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


To: Alighieri who wrote (587948)9/28/2010 7:59:16 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1570766
 
Petraeus says Taliban making 'overtures' for peace

KABUL (AFP) – The commander of NATO troops in Afghanistan said Tuesday that the Taliban are approaching the Afghan government and foreign forces about laying down arms after almost nine years of insurgency.

US General David Petraeus, who commands more than 150,000 NATO and US troops in Afghanistan, said many small insurgent groups had already made "overtures" to NATO forces about quitting the fight.


"There have already been 20 or so overtures from small groups around the country," he told AFP, referring to a programme aimed at reintegrating mid-level Taliban commanders and grassroots fighters back into Afghan society.

He said NATO supported efforts by President Hamid Karzai to open peace talks with the Taliban leadership and in some cases had helped the process along.

"Reconciliation with senior elements of the Taliban is the province of the Afghan government," Petraeus said in an interview with AFP.

"President Karzai has established very clear red lines for it, and in this case we support what it is the Afghan government is doing, and in some occasions facilitated as well.

"This is very, very early stages, I don't think you would yet call it negotiations, it is early discussions," he said.

"People are coming to the government, there are people coming to us," he said, adding: "This is an Afghan government endeavour."

Petraeus was referring to the twin-track programme of reconciliation and reintegration, sponsored by the Western allies with a 200-million-dollar trust fund to help pay local Afghan communities to bring fighters in from the cold.

Reconciliation focuses on opening a dialogue with the Taliban leadership, and reintegration on encouraging fighters to rejoin their communities.

A Taliban spokesman dismissed Petraeus's comments as "completely baseless", saying the insurgents would not "negotiate with foreign invaders or their puppet government".

"We want full and unconditional withdrawal of all invading forces from our country," Zabiullah Mujahid told AFP by telephone from an unknown location.

Nevertheless, Petraeus said more former Taliban fighters had "recently come forward in that regard," an assertion confirmed by Afghanistan's minister of defence, Abdul Rahim Wardak.


"Last night (a) big reintegration has taken place in the west of Afghanistan, a big number, hundreds and I hope that will be the beginning of this process," Wardak told NATO television Tuesday.

Approaches to the Taliban leadership, believed to be based in Pakistan, have been led by Karzai, who set up a High Peace Council to open a dialogue.

The council was mooted as a negotiating body, made up of representatives of a broad section of Afghan society, to talk peace with the Taliban, who have been waging war since their regime was toppled in late 2001.

Karzai on Tuesday renewed his call on the Taliban to give up their violent campaign against his administration.

"I call on the Taliban again," he said. "Compatriots! Don't destroy your land for the benefit of others. Don't kill your people for the benefit of others. Embrace peace," he said.

The insurgency is at its fiercest in the Taliban's southern base, where Petraeus said a major operation began a week ago in and around Kandahar city, aiming to exert "substantial additional pressure" on the insurgents.

Operation Dragon Strike involved about 7,000 troops, he said, calling it the first major operation in which Afghan soldiers outnumbered NATO forces.

Dragon Strike is the latest phase of Operation Hamkari, seen as a last-ditch effort to eliminate the Taliban from Kandahar and the surrounding areas of Zhari, Panjawyi and Arghandab.

These areas had been "safe havens for the Taliban for over five years," he said. Insurgents had "put up a considerable fight" in some areas, he said and "decided that they might want try to slide away or go into other areas".

The three areas -- Arghandab northwest of Kandahar city, and Panjwayi and Zhari to the west -- have long been considered lethal Taliban haunts, mined with bombs that cause the overwhelming majority of deaths among foreign troops.

Clearing Kandahar of insurgents is seen as pivotal to the counter-insurgency strategy which Petraeus described as a "comprehensive civil-military campaign".

It builds up to July 2011, which US President Barack Obama has laid down as the deadline for starting to draw down US troops -- though both the president and the commander have recently emphasised that it is not a pull-out date.

news.yahoo.com



To: Alighieri who wrote (587948)9/28/2010 10:41:18 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1570766
 
This is unbelievable. This attorney in the AG/s office in Michigan is attacking the student council president of the U of M. He's accused the SC president of being nazi like and satan's rep and is stalking him, asking him to resign his position. In the meantime, the AG refuses to do anything, saying that his assistant is simply immature.

Did I mention that both the AG and his assistant are evangelical Rs?

Asst. attorney general targets openly gay college student

Says student is "nazi like," and "anti-Christian"

By: Ross Jones

ANN ARBOR (WXYZ) - Andrew Shirvell has fought battles in courtrooms throughout the state, but it’s a fight he’s picked with an openly gay college student that has some wondering if this attorney is out of order.

In classroom’s across the state, Attorney General Mike Cox uses videos to teach students the dangers of internet predators and cyber bullies.

“We want you to be safe on the Internet, and in particular, we want to protect you from Internet predators,” said Cox in the video.

But is one of his top lieutenants engaging in cyber bullying, the very behavior Cox says is so dangerous. Andrew Shirvell is an assistant attorney general who helped run Cox’s last re-election campaign. But on his own time, he’s the author of a blog he started last spring targeting Chris Armstrong, the openly gay president of the University of Michigan’s student assembly.

“His agenda was…to promote the radical homosexual agenda at the University of Michigan, and to use his position to promote that cause,” said Shirvell.

Armstrong campaigned to stop tuition hikes, expand gender-neutral housing to transgendered students, and make drinking less dangerous by keeping cafeterias open later. Students went to the polls, voting Armstrong in overwhelmingly, and Andrew Shirvell went to the web.

“Did he think he was just going to get some free pass just because he’s gay or whatever,” said Shirvell.

“He’s an adult, just like he’s been quoted before, we’re all adults here. And so we’re treating him like an adult with adult-level criticism," he said.

With 27 postings to date, Shivell’s blog is filled with language you’ll never hear him use in a court room, calling Armstrong “nazi like,” a recruiter for “the cult that is homosexuality,” and a proponent of a “racist, anti-Christian agenda.”

“That came from his decision to join Order of Angell,” said Shirvell.

The group he’s talking about is a university honors society. Years ago, its use of Native American artifacts in its meetings drew criticism from minority students. It gave up the ritual years ago, and today is recognized by U of M as an official student group, with past members that include President Gerald Ford, Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy and Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop.

“Do you believe they’re racist also,” asked Action News reporter Ross Jones.

“Umm, I don’t believe that they’re, I don’t believe… I haven’t investigated what their subsequent activities were,” responded Shirvell.

In other internet postings, Shirvell’s language has been even stronger: calling Armstrong “Satan’s representative on the Student Assembly,” even posting a photograph with a swastika attached to his face.

“How under any circumstance, regardless of whether or not you agree with somebody’s lifestyle, is something like that defensible,” asked Jones.

“Well, he is promoting a satanic lifestyle, and he is a fierce advocate for it,” said Shirvell.

“By being openly gay,” asked Jones.

“No,” said Shirvell. “By being somebody that’s there to promote special rights for homosexuals at the cost of heterosexual students.”

In several posts, Shirvell accuses Armstrong of being sexually active with other male students, some of whom don’t identify themselves as gay. He’s also said Armstrong hosted “gay orgies” in his dorm room, which Armstrong denies. And, he says the student body president broke the law by engaging in underage binge-drinking when he attended a party he listed on his Facebook account.

“And you saw him drinking,” asked Jones.

“I did not see him, but I know what, I know what the Facebook event was all about. It’s on the website,” responded Shirvell.

“Do you know if he attended,” Jones asked.

“I know he responded that he was going to attend,” said Shirvell.

“Did I see him there? I didn’t see him there, I don’t live in Ann Arbor."

Shirvell conceded he had no proof Armstrong was ever drinking, and for good reason. Armstrong wasn’t even in town the night of the party.

“The first amendment guarantees you the right to say things, but not anything,” said Wayne State law professor Peter Henning.

“When lawyers publish things, they have to be very careful that it could get cited against them in a future case,” he said.

Cyber bullying expert and Michigan State University instructor Glenn Stutzky said Shirvell's blog meets the definition of cyber bullying. He says Shirvell’s blog is the type of harassment he and others are trying to outlaw.

“It’s really a thinly disguised means to harass, bully and intimidate under the guise of, ‘I’m just expressing my opinion,’ ” said Stutzky.

Meanwhile, as the attorney general’s office continues to use videos like this to protect students from cyber bullies, Shirvell insists he’s not one of them. He plans to continue his blog, with four new postings this month.

Attorney General Mike Cox refused our repeated requests for an on-camera interview. Instead, issuing a two-line statement which reads, in part: “I don't agree with Mr. Shirvell's tactics, his judgment, or his word choice but

nonetheless I recognize his non-work related blog is protected by our Constitution."
Then, late tonight amidst growing scrutiny, Cox issued a second statement, saying, "...Mr. Shirvell’s immaturity and lack of judgment outside the office are clear.”
As for Chris Armstrong, he did not agree to talk to Action News on camera, saying that he didn’t want to dignify Shirvell’s comments by responding to them.
Cyber bullying is illegal in some states. Michigan is not one of them.

If you have a tip for the Action News investigative team, contact us at tips@wxyz.com or at (248) 827-9466.

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wxyz.com



To: Alighieri who wrote (587948)9/28/2010 10:44:21 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1570766
 
This R running for Congress in NY is a white supremacist.

Westchester’s ‘White Supremacist’ Candidate

ADL says Internet is empowering racist politicians like Jim Russell, Rep. Nita Lowey’s Republican challenger.

thejewishweek.com



To: Alighieri who wrote (587948)9/29/2010 2:06:57 PM
From: TimF  Respond to of 1570766
 
The argument "X therefore X", which is the essential form of the argument that the CBO made, is indeed worthless.

Absent the argument, we just have their opinion. I probably wouldn't quite say their opinion is worthless, just that it isn't authoritative, it isn't something that others should defer to just because of the group making it.