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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (321718)1/19/2007 7:18:59 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574260
 
How many stupid pills per day does it take to generate posts like the ones you do?

I don't know you tell me.

DUBLIN, Ireland (CNN) -- At a recent debate over the battle for Islamic ideals in England, a British-born Muslim stood before the crowd and said Prophet Mohammed's message to nonbelievers is: "I come to slaughter all of you."

"We are the Muslims," said Omar Brooks, an extremist also known as Abu Izzadeen. "We drink the blood of the enemy, and we can face them anywhere. That is Islam and that is jihad."

cnn.com



To: tejek who wrote (321718)1/19/2007 7:29:23 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574260
 
'A Gaia-send'
"[F]or quite a few people, environmentalism has become a matter of not just ideology but quasi-religious zealotry.
"Mark Kleiman, a professor of public policy studies at UCLA and a self-identified liberal, noted this recently ... 'To those who dislike a social system based on high and growing consumption and the economic activity that supports high and growing consumption and maintains high and growing demand ... to those who think that the market needs more regulation by the state, to those who think that international institutions ought to be strengthened ... global warming is a Gaia-send' — since it justifies drastic worldwide public action to curb production and consumption. (Gaia, the ancient Greek goddess of the earth, is a term used by many ecologists to refer to the earth as a living entity.) While Kleiman sympathizes with environmentalists, he notes that 'their eagerness to believe the worst' — for instance, in Al Gore's documentary, 'An Inconvenient Truth' — 'is just as evident as the right wing's denialism.' "
— Cathy Young, writing on "Common Sense in the Warming Debate," Monday in the Boston Globe