Tehran convicted some Iranians for al-Qaeda ties

After long denying any Al-Qaeda presence in the country. From AP, with thanks to Anthony:

Iran acknowledged for the first time Sunday it has convicted some Iranian nationals of supporting al-Qaeda, saying the number was fewer than five.

"A few pro-al-Qaeda Iranian nationals have been tried and convicted," Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told reporters at his weekly press briefing.

Their number, he said, is less than "the fingers on one's hand," he was quoted by the official Islamic Republic News Agency as saying.

He did not say when they were convicted, what sentences they had received, what sort of support they had provided Osama bin Laden's terror network or give any other details.

The United States has accused Iran of harboring al-Qaeda operatives, with some U.S. counterterrorism officials alleging hard-line elements within the Iranian regime may have developed working relationships with some senior al-Qaeda officials who fled to Iran after the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan. Iran has rejected the accusations.

| 8 Comments
Print | Email this entry | Digg this | del.icio.us |

8 Comments

Osama is alive and well and lives in IRAN! Take my word for it:

Muslim brothers;- they don't hurt each other! How else can a guy like this with so many wives and children just disappear?

Not only that, the whole jihad army, the whole crew around OBL, you really think they are hiding in some cave in Afghanistan?

It's all for the common cause. They may be Shiites in Iran , but when it comes to the crunch: They are implementing Sharia law, stoning, cutting off limbs and isn't that Osamas environment?

Intelligence agencies have noticed that in Osama's pre-election tape, his clothing was that of an Iranian cleric.

Interesting how that detail never made front page news.

"...it has convicted some Iranian nationals of supporting al-Qaeda..."

It's a crime to support al-Qaeda in Iran? Really! Is this the same regime that held a "Death to America" parade just a few months ago?

Here's what the Iranian spokesman really meant:

"Please, everyone, relax & look the other way so we can work on our nukes."

And then we have some good ol' cannon fodder, very convenient to appease the west.

And they thought they were in the suicide bomber line not the terrorist convicted line, uh-oh looks like they will meet some fellows who have been promised paradise as soon as time served. As the five new guys scream in agony whilst every one gets a part of their promise.

AM YISRAEL CHAI

Be sure the corrupt abusive ME regimes (Saudi and Egypt top these lists) will respond homogenously to the alqaeda threat i.e. they'll feed the jihadi serpent all manner of funds, arms, refuge and propaganda (lies) until such a time that the snake grows up and starts to threaten the regime's stability...then they'll go totally confused on who they're fighting for and who they're fighting against half heartedly crackdown ....

Sounds familiar? Yup, almost ALL ME regimes follow this pattern.

Well, watch it unfold in Iran now

AS I KEEP SAYING WE NEED TO JUST BOMB ALL OF HIS HOUSES AND FACTORYS AND SHIPS NO MATTER WHERE THEY ARE JUST BECAUSE WE CAN!!

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/10/91824.shtml
Reprinted from NewsMax.com
Liberals, Leftists and the War in Iraq
David Horowitz
Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
The passions of war in a divided nation can be not only unpleasant, but dangerous as well. They can tie our hands, weaken our resolve, and make us vulnerable to those who are determined to destroy us. But when lives are at stake – and those lives are our own – it is easy to abandon common civilities and to think of our opponents as an enemy camp vying for the right and the power to determine our fates.

In these circumstances it is easy to forget the ties that bind us, and that we are, when all is said and done, a nation indivisible. In these times, the worst in us can spring to the surface and the worst among us find it easier to advance to the fore. At the same time, the best are often in retreat. However, with the election over and the contest for power momentarily decided, a window of opportunity has opened in which each of us can strive to check these currents and reaffirm our common heritage, humanity and faith. This is an opportunity that presents itself to those on both sides of the debate over the war in Iraq.
Doing this, on the other hand, requires intestinal fortitude and also a clear head. Thus, in order to form a common front in the defense of the homeland – despite differences over matters that are grave – the most important thing to be clear about is whether these differences are based in good faith. If they are not, no such common front is possible. If they are, then a unity despite differences is an achievable goal.
I cannot, for example, speak for the opponents of the war, but if I were among them I would not find it possible to embrace people whom I believed had supported the war in Iraq for motives that are venal and reasons that are corrupt.
If I believed in my heart that George Bush and Dick Cheney lied to send young Americans to war to make profits for Halliburton and to steal Iraq’s oil, I would consider them my enemies and would not be able to find a common ground to include them.
By the same token, as a supporter of the war, I make a distinction between those who oppose the war out of love country and those who don’t.
Patriotic dissenters (if I may use that term) criticize the war because they believe the conflict in Iraq reflects mainly honest but flawed decisions, weakens our security and distracts us from the task at hand.
Unpatriotic critics (if I may use that term) are those who oppose the war because they regard America as essentially guilty, and share a common dream with our enemies of a world liberated from America’s oppressive presence.
This was a view expressed with refreshing candor at a Columbia University “teach-in” against the war in Iraq, held just as the tyranny of Saddam Hussein was being ended by American troops entering Baghdad.
The teach-in was conducted by thirty Columbia professors, among them was Nicholas DeGenova who created a stir by declaring his wish for “a million Mogadishus.” This referred to the massacre of U.S. troops by an al-Qaida warlord in Somalia ten years before, a massacre the radical professor wanted replicated a million times.
“U.S. patriotism is inseparable from imperial warfare and white supremacy,” DeGenova told the 3,000 cheering students and faculty who attended the teach-in. “U.S. flags are the emblem of the invading war machine in Iraq today. They are the emblem of the occupying power. The only true heroes are those who find ways that help defeat the U.S. military.”
DeGenova went on to affirm that peace was indeed “subversive” – his word – “because peace anticipates a very different world than the one in which we live, a world where the U.S. would have no place.”
DeGenova’s view of the war in Iraq and of the importance of America’s defeat is one that is widely shared on the political left. It is the view that animates the leaders of both major “peace” organizations, International ANSWER and the Coalition United for Peace and Justice.
It is the view put into practical detail by New Left radical and former Democratic State Senator Tom Hayden in an article on the leftwing website www.alternet.org called “How to End the War in Iraq.”
In Hayden’s words: “The anti-war movement can force the Bush administration to leave Iraq by denying it the funding, troops, and alliances necessary to its strategy for dominance.” This is the voice – let us not mince words – of an enemy of the United States (and in Hayden’s case, a lifelong enemy at that). It is the voice of a radical (or “progressive”) movement that at one time had the honesty to call itself “revolutionary,” because it rejected not just American policies but the American “system” as such.
A more celebrated exponent of this anti-American loyalty is Michael Moore, who has regularly denied the very existence of a terrorist threat, which makes American policy look predatory indeed. Moore’s repellent agendas, on the other hand, did not prevent him from being honored with a seat next to former President Jimmy Carter at the Democratic National Convention, or the support of many Democratic Party leaders at the opening of Farenheit 911 – his screed against America’s presence in Iraq.
In a statement defending the Zarqawi terrorists Moore has said: “The Iraqis who have risen up against the occupation are not ‘insurgents’ or ‘terrorists’ or ‘The Enemy.’ They are the REVOLUTION, the Minutemen, and their numbers will grow – and they will win. Get it, Mr. Bush?” A man who thinks that the terrorists are not the enemy, clearly believes that we are.
If you are convinced, as Michael Moore so obviously is, that America is the global imperialist power and that the future progress of mankind depends on America’s defeat, then you will necessarily think of the terrorist enemy as a liberator, who is serving the function that leftists like him are presently too weak or too cowardly to accomplish on their own: to bring down the Great Satan.
There was a refreshing candor to the movement of the Sixties (to which both Moore and Hayden once belonged), which has since been abandoned. Out of disgust with the Stalinist generation that posed as “progressive” and “liberal,” the New Left openly proclaimed itself revolutionary and proud of it.
It is true that to mobilize large constituencies leaders of the anti-Vietnam movement claimed that their only agendas were “peace” and “justice.” They organized opposition to the war under the banner of “Bring the Troops Home,” as though their primary concern was the safe return of American soldier. But there were also many in the movement’s ranks who remained true to the code of New Left authenticity by flying the flags of the Communist enemy and chanting “Victory to the Vietcong.”
Tom Hayden (whom I knew at the time) was one of these worthies, and even attempted to incite a guerrilla war in American cities in a radical homage to his Communist heroes in Vietnam. In fact, victory for the Communists in Vietnam was an agenda of all New Leftists at the time, though it is also true that many anti-war liberals who did not share this hope were seduced into joining the demonstrations the New Leftists organized.
It is this amalgamation of forces on the left – both liberal and radical – that makes the present task of distinguishing patriots who disagree with the policies in Iraq from anti-American radicals who want to bring down the “empire.” This latter group rarely expresses its goals candidly, as Professor DeGenova did at the Columbia teach-in. That is because it is aware that its revolutionary goals constitute an outlaw agenda the vast majority of Americans would reject.
It would be far easier to separate this anti-American left from patriotic critics, if the patriots would do some of the separating themselves. It is difficult to establish such a separation, when leaders of the Democratic Party are embracing unsavory figures like Michael Moore.
It is difficult when prominent figures in the Democratic Party embrace MoveOn.org radicals who opposed the war in Afghanistan, making common cause with them in an effort to shift the Party to the left. Further complicating the task of clarity is the existence of an entire Internet industry, funded by liberal donors, whose agenda is to smear conservatives as “rednecks,” “racists” and “witch-hunters” whose intent is to tar any criticism of the war as unpatriotic.
These smear sites include David Brock’s MediaMatters, MediaTransparency, PublicEye, NameBase, Disinfopedia, SouthernPovertyLawCenter, and the “Rightwing Watch” section of www.PeoplefortheAmericanWay.org.
I don’t for a moment suggest that conservatives are free of any guilt when it comes to using a broad brush in dealing with political opponents. On the other hand, if radicals pretend to be liberals it’s understandable that their opponents will often miss the difference.
The failure of the patriotic left to dissociate itself from the Haydens and Moores often expresses itself in the form of venomous attacks on conservatives who do make these distinctions. I, myself, have criticized conservative writers who failed to recognize the patriotism of leftists, and then been attacked as though I had not.
This technique of lumping opponents for purposes of attack has a name in the leftwing tradition. Trotsky called it attack by “amalgam,” as when Stalinists smeared him for allegedly being “in league with Hitler and the Mikado,” because they were all opponents of the Stalin regime. Stalinists coined the term “social fascists” to attack democratic leftists whom they opposed along with the fascists.
A recent post in Brock’s site, MediaMatters follows this well-worn pattern. It accuses me of attacking all Democrats as enemies of America. In fact, I was attacking only one faction in the Democratic Party whose criticisms of the war were unprincipled and reckless. Here is the MediaMatters post: “David Horowitz [says] Democrats, media are ‘getting Americans killed in Iraq … because of their pathological hatred of George Bush.’” The Media Matters charge has stimulated several emails of complaint that I have tarred patriotic Democrats with the unpatriotic brush.
In fact, the editorial I wrote, to which MediaMatters linked, says exactly the opposite. My headline makes this clear. It says: “This is Not a Magazine about Republicans and Democrats But About a War We Have to Win.” In my editorial, published the day before the election, I observed that this was “a season of poisoned politics and fierce divisions,” and attempted to distinguish between patriotic dissenters from the war and those who wanted the United States to lose it. I referred to conservative critics who were suspicious of nation building and feared that Iraq was a distraction from the larger war on terror. Of them I said, “These are patriots and belong in our camp.” My very next sentences were:
There are worthy Democrats who belong there too. Joe Lieberman should have been the Democrats’ candidate for President. Dick Gephardt would have made an equally worthy leader. Both have been models of principle as potential leaders of the opposition, but have been silenced by the stampeded majority of their party from the common purpose and by the frenzy of hatred against the incumbent George Bush.
I have made similar distinctions elsewhere, including in my book Unholy Alliance: Radical Islam and the American Left. But this has not prevented critics of mine, like Alan Colmes, from accusing me of “McCarthyism” because I allegedly do not make such distinctions. In fact, I have always made been mindful that many opponents of the war are patriots. I have even posted the articles of anti-war critics on the FrontPage site, including Todd Gitlin who was one of the professors at the Columbia teach-in. Nonetheless, the smear campaign against me (and conservatives like me) is so pervasive in the constituencies of the left that nothing I write shakes their impression.
The other day I received an email from a friend of mine who is a leftist, a Democrat and an opponent of the war, but also a man whose eloquent expressions of patriotism I have posted on FrontPagemag.com. Sherman Alexie is a Spokane Indian, and one of the most talented and lyrical writers of our time.
I can’t recommend highly enough his novel Reservation Blues or his most recent collection of poignant stories, Ten Little Indians. Yet the email I received from Sherman was inspired by the false presentation of my position on the MediaMatters site. Dear David
Wow,
All you guys calling each other names. Such entertainment. Do you think Jack White, in calling you an angry man, reveals himself as an angry man? And do you think David Brock realizes he’s the jailhouse stoolie of the Republican Party? Yeah, I figure he’s telling the truth about his former Republican dirty trickster friends, but now he seems to have become a Democratic dirty trickster. What's the difference between a Republican and Democratic dirty trickster? Only the source of funding.
And David, where’s your logic? How can you possibly accuse various leftists of dirty tricks and slander when you have accused us anti-war folks and Bush-haters of getting troops killed? There is no larger insult, no greater accusation of evil than that, David. And wildly inaccurate.
You make it sound like only pro-war Republicans have friends and family in Iraq. That only pro-war Republicans are worried about the troops. At every talk I give, I ask all of the people who have friends and/or family in the military to raise their hands. Then I ask the Republicans to lower their hands. There are always dozens of hands still raised. Do you think all of those anti-war Democrats want their friends and families to die?
Talk about elitist! David, I guarantee you that I have more friends and family in the military than you do now or have ever had. I know hundreds of current and ex-soldiers. I’m an email pen pal to a dozen friends in Iraq. Republican small town guys who believe in their mission, who love their country and their families, but who count on me to be the anti-war guy even as I send them all of my prayers and support and dirty jokes.
It’s the whole red state-blue state separation illusion. There are millions of us redstate children who became bluestate adults and we live and love in both worlds.
Sherman
I was disappointed that Sherman could be so influenced by Brock’s post and that he could think I didn’t understand his own deep affection for his country, after I had posted his writing on my site. I disagree with him, moreover, that Brock was telling the truth either before or after his conversion.
Brock is so much a hired gun and so little a reporter that if he does tell a truth here or there it’s more like an accident than an intended result. I also don’t think that being “bluestate” is a sign of maturity. But this kind of disagreement is what makes life interesting. In my reply to Sherman I pointed out that in thinking that only conservatives were making serious charges, he had missed the other side of the conversation (a rarity for him).
When opponents of the war say that the war is not just wrong-headed but based on “lies,” that it is a “fraud” concocted for the President’s friends in Texas and that the President and those who support him are getting Americans killed for no reason, that is just as serious an accusation as mine. Moreover, these charges from the left came first, and it is these very attacks – not general dissent from the war – that in my view are “getting Americans killed.”
There will always be dissenters in a democracy. It is the air we breathe. My concern (and that of the article I wrote) was not about dissenters but about the decision of Democratic leaders, like Jimmy Carter, Ted Kennedy and Al Gore to attack the President in the reckless fashion they did.
In my view, to call the commander-in-chief a liar and a traitor is to sabotage the war effort and undermine our troops in Iraq. Dissent by my friend Sherman Alexie – and others like him – is not.
Leaders of the Democratic opposition have a greater responsibility because of their position. The reckless charges made by Gore and Kennedy gave license to people who supported them to open up a war within the war, and a war on the war within the American establishment. This is unprecedented in the modern era and in fact since the Civil War itself.
The way I put this view in a speech I gave at Georgetown was as follows: “When you are eighteen or nineteen years old and you are in Fallujah surrounded by terrorists who want to kill you, and you hear the leader of the Democratic Party who is within a hair of the presidency say you shouldn’t be there in the first place - that does more than simply ‘confuse’ you. It demoralizes you; it saps your will to fight, and it gets you killed.”
Similarly, when the New York Times runs the Abu Ghraib story for 65 days on its front pages with the intent of humiliating America’s forces in Iraq, and when Ted Kennedy compares America’s prisons in Iraq to Saddam Hussein’s torture chambers, that is as effective as any enemy propaganda could be in demoralizing Americans and in undermining their will to resist the forces of an enemy who is as ruthless as any they have ever faced.
If things are going badly in Iraq, the New York Times and the Democratic Party leadership have themselves at least partly to blame.
Since Howard Dean and his supporters stampeded the Democratic Party into the anti-war camp, the Administration has had to fight the war in Iraq with one hand tied behind its back.
To point this out, to say that this level of distortion and attack gets Americans killed is obvious; and an appropriate criticism; and it is very different from saying that any criticism of the war is tantamount to treason, or that all “anti-war folks” are in the enemy camp.
What Jimmy Carter, Al Gore and Ted Kennedy have done is to destroy the bi-partisan principle on matters of war and peace. This was a policy tradition honored by both parties during the Cold War and up to the moment Al Gore and Jimmy Carter decided to throw it overboard in the fall of 2002.
When Ronald Reagan was President of the United States, liberals hated him with ill-concealed passion. But no Democratic leader accused Ronald Reagan (or any Republican President) of betraying the American people on issues of war and peace, let alone of lying to put American troops in harms way, as Al Gore and Jimmy Carter and Ted Kennedy in regard to President Bush.
The anti-war left obviously never operated under such constraints. “Hey, hey LBJ, how many kids did you kill today?” was but one of its characteristic “anti-war” cries. But even the Democrats like Eugene McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy, who finally broke with the Vietnam war, never spoke about a President in office in the ugly accents employed by the present Democratic opposition. This decorum symbolized the bonds we shared as Americans and it made our country strong.
The closest any congressional figure came to the kind of poisonous rhetoric that has become commonplace of late was when radical congressman Ron Dellums told a “Stop the Draft” protest in Berkeley, that “Washington D.C. is a very evil place.”
It was during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the first time the Red Army had crossed an international border since 1945, and Jimmy Carter’s Administration was trying to re-introduce a draft to meet the crisis. Dellums dismissed the Soviet threat in these words: “From my vantage point, as your Representative, I believe we are at a very dangerous moment.
"Washington, D.C. is a very evil place. While Mr. Zbigniew Breszinski (the President’s National Security Advisor) professes to see the arc of crisis in Southeast Asia as the Balkan tinderbox of World War III, well Ron Dellums sees the only arc of crisis being the one that runs between the basement of the West Wing of the White House and the war room of the Pentagon.”
Ron Dellums is a charter member of the anti-American left, a pro-Castro radical who colluded with the Marxist dictatorship in Grenada to deceive his own government about an airstrip Cuba was building on the island to accommodate Soviet nuclear bombers.
But while Dellums denounced Jimmy Carter and his administration as evil and a threat to the peace, the Democrats themselves appointed him to head the congressional Subcommittee on Military Installations (worldwide) and then to head the House Armed Services Committee itself, the most powerful legislative position overseeing national defense.
When Dellums eventually retired during the Clinton Administration, he was awarded the highest civilian honor for “service to his country” that the Pentagon can bestow.
This is what makes it difficult to draw the necessary distinctions on the Democratic side of the debate. It is also a reason why Democrats have a large credibility problem on issues of national defense, a key factor in deciding the last presidential election.
That election result, on the other hand, has begun to stimulate some second thoughts in liberal circles. Peter Beinart is the editor of The New Republic, which is a liberal magazine that, thanks to its publisher Martin Peretz, has generally taken a strong anti-Communist/anti-totalitarian position on matters of national defense. The December 13th issue of The New Republic contained a long and thoughtful essay by Beinart which was self-described as “An Argument for A New Liberalism” and specifically for an “anti-totalitarian liberalism.”
The problem, as Beinart posed it, was that while the Democrats had a “fairly hawkish foreign policy establishment” at the top of the party, “below this small elite sits a ... grassroots that views America’s new struggle [the war on terror] as a distraction if not a mirage.” Beinart calls the members of this grassroots “softs,” and believes that the Democratic Party has a dim electoral future if it continues to allow them to shape its policy.
He recalls the days of the early Cold War when the Democratic Party was riddled with Communists and their sympathizers who thought the struggle against Stalin and the Soviet empire was also a distraction and a mirage. The remedy liberals eventually arrived at was to condemn the Communists and fellow-travelers (who called themselves “progressives” then as now), and expel them from their organizations.
The precursors of what Beinart calls the “softs” on totalitarian Islam were the followers of former Vice President Henry Wallace, who allowed himself to become the presidential candidate of the Communist-controlled Progressive Party, which had condemned the Cold War. Beinart identifies as current symbols of “Wallacism” in the Democratic Party, Michael Moore and MoveOn.org:
Moore views totalitarian Islam the way Wallace viewed Communism: As a phantom, a ruse employed by the only enemies that matter, those on the right. Saudi extremists may have brought down the twin Towers, but the real menace is the Carlyle Group.
Today, most liberals naively consider Moore a useful ally, a bomb-thrower against a right-wing that deserves to be torched. What they do not understand is that his real casualties are on the decent left. When Moore opposed the war against the Taliban, he casts doubt on the sincerity of liberals who say they opposed the Iraq war because they wanted to win in Afghanistan first.
When Moore says terrorism should be no greater a national concern than car accidents or pneumonia, he makes it harder for liberals to claim that their believe in civil liberties does not imply a diminished vigilance against al Qaeda.
Beinart is absolutely right about this and it is encouraging to hear him say that the time has come for liberals – the decent left – to take back their movement. He takes as his model the purging of Communists from the CIO and other organizations by socialists like Walter Reuther and liberals like Hubert Humphrey and Harry Truman. “Liberals …must first take back their movement from the softs. We will know such an effort has begun when dissension breaks out with America’s key liberal institutions.”
I hope this happens, but I am not as sanguine as Beinart that it will. In the first place I think Beinart underestimates the opposition that decent leftists like him face in purging the “Communists” from their ranks.
The left – the hard, indecent left – is much more powerful today than it was in the heyday of Communism. In the second place, the Michael Moores are not merely “softs” as Beinart describes them. (“The softs … were not necessarily Communists themselves. But they refused to make anti-Communism their guiding principle.”)
There were, and are, softs like this. But Michael Moore and the leaders of the “anti-war” movement are more analogous to the Communists of the Cold War. They are activists who believe not that there is no enemy, but that we are the enemy.
The fact that people like this are entrenched in major institutions of the Democratic Party for example MoveOn.org and the constellation of Soros-inspired 527s, and in the leadership of the government unions, the funding base of the Democratic Party – is unprecedented and will make this battle much more difficult. On the other hand, the grim prospect of another 9/11 could alter the political dynamics overnight.
The most important aspect of Beinart’s article and its support by The New Republic is that it reminds us that liberals like Beinart and my friend Sherman Alexie, share a common agenda with conservatives when it comes to defending this country and its liberties from the totalitarian enemy. This is the bond that makes us a nation, and it must come before all others in matters of war and peace.


FOR THOSE OF YOU LOOKING AT THE HUMVS LET'S JUST LOOK AT THAT THESE HUMVS WERE NEVER MENT TO BE UP ARMORED AND I WANT YOU TO PUT 2000 LBS ON YOUR CAR AND SEE HOW LONG THE CHASSE LASTS???

AND LOOK EVEN TODAY THEY ARE COMPALIANING ABOUT THE MONEY??

WHAT ABOUT THE 87BILLION?? ALL THE DEMOCRATS WHO DID'NT WHANT TO GIVE OUR GUYS THE MONEY?? LETS LOOK AT THE DEMOCRATS IN THE SENATE WHO DEMANDED TO CONTROL EVERY PENNY?? AND THE "WHO GOT THE CONTRACTS"

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/3/21653.shtml
Check Evil at the Door
Steve Farrell
Friday, Dec. 3, 2004
Liberty Letters, John Dickinson, Letter 16

There are blatant differences between the Founders of yesteryear and the political pygmies that all too often masquerade as defenders of liberty and law today. The former studied history, the classics and original-source documents – the latter, political propaganda, second-hand mush and three-second sound bites.
The former considered the moral absolutes of the Bible and Natural Law – the latter, the moral relativism of the Humanist and Communist Manifestos.
The former defended a few fundamental God-given rights via limited government – the latter, the right to do almost anything and everything via big government.
Little surprise, then, that law and liberty as once understood are on the way out – moral anarchy and absolute forms of government, on the way in.
But the news is not all bad.
Witness the resurgence of genuine conservatism on the Internet, on talk radio, in the homeschool movement, in Christianity, and in the record voter turnout this last election, driven by pivotal state referendums against gay marriage, socialist handouts for illegals, and coast-to-coast worry over a presidential candidate with a dicey resume.
A slumbering giant is awakening. But why did it take so long? The Founders would call our wait-for-a-crisis approach foolish.
John Dickinson explains:
“Are [we] ignorant that usurpations, which might have been successfully opposed at first, acquire strength by continuance, and thus become irresistible?”
He was saying "Beware the power of precedent" and "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
It was 1767 common sense. Dickinson was writing his “Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer,” discussing the need to hold the line against a second attempt by England to impose a tax on the colonies (the first was the Stamp Act), through duties on English imports such as paper.
Root principles were on the line.
The first, the rights of man, “particularly ... that great one, the foundation of all the rest – that [our] property acquired with so much pain and hazard, should be disposed by none but [ourselves or our representatives].”
Property and consent: Without these, men are “slaves,” even if the burden imposed is not yet felt.
And that was the case. Initially this tax, like America’s first income tax in our day, was “gentle and kind.” But that wasn’t the point. “We have a statute, laid up for future use, like a sword in the scabbard,” Dickinson said. That was the point.
Next, the tax was the unjust sort that socialists impose today. The bill’s purpose was “to defray the expenses of defending, protecting, and securing his Majesty’s DOMINIONS in America.”
However, “His Majesty’s DOMINIONS,” noted Dickinson, “comprehended not only the British colonies, but also the conquered provinces of Canada and Florida, and the British garrisons of Nova Scotia. ...
“What justice,” he asks, “is there in making us pay for ‘defending and securing’ THESE places? What benefit can WE, or have WE ever derived from them? None of them was conquered for US; nor will ‘be defended, protected or secured for US. ...”
“They who feel the benefit, ought to feel the burden,” he concluded.
What’s wrong with that? He’s right.
Then there was the matter of propaganda and the gullible gulls. For the tax was not marketed as a tax, but as a mere ‘regulation of trade.’
Dickinson dragged the fraud out into the light of day. “An act of parliament, commanding us to do a certain thing, if it has any validity, is a tax upon us for the expense that accrues in complying with it. ...”
Ever heard of hidden taxes? This was America’s first. A political trick. And political tricks are always dangerous.
“[N]ames [do] not change the nature of things. Indeed, we ought firmly to believe, what is an undoubted truth, confirmed by the unhappy experience of many states heretofore free, that UNLESS THE MOST WATCHFUL ATTENTION BE EXERTED, A NEW SERVITUDE MAY BE SUPPLIED UPON US, UNDER THE SANCTION OF USUAL AND RESPECTABLE TERMS.”
We need to call a spade a spade. And designs, designs
Which leads to Dickinson’s final point: Motives matter.
“Ought not the people ... to watch? to observe facts? To search into causes? to investigate designs?”
Prime Minister Greenville revealed that England’s goal was “to bind the colonists in all things.” Tucker likewise advised the crown to subvert the colonists ability to “be supplied with all things from within themselves,” lest they get to thinking that they can “set up for themselves.”
Get real. Political motives ought never to be blindly received as holy and pure. Men and nations do conspire. Political naivete is a threat to liberty.
Dickinson was right. Pay now or pay later. Which will it be?


BOOK ABOUT MO-HAM-OD- LIFE TO BE BANNED WRITTEN BY GEORGE BUSH IN THE 1800S RULE CAME DOWN IN EGYPT??

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/13/143734.shtml
Supreme Court Sides With Police Over Deadly Force
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court refused Monday to clarify when police can use deadly force to stop fleeing criminal suspects but said a lower court got it wrong in allowing a lawsuit against an officer in Washington state who shot a burglary suspect.


http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/10/162328.shtml
OPEC to Reduce Its Daily Oil Output; Prices Drop
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Dec. 10, 2004
CAIRO, Egypt – Seeking to keep prices up without having them explode, OPEC agreed Friday to reduce its daily oil output by 1 million barrels a day, and reserved the right to cut deeper early next year if crude turns much cheaper than now.


http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=16295
Indoctrination at Purdue
By David Horowitz and Thomas Ryan
FrontPageMagazine.com | December 13, 2004
Professor Harry Targ is the director for the Peace Studies program at Purdue University, a state college in the Indiana system. Professor Targ is a member of the National Executive Committee of the “Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS).” This is a faction of the Communist Party USA that was expelled in 1991 for opposing the hard-liner coup against the Soviet Union’s last dictator Mikhail Gorbachev. Targ’s views on the questions of war and peace are standard Communist doctrine: “We need to clarify the connections between U.S. capitalism, global conquest, and visions of empire…we need to discover where multinational corporations and international financiers stand, whether the oil and/or military industries are driving the doctrine of preemption, and which, if any, sectors of the ruling class regard unilateralism, globalism, and militarism as a threat to global trade, production, investment and speculation.”
The Peace Studies program at Purdue is designed to indoctrinate unsuspecting undergraduates in the views that have made Targ a Communist. Examples include, “Persuasion in Social Movements,” America in Vietnam,” and “Classical and Contemporary Marxism.” The latter is a course in applied Marxist doctrines, which includes two propaganda films that reflect the range of the course. One “illustrates the trajectory from Marx’s Manifesto to anti-globalization movements,” while the second lionizes the terrorists in Chiapas Mexico, showing how their activities “intertwine” so-called “post-colonial” theories of liberation with “liberation theology,” which is a religious coating for Marxist agendas.

http://www.loupatriot.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2004/12/13/41bda77ca4bf1
U of L rescinds professor's contract
Patriot online update
December 13, 2004

The University of Louisville said in a statement released over the weekend that it has withdrawn the contract of sociology lecturer Dr. John McTighe for at least the spring semester.
McTighe was quoted by student columnist Brian Yates as saying "It was the religious zealots who say they were voting on morals. I think we should all buy AK47's and shoot them all! That's what I would suggest, if it were allowed." [Full disclosure: Mr. Yates is the publisher of the Louisville Patriot.]
Following Yates' commentary, U of L received 1,600 e-mail messages, many from members of the American Family Association, who had sent an e-mail to members and posted an item on its website.
McTighe said in a statement that there was "absolutely no attempt to advocate violence."
He told the Courier-Journal last week that Yates misquoted him and that his remarks were taken out of context. He did acknowledge making comments similar to those cited in the Louisville Patriot's December issue.
U of L President James Ramsey said in a statement, "We strongly support academic freedom. The quote attributed to Professor McTighe is unacceptable and not an issue of academic freedom."
Dr. Shirley Willihnganz, U of L provost, said that the investigation would be completed when students returned from Christmas break.
"Students are leaving the campus for the holiday break and the review will be completed as soon as we can meet with students," Willihnganz said in a statement. "Our goal is to determine the facts in this matter and to act responsibly to both the students and faculty."
McTighe said he agreed to withdraw the contract because "he has confidence in the university review process."


http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/12/94839.shtml
Iran Acknowledges Terror Convictions
NewsMax Wires
Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran acknowledged for the first time Sunday that it has convicted some Iranian nationals of supporting al-Qaida, saying the number was fewer than five.


http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/13/110507.shtml
Russia Beefing Up Missile Forces
Phil Brennan, NewsMax.com
Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
Is there a new Cold War and arms race underway?

A new force of the Topol-M Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM)- described by Russian Defense officials as a "21st-century weapon" unrivaled in the world and allegedly capable of defeating U.S. anti-missile defenses - is due to be created in 2005, posing a deadly threat to the U.S. According to Russian Missile Force Commander Nikolai Solovtsov a fifth missile regiment armed with Topol-M ICBMs will be added next year.
Today's RIA Novosti quoted Solovtsov as telling a Moscow news conference "Currently we are planning re-arming another regiment with the Topol-M missiles. In the last years, we have commissioned four missile regiments, a 40-launcher force," he added.
The Topol-M was described last year by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov as "... the most advanced, state-of-the-art missile in the world. Only such weapons can ensure and guarantee our sovereignty and security and make any attempts to put military pressure on Russia absolutely senseless."
Solovtsov revealed that the first regiments armed with mobile Topols would come into action within two to three years, the ultimate goal of the Topol program being to have several divisions deployed. He told reporters that in 2006 three to nine mobile Topol-M launchers will be commissioned.
"In 2005 the mobile launchers will not yet begin combat duty, but after 2006 we will deploy three to nine missiles per year," he said.
The Russian SS-27, or Topol-M, is an intercontinental-range, ground-based, solid propellant ballistic missile, according to the Claremont Institute's MISSILETHREAT.com. "It represents the pinnacle of ballistic missile technology, incorporating modern fuel and warhead designs, as well as being capable of being launched from both missile silos and transporter-Erector-Launcher (TEL) vehicles."
Russian Defense officials claim that the SS-27 is invulnerable to any modern anti-ballistic missile (ABM) defenses and will be the foundation of the Russian strategic nuclear arsenal by 2015.
They insist that the SS-27 is certainly immune to any ABM defense the United States can put into being.
Claremont says it is capable of making evasive maneuvers as it approaches its target, enabling it to evade any terminal phase interceptors. Moreover the SS-27 is also designed to survive a strike from any laser technology available, rendering any current space-based laser useless.
Adds Claremont "The SS-27 can currently strike any target within the continental United States. The deployment from hardened silos and hidden TEL vehicles makes it nearly impossible to successfully prevent launch, and current ABM technology is insufficient to prevent its successful impact.
"As a solid propellant design, it can be maintained on alert for prolonged periods of time and can launch within minutes of being given the order.
"Its confirmed, single 550 kT warhead is sufficient for the depopulation of cities, which combined with its survivability, makes it an ideal retaliatory weapon. The SS-27 enables Russia to guarantee a successful nuclear response."
The SS-27 has a range of 10,500 km (6524 miles) and is reported to typically be equipped with a 550 kT yield nuclear warhead. The first two SS-27 missiles entered service in 1997 in modified SS-19 silos.
The first silo-based missile regiment was declared operational in 1998, with a second in 1999, a third in 2000 and a fourth in 2003. The first TEL versions entered service in 2001. It was originally planned to build 350 missiles, but this has been amended to the construction of 50 missiles by 2005.
A sea-based version is under development under the name Bulava.


TIME TO MIVE THE PEICES IRAQ WILL ELECT A NEW GOVERMENT AND WE ARE DONE PLAYING WITH THE ARABS WE HAVE BIGGER FISH??

RUSSIA AND CHINA DOING SME WAR GAMES AND SEAMS TO BE SELLING SOME BAD TOYS TO CHINA??

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/13/111046.shtml
China and Russia Will Hold First War Games Together
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
BEIJING – China and Russia will hold their first joint military exercise next year, the Chinese government said Monday, as President Hu Jintao called for an expansion of the rapidly growing alliance between the former Cold War rivals.

The announcement came during a visit to Beijing by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, who was expected to discuss expanding the Kremlin's multibillion-dollar annual arms sales to China. The exercises are to take place on Chinese territory, the official China News Service said. But that report and other government statements didn't say when they would take place or what forces would be involved.
"We want ... to promote the development of the two countries' strategic collaborative relationship in order to safeguard and promote regional and world peace," CNS quoted Hu as telling Ivanov.
Beijing and Moscow have built up military and political ties since the Soviet collapse in 1991, driven in part by joint desire to counterbalance U.S. global dominance.
They are partners of the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization, formed to combat what they consider the common threat of Islamic extremism and separatism. The other members are the former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
The announcement of military exercises comes two months after Beijing and Moscow settled the last of their decades-old border disputes that led to violent clashes in the 1960s and '70s.
The agreement was signed during an October trip to Beijing by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who said relations had reached "unparalleled heights." That visit also produced a pact to jointly develop Russian energy resources, an urgent issue for Beijing, which is trying to avert fuel shortages in its booming economy.
The frontier where at one point 700,000 Soviet troops faced 1 million Chinese soldiers is now a bustling cross-border market.
China has become the Russian arms industry's No. 1 customer, and is expected to buy $2 billion in weapons this year.
Russia is a key supplier for the Chinese military's effort to modernize its arsenal and back up frequent threats to invade Taiwan, the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its territory.
The United States and the European Union have banned weapons sales to China since its bloody 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters. But Moscow has supplied Beijing with high-performance Su-27 fighters and other top-of-the-line arms.
Ivanov also met with Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan and Guo Boxiong, deputy chairman of the Communist Party commission that runs China's military, the official Xinhua News Agency said. Hu is chairman of the commission.
Hu is to visit Moscow in May during festivities commemorating the end of World War II.
© 2004 Associated Press

Part of the American Tribe
Squirrel Hunter
Spider Killer
God Bless the USA and her Fighting Forces and ALL who Fight with her give them Sight,Wisdom,Strength, and Courage to Victory Amen

Yeah, they probably got their hands smacked by Mullahs and WINK!WINK!NUDGE!NUDGE! Stupid Infidels will believe anything...

"For crimes against humanity, I, Mullah al-Mamhoon, sentence thee to .."
(a) Paradise
(b) Financial rewards
(c) Islamic sainthood