Saturday, December 12, 2015

Is this really progress in Saudi Arabia?




This is viewed as progress? Amazing how the media in the West continues to give Saudi Arabia a pass on everything. Allowing women to FINALLY vote in the year of 2015 only in MUNICIPAL elections in a country that is ruled by a fascist theocratic monarchy is hardly a step worthy of any praise. It is a mockery and a joke. The Saudi's finally acquiesced to allowing women this small gesture only as a propaganda measure to stop the negative press they (and Wahhabi Islam in general) have been receiving lately.

These cartoons say it all:







Does anything in the Middle East make sense?



 There is so much that is wrong with the Middle East that it is hard to know where to begin. Where does one start? We see a region that is completely engulfed in chaos, death and destruction - and unfortunately been this way for many decades now. Where does one start I ask? The Palestinian and Israeli conflict - and possible third Intifada? The Syrian army and the anti-Assad forces conflict? The Egyptian government and the Muslim Brotherhood conflict? ISIS against the rest of the world conflict? Russia's involvement in the Syrian conflict? The Sunni and Shiite clash between Saudi Arabia and Iran? Their proxy war in Yemen and Syria? Iran's involvement in defending Assad? Hizbullah's joining other Shiite groups from Iraq, Iran - and now we learn from Pakistan, to join the fight against ISIS?

We still have Turkey and it's war against the Kurds? In Libya different factions are fighting it out. I just scratched the surface. I didn't get into the religious fanaticism or the political dysfunctions of all the governments in the Middle East. I didn't get into how backward these countries are on many fronts, from education to health care to basic human rights or women rights.

The intrigue never ceases. The place is a mess to no end. And then I come across this headline:Saving their sworn enemy: Heartstopping footage shows Israeli commandos rescuing wounded men from Syrian warzone - but WHY are they risking their lives for Islamic militants?









Wednesday, December 9, 2015

When will the world say enough is enough to Saudi Arabia?

For too long I have expressed the view that the main source of radicalism in the Islamic faith begins and ends in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states.  The petrol money has been used to fuel this radicalism. This is not rocket science and yet for too long our government has looked the other way.  We all know the interest of oil money and oil companies trumps everything else but that has to stop. To be able to win the "war on terror" we have to deal with the religious ideology/theology that is coming out of Mecca. The Wahhabi brand of Islam is about as radical and backward as it gets. The Koran like any other religious text is open to interpretation - whether the fanatics acknowledge that fact or not. Why couldn't the branch of Sufi Islam be mainstream? The branch that can co-exist with modernity - and other religions - and other interpretations - and co-exist with secular society and government? Those ingredients are essential to ensure greater harmony and advancement in a society. Wahhabi Islam is a relic of the 7th century and it should be condemned, shunned and rejected. Instead,  we have closed our eyes to the abuses in Saudi Arabia perpetrated against their own people - women, gays and other religious sects. We have ignored the funding of extremism abroad – not to mention 9/11 was carried out by Saudi’s. That has to end. Even more disgusting as we learn that Saudi Arabia did not offer to accept one single refugee from Syria - but after Germany and other Western countries accepted to allow thousands to migrate, Saudi Arabia announced to fund the building of 200 mosques for them in Europe. Are you fucking kidding me? I read somewhere Saudi Arabia built over 1,500 mosques worldwide? Any wonder why this religion is a breeding ground for jihadists, fanatics and throwbacks?  It's good to see the German foreign minister express the obvious, it's about fucking time. And more is needed by all Christian nations.

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Germany's vice-chancellor has publicly accused Saudi Arabia of financing terrorists in the West.
Sigmar Gabriel claimed the country was funding mosques linked to extremism, which he said were becoming a threat to public security.

In an interview with German newspaper, Bild am Sonntag, Mr Gabriel said: “We have to make clear to the Saudis that the time of looking away is over.
“Wahhabi mosques all over the world are financed by Saudi Arabia.

“Many Islamists who are a threat to public safety come from these communities in Germany.”

CHRISTIANITY IN THE MIDDLE EAST ON THE VERGE OF EXTINCTION

Photo of Russ Read
About 1.3 million Iraqi Christians have been displaced, murdered or taken prisoner since 2003. A centuries-old civilization now faces permanent extinction while the rest of the world, including the U.S. government, looks on.
As Christians across the world begin to celebrate Christmas, the 300,000 remaining Christians displaced in Iraq and Syria are preparing for a harsh winter that will almost certainly dwindle their numbers further. ISIS has been assaulting Christianity in the Middle East for well over a year and a half, and now the few remaining will be forced to brave the elements in the face of a genocide.
“Assyrian culture is melting,” says Juliana Taimoorazy, head of the Iraqi Christian Relief Council, a group dedicated to aiding Christians being persecuted in the Middle East in an interview with The Daily Caller News Foundation. Taimoorazy ismaking a desperate push to try and raise money to save Assyrian Christians in Iraq before winter settles in. “We want to buy caravans,” says Taimoorazy, referring to the camper-style vehicles that can serve as temporary shelters equipped with running water and electricity.
The Iraqi Christian minority, also known as Assyrian Christians, has a history in the Nineveh Plains region of Iraq going back 6,700 years. Assyrians were one of the first major groups in the region to convert to Christianity and are one of the last groups to speak Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ.

  • Prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003, Assyrians numbered 1.6 million in Iraq. With the rise of al-Qaida in Iraq and the Iraqi insurgency, their numbers began to dwindle. In 2014, less than 500,000 remained. In just over a year since its rise, ISIS has slaughtered and displaced the Assyrian Christians with brutal efficiency, cutting their numbers nearly in half to 300,000.
    “ISIS took 280 Assyrian hostages to Syria,” says Taimoorazy. Three of the hostages were executed on video in October. This represented the first time ISIS executed Christians on camera, yet Taimoorazy claims the incident went essentially ignored by Western media. ISIS is demanding $100,000 in ransom for each Christian, that’s $28 million to stave off extinction of one of the last remaining Christian groups in the Middle East. Many Assyrians in the diaspora have been successfully resettled in Europe and the United States, including Taimoorazy herself who fled from her native Iran in 1989, however they lack the financial capacity to save their friends and family from the hands of ISIS.
    “They [ISIS] know we cannot come up with this kind of money, so they are hoping other groups and countries will come up with the money,” an Assyrian leader told Fox News when the hostages were first taken in April.
    Even when the money is raised, the matters regarding ransom are extremely complicated. As a general policy, the United States does not engage directly in hostage negotiations. Assyrians therefore must utilize back-channel sources to secure their loved ones, which usually involves using Sunni Muslim warlords, charity workers and clergy still present in the region. Mar Gewargis III, the Patriarch of the Assyrian Church, is a particularly important figure speaking out on this issue.
    There is of course a moral dilemma when Assyrians are forced to pay off ISIS to save their culture: the same ransom money used to save some inevitably fuels the ISIS war machine, allowing the terrorist group to potentially continue its eradication of Christianity in the region.
    Assyrian Christianity is facing “a form of soft genocide” in addition to eradication, says Taimoorazy. Even the groups fighting ISIS, like the Kurdish Peshmerga and Iraqi military, are loathe to aid the Christians. When the first ISIS onslaught hit the Nineveh Plains in the summer of 2014 “the U.S.-backed Iraqi army, wilted before the onslaught, with many soldiers reportedly abandoning their posts and stripping off their uniforms to avoid detection,” says an Al Jazeera report. Taimoorazy claims continued abuse of Christians results when the Kurdish Peshmerga and various Iraqi militias retake towns from ISIS.
    Despite witnessing the eradication of Assyrians for over a year, Taimoorazy claims the United States has brought in few of them. She explains that before the ISIS uprising, 45-50 percent of Iraqi refugees coming into the U.S. were Christian, today that number is a remarkable 6 percent, with 89.6 percent of the remaining total being Muslim. When asked why there was such a dramatic drop, Taimoorazy pointed out that while the numbers under Bush were poor, the “[Obama] administration is not friendly to the Christian cause.”
    Taimoorazy says those who are fortunate enough to be saved face difficult challenges when resettling. “Assyrian culture is melting,” she claims, due in large part to the poor resettlement policies of Western countries, including the United States. Most Assyrians coming to the United States are spread throughout the country, making it particularly difficult to retain traditional Assyrian customs and their ancient language. “[Assyrians are] assimilating to the Christian community in America,” explains Taimoorazy.
    Taimoorazy sees the solution to the Assyrian problem as two-fold. In the short term, better settlement policies will be needed so that Assyrians in the diaspora can continue their traditions and culture abroad. In the long term, she sees the solution as a province dedicated to the Assyrian Christians somewhere in the Nineveh Plains. Taimoorazy and her colleagues see the goal of establishing an Assyrian homeland as a “repackaging of Zionism,” and they already have the support of notable Middle Eastern leader King Abdullah of Jordan. No matter what happens in the future, Taimoorazy makes it evidently clear that if current policy does not change, Christianity in the Middle East could soon be lost to history.