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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 2:05:42 PM
From: chartseer4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 
Are you a black muslim?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 2:32:15 PM
From: lorne3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 
kenny..her is a fine example of what another of your idols has unleashed on the world,,,enter silly willi clinton the stupid and dangerous.......

Radical Islam on rise in Balkans
September 22, 2010
Posted by Yilan in Albania, Macedonia.
turkeymacedonia.wordpress.com


An online music video praising Osama bin Laden has driven home a troubling new reality: A radical brand of Islam embraced by al-Qaida and the Taliban is gaining a foothold in the Balkans.

“Oh Osama, annihilate the American army. Oh Osama, raise the Muslims’ honor,” a group of Macedonian men sing in Albanian, in video posted on YouTube last year and picked up by Macedonian media this August. “In September 2001 you conquered a power. We all pray for you.”

Although most of Macedonia’s ethnic Albanian minority are Muslims, they have generally been secular. But experts are now seeing an increasing radicalization in pockets of the country’s Islamic community, particularly after armed groups from the ethnic Albanian minority, which forms a quarter of the population of 2.1 million, fought a brief war against Macedonian government forces in 2001.

It’s a trend seen across the Balkans and has raised concerns that the region, which includes new European Union member Bulgaria, could become a breeding ground for terrorists with easy access to Western Europe. Many fear that radicalized European Muslims with EU passports could slip across borders and blend into society.

At the center of the issue is the Wahhabi sect, an austere brand of Islam most prevalent in Saudi Arabia and practiced by bin Laden and the Taliban.

“Wahhabism in Macedonia, the Balkans and in Europe has become more aggressive in the last 10 years,” said Jakub Selimovski, head of religious education in Macedonia’s Islamic community. He said Wahhabis were establishing a permanent presence in Macedonia where none existed before, and that “they are in Bosnia, here, Kosovo, Serbia, Croatia and lately they have appeared in Bulgaria.”

It is the first time a high-ranking official in the former Yugoslav republic’s Islamic community has agreed to speak openly about the presence and threat of radical Islam.

In Bulgaria, nearly one-sixth of the population of 7.6 million are Muslims who adhere to conventional Sunni beliefs. Ethnic peace has been maintained in the last 20 years. As elsewhere in the Balkans, however, Wahhabi incursions have led to a struggle for control of religion and Islamic community-owned property.

Large amounts of money, allegedly from Muslim organizations abroad, have been spent in Bulgaria since the mid-1990s for more than 150 new mosques and so called “teaching centers” to spread Wahhabism.

According to Bulgaria’s former chief mufti, Nedim Gendzhev, some Muslim organizations were aiming to create a “fundamentalist triangle” formed by Bosnia, Macedonia and Bulgaria’s Western Rhodope mountains. Local newspaper reports say radical Islam is being preached in different cities and villages in southern and northeastern Bulgaria.

In 2003, Bulgarian authorities shut down a number of Islamic centers on the grounds they allegedly belonged to Islamic groups financed mainly by Saudi Arabians that possibly also had links to “radical organizations” such as the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Official statements said that the centers were shut down “to prevent terrorists getting a foothold in Bulgaria.”

However, centers where radical brands of Islam are preached continue to to crop up in the country, said political analyst Dimitar Avramov.

“Along with the three official Muslim schools, there are at least seven other which are not registered and not controlled by the state,” he said, adding that in the last 20 years some 3,000 young Muslims have graduated from these schools.

In neighboring Serbia last year, 12 Muslims — allegedly Wahhabis — from the tense southern Sandzak region were sentenced to up to 13 years in prison for planning terrorist attacks, including on the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade. The presence of radical Muslims in Sandzak, the poorest region of Serbia, is linked to the advent of mujahedeen foreign fighters who joined Bosnian Muslims in their battle against the Serbs in Bosnia’s 1992-95 independence war.

In Bosnia, the issue of Wahhabi influence is one of the most politically charged debates, with Bosnian Serbs maintaining there is a huge presence of Wahhabis in the country and Muslim Bosniaks downplaying the issue and at times claiming it does not exist.

Juan Carlos Antunez, a Spanish military specialist in religious extremism with years of experience in Bosnia, estimates there are about 3,000 people in Bosnia who have embraced this interpretation of Islam and only a small fraction of them are a potential security threat.

In a study prepared for the Sarajevo-based Center for Advanced Studies in May, Antunez argued that Bosnia’s official Islamic Community has been successful in curbing Wahhabi influence. Although it did not aggressively ostracize the Wahhabis, it strictly controls the appointments of imams in mosques and lecturers in Islamic educational institutions in the country.

Ahmet Alibasic, a lecturer at the Faculty of Islamic Studies in Sarajevo, said most Wahhabis in Bosnia refrain from criticizing the Islamic Community and were even calling for unity among Muslims.

“Their influence reached its peak in 2000, but it has since started falling and it continues to fall,” Alibasic said, adding that measures taken by Bosnian authorities after 9/11 had a significant effect as the movement began to lose power after the closure and banning of several Islamic, mostly Saudi-backed, charities which funded the movement.

In Albania, the issue is also charged. Ilir Kulla, former head of the government’s department on religious issues, insisted the Wahhabis had not caused any problems in Albania.

Kulla said hundreds of young Albanian men had been educated in universities in the Middle East, including in Saudi Arabia, and were now mosque leaders, but that there had been no attempt by Wahhabis to challenge the leadership of the country’s Muslim Community, which he insisted was still moderate.

But in Macedonia, the increasing clout of radical Islam is causing a rift in the country’s Muslim community, with a power struggle developing within the country’s official Islamic Religious Community between the moderate mainstream and the emerging Wahhabi wing.

“A destructive, radical and extremist current has appeared with an intention of taking over the lead of the Islamic religious community,” Selimovski said.

Authorities in Macedonia are reluctant to confirm any threat of radical Islam in the country. But a government official, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the topic, did acknowledge that “radical groups and their followers are being closely observed.”

Last year, three ethnic Albanian brothers originally from Macedonia were implicated — along with a Jordanian, a Turk and a Kosovo Albanian living in the U.S. — in an alleged plot to attack the U.S. Army’s Fort Dix military base in New Jersey. No attack was ever staged on the base, which is used largely to train U.S. reservists bound for Iraq.

“Macedonia is part of the international coalition in the fight against terrorism and it cannot be excluded from the responsibility to observe and respond to any possible activity or emerging of terrorists,” Interior Ministry spokesman Ivo Kotevski told the AP.

Moderate Muslims say the Wahhabi sect now controls five mosques in Skopje even though the Islamic Religious Community has suspended the man they claim is the sect’s leader, Ramadan Ramadani, as imam of the Isa Beg mosque in Skopje, and prohibited him from organizing prayers.

But Ramadani, who has launched a petition seeking supporters to overturn the current Community leadership, rejects any accusation of radicalism, saying his opponents are scaremongering.

“They need my name to have somebody to frighten people,” Ramadani said. “I do not know any individuals or structures here that could be defined as Wahhabi. It is the attempt of political labeling and stigmatizing people who want reforms.”

Ramadani insisted that Macedonia’s Islamic community had nothing to do with the online song supporting bin Laden, and denied Macedonian media reports that it had been played in mosques there.

“Bin Laden is nothing for the Muslims in Macedonia,” Ramadani said. “He is not our hero.”




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 4:11:38 PM
From: lorne3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224707
 
kenny...wow , openly buying votes everyone know this but I suppose it will depend on how many like yourself have been dumbed down to the point that the commie party is more important to them than America. Don't even need congress..

Obama to sidestep Congress on housing, student loans

Obama to announce actions on housing, student loans

WASHINGTON | Mon Oct 24, 2011
reuters.com


(Reuters) - President Barack Obama this week will announce a series of actions to help the economy that will not require congressional approval, including an initiative to make it easier for homeowners to refinance their mortgages, according to a White House official.

The actions come as Obama is facing resistance from Republicans to a $447 billion jobs package he has urged Congress to pass.

The first of the initiatives will be unveiled during Obama's three-day trip to western states beginning Monday.

He will discuss the changes in mortgage rules at a stop in Nevada, which has one of the hardest-hit housing markets in the country.

The Obama administration has been working with the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to find ways to make it easier for borrowers to switch to cheaper loans even if they have little to no equity in their homes.

The FHFA intends to loosen the terms of the two-year-old Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP), which helps borrowers who have been making mortgage payments on time but who have not been able to refinance as their home values have dropped.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the changes should boost refinancing because they will let banks avoid the risk of any "buy-back" on a HARP mortgage as long as borrowers have made their last six mortgage payments and they prove that they have a job or another source of passive income.

They are also set to reduce loan fees that Fannie and Freddie charge and waive fees on borrowers that refinance into loans with shorter terms, the Journal said.

Pricing details won't be published until mid-November, and lenders could begin refinancing loans under the retooled program as soon as December 1, the newspaper reported, citing federal officials. Loans that exceed the current limit of 125 percent of the property's value won't be able to participate until early next year, the report said.

In Denver Wednesday, Obama will announce a student loan initiative.

"The only way we can truly attack our economic challenges is with bold, bipartisan action in Congress," White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer told The New York Times.

"The president will continue to pressure Congressional Republicans to put country before party and pass the American Jobs Act, but he believes we cannot wait, so he will act where they won't."

(Reporting by Caren Bohan and JoAnne Allen. Editing by Sandra Maler and Chris Wilson)




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:45:47 PM
From: Hope Praytochange1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224707
 
Democrats face tough election season in S.C. By Adam Beam - abeam@thestate.com

CHARLESTON --

U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, interrupted an interview with a reporter Saturday in Charleston to speak with two elementary-school age children that she quickly labeled "little Democrats."

"We are leaving no stone unturned," she said once she returned to the interview.

Wasserman Schultz and the rest of the Democratic Party will have to turn over quite a few stones to make headway in South Carolina, which has not voted for a Democratic presidential candidate since Jimmy Carter in 1976 - 35 years ago.

http://www.heraldonline.com/2011/10/24/3466919/democrats-face-tough-election.html#ixzz1bklFCq7y



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:46:13 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:46:34 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:47:07 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:47:34 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:48:01 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/24/2011 9:48:29 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/25/2011 7:56:17 AM
From: lorne5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 
ken..here is what happens when to many of your kind get together in one place....

Shootings way up in two weeks
By BRAD HAMILTON
October 23, 2011
nypost.com


Bullets are flying over Broadway -- and everywhere else in the city.

The number of people shot surged 154 percent two weeks ago -- to 56 from 22 over the same week last year -- and spiked 28 percent in the last month.

Last week tallied another increase in victims -- 22 people had been hit through Friday, including the three victims gunned down outside a Brooklyn school Friday.

Last year, only 17 shooting victims were logged for the entire week.

The recent gunplay has now pushed the number of shooting victims this year slightly above last year’s tragic tally -- to 1,484 from 1,451 -- through Oct. 16.

Four high-ranking cops point the finger at Occupy Wall Street protesters, saying their rallies pull special crime-fighting units away from the hot zones where they’re needed.

Since Occupy Wall Street took over Zuccotti Park on Sept. 17, the NYPD has relied heavily on its borough task forces, the department’s go-to teams for rowdy crowds.

But such protest duty takes the special units away from their regular jobs -- patrolling public housing and problem spots and staking out nightclubs plagued by violence, supervisors said.

“Normally, the task force is used in high-crime neighborhoods where you have a lot of shootings and robberies,” said one source.

“They are always used when there are spikes in crime as a quick fix. But instead of being sent to Jamaica, Brownsville and the South Bronx, they are in Wall Street.”

Another NYPD boss is troubled by the resulting slowdown in stop-and-frisks.

When OWS marches, as many as 3,000 cops a day could be called on to keep the peace. That’s about 10 percent of the total force.

“The city is going crazy with demonstrations and protests, and I’m lucky if I can get four cars out there,” said Deputy Inspector Ted Berntsen, commander of the 13th precinct in Chelsea.

As the NYPD deals with depleted ranks, fewer thugs are going to jail. The Organized Crime Control Bureau -- an elite unit of hundreds of cops fighting drug dealers and gun runners -- has seen arrests plummet 19 percent this year.




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/25/2011 7:59:56 AM
From: lorne5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224707
 
kenny..I have been saying for the last couple of years that what hussein obama is doing is intentional...no one not even him could be this stupid. and you support the destruction of America.?

Obama now accused of destroying U.S. economy ... on purpose!
President, Dems accused of deliberately overloading country's financial system
: October 24, 2011
wnd.com



NEW YORK – A new book released today documents how President Obama and progressive Democrats are deliberately overloading the U.S. financial system, using socialist designs to remake the economy.

"Red Army: The Radical Network that must be defeated to save America" by Aaron Klein and Brenda J. Elliott unearths the radical origins of Obama's major economic legislation and policies, including the 2009 "stimulus" and health-care law.

The book, with nearly 1,500 endnotes, documents how these radicals aim to remake the American financial system with massive government control.

"Red Army" contains a number of other major scoops while exposing the radical socialist network that seized political power in Washington over decades, shaped Obama's presidential agenda and threatens the very future of the U.S.

Get your personally autographed copy of "Red Army: The Radical Network That Must Be Defeated to Save America" from WND's Superstore

Klein and Elliott trace Obama's economic policies to a number of progressive organizations, most prominently the Economic Policy Institute, which is funded by billionaire George Soros.

"Red Army" investigates recent legislation and initiatives, including the "stimulus" bill, "Making It In America," the Currency Reform for Fair Trade Act of 2010 and "Buy American."

It traces the policies to groups such as the Alliance for American Manufacturing, a union-manufacturer partnership; the Soros-funded Campaign for America's Future; and the Apollo Alliance, which is run by a who's who of radicals.

On Obamacare, the "Red Army" documents how the legislation – deliberately masked by moderate, populist rhetoric – was carefully crafted and perfected over the course of decades. The book shows how the law is a direct product of laborious work by a coalition of radical groups and activists with socialist designs who seek to "reform" the U.S. health care industries, which account for a significant portion of the U.S. capitalist enterprise.

"Red Army" reveals the principal author of Obamacare, as well as how the legislation had its origins in an initiative openly associated with a slew of radical activists and groups. One is a group funded by Soros. A second is a terrorist-supporting, communist-hailing extremist. To top it off, another is a socialist activist who is the father of the U.S. single-payer movement.

Klein and Elliott first exposed President Obama’s "extremist ties" in their 2010 New York Times best-seller "The Manchurian President."

Some other highlights from "Red Army":

•The existence of a powerful "Marxist-socialist" bloc in Congress (explicitly formed as an arm of the Democratic Socialists of America) and how it is behind legislation in areas that affect all Americans, including the complete socialization of health care and comprehensive immigration reform, which, the book exposes, seeks to change the very nature of the American electorate.

•In two chapters that every American must read, entirely new information is laid bare on the left's unprecedented assault on America's already over-liberalized education system.

•The multipronged policy offensive aimed at disarming America by emboldening its enemies within and without, spurning traditional allies, subjecting the nation to the authority of foreign tribunals and systematically dismantling the U.S. military.

•How elements of the news media not only collude with these radical groups but are in some cases members of the very extremist organizations they ought to be investigating.
"Red Army" is published by Broadside Books, an imprint of Harper Collins.

Klein is WND's senior reporter and Jerusalem bureau chief. He hosts Aaron Klein Investigative Radio on New York’s WABC Radio. He is a regular guest on the Fox News Channel and the Fox Business Network.

Elliott is a New York Times best-selling author, researcher and historian.




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/25/2011 8:03:46 AM
From: lorne5 Recommendations  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 224707
 
ken, you and your kind are responsible for the advancement of radical islam your support for hussein obama has caused this to happen. Bet you feel real proud?

Secular party concedes defeat in landmark Tunisian election
Official results expected on Tuesday; party officials vow alliance with secularists
msnbc.com news services
updated 10/24/2011
msnbc.msn.com

Moderate Islamists claimed victory in Tunisia's first democratic election, sending a message to other states in the region that long-sidelined Islamists are challenging for power after the "Arab Spring".

Official results will be announced on Tuesday, but the Ennahda party said it had already tallied results posted at polling stations after Sunday's vote, the first since the uprisings which began in Tunisia and spread through the region.

"The first confirmed results show that Ennahda has obtained first place," campaign manager Abdelhamid Jlazzi said outside party headquarters in the centre of the Tunisian capital.

As he spoke, a crowd of more than 300 in the street shouted "Allahu Akbar!" or "God is greatest!". Other people started singing the Tunisian national anthem.

Alliance with secularists
Mindful that some people in Tunisia and elsewhere see the resurgence of Islamists as a threat to modern, liberal values, party officials said they were prepared to form an alliance with two secularist parties, Congress for the Republic and Ettakatol.

"We will spare no effort to create a stable political alliance ... We reassure the investors and international economic partners," Jlazzi said.

Two days after an unprecedented 90 percent of voters turned out for the election, officials were still counting the ballot papers in some areas. They said nationwide results would not be ready before Tuesday afternoon.


Sunday's vote was for an assembly which will sit for one year to draft a new constitution. It will also appoint a new interim president and government to run the country until fresh elections late next year or early in 2013.

The voting system has built-in checks and balances which make it nearly impossible for any one party to have a majority, compelling Ennahda to seek alliances with secularist parties, which will dilute its influence.

"This is an historic moment," said Zeinab Omri, a young woman in a hijab, or Islamic head scarf, who was outside the Ennahda headquarters when party officials claimed victory.

"No one can doubt this result. This result shows very clearly that the Tunisian people is a people attached to its Islamic identity," she said.

Tunisia became the birthplace of the "Arab Spring" when Mohamed Bouazizi, a vegetable seller in a provincial town, set fire to himself in protest at poverty and government repression.


'Changed the course of history'
President Barack Obama said Tunisia's revolution in January, which began with Bouazizi and ended with autocratic President Zine Al-Abidine Ben Ali fleeing abroad, had "changed the course of history."

"Just as so many Tunisian citizens protested peacefully in streets and squares to claim their rights, today they stood in lines and cast their votes to determine their own future," he said.


The suicide of vegetable peddler Bouazizi, prompted by despair over poverty and government harassment, provoked mass protests which ended Ben Ali's 23-year grip on power.

Slideshow: State of emergency in Tunisia (on this page)
This in turn inspired uprisings in Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Syria and Bahrain which have re-shaped the political landscape of the Middle East and North Africa.

Ennahda is led by Rachid Ghannouchi, forced into exile in Britain for 22 years because of harassment by Ben Ali's police. A softly spoken scholar, he dresses in suits and open-necked shirts while his wife and daughter wear the hijab.

Ghannouchi is at pains to stress his party will not enforce any code of morality on Tunisian society, or the millions of Western tourists who holiday on its beaches. He models his approach on the moderate Islamism of Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan.

Video: How rap fueled the Arab Spring (on this page)
The party's rise has been met with ambivalence by some people in Tunisia. The country's strong secularist traditions go back to the first post-independence president, Habiba Bourguiba, who called the hijab an "odious rag".

Outside the offices of the commission which organised the election, about 50 people staged a sit-in demanding an investigation into what they said were irregularities committed by Ennahda. Election officials said any problems were minor.

"I really feel a lot of fear and concern after this result," said Meriam Othmani, a 28-year-old journalist. "Women's rights will be eroded," she said. "Also, you'll see the return of dictatorship once Ennahda achieves a majority in the constituent assembly."

Ennahda's preferred coalition partners may reassure some opponents. Ali Larayd, a member of the party's executive committee, said it was ready to form an alliance with the Congress for the Republic and Ettakatol, both secularist groups respected by Tunisia's intelligentsia.

The Congress is led by Moncef Marzouki, a doctor and human rights activist who spent years in exile in France. Ettakatol is a socialist party led by Mustafa Ben Jaafar, another doctor and veteran Ben Ali opponent.

The only official results released were from polling stations abroad, because they voted early.




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/25/2011 9:30:19 AM
From: JakeStraw5 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224707
 
Under the Obama Administration, the U.S. national debt will have risen approximately $5.0 trillion—that’s almost a 50% increase from when President Obama took office and the biggest four-year increase in the U.S. national debt under any President.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (116171)10/25/2011 9:35:12 AM
From: FJB4 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224707
 
Barack Obama likes to blame all of our economic woes on his predecessor. The burgeoning national debt is no different, as he blames its precipitous rise on the Bush tax cuts. Well, President Bush and his merry band of big-government conservatives were anything but budget hawks; nonetheless, it took them 92 months – almost the entire 8-year tenure – to accrue $4.3 trillion in debt. Obama has accumulated that much debt in just 33 months. Put another way, it wasn’t until 1997 that we amassed as much debt as Obama has in 2.5 years.

redstate.com