But on serious thought, I felt, though the tone might be hurting,facts(most of them at least), can not be denied.
Would people ponder?
I question my faith when Fraudsters defame my Religion and later get convinced by referring texts/scriptures they do not represent Hinduism.
Hurt not intended.
Thanks Ram.
Everyone seems to be wondering why Muslim
Terrorists are so quick to commit suicide. Lets have a look at the evidence: – No Christmas – No television – No nude women – No football – No pork chops – No hot dogs – No burgers – No beer – No bacon – Rags for clothes
– Towels for hats
– Constant wailing from some idiot in a tower
– More than one wife
More than one mother in law
– You can’t shave
– Your wife can’t shave
– You can’t wash off the smell of donkey
– You cook over burning camel shit
– Your wife is picked by someone else for you
– and your wife smells worse than your donkey
Then they tell you that “when you die, it all gets better”?? Well no sh*t Sherlock!….
It’s not like it could get much worse
THE MUSLIMS ARE NOT HAPPY!
They’re not happy in Gaza ..
They’re not happy in Egypt ..
They’re not happy in Libya ..
They’re not happy in Morocco ..
They’re not happy in Iran ..
They’re not happy in Iraq ..
They’re not happy in Yemen ..
They’re not happy in Afghanistan ..
They’re not happy in Pakistan ..
They’re not happy in Syria ..
They’re not happy in Lebanon ..
SO, WHERE ARE THEY HAPPY?
They’re happy in Australia .
They’re happy in Canada .
They’re happy in England ..
They’re happy in France ..
They’re happy in Italy ..
They’re happy in Germany ..
They’re happy in Sweden ..
They’re happy in the USA ..
They’re happy in Norway ..
They’re happy in Holland .
They’re happy in Denmark .
Basically, they’re happy in every country that is not Muslim
and unhappy in every country that is!
AND WHO DO THEY BLAME?
Not Islam.
Not their leadership.
Not themselves.
THEY BLAME THE COUNTRIES THEY ARE HAPPY IN!
AND THEN; They want to change those countries to be like….
THE COUNTRY THEY CAME FROM WHERE THEY WERE UNHAPPY!
Excuse me, but I can’t help wondering…
How damn dumb can you get?
An area always in turmoil with a host of problems facing some nation or another, it is now the turn of Syria to fight Assad.
As Assad hardens his stand , so are the rebels .
What is bizarre is that their killing machine is a 11 year old boy,Mohammed Afar called as Little Lion.
Mohamed Afar Killer Syria.
Read On.
Over the top of his faded yellow jacket a Free Syrian Army vest holds three extra clips, each full with live ammunition, and a walkie-talkie. An FSA badge sits on one side and a rendering of the Islamic Shahada, in Arabic calligraphy, on the other.
He says he does not miss school or want to stay at home with his mother and two sisters.
The fighters surrounding him, all claiming to be from Liwa al-Tawhid, pass him a sniper rifle and offer to take him to a frontline, so he can demonstrate his shooting.
“He is a great shot,” says his father, Mohammed Saleh Afar. “He is my little lion.”
Over the course of its grinding 21-month insurgency, Syria’s children have endured numerous abuses.
Caught-up in shelling, airstrikes, and sniping, they have additionally been subject to arbitrary arrest, torture and rape, as reported by the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Syria in August; which, additionally, noted “with concern reports that children under 18 are fighting and performing auxiliary roles for anti-Government armed groups.”
Both the Geneva Conventions and the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Children carry provisions that call for not using combatants under the age of 15, while the International Criminal Court’s Rome Statute makes it a war crime.
Mohammed quickly disengages his magazine and presents it, before skillfully reinserting it, but not chambering a round. The older fighters surrounding him— some of whom are little more than boys themselves —praise his speed and mirror his father’s earlier statements, calling him a “good shot.”
He says he admires the fighters from Jabhat al-Nusra—composed of hardline Islamists subscribing to Takfiri ideology—and recently designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States. Al-Nusra have proven effective in battle, winning itself scores of supporters.
A multimedia showcase of some of 2012’s top stories, including the war in Syria, the Benghazi attack, anti-austerity protests, super-storm Sandy, the South African miner tragedy, the U.S. election and Felix Baumgartner‘s space jump. Production by Jillian Kitchener.
Visiting a troubled area is fraught with danger, especially when you are in pursuit of hot stories.
Chasing a Pulitzer or Booker that would bring in cheers and laurels is fine , but at what cost?
If the Reporter had any sense he should have declined to travel and if refused should have quit.
You can not have the cake and eat it too.
Misplaced bravado and accusation!
‘Ed Shadid, the cousin of dead New York Times foreign correspondent Anthony Shadid, caused a stir over the weekend when he claimed in a speech that Anthony pre-emptively blamed the Times for his death in Syria, telling his wife: “If anything happens to me, I want the world to know that the New York Times killed me.” In an interview with Gawker, the surviving Shadid confirms the account and says the Times knew a trip to Syria was too dangerous, but sent him anyway.
In his speech at the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee‘s convention on Saturday, which was initially reported on Twitter and later by Politico, Shadid said that his cousin didn’t want to go on the reporting trip to war-torn Syria that led to his death, reportedly from an asthma attack, in February. On the night before he left for Syria, Ed said, Anthony was “screaming and slamming on the phone in discussions with his editors.” In his last telephone call with his wife, Ed says, Anthony gave his “haunting last directive that if anything happens to me I want the world to know the New York Times killed me.”
I do not approve of and will not be a part of any public discussion of Anthony’s passing. It does nothing but sadden Anthony’s children to have to endure repeated public discussion of the circumstances of their father’s death.
In an interview, Ed Shadid—an Oklahoma City physician and city councilman—told Gawker that his cousin didn’t want to go to Syria in February, didn’t feel like he had the support of his editors, and had been previously warned off a Syria trip by a Times security consultant.
“Did he want to go at that time?” Shadid said. “Did he feel like he had the logistical support necessary? The answer is no.” According to Ed, a Times security consultant reviewed a plan to infiltrate Anthony and his photographer Tyler Hicks across the border between Turkey and Syria in December 2011, but rejected it as too dangerous. “There was a security advisor who said, in no uncertain terms, ‘You are forbidden to enter Syria,’” Ed says. “So Anthony wrote an email to Tyler Hicks and says, ‘Hey man, it’s off. We’re not allowed to go.’” But roughly six weeks later, Ed says, Anthony’s editors reversed course and asked him to go anyway.
“The situation was worse on the ground than it had been in December,” Ed says. “The only thing that had changed was that CNN had gained access to [the rebel stronghold] Idlid. My understanding is that CNN gaining access bothered his editors.”
The night before Anthony left his home in Beirut for Turkey to begin the journey into Syria, Ed says, he was overheard on the phone with his editors “screaming at them and saying, ‘This is horseshit,’ and slamming down the phone.” He doesn’t know the specifics of what the arguments were about, but claims that Anthony felt he wasn’t supported by the Times. He asked for camping equipment to bring along on the journey through the mountainous border, Ed says, but his editors said no. When the 43-year-old reporter complained about the physical demands of the journey, Ed says, Times foreign editor Joseph Kahn responded, “It sounds like you’re going to get a lot of exercise on this assignment.”
In a statement, the Times said that it “respectfully disagrees with Ed Shadid’s version of the facts” and that the paper “does not pressure reporters to go into combat zones. Anthony was an experienced, motivated correspondent. He decided whether, how and when to enter Syria, and was told by his editors, including on the day of the trip, that he should not make the trip if he felt it was not advisable for any reason.” Asked repeatedly whether a security consultant had rejected the Syria trip in December, Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy declined to comment.
Whether or not Anthony—a lifelong smoker—wanted to go to Syria, his cousin says, he was in no shape to be there. “When I saw Anthony in December, he wheezing,” he says. “But the New York Times had never asked him to take a physical. If you are going to send someone across mountainous terrain with gun smugglers who could—and did—abandon the journalists, shouldn’t you have a sense of whether they were physically capable? I don’t think a physician would have signed off on him travelling this arduous terrain in the cold.”
Contrary to a report from one Twitter correspondent who heard Ed’s speech, Shadid’s family is not pursuing legal action against the Times, even though he says he has “audiotapes and email evidence” to back up his claims. All he wants, he says, is to start a conversation about steps that the Times and other papers can take to better protect the safety of its correspondents. “How much would it cost to do an annual physical exam?” he says. “Or mandate basic medical training? These are not expensive, complicated things.” (According to Ed, Anthony’s companion Hicks improperly performed CPR on the stricken reporter.)
Ed had previously spoken at several memorial events for his cousin, each time raising questions about whether the Times and other papers can do more to ensure the safety of their correspondents.
“While the specifics of this case are important,” Ed says, “the bigger issue is what commonsense reforms can we put in place to protect journalists, at all newspapers.”
He’s also concerned that the official narrative of Anthony’s death—he died of an asthma attack exarcebated by the presence of horses—doesn’t wash. The emphasis on asthma comes from Hicks, who wrote that Anthony sustained increasingly severe allergic reactions to the horses they travelled with. But according to Ed, Anthony took has young daughter to horseriding lessons once a week without any adverse reactions. “They put out a story that Anthony Shadid died from asthma—according to who? Dr. Tyler Hicks?” Ed says Hicks’ account of Anthony’s final moments—he “stopped and leaned against a large boulder [and] collapsed onto the ground…already unconscious and [not] breathing”—is much more consistent with a heart attack than an asthma attack. He also says an autopsy was performed on Anthony’s body in Turkey, and wonders why he hasn’t seen the results. “We don’t have them,” he says.’
“Thousands of awe-struck Norwegians bombarded the Meteorological Institute to ask what the incredible light — that could be seen in the pre-dawn sky for hundreds of miles — could possibly be.
The phenomenon has been dubbed ‘Star-Gate’ — as the world’s top scientists and the military lined up to admit they were baffled.
Scandinavian country’s almost five million population, with sightings as far north as Finnmark to Trondelag in the south.
Totto Eriksen, from Tromso, in northern Norway, was one of the thousands who bombarded Norwegian newspapers with sightings — after nearly crashing his car on spotting the spiral overhead.
He said: “I was driving my daughter to school when this light spun and exploded in the sky.
“We saw it from the Inner Harbour in Tromso. It looked like a rocket that spun around and around – and then went diagonally across the heavens.
“It looked like the moon was coming over the mountain – but then turned into something totally different.”
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