67 Replies to “Reader Tips”

  1. Last night while watching CNN, on 3 separate occassions, when they broke for commercials, I watched promos for Little Mosque on the Prairie, The Week the Women left and another new program with 2 guys coming soon. The CBC logo was in the corner. Was this a fluke of crossed signals, or is CBC now advertizing on CNN.
    First time I thought I had switched channels, but the second, I checked and I hadn’t.
    Then I thought cbc was carrying CNN and the hype re tonights vote. Wrong.
    And, no one else had access to the remote, and it was several feet away from me.
    I will be watching tonight to see if it happens again.

  2. I can’t help Mary T.
    I switched from CNN as soon as Fox News cable was available in Canada.
    Best move I made since cable and satellite became the norm for viewing.
    CNN in my view are just as leftist as CBC.
    It would not be surprising for CBC to be spending our money at CNN, their natural ally.

  3. mary t – it’s nothing to do with CNN. It’s your cable server which is Canadian; it inserts those ‘Canadian ads’. Now, one must wonder how much it costs our precious CBC to advertise on that Canadian cable service….to people who aren’t watching that CBC.

  4. Even more conservatives begin to see what the rest of us saw from the beginning. Now that it is au courant, David Frum “dares” to criticize Bush and his Admnistration and even laments the state of the US in Iraq and its economy, in his new book, excerpted in three parts in the National Post. I think the truest thing he writes – and that we must pay attention to – is how Bush, in fighting terrorists, uses and helps the biggest backers of the terrorists. Must be “Bush Derangement Syndrome”, right?
    Here is part of yesterday’s (http://www.nationalpost.com/opinion/story.html?id=209556&p=3):
    ————-
    In the war on terror, Bush triangulated between promoting democracy to defeat Islamism and supporting authoritarian allies against Islamism. He sought to defeat radical Islam with the support of radical Islam’s principal backers: the Saudi monarchy and the Pakistani military. He ended up running two contradictory foreign policies, and unsurprisingly, both ended badly.
    At home, Bush triangulated between radical free-market reforms in Social Security and Medicare on the one hand and a huge expansion in government’s grip upon prescription drugs, farming and energy on the other. He cut taxes and increased spending. He sought to protect the nation from foreign terrorists while propping open the doors to huge new waves of foreign immigration. Unsurprisingly, these contradictory policies ended badly, too.
    The American economy grew handsomely between 2001 and 2006. But over those five years, the income of the median American — the worker right in the middle of the pay scale — did not rise at all. The number of people in poverty rose by 5.4 million between 2000 and 2004. – The 9/11 attacks exposed terrifying unreadiness throughout the U.S. government. In response, the Bush administration launched the most radical overhaul of the U.S. government since the beginning of the Cold War — only to be caught almost equally unprepared by Hurricane Katrina. – Between 2001 and 2006, at a time of intense concern for national security, at least four million people entered the United States illegally, elevating the total illegal population to at least 12 million. – For the first time in half a century, Republicans controlled the presidency, the House, and the Senate all at the same time. Instead of rolling back government, however, Republicans hugely expanded it. Federal spending under George W. Bush rose faster than under any president since Lyndon Johnson. […]Republicans won in 1994 and 2000 due in large part to voter perceptions of them as the more honest and ethical party. This asset was squandered by Jack Abramoff, Duke Cunningham, Mark Foley, and Alberto Gonzalez.
    More than most presidents, George W. Bush has left behind a mixed record: of work begun but left unfinished, of challenges confronted but ill articulated, of heroic aspirations marred by ineffective execution, of bold initiatives and tentative results.

  5. I am so sick of Little Mosque commercials,and all the rest of the crap better known as their winter programming, all night long. I am willing to bet that no one from the CBC watches the CBC.
    Commercials, promos,. Why are the CBC showing commercials. they are a public funded .org
    Dump the CBC.

  6. Blogger who dared to expose Saudi corruption is arrested
    Fouad al-Farhan knew they were coming for him. A few days before Saudi security forces swooped on his offices, he sent a letter to friends telling them he was a wanted man. “They will pick me up any time in the next two weeks,” he predicted.
    His crime? Writing one of the most widely read blogs in Saudi Arabia.
    Mr Farhan, 32, who describes his online mission as “searching for freedom, dignity, justice, equality, public participation and other lost Islamic values”, had already broken ground by refusing to hide behind a pen-name as he vented his spleen about the rampant corruption blighting political life. Now he has clocked up another first – the first blogger to be arrested in the kingdom…

  7. It’s -15 in Toronto, colder with the wind chill.
    Hey! Al Gore!
    Come on up and enjoy the sunshine!

  8. Does anybody have a clue who Ted thinks he’s talking to here?
    He seems to have confused SDA with rabble for quite some time now.
    Liberals are extremely strange.

  9. Our local cable service has recently put Fox News on their pkg. But, to get it one must buy another box, and as soon as I can afford it, I will get it. Watching cnn’s coverage of the 2004 election results was worth the price, to see the looks of disbelief on all those faces.
    Hopefully the same shocked looks will be there when Hillory doesn’t win a huge majority tonight.
    How stupid are voters, (don’t answer) especially those supporting her because they liked Bill.
    Would be fun to watch the clips of the experts after she announced her candidacy. She was unbeatable, unstopable, the WH was hers for the taking.
    She might still be the nominee, but it will be a tough fight, and she will lose in November.

  10. Further to Mary T’s dilemma with CBC advertising on CNN. Thanks to the CRTC, we Canadians are not allowed to watch any US commercials carried on Cable or Satellite TV. That is why the famous Super Bowl commercials are never seen in Canada unless one has an antenna and lives within signal range of a US TV station. Next time you are watching a sporting event on a Canadian feed from the US, take a look at the Jumbotron adverts.
    Usually Canadian Tire or some other uniquely Canadian business enterprise.
    You can thank Sheila Copps, Pierre Turdeau and the rest of the Commmie Pinko Canadian leftoids
    for that. The government CAN and DOES regulate what you can watch on television.

  11. Violent deathrate in Venezuela higher than in Iraq:
    http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2008/01/holy-chavistas-venezuela-violent-deaths.html
    Somehow it still must be all Bush’s fault.
    By the way, Ted, Frum is a conservative. That means he’s free to criticize fellow conservatives, and still cheerfully exist inside the conservative camp. Other conservatives are also free to disagree with his opinions while still respecting his viewpoints.
    It’s hard for the sheep-like and group-think mentality of a leftist to grasp the point that being a conservative does not mean one has to toe a line or be cast out, but do try . . .

  12. “Such is the low esteem of George Bush’s America in the rest of the world that Britain and France are fighting over which of them is our closest ally. . . . I hear the Democrat candidates bloviate on the campaign trail about how they’re going to “repair our relations” with the rest of the world, and wonder on what planet they’re living. Hilarious.”
    http://www.transterrestrial.com/archives/010306.html#010306

  13. Watch for it, the sky is falling, the sky is falling, we are all doomed.
    Enviroment Canada Southern Ontario january 5,6 & 7th, Saturday +3, Sunday +7 & Monday +9

  14. Mart T – I’m praying The Hag takes a nosedive tonight. She’s capable of some real mean spirited behavior when on the defensive like her culling through Obama’s kindergarten records. The public needs as much exposure to a wounded enraged Hildabeast as possible.
    Globl warming has hit my neighborhood in Florida, we dipped to 26 degrees wind chill last night. The strawberry crop was killed, no definative news yet on whether the orange crop was salvaged.

  15. The Hildebeast is such a phoney, I gag every time I see her trying her best to smile and look like a dutiful daughter and mom. That’s the card she’s playing now: dragging her mom and Chelsea onto the hustings, neither of whom look at all happy being there.
    ‘Think it may backfire. If you’re going to bring your mom and daughter into the political limelight AS SUPPORT, they should at least be looking at you with adoring eyes.
    As it is, Mrs. Rodham and Chelsea seem to have the same opinion of Hill as the rest of us: When can we get outta here?

  16. “Yet an extraordinary if neglected window onto the inner workings of life in Waziristan does exist—a modern book, with deep roots in the area’s colonial past. …-
    Tribes of Terror
    Lord Curzon, Britain’s viceroy of India and foreign secretary during the initial decades of the 20th century, once declared:
    No patchwork scheme—and all our present recent schemes…are mere patchwork—will settle the Waziristan problem. Not until the military steam-roller has passed over the country from end to end, will there be peace. But I do not want to be the person to start that machine.
    Nowadays, this region of what is today northwest Pakistan is variously called “Al-Qaedastan,” “Talibanistan,” or more properly, the “Islamic Emirate of Waziristan.” Pakistan gave up South Waziristan to the Taliban in Spring 2006, after taking heavy casualties in a failed four-year campaign to consolidate control of this fierce tribal region. By the fall, Pakistan had effectively abandoned North Waziristan. The nominal truce—actually closer to a surrender—was signed in a soccer stadium, beneath al-Qaeda’s black flag.
    Having recovered the safe haven once denied them by America’s invasion of Afghanistan, al-Qaeda and the Taliban have gathered the diaspora of the worldwide Islamist revolution into Waziristan. Slipping to safety from Tora Bora, Osama bin Laden himself almost certainly escaped across its border. Now Muslim punjabis who fight the Indian army in Kashmir, Chechen opponents of Russia, and many more Islamist terror groups congregate, recuperate, train, and confer in Waziristan. This past fall’s terror plotters in Germany and Denmark allegedly trained in Waziristan, as did those who hoped to highjack transatlantic planes leaving from Britain’s Heathrow Airport in 2006. The crimson currents flowing across what Samuel Huntington once famously dubbed “Islam’s bloody borders” now seem to emanate from Waziristan.
    Slowly but surely, the Islamic Emirate’s writ is pushing beyond Waziristan itself, to encompass other sections of Pakistan’s mountainous tribal regions—thereby fueling the ongoing insurgency across the border in Afghanistan. With a third of Pakistanis in a recent poll expressing favorable views of al-Qaeda, and 49% registering favorable opinions of local jihadi terror groups, the Islamic Emirate of Waziristan may yet conquer Pakistan. Fear of a widening Islamist rebellion in this nuclear-armed state wasGeneral Musharraf’s stated reason for the recent imposition of a state of emergency. And in fact Osama bin Laden publicly called for the overthrow of Musharraf’s government this past September. It is for fear of provoking such a disastrous revolt that we have so far dared not loose the American military steamroller in Waziristan. When Lord Curzon hesitated to start up the British military machine, he was revolving in his mind the costs and consequences of the great 1857 Indian “Mutiny” and of an 1894 jihadist revolt in South Waziristan. Surely, Curzonwould have appreciated our dilemma today.
    An Indispensable Guide
    Foreign journalists are now banned in Waziristan and most local reporters have fled in fear for their lives. Because scholars have long neglected this famously inhospitable region, Waziristan remains a dark spot, and America remains proportionately ignorant of the forces we confront in the terror war. Yet an extraordinary if neglected window onto the inner workings of life in Waziristan does exist—a modern book, with deep roots in the area’s colonial past. …-
    http://tinyurl.com/yv3t9k (claremont.org)

  17. When I see Ted in signature, I skip his rantings, simply because I usually can’t understand the word combinations he puts together. Such a contrast with other regular posters here… It’s tough to be a village idiot I guess.

  18. Oh, she was clear enough Jay. She just doesn’t seem to realize she made part of my point for me, i.e. the insularity of the thought process that no criticisms of Bush are allowed… now slightly modified to allow criticisms by other conservatives even though some of these criticisms have made by non-conservatives from the beginning of Bush’s term.

  19. Ted the troll needs to get his own blog, but there might possibly be a hint of a wisp of a trace of a scintilla of a point in that bit about Bush’s triangulations.
    The point is, the truly horrible thing about Bill Clinton’s triangulations is that it gave George Bush the idea that triangulations were a good thing.

  20. More Islamic honour killings. “Oh, wait,” says the Imam, “This is not Islam.”
    “Dead in Dallas: Honor Killings Land on our Shores”
    They have dishonored our shores for quite some time and more keep coming our way.
    I am talking about honor killings in North America. In The Death of Feminism, I write about honor murders in Missouri, Ohio, and in parts of New Jersey, New York, and Canada which took place during the last quarter-century.
    Just yesterday, an Egyptian Arab Muslim father in Dallas, Texas allegedly shot his two beautiful teenage daughters to death because he disapproved of their American-style ways. Their names were Amina and Sarah Said and their father’s name was Abdul Said. The girls looked sassy and full of life; they looked like Dallas teenagers. They were 17 and 18 years old and their friends considered them “geniuses.” Abdul was a taxi driver.
    ibloga.blogspot.com (Not being picked up yet by MSM, other than Washington Times)

  21. Muslim honour killing. MSM’s political correctness does not allow the words, Muslim/Islam.
    …-
    Slaying of popular teens stuns friends
    Sisters’ father wanted for capital murder[…]
    The suspect
    Description: Police said Yaser Abdel Said is about 6-foot-2, weighs about 180 pounds and has black hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a black turtleneck shirt/sweater, a brown coat and tan pants.
    He is believed to be armed with a handgun, police said.
    Anyone with information is asked to call Irving police at 972-721-2518.
    http://tinyurl.com/2j6jvg (star-telegram)

  22. Ted: we seldom agree on anything but for once you bring up a salient point….even if it just done as a typically partisan reactionary reflex.
    Overall I have to say Bush has been a bad thing for republicanism and American conservatism….he …or more correctly his “administrators” who he allowed full policy margin, ARE NOT real conservatives in any sense…not fiscally, not in foreign policy or domestic policy.
    Real principled conservatives would be wise to disassociate themselves with this neo-con regime (relapsed trotskyites) …..these guys were about as “conservative” as FDR or Strauss were.
    http://www.amconmag.com/06_30_03/feature.html
    http://www.lewrockwell.com/dmccarthy/dmccarthy23.html
    http://www.amconmag.com/2005/2005_10_10/article3.html
    http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/925124/posts

  23. “Female airmen deadly in Iraq, Afghanistan”
    A small cadre of women prove their mettle in combat
    By Patrick Winn – Staff writer
    Posted : Wednesday Jan 2, 2008 21:52:41 EST
    Their numbers are few. Their profile is small. But few groups of women have proven more deadly or destructive than Air Force women flying and fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Black began to chart the course. When her voice crackled over the soldiers’ field radios, Dostum was delightedly incredulous. A woman? Sent to kill the Taliban? “He couldn’t believe it,” Black said. “He thought it was the funniest thing.”
    The Spectre neared and its cannons erupted. Unaccustomed to the Gatling gun’s mechanized snarl, the fighters confused the airstrike with a ground assault. Militants scattered into the fields, seeking cover in ditches and vehicles, although Black could see their heat-signature silhouettes from her console by the cockpit.
    Dostum, hidden with the Army detachment several miles away, said the Taliban also believed a high-powered laser pointer used by Spectre operators to identify ground targets — a “sparkle,” in Air Force spec ops speak — was a death ray that turned everything it touched to flames.
    As the hailstorm of munitions continued, Dostum grabbed his walkie-talkie, switched to the Taliban’s unsecured frequency and relayed to them the sound of Black’s chatter coming through Army radio.
    He used the female pilot’s voice to taunt them as they bled.
    “He said, ‘America is so determined, they bring their women to kill the Taliban. You’re so pathetic,’” Black said. “‘It’s the angel of death raining fire upon you.’”
    airforcetimes.com/news/2007/12/airforce_deadly_women_071229w/

  24. The partisan (self-described as “non-partisan”…as if) Ted is the one who doesn’t get it. Yes, democrats have been criticizing Bush’s policies (and although he doesn’t admit it, so have republicans)…but the democrats have also been calling him satan’s spawn or satan himself and blaiming Bush for everything that has gone wrong (and things that have gone well, they’ve fabricated claims that they haven’t).
    So, the democrats have said one thing (out of a thousand outlandish ones) that some republicans agree with…and this is supposed to be a revelation? Talk about having blinders on.
    Get a clue, Ted. Your postings have ZERO effect here.

  25. My grandfather one told that he he played tennis on boxing day, wearing a T-shirt with short sleeves. The year?? Circa 1930’s.Global warming is new?? Hardly. Plus five for this friday!! Wow, what better news. I can make snowballs and throw them at my NDP neighbours!!

  26. The new number of Azure magazine is out. It includes this gem of the finest water:
    Assaf Sagiv, Civilians First
    In 1847, disaster befell a Portuguese Jew by the name of David Pacifico, a trader living in Athens. An anti-Semitic mob stormed his house, looted its contents, and left it wrecked and vandalized. The beleaguered merchant appealed to the Greek authorities, demanding compensation for the considerable financial losses caused by the attack. He was turned down. A British subject by birth, he then turned to Her Majesty’s government, which responded with decisive force…
    …Lord Palmerston…appealed to British legislators’ sense of national pride, and justified his country’s intervention on Pacifico’s behalf by recalling an ancient and revered precedent: “As the Roman, in days of old, held himself free from indignity when he could say, Civis Romanus sum [I am a Roman citizen], so also a British subject, in whatever land he may be, shall feel confident that the watchful eye and the strong arm of England will protect him against injustice and wrong.”

    But in the three decades that have passed since the Entebbe raid, and particularly in the last few years, Israel’s commitment to defending its citizens from the ceaseless aggression of its enemies has eroded considerably…

  27. Multi-culturalism a failure there too? Say it isn’t so!
    Assaf Inbari, Zionism’s New Challenge
    Israel is home to three Jewish nations: The secular, the Haredi, and the national religious, all of whom are called “Israelis.” Zionism has failed to mold them into one people. The fashionable response to this failure is to dismiss the melting pot idea in favor of “multi-culturalism.” This is the liberal model, the “live and let live” approach. In theory, it is wonderfully enlightened. In reality, it is lethal to Zionism.

  28. W Dr. Thomas P.Sheahenhy writes;
    “Why does Al Gore resort to such intemperate language to describe critics of regulatory excess? Perhaps because he has staked out such an extreme position on environment in the past and his position is now at risk of being exposed as fraud.”
    Are we talking about MMGW here ? And more, read on.
    “As a U.S. Senator, for instance, Gore pushed for the ratification of the 1987 Montreal Protocol, the international treaty to ban substances like CFCs. He did so despite the fact that there was no solid evidence that CFCs had any impact on stratospheric ozone levels. There was only an incomplete theory suggesting that CFCs might cause such depletion.” TS
    Same scene different movie ?
    “It is well to remember that the 1995 Nobel Prize for Chemistry was awarded to three professors who pioneered the study of man-made effects ozone layer. The prize was not given to Al Gore and the hypesters who inflated that research into a doomsday scenario, thereby rationalizing government intervention. The reality is that the ozone-CFC relationship is a chemistry problem with over 150 variables, and nobody has the definitive answer. Methane, ice crystals, sulfate aerosols, and other chemicals all contribute to the complexity of the problem. The Nobelists would be the first to agree that the question is by no means settled.” TS
    So this is where Big Al got the idea that HE should win a Nobel !! Pieces are fitting.
    Now for the fear-mongering part.
    “During the campaign of 1992, Gore promoted the “ozone hole over Kennebunkport” scare. Though the hole never materialized, it led directly to the decision to speed up the phase-out of CFC production by five years. Predictably, Gore’s book, “Earth in the Balance,” gave credence to such environmental hoaxes as blind sheep and rabbits in the Antarctica, supposedly caused by increased levels of the sun’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation as a result of ozone depletion.” TS
    http://www.nationalcenter.org/npa152.htm
    Now fast forward to 2007.
    Bob Lieberman writes;
    “The international treaty to protect the ozone layer turns 20 this year. But is there really much reason to celebrate?
    Environmentalists have made numerous apocalyptic predictions over the past several decades, virtually none of which has come to pass. Yet each time, the greens and their political allies proclaim victory, arguing that their preventive prescriptions averted disaster.
    Such is the case with the 1987 Montreal Protocol On Substances That Deplete The Ozone Layer (Montreal Protocol). The lurid predictions of ozone depletion-induced skin cancer epidemics, ecosystem destruction and others haven’t come true, for which Montreal Protocol proponents congratulate themselves. But in retrospect, the evidence shows that ozone depletion was an exaggerated threat in the first place. As the treaty parties return to Montreal for their 20th anniversary meeting it should be cause for reflection, not celebration, especially for those who hope to repeat this “success story” in the context of global warming.”
    Not only the same scene — same movie !!
    “So what do we know now? As far as ozone depletion is concerned, the thinning of the ozone layer that occurred throughout the 1980s apparently stopped in the early 1990s, too soon to credit the Montreal Protocol. A 1998 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report said that, “since 1991, the linear [downward] trend observed during the 1980s has not continued, but rather total column ozone has been almost constant …” However, the same report noted that the stratospheric concentrations of the offending compounds were still increasing through 1998. This lends credence to the skeptical view, widely derided at the time of the Montreal Protocol, that natural variations better explain the fluctuations in the global ozone layer. ” BL
    Sure sounds like the MMGW scare. Same screen play writers too.
    “More importantly, the feared increase in ground level UVB radiation has also failed to materialize.”
    But this was the whole reason for us spending $Billions on “fixing” out air conditioners !!
    “Needless to say, if UVB hasn’t gone up, then the fears of increased UVB-induced harm are unfounded. Indeed, the much-hyped acceleration in skin cancer rates hasn’t been documented. U.S. National Cancer Institute statistics show that malignant melanoma incidence and mortality, which had been undergoing a long-term increase that predates ozone depletion, has actually been leveling off during the putative ozone crisis.” BL
    How many sleepless nights did Al Fraud cause ?
    “Further, no ecosystem or species was ever shown to be seriously harmed by ozone depletion. This is true even in Antarctica, where the largest seasonal ozone losses, the so-called Antarctic ozone hole, occur annually. Also forgotten is a long list of truly ridiculous claims, such as the one from Al Gore’s 1992 book “Earth in the Balance”that, thanks to the Antarctic ozone hole, “hunters now report finding blind rabbits; fisherman catch blind salmon.”
    Overall, the Montreal Protocol isn’t making these bad consequences go away — they were never occurring in the first place.” BL
    Sure does sound like Suzuki’s ‘thousands and thousands of species are dying because of global warming’ thing. Oh ? As far as I know, he still has not got back to Patrick Moore with even one name.
    ” But doomsayers such as Gore simply soldier on. His claims of blind animals from ozone depletion have been replaced by equally dubious assertions in his book “An Inconvenient Truth,” including predictions of a massive sea level rise that would wipe away south Florida and other coastal areas.” BL
    http://www.heritage.org/Press/Commentary/ed091407a.cfm
    The Warming Alarmists are trying to get Kyoto up and runnuing quickly. (Suzuki: mankind has only a decade to act) Then, when the earth enters it’s inevitable, natural cooling period in a few years, they can, as with the Ozone Scare, claim victory. Sick. And slick !
    Time for the Mother Of All Lawsiuts.

  29. “the Daily Mail cites a British health report that says at least 66,000 women and girls in the UK have been forced to undergo female genital mutilation”
    “And thousands more girls at imminent risk as families club together to fly professional “cutters”
    from Africa to Britain ” c/o little green footballs
    Got that! 66,000 women had it done to them IN Britain ! ( it couldn’t be happening here). It is heartening to hear that the families are ” clubbing together”

  30. Ann at 11:28 points to this..
    Violent death rate in Venezuela higher than in Iraq:
    http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2008/01/holy-chavistas-venezuela-violent-deaths.html
    And Newsmax.com states . . .
    Vioxx – More Deadly Than the Iraq War?
    Perhaps Merck assumes we’ve forgotten about the estimated 139,000 Americans that died from Vioxx during its first incarnation (more than 46 times as many American military personnel killed in Iraq to date).
    The saddest truth of all when it comes to your health?
    The #1 killer in our society is not cancer or heart disease. The #1 killer is the health care system itself (something doctors call iatrogenic death). This includes death from:
    * Medications
    * Surgical errors
    * Hospital-acquired infections
    * Diagnostic machines
    * Hospital-acquired malnutrition
    =========== Newsmax.com
    I suggest we remain serious about protecting the freedom that cost us hundreds of thousands of young men in previous wars.
    Pakistan youth run amok in the streets with bombs and guns born out of no education and deep poverty. Bhutto and Musharaff never did expand the school system.
    The Taliban know schools are their worst enemy and destroy them when they regain land in Afghanistan.
    Teachers in troubled Kenya are moving out because inflation has robbed them and they can not feed their families.
    Will the jihadists move in where the teachers move out? Bet on it! = TG

  31. Benazir Bhutto created the Taliban.
    …-
    “Even if the Taliban were a creation by Benazir Bhutto’s (1993-1996) interior minister, Nasrullah Babar, they had soon freed themselves from any gratitude and dependence.” …-
    The (Russian) Roots of Islamic Terrorism (a must read!)
    http://users.jyu.fi/~aphamala/pe/issue5/roots.htm
    (eurasian politician March 2002)

  32. Newsflash #1 – A country fighting two wars and with permanent bases located around the world has a high military budget!
    Newsflash #2 – The sun rises in the east and sets in the west!
    Thanks for the newsflash, lberia.

  33. Well then Iberia Canada better pick up the pace we are behind Spain and Brazil at 9.8 billion!!
    It appears the world is still a dangerous place.

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