WARNING

ILLUSTRATED P.I.G TO ISLAM ... TAKES A HARD LOOK AT ISLAM, THE ISLAM THAT IS HIDDEN FROM US, THERE-FORE THIS SITE CONTAINS MANY DISTURBING IMAGES OF VIOLENCE , DEATH AND DESTRUCTION , THERE AGAIN, ISLAM IS A DISTURBING BELIEF SYSTEM, OF VIOLENCE, DEATH AND DESTRUCTION .


Sunday, July 30, 2006

NOT ALL MUSLIMAHS KEEP QUIET


Politically Incorrect Guide to

NOT ALL MUSLIMAHS KEEP QUIET

And it seems like muslimman cannot handle a woman

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Koola Boof
Found guilty of "treason against Sudan" and "blasphemy against Islam"...Koola Boof was sentenced in September of 2002 by a Muslim Sharia Court in her native Sudan to be beheaded...however, the author says that she has received even worse death threats than that directly from Sudanese diplomat Gamal Ibrahaim and from her ex-"sugar daddy", Sudan's former Vice President Hasan Al-Turabi (who is now on house arrest). Not only that, she had a personal phone call from Osama Bin Laden himself, who said to her, "If I had the time to waste, I would slit your throat myself."
http://mirrormax.i8.com/about.html

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Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Dutch member of parliament Ayaan Hirsi Ali has been threatened with death for writing the film "Submission" -- which is heavily critical of Islam and for which filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered in November. She spoke with SPIEGEL about her life as a fugitive, how to fight radical Islam, and the need for legitimate intolerance.
http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,356485,00.html


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Isioma Daniel
A Nigerian Muslim state said Tuesday it had issued a "fatwa" urging Muslims to kill the author of a newspaper story on the Miss World pageant that sparked deadly riots in northern Nigeria.
Nigerian Muslims were enraged by the article, written by a young woman journalist named Isioma Daniel who recently returned from a journalism course at Britain's University of Lancaster. It suggested that the Prophet Mohammad probably would have married one of the contestants in the beauty contest, which was to have been staged in Nigeria.
http://www.fomi.se/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1278


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Samira Munir
Of Pakistani origin Samira Munir proclaimed herself to be a muslim. She was not, however, your average muslim woman, not by a long shot. For those familiar with Irshad Manji, the Canadian author who wrote the book The Trouble With Islam and runs the website Muslim Refusenik Samira Munir can probably be best described as a Norwegian counterpart or equivalent of Irshad Manji.
Samira spoke relentlessly and very courageously for the rights of women in the muslim immigrant community in Norway, how they were faced with threats of forced marriages, so called honour-killings and female sexual mutilation. She also warned Norwegian politicians of dire consequences of their neglect and indifference. As a matter of fact she entered politics herself.


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Then, on November 14, 2005, the website of Human Rights Service brought the shocking news that Samira had died under circumtannces which still seem mysterious, to say the least. The story was that she had been run over by a train at a station on one of the suburban lines in Oslo. For someone who recently had claimed she was receiving almost daily death threats this seemed highly suspicious. It was made even more suspicious by the fact that the PC media in Norway for several days did not mention by a single word what had happened. Only a few Christian newspapers which do not belong to the islamophile dhimmitude which characterize Norwegian Christianity did mention the story. Earlier the same day as she was killed she had participated in a radio discussion where she defended the ban on hijab in universities in Turkey.

WHY THE SILENCE ABOUT
Samira Munir

A VERY LETHAL MYTH

Politically Incorrect Guide

A VERY LETHAL MYTH



This comment outlines the history of Canaan/Israel/ in maps From this brief history, we learn that it is a small country that has usually been dominated by outsiders, and that many peoples have lived here and established themselves and staked their claims here.

Canaan before the Hebrews

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Canaan had been a collection of city-states, tributary to the Egyptian Pharoah, as attested to in the Tel- El Amarna tablets. The breakup of the Egyptian empire beginning about 1500 BCE made possible the invasion of the Hebrews. The map shows the probable location of cities in Canaan about 1200 BCE
.
Israel in Early Times

Israel during the period of the Judges

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Israel/Canaan during the reign of King David

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According to Hebrew tradition, 12 tribes entered Cana'an from Egypt and conquered it, led by Moses. Historical evidence from the Amarna tables suggests that there were already 'apiru' (probably Hebrews) in Canaanites in the time of Egyptian rule, some possibly with names such as "yakubu-el" (Jacob). The biblical account allots different parts of the land to the twelve tribes as shown in the maps. Soon after, a kingdom was established, first under Saul and then under David. The right-hand map shows the borders of the kingdom of David (about 1000 B.C.E. ) and other nations. The maps are necessarily conjectures based on biblical narrative and supporting archeology

The Dual Kingdom and Judea in the Time of Jesus

Israel and Judea

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After the death of King Solomon, Israel split into two kingdoms. Eventually, both the kingdom of Israel, and later that of Judea, with its temple in Jerusalem, were overrun by invaders. The Persians restored the Judean kingdom and allowed the Jews to rebuild their temple. This kingdom fell to Greek and later Hellenic-Syrian domination when Alexander the Great conquered Persia.

Israel/Judea about the time of Jesus

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In 164 BCE the Hasmonean Kingdom of Judea revolted and became semi-independent of Syria. It was protected by a treaty of friendship with Rome. However in 61 Pompei conquered Jerusalem, and from then on Israel was subordinate to Rome. Parts of it were nominally independent under the rule of local kings of the line of Herod the Idumean.

Maps of Herodian and Roman Filastin
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Patriarchate of Jerusalem

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Herod build many towns and fortifications (including Massada and Heordion) and extensively remodelled the temple in Jerusalem. After the first Jewish rebellion and fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD, large numbers of Jews were exiled. Jerusalem was eventually rebuilt as Aelia Capitolina. After the failure of the revolt of Bar-Kochba in 133, there were more exiles and ruined towns. On the ruins of Israelite and Canaanite towns, the Romans built new ones, populated partly by inhabitants of neighboring lands. The land was divided into several districts, of which Israel was only one. The Negev (southern district), generally excluded from these divisions was inhabited by the Nabateans, an Arab trader nation that made a notable desert civilization in cities such as Avdat (in modern Israel) and Petra (in modern Jordan). The whole area between the desert and the sea was known, later in the Roman Empire, as the Christian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, though this was not a Roman administrative division.

Map of Israel under the Caliphs

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Christian Jerusalem fell first to the Persians, in 614. It was reconquered briefly in 629 by Heraclius. However, with the rise of Islam, the Middle East, and with it - Israel - Canaan - was conquered by Arabs. Jerusalem fell in 640. The Jews were willing allies of the Arabs, as they had been of the Persians. The Land was divided into a Southern Jund (district) of Filastin with a capital in Al-Lud (later in Ramleh), and a northern Jund of Al Urdunn with its capital in Tabariyeh (Tiberius).
(note= Filistin is not quite the same as Palistine)
638
Six years after Mohammed's death, the Caliph Omar enters
Jerusalem and Jews are readmitted to Jerusalem
691
Dome of the Rock completed by Caliph Abd al-Malik
701
The construction of the al-Aqsa mosque completed
by Caliph al-Walid
1010
Caliph al-Hakim orders destruction of synagogues
and churches

Crusader Times

The Latin States
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The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem

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Beginning in 1095, the crusaders conquered Jersalem and the surrounding areas. Initially savage toward Muslims and Jews, crusader rule eventually seems to have brought a measure of good administration before it was eventually eliminated by Salah-e-din and his successors

1099
Crusaders, led by Godfrey de Bouillon, capture of
Jerusalem following Pope Urban's call in 1096.
Baldwin I declared King of Jerusalem
1187
Kurdish general Saladin captures Jerusalem from Crusaders.
He permits Jews and Muslims to return and settle in the city.

1192
Richard the Lion Heart attempts to re-capture Jerusalem
but fails.
Treaty with Saladin permitting Christians to worship at their
Holy sites.
1219
City walls razed by Sultan Malik-al-Muattam
1244
Khawarizmian Turks capture Jerusalem. End of Crusader rule.

Turkish Jersalem and the surrounding areas

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Jersalem and the surrounding areas, changed hands several times among Moslem conquerors, the last of whom were the Turks.

1260 — 1517
The Mameluk Period
1244
Mameluk Sultans defeat the Ayyubids and rule Jerusalem
1260
The Mameluks of Egypt capture Jerusalem
1267
Rabbi Moshe Ben Nahman (Nahmanides) arrives from Spain,
revives the Jewish congregation and establishes synagogue and
center of learning bearing his name.
1275
Marco Polo stops in Jerusalem on his way to China
1348
The Black Death Plague hits Jerusalem
1488
Rabbi Obadiah of Bertinoro settles in Jerusalem and
leads the community.

[1517 — 1917
The Ottoman Turkish Period

1517
Ottomans effect peaceful takeover of Jerusalem
1537-1541
Unwalled since 1219, Sultan Suleiman ("The Magnificent"),
rebuilds the city walls including the present day 7 gates and the
"Tower of David." The Damascus gate in 1542.
1700
Rabbi Yehuda He'Hassid arrives, starts building
"Hurva" Synagogue
1836
First visit of Sir Moses Montefiore
1838
First consulate (British) opened in Jerusalem
1860
First Jewish settlement outside walls of the city
1898
Visit by Dr. Theodor Herzl, founder of the World Zionist
Organization.
As shown in the map, the land was divided into three administrative areas. These divisions became important in assessing the meaning of promises in the Sykes-Picot agreement and Husayn-MacMahon letters

1917
British conquest and General Allenby's entry into Jerusalem.
1918
Dr. Chaim Weizmann lays foundation stone of
Hebrew University on Mount Scopus.
1920
Sir Herbert Samuel appointed first British High Commissioner
and "Government House" established in Jerusalem.
1947
United Nations Resolution recommending the partition of Israel.

Since the earliest days of the Zionist enterprise, Jews living in their historic homeland of Israel have repeatedly extended their hand in peace. From its acceptance of the UN Partition Plan in 1947 to its numerous peace overtures toward the Arab states to its offering of more than 90 percent of the West Bank, all of Gaza and a presence in east Jerusalem at Camp David in 2000, Israel has made numerous efforts to coexist in harmony with its Arab neighbors. While Israel has succeeded in achieving peace with Egypt and Jordan, its unflagging efforts to reach such agreements with others, including Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinians, have repeatedly been rejected.

1918
Early Zionists Reach Out to Arabs
Chaim Weizmann, who would become the first president of Israel, leads the first of several missions to the area to explain the Zionist movement’s aims to the Arabs. He first visits Cairo in March 1918 to meet with leading Syrian Arab nationalists who had been chosen by the British as representatives. Weizmann stresses the Zionists’ desire to live in harmony with the Arabs in Palestine.

1947

Zionists Accept Creation of Jewish and Arab States

The Jewish community in Palestine accepts the Nov. 29 UN Partition Plan, even though it would have established a truncated, non-contiguous Jewish state without Jerusalem and the Galilee. The Palestinian leadership and Arab governments reject the plan. Their violent effort to destroy the Jewish community is defeated.

1948

Israel Declares Independence Amid Arab Violence
Despite the violent Palestinian campaign against the Jewish community, Israel’s Declaration of Independence of May 14 includes an offer to the Palestinian residents of "full and equal citizenship and due representation." The Declaration states: "We extend our hand in peace to all the neighboring states and their peoples."

1949

Israel Signs Armistice Agreements, Offers Repatriation of Refugees

After Israel wins the War of Independence against the Palestinians and five invading Arab armies, it signs several armistice agreements. These deals include territorial concessions to the Arab countries despite their refusal to sign peace treaties with Israel. The new Jewish state also offers to repatriate 100,000 Arab refugees, to allow the return of family members separated by war, to release refugee accounts frozen in Israeli banks and to pay compensation for abandoned land. The Arab states reject the offer.

1957

Israel Pulls Out of Egyptian Land

After capturing the Gaza Strip and most of the Sinai from Egypt in October 1956, Israel withdraws from these areas in early March in return for US security guarantees.

1967

Arabs Reject Israel’s Offer to Withdraw From Sinai and Golan Heights

On June 19–just nine days after the end of the Six-Day War–Israel’s cabinet decides to withdraw from the Sinai and the Golan Heights in return for peace. The decision is transmitted through the U.S. government to Egypt and Syria. Both immediately reject the offer.

1968

Israel Accepts UN Call to Withdraw from Territories

Israel’s foreign minister informs the United Nations on Feb. 12 that Israel accepts UN Security Council Resolution 242 of November 22, 1967, which calls on Israel to withdraw "from territories occupied" in the Six-Day War.

1974

Israel Signs Disengagement Agreements with Egypt and Syria

Israel signs a disengagement agreement with Egypt under which it is required to withdraw its forces from positions west of the Suez Canal that it captured during the Yom Kippur War in 1973. In a similar agreement with Syria, Israel withdraws its forces from all the area beyond the Golan it captured, as well as from a narrow strip in the eastern Golan, including its capital, Kuneitra. In both agreements, Israel accepts the imposition of a UN force between it and the two Arab countries.

1975

Israel Withdraws From Strategic Areas of Sinai

Israel signs a second disengagement agreement with Egypt in September. Under the agreement, Israel withdraws its forces from the Suez Canal and a large part of the Sinai, including its oil fields and strategic passes, in return for a three-year non-belligerency pledge.

1978

Israel Signs Camp David Accords with Egypt

At a summit held by President Jimmy Carter at his official retreat, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat sign the Camp David Accords. This landmark agreement is a declaration of principles under which Israel agrees to withdraw from the entire Sinai in return for a peace treaty and to establish autonomy for the Palestinian residents of the West Bank and Gaza.

1979

Israel Signs Peace Treaty With Egypt

Israel signs a peace treaty with Egypt on March 26. The treaty, the first between Israel and an Arab country, finalizes Israel’s commitment to withdraw from the entire Sinai. The Israeli withdrawal is completed on April 25, 1982.

1988

Israel Returns Taba to Egypt

Israel withdraws from Taba, a sliver of land west of Eilat, whose status remained unresolved in the peace treaty. Although Israel built a luxury hotel in the area, it promptly carries out its withdrawal on Sept. 29 when international arbitrators rule in Egypt’s favor.

1993

Israel Signs Declaration of Principles with PLO

Israel signs a declaration of principles with the PLO in a Sept. 13 ceremony featuring the famous handshake between Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Israel recognizes the PLO and agrees in principle to re-deploy its forces from various parts of the West Bank and Gaza where Palestinian self-government is to be established.

1994

Israel Turns Over Gaza, Jericho; Signs Peace Deal with Jordan

Israel in May agrees to partially implement the Oslo Accords, redeploying from most of Gaza and Jericho. Palestinian political leaders and security forces take over the evacuated areas. In October, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan’s King Hussein sign a formal peace treaty and Israel turns over more than 100 square miles of land.

1995

Israel Transfers to PA Authority Over 90 Percent of the Palestinians

Under the Interim Agreement, signed with the PLO on Sept. 28, Israel re-deploys its forces from most West Bank cities and villages. In total, Israel’s forces hand over to the Palestinians 27 percent of the West Bank, which comprises more than 90 percent of the Palestinian population.

1997

Israel Agrees to Turn Over Most of Hebron to the Palestinians

Israel agrees in January to re-deploy from 80 percent of Hebron, Judaism’s second holiest city, negotiate a safe passage for the Palestinians from the West Bank to Gaza and to open a Palestinian airport in Gaza.

1998

Israel Hands Over 40 Percent of West Bank to PA Control

Under the Wye agreement signed on Oct. 23, Israel agrees to a phased redeployment from additional West Bank territory, bringing the total handed over to the Palestinians to 40 percent.

1999

Israel Signs Agreement to Implement Land Withdrawals

Israel signs the Sharm el-Sheikh agreement to implement the Wye accord despite Palestinian violations and to enter into permanent-status negotiations, in which Israel was to make further concessions.

2000

Israel Offers Golan to Syria and Withdraws From Lebanon

Israel, through President Clinton, offers Syria in March a full withdrawal from the Golan to the 1923 international border in return for a peace treaty and security arrangements. Syrian President Hafez Assad rejects the offer. Two months later, Israel unilaterally withdraws from southern Lebanon. The UN confirms that Israel withdrew from all Lebanese territory under Security Council Resolution 425.

Israel Seeks to Reach Final Settlement with the Palestinians

At Camp David in July, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offers Arafat 92 percent of the West Bank, all of Gaza, Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem, Palestinian statehood and the dismantling of most settlements, but he rejects this and the Palestinians launch violence. In December, Barak agrees to negotiate a Clinton proposal for an Israeli withdrawal from 95 per-cent of the West Bank. Again, Arafat rejects the proposal.

2001

Israel Offers More Concessions

Despite the continuing Palestinian violence, Israeli negotiators, meeting with Palestinian counterparts in Taba, Egypt, agree to go even further than the proposal by Clinton on several key issues. Arafat blocks his negotiators from moving toward an agreement.

Israel Accepts Settlement Freeze Once Violence Stops

Under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Israel accepts a report issued by a committee led by former US Senator George Mitchell that calls for a total settlement freeze following the cessation of violence. Israel immediately declares a unilateral cease-fire, but the Palestinians continue their violence.

2002

January

January 15: An Israeli woman was shot dead in Jerusalem; a man (a United States citizen living in Israel) kidnapped into Nablus and shot dead there.
January 16: An Arab resident of East Jerusalem was killed while driving in a car with Israeli license plates near Jenin.
January 17: Six men and women were killed at a Bat-Mitzvah ceremony in Hadera by a Fatah gunman.
January 22: Two women were killed by a Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades gunman in Jerusalem
January 25: 20 people were injured in a suicide bombing in the Old Bus Station of Tel Aviv.
January 27: An elderly Israeli was killed and 172 were wounded by a Fatah suicide bombing in Jerusalem. The attack marked the first time a female suicide bomber was used.
The

2003

January

January 2: The body of a 72-year-old Israeli was found in the northern Jordan Valley in his burned out car. The Fatah Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed responsibility for the murder.
January 5: 23 people, including eight foreigners, are murdered in two nearly simultaneous suicide bombings in central Tel Aviv. More than 100 others were reported seriously injured. Islamic Jihad and Yasser Arafat's Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed responsibility. Another arm of Yassar Arafat's movement denied responsibility.
January 12: A 48-year-old man was killed and four people wounded when terrorists infiltrated Moshav Gadish and opened fire. The Palestinian Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack.
January 17: A 34-year-old Israeli was killed when terrorists entered his home near Kiryat Arba, and opened fire. His 5-year-old daughter and two others were wounded. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack.
The complete list for 2003


2004

January

January 3: Israeli soldiers kill three Palestinians in a clash with Palestinian stone throwers in Nablus in the West Bank, one of them a 15-year-old boy. Later, during the funeral service for the three dead, another Palestinian was shot dead. Three others were wounded. [1]
January 13: A father of five was shot dead and three Israelis were injured in a roadside ambush by the Fatah's Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades. [2]
January 14: Four Israelis were killed at Erez crossing after a suicide bomber exploded herself in a checkpoint to the industrial zone of Erez. Hamas and the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed joint responsibility. [3]
January 28: Israeli forces entered the Alzaytoun area south of Gaza City, killing eight Palestinians, five of whom were armed members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and wounding dozens [4].
January 29: Eleven Israelis killed and 50 wounded in a suicide bombing of a city bus in Jerusalem. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed responsibility. Hamas also claimed responsibility the next day. The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a video documenting the sights that police forensic expert encountered at the scene. (contains graphic content). [5]
January 30: Three armed Palestinians were killed in gun fights with IDF forces. Two were killed while carrying explosives near Dugit. The third died in a gunfight at Bethlehem. [6]
The complete list for 2004


2005

January

January 1: Israeli forces killed one Palestinian in Tal-al Sultan in Gaza. [2] Another was killed in the el-Salam quarter of Rafah and two more by helicopter gunship missile strike in Rafah.[3]
January 2: one Israeli civilian was seriously wounded when a Palestinian mortar shell hit the Erez crossing. [4]
January 2: one women was lightly injured when a barrage of Qassam rockets hit Sderot. [5]
January 2: Vladimir Rubin, a 66 years old security guard of the natural reserve of Beit Jubrin was shot dead. The al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed responsibility. [6]
January 4: 7 Palestinians are killed by a tank shell in Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. The IDF claim 6 of them were armed militants who were launching mortars shells and Qassam rocket, and that in addition to the shell hit a Qassam rocket exploded and caused extra damage to civilians. However, Palestinian claim that they were all civilians - from the same family - who were working in the greenhouses. [7], [8]
January 4: two Israeli children were injured when a Palestinian mortar shell landed near a school bus. [9]
January 5: 12 soldier are wounded, when a Qassam rocket hit a base near the Gaze-Israeli border. [10], [11]
January 6: One Hamas activist was shot dead by Israeli soldiers while he was infiltrating the Ganei Tal settlement in Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip. [12]
January 7: One Israeli is killed and four Israelis were wounded from in a shooting attack in the West Bank. In Gaza, two Palestinians were killed. [13], [14]
January 8: One Palestinian police man was shot dead by Israeli forces at a roadblock in southern Gaza. [15]
January 11: Nissim Arviv, 26, dies from his wounds, after being struck by a Palestinian mortar in the Erez crossing nine days ago. [16]
January 12: Gideon Rivlin, 50, a father of five, is killed and 4 Israeli soldiers are wounded in attack by 3 Palestinian militants who detonated a roadside bomb near the Morag settlememt greenhouse in Gush Katif. IDF forces returned fire and killed two of the attackers. The Palestinian Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility. [17]
January 12: Two Palestinians was shot dead near Ramallah on the West Bank in an exchange of fire with Israeli soldiers. [18]
January 13: Two Palestinian suicide bombers explode themselves and a truck ladden with explosives in the Karni crossing - a terminal in the eastern Gaza Strip allowing Palestinian merchants to export goods. At least 6 civilians, all Israelis, were killed and about 10-20 were wounded in the attack. The six were Hertzle Shlomo (50), Ivan Shmilov (53), Dror Gazari (31) from Sderot, Ofer Tiri (23) of Ashkelon, Muna'am Abu-Sabia (33) of Daburia and Ibrhim Kahili (46) of Um-al-Ghanem. Palestinian militants launched mortar shells and automatic weapsons fire against ambulances who came to evacuate the wounded and treat the casualties. Fatah's al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, Hamas and The Popular Resistance Committees claimed joint responsibility. About 3 militants were killed during the attack. Palestinian President-elect Mahmoud Abbas is the chairman of Fatah. [19] [20]
January 15: Eight Palestinian militants have been killed in three separate clashes in the Gaza strip: 4 were killed in al-Zaytoun neigborhood, a Hamas stronghold in Gaza City, 2 were killed in Rafah and other 2 were killed near Kissufim junction. [21], [22]
January 15: On noon, an Israeli child living on a settlement was injured from a Qassam rocket, loosing his hand. In the afternoon, aQassam rocket hit Sderot and wounded 6 people. An Israeli 17-years-old woman suffered critical wounds. Hamas claimed responsibility. [23]
January 18: Palestinian suicide bomber killed one security officer and wounded six Israelis in Gush Katif junction in the Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility. (Haaretz)
January 21: Ella (Chaya) Abukasis, 17, who sustained critical wounds from a Qassam rocket on January 15 when she tried to shield her 10-years-old brother from the rocket, died from her wounds in the Soroka hospital. [24]
January 31: 2 people suffered shock injuries as 7 mortar shells hit Neve Dekalim settlement in the Gaza Strip. Hamas claimed responsibility and say the shooting was a revenge for the killing of a 10-years-old girl in Rafah earlier this morning. Palestinians initially claimed she was killed from IDF tank shell but it was letter revealed that she was killed by Palestinian pilgrims, who shot spontanously into the air. [25], [26]
According to Haaretz, 53 Palestinian were killed during January, 23 of them were civilians.
2005



LETS NOT FORGET ARAFAT REJECTED A PEACE PROPOSAL THAT WOULD HAVE GIVEN THE PALESTINIAS 98 % OF THE OCCUPIED TERRITORY,WHERE AS TODAY PALESTINE WOULD HAVE ITS OWN INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT,AND INTERNATIONAL PORT.FOR THE LAST 2% PALESTINE WAnT TO NEGOTIATE WITH THE THE ONLY LANGUAGE IT UNDERSTANDS

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Twenty-eight people were killed and 140 injured - 20 of them seriously - in a suicide bombing in the Park Hotel in the coastal city of Netanya, in the midst of the Passover holiday seder with 250 guests.


Two people were killed and 28 injured, two seriously when a female suicide bomber blew herself up in the Kiryat Yovel supermarket in Jerusalem.


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30 people were injured, one critically and 5 seriously, in a suicide bombing in a cafe on the corner of Allenby and Bialik streets in Tel-Aviv. The woman critically wounded died of her injuries several days later.



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Fifteen people were killed and over 40 injured in a suicide bombing in Haifa, in the Matza restaurant of the gas station near the Grand Canyon shopping mall.


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ALL THIS MURDER AND MAYHEM BECAUSE OF A MYTHE THAT MOHAMMED DREAMED ABOUT GOING TO A MOSQUE THAT WAS NOT EVEN BUILT


Ha Ha Ha dont you ever feel cheated :- Johnny Rotten



bet that ol evil mo must have murmered much the same on his deathbed

THE VANISHING BUDHA

Politically Incorrect Guide to

ARTISTS AT WORK

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ART CRITICS

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WHERE ARE THE RIOTS-DEATH THREATS-ARSON ATTACKS-THE PROTEST TO THE UNITED NATIONS


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WHERE ARE THE RIOTS-DEATH THREATS-ARSON ATTACKS-THE PROTEST TO THE UNITED NATIONS


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NEED I ASK

Last year, Dutch artist Tjalling Houkema saw how his drawing of a Qu'ran splattered with blood and with a gun inside was removed from an exhibition in a library in The Hague after Muslims complained and made threats.

NOW SHALL WE LOOK AT SOME ARTWORK FROM PALESTINE WHICH APPEARED AS ISREAL WAS LEAVING THE GAZA STRIP
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With those two together the victory has been achieved.

MATTER OF PREFERENCE

Politically Incorrect Guide
BALI


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OR
JAVA
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OOOOOPS
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A naked boy walks outside a mosque distracting some Muslim women pilgrims praying at a mosque

Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.
Albert Einstein

GREAT RIDES PLANES 2

Politically Incorrect Guide

GREAT RIDES PLANES 2

In 1968 terrorists hijack a jet that was carrying 130 Jews, and flew it to Africa. The State of Israel responds by sending a team of Israeli commandos, who storm Entebbe airport - kill the terrorists - and rescue the Jews.




Two Nazis ??


and five Muslims




The' Baader-Meinhof ' gang joins with the ' Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine' and they did a joint hijacking.



Day 1 ....
June 27, 1976 ..Tel Aviv
Four terrorists board Air France 139 which flies to Athens and on to Paris. When the plane stops in Athens, three more hijackers board.
The plane in hijacked and heads to Benghazi where the hijackers demand the release of 53 militants, held in Israel and four other countries.


Day 2 ... June 28
Air France 139 lands in Entebbe, Uganda.


The hijackers put the Jews in a separate building from the rest of the passengers


This monster ate his enemies and kept their heads as trophies.

Idi Amin torments the Jews
For three straight days the TV blasts pictures of this monster touring the building where innocent Jews quiver. Every morning, Amin would walk thought the complex mockingly belching " Shalom Shalom - welcome to Uganda ".


Day 4
The hijackers release 149 of the non Jewish hostages on the July 2. Planes are sent to Entebbe to pick them up.


Day 6 ....
Jews decide to act.
The Israel cabinet meets and authorizes 'Operation Thunder Bolt'.General Motta Gur lays out the details.The plan consists of sending 200 special forces, four C-130 transports and two 727 jets.


Day 7
Commandos attack
July 4 ... four C-130's and two 727 leave Israel for a 7 1/2 hr flight to Entebbe.
[list=]http://judicial-inc.biz/entebb2.jpg[/list] At midnight four C-130's land undetected at Entebbe. They quickly unload a Mercedes, two Land Rovers and drive to the airport impersonating Idi Amin.
The Israelis ( disguised as Palestine terrorists ) storm the building killing two more Ugandans.
In front of the building two Ugandans tried to stop them but silenced UZI's stopped it.

A terrorist stepped out the main door of the Old Terminal to see what the fuss was about and was shot. The commandos enter the building and kill three more. The two from the Badher Meinhoff make a stand but are quickly killed
The assault lasted 3 minutes and 7 hijackers were dead. Somehow the Israelis shot three of their own.

Commandos secure airport
Next another plane arrives with two APC's
Israel prepares to battle Ugandans as infantrymen from the first and third plane ran to secure all access to roads to the airport. There was no opposition.


Jews flown to Israel
Cameras roll as Jews safely arrive in Tel Aviv.

Not all came home

Mrs. Dora Bloch fell ill, and she was taken to a hospital in Kampala.

When Amin learned the hostages were rescued, he went to the hospital and tore her apart.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

GREAT RIDES PLANES

Politically Incorrect Guide

GREAT RIDES (PLANES)


In 1968, an El Al plane was the target of the first Arab-Israeli hijacking. Three members of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) hijacked an El Al plane to Rome and diverted it to Algiers. The negotiations extended over 40 days. Both the hijackers and the hostages went free. This was the first and only successful hijacking of an El Al flight.


Leila Khaled
On August 29, 1969 Khaled was part of a team that hijacked TWA Flight 840 on its way from Rome to Athens, diverting the Boeing 707 to Damascus, where it landed after flying over Haifa in order for Khaled to see her birthplace, which she was not allowed to visit. No one was injured, although the aircraft was blown up. The PFLP leadership had thought that Yitzak Rabin, the Israeli ambassador to the United States would be on board. After this hijacking, Khaled underwent the first of several plastic surgeries intended to conceal her identity.
On September 6, 1970, Khaled and Patrick Arguello, a Nicaraguan, attempted the hijack of El Al Flight 219 from Amsterdam to New York as part of the Dawson's Field hijackings; a series of almost simultaneous hijackings carried out by the PFLP. The attack was foiled when Israeli skymarshals killed Arguello before eventually overpowering Khaled. Although she was carrying two hand grenades at the time, Khaled said she had received very strict instructions only to threaten passengers on the civilian flight. The pilot diverted the aircraft to Heathrow airport in London, where Khaled was delivered to Ealing police station. On October 1, the British government released her as part of a prisoner exchange.

Armed guards foiled a hijacking attempt on an El Al plane in 1970. This was part of the Dawson's Field hijackings.

The Dawson's Field hijacking occurred on September 6, 1970. Four different jet aircraft bound from Europe to New York City, New York, United States were hijacked. Two of the jets landed at a remote desert airstrip in Jordan called Dawson's Field, the third, a 747, was thought to be too large to land there, and the fourth hijacking was foiled mid-air. The Palestinian guerrilla organization PFLP planned and executed this operation to gain publicity for the plight of Palestinians and to gain release of fellow guerrillas being held in Swiss jails.

The initial hijackings were on four different planes:


El Al Flight 219, a Boeing 707, originated in Tel Aviv, Israel and was headed to New York City. It had 148 passengers and 10 crew members aboard. It stopped in Amsterdam, Netherlands, and was hijacked shortly after it took off from there by Patrick Arguello, a Nicaraguan, and Leila Khaled, a Palestinian. El Al security officers shot and killed Arguello and captured Khaled. The plane landed safely at Heathrow Airport in London, where Khaled was turned over to authorities. The original plan was to have four hijackers aboard this flight, but two were unable to board in Amsterdam.

Pan American Flight 93, a Boeing 747, was carrying 152 passengers and 17 crew. The flight was from Brussels, Belgium to New York with a stop in Amsterdam. The two hijackers bumped from the El Al flight boarded, and hijacked, this flight. It first landed in Beirut where it refueled and picked up several associates of the hijackers. It then landed in Cairo. The first 747 had only started flying in January of that year. Many airports were not equipped to handle the jumbo jet. The plane was blown up at Cairo after everybody deplaned.
Aircraft are blown up by the guerrillasTWA Flight 74, a Boeing 707. was an around-the-world flight carrying 141 passengers and a crew of 10. It was hijacked shortly after taking off from Frankfurt am Main, Germany. It landed at Dawson's Field in Jordan.
Swissair Flight 100, a DC-8, carrying 143 passengers and 12 crew flying from Zurich, Switzerland to New York. It also landed at Dawson's Field.


On the following day, a fifth plane, BOAC flight 775, a VC-10, was hijacked and brought to Dawson's Field. This was unplanned by PFLP, but the work of a sympathizer who wanted leverage with the British to free Leila Khaled.
On September 12, after taking the passengers off, the guerrillas blew up the three planes (TWA, Swissair, BOAC) in the Jordan desert. This was seen by newscrews and broadcast to international television.
Eventually, a deal was brokered that led to the release of all hostages in exchange for Leila Khaled and three PFLP guerrillas held in a Swiss jail.









Leila Khaled (Arabic: ليلى خالد laylà ẖālid; born April 9, 1944) is a former member of George Habash's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), part of the secular, leftwing Palestinian rejectionist front. She is currently a member of the Palestinian National Council

FRIGGING JERKS

Politically Incorrect Guide

Fings ain,t wot they used to be

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And fings dont look better

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HAGIA SOPHIA

Politically Incorrect Guide

Truly rare diamond


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Hagia Sophia

Hagia Sophia is not a public building that changed ownership with the conquest of a war. Hagia Sophia is a place of god, Christendom’s grandest place of worship for over 900 years, and arguably the most perfect and beautiful church that has been erected by any Christian people. The splendour of its overall effect, its “paradise-like” beauty and architectural brilliance were often comprehensible only in terms of repeated divine intervention.

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The magnificence, spirituality and prestige of the Great Church led to its being appropriated as an imperial and religious symbol by the Ottoman sultans. The church of Christ was possessed and converted into a mosque, until it was decreed a museum. During this long time, it has been subjected to more than its fair share of abuse and denigration.

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Hagia Sophia, an essential element of Christianity, a second Jerusalem, the most revolutionary and daring church conceived in Christendom, has been turned into a museum considerably impaired by the loss of all its Christian furnishings and much of its original setting and atmosphere. At present it is part of an increasingly elaborate area of monuments, museums, and rug and souvenir shops. The Great Church, transformed into a monument/museum without life…The conquest of war does not and cannot change its spiritual nature into a civil-cultural-secular institution. For as long as the injustice done to the soul of Hagia Sophia is ignored and forgotten Christianity cannot be whole. Hagia Sophia’s reason for existing is vitally important to restoring religious integrity.

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It is a disgrace and disrespect to a religion and god when holy places are unwillingly turned purely into tourist attractions. How would the Muslims feel if one of their holiest places was turned into a museum for tourists by a conquering power?

With its conversion into a museum in 1934, Hagia Sophia was frozen in some past age, vaguely Byzantine. Directed by the then historicist paradigm that saw the past as unchanging, Hagia Sophia was also understood through the aesthetic of the great museum, that is, aloof and imposing. Both traits were useful to a Turkish government that wanted to break with the Ottoman era that lasted until after World War I. The church of Heavenly Wisdom became thus what the official Turkish act of secularisation called a “unique architectural monument of art” and hence was valued more for its age, art and historical value than for its practical and religious use.


Times have changed. Turkey has long severed its ties with the darker aspects of its Ottoman past. It aspires to join the European Union. The time has come to restore Hagia Sophia’s spirituality as a place of Christian worship. Turkey has to remember that old wisdom that says, “Do not do to others what you don’t wish them to do unto you”. Justice must prevail so that religious integrity might be restored. Turkey has to face up to its history and address this vital issue.

In 1847, a progressive sultan, Abdülmecid I(r. 1839-61), commissioned the Swiss architect Gaspare Fossati to restore the structure of Hagia Sophia, then Ayasofya Camii. When Fossati and his team began work on Hagia Sophia in 1847, after more than a century of neglect, they found the building in a dilapidated state with a leaking roof and “clouds of pigeons” despoiling the interior. They repaired cracks in the domes and vaults, and placed an iron chain around its base to contain its outward thrust. However they removed four flying buttresses that seemed to serve no purpose. They replaced the leaking lead covering of the roofs and carried out a complete cleaning inside and out. As the deteriorated plaster was chipped off walls and vaults, decorative Byzantine mosaics, shimmering with gold, were revealed. The sultan, astonished by their beauty, ordered Fossati and his team to uncover all the mosaics. When those in the galleries were uncovered and repaired, Fossati beseeched Abdülmecid to relax the rigid principles that demanded their obliteration. “They are beautiful,” Abdülmecid said. “Hide them because our religion forbids them. Hide them well, but do not destroy them: For who knows what might happen.”

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Sultan Abdülmecid was intent on modernizing his kingdom and strengthening its ties with Western Europe at a moment when the great gulf between Turkey and Europe was beginning to narrow, a process that continues in our day. For him Hagia Sophia was part of a policy of progressive reform. Abdülmecid, whose reign had started with the proclamation of the Tanzimat, the most important milestone in the Westernisation of the Ottoman state and culture, encouraged uncovering the mosaics for repair and criticized his predecessors for having obscured these beautiful ornaments. He took advantage of the hajj (pilgrimage) to send the most fanatical imams of the (then) mosque to Mecca, before he undertook the restoration.


If Turkey aspires to join the community of Europe, the first step would be to show a spirit of understanding and a sense of justice, mutual respect and willingness to cooperate, as is the culture of the European Union. The time to restore the spirituality of Hagia Sophia as a place of Christian worship is now. The spiritual “redemption” of the Holy Wisdom church might be realized with the same care and respect with which Abdülmecid, that progressive, proeuropean reformer of the Ottoman Empire, commissioned the last major Ottoman restoration of Hagia Sophia.

History might neglect but it never forgets. Historic mistakes can be reversed and corrected. By taking the big and noble step of redeeming Hagia Sophia, the Turkish state would prove its genuine respect for the Christians of Europe and the world. Restoring Hagia Sophia to Christian worship would be THE revolutionary gesture of wisdom, progress and civility. Such an act would offer Istanbul the rare privilege of hosting not only a great monument of world art, but also one of Christianity’s most important places of worship, a truly rare diamond.


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If you believe in the just case that Hagia Sophia should be restored to its proper religious role as a church, for which it was built in the first place, then please support this petition to the EU Parliament that Turkey should not be admitted as a member of the European Union until it restores Hagia Sophia to its original purpose as a church and not a museum.

A minimum of 1.000.000 signatures are needed in order to persuade the European Union to consider this proposal seriously.

As you know, Turkey is doing everything it can today to convince the European Union that it is a worthy country to join it.