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Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/20/2013 11:43:04 AM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 16547
 
Ali Syed Kills 3 near LA--police see 'no motive' OF COURSE

Shooting spree across Calif county leaves 4 dead


By GILLIAN FLACCUS | Associated Press –
news.yahoo.com View GalleryShooting spree in California




TUSTIN, Calif. (AP) — A violent rampage that left four dead in suburban Orange County began in the pre-dawn hours Tuesday when a 20-year-old killed a woman in his home and sped away in his parents' car, authorities said.

An hour later, it was over — but not before Ali Syed had killed two more people during carjackings, shot up vehicles on a busy freeway interchange and left three others injured in a trail of carnage that stretched across 25 miles.

One driver was forced from his BMW at a stop sign, marched to a curb and shot in the back of the head as other commuters watched in horror.

"He was basically executed," Santa Ana police Cpl. Anthony Bertagna said. "There were at least six witnesses."

Syed later killed himself. He lived with his parents at the Ladera Ranch residence where the first victim, an unidentified woman in her 20s, was slain, Tustin police Chief Scott Jordan said. He was unemployed, taking one class at a local community college, Jordan said.

The woman was not related to the shooter and it wasn't known what she was doing at the home, said Orange County sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino.

Syed's parents were in the house at the time, fled the residence when shots were fired, and reported it, he said.

Jordan said Syed stated to one carjacking victim: "I don't want to hurt you. I killed somebody. Today is my last day."

Jordan said there was no indication of a motive, but he sought to assure residents that the violence was over.

"There is no conspiracy here, there are no outstanding suspects, it was a very, very unfortunate situation, but I don't think the people here in Orange County have to be worried about their safety," he said.

The violence began at 4:45 a.m., when deputies responded to a call from Ladera Ranch, a sleepy inland town about 55 miles southeast of Los Angeles. They found the woman shot multiple times.

Jason Glass, who lives across the street, said he couldn't sleep and was watching TV in his garage with the door partly open when he heard what sounded like gun shots.

Then he heard a commotion and the sound of a car speeding away.

Hours later, his neighborhood was flooded with police, and crime scene tape sectioned off the street.

"I just happened to be in here when this happened," Glass said about his garage. "To think he could have rolled under my door or needed a car or needed to hide is crazy. It's freaking me out."

From Ladera Ranch, police said the gunman headed north and pulled off Interstate 5 in Tustin, about 20 miles away, with a flat tire and other damage to his parents' car.

A man who was waiting in a shopping center parking lot to carpool with his son saw Syed had a gun and tried to escape in his Cadillac, Jordan said. Syed ran after the car as it drove away and fired his shotgun through the back window, striking the driver in head but not killing him.

The driver "noticed that he was loading his shotgun, so he simply gets back in his car and tries to escape," Jordan said. "He's driving through the parking lot trying to get away and the suspect is actually chasing him on foot, taking shots at him."

Syed then crossed the street to a Mobil gas station, where he approached the driver of a pick-up and asked for his keys, Jordan said.

"He says something to the effect of, 'I've killed somebody. Today's my last day. I don't want to hurt you. Give me your keys,'" he said. "He hands over the keys and he gets in the truck and leaves."

Syed got back on the freeway, where he pulled to the side of the road at the busy I-5 and State Route 55 interchange and began firing at commuters, Jordan said.

One driver was struck in the mouth and hands. He didn't have a cellphone, but was able to drive home and call police. Two other cars were hit but their drivers weren't injured, Jordan said.

"All of this is happening so quickly," he said, estimating that Syed shot at drivers from the side of the freeway transition for about a minute.

The shooter then exited the freeway in nearby Santa Ana but ran the curb and got his car stuck, authorities said.

He approached Melvin Edwards, a 69-year-old from Laguna Hills who was on his way to his Santa Ana business, as Edwards sat in his BMW at a stop sign. Syed forced Edwards to get out of his car, marched him across the street and shot him three times, including in the back of the head and the back, as horrified drivers looked on, Jordan said.

"They tried to get away. They saw what was going on, they tried to get away and they called police," he said.

Syed took Edwards' BMW and next popped up at the Micro Center, a Tustin business, where he shot and killed construction worker Jeremy Lewis, 26, of Fullerton. Lewis' co-worker rushed to intervene and was shot in the arm, Jordan said.

Syed took the second construction worker's utility truck and fled to Orange, this time with California Highway Patrol officers in pursuit. He jumped from the moving utility truck at an intersection in Orange, about five miles away, and shot himself immediately, Jordan said.

A shotgun was recovered at the scene.

A message left at Syed's parents' home wasn't immediately returned on Tuesday.



To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/20/2013 12:01:54 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Respond to of 16547
 
The Islamization of Spanish Jurisprudence

Spain Submits to "Adoption Jihad"


by Soeren Kern February 20, 2013
gatestoneinstitute.org
To the extent that European lawmakers are willing to graft Islamic legal principles onto Europe's secular legal codes, Islamic Sharia law could easily become a permanent reality in Spain and across the continent.

Spain has acceded to the demands of the Islamist government in Morocco
by agreeing that Moroccan children adopted by Spanish families must remain culturally and religiously Muslim.

The agreement obliges the Spanish government to establish a "control mechanism" that would enable Moroccan religious authorities to monitor the children until they reach the age of 18 to ensure they have not converted to Christianity.


The requirement, which will be enshrined in Spain's legal code
, represents an unprecedented encroachment of Islamic Sharia law within Spanish jurisprudence. The move also represents a frontal assault on the freedom of religion or belief, which is protected by Article 16 of the Spanish Constitution.

Spanish Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón said on February 17 that he had agreed to the demands of his Moroccan counterpart, the Islamist Mustafa Ramid, so that Spanish families who have been assigned Moroccan orphans can bring the children to Spain.

Adopting children in Morocco has always been problematic. But the procedure became vastly more complicated in 2012, when Morocco's newly elected Islamist government announced measures to prevent non-Muslim foreigners from adopting Moroccan children.

According to the Casablanca-based NGO Feminine Solidarity Association (ASF), Morocco has an alarmingly high rate of child abandonment; an average of 24 children are abandoned every day (or around 8,700 every year) throughout the country. (ASF says many children are abandoned because of Article 490 of the Moroccan Penal Code, which stipulates one year in prison for anyone found guilty of having sexual relations outside of marriage.)

Statistically, the future for Moroccan orphans is bleak. A consortium of six NGOs reports that 80% of the children who grow up in Moroccan orphanages become delinquents, and 10% end up committing suicide. Only 10% become productive members of society.

Because of its geographic proximity, Spain has emerged as a key destination for Moroccan orphans. In 2011, the year before the Islamist government intervened to freeze the adoption process, 254 Moroccan children were assigned to Spanish families.

The Western concept of adoption -- by which an adopted child becomes the true child of the adoptive parents
-- has never existed in Morocco (nor in most other Muslim countries).

Instead, Islamic law governs adoption through a system called " Kafala," a legal guardianship which allows a non-Muslim person to assume responsibility for the protection, education and maintenance of an abandoned child, but which prohibits a non-Muslim from formally adopting or assuming custody of that child.

According to Kafala, the "adopted" child must keep the name and surname of his biological parents. Moreover, the child must remain Muslim and must maintain the nationality of his or her birth. In effect, non-Muslim guardians are prohibited from establishing a full parental relationship with the child, as would be the case with adoption.

On September 19, 2012, Moroccan Justice Minister Mustafa Ramid issued a circular prohibiting the transfer of Moroccan children to foreigners "if they are not habitually resident in Morocco." He argued that once children leave the country, it is impossible to verify whether the Kafala is being respected and the children are being raised as Muslims.

The new stipulation affects at least 58 Spanish families who were assigned Moroccan children before the Islamist government took office in November 2011.

In order to comply with the new requirements, some Spaniards have quit their jobs and/or sold their homes and moved to Morocco to obtain residency there. But many have discovered that the mere possession of a Moroccan residence permit does not guarantee that non-Muslim adoptive parents can someday take their children to Spain.

Susana Ramos, for example, an adoptive parent from Madrid, was assigned an abandoned baby more than one year ago by the Moroccan League for Child Welfare, a public institution in charge of orphans. Since then, she has made 23 trips to Morocco, but still has been unable to take the child to Spain.

In at least a dozen other cases, Spaniards have converted to Islam in order to obtain custody over "their" children, especially if they are girls.

Seeking to end the "humanitarian drama," Spanish Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón announced that he would give in to Moroccan demands and amend Spain's Law Concerning International Adoption, dated December 2007, in order to bring Spanish law into conformity with Islamic law.

The legal changes, which are set to take effect in 2013, would "constrain" the rights of Spanish adoptive parents by obligating them to fully comply with the Kafala until the children reach adulthood.

In practical terms, this means that Spaniards who adopt Moroccan children would forfeit their right to use the Spanish court system to try to obtain "full adoption" of the child under Spanish law. In the past, some Spanish families have successfully used this legal route "to ensure the well-being" of their adopted Moroccan children, by gaining for them the same rights as Spanish children.

It remains unclear whether Ruiz-Gallardón's "appeasement strategy" will placate the Islamists in Morocco, who are insisting that the legal measures be retroactive and apply to all Moroccan children who have ever been adopted by Spanish parents.

Moroccan authorities are also demanding that Spanish parents travel to Morocco once a year so that Islamic religious authorities there can verify full compliance with the Kafala.


In December 2012, a group of 40 families (mostly Spanish, but also American, Canadian, French and Swiss) sent an emotional letter to Moroccan King Mohamed VI, requesting that he intercede with the Islamists who are running the country.

But the letter seems to have backfired by infuriating many of those who sympathize with the Islamists.

This would include the Barcelona-based Friends of Morocco Association
(ITRAN), which has helped Spanish families with the adoption process in Morocco. In a tersely worded statement dated January 25, 2013, ITRAN said the decision to circumvent the status quo by contacting the Moroccan King directly was "undeniably a grave and intolerable lack of respect" for the Kafala.

Members of ITRAN said they were angry that some Moroccan children in Spain had been "baptized into the Christian faith," and that from now on the group would help only those who sign a statement promising "a sincere and unequivocal commitment to meet each and every one of the obligations that the law of Kafala imposes."

The Islamists in Morocco have also remained uncompromising. In a recent interview with the online newspaper Europa Press, Moroccan Foreign Minister Saaedín el Otmani advised the families in question to resolve their cases directly through Morocco's notoriously inefficient court system. He said they should provide "proof" that they can "guarantee" full compliance with the Kafala.

This will not be easy. In the Moroccan city of Agadir, for instance, an Islamist judge recently suspended the adoption proceedings of several Spanish families. He ordered the future guardians first to pass a theological exam to demonstrate that they have sufficient knowledge of Islam in order to be able to educate the children as Muslims.

As for Ruiz-Gallardón, he may be looking to neighboring France for guidance on how to deal with the Kafala issue. The French Civil Code explicitly recognizes the Kafala as having precedence over French law in all cases involving children born to Muslim parents outside of France, in the interests of "cultural pluralism."

The law was recently challenged in court by a French citizen living in Villeurbanne (Lyon), after French authorities prohibited the woman from adopting a child who was abandoned at birth in Algeria.

In October 2012, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) unanimously upheld the French decision. It ruled that the refusal to let the applicant adopt was based on the French Civil Code, but also, to a large extent, on compliance with international treaties, particularly the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, dated November 1989, which explicitly refers to the Islamic Kafala as "alternative care" on a par with adoption.

The ECHR considered that the fact that the Kafala was acknowledged in international law was a decisive factor when assessing how European countries accommodated it in their domestic law and dealt with any conflicts that arose.

Back in Spain, Ruiz-Gallardón's decision to make Spanish law comply with Islamic Sharia law has generated controversy. But it remains to be seen if any lawsuits emerge to challenge what some are calling the "Islamization" of Spanish jurisprudence.

Either way, to the extent that European lawmakers are willing to graft Islamic legal principles onto Europe's secular legal codes, Islamic Sharia law could easily become a permanent reality in Spain and across the continent.
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credit monkeyman




To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/20/2013 12:23:50 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16547
 
US issues worldwide caution to its citizens on terror threats...

US issues worldwide caution to its citizens on terror threats...



To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/20/2013 4:56:40 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 16547
 
John Kerry Gives First Foreign Policy Speech -- on Climate Change...

Says Congress greater threat to foreign policy than China, Middle East...

Complains about lack of funding...


John Kerry Gives First Foreign Policy Speech -- on Climate Change...

Says Congress greater threat to foreign policy than China, Middle East...

Complains about lack of funding...



To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/21/2013 3:39:06 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations  Respond to of 16547
 
Jackson Lee Honors Rapper Who Sang “I Just Gotta Keep Killin’ That White Bitch”

FrontPageMagazine
Posted By Daniel Greenfield
On February 20, 2013 @ 7:33 pm

Excerpt:

Sheila Jackson Lee is America’s hardest working congresswoman, always out there making headlines for saying stupid things and doing really terrible things.

The latest terrible thing that Sheila Jackson Lee did was hand a “Certificate of Congressional Recognition” to a rapper most famous for singing about drug dealing.

Houston Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee was in the midst of NBA All-Star Game festivities in Houston this past weekend. The Democratic congresswoman from Houston took time to honor Atlanta hip-hop star Jay Jenkins, known as “Young Jeezy,” for his community work across the country.

During All-Star Game weekend, Jackson Lee presented with a “Certificate of Congressional Recognition” embossed with a gold seal.

“Your core values
of hard work and integrity has helped improve youth in the Houston community,” declared the certificate, which was signed by Jackson Lee.

Young Jeezy’s core values are drug dealing and rapping about dealing drugs
and selling Snowman t-shirts which stand for drug dealing. Some of those shirts are being worn by elementary school kids, so he certainly is doing his part to improve the youth of Houston.

Other things that Young Jeezy is famous for include his “My President is Black” song with lyrics like “Mr. Black President, yeah Obama for real/They gotta put ya face on the 5000 dollar bill”.

*snip*

Link



To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/25/2013 12:49:56 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Respond to of 16547
 
Michelle Obama’s Oscar cameo was pointless and bizarre

Telegraph UK By Nile Gardiner February 25th, 2013
blogs.telegraph.co.uk

Michelle Obama: Hollywood favourite

The entrance of Michelle Obama, via video link, at the end of the ceremony to announce the Best Picture winner was a bizarre moment that was completely pointless. It was reportedly arranged by Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, a close friend of the Obamas. If the First Lady was a former actress (à la Carla Sarkozy), or had some official role in promoting the American film industry, it might have made some sense. Mrs. Obama, though, has no connection to the world of cinema.

It was a cringe worthy moment that came across as cynical liberal Hollywood pandering to a Democrat White House, a fitting match for an Obama presidency that is obsessed with show biz celebrities.

As Tim Stanley noted earlier, “the bias discredits both the White House and movie industry.” Even the First Lady herself looked a bit embarrassed by the whole affair, and who knows what Jack Nicholson was really thinking about the spectacle. At least there is a silver lining. Argo is not only a nail biting movie based on a true story, but it is also an unflinching indictment of the Iranian revolution and the Islamist regime that came to power in 1979. To anyone who has seen this movie, Barack Obama’s policy of engagement with the tyranny in Tehran looks foolhardy and naive in the extreme.




To: Honey_Bee who wrote (1555)2/25/2013 12:55:39 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
liberal Hollywood pandering to a Democrat White House,


Message 28745407