In war there are no rules: A number of IDF soldiers have over the last year faced investigation and penalty for documenting themselves performing questionable acts in front of Palestinian prisoners or while on patrol. Full article and video here.
Author: mara.ahmed
French women cause a stir in niqab and hot pants in anti-burka ban protest
Two French female students have made a film of the pair of them strolling through the streets of Paris in a niqab, bare legs and mini-shorts as a critique of France’s recently passed law. Calling themselves the “Niqabitches,” the veiled ladies can be seen strutting past prime ministerial offices and various government ministries with a black veil leaving only their eyes visible, but with their long legs naked bar black high heels. Bemused passers-by can be seen gawping at the pair or asking to take photographs in the clip. At one stage in the film, the two women approach the entrance to the ministry of immigration and national identity, only to be told by a policeman to go elsewhere. However, a policewoman also present is delighted by their clothes. “I love your outfit, is it to do with the new law?” she asks. “Yes, we want to de-dramatise the situation,” one girl replies. “It’s brilliant. Can I take a photo?” asks the policewoman, who will soon be required to fine public niqab wearers. Full article and video here.
A Nobel Peace Prize laureate in prison
A Nobel Prize laureate sits in Israeli detention, a few days after Israel hijacked another Gaza-bound aid boat, whose passengers included a Jewish Holocaust survivor, an Israeli father who lost a child to terror, and an air force pilot-turned-conscientious objector. It hijacked the boat to prevent them from reaching their destination and reminding the world of the blockade. This is the portrait of Israel today. (Gideon Levy) Full article.
When the Taliban calls, pick up?
Apparently, guilt by association is alive and well. You can easily become an “enemy” if you have the wrong friends. Big Brother is back, if he ever left. Many warned that we have no real online privacy especially with the Obama Administration threatening to monitor, and, when think necessary, shut down the Internet. This paranoia and blow against freedom is being fed by what political scientist Michael Brenner calls a “phony war,” writing that, “warnings are sounding about the growing menace to the US homeland from homegrown terrorism. A recent Congressional Research Service purporting to quantify that increased risk has created a stir. All this angst needs to be placed in dispassionate perspective. America stills lives in an acutely anxious post-9/11 state.” Full article.
Big Brother Obama: US to spy on Internet messaging
The Obama White House is backing new regulations that would compel popular Internet messaging services like Facebook, Skype and Blackberry to open up their systems to FBI surveillance, the New York Times reported Monday, citing federal law enforcement and national security officials. The threat to democratic rights goes far beyond anything envisioned by the Bush administration. The goal is to make all forms of electronic communication that use the Internet subject to wiretapping and interception by federal police agencies. Full article.
U.S. Tries to Make It Easier to Wiretap the Internet
Essentially, officials want Congress to require all services that enable communications — including encrypted e-mail transmitters like BlackBerry, social networking Web sites like Facebook and software that allows direct “peer to peer” messaging like Skype — to be technically capable of complying if served with a wiretap order. The mandate would include being able to intercept and unscramble encrypted messages. The bill, which the Obama administration plans to submit to lawmakers next year, raises fresh questions about how to balance security needs with protecting privacy and fostering innovation. And because security services around the world face the same problem, it could set an example that is copied globally. Full article.
IslamAWAY from Hasan Minhaj
opening of “concurrence” and “psychic spaces” at naz – oct 1, 2010
ARTS CENTER GALLERY NAZARETH COLLEGE: Concurrence features Mitch Messina & Karen Sardisco in the Arts Center Gallery. Psychic Spaces features Cathy Kirby & Nancy Beikirch in the Colacino Gallery.
went to the opening today. especially enjoyed my friend cathy kirby’s beautiful artwork and mitch messina’s sculptures.
Sculptor Mitch Messina’s pieces are “reminiscent of the forms and functions of pre-industrial tools that have become unfamiliar or lost to us with the rise of industrialization. Messina sees the implements he represents “as allegorical symbols of the inner working of the human struggle to give shape and meaning to an irrational world. I attempt to recapture the tension, precarious balance, complexity and dissonant relationships that exist in our society – a society faced with an ever increasing dehumanization and mechanization away from objects made by hand – creating an alienation between the maker and the finished product.”

Review: Norwegian doctors’ “Eyes in Gaza”
At noon on New Year’s Eve 2008, four days after the start of Israel’s onslaught, Gilbert and Fosse entered Gaza from Egypt. On the morning of 10 January 2010, with Israel’s campaign still having a week to run, they returned to Egypt and were replaced by another Norwegian medical team. During the intervening period they assisted their Palestinian colleagues – whose “historic heroism” they praise unstintingly – in performing an average of twenty operations daily on the civilian victims of Israel’s orgy of shooting and bombing. In the absence of western media they also acted as reporters, giving ten to fifteen interviews daily. Full article.
short short review: the american
“the american” left me cold. clooney as a super skinny, morose assassin is such a waste.

Second attack on NATO convoy in Pakistan
The Pakistani government shut one of the two border crossings into Afghanistan on Thursday in apparent protest of a NATO helicopter incursion that killed three of its soldiers on the border. Around 80 percent of the fuel, spare parts, clothing and other non-lethal supplies for foreign forces in landlocked Afghanistan travels through Pakistan after arriving in the southern Arabian sea port of Karachi. The alliance has other supply routes to Afghanistan, but the Pakistani ones are the cheapest and most convenient. Full article.
U.S. to apologize for 1940s Guatemala STD experiments
U.S. government medical researchers intentionally infected hundreds of people in Guatemala, including institutionalized mental patients, with gonorrhea and syphilis without their knowledge or permission more than 60 years ago.
According to the site Livescience, the research was unearthed by Wellesley College researcher Susan Reverby. Her study, “Normal Exposure’ and Inoculation Syphilis: A PHS ‘Tuskegee’ Doctor in Guatemala, 1946-48,” draws a link between the research in Guatemala and the notorious Tuskegee syphilis experiment, where hundreds of African-Americans in Alabama were infected with the disease. Full article.
Extrajudicial killings in Pakistan
the effing war on terror. this is what the pakistani army action in swat and other parts of the country looks like:
a report by imran khan here.
Say Hello To Mechanically Separated Chicken
Say hello to mechanically separated chicken.
It’s what all fast-food chicken is made from—things like chicken nuggets and patties.
Also, the processed frozen chicken in the stores is made from it.
Basically, the entire chicken is smashed and pressed through a sieve—bones, eyes, guts, and all.
It comes out looking like this.
There’s more: because it’s crawling with bacteria, it will be washed with ammonia, soaked in it, actually.
Then, because it tastes gross, it will be reflavored artificially.
Then, because it is weirdly pink, it will be dyed with artificial color.
But, hey, at least it tastes good, right?
High five, America!
Babri Mosque verdict given in favour of Hindus
AYODHYA: The Allahabad High Court has announced its verdict on the Ayodhya Babri Mosque case. However, this verdict reflects the decision of two out of the three judges, while the third’s verdict remains to be seen.According to the verdict the land will be divided into three parts, one will go to the Ram Lalla, one to the Sunni Waqf Board and one to the Nirmohi Akhara. Full article.
