Oil Addiction and Identity
The end of Textbooks
Things which don't go away
Ace Combat: Joint Assault
Sitting Room Teaser
Give Peace a Chance
Wham! Bam! Islam!
Part of a PBS Frontline World story about The 99, the first comic book with Muslim heroes based on Islamic culture. It is widely popular but banned in Saudi Arabia and is facing a big test with its Indonesian release.

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Cordoba House and Religious Freedom
27 aug  |  When Nancy Pelosi said the powers and money backing the anti-Muslim protests in New York and elsewhere should be investigated, she had in mind the simplest of political questions. Who benefits? In this case, who benefits from a spectacle of words and images that suggest that right-wing populism in America has now taken a definitively anti-Muslim tone?

By David Bromwich  . . read more

Archbishop's Sharia Fiasco
11 feb  |  Popular and controversial YouTube video blogger Pat Condell has a few things to say on the Archbishop of Canterbury and the controversy caused by the suggestion that sharia law be introduced in certain cases in the UK.  . . read more
Reading Nigeria's Christian-Muslim violence
21 mar  |  Recently over 500 Catholics died at the hands of a Muslim mob in Northern Nigeria. It would be easy to understand the killings as an expression of a wider Muslim intolerance of Christians and miss the subtle interplay of religious faith, tribal loyalties, and traditional religion and group identity- by Andrew Hamilton . . read more
Fatwa for a Swedish Cartoon
27 sep  |  A newspaper editor in Sweden has had a fatwa issued against him by Al Qaeda in Iraq after he published controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. The editor says he acted for freedom of speech. . . read more
Islam Is Not a Victim
21 jul  |  Controversial video blogger Pat Condell launches another attack on Islam - the 'religion of peace' is not a victim, in fact in Saudi hands it's a predator. . . read more
Women in Afghanistan Starved for Sex
17 aug  |  Women in Afghanistan Starved for Sex . . read more
Life in the Middle East: as told by a Christian Arab journalist and human rights activist
19 jan  |  Here is the perspective of a Christian Arab from Lebanon. She is a journalist and human rights activist, who speaks truth to power without fear of political correctness. She is the author of Because They Hate: A Survivor of Islamic Terror Warns America and other books about the political realities of Jihad in the Middle East and the world.

The speaker has lived the life in the Middle East. Born and raised in Lebanon, she knows and tells the real story of how life changed in her country after Arafat and his Palestinian Liberation Organization settled there and began their rule of terror.

Although the sponsoring organization for this speech in the video below, the Heritage Foundation, appears to be an organization with whom I (and I imagine most if not all readers of OpEd News) will have political disagreements, Gabriel tells a compelling story any open minded critical thinker should hear.

I have become familiar with the inexplicable reaction of intolerance and closemindedness of many in the "Progressive" movement, who refuse to even read or listen to differing perspectives.

If this was not so destructive (and Regressive), I would find it amusing that people who define themselves as "Progressive" are so inclined to censorship and single viewpoint propaganda. For that is, in fact, the definition of propaganda: the presentation of a single and biased point of view to the exclusion of other viewpoints that would enable and require critical thinking and analysis.

And it is this virulent unwillingness to hear differing perspectives that keeps the Progressive movement from winning important political battles. It bespeaks a lack of the kind of critical and strategic thinking, and the ability to perceive and consider the Big Picture, that is required to succeed in difficult and challenging power struggles.

So - in the hopes that most readers are interested, intelligent, thinking people, I post this different perspective.

Here is a speech where you can hear Ms. Gabriel's story.

Here is an interview at Duke University with Ms. Gabriel.

According to Wikipedia: Brigitte Gabriel (born 1965) is a human rights advocate, journalist, author and activist. She is the founder of the American Congress For Truth and ACT! for America.

According to Gabriel's website, her mission is to:

• Keep citizens informed through action alerts, issues and legislation
• Educate millions of citizens about our enemy, and what they can and must do to protect themselves and their country
• Arm activists with information to get involved and take action
• Motivate citizens to become active in decisions affecting national security and the American way of life
• Network organizations with like-minded goals to bring change
• Empower citizens to have a voice in their government
• Fearlessly speak out in defense of America, Israel and Western civilization

Gabriel was born in Lebanon and raised as a Christian. She is a favorite among conservative radio stations in the United States.

 

Nancy Tobi is cofounder, former Chair, website editor for Democracy for New Hampshire (DFNH), and Chair of the NH Fair Elections Committee. Nancy is the author of numerous articles on election integrity, including "The Gifts of HAVA: Time to Ask for a Refund," "What's Wrong with the Holt Bill," "We're Counting the Votes: An Election Preparedness Kit," and "Hands-on Elections: An Information Handbook for Running Real Elections, Using Real Paper Ballots, Counted by Real People". Her article about election reform fallacies is included in the April 2008 book "Losers Take All" edited by Mark Crispin Miller. . . read more

Pat Condell - Religion of Fear
7 apr  |  Popular and controversial video blogger Pat Condell's latest spray concerns Islam - the religion of fear. He's celebrating that Fitna has been reinstated on LiveLeak after being taken down following death threats. . . read more
Baghdad Blues - From 'The Outsider'
17 sep  |  When I left the exhibition of the Great Arts of Islam at the Art Gallery of NSW, I came away with three thoughts burning in my mind. The first was how little I knew about the Islamic culture and yet how connected it is to the culture of the West. Astronomy, astrology, science and religion, intertwining to present a world view which seems to share such strong foundations with our own. We are as one under the busy old sun.

The second was a tiny green and gold glass tumbler made in the 11th Century which shone with antique luminescence for me as it has done for many others for hundreds of years. The antithesis of our throwaway, disposable culture which is drastic plastic and utterly unfantastic.

But last was my new knowledge of the supremacy of Baghdad as the centre world of Islam from the ninth to the thirteenth century. They could not have known that a 'coalition of the willing' at the very beginning of the twenty first century, would have destabilised their city to such an extent that its Islamic treasures and meaning would become as disposable as the culture the coalition represents. . . read more

Pat Condell - Appeasing Islam
10 mar  |  Popular and controversial YouTube video blogger Pat Condell's latest spray concerns the appeasing of Islam by western countries, which he believes is leading to Europe's cultural suicide. . . read more
blogs   100words
 
by Jack Freeman

As four months of travel in India is coming to an end I am finding
it continually confusing that many of the cultural atrocities that
come with this society of 1 billion strong are deemed "interesting"
and "profound".

Sitting in social circles from hostel to hostel, I have met forceful disagreement with my criticisms of the oppressive nature of India's cast system and their large Islamic community. The smug, "oh, you just don't get it" attitude you receive for owning such opinions is both condescending and misguided.

This is an enraging example of the pseudo, naive belief that this "exotic"society is unintelligible to (most of) us westerners. In this beautiful, richly diverse and all round fun country where, by the same token, you will be greeted by zero empathy of female lib, homosexual equality or my own personal faithlessness, I wish that travelers would not deny their education and morals on arrival. Is it not possible to balance both romance and a sense of rationality?