|
|
Tuesday, February 26

Shas " Watchmen's Warning"
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 11:34 PM EST
Homosexual activity cause of earthquake, Shas MK says
'The Gemara mentions a number of causes of earthquakes, one of which is homosexuality, which the Knesset legitimizes,' Benizri says regarding last Friday's tremor Amnon Meranda
The recent earthquake that was felt across Israel was the result of the "homosexual activity practiced in the country", Knesset Member Shlomo Benizri said Wednesday.
During a special Knesset session on Israel's preparedness for the possibility of another earthquake hitting the region, the Shas member said "the Gemara refers to earthquakes as disasters, but you are searching only for the practical solutions how to prevent and repair.
"But I no of another way to prevent earthquakes; the Gemara mentions a number of causes of earthquakes, one of which is homosexuality, which the Knesset legitimizes," Benizri said.
An earthquake registering 5.3 on the Richter Scale was felt by residents across Israel at 12:36 pm Friday. The trembling lasted for 19 seconds and shook structures in many major towns and cities.
(More)
Shalom Subscribers:
I would like to thank each of you who have emailed ... more »

Alarmed rabbis: Prime minister dividing Jerusalem
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 11:32 PM EST
Prominent Jewish leaders urge Israeli leader's partners to bolt government By Aaron Klein JERUSALEM – A group of hundreds of prominent Israeli rabbis this week urged a religious partner of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's government to immediately bolt the Israeli leader's coalition amid rampant media reports Jerusalem is up for negotiations. The rabbis warned that if the Orthodox Shas party remains in Olmert's government, they will urge Jews against supporting Shas. If the party bolts, Olmert's coalition government could fall apart, precipitating new elections. "We are seriously considering issuing a statement signed by the hundreds of rabbis of the organization declaring it is absolutely forbidden for any observant Jew to vote for a party that lent its support to a government that negotiated the division of Jerusalem, a move that will place the entire population in Israel in mortal danger," Rabbi Avrohom Shmuel Lewin, director general of the Rabbinical Congress for Peace, told WND. The Congress is a coalition of more than 350 Israeli rabbinic leaders and pulpit rabbis. Olmert repeatedly has insisted Israeli-Palestinian negotiations are not dealing with the status of Jerusalem, while Palestinian leaders, including Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abba, and many Israeli officials, including Foreign Minister Tzipi ... more »

Vinegar: Sour Grapes or Sweet Success?
by
Jodie A.
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 10:45 PM EST
By Rabbi Tzvi Rosen Vinegar is one of nature's most unique and versatile products. Folklore maintains that vinegar was discovered quite by accident, when wine was inadvertently left to sour. This resulted in the first batch of full-bodied wine vinegar. Indeed, the word vinegar is derived from the French word vinagere, which means sour wine. Euphemistically, the Talmud refers to a ne'er do well son of a righteous father as a "vinegar, son of wine." Folklore aside, vinegar was well known in the time of Tanach (Scripture). The Torah forbids a Nazarite to drink wine vinegar or eat other grape and wine products. In Psalms, Kind David asked to drink vinegar. In the Book of Ruth, Boaz's workers dipped their bread in vinegar. The Hebrew term for vinegar, chometz (pronounced ch-oh-metz), is very much akin to the word chametz (pronounced ch-aw-maitz), leavened bread products. This etymological similarity underscores a close similarity between the production of vinegar and the leavening of bread. The chemical process that allows wine to "sour" into vinegar, and effects the leavening of flour and water, is known as fermentation. Fermentation is a natural conversion process by which yeast, a fungus found in nature, converts sugar into ... more »

Put It Back on the Table
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 06:53 AM AKST
By Jonathan Tobin
Willingness to deal with renewed Iran threat needs to be campaign issue
A couple of months ago, the question of what to do about the
possibility of a nuclear Iran was on the verge of becoming the No. 1
foreign-policy issue in 2008.
Though not exactly eclipsing the Iraq war, Iran's nuclear program was
the red-hot focus of attention, with speculation rising as to what, if
anything, the United States was prepared to do about the prospect of a
radical Islamist theocracy, whose main foreign-policy goal has been to
foment terrorism in the Middle East, gaining the ability to obliterate
its enemies.
Then, in early December, it all went away.
The release of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran seemingly put
an end to the discussion. By leading with its claim that the Iranians
had abandoned their nuclear-weapons program in 2003, the top American
spies neatly spiked any chance that an international coalition could be
formed to impose a tough sanctions regime on Tehran.
'IRAN'S GREATEST VICTORY'
Moreover, by going public in this way, the intelligence apparatus
seemed to be signaling that the Bush administration would be stopped
from gathering domestic support for a foreign campaign ... more »

Obama raised funds for Islamic causes
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 06:30 AM AKST
Speeches for Palestinian refugees called code for Israel's destruction
By Aaron Klein
JERUSALEM – Sen. Barack Obama has spoken at fundraisers for
Palestinians living in what the United Nations terms refugee camps, WND
has learned.
Palestinians have long demanded the "right of return" for millions of
"refugees," a formula Israeli officials across the political spectrum
warn is code for Israel's destruction by flooding the Jewish state with
millions of Muslim Arabs, thereby changing its demographics.
In a conference call last month with Jewish and Israeli media aimed
primarily at dispelling Internet reports he is anti-Israel, Obama
stated "Palestinian refugees" belong in their own state and do not have
a "literal" right of return to Israel.
"We cannot move forward until there is some confidence that the
Palestinians are able to provide the security apparatus that would
prevent constant attacks against Israel from taking place," continued
Obama during the conference with Jewish journalists.
But in the 1990s Obama was a speaker at events in Chicago's large
Palestinian immigrant community to raise funds for U.N. camps for the
so-called Palestinian refugees.
Ali Abunimah, a Chicago-based Palestinian-American activist and
co-founder of Electronic Intifada, a pro-Palestinian online
publication, recalls introducing Obama at one such ... more »

Food shortages loom as wheat crop shrinks and prices rise
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 06:30 AM AKST
Jonathan Leake
THE world is only ten weeks away from running out of wheat supplies
after stocks fell to their lowest levels for 50 years.
The crisis has pushed prices to an all-time high and could lead to
further hikes in the price of bread, beer, biscuits and other basic
foods.
It could also exacerbate serious food shortages in developing countries
especially in Africa.
The crisis comes after two successive years of disastrous wheat
harvests, which saw production fall from 624m to 600m tonnes, according
to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
Experts blame climate change as heatwaves caused a slump in harvests
last year in eastern Europe, Canada, Morocco and Australia, all big
wheat producers.
Booming populations and a switch to a meat-rich diet in the developing
world also mean that about 110m tons of the world’s annual wheat crop
is being diverted to feed livestock.
Short term pressures have compounded the problem. Speculative buying by
investors gambling on further price rises has further pushed up prices.
Though shortages are often blamed on the use of land for biofuel crops,
the main biofuel cereal crop is maize, not wheat. Farmers have brought
millions of acres of fallow ... more »

Syrian-born backer of Obama ordered to Jail
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 06:22 AM AKST
Beirut / Chicago - A federal judge sent accused Illinois political
fixer Antoin "Tony" Rezko to jail today after federal prosecutors
accused him of violating his bail terms by a convoluted series of
financial transactions with Mideast banks.
Rezko has become an "Achilles heel" for Illinois Sen. Barack Obama
after disclosures he and people associated with him had raised almost
$200,000 for Obama and that Obama sought Rezko's "help and advice" in
the purchase of a new home.
In a court hearing in Chicago, prosecutors detailed a $3.5 million wire
transfer from a bank in Beirut, Lebanon that they said was moved
through a series of accounts until it reached Rezko or some of his
relatives who had posted property for his bond.
Under the terms of his agreement, prosecutors said in a filing with the
court, Rezko was obligated to disclose any change in his financial
status.
In court, prosecutors said Rezko had become a "flight risk" because of
his secretive transactions in the Mideast.
According to the court filings, the money came from a company, General
Mediterranean, owned by a British-based Iraqi billionaire, Nadhmi
Auchi, who was convicted in France on fraud charges.
The filing says when Auchi ... more »

Colour-blind artist learns to paint by hearing
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 05:36 AM AKST
A COLOUR-BLIND artist who could only recognise black and white shades
has learnt how to paint with a full palette by “hearing” the hues he
cannot see.
Neil Harbisson, 25, has been fitted with a device called an Eyeborg,
which converts 360 colours into different sounds.
Now he is to mount his first London exhibition, showing city scenes
such as red phone boxes in London and brightly coloured recycling banks
in Barcelona.
Harbisson, whose exhibition will arrive in London in April, after
opening in Barcelona, said: “When I paint it is as if I am composing
music on a canvas.”
As an art student at Dartington College of Arts in Devon, he painted
only in black and white because that is all he saw. But three years ago
he met Adam Montandon, a cybernetics expert who came to give a lecture
at the college.
After the talk, Montandon was told of Harbisson’s condition and he took
up the challenge of solving the problem, enabling Harbisson to paint in
colour. The artist suffers from achromatopsia – or complete congenital
colour blindness.
Montandon decided to harness the way in which different colours reflect
light at different frequencies, with light vibrating fastest from
... more »

The Turbulence Ahead
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 05:27 AM AKST
by Chuck Missler
As we enter the new year and survey the turbulent horizon ahead, global
enigmas continue to challenge any competent analysis. Anyone who
assumes that the years ahead will be smooth sailing is underinformed.
While most of us are probably underwhelmed by the current contenders
competing for the highest office of the land, the ensuing election
debates will consume most of the media attention through November.
(It seems bizarre that there are many who believe that there are
candidates that should be in prison, not on the campaign circuit!)
Nevertheless, whoever ultimately enters the coveted Oval Office is
likely to be overwhelmed by the emerging realities that will confront
the new president.
Mushroom Clouds on the Horizon
The nuclear threats continue to intensify and multiply. Despite the
politically motivated disinformation of the "National Intelligence
Estimate," most serious observers remain convinced that Iran is
intrepidly pursuing its aggressive nuclear weapons objectives, and the
intentions of its radical leadership have certainly been clearly
declared
There are many who anticipate that Israel may be planning a preemptive
nuclear strike, but Iran has warned that it will launch 11,000 rockets
at Israel and U.S. military bases in the Middle East if it ... more »

A Spry Farrakhan Sings Obama's Praises
by
Publisher
on Tue 26 Feb 2008 05:13 AM AKST
In his first major public address since a cancer crisis, Nation of
Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan said Sunday that presidential candidate
Barack Obama is the "hope of the entire world" that the U.S. will
change for the better. The 74-year-old Farrakhan, addressing an
estimated crowd of 20,000 people at the annual Saviours' Day
celebration, never outrightly endorsed Obama but spent most of the
nearly two-hour speech praising the Illinois senator.
"This young man is the hope of the entire world that America will
change and be made better," he said. "This young man is capturing
audiences of black and brown and red and yellow. If you look at Barack
Obama's audiences and look at the effect of his words, those people are
being transformed."
Farrakhan compared Obama to the religion's founder, Fard Muhammad, who
also had a white mother and black father.
"A black man with a white mother became a savior to us," he told the
crowd of mostly followers. "A black man with a white mother could turn
out to be one who can lift America from her fall."
Farrakhan also leveled small jabs at Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama's
rival for the Democratic nomination, suggesting that she represents ... more »
|
Celebrating Jerusalem's Reunification
Americans for a Safe Israel
Visitors Map
|