August 23, 2004
At Atlanta
Armed Liberal
I'll be in Atlanta from Sun - Thurs next week.
Any Atlanta-area bloggers want to connect? Drop me an email.
Good news from Afghanistan
Arthur Chrenkoff
Note: Also available at the "Opinion Journal" and at my blog, Chrenkoff (here). Kudos and thanks to James Taranto, one of the few in the mainstream media who continues to spread the good news.
The former king of Afghanistan, Mohammad Zahir Shah, has seen it all in his 89 years: after four decades on the throne, a coup that saw his deposed, and another three decades in exile, he is now back in his homeland, living the peaceful life of a private citizen, albeit in the security of a private mansion on the grounds of the presidential palace in Kabul. Asked recently by an interviewer about his country's future, Mohammad Zahir Shah replied: "I am not a fortune-teller, but I am optimistic."
For the past quarter of a century, one need not have been a fortune teller to expect that Afghanistan's near future would remain grim. A communist coup, followed by the Soviet invasion and occupation, then the civil war between former mudjahedin freedom fighters, and finally the oppressive Taliban theocracy have all drastically reduced the number of optimists in this unlucky corner of Central Asia.
But optimism is back, and since the overthrow of Mullah Omar's regime almost three years ago it has been making a slow but steady comeback. For all the continuing security problems and sporadic fighting with the Taliban and al Qaeda remnants, Afghanistan's resurrection has been an unheralded success story of the recent times. Huge challenges remain, to be sure, but for the first time in a generation there is real hope that the country is finally breaking out of the cycle of violence and succeeding in its first steps on the road to normalcy.
The Afghans know it's happening, but we in the West, looking at Afghanistan through the prism of mainstream media coverage, are far less aware of all the positive developments taking place over there. Here is some good news from the last four weeks that you might have missed while the media, true to their form, continued to focus on the negatives.
read the rest! »
SOCIETY:
- The presidential elections are still some two months away, but the foundations have already been laid down with considerable success: according to initial United Nations reports, almost 80 per cent, or 7.9 million out of estimated 10 million eligible voters have registered to vote in October's poll. Other reports at the time put the figure as high as 9 million registered voters, but when the voter registration officially closed on Sunday, 15 August, the United Nations realized that a staggering 9.9 million Afghans had registered to vote, of whom almost 42 percent were women. In the words of Manoel de Almeida e Silva, a spokesman for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), "This registration process has concluded after a number of problems and what is even more remarkable is the number of Afghans registered in spite of these problems." One of those who have recently registered to vote is Afghanistan's former king.
- To assist in the proper running of the election some much needed foreign aid continues to flow in, including an addition $2 million from Australia (A$2 million has already been provided). "Australia's total assistance to Afghanistan since September 2001 stands at [A]$110 million, making it Australia's third largest humanitarian effort, exceeded only by East Timor and Iraq," said Australia's foreign minister Alexander Downer. The European Union is also providing an extra $10.9 million towards the running of the elections. Some 5,000 polling centers are expected to operate across the country, each consisting of 5 polling stations, making it a total of 25,000 places where the Afghans will be able to cast their vote in October.
- There's already considerable political interest in the presidential poll:
"Three of the political parties, the Afghanistan National Unity, the Afghanistan National Welfare and the National Ideal of the People of Afghanistan officially began their activities on Saturday August 17 after registering with the Afghan judiciary.
"The latest reports released by Afghanistan's Justice Ministry indicate that so far 61 parties have asked for permission to campaign for the nation's top job and 31 parties have obtained permission to participate in the elections.
"According to Afghanistan's laws on parties, one of the main conditions for establishing a party is to dissolve military sections; therefore, it seems that Afghanistan's active political parties have done an about-face in their policy by accepting this law."
- The Afghan Joint Electoral Management Body has recently announced the names of 18 eligible candidates for the presidential election. "Of the 23 candidates who filed their nomination papers prior to the 26 July deadline, three were rejected for failure to comply with the nomination procedures and two others later withdrew."
- Not surprisingly, it's those who have suffered the most in the past who feel most passionately about the need for democracy. Take, for instance, the Panjshir valley, which used to be the hotbed of anti-Taliban resistance and where the voter registration figures now are twice what the UN has originally expected. As the poll draws near, the enthusiasm is palatable:
"Like virtually every adult in this Panjshir Valley village, Rahmal Beg registered to vote weeks ago. Indeed, popular enthusiasm is so high for the Oct. 9 presidential election -- the first in Afghan history -- that thousands of people in the valley have reportedly registered twice.
" 'Everyone wants to vote,' the 75-year-old farmer said proudly. 'The radio, the mullahs and the district officials have all promoted the election. This is our chance to choose a leader who is patriotic and Islamic. Our valley was the center of resistance against the Russians and the Taliban. Now we want to become the center of democracy'."
- The feelings are similar among the minority Hazaras who have also strongly opposed the Taliban takeover in the 1990s and as a consequence suffered thousands of their own people killed by Mullah Omar's not-so-holy warriors:
"There is one main reason Sher Aga will not allow the Taliban to scuttle his chance to vote in the October presidential election. Aga... recalled how agents of the former regime fatally shot his friends in this provincial capital's bazaar.
" 'They really exploited us,' he said at a teashop in the market. 'They killed a lot of our youth, burned our houses, destroyed the Buddhas and even released sheep and cattle into our fields to destroy our crops. Now it's a good opportunity for us to elect someone to serve the country... I have a voter card, so now I have the power...'
"Aga's comments are typical of the ethnic Hazara minority who live in the central Afghan province of Bamian. Armed with a new constitution that guarantees equal rights to minority groups, Hazaras are engaged in an intense campaign to grasp some power and lift themselves from the bottom of Afghan society."
- There's more about the Hazaras in this current profile of their province:
"It is an idyllic image of what the rest of Afghanistan could be: University students play volleyball against the backdrop of the destroyed Bamyan Buddhas, while groups of chattering young girls walk to school through fields of wheat. Taliban fighters are hiding in caves just 60 kilometres to the south, launching attacks against U.S.-led coalition forces, election workers and the aid community, but the central province of Bamyan has become the safest, most egalitarian place in Afghanistan."
- Unlike in some conservative tribal areas of Afghanistan, women were actively encouraged to enroll to vote by the local Hazara religious and community leaders, and they have done so in numbers equal to their men. Speaking of Hazaras, the famous ancient Buddha statues, whose destruction by the Taliban had generated so much anger across the world a few years ago, might soon be raised from the ashes, or in this case, rubble:
"[T]he fate of the Buddhas may lie with a veteran Bavarian art restorer with a walrus moustache who has spent a lifetime in German castles and cathedrals. Edmund Melzl has been sent out by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) for the summer to sort through the rubble piles to evaluate whether they contain the raw material to rebuild... 'Yes, we think it is possible to recreate the Buddhas,' he said. 'In restoration terms, this is the biggest challenge imaginable. Really good restorers could do it. A giant scaffold is needed, and a lot of money. It could take years. We could train local people so Afghans would do most of the work'."
- Not a minority like the Hazaras, the Afghan women, too, continue to enjoy their new-found freedoms. Both Afghanistan and Iraq have for the first time sent official delegations to the Global Summit of Women, held this year in South Korea. "I can't compare before with now," says Soraya Rahim, deputy minister of the Afghan Ministry of Women's Affairs, who heads the nine-person delegation. Indicative of the huge social changes that have taken place in the post-Taliban Afghanistan, Masooda Jalal, a female doctor from the Tajik ethnic minority, is contesting the presidential elections. It's not just politics, as dangerous as they can be; after the hiatus of the fundamentalist rule women are also rejoining the security forces:
"Nahid, 18, from Kushhal Kan in the western part of Kabul, leaned against the wall as she watched hundreds of young male recruits, march in formation in a graduation rehearsal at Afghanistan's only police academy.
"Her decision to become a police officer had caused a family row, she said. Her uncle cut off all relations with her parents, who supported her decision to enter the academy. But despite such challenges, women are once again joining the ranks of the police in Afghanistan."
- And in their more traditional roles, yet still undreamed of under the Taliban, two Afghan women give birth to test tube babies at the Australian Concept Infertility Medical Centre in Karachi, Pakistan.
- As the situation in Afghanistan slowly returns to normal, refugees continue to flow back to their homeland: more than half a million have returned from Iran and Pakistan so far this year, bringing the total to 3 million out of the estimated 4.5 million who have left Afghanistan over the last quarter of a century of war and dictatorship. The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is providing an extra 20,500 housing units for the returnees. So far, "[a]s part of an initial reintegration effort to help vulnerable returnees, UNHCR, in collaboration with the Afghan Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation (MRR), provided some 100,000 rural shelter units as new homes that have benefited more than half a million Afghans in the past two years." You can read how this assistance is helping to rebuild houses in Kabul.
- In entertainment news, "Earth and Ashes", a film by Paris-based Afghan director Atiq Rahimi, shared the Best Picture prize with a Taiwanese entry at the sixth Osian Cinefan film festival. Back in Kabul, French Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres has officially reopened the capital's famous 600-seat Arian cinema, which was destroyed during the civil war in the 1990s. The cinema was rebuild with donations from the French film industry. And Afghanistan now has its first entertainment television channel:
"Using a mobile antenna positioned on a hill overlooking the capital, the broadcast range of 'Afghan TV' station only covers Kabul city, but its owner, Ahmad Shah Afghanzai, hopes to widen its range across the country in a year's time. 'Within a year we hope to be watched all over the country through a satellite station,' he told Reuters. Afghanzai, a 34-year-old businessman, has invested $200,000 in the nascent private operation, and needs nearly $3 million to expand it to cover the whole of the country."
- Mullah Omar must be turning in his cave. Another new station, Ayna TV (Mirror TV), which is broadcasting to northern Afghanistan, is also up and running.
- And in sports news, Friba Razayee and Robina Muqim Yaar are the first Afghan women to compete in the Olympics (in Judo and sprint, respectively): "When asked about her chances of winning an Olympic medal in Judo, Friba Razayee smiles and giggles that she's just happy to be able to compete at the games. 'I am really happy, winning or losing is not important for us, because we are the first women,' she says. 'The Olympic Games are important to us, we are all Olympians and it is important to us to participate and we are not here just for a medal'." Afghanistan was banned from competing in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, partly because the then Taliban government did not allow female athletes to participate.
- The sprinter Robina Muqim Yaar recently had this to say about the day she stopped wearing her burqa: "It was liberating, marvelous. I was very happy. The burka was not me, it was forced on many people by others." Her Olympic message back home is simple, yet powerful: "I am here to give hope to the women of my country. They can look forward to the future. Sports like athletics cost nothing to do. I would like to see many more Afghan women competing in sport."
- It's an example that others are already following. On the somewhat more junior level, eight girls with four months of soccer experience behind them are the first team from Afghanistan to participate in the International Children's Games, held this year in Cleveland, Ohio: "They're part of the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange, which brings Afghan girls to the USA for a six-week sports leadership camp. When program organizer Awista Ayub, a 24-year-old Afghan-American, learned about the Games, she realized it would be a great event for her girls to work toward." The rest, as they say is history; or in this case, history in the making. The team in now being couched by the local Cleveland soccer legend, Iranian immigrant Ali Kazemaini and President Bush has already met with the girls.
- Not just the two female members but the whole Afghan Olympic team is making history, even without getting onto the podium:
"For Afghanistan's athletes, gold medals are a distant dream. For them, the Athens Olympics merely represent ground zero after years left out in the cold. For the five Afghan athletes bravely carrying the flag for their war-torn nation, Olympic glory will be measured simply by the fact they were able to take part at all.
- Afghanistan Olympic officials have long-term plans. 'All of Afghanistan is proud of what the athletes are doing in Athens,' Sayed Mahmood Ziadashti, vice-president of the Afghan Olympic Committee, told Reuters on Sunday. 'This is a very important step for Afghan sport and will encourage the youth and younger generations so we can build for the future'."More here about the tough journey of the Afghan team from their war-torn country to the Olympic stadiums: "The road to Athens is tough for any athlete, but for some it is lined with land mines. For those representing war-torn countries, training can mean risking bombs and bullets to reach the stadium, and making do without the barest essentials of equipment and coaching... But many say the adversity they face has strengthened their resolve to push themselves to the limit." Let's hope that win, lose or draw, the Afghan Olympic squad with their determination, tenacity and hard work will provide some much needed inspiration and role models for their compatriots.
- And finally, a moral victory in the war on the local scourge of drug cultivation, after Afghanistan's religious leaders declare any involvement in drug industry out of bounds: "Afghanistan's Council of Ulemas earlier this month issued a fatwa, or religious decree, saying the cultivation, processing trafficking and consumption of drugs must be prevented... opium poppy cultivation, even if it is not consumed by Muslims or if it is done out of poverty, is illegal." This coincides with signs of increased efforts to combat drug cultivation: "US-led coalition forces are preparing a coordinated effort to attack the narcotics trade in Afghanistan, recognizing that drug income could be used to fund insurgents and terrorists in the country."
RECONSTRUCTION:
- Says Lt. Col. Scott Normandeau, of Manchester, New Hampshire, commander of the 157th Communications Flight for the Air National Guard: "There is a huge reconstruction effort going on... I came back here [to the United States] and was surprised at what I heard on the news." Having been following the media coverage of Afghanistan I can sympathize with Lt. Col. Normandeau. "I don't think people realize, this isn't a country at war," he continues. "It is a country that is in the process of recovering." Normandeau provides a good picture of how the reconstruction is taking place every day, out of the eye of news camera:
"The city is divided into reconstruction zones, whose first effort is to establish security. After that, people like Normandeau go from zone to zone, having tea with the governors and finding out what they need. Schools top the list, but after almost a quarter of a century trying to defend itself against invaders and the Taliban, they need everything.
"So Normandeau and others act as liaisons between the provinces and the workers who are being taught basic skills such as plumbing techniques and reinforcing concrete. 'The engineering unit there isn't just doing the building for them, they are teaching them how to do it themselves,' Normandeau said. 'The Afghanis are learning a trade.'
"Because the last two decades have been spent waging war, there hasn't been much time to create infrastructure, let alone build anything, Normandeau says. 'We are helping them rebuild and providing the security so they can do that,' he said. 'But we are just a part of it. Most of the security is provided by the Afghanis. And we are just one of 68 nations. There are Germans, Poles, Italians'...
"Normandeau's area of expertise is telecommunications. In that role, he worked with the nationals to design systems, obtain equipment, build new telecommunication centers. The 'first generation' of communication will be cell phones, he said, which will replace the switchboards and radios in use now. After that - in five to 10 years - fiber-optic cables will be laid."
- On the other side of the world, University of California-Berkeley recently hosted about 100 businesspeople, professors and government officials at the International Conference for the Rehabilitation and Development of Infrastructures in Afghanistan. The conference was organized by the Society of Afghan Engineers, a global group of about 500 members, which has a large local branch in the Bay Area:
"Invited to the conference were prominent guests including Afghanistan's deputy ministers of education, water and power, housing, irrigation, and education; leading scholars, such as Bernard Amadei, professor of civil engineering at the University of Colorado and head of the U.S. branch of Engineers Without Borders; and Afghan-American activists Rona Popal of Fremont and Humaira Ghilzai of San Francisco, both of whom simply want to understand what's going on in their homeland and see what they can do to help.
"The academic setting provided an opportunity for Said Mirzada, 29, a Newark computer engineer who plans to return to Afghanistan in about two years. Mirzada wanted to meet with big names in the field such as Hunter Lovins, president of Natural Capitalism in Colorado, who spoke about how Afghan engineers have an opportunity to develop their homeland 'right the first time' by using eco-friendly infrastructure. 'My dream is to rebuild Afghanistan and get it stabilized,' Mirzada said."
- Back on the ground, the World Bank has announced a grant of $456 million, half of nearly $900 million already pledged to Afghanistan, which will be released by June next year. The Bank has also approved a $145 million package of extra assistance: "$35 million in grant funding for education, a $25 million credit for urban reconstruction, a $80 million credit to support the Afghan government's medium-term development strategy, and a $5 million in seed money for a private investment guarantee initiative."
- In transport news, Russian Railways (RZD) will be constructing a railway network which will link major Afghan cities and extend to Iran and Pakistan. Meanwhile, Pakistani Minister for Railways, Ghous Bukhsh Mehar, has announced that his government is considering the construction of the Pakistan-Afghanistan rail link to slash the high transport costs between the two countries and open Afghanistan to the international markets. "To accomplish the objective, both Islamabad and Kabul had already agreed to lay down railway track of about 103 Km between Chaman and Kandhar", said the Minister.
- Pakistan is also donating 200 trucks and 100 buses to help in the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the Manila-based Asian Development Bank is funding the development of a master plan to "identify the main road systems required to link major markets, production centers and development opportunities in Afghanistan" as well as linkages between Afghanistan and its neighbors. Earlier this year, the Asian Development Bank has already pledged $1 billion in loans and grants to Afghanistan between 2005 and 2008.
- And in the private sector, some quite unexpected business concepts prove to be quite successful: "Afghanistan's first fashion brand -- 'Tarsian & Blinkley' -- is selling fast in New York and various other cities around the world. It is a product of a company a 30-year-old female fashion designer has created with the local non governmental organization 'Morning Star.'
" 'Morning Star''s office in the Taimai residential area in the heart of Kabul is always crowded with Afghan women, mostly those who lost their husbands to war, trying to meet the designer, Sarah Takesh, to sell their embroidered products..."
HUMANITARIAN AID:
- The Coalition forces, in addition to their vital security role, continue to assist in reconstruction. Some of their tasks are unlike any faced in previous deployments: for example, getting more girls to schools:
"Coalition officials are working with village elders in Aibat Khile to improve the learning environment for the girls who are starting to go back to school. The groundbreaking ceremony for Aibat Khile Girls School was held July 15. 'As the number of children in the village grows, so does the number of students,' said Gen. Maulano, a local mujahedeen commander. 'There will be 600 girls attending Aibat Khile Girls School when the construction is done'."
- The Coalition governments are also providing valuable assistance, which in some cases can take quite a high-tech form:
"The Bush administration is sending talking, electronic books to Afghanistan to give women basic lessons about public health. The concept is based on LeapPad, a top-selling line of electronic books that help children learn to read...
"The books have a small wand that can be used to touch images of everyday life in Afghanistan that are then described in Dari or Pashto, the country's two principal languages. One scene describes how to make water safe to drink, another how to give basic care to an infant. Health clinics initially will distribute 20,000 books to Afghan women."
- Other health assistance is more straight-forward: "Japanese surgeons successfully removed a bullet from a 13-year-old Afghan girl's head, eight years after she was caught in crossfire in her war-torn homeland. Fatema Safar was hit by a stray bullet during fighting when she was five years old. The bullet, embedded near the top of her nose, caused her chronic headaches. Safar was brought to Japan by a Tokyo-based aid group last month for treatment." You can also read this story about one humanitarian "over-stayer" in Afghanistan: "When Army Col. (Dr.) Richard Gonzales arrived in Afghanistan, his mission was to serve 90 days before he could return to his family and private practice in Puerto Rico. Now, six months later, his private practice is sold and he has signed on for an entire year." Col. Gonzales will be teaching modern orthopedic techniques to Afghan surgeons.
- Civilians, too, are active in humanitarian work on the ground in Afghanistan. These are people like Cindy and Zack Taylor (Zack is a gastroenterologist in Germantown), who have taken medical teams with them into Afghanistan on six occasions so far. The genesis of their effort lies on September 11, when Cindy Taylor was onboard one of the planes which were diverted to Canada when the terrorists struck. "We began to ask ourselves what we could do to help," says Cindy.
- Agriculture still remains Afghanistan's major industry, and so in that area, too, some major assistance programs are currently under way. A native of Fairfield, Iowa, Randy Frescoln, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development business and cooperative program director, is going to Afghanistan on a six-month assignment to help increase agricultural growth and rural incomes. Meanwhile, Canada's Drew Gilmour is "trying to marry business and aid by forming Development Works Canada with two silent partners" in a $4 million aid project to build a sustainable business for Afghan farmers. Says Gilmour: "Smart development doesn't have to be charity. Emergency relief is absolutely necessary, but if a country is going to recover, it has to have opportunities. Long-term recovery can only happen through economic investment and job creation." Hence, Gilmour's new project: a vegetable dehydration facility.
"Dehydration is labour-intensive and increasingly popular, two reasons that attracted Mr. Gilmour to it. In addition, the climate of Afghanistan allows many things to grow well. 'Afghanistan is an agricultural greenbelt. The quality of goods you can get there is amazing,' says Mr. Gilmour. 't's sandy, but things can grow in that environment. They have wonderful soil that has not been contaminated (by pesticides or chemicals).'
"The company has already sold its dehydrated vegetables to Dutch, German, British and French customers. With produce coming from 1,200 farms, the new venture employs 5,000 people. A top-of-the-line dehydration factory is under construction and will open in December, employing another 125 people. A second factory is being considered."
- Another of Gilmour's projects: producing sun-died tomatoes, with four hundred farms led by women participating in the project.
- It's not just the Coalition governments which are providing funds and support to aid in Afghanistan's reconstruction: the government of New Zealand, for example, is spending an additional NZ$5 million on education, agriculture and governance programs, targeted specifically at the southeast province of Bamiyan, which is the base of the operation for a New Zealand provincial reconstruction team.
- Private businesses are also contributing to the reconstruction: "All thanks to the efforts of a construction company owner from Matsudo, Chiba Prefecture, a badly needed schoolhouse is rising from the rubble in a small village in the east of war-ravaged Afghanistan. Mitsuhiro Kanemoto, 61, has donated the majority of the funds for the project with money he raised to help the children of Qara-i-wazir, about 10 kilometers south of Kabul."
- Japanese students, too, lend a helping hand: students form Tsuruma Elementary School in Tokyo's Machida, for example, have all donated their old school bags after the graduation. "Artificial-leather manufacturer Kuraray, Co. and JOICPF [Japanese Organization for International Cooperation in Family Planning] teamed up in February to collect and deliver the bags, along with stationery and other utensils. Contributions came from around the nation. Of about 10,000 bags donated so far, 2,200 were shipped from Yokohama in May to the mountainous Nangarhar province of eastern Afghanistan. JOICFP has asked an Afghan group to distribute the bags to schools."
SECURITY SITUATION:
- The fight against the Taliban remnants continues: in recent fighting in the Khost province along the Pakistani border, the US forces have killed 50 Taliban fighters. In another recent success, "Afghan forces acting on a tip captured four regional Taliban commanders and killed six other militants in two separate weekend raids in southern Afghanistan." And in eastern Afghanistan, a Taliban commander has been killed during an unsuccessful ambush against a Coalition convoy.
- Some successes in border control, too, as Pakistani Frontier Corps arrest 13 suspected terrorists near the border between the two countries, also seizing a "huge quantity of arms and ammunition" that the arrested men were attempting to smuggle into Pakistan.
- After two and a half years out of power and under constant military pressure, a split has developed in the Taliban ranks, resulting in the formation of a breakaway faction. Claiming the loyalty of about one third of fighters, the new faction is led by Sabir Momin, the Taliban's deputy operations commander in southern Afghanistan. According to Momin, "the Taleban militia was beset by internal differences and suffered serious losses due to poor leadership." May they continue.
- As the new Afghan security forces are slowly building up and gaining strength, there is more foreign military assistance with Eurocorp, the European security force, arriving on the Afghan scene. In the force's first deployment outside Europe in its 12 year history, Eurocorp has now taken control over the 7,000-strong peacekeeping contingent in Afghanistan: "Eurocorps is made up of detachments from five European Union countries - Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg and Spain. Created in 1992 by France and Germany, it was later put at the service of the European Union and is certified as a NATO rapid reaction force... Ultimately some 350 Eurocorps troops will be deployed to Kabul. While the peacekeepers patrol Kabul and parts of northern Afghanistan, another 20,000-strong coalition of troops under the United States' leadership is hunting militants in the southern and eastern parts of the country."
- There is a strong cooperation between the foreign troops and the new Afghan security forces: the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, for example, has been airlifting Afghani army units to trouble spots around the country. Other contributions are smaller in scale, but just as valuable: "Cisko the sniffer dog is worth more than a new Corvette sports car, but his ability to intercept explosives is priceless."
- While armed forces work to guarantee a more peaceful tomorrow for the country, international organizations are working to deal with the legacy of Afghanistan's bloody past:
"Ahmed has had to grow up fast. Aged 12, he found the bodies of his parents amid the rubble of their home bombed by Taliban aircraft four years ago. By then he was already a fighter in Afghanistan's resistance forces, and ever since has been providing for two younger sisters.
"With shaved head and troubled, darting eyes, the thin 16-year-old seems to have lost his childhood, although he loves to play soccer when he can. Like thousands of other child soldiers in Afghanistan being prepared for civilian life under a programme sponsored by the U.N. children's charity UNICEF, he is looking forward to a less turbulent future.
" 'I want to be a blacksmith,' he said, after enrolling in the scheme in a village on the old frontline between the Taliban and Northern Alliance forces north of Kabul."
- According Yousaf Ghaznavi, programme supervisor and UNICEF's local partner, between 2,000 and 2,500 former child soldiers (out of the total of around 8,000) have enrolled in the scheme since February. You can read more about this valuable program here.
No one is pretending that Afghanistan doesn't have a long way to go yet - it is, after all, starting almost from zero. But thanks to the Coalition military action that overthrew the Taliban regime almost three years ago, and with the continuing assistance from governments, organizations and individuals around the world, the Afghans are finally allowed to be optimists again. For a country that has suffered so much, it's a good start. « ok, I'm done now
Iraq Report: August 23/04
Andrew Olmsted
Welcome! Our goal at Winds of Change.NET is to give you one power-packed briefing of insights, news and trends from Iraq that leaves you stimulated, informed, and occasionally amused every Monday & Thursday. This briefing is brought to you by Joel Gaines of No Pundit Intended and Andrew Olmsted of Andrew Olmsted dot com.
TOP TOPICS
Other Topics Today Include: kidnapping reporters becomes a new Iraqi pastime; Iraq's National Assembly gets fisrt reviews; Sistani takes a vacation; Italian troops prepare to rotate; Iraq's soccer team makes two statements; humor from Iraq.
read the rest! »
REPORTS FROM THE FIELD
IRAQI POLITICS
- Ali, at Iraq the Model, discusses a strange, new experience inside the Iraqi National Assembly. The freedom to have open discussions and elections for the new Iraqi National Council. Zeyad from Healing Iraq has some thoughts as well.
- Grand Ayatollah Al-Sistani is leaving a London hospital, but remaining in England as he recovers from heart-related treatment. Al-Sistani is considered the most important moderating force in post-war Iraq and his departure from Iraq is seen by many as disapproval of Muqtada al-Sadr's activities.
THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE
- The Italian Friuli Briagade and 'Pozzuoli' unit will soon be "Changing the Guard" in Nasiriyah. The Trieste-based Friuli Briagade is due in Iraq on 27 August.
- Arthur Chrenkoff examines some recent U.S. polls regarding the war in Iraq and comes away confused.
ETCETERA
- SSG Grant, a reservist combat engineer with Company B, 458th Engineer Battalion at Camp Victory-North has created quite a following with his cartoon series - Bohica Blues. For Milspeak-challenged individuals, BOHICA is the acronym for Bend Over Here It Comes
Again. Hat Tip: Intel Dump
- The troops are still there. So is the Winds of Change.NET consolidated directory of ways you can support the troops: American, Australian, British, Canadian & Polish. Anyone out there with more information, contact us!
Thanks for reading! If you found something here you want to blog about yourself (and we hope you do), all we ask is that you do as we do and offer a Hat Tip hyperlink to today's "Winds of War". If you think we missed something important, use the Comments section to let us know. « ok, I'm done now
August 21, 2004
Good News Saturdays 2004
Joe Katzman
As many of you know, Saturday is the Jewish Sabbath. In that spirit, our Saturday posts to this blog have always been "good news". We share wisdom from groups like the Sufis, Hasidim and Zen Masters, highlight the acts of good and decent people, laugh at humourous events, and point to amazing discoveries that could benefit humanity.
The day chosen isn't important - the idea is. Personally, I think bloggers and readers could all use more breaks like this from the (often negative) news of the week. Good News Saturdays began back in 2002, and my Muslim, Jewish, Christian, and non-religious colleagues have all graciously agreed to respect and work within this Winds of Change.NET tradition. So, welcome to Winds of Change.NET... and Shabbat Shalom.
Sufi Wisdom: Obligation
T.L. James
by T.L. James of Mars Blog and Man of Two Worlds. Part of our weekly Sufi Wisdom series.
This week, it's time for another Mulla Nasrudin story -- one with which we can all relate on one level or another: The Mulla nearly fell into a pool. A man whom he knew slightly was near and saved him. Every time he met Nasrudin after that he would remind him of the service which he had performed.
When this had happened several times Nasrudin took him to the water, jumped in, stood with his head just above water and shouted: 'Now I am as wet as I would have been if you had not saved me! Leave me alone!'
This Isn't America
Gary Farber of Amygdala
But, of course, it is.
It merely mustn't be.
I called Specialist Joseph M. Darby an "American hero" here, mentioned him here, and asked who would pray for him here, when I last addressed the way he was being treated.
Specialist Darby is, as you either already know, or will know if you click the above links and their links, the man brave enough to see the terrible abuses going on at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, obtain a CD of photographic evidence, and deliver it to the authorities.
He was the only one to do so, despite so many people participating, and having such knowledge.
He knew the likely costs.
His wife, Bernadette, didn't.
Now comes GQ, with this searing, must-read, story. Please don't just read my excerpts. Click on the link and read the whole story.
read the rest! »
They shut him up. Fast. You never even saw him. No footage of him coming off the plane, no flags or banners waving, no parade in his honor. He came home from Iraq in May, but there wasn't even a formal announcement. In fact, you're not supposed to know he's here.
He lives in a secret location. It might be just down the street, or it might be halfway to nowhere. Maybe he was sitting at the next table last night, having dinner right beside you. You have no way of knowing: Nobody knows what he looks like.
[...]
Each day, she would catch another snippet of the hostility brewing around her. There was the candlelight vigil in Cumberland, Maryland, to show support for the disgraced soldiers, including the ones who did the torturing, about a hundred supporters standing in the pounding rain, as if beating and sodomizing prisoners were some kind of patriotic duty. Or the 200 people who gathered one night in Hyndman, Pennsylvania, waving American flags to honor Sivits, the first soldier tried in the scandal. They posted a sign in Hyndman. It said JEREMY SIVITS, OUR HOMETOWN HERO. And the mayor told reporters that even though Sivits would sometimes do "a little devilish thing," on the whole he was "a wonderful kid."
Where were the signs for Joe? Bernadette had to wonder. Where was his vigil? Where was his happy mayor? Where were his calls of support? Down at the gas station, Clay overheard some guys say that Joe was "walking around with a bull's-eye on his head," just casually, just like, oh, everybody knows Joe's dead. Some of Bernadette's family even let her know that other members of the family were against her now, that they couldn't support a traitor. The more Bernadette heard, the more paranoid she became. How serious was this? Her nerves were so fried from the media onslaught that she couldn't be sure what was serious and what was just talk. Had those cops really ignored Maxine because they were against Joe? And if so, what else would they ignore?
[...]
And then the phone rang.
It was a major from the U.S. Army, and he was coming over. Within a few minutes, everything began to shift around Bernadette, and it was hard to tell what was happening. She found herself in the passenger seat of an unmarked government vehicle, speeding down the highway to some unknown destination, Clay's truck right behind her with Maxine and the kids packed inside, the whole group snatched up by military protective custody without any prior warning or even a clear idea of why. Bernadette called Virginia and said, "We're in protective custody now. I don't know where we're going, but we'll call you when we get there."
The whole thing felt insane. Could all this really be happening? Did they know something she didn't?
Well, yes. Quite a few things, actually. Like, one thing Bernadette didn't know—because almost nobody knows it, because almost everybody who does know has either been lying or keeping it a secret—is the rest of the story, what really happened at Abu Ghraib. Oh, you hear allusions to the fact that certain things haven't been told, like Rumsfeld saying in May that the whole story is "a good deal more terrible" than what you've seen. But you don't hear Rumsfeld saying any more than that, or explaining what "more terrible" means.
[...]
All this in a prison, by the way, that was overcrowded by about 350 percent. According to Major David DiNenna, who served under Karpinski in Abu Ghraib, "Towards the end, we had over 7,000 prisoners. We were only supposed to run 2,000." Karpinski says the same thing.
Or how about this: children. Little kids. In the prison. Sure, the army will say they weren't little, but they were, and they still are. According to Florian Westphal, at the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva, there have been at least 107 juveniles in American custody this year, and according to an army spokesman at the Pentagon, there are still "about sixty juveniles under the age of 18"—but he insists that "the youngest would be 14." As if 14 isn't young. As if 14 is a perfectly reasonable age to be housed in an adult prison.
Not that it's even true.
At least one person from Abu Ghraib says the kids in custody go far younger than that. And this person ought to know. After all, it was her prison—that is, until military intelligence and private contractors took it away. "There was one kid in there, he looked like he was 8," remembers General Karpinski. "His hands were on the bars, and he was clearly a juvenile. So I touched his hands, you know, and I spoke to him in Arabic to the extent that I could. I asked him how old he was, and he said that he was almost 12 and that he wanted his mother and could his mother please come, and he was crying, and he was grabbing my hand so hard. I asked him, what did he do? What was he there for? And he said he was bringing some food, and all of a sudden these soldiers came, and there was a lot of noise and a lot of shouting, and him and his brother were just playing there, just bringing some food to these people. So I asked him, 'Do you know about any weapons? Saddam? Planning?' He was swearing to me, 'No, no,' and crying. His brother was with him in the cell, and I asked him how old he was, and he said 15."
[...]
You didn't see those pictures on the news though, didn't hear Rumsfeld talk about that. Just like nobody except Janis Karpinski is talking about the three military-intelligence officers who were sent home in January after the sexual assault of two female prisoners. That case is confidential, just like the roughly 5,950 pages of Major General Antonio Taguba's 6,000-page investigation of the Abu Ghraib scandal are "confidential." Just like all the pornography coming out of Abu Ghraib is being kept from you, the videos of Lynndie England fellating an unidentified man, the pictures of soldiers having sex. The members of the United States Congress apparently couldn't tell who the man was when they watched the highlight reel on a loop in a dark room on Capitol Hill one afternoon in May, an event that one Congressman calls "Bizarro World," with representatives coming and going while hundreds of pictures and videos rolled by, people like Nancy Pelosi sitting in front of a screen of depravity, with a military minder occasionally interjecting, "This one's from Tier 1A."
That wasn't on 60 Minutes II, either.
Just try calling your senator and asking him about that. Ask him what he saw. Any children? Pornography? Sexual abuse? Richard Durbin: No comment. Lindsey Graham: Can neither confirm nor deny. Joseph Lieberman: No response. Sam Brownback: No response. Carl Levin: No comment. Joseph Biden: No comment. Ron Wyden: Can neither confirm nor deny. Tim Johnson: Can neither confirm nor deny. Jon Corzine: No comment. Chuck Schumer: No response. Barbara Boxer: No comment. John Warner: No comment. Lincoln Chafee: No comment. Dianne Feinstein: No comment.
[...]
Three months in protective custody have been a mixed blessing. The house has three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a chandelier. That's all you need to know. That, and also that it's the nicest house they have ever had. They've made friends with the security detail and will probably stay in touch, and Joe changed his appearance, just a little, just to be sure. Read The Rest Scale: 10 out of 5. Read The Rest, for god's sake. And ask: how is it this is what we do to a hero?
This isn't America.
This should not be America.
This must not be America. Gary Farber's home blog is Amygdala. « ok, I'm done now
The Dahlia Flower
Joe Katzman
This Buddhist story comes to us via the famous Buddhist monk and author Thich Nhat Hanh. Finding Our True Home is a translation of the Amitabha Sutra, as well as an accessible commentary and introduction to the Pure Land school of Buddhism.
"During the war with ther French in Vietnam, there was a young poet named Quach Thoai...[who] died young and left a very beautiful poem...:
Standing by the fence,
You smile your wonderful smile.
Looking at you in silence I am amazed
I just heard you singing.
The words of your song
Belong to eternity.
With all my heart I bow to you in respect."
Flowers are often used to convey important meanings in Buddhism. What is this one teaching us?
August 20, 2004
Hooray For Gov. Dean
Armed Liberal
Via TAPPED, a seriously great comment from Howard Dean.
In a column available at Cagle Cartoons ( ??), Gov. Dean says: Europeans cannot criticize the United States for waging war in Iraq if they are unwilling to exhibit the moral fiber to stop genocide by acting collectively and with decisiveness. President Bush was wrong to go into Iraq unilaterally when Iraq posed no danger to the United States, but we were right to demand accountability from Saddam. We are also right to demand accountability in Sudan. Every day that goes by without meaningful sanctions and even military intervention in Sudan by African, European and if necessary U.N. forces is a day where hundreds of innocent civilians die and thousands are displaced from their land. Every day that goes by without action to stop the Sudan genocide is a day that the anti-Iraq war position so widely held in the rest of the world appears to be based less on principle and more on politics. And every day that goes by is a day in which George Bush's contempt for the international community, which I have denounced every day for two years, becomes more difficult to criticize. Right on, as we used to say.
I'm one of those who abandoned respect for the U.N. quite a while ago, and so have a hard time with those - Kerry included - who call for the U.S. to align it's foreign policy with U.N. mandates. The appalling track record of the U.N. continues, and weakens the claims of those who look to it as the world's moral arbiter.
Gov. Dean deserves applause for taking this stand, and for acknowledging - atypically for a politician - how it connects to his past views.
Iraqi Police Control Shrine ??; Sistani supports action
Robin Burk
UPDATED: I've added the ?? above since it's not clear who's in the shrine right now. But the Sistani quote is significant, if it's true.
From Omar at Iraq the Model:
IP enters Imam Ali shrine peacefully and Sadr is still not found.
News are still foggy but Al-Hurra TV reported that 400 members of Mehdi militia were arrested inside the shrine.
In another related development Radio Sawa reported this afternoon that Al-Sistani from London gave an interview to a news website (link unavailable).
The reporter of Radio Sawa said :
Al-Sistani called the militias to leave Najaf immediately and hand over the city to the Iraqi government describing the presence of militias as illegitimate and that the presence these militias inside the shrine is desecrating its holiness. Sistani had also stressed on the necessity to hold the elections according to the declared schedule saying that the results of the elections will decide who has the right to lead Iraq.
Sistani added “the coalition forces came and helped Iraqis to get rid of a brutal tyrant that murdered Iraqis and destroyed Iraq’s economy and they didn’t come to kill Muslims or attack Islam”.
This is almost too good to be true but Radio Sawa was always considered as a trust worthy source of information and I just hope that this is true as we’ve awaited such an announcement for a long time. It will deprive Muqtada of any significant legitimacy or credibility among the She’at if he had any previously. Muqtada and his thugs were dreaming to get support or at least silence from the She’at senior clerics. Now Muqtada is left with very little space to maneuver in; Sistani’s statement had put Muqtada in-between two hard choices either handing the city to the government and accepting the fact that he got defeated or he can go on with his crazy battle and get erased together with his militia.
Sistani's pronouncement, if confirmed, is very important.
Winds of Discovery: 2004-08-20
Hippercritical
Welcome! This is the 4th edition of "Winds of Discovery", a report by Glenn Halpern of HipperCritical that will take you on a wild ride across the spectrum of science and discovery.
Topics this week include: Biovaccines; Skinplex; Gene doping; Nanotech and alternative energy solutions; Allergen neutralization; Isaac Newton; DARPA's U-Haul in the Sky; Robot guards; Smart glass; Visual gadgets; Human hibernation; Space law; Space tourism; Wave power; Super tsunamis; Dead zones
If YOU have a link suggestion send it to discovery, here @windsofchange.net. Regular topics include:
read the rest! »
BIOTECH & MEDICAL
- The government continues to fund biovaccines in preparation for any future terrorist attacks through Project BioShield. However, government money may not be enough to cover all the costs. Learn more about the companies that are putting forth such efforts and the products they are developing.
- Women who think they will live longer lives tend to produce boys when pregnant. It sounds a little crazy, I know, but that's what the data indicates.
- Skinplex is a product which enables the skin to transmit data. Soon we'll be able to trade business cards and other information with nothing more than a handshake.
- The world continues to witness scandal after scandal involving athletes who seek to get ahead of the competition through drug doping. Too many athletes are getting caught, and its most embarassing when Olympians are bagged on the international stage. So, some are looking for new, less detectable solutions.
NANOTECH
INVENTION & DISCOVERY
- Food allergy sufferers may soon have reason to celebrate. Scientists at the Technion Israel Institute of Technology are using high frequency sound waves to neutralize the protein in sesame seeds which unleashes the harmful allergenic effects. The scientists believe that the same technology can be applied to peanuts, milk and other foods.
- Sir Isaac Newton is one of the most famous and most accomplished scientists in world history, and we will soon be able to learn much more about him on the web. I'll be checking it out for sure.
- DARPA is creating its own 'U-Haul in the Sky' which will be able to deliver an 1,800 person unit to any spot in the world within four days. Sure, sometimes DARPA stretches it's creative mind a bit too far, but then other times they come up with the most useful technologies in the world.
- Smoke em out! Who? No, not al Qaeda or the Taliban. In Tokyo, robot guards are being designed to locate and even apprehend ordinary intruders.
- Have you ever felt uncomfortable sitting next to a glass window on a bright and sunny day because the heat from the sun seems to keep pouring in? Well, smart glass will provide the benefits of sunlight without all that heat.
- The Society for Information Display held its annual international symposium where visitors got to play with all the up and coming visual gadgets that will soon (or already have) hit the marketplace. Very cool stuff.
SPACE
- If humans will ever reach the most distant galaxies, then it will certainly require some degree of hibernation. A typical trip might span across several generations. Well, while it still may be decades away, scientists are already at work studying the possibilities of human hibernation.
- As we venture further away from this planet, space law is becoming a bright new field for the next generation of attorneys, and the rules are still being written.
- Meanwhile, Alan Boyle's Cosmic Log explores the future of space tourism.
THE ENVIRONMENT
- John Atkinson explores wave power and its potential to reduce California's dependency on coal, natural gas and all that stuff.
- The Beeb frets over the future possibility of a super tsunami and other "gee-gees" which could wipe out whole cities, and
- "Dead zones" have been detected off the Oregon coast and Scotland too. Global warming may be the culprit.
- On the bright side, the huge uniform stretches of Purple Loosestrife cluttering up North American ecosystems may soon be a thing of the past. This invasive European species has some natural enemies, and tests in my different locations reveal that importing some of them will cut Lythrum salicaria down to size - without negative effects on the rest of the ecosystem.
Please check back soon for another exciting edition of Winds of Discovery! « ok, I'm done now
Hatewatch Briefing 2004-08-20
Lewy14
Welcome! This briefing will be looking hard at the dark places most mainstream media seem determined to look away from, to better understand our declared enemies on their own terms and without illusions. Our goal is to bring you some of the top jihadi rants, idiotarian seething, and old-school Jew-hatred from around the world, leaving you more informed, more aware, and pretty disgusted every month. This Winds of Change.NET HateWatch briefing is brought to you by Lewy14. (Email me at my handle "hatewatch" here at windsofchange.net). Entil'zha veni!
HIGHLIGHTED TOPICS
- Religious Hate: More blood libels from Egypt; Zarqawi threatens the Dutch; Palestinians teach kids to hate; Islamists in Pakistan confront modernity – with bombs; Non-moderate Muslims preach in the West; American Muslim vows to fight us – and does; Jihad’s role in Darfur.
- Idiotarian Seethings: Socialist Workers Party discards their shibboleths; Nader traipses through the tropes of anti-Semitism.
- Race and Culture: Rage at Israelis visiting Auschwitz; Iran shows Olympic spirit; terrorists are ‘normal’ – good news or bad?; echoes of Abu Ghraib; self-policing hatred in the blogosphere; old “flames” burn Kerry critic.
read the rest! »
Religious Hate:
- Al-Tawhid wa al-Jihad threatens Dutch with 'Islamic earthquake' Hey, they know it really is an international coalition. “You did not learn the lesson of Spain” says Zarqawi’s group (what lesson is that again?) Similar greetings have been extended to Denmark and of course Italy. Old CW: AQ groups are scary because they don’t have a strategy. New CW: AQ groups are scary because they do have a strategy.
- Frontpage’s Erick Stakelbeck and Michal Deskalo write that Hamas has up a website to indoctrinate and recruit suicide bombers. According to the article, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al-Aqsa Martyr’s Brigade all run summer camps to indoctrinate youth in terror. It’s hard to believe but if you see the pictures that Charles Johnson has put together, it’s quite chilling. The part that sticks in my craw: Hamas recognizes academic excellence, but then,
The students were presented with certificates of achievement and told to avoid “the Western lands of the infidels” while pursuing their college degrees. Feh, again with the kufr cooties. Hat tip – Rochi Ebner.
- Not exactly hate speech, but interesting nonetheless: Islamists in Pakistan chose to conduct debate about the appropriate curricula for madrassa – with bombs. I too have wanted to blow up my computer on occasion, but this strikes me as… extreme.
- These guys are not moderates: MEMRI has translated a Friday sermon delivered by Sheikh Abu Hamza Al-Masri in London’s Finsbury Park Mosque on April 23. And Qazi Hussain Ahmed (”Suicide bombers represent the real Ummah”), leader of Pakistan’s largest religious party Jamaat-e-Islami, is to speak in Oslo August 22
- You remember Mohammed Junaid Babar, don’t you?
This is the man who attracted a lot of attention after 9/11 by claiming that his mother had safely gotten out of the World Trade Center on that day -- and that he was going over to Afghanistan to join Al-Qaeda. Turns out when he said he would fight us, he meant it: he’s pleaded guilty to a bomb buildings in London, and is suspected of planning terror in New York. why? "I did grow up there. But that doesn't mean my loyalty is with the Americans," said Babar in a November 2001 interview. "My loyalty will, has always been, is, and forever will be with the Muslims.” Interesting that he sees these as disjoint sets. Can we afford to disbelieve people who say such things?
- I’ve seen many items on the centrality of jihad with respect to the current crisis in Darfur. Garry Farber points to a Slate piece which discusses jihad as motivation for Darfur genocide. I’ll confess I’m still not clear on this. I need a diagram.
Idiotarian Seethings:
- From Winds of Change commenter “JK” comes this tidbit about the Socialist Workers Party:
At the SWP’s Marxism 2003 conference one former Alliance member claimed that women’s rights and gay rights were described by the secretary of the Stop the War Coalition as a ‘shibboleth’ which couldn’t be allowed to get in way of unity with Muslim groups. So much for the universalist nature of secular humanism.
- Via Joe Katzman to Michael Totten, check out this WaPo editorial calling out Ralph Nader for accusing our President and Congress of being Israeli “puppets”.
This is poisonous stuff. And if Mr. Nader doesn't understand what such words actually mean, the less savory elements of American society certainly know how to read such code. Two cheers for the Post (if they ran this as News, they’d get three), but with respect, most elements of American society know how to read this “code”, if you can even call it that.
Race and Culture:
- Via Drudge: Just another case of random Frenchmen ranting at Jews who make the mistake of identifying with Israel. That these Jews were the subject of violent rage while visiting Auschwitz makes it noteworthy.
It was simply shocking," he [Weinbaum] says. "In some way, I felt that these men were satisfied to visit Auschwitz. This was another reminder that in Western Europe there is sympathy for dead Jews; it's just the live ones that they cannot tolerate."
- Iranian world Judo champion Arash Miresmaeili has refused to fight Israeli Ehud Vaks. The refusal is “voluntary” but consistent with the policy of the Iranian Olympic team, which remains defiant:
“Our policy is not to recognize the Zionist regime in any international event ... We cannot accept the presence of anyone in international events under the flag of that regime”, government spokesman Abdollah Ramazanzadeh told a news conference. Principled political stand, or outright bigotry? The right of an athlete to protest is hard to question, but his right to do so immune to penalty and sanction must be forfeit. A price must be paid, or else international sporting will have to end all pretense to being a brake on discord, and assume the role of an engine. Sadly it seems the IJF disagrees with me, there will be no penalties for Miresmaeili or his team as the IJF have accepted the “official” dodge disqualification that Miresmaeili couldn’t make weight. I don’t believe it.Iran's President Mohammad Khatami said Miresmaeili's act would be recorded among the nation's glories. Obviously Iran’s “moderate” president doesn’t believe it either.
- Perhaps the War on Terror really is a war on bad philosophy:Psychiatrist: Terrorists 'normal'
Suicide bombers are rational, sane people whose choice to end their lives as they kill others is considered perfectly normal in societies they grow up in, the Globe and Mail reported yesterday from a southern Ontario religious conference. How’d they get those ideas growing up?
- The echoes of Abu Ghraib continue to sound… ugly. Via Drudge we learn that the scandal’s whistleblowers, Sgt Joseph Darby, requires protective custody, and his family is shunned and threatened by the community. This “community” is obviously unworthy of the name.
- Meanwhile, back in the blogosphere, Gary Farber follows up on Bjørn Stærk’s efforts to call out hatred in blog comments. Bjørn comments:
One thing I've begun to notice is how much easier it is to get links by taking another cheap shot at left-wing idiots than by criticizing people on your own side. Bjørn was pretty widely linked, though.
- And in that spirit of Bjørn’s call to action, I have to say I find this cartoon from Cox and Forkum to be over the top: neither nice, nor true, nor necessary. Nor funny.
- Via Drudge, more lessons on how not to conduct yourself online: Jerry Corsi, co-author of Unfit for Command” has had his bigoted internet flames come back to burn him. The more prominent your voice becomes, the bigger the bite, and “fairness” has nothing to do with it.
A Hopeful Snarky Note:
- The latest CD-ROM from
patriotic resistance fighter Jordanian militant terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is more of the same tired material: wage jihad against the “crusaders”, “get up friends, God has opened the doors of paradise (to martyrs).”… boring. It’s like his script hasn’t changed in, like, fourteen centuries or something… oh wait… anyway, what really ticked me was not the content, but the title: ‘The Winds of Victory’. Sounds a lot like… hey! Paging Joe Katzman! I think the Z-man is infringing on your intellectual property! Forget the Patriot Act, sic the DMCA on this guy!
« ok, I'm done now
62 Reasons to Adopt A Sniper
Joe Katzman
Phil Carter of Intel Dump:
"I have read a great deal about Operation Iraqi Freedom and the subsequent fights to pacify parts of Iraq such as Ramadi, Fallujah and Najaf. But when I saw this statistic about sniper kills, it really hit me that we are decisively engaged:"
The rest of Phil's post makes a compelling (if indirect) case for supporting the efforts of law enforcement officers, veterans, and people like you to "Adopt A Sniper." Let's get these people the specialized equipment they need to do this critical job.
Going Ape in Sudan
Joe Katzman
The violence in Sudan is continuing without letup. AFP reports that the Sudanese state capital Kassala has been the scene of "organised attacks which last several hours", targetting "bakeries and grocery stores":
"They attack women and children, run into homes, "breaking kitchen utensils and snatching food from the children" and open the doors of refrigerators to get at the food inside, according to one resident, Salah Osman al-Khedr."
Sounds bad. Maybe we can muster an international resolution or something to condemn such behaviour. That'll show 'em.
"He put the phenomenon down to the wholesale cutting down of trees which has deprived the monkeys of their sole source of food. The attacks start at dawn and sometimes last until dusk, he said."
Oh. On second thought, perhaps they should look at the monkeys and ask: "why do they hate us?"
|
Recent Entries
Search
Help Gary Out
Swag N' Stuff
The Team:
Winds of Change.NET Affiliates & Blogkids
Recent Comments
Read our comments policy.
Armed Liberal: Last time I checked, this wasn't the Chomsky blog...he's got one, and might I (gently) suggest that ... [ go]
Josh Yelon: Darby's problem can be summed up in three words: Blame America First. The accusation "you're a Blam... [ go]
Joe Katzman: Jesus christ, I step away from the blog for 2 @#$%! days...
This thread is ridiculously off topic. ... [ go]
Joe Katzman: SBD,
Actually, LiberalBlogger is using a humourous "Leftist Cant Generator" program at Spinline.NET... [ go]
Daveb: Regarding this..
Grand Ayatollah Al-Sistani is leaving a London hospital, but remaining in England... [ go]
Archives By Category
Archives by Date
Links
|