(7/24/2014)
(7/24/2014)
(8/5/2014)
” . . . a separate militant group to Hamas! They are also responsible for rocket fire into Israel . . .” (1:21)
(8/10/2014)
(6/18/2014)
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10 Sunday Aug 2014
(7/24/2014)
(7/24/2014)
(8/5/2014)
” . . . a separate militant group to Hamas! They are also responsible for rocket fire into Israel . . .” (1:21)
(8/10/2014)
(6/18/2014)
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08 Friday Aug 2014
“We are the generation that stays quiet about political corruption, favoring political correctness instead. We pride ourselves in sticking up for the underdog while throwing our friends and allies to the dogs.”
(8/8/2014)
However you get the news . . . you get it.
Hamas hasn’t a human program or a prayer to offer anyone. Its officers have made themselves millionaires (actually, Khaled Mashaal is a billionaire) on the way to dealing death to their own constituents, including 160 children recruited for the construction of their tunnels.
Of ISIS, one only finds worse things to mention — rape and rapine all the way to attempted genocide, Shiites, Christians, Yazidis, and anyone else just because and as it strikes BadDaddy’s fancy.
Talk about the “Hamaside” and “Muslim Botherhood” . . . .
WASHINGTON — U.S. warplanes made a second wave of airstrikes Friday in northern Iraq against the militants who have besieged a religious group and threatened the city of Irbil, a Pentagon official said.
Rear Adm. John Kirby, spokesman for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, said the second wave of strikes used a drone to attack a mortar position while four FA-18 fighter-attack planes hit a seven-vehicle convoy outside Irbil.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/08/08/obama-iraq-airsgtrike/13767377/ – 8/8;/2014.
BBC Live (right now – 8/8/2014/1723 ET):
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-28709792
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07 Thursday Aug 2014
Tags
Hamas, human shields, IDF, Israel, New York City, news, NYC, photograph, pro-Israel, rally, street

Early Evening Pro-Israel Protest, Time-Warner Center, 59th Street and Columbus Circle, New York City, August 7, 2014. Used with permission of the photographer, (c) 2014 Daniel Sigmund Reichwald.
______
If there is a crisis in journalism, the Arab-Israeli highlights the crisis as never before.
Former Israeli Ambassador to the US Michael Oren was interviewed on CNN after Ron Dermer, the current Israeli Ambassador to the US complained that CNN’s coverage was focused on pictures of Palestinian children, while not mentioning the UN school that housed rockets.
http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/is-journalism-dead/#ixzz39qUq5bQC – 8/7/2014.
(8/6/2014)
Hamas has “played” the residents of Gaza.
While they’re suffering IDF attacks against Hamas facilities and launch sites, Khaled Mashaal may as well be clinging to his billions (dollars, not people) on extended stay in Qatar.
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07 Thursday Aug 2014
07 Thursday Aug 2014
““We are being slaughtered!” she sobbed, her voice raw and worn out, as seen on this parliamentary video. “We are being exterminated! An entire religion is being exterminated from the face of the Earth. In the name of humanity, save us!””
“Brothers, away from all humanitarian disputes, we want humanitarian solidarity” (1:00)
Kurdish MP Vian Dakhil pleading for life before Parliament, August 5, 2014:
One Yazidis showed al-Jazeera a series of text messages received by Yazidis upon the arrival of ISIS, reading: “Where are you going to go? I swear [to] God I will cut you into pieces… We are coming for you, you pig, you enemy of God.”
The Yazidis took the threat seriously. The Washington Post reports that estimates vary from 10,000 to 40,000 Yazidis currently stranded on a mountain above Sinjar, knowing their immediate death awaits them at the foot of the mountain.
Thousands of Yazidis — a Kurdish ethno-religious community — have been trapped on Sinjar Mountain in northern Iraq as they attempt to escape the extremists’ grasp. The sole parliamentary representative of the Yazidis, Vian Dakhil, warned that her small community, which has roots in a 4,000 year-old faith, faces the threat of extermination.
Other religious and ethnic groups, including Christians, Shiite Turkmens and Shabaks, have also recently been displaced since the Islamic State began waging a violent campaign against minorities in the territory it controls.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/07/photos-yazidis-christians-minorities-iraq_n_5658370.html – 8/7/2014.
Yazidis believe in one God and worship seven angels. Melek Taus, known as the Peacock Angel, plays the most important role. Worship of the Peacock Angel is where the label “devil worshipper” stems from. Christianity and Islam view the Peacock Angel as a fallen angel or devil for refusing to bow before Adam. Yazidis interpret this as a test of the Peacock Angel’s commitment to God and see the Peacock Angel as the chief of God’s angels.
David Rubin: Is that then part of it? This is so savage that partly . . . you know, everyone keeps saying the images out of Gaza are horrible, which they are, but there’s this definitive narrative There’s a bomb that drops on something . . .
Nikki DeLoach: It’s a war that we recognize. That’s how we’ve seen war. This is not that. This is savage. It’s like . . . medieval . . . something you would see on Game of Thrones.”
I doubt any will see the mass beheading of children (as has been reported in relation to the slaughter of Chaldean Christians in Iraq) on Game of Thrones.
(CNN) — If you’re following the news about ISIS, which now calls itself the Islamic State, you might think you’ve mistakenly clicked on a historical story about barbarians from millennia ago.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/07/world/meast/stopping-isis/index.html – 8/7/2014.
http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2014/08/07/isis-seizes-mosul-dam-threatens-genocide-against-the-yazidis/ – 8/7/2014.
“The heinous crime of the Islamic State was carried out not just against Christians, but against humanity,” Sako told a special church service in east Baghdad where around 200 Muslims joined Christians in solidarity.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/21/isis-genghis-khan-iraq-chaldean_n_5603939.html – 7/20/2014.
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.ca/2014/08/the-abuse-of-god-death-and-destruction.html – 8/8/2014 (I continue updating a piece for a little while afterwards as new and telling verbiage appears. As ISIS is basically a raiding party, events move very quickly through its machinations. Where it hustles, Iraq and its allies plod, by comparison, toward getting their act together. At the moment, Aug. 8, 2014, and despite some U.S. activity, ISIS has battlefield resource superiority — arms and ammo, cash, armor and domestic vehicles, a modern enough headquarters, and some techniques in cover and cruelty that have made them especially hard to get at. In their world, the world is running away from them, which for plunder must suit them fine).
http://time.com/3083172/iraq-kurdistan-independence/ – 8/7/2014.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pentagon-considers-air-drops-to-15000-iraq-refugees-fleeing-isis/ – 8/7/2014.
http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/friend-flees-horror-isis – 8/6/2014.
Finally:
http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/07/world/iraq-options/index.html “U.S. drops humanitarian aid in Iraq.”
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07 Thursday Aug 2014
To suggest that the “field is confused” might understate the reality. However, distilled to structural themes, it might look a little bit like this:
1. Kingdom of God — >Sunni-Shiite rivalry : Saudi-Iranian rivalry
2. Contemporary Governance –> The Despotic vs The Democratic
3. Political and Social Psychology and Topology –> Extremists vs Moderates
Official Iranian hatred of the “Zionist entity” has has maintained a flow of war making machinery and materiel to Hamas from well before present hostilities. IDF interdicted at least one shipment and one may be sure analysts are reverse engineering back to sources the arming of Hamas.
How the above suggested themes are arranged in any given mind and heart seems to me as invisible a matter as it may be personal, and in the field as much account for mistrust and paranoia as related attitudes remain inaccessible to detection except out in battle space where the same becomes quite clear as to who has embraced what cause and with what attitude.
As appears to happen with “Islamist-style” Islamic overlay, the society that existed prior to onset becomes suffocated and hidden (to greater or lesser extent). Despite the onslaughts of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Iran, so _____ frequently points out, retains many facets of its pre-revolutionary modernity, and what the Ayatollahs Khomeini and Khamenei have done is dealt themselves their own kingdom (see “Reuters, Khamenei, wealth” on that) with themselves at the center of its universe.
As long as the dictator can keep the engines of wealth in his state operating and pursue his dream of himself unmindful of the suffering he causes, that’s all that matters. Iranians may have a problem with this — the modern are the competing interest — but not the Ayatollah, not any more than Baghdaddi or Putin or Assad. They’re very different in their ambitions, but they are of the same personality, and that may be what bonds them albeit along the Shiite axis, loosely speaking.
While oil plays a mighty role in these politics, it may be much less important than the protection of the immense (and fragile) ego of the despot.
The weight of American interest in Israel’s survival probably should not be credited too greatly to the evangelical Christian community: all of the open democracies feature a majority culture, but they are all democracies in function as well as spirit, and Israel stands with them.
Brotherhood-style “democracy” as exhibited in Egypt and perhaps illustrated by Erdogan’s work in Turkey, is inherently anti-democratic and despotic primarily because the intellectual, political, and social machinery exploited is itself kleptocratic or piratical.
Human language programming and scripting get into this right about here: how is one to navigate so confused a world? Adhering to instructions might seem a good idea, but when the same promote such as Baghdaddi the Butcher to star power, one might well question the validity of those charts as well as the functioning of that most perverted “moral compass”.
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07 Thursday Aug 2014
Tags
“Tal Kayf is now in the hands of the Islamic State. They faced no resistance and rolled in just after midnight,” said Boutros Sargon, a resident who fled the town and was reached by phone in Arbil.
“I heard some gunshots last night and when I looked outside, I saw a military convoy from the Islamic State. They were shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’ [God is greatest],” he said.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/aug/07/isis-offensive-iraq-christian-exodus – 8/7/2014.
BackChannels Comment
Unfortunately, when it comes to political absolutism (why I call them the dictator “Putin-Assad-Khamenei”), despotism, and fascism (Hungary’s Jobbik now relates to Iranian heritage), there seems no end to variants.
ISIS has been proving vulnerable to the Kurdish Peshmerga, who know what will happen to them if they lose, and some ad hoc assembly of very small ambush parties that are targeting its leaders. Nonetheless, they’re using Erdogan’s embassy in Mosul as a headquarters (and they have gotten Erdogan to purchase $800 million in oil from them — and Erdogan has blacked out mention of the story in Turkey . . . all of which is bad news for NATO and the Turkish people).
The story with dictators who “take off” always ends in surreal depravity and sadism, and that much BadDaddy Baghdaddi’s lunatics have clearly accomplished.
More From the News
Jihadists who took over large areas of northern Iraq today have forced 100,000 Christians to flee as they occupied churches, removing crosses and destroying manuscripts.
They have fled with nothing but their clothes, some on foot, to reach the Kurdistan region, according to Louis Sako, the leader of Iraq’s largest Christian denomination.
CNN interview with Mark Arabo, Los Angeles –
Related:
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06 Wednesday Aug 2014
Tags
Dear ______,
I’d rather we would not talk about Israel because we seem to totally disagree on this subject, and I don’t want it to have a bad impact on our long-time friendship. But I want to share my thoughts with you about you saying that in reality the Israelis are ashamed about the war in Gaza.
I am sure that the vast majority of my friends in Israel are certainly not ashamed of that war.
Many have children in the army in Gaza or in the West Bank. Many are worried, desperate, and certainly feel no less compassion for the Palestinian civilian victims than you. Most find war terribly and do not want that innocent people die.
But they also do not want thousands of Israelis to die or to continue to live under rocket-fire, under constant threat, with radical Islamists around them that make no secret of what they will do with Jews as soon as they will have the occasion.
Hamas never says “Israelis”. For them there is no difference.
But I can comment only for myself: I am against violence and war and just as horrified and shocked as you are about injured and killed children all over the world .
My compassion is not limited to Indian or South American children, nor is it limited to Palestinian kids either.
My sympathies are also go to Syrian Pakistani, Sudanese, Nigerian, Iraqi, Somali, Lybian children who are killed by hundreds of thousands by the same ideology, by radical Islam, which has cost the lives of more tha 11 000 000 Muslims since 1948 11 000 !!! [STET]
I have contacts with Palestinians, even with a filmmaker from Gaza, now … but .. I see the danger posed by radical Islamists such as Hamas, and that the blockade of Gaza came AFTER the rocket attacks, and is not it’s cause.
And I know that the wall that has been erected after horrible terror attacks brutally murdered more than thousand Israeli civilians in buses, schools and pubs have lost their lives, and that the settlements are NOT the main cause of failed peace talks, which is the general consensus and mantra of the “European Hasbara” of the Left, Greens, Islamists and neo-Nazis.
I am shocked by your lack of compassion for Israelis being bombarded for years, the many gruesome terrorist attacks, many of which I indirectly (and one even had directly experienced!) !!
And your one-sided criticism of Israel and your lack of understanding what is happening there. Your black and white view of Israel scares me.
I also have my criticism of many what happened in Israel, the swing to the right, but that is also happening in Europe.
My friends there, and I are almost all for a two-state solution.
But radical Islamism all around Israel makes this solution increasingly impossible and dangerous for Israel.
It is not only the settlement policy, which can be criticized of course.
But writing hateful and ironic, cynical comments, and sometimes even posting false photos or articles is certainly no way to peace either.
The only way to peace is the path of the heart, through encountering each other, and a mutual attempt to understand each other’s pain and fears.
I have a few such friends in Israel who are seeking this path. But it is not possible when organizations like Hamas have power because they are making any contact impossible.
And to liken Bibi and Bennet, no matter how much one may accuse them of racism or war-mongering, to the leaders of Hamas, who kill and torture their own people, is absurd.
I am often enough in Israel to capture the atmosphere there. Yes, there is a growing racism , and hatred, and religious fanaticism, like all over the world, and it has to be taken care of.
But the way you criticize Israel in your many posts, and never utter even a single word of criticism of Hamas or Fatah, you kindle only hatred of Israel.
I’m against war and violence, but I see a great danger in radical Islam, that is the new fascism, and history repeats itself again, unfortunately. And with radical Islamists, it is not possible to conclude peace negotiations.
Have you read the Hamas Constitution which openly calls for the murder of Jews?
Hamas wanted to start a mega terrorist attack and would kill every Israeli if they had the chance.
And now they can send rockets from Gaza to Haifa. What should Israel do according to you, to protect their civilians?
Was it wrong that the Allies bombed Dresden and Berlin?
It is not easy to answer this moral question…
The violence and the suffering of many innocents is of course shocking to any feeling being, and the pictures of dead or injured children are heart-breaking of course.
But the vast majority of people in Israel is also realizing the danger of not reacting to the constant shelling of rockets and the threat of the tunnels, and of Hamas acquiring more weapons.
Would you like to see such gruesome pictures also from Israel? Bombs on planes? Some rockets hit Ben Gurion airport a few days ago. How many deaths would there be now in Israel, after years of missiles fired into Israel by Hamas if there were no shelters and no iron dome?
Israel is between a rock and a hard place.
And what I do know, not from the media but from the children of my friends who are now soldiers in Gaza, is that they very often tell people exactly where they should stay to be safe if the houses are being blown up, but that Hamas prevents them to escape, and fires rockets near schools, hospitals and mosques.
This whole situation is terrible, and moves me very much.
However, I am sure that one-sided criticism of Israel, particularly in Europe where anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism are so closely intertwined, does not contribute to peace, and hurts not only Israel, but also the non-Islamist Palestinians.
I would appreciate if this issue would be settled between us, I respect your opinion, but do not agree with it.
For me this is not a reason not to be friends, or to judge you.
Everyone has their past, and experiences, and if I lived in Germany I would perhaps also share your opinion; if you were in Israel and your sons in the army now , you would probably think differently as you do now, I don’t want to condemn anyone.
I look forward but to talk to you about other issues.
Very best wishes, and also do not condemn you me and some of your friends in Israel on our opinion.
Our children have often wept over friends killed in attacks, and we sat there with our gas masks during the Gulf War, or in the shelter when missiles were falling.
There is a wise Indian saying “condemn no one unless you’ve been walking around a few days in his moccasins”.
See you soon, be well, and I hope that soon peace will come ………
Shalom,
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