Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Can't wait till the shoe is on the other foot


Not guilty. The Israeli captain who emptied his rifle into a Palestinian schoolgirl (From the British Guardian)
An Israeli army officer who fired the entire magazine of his automatic rifle into a 13-year-old Palestinian girl and then said he would have done the same even if she had been three years old was acquitted on all charges by a military court yesterday.
...
The manner of Iman's killing, and the revelation of a tape recording in which the captain is warned that she was just a child who was "scared to death", made the shooting one of the most controversial since the Palestinian intifada erupted five years ago even though hundreds of other children have also died.
...
In the recording, a soldier in a watchtower radioed a colleague in the army post's operations room and describes Iman as "a little girl" who was "scared to death". After soldiers first opened fire, she dropped her schoolbag which was then hit by several bullets establishing that it did not contain explosive. At that point she was no longer carrying the bag and, the tape revealed, was heading away from the army post when she was shot.
Following the verdict, Capt R burst into tears, turned to the public benches and said: "I told you I was innocent."

They all are innocent.  They will always be innocent. After all, the life of a Palestinian child is nothing but a waste of oxygen. 

The army's initial investigation concluded that the captain had "not acted unethically"
Now I know what they mean when they say the Israeli Army is the most Ethical army on the world.

And suddenly, I feel enlightened.  Thank you Israel.

Khaled
Related Posts:
Links:

Monday, August 30, 2010

This one is so funny, for so many reasons.

‘Sinner’ singer given 39 lashes by rabbis
JERUSALEM POST STAFF   
Punishment for performance in front of "mixed audience".
A singer who performed in front of a “mixed audience” of men and women was lashed 39 times to make him “repent,” after a ruling by a self-described rabbinic court on Wednesday.

Rabbi Amnon Yitzhak, founder of the Shofar organization aimed at bringing Jews “back to religion” (hazara betshuva), has made it his recent mission to fight against musical performances for both men and women.

His “judicial panel,” with Rabbi Ben Zion Mutsafi and another member, sentenced Erez Yechiel to 39 lashes in order to “rid him of his sins.”

In a video clip of the court posted on the Shofar Web site, Ben Zion said that those who make others sin (mahtiei rabim), such as artists who make men and women attend performances or dance together, have no place in the world to come.

He displayed a leather strip he said was made by his father from ass and bull skin, with which Yechiel was to have been whipped.

Yechiel, who said, “I accept upon myself the lashing for my sins,” was ordered to stand by a wooden poll with his head facing north (“from whence the evil inclination comes”), his hands tied with a azure-colored rope (“a symbol of mercy”), and served his “sentence.”
Does that remind you of something?
Khaled

Sunday, August 29, 2010

If you are an Orthodox Jew spiritual leader, it is OK to say such things.

As if it was not enough to have a demagogue idiot fill the air waves in Washington's Lincoln Memorial this Saturday, the hateful racist bigoted evil religious Jewish 'spiritual' leader in Israel also has to have his moment on his holy day.  Do not expect anything holy in his ramblings.

Only an Israeli spiritual leader and head of a party that is in the ruling government in our Ally/Master Nation of Israel can utter this and cause no global wave of condemnation by the 'civilized world' leaders.


Meet Ovadia Yosef: a Shining Light Unto the Nations.
"Abu Mazen and all these evil people should perish from this world," Rabbi Ovadia was quoted as saying during his weekly sermon at a synagogue near his Jerusalem home. "God should strike them with a plague, them and these Palestinians."

In 2001, the spiritual leader of the ultra-Orthodox faction gave a speech in which he also called for Arabs' annihilation.
"It is forbidden to be merciful to them," he was quoted as saying. "You must send missiles to them and annihilate them. They are evil and damnable."

Khaled

Link:
Previous posts showing the 'glorious spirituality' of Israeli religious leaders and community:

Common Nonsense: Glenn Beck - the Triumph of Ignorance


How much longer we have to endure idiocy being the loudest voice in the country?

We are supposed to be better than that.

It is hard to find anything to say about 'Beck the idiot' that has not been said before.  But when a village clown has the power to mobilize tens of thousands on demand: that is a sad day.  He tarniches MLK memories with a fake call to 'restoring honor' to our country, on a day and in a place where MLK made the call that he is most remembered and revered for.

Restoring Honor?!

How about restoring sanity?
 Unfortunately, that is not a call that will mobilize many these days.
 Khaled

The picture and the title taken from:
And for something sane to read, check The Nation:

    Sunday, August 15, 2010

    The World Is Full of Ground Zeroes

    A true patriot shows his love for fellow citizens
    The nonsensical and mostly hateful discussion about the the so-called 'Ground-Zero Mosque' just shows how politics and religion are almost one and the same thing in many areas of the US at present.

    The so-called separation of Church and State is a great principle, but is getting  less and less implemented.  And even when religion is not explicitly part of the public discussion, the religious tones seem to underlie the discourse.

    In my opinion, it is no coincidence that this ugly situation is being kindled more and more in preparation for the the November primaries where the politicians of the 'American Party of God', aka the Republican Party, would sell there souls - if they have any - for a seat in the congress.

    But one good thing that came out of this is the energization of many good people in the defence of the group that wants ot build the Cordoba Islamic Center, and of Muslims in America against the tide of hate they are facing.

    A good friend of ours has forwarded me an article in the Huffington Post that that is mostly a letter written by a friend of hers, Anya Cordell.  Our friend describes Anya Cordell as a Jewish activist that "... has been actively engaged in monitoring and responding to the rising tide of distortions and lies related to Islam, Muslims and groups designated as the other."

    I will be quoting excerpts from the letter only here, but the introduction by the Huffington Post writer, William Spear, is also very well-worth you time, and you can read the whole thing here.

    ... I've been wondering about your response to the multiple traumas related to 9/11 and lower Manhattan; the victims on the planes and on the ground, the rescue workers, the witnesses on the scene and watching on screens (all of us), and Muslims the world over who became instantly associated with something as horrifying and destructive as this event. As you know, I received the 2010 Spirit of Anne Frank Outstanding Citizen Award from The Anne Frank Center USA (in lower Manhattan ) for my work against the designating of any group as "Other." At this time of controversy surrounding the Islamic Cultural Center in New York, I thought I'd share my reflections with you and your audience.
    When I think about the issue of "sacred ground" at the site of the 9/11 attacks in New York, and what should occur on or around it, I think about the innumerable "ground zeroes" around the world, where loved ones of families we never hear of have died in unspeakable violence. I think about what monuments or markers do, or do not, exist to commemorate where they fell or burned or disintegrated. Despite the unspeakable trauma in New York, it strikes me as quite a luxury to be able to memorialize and sanctify such ground, a luxury afforded to only a very few grieving families, the world over.
    After September 11, a number of innocent men, not just Muslim or Arab, but also Sikh, Hindu, South Asian, and others, were murdered in the U.S. by self-avowed 'patriot' vigilantes. I know the families of some of these victims. The widow of one works every day standing exactly where her husband was shot in cold blood, behind the counter of the service station he ran. There is no hushed and sacred ground there, except for an instant when momentary wisps of incense her father lights in the doorway each day fade away, just before the customers tramp through to pay for their gas, cigarettes, lottery tickets and sodas. Customers do remember and speak of the murdered man who was the soul of generosity -- a U.S. citizen who was Hindu, from India, who would let you drive away with a tank of gas and the promise that you'd pay him back if you didn't have money in your wallet that day. I suppose their memory is his memorial. Similarly, a Sikh family works every day where their loved one was slain, in Mesa, Arizona on September 15, 2001 by a killer who had vowed to "kill the ragheads responsible for 9/11," and instead murdered a sweet man wearing a turban as a tenet of his Sikh faith.
    There is no memorial at the intersection where I live, where a black neighbor, was gunned down by a white supremacist in 1999, although we did organize nightly walks from the site, which folks attended for months, sometimes accompanied by the victim's wife and children, two of whom witnessed their father's shooting. There is a slight imprint of a leaf in the cement curb where he fell, (I think the curb was set before the murder), a coincidence that feels to me a tiny bit meaningful.
    These are my thoughts when I read of the families of some of those who died in lower Manhattan, wanting "ground zero" and its environs (how far?) to be hallowed in a way that only the most privileged nations can afford. ..
    Perfectly innocent people die daily as victims of what is referred to as "collateral damage" in dusty parts of the globe. Children disintegrate stumbling across minefields. All manner of mayhem and terrorism destroy lives, but somehow we imagine that those who were lucky enough to have lived and worked in New York apparently stand (figuratively, no longer literally) far apart from these multitudes of others, who were equally innocent, whose deaths were equally shocking, whose families loved them just as much and who also clawed at earth with bare hands trying desperately to rescue and recover them. ...
    After 9/11 I felt compelled to reach out to the innocent families I mentioned above, and in the years since, I've watched the anti-Muslim drumbeat intensify in ways that impact multitudes of innocent people. All the Muslims I know are traumatized by the stereotyping and characterizations that are now rampant. Rather than celebrating 9/11 (as they have been accused), they despair of it. All of them fear; children being taunted and bullied, adults being more vulnerable in public and in the workplace. ...
    Following a presentation, a student once whispered to me, "Thank you so much for your program. I'm Muslim, but no one here knows it." That sent chills down my spine, reminding me of historic times when people needed to try to "pass" to be safe. As a Jewish woman, the moment made me think of Anne Frank, and the disparity between the Nazi stereotypes of Jews, and the reality of the innocents who were slaughtered. It also made me think of the heroic non-Jewish friends who supported Anne's family in hiding, and the necessity of crossing divides to be allies for one another. ...
    I would trust my Muslim and Hindu and Sikh friends with my life. I'm sure there are some Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, Jews, Christians and others who might terrify me. In my experience there are wonderful people of all faiths, who claim their religion has taught them their values, and awful people of all faiths who also claim their religion has taught them their values. I am much more interested in meeting people than in labeling them. ...
     Khaled

     Anya Cordell, Author, RACE: An OPEN & SHUT Case
    Links:

    Friday, August 6, 2010

    American victim of our Israeli Masters finally speaks out.

    Emily Henochowicz is a Jewish American young woman who was in the occupied Palestinian Territory at the time the Israeli 'Defence' Forces slaughtered several Turkish civilians and one American  in the Gaza flotilla largest ship, Mavi Marmara.  In the protests that erupted in Ramallah the following day, that young art student lost her left eyes after a member of the Israeli 'Defence' Forces aimed his gas canister gun directly at unarmed demonstrators and, simply, pulled the trigger.

    Emily Henochowicz
    The Israeli Masters are usually accustomed to violently responding to Palestinians even when they are peacefully protesting. And if Israeli response leads to death of a little girl or an old man, or the maiming of scores of young Palestinians, that is still OK - safety of the masters is of utmost importance and takes priority over the lives and well being of an Arab or even many Arabs.

    Violence by Israeli bullies against Arabs is not usually the bullies are held accountable for.  And if a soldier or an officer is unlucky enough to be taped while, for example, shooting an Arab who is a hand-cuffed and blind-folded at short range (Reuters Video), the worse that could happen is usually moving them to another 'Defence' unit where they can resume their 'offensive activities.  For the Israeli masters, good life must go on.

    This time it was an American young woman - and a Jewish one -  that got injured.  She lost her left eye, and is lucky she is alive.  Yet, hell did not open loose for the Israeli cowards that feel they can abuse Arabs without fear of any accountability.

    The fact that she is American did not make any difference.  The fact that she is Jewish, and that her father is an Israeli did not make much difference either. Our US government did not summon the Israeli ambassador, or issue an immediate strong denouncement of the violence against unarmed civilian American woman.  They usually save their convulsions for Iran as they did after Iran's government repression of protests by domestic opposition after the last Iranian elections.

    I guess in the hierarchy, Israel trumps not only Arabs and their interest, but also Americans and their interests.  Some cowardly government and politicians we have.

    Sadly,  it is not only the US government; the main stream media that did not pay any attention to one of their own citizens violently abused by a friendly government that we send aid to, and protect in all international venues at the expense of our own interest.  Yet we behave as if they are our masters.

    Emily Henochowicz was interviewed recently by Amy Goodman on Democracy Now and it is worth watching.


    Khaled.

    Links:

    Sunday, August 1, 2010

    Jewish Anti-Defamation League (ADL) put their dirty foot in their mouth.

    Abraham Foxman
    I never liked the ADL.  Somehow they send a vibe of sneaky, dishonest and unprincipled opportunism.  No matter what subject they meddle in, their stance reeks of pure cheeky pro-Israel propaganda (i.e., Hasbara) coated with an ultra-thin layer of civil rights defense.

    The only demonstration I organized was against their ugly head, Abraham Foxman who was invited - by some people who like pushing the envelope - to speak as a keynote speaker before St Louis Interfaith Partnership.
    It was a joke to invite the head of a so-called civil right advocacy group who - was a week earlier in Israel to support their bloody deliberate assault on Lebanon civilians and infrastructure - to be the key note speaker in an annual meeting of INTERFAITH organization.  It was a slap in the faith to St. Louis Muslim community.

    The logic of pro-Israel apologists is usually that anything a loud-mouth pro-Israel lobbyist does is an example of sublime morality, innocence and thoughtfulness.  And if you do not like... Well, that is because you are an anti-Semite - or a self-hating Jew, depending of the circumstances.

    I am very happy that the shameful Anti Defamation League has recently opened its out only to put its dirty foot in it.
    Their stance is deliberate, and 'well argued' -so it will be very difficult for them to spin it into something like: 'it was taken of of context'  or 'it was an impulsive low-level and unauthorised person who did it, and we fire him'.   This one is sticking - and it shows the real ADL: bigoted and hypocritical, just as I always suspected.
    The statement contains a sentence that will go done their history as a landmark of their hypocrisy:
    "But ultimately this is not a question of [civil] rights, but a question of what is right."
    Coming for this 'pretend' civil rights group, it is a statement that makes you want to vomit.  Of course, from their perspective 'what is right' is usually what they deem it to be so.

    What they did is not sitting  well with many progressive Jewish voices and they are outspoken against it.  Jeffrey Blankfort has an excellent post on the wonderful MondoWeiss blog about the ADL and thier dirty history.
    Other postings on the same great blog cover other aspects of the issue.
    ‘ADL’ statement rationalizing bigotry draws wide scorn - Philip Weiss - MondoWeiss
    Foxman plays Holocaust card - Philip Weiss -MondoWeiss
    And by Paul Crugman in the New York Times Blog
    Bad for the Jews - Paul Krugman Blog - NYTimes.com
    It is nice to see an ugly face finally lose the half-pound of make-up it is hiding behind.

    Khaled

    Post-script

    Zakaria poses thr question:"Does Foxman believe that bigotry is OK if people think they're victims? Does the anguish of Palestinians, then, entitle them to be anti-Semitic?"
    And I, Khaled, may add: Does the Jewish suffering during the holocaust justify the racism and bigotry that Palestinian face on daily basis in there own occupied historic Homeland?