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Tuesday, November 6
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:26 PM EST
Group of right-wing rabbis writes open letter to US president demanding he cancel Annapolis summit or risk provoking 'wrath of the almighty.' Rabbis assert Katrina disaster a result of America's support of 2005 disengagement, say California fires a warning
Neta Sela A fringe group of prominent ultranationalist rabbis issued a harshly-worded letter to United States President George W. Bush earlier this week, warning him that the upcoming Annapolis peace conference would bring destruction upon America. The rabbis evoke their previous prediction in 2005, when they published an open letter to Bush in the New York Times, demanding the US rescind its support of the disengagement plan. "We wrote to President Bush, a man who believes in the Bible, to warn him against the terrible danger to which he is exposing his country by hosting such a conference," said Rabbi Meir Druckman, one of signatories to the letter. "The land of Israel belongs to the people of Israel. God punishes anyone who coerces Israel to give up its land," he said. "There is no doubt the New Orleans flood from the Katrina hurricane was God's punishment for evicting the settlements," said Druckman, "with hundreds of thousands left homeless, hundreds killed or ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 08:51 AM AKST
Link to First Temple found [Excerpts]Archeologists overseeing contested
Islamic infrastructure work on Jerusalem's Temple Mount have stumbled
upon a sealed archeological level dating back to the First Temple
period, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced.The find marks the
first time that archeological remains dating back to the First Temple
period have been found on the contested holy site, the state-run
archeological body said.No archeological excavations have ever been
carried out on the Temple Mount, which is Judaism's holiest and Islam's
third-holiest site, due to opposition from religious leaders.The sealed
archeological level, dated from the eighth to the sixth centuries BCE,
was exposed at the end of August in the area close to the southeastern
corner of the raised platform surrounding the Dome of the Rock, and
includes fragments of ceramic tableware and animal bone."The layer is a
closed, sealed archeological layer that has been untouched since as
early as the eighth century BCE," said Yuval Baruch, the Jerusalem
District archeologist for the Israel Antiquities
Original Source more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:50 AM CST
By Anshel Pfeffer
An eight-centimeter-square piece of the 1087-year-old Aleppo Codex will be given to a representative of the Ben Zvi Institute in Jerusalem on Thursday, following 18 years during which Israeli scholars tried to retrieve it from businessman Sam Sabbagh. Sabbagh salvaged the fragment from a burning synagogue in Aleppo, Syria in 1947. Inscribed on both sides, it is one of the lost fragments of the codex, a copy of the Bible written in 920 C.E. in Tiberias by the scribe Shlomo Ben Buya'a. The fragment Sabbagh had bears verses of Exodus chapter 8, including the words of Moses to Pharaoh: "Let my people go, that they may serve me..." Sabbagh believed the small piece of parchment was his good luck charm for six decades. He was convinced that thanks to the parchment, which he kept with him always in a transparent plastic container, he had been saved from riots in his hometown of Aleppo during Israel's War of Independence, and he had managed to immigrate from Syria to the United States in 1968 and start a new life in Brooklyn and make a living. The charm was with him when he underwent complicated surgery. Just two years ago, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:45 AM CST
Some 3,000 of the 22,000 Sderot residents fled the beleaguered western
Negev town in June, July and August, Yediot Aharonot reported on
Tuesday.
The figure amounts to an unprecedented 1 in 7 people that escaped the incessant Kassam attacks over the summer when some 1,500 rockets were fired at the town. Sderot officials assessed that the mass summer exodus was due to growing exhaustion of residents and the fact the many left so that their children could start the new school year elsewhere. Sderot Mayor Eli Moyal revealed that many of those who left were from a medium to high economic level. "They are the families that were the fuel, the power and the engine that were driving Sderot forward. These are the people who opened businesses, employed people and raised their living standards - most of them have now disappeared. It is a tremendous blow to the town, also because of the harm to the Interior Ministry budget." Sderot Municipality workers said that from conversations with families that have left the town, it emerged that most had set up new homes in Ashkelon, Ashdod and Rishon Lezion - further away for the threat of Kassam attacks. Streets lined with ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:44 AM CST
By Caroline B. Glick
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | From October 26-30, a mob of Druse villagers in Peki'in in the Galilee launched what has all the markings of a pogrom against the four Jewish families in the village. They burned their cars and surrounded and torched their homes. The police took a full day to come to the Jews' defense. And when they did, the Druse mob kidnapped a policewoman and only set her free in exchange for their cohorts who had been arrested. The police then set about evacuating the Jews from their encircled homes and did nothing to prevent their homes from being destroyed by the mob. Now the Knesset's Interior Committee is demanding that a governmental commission of inquiry be set up to investigate what the Druse claim was police brutality in attempting to disperse the violent mob. For its part the Olmert government is distancing itself from Internal Security Minister Avi Dichter's decision to suffice with an internal police investigation of the policemen's behavior at the scene. The question that arises is whether the leftist-dominated Knesset and the Olmert government act as they do out of fear or conviction. This question is given increased urgency as the ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:42 AM CST
President says current peace initiative enjoys US-support while
Israel's concerns are addressed in full. Meanwhile Olmert is hoping a
Syrian presence in Annapolis will lead to successful negotiations with
Damascus
Roni Sofer "Annapolis is a tremendous opportunity, it won't be an instantaneous solution to everything, but I have spoken to the Arab leaders and there is a spirit of trust and optimism there," said President Shimon Peres on Tuesday following a briefing with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. "Our starting point for the negotiations is far better than anything we could have expected," said Peres. The president also noted the apparent cooperation between the triumvirate – Washington, Jerusalem and Ramallah. "This is different from Oslo, without the support of the Americans. Today no one is twisting Israel's arm, no one is writing off its yearning for peace," he said, noting that when the peace process began more than a decade ago, both sides were unable to trust each other. Ahead of his upcoming official visit to Ankara, Peres said that Turkey "could absolutely play a key role in the peace process." The president is scheduled to address the Turkish parliament, a diplomatic feat described as "historic" by ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:40 AM CST
sheera claire frenkel
"Israel is prepared to go very far at the Annapolis conference," Defense Minister Ehud Barak told the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Tuesday. During the Middle East conference, Barak said, "Israel is going to seek important agreements that would require the Palestinians to implement the first stage of the road map." "This includes dismantling all terrorist organizations," said the defense minister, adding that "the demand to dismantle terror camps extends to Gaza as well." Barak hinted that Fatah might need to go into the Strip to confront Hamas head on. Regarding a possible large-scale IDF operation in Gaza, Barak said that although the time had not yet come for such a mission, "at some point sooner or later, we will have to engage in such an operation if Kassam rocket fire and weapons smuggling continue as they have of late." Barak said Israel had the ability to enter Gaza and operate there using all military options, indicating that in a possible confrontation, the IDF would not hesitate to use the air force, ground forces and perhaps even the Israel Navy. "Every day that passes," Barak added, "brings Israel closer to being forced to confront the ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 11:37 AM CST
Israel's major newspapers and television news outlets largely ignored a
Sunday evening demonstration attended by thousands of Israelis
expressing their opposition to the upcoming US-hosted
Israeli-Palestinian "peace" summit scheduled to take place in
Annapolis, Maryland later this month.
The protesters started at the residence of the US consul general in Jerusalem and marched several hundred yards to the nearby King David Hotel, where US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and international Middle East envoy Tony Blair were meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to hash out a joint statement Olmert is expected to present with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas at the conclusion of the Annapolis gathering. The crowd was addressed by leading rabbis and lawmakers, who warned the people that their leaders were, under pressure from the international community, leading Israel down a path of destruction. "Ehud [Olmert], [Defense Minsiter] Ehud [Barak], and [Foreign Minister] Tzipi [Livni] are deceiving an entire people and leading all of us to the Annapolis trap while ignoring the facts on the ground," Israel National News quoted Knesset Member Yuval Steinitz of the opposition Likud party as saying. Israel is expected to find itself isolated at Annapolis, where a Bush Administration determined to oversee ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 08:14 AM AKST
It can run for hours at 20 metres per minute without getting tired. It
lives longer, has more sex, and eats more without gaining weight. Could
the science that created this supermouse be applied to humans?
By Steve Connor, Science Editor Scientists have been astounded by the creation of a genetically modified "supermouse" with extraordinary physical abilities – comparable to the performance of the very best athletes – raising the prospect that the discovery may one day be used to transform people's capacities. The mouse can run up to six kilometres (3.7 miles) at a speed of 20 metres per minute for five hours or more without stopping. Scientists said that this was equivalent of a man cycling at speed up an Alpine mountain without a break. Although it eats up to 60 per cent more food than an ordinary mouse, the modified mouse does not put on weight. It also lives longer and enjoys an active sex life well into old age – being capable of breeding at three times the normal maximum age. American scientists who created the mice – they now have a breeding colony of 500 – said that they were stunned by their abilities, especially ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 08:07 AM AKST
Extremists are grooming children and teenagers to plot terrorist
attacks against Britain, the director of the domestic spy agency said
Monday.
But Jonathan Evans, making his first public speech since becoming director-general of Britain's MI5 agency in April, said vital resources needed to tackle terrorism are being diverted to counter the espionage threat from Russia and China. "Terrorists are methodically and intentionally targeting young people and children in this country," Evans said, according to a text of his speech in Manchester, England. "They are radicalizing, indoctrinating and grooming young, vulnerable people to carry out acts of terrorism." Testimony from a U.S. terrorist-turned-witness in British court cases has revealed how young Britons are trained for attacks at terrorist camps in tribal areas of Pakistan. Evans said though Pakistan remains a key training ground for Britons, similar centers are emerging elsewhere. Al Qaeda in Iraq is attempting to stage attacks outside Iraq and parts of East Africa, particularly Somalia, have become a key area for training and planning of attacks on Britain, he said. Evans said thwarting plots alone is not enough to stop the threat of extremist terrorism, and urged the government and society to counter the message of radical preachers.... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 07:26 AM AKST
'Satan's' appearance prompts man to drop drug habit
The anniversary reception photo capture on a screenshot from Fox News seems unremarkable, but got the attention of Joe and Patty Martinez A Colorado man reports he was able to kick his drug habit after a photograph of him at a relative's anniversary celebration showed – literally – a demon on his shoulder. Joe Martinez told Fox 31 News in Denver that drugs were killing his soul. But he's now on the road to recovery because of the photograph. "I look at it and I carry it wherever I go," he told the television station. The photo showed a typically smiling couple at a anniversary reception. What it also shows is what Martinez's wife, Patty, describes as "Satan." "Right away I really thought, I said, 'You're really walking with Satan'," she said. The photo was taken at a family anniversary celebration several years ago. It was in an album until just months ago, but Martinez says he won't be without it now because of the reminder it provides. What appears to be a dog is looking over Joe's shoulder, in a closer view of the anniversary reception photo "There's good and evil ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 07:19 AM AKST
By Alexandra Marks
New York The federal government's efforts to create a standardized, secure driver's license that would also serve as a national ID card have hit some significant stumbling blocks. Chief among them: Eight states have voted in the past year not to participate in the program. Nine others are on the record opposing the proposal. In total, legislation opposing the plan has been introduced in 38 states. Behind much of the state legislative opposition to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) plan is Missouri state Rep. Jim Guest, a conservative Republican. His primary concern: REAL ID, as DHS has dubbed the initiative, would not deter terrorists. Instead, he believes, it would be an unprecedented invasion of individual privacy, creating a databank of personal information to which officials on the local, state, and federal levels would have access. "I love my freedom, I love my country, and we're heading down a road here that would take away many of the things we take for granted," says Representative Guest. "If we had to start carrying a card around – if we lost our freedom not to – I don't think we could ever get that back." Passed by Congress in ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 06:55 AM AKST
By Peter Cohan
Bloomberg News reports that Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen refuses to be paid in dollars. In addition to landing undefeated (9-0) New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady -- although that relationship could be on the rocks -- she is one savvy currency trader. Gisele Bundchen is proving to be a shrewd analyst of the U.S. dollar's weakness. When Bundchen signed a contract in August to represent Pantene hair products for Procter & Gamble Co. (NYSE: PG), she demanded payment in euros. She'll also get euros for the deal she reached last October with Dolce & Gabbana SpA in Milan to promote the Italian designer's new fragrance. "Contracts starting now are more attractive in euros because we don't know what will happen to the dollar," Patricia Bundchen, the model's twin sister and manager in Brazil, said in a telephone interview in September from Sao Paulo. Those Bundchens are smart cookies! Too bad I can't say the same for Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and his strong dollar policy. On an mildly related note -- Boston is clearly the hub of the sports universe. With the Red Sox having won the World Series in 2004 and 2007 and the New England ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 06:46 AM AKST
Paul Tibbets stands in front of the Enola Gay
We hardly make them like him anymore, and now he's gone. Paul Tibbets died last week at his Columbus, Ohio home. He was 92. There are people who are glad he's gone because they don't like what he did in 1945. They're idealistic fools. They're alive and free today because of Tibbets' skill and courage. I've no hesitation in saying we need more like him, with his attitude about doing what needs to be done in time of war when so much is at stake. In a 1975 interview he said, "You've got to take stock and assess the situation. … We were at war. … You use anything at your disposal." That's the attitude – realistically facing the need to defeat the enemy! His full name: Paul Warfield Tibbets, Jr. Shame on you if you don't know who he is, because Paul Tibbets changed history in 1945. He piloted the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb in war. In fact, he planned the missions, leading the first of two that definitively ended the bloody and costly war against Japan. The Japanese surrender came after a second mission, three days ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 06:44 AM AKST
It can certainly understand why neo-pagans like Al Gore believe,
despite overwhelming scientific evidence to the contrary, man-made,
catastrophic global warming is the gravest threat to the planet.
What I can't understand is why people who claim to believe in the Bible as the inerrant, inspired Word of God do so. Even more difficult to comprehend is why some evangelical Christians are caught up in the notion that government and international action are the proper methods to fight this phantom threat. First of all, in Genesis 8:22, we're told of a promise by God never to use global floodwaters again as a means of destroying life on Earth. In that promise, the Bible explicitly states: "While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease." In other words, no more cataclysmic floods – the result Al Gore promises in the near future as a consequence of global warming. Just as importantly, there is another promise there that cold and heat shall not cease. What does that mean? It means God controls the world's temperature, not man. God controls the climate, not man. God controls the earth's "eco-system," not ... more »
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 12:12 AM EST
Ezra HaLevi(IsraelNN.com) New technologies developed in Jerusalem and Hevron are keeping Israel and the world safe from conventional and biological terror attacks.
Hebrew University scientists in Jerusalem have found a simple way to detect whether someone has handled explosives recently. A forensic chemist from the university developed a chemical spray that is able to detect recent contact with urea nitrate - the easily attainable chemical used in most bombs produced in the Palestinian Authority. The chemical test reacts with even the smallest amounts of urea nitrate, turning the surface bright red. A swab sample can be taken from surfaces touched by a suspect or the hands of the person in question. Professor Joseph Almog, the spray’s developer, told Israel21c that the method could be “cheaply and easily incorporated into security screenings by law enforcement agencies, the military, and at certain air and sea check-points.” Israel’s Water Company Installs Anthrax Detector Israel’s Mekorot water company has adopted a system developed by the Israeli company Biological Alarm Systems (BAS) which rapidly detects hazardous biological substances in the water supply. The system detects such toxins as anthrax and botulism in both water and air and can be deployed in public places like mass-transit ... more »
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 12:09 AM EST
mark weiss
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 06 Nov 2007 12:01 AM EST
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said he may be able to make peace with the Palestinians by the end of 2008 as the United States vowed to defend Israel's security during the difficult process.
"If we act decisively together, we and the Palestinians, there is a chance for us to reach real achievements, maybe even before the end of President (George W.) Bush's term," he said at the Saban Forum think-tank in Jerusalem. "There is no intention to drag out the negotiations without end. There is no reason to again hit the foot-dragging that characterised our talks in the past," the premier said. Israel and the Palestinians have been engaged in intensive talks in an effort to draft a joint statement outlining a solution to the decades-old conflict ahead of a meeting in Annapolis, Maryland expected later this year. The two sides plan to launch intensive bilateral talks on a permanent agreement following the international meeting, aimed at reviving a peace process that has been dormant for seven years. The Palestinians have repeatedly demanded that the joint statement include a clear timetable for the negotiations, but Israel has insisted on a looser document based on a 2003 peace blueprint ... more » |
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