Skip to main content

Home/ Politically Minded/ Group items tagged IRAN

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Muslim Academy

Causes of Extremism in Pakistan - 0 views

  •  
    Pakistan is currently the flashpoint of international politics due to numerous reasons. Among the broad array of factors that make Pakistan highly essential and important country in world politics, the two main factors are the geographic location of Pakistan as well as the international War on Terror. Pakistan is located right in the middle of some great powers of the world that are Russia, India, China, similarly the country like Iran is also a neighbor of Pakistan. The presence of the United States along with International Security Assistance Forces (ISAF) and NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) countries has also significantly increased the importance of Pakistan in World Politics. Other factors that make Pakistan the central point of interest in world politics are the alleged presence of wanted extremists across the Pak-Afghan border, Nuclear Capability, State of the Art Missile System, one of the most professional and capable Military and Spy Agency and the hub of international trade.
mehrreporter

'Ahmed Shaheed not qualified, reports not valid' - 0 views

  •  
    Tehran, YJC. Iran's Human Rights chief says human rights reports on Iran hold offensive nature.
Michael Haltman

Is the end-game in Iran fast approaching as nuclear reactor is due to be fueled by Russ... - 0 views

  •  
    Will Israel be forced to strike this week as Russia readies to load nuclear fuel rods into an Iranian reactor?
thinkahol *

TV discussions - Glenn Greenwald - Salon.com - 0 views

  •  
    I did two segments on Morning Joe this morning -- the first on Iran and the second on Afghanistan -- which actually entailed decent discussions.  I was also on Rachel Maddow's show last night discussing the Tea Party, Russ Feingold and Larry Summers.  The videos of those segments are below.
thinkahol *

WikiLeaks' Most Terrifying Revelation: Just How Much Our Government Lies to Us | | Alte... - 0 views

  •  
    Do you believe that it is in Americans' interest to allow a small group of U.S. leaders to unilaterally murder, maim, imprison and/or torture anyone they choose anywhere in the world, without the knowledge let alone oversight of their citizens or the international community? And, despite their proven record of failure to protect America -- from Indochina to Iran to Iraq -- do you believe they should be permitted to clandestinely expand their war-making without informed public debate? If so, you are betraying the principles upon which America was founded, endangering your nation, and displaying a distinctly "unamerican" subservience to unaccountable authority. But if you oppose autocratic power, you are called to support Wikileaks and others trying to limit U.S. Executive Branch mass murder abroad and failure to protect Americans at home.
Arabica Robusta

ZCommunications | The brutal truth about Tunisia by Robert Fisk | ZNet Article - 0 views

  • For I fear this is going to be the same old story. Yes, we would like a democracy in Tunisia – but not too much democracy. Remember how we wanted Algeria to have a democracy back in the early Nineties?   Then when it looked like the Islamists might win the second round of voting, we supported its military-backed government in suspending elections and crushing the Islamists and initiating a civil war in which 150,000 died.
  • Indeed, what was Hillary Clinton doing last week as Tunisia burned? She was telling the corrupted princes of the Gulf that their job was to support sanctions against Iran, to confront the Islamic republic, to prepare for another strike against a Muslim state after the two catastrophes the United States and the UK have already inflicted in the region.
  • It's the same old problem for us in the West. We mouth the word "democracy" and we are all for fair elections – providing the Arabs vote for whom we want them to vote for.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • In Algeria 20 years ago, they didn't. In "Palestine" they didn't. And in Lebanon, because of the so-called Doha accord, they didn't. So we sanction them, threaten them and warn them about Iran and expect them to keep their mouths shut when Israel steals more Palestinian land for its colonies on the West Bank.
thinkahol *

BART Pulls a Mubarak in San Francisco | Electronic Frontier Foundation - 0 views

  •  
    This week, EFF has seen censorship stories move closer and closer to home - first Iran, then the UK, and now San Francisco, an early locus of the modern free speech movement. Operators of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system (BART) shut down cell phone service to four stations in downtown San Francisco yesterday in response to a planned protest. Last month, protesters disrupted BART service in response to the fatal shooting of Charles Blair Hill by BART police on July 3rd. Thursday's protest failed to materialize, possibly because the disruption of cell phone service made organization and coordination difficult.
William Green

The most important news and commentary to read right now. - The Slatest - Slate Magazine - 0 views

  •  
    Andrew Sullivan supported George W. Bush for president in 2000 and praised his initial reactions to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In the years since, Sullivan's become disgusted by the moral morass of American torture and Bush's stalwart defense of it. But Bush, Sullivan writes in a cover-story epistle to the former president in the Atlantic, is the only person who can amend torture's stain on the country. So Sullivan appeals to the conservative and Christian roots he shares with Bush and calls for the former president to "reject categorically the phony legalisms, criminal destruction of crucial evidence, and retrospective rationalizations used to pretend that none of this happened. It happened." Bush must, Sullivan writes, say a public mea culpa to the American people, as Ronald Reagan did in response to the Iran-Contra scandal. If not, Sullivan warns that a future president might "resort to the same brutalizing policy, with the same polarizing, demoralizing, war-crippling results. I am writing you now because it is within your power-and only within your power-to prevent that from happening."
Asif Sheeraz

Watch Aaj Kamran Khan Kay Saath - 19th June 2009 - 0 views

  •  
    Shahzad Hassan presents another fresh episode of Aaj Kamran Khan Kay Saath in Geo TV and talked with Tariq Fatmi Former Ambassador, Khalid Mehmood Former Ambassador Iran, Shafqat Mehmood Analyst, Wasiatullah Khan and Mehtab Haidar.
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

John Bolton at CPAC: The Benefits of Nuking Chicago | Mother Jones - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting how the warhead seems to be going off on the campus of Columbia College. I guess the bad guys are going to bring us to out knees by cutting off the supply of fashion illustrators and fiction writers? Those fiends! We would have never seen it coming. If you're read my stuff, you know exactly what I think of the Bush administration and how happy I was to see it leave Washington. I like a good neocon bash maybe even more than the next man. But, while this take on Bolton's remarks has been a popular one, I don't feel it's a reasonable one. As the article itself quotes Mr.Bolton "The fact is on foreign policy I don't think President Obama thinks it's a priority," said Bolton. "He said during the campaign he thought Iran was a tiny threat. Tiny, tiny depending on how many nuclear weapons they are ultimately able to deliver on target. Its, uh, its tiny compared to the Soviet Union, but is the loss of one American city" - here Bolton changes his tone subtly to prepare for the joke - "pick one at random - Chicago - is that a tiny threat?" Yes, there's a joke in that remark, but it's not the one that Jonathan Stein of Mother Jones wants it to be. The point of the joke is that if even one city gets hit, that's somebody's home and to that somebody, the difference between a vast nuclear arsenal and a small one isn't going to matter much. By naming the president's hometown in the hypothetical, he invites the president to put himself in the shoes of that person left facing a detonation close at hand. We don't have to guess how Obama would feel about such a prospect; it's the same way anybody would feel about it. To suggest, as the author does, that the audience validated a hope for mass murder by laughing at the joke is a disingenuous attempt to produce a hysterical response for the political gain of an already victorious faction. It's a cheap shot, and the author should have known better. This makes the Bush Administration and neoconservatism look bett
mehrreporter

Iran checking relations prior to OPEC session - 0 views

  •  
    Tehran, YJC. As we approach the OPEC meeting in Vienna, Iran's Oil Ministry is holding talks with different oil producing countries.
barrybcollinss

Report: Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander killed in Syria - 1 views

  •  
    TEHRAN, Iran –  Iran's semiofficial Mehr news agency says a commander in its effective Revolutionary Guard has been killed in Syria.
Michael Haltman

Southern Exposure, illegal immigration, Mexican border war, and Arizona immigration law... - 3 views

  •  
    Wouldn't it be a good idea to keep terrorists from moving across our border with Mexico. The Arizona immigration law is a good start!
Michael Haltman

Joran van der Sloot: What the... - 0 views

  •  
    People need to take an interest in more than Natalee Holloway, Dancing with the Stars, American Idol, etc. There are bigger fish to fry out there!
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 51 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page