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


To: combjelly who wrote (352458)9/27/2007 3:06:58 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576001
 
"You advocate free speech only for some"

I do ?? link



To: combjelly who wrote (352458)9/27/2007 3:15:55 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576001
 
Near-Normal 2006 Hurricane Season Blamed on Global Warming

According to award-winning Harvard global warming researcher, Prof. Simon Ivorytower, global warming theory predicts increases in all kinds of weather. "Not only does global warming theory predict more storms, more droughts, more floods, it also predicts more normal weather as well. This is what makes global warming theory so powerful…it can explain anything", Prof. Ivorytower told ecoEnquirer.

ecoenquirer.com



To: combjelly who wrote (352458)9/27/2007 3:57:13 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1576001
 
Dear Hollywood: Worse Than Bush… Now?
— Dirty Harry @ 9:41 am
thks to lindybill

Dear Hollywood,

Dirty Harry here. We haven't communicated in awhile. And that's okay. You've been busy organizing an army of underage cocaine-addled prostitutes to explain these anti-American box office catastrophes to your major shareholders, and I've been busy trying to bluff my name onto the major shareholder list, and so our ships have passed too often without a word. But I'm back. Back to offer some advice.

First, let's see if we can't find that common ground, shall we? Can we agree that:

1. Executing gay people is worse than opposing gay marriage?

2. That joking about executing gay people is worse than not really being interested in watching Queer Eye For The Straight Guy?

3. That having laws on the books calling for the execution of gay people is worse than Yosemite Sam mudflaps and a rebel flag bumper sticker?

4. That subjugating women to burkas and stoning them for fighting off rapists is worse than not voting for Hillary because she's a scary, socialist, shrew?

5. That an actual theocracy is worse than, oh, giving taxpayer money to churches who feed the poor?

6. That denying the Holocaust is worse than appointing black Republicans to cabinet level positions?"

7. That wanting millions of "Jooooz!" in Israel exterminated is worse than wanting millions of the unborn to live?

I know that last one's hairy and that Oliver Stone and Sean Penn will need some time to mull all seven, but I think I've created some common ground here and that we should move on.

So, here's my question: How many underage cocaine-addled prostitutes are there? Because we both know the massive losses that come with these love letters to al-Queda can't go on forever. So, here's my pitch… Here's how you hold onto your liberal credentials and still make money. Ready? You're gonna love it. Two words: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Say it with me. Let it roll off your tongue: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Think about it. He's today's Hitler: Anti-Semitic, sexist, homophobic.. Worse than Hitler, he's a theocrat. You guys hate theocrats. Plus he's got that little man's complex and dresses like a man in desperate need of some homosexuals in his country.

So, what say we make him the bad guy once in a while? Not all the time, but here and there. Instead of these money-draining attacks on our troops and illiberal criticisms of our desire to liberate millions — which is so 2006 — let's make Mahmoud the whipping boy — the common enemy — the target of some brutal onscreen butt-kicking. What do you say?

Me? I'm excited. I think we got something here: A win-win. If I knew the words I'd sing Kumbaya. Look at us, Hollywood. You and I, arm in– What? No? You're telling me, no? You got a guy killing gays and building nukes to exterminate the "Jooooz!" and you're telling me, no? You're telling me that you're still gonna go after Bush and America? I don't understand, I thought… I thought we… Okay. Well, thanks for listening.

Your friend,

-DH

P.S. Not to be a pest, but would it help if I could get a picture of Mahmoud wearing fur and driving an SUV?

libertyfilmfestival.com



To: combjelly who wrote (352458)9/27/2007 4:46:02 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576001
 
Columbia prez should have stood up for America, too

By Ed Koch

jewishworldreview.com | President Lee C. Bollinger of Columbia University and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran met Monday on a field of rhetorical battle at Columbia.

Bollinger opened the proceedings, to which he had invited Ahmadinejad, by presenting a series of sharply-worded questions. Bollinger, normally a genial, soft spoken man who is always courteous and deferential to his guests, was in a totally different mode. His voice was hectoring and bullying. He included in his litany of questions provocative and insulting statements about his guest.

Bollinger's change of style was, I believe, to blunt the enormous criticism that ensued following Columbia's invitation to Ahmadinejad to speak there. In his defense, Bollinger's supporters constantly invoke the concepts of free speech and the First Amendment. But in this case they simply don't apply.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution reads as follows: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

No government action was taken to stop Columbia and Bollinger from extending the invitation and holding the event as they did. I watched it on television, 600 people watched it from within the auditorium and thousands of Columbia students sat outside watching and listening to a giant TV screen.

The right of free speech — Bollinger and Ahmadinejad were exercising it before, during and after this controversy — was never in question. What was in question was Bollinger's judgment. Why provide the President of Iran — who supports terrorism and whose government provides bombs to Iraqi insurgents and terrorists who use them to kill American soldiers — with the prestigious platform at a great American university?

Isn't it a fact that Ahmadinejad has been and will continue to be interviewed by journalists every day during his stay in America? What he got at Columbia was a special platform where he could, in an academic setting, disseminate his views to the world. Yes, the attention of the world, particularly the Islamic world, was focused on Columbia and Ahmadinejad. And what did they see? They saw Columbia University's president, Bollinger, who had invited Ahmadinejad to his school, do what should never be done — insult the person who is a guest in your home, office or shared podium and stage. Bollinger had said of Ahmadinejad, "Mr. President, you exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator," adding, "You are either brazenly provocative or astonishingly uneducated." Bollinger went on, "It's well-documented that Iran was a state sponsor of terrorism." The final insult was, "I doubt that you will have the intellectual courage to answer these questions." Ahmadinejad understood this immediately and referred to Bollinger's insults in his speech, saying, "I shall not begin by being affected by this unfriendly treatment."

I am also distressed that the heart of Bollinger's objections related to Israel and Ahmadinejad's call for its destruction. Of course, that is important, especially to Jews and certainly to me, and to the world as well. But I would have preferred a question on Ahmadinejad's call for the destruction of the United States. Bollinger could have said, "with respect to the U.S., shortly after your election in October 2005, you called for a global jihad aimed at destroying the U.S., saying 'Is it possible for us to witness a world without America and Zionism?' You went on to say, 'You should know that this slogan can certainly be achieved.'" Bollinger, a Jew himself, gave Ahmadinejad ammunition to be used among Islamic supporters that the battle at Columbia was primarily a battle between Islam and the Jews, and Ahmadinejad had bravely stood up to the mocking of the Jewish Bollinger.

The Daily News reported, "Ahmadinejad has also revived an old slogan of the Khomeinist movement that had fallen into disuse in the '90s: 'Death to America!' Every meeting he addresses in Iran starts and ends with this cry — chanted by professional demonstrators working for the regime." Bollinger should have asked Ahmaninejad about his role in the Iranian hostage taking of American consular officials during the Carter administration. Barry Rosen, one of the hostages held for 444 days and released on January 20, 1981, the day President Reagan was inaugurated, recently wrote, "Ahmadinejad was one of those outrageous Iranians who took me and more than 50 other Americans hostage for 444 days, violating international law and making us suffer indescribable moments of terror." If Ahmadinejad were not protected by diplomatic immunity, he could be arrested for a host of terrorist and criminal activities.

As important as it was to stand up for the rights of homosexuals, who are hanged or stoned to death in Iran, standing up for the U.S. and the American soldiers being killed daily by Iranian-supplied bombs was particularly relevant and in need of greater emphasis than that given by Bollinger.

All in all, it was a fiasco for America and a blunder by Bollinger, as well as a coup for Ahmadinejad. His goal was not to respond to Bollinger, the Columbia students or Americans seeing him on television. His goal was to talk over their heads to the Islamic world and its terrorists and show how he bearded the Columbia lion in its own den.

President Bollinger, as an encore, why not invite Hugo Chavez? I think he'd come. You could provide him with a platform to enhance his reputation.

jewishworldreview.com



To: combjelly who wrote (352458)9/27/2007 6:36:36 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576001
 
Yeah you libs are really for free speech.
School Cancels Speech by MLK Jr.’s Niece Because of Pro-Life Stand

youtube.com