vaman wrote:Oh yes Sureshm, I am biased as the revolution makes no sense to me, and since you have amply displayed your IQ again can we move this discussion elsewhere? Lets debate at communalismcombat.org, I am on as teesta setalvad



vaman wrote:Oh yes Sureshm, I am biased as the revolution makes no sense to me, and since you have amply displayed your IQ again can we move this discussion elsewhere? Lets debate at communalismcombat.org, I am on as teesta setalvad
he sure did not learn anything about diplomacy then., Miliband insisted that he was simply articulating the British Government's stand because he did not believe in saying "one thing in private and another in public".
Lord Ahmed, 51, was driving his Jaguar when he hit a stationary car in the outside lane of the motorway - Martyn Gombar, 28, was killed. Lord Ahmed, of Rotherham, had admitted driving dangerously.
A proposal to pay £12,000 compensation to the families of everyone killed during Northern Ireland's troubles -- including the relatives of terrorists - has been rejected by the Government.
The proposal would have meant that the family of a terrorist who blew himself up with his own bomb would be entitled to the same payment as relatives of a baby killed in the blast.
$hitain will need to import another million+ rabid Paki beards to feed the surge in demand for labor (and labor demand for votes) caused by this fantabulistic growth spurt (0.1% to 16.8% is not trivial, after all), I predict.HBOS, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, revealed that 381,669 customers, about 16.8 per cent of its mortgage book, owed more than the value of their homes. At Lloyds TSB, 162,000 homeowners, 15 per cent of its mortgage book, were in the same position.
These figures compare with only 0.1 per cent of customers of each bank – a total of less than 4,000 households – being in negative equity at the end of 2007.
...
Michael Saunders, chief economist at Citigroup, said last month that the bank estimated homeowners with negative equity was up to about 1.2 million, from 100,000 a year ago, out of a total of between 11 million and 12 million mortgages. “There is no sign that the decline in house prices – and hence the surge in negative equity – is yet close to ending,” he said.
He said in December that about one owner in four could be in negative equity if prices fell by a total of 30 per cent by 2010, as many analysts expect.
Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, has said it is "impossible to say" how much capital will be required to shore up the British banking system.
Mr King said it would take "many months" to establish the scale of toxic assets held by banks, and the scale of problems would change depending on the international economic outlook. {Clear signal for some to scram with the loot whilst they still can}
"That is not something that is easy to do or can be done quickly," he told the MPs. "It will require a much longer and more detailed assessment contract by contract."
"How much capital banks will need in the end is impossible to tell," he added. {Duh}
But he also suggested public borrowing was too high as the UK entered the crisis and that had affected the Government's response to it. "I do think public debt matters. We get to this crisis with levels of public borrowing which were too high and that made it difficult," he said.
But, he added, that was a "million miles" away from the idea that Britain in any way resembled somewhere like Zimbabwe. {million miles indeed. Must be true, a TFTA sahib is saying so}
When a tabloid newspaper reports that a 'Muslim hate mob' is daubing abuse, can we believe them?
By Peter Oborne
Monday, 7 July 2008
On the morning of 7 October 2006 The Sun newspaper splashed a dramatic story across its front page. The story – billed as exclusive – concerned a callous and cynical crime committed by Muslims. A team of Sun reporters described in graphic detail how what the paper labelled a "Muslim hate mob" had vandalised a house near Windsor. The Sun revealed that "vile yobs hurled bricks through windows and daubed obscenities. A message on the drive spelled out in 4ft-letters: '****** off '."
Related articles
One Tory MP, Philip Davies, was quoted venting outrage at this act of vandalism. "If there's anybody who should ****** off," Davies was quoted as saying, "it's the Muslims who are doing this kind of thing. Police should pull out the stops to track down these vile thugs".
The Sun left its readers in no doubt as to why the outrage had been committed. Local Muslims were waging a vendetta against four British soldiers who hoped to rent the house on their return from serving their country in Afghanistan. The paper quoted an army source saying that: "these guys have done nothing but bravely serve their country – yet they can't even live where they want in their own".
But there was one very big problem with The Sun story. There was no Muslim involvement of any kind. It is true that a house had been vandalised in Montagu Road, part of the comfortable and prosperous Windsor suburb of Datchet – as The Windsor Express had reported the previous day. It also looks very likely that the attack was connected with the potential arrival of four household cavalry officers.
The average house price in Montagu Road is around £600,000 and there is an air of almost rural tranquillity. As far as we could discover, no Muslims lived in the area. To all intents and purposes Montagu Road was a white, gated community. The Sun claim that a "Muslim hate mob" could have arrived unnoticed and committed vandalism without being observed was nothing short of preposterous. Furthermore, the police denied any Muslim connection.
In his article for The Windsor Express the previous day, local journalist Paul Pickett had written a far more scrupulous piece. He reported that the local army barracks had received three anonymous phone calls the previous week. They were not from Muslims, however, as The Sun reported. They were from local residents. Pickett reported that the anonymous calls objected to the presence of soldiers because they would lower property prices in the road. He also reported that around 40 local residents had signed a petition, objecting to the soldiers moving in.
We spoke to Jamie Pyatt, one of The Sun team of journalists who wrote the "exclusive" and he stood by his story. He told us that the police were being politically correct by not admitting that Muslims had carried out the crime. According to Pyatt, his contacts were under no doubt as to who vandalised the house. He claimed that there are lots of Asians on the road who could easily have seen British soldiers looking around in their combat gear. This was certainly not our impression. In fact, we did not see a single man, woman or child who looked remotely Muslim.
Eventually, even The Sun was forced to admit that there were problems with its story. Some four months after it appeared, under pressure from the Press Complaints Commission, a four-line correction was published. It read: "Following our report "Hounded out" about a soldiers' home in Datchet, Berkshire, being vandalised by Muslims, we have been asked to point out no threatening calls were logged at Combermere Barracks from Muslims and police have been unable to establish if any faith or religious group was responsible for the incident. We are happy to make this clear."
The Sun never retracted the sensational assertion that a "Muslim hate mob" had vandalised the house and, to this day, the original "Hounded Out" story can be found on The Sun website.
But Islamophobia As this pamphlet will illustrate, it can be encountered in the best circles: among our most famous novelists, among columnists from The Independent and Guardian newspapers, and in the Church of England. Its appeal is wide-ranging. "I am an Islamophobe, and proud of it," writes Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee, then writing for The Independent. "Islamophobia?" The Sunday Times columnist Rod Liddle rhetorically asks in the title of a speech, "Count me in." Imagine Liddle declaring: "Anti-Semitism? Count me in", or Toynbee announcing that she was "an anti-semite and proud of it". This just wouldn't happen and for very good reasons. Anti-semitism is recognised as an evil, noxious creed and its adherents barred from mainstream society and respectable organs of opinion. Not so Islamophobia.
Channel 4 Dispatches commissioned the Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies, to examine reporting of Muslim issues. The team analysed some 974 stories and found that approximately two-thirds of all "news hooks" for stories about Muslims involved either terrorism (some 36 per cent of stories); religious issues such as Sharia law, highlighting cultural differences between British Muslims and others (22 per cent); or Muslim extremism, concerning figures such as Abu Hamsa. These stories all portrayed Muslims as a source of trouble. By contrast only 5 per cent of stories were based on problems facing British Muslims.
Here are some more false stories concerning Muslims in Britain. Some were pure inventions, others contained a grain of truth but were distorted.
"Muslim Sickos" Maddie Kidnap Shock' – Daily Star, 28 April 2008. The story did not, as readers might have inferred from the front-page headline, reveal that Madeleine McCann had been kidnapped by a Muslim "sicko". In fact, it refers to a website on which claims were made that Madeleine's parents were involved in her disappearance.
"Hogwash: Now the PC brigade bans piggy banks in case they offend Muslims" – Daily Express, 24 October 2005.The story claimed that NatWest and Halifax had removed images of piggy banks from their promotional material in an effort to avoid offending Muslim customers, since pork is forbidden in Islam. The paper quoted observers calling such action "barmy" and "bonkers", thereby stirring up a huge response from the public.
After the story's publication, the Halifax drily noted that it "has not withdrawn any piggy banks from branches" and noted that in fact it had not used piggy banks in its branches for a number of years. The NatWest press statement noted that: "There is absolutely no fact in the story."
"Get off my bus I need to pray" – The Sun, 28 March 2008. This was the story of a Muslim bus driver ordering his passengers off his bus so that he could pray. The Sun story, along with footage of the bus driver praying, was widely circulated around right-wing blogs. Dhimmi Watch, the right-wing blog on the site Jihad Watch that catalogues perceived outrages committed by Muslims, even included The Sun story in their "ever-expanding You Can't Make This Stuff Up file". Well, actually, you can. The bus had been delayed, so in order to maintain frequency the bus company had ordered the driver to stop his bus and allow passengers to board the bus behind. Tickets and CCTV evidence show that all the passengers were on that bus within a minute.
The so-called witness, a 21-year-old plumber, who recorded the bus driver praying, had not been on the bus, and had arrived after the incident to find a small crowd outside a bus.
"The crescent and the canteen" – The Economist, 19 October 2006. There was no truth in the article's suggestion that Leicester University had banned pork on campus. In actual fact, the university Student Union had made just one out of the numerous cafes on campus halal, in a decision which had as much to do with economic factors as cultural sensitivity as Leicester has a large number of Muslim students. The other 26 cafes on the campus, including the main canteen, were still serving pork as usual.
We should all feel a little bit ashamed about the way we treat Muslims in the media, in our politics, and on our streets. They are our fellow citizens, yet often we barely acknowledge them. We misrepresent and in certain cases persecute them. We do not treat Muslims with the tolerance, decency and fairness that we so often like to boast is the British way. We urgently need to change our public culture.
This article is edited from the pamphlet 'Muslims Under Siege: Alienating Vulnerable Communities' by Peter Oborne and James Jones. It is linked to tonight's edition of Dispatches, 'It Shouldn't Happen to a Muslim', Channel 4, 8pm
The morning papers and TV last night featured plenty of comment focused on the White House's very odd and, frankly, exceptionally rude treatment of a British PM. Squeezing in a meeting, denying him a full press conference with flags etc.
But Obama's merely warmish words (one of our closest allies, said with little sincerity or passion) left a bitter taste with this Atlanticist. Especially after his team had made Number 10 beg for a mini press conference and then not even offered the PM lunch.
Barack Obama sends bust of Winston Churchill on its way back to Britainthe White House sent back to the British Embassy a bust of Sir Winston Churchill that had occupied a cherished spot in President Bush's Oval Office. Intended as a symbol of transatlantic solidarity, the bust was a loaner from former British prime minister Tony Blair following the September 11 attacks
But when British officials offered to let Mr Obama to hang onto the bust for a further four years, the White House said: "Thanks, but no thanks."
Why not send the bust to Pakistan, they deserve to keep a piece of UK and Chruchil.But when British officials offered to let Mr Obama to hang onto the bust for a further four years, the White House said: "Thanks, but no thanks."
So, his logic is : Traffic heavy in India and so easier to target buses!!!http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/ar ... E2phyog0uA
Writing in Wednesday's Guardian, Fletcher recalled how the England tour party he took to Pakistan in 2005/06 had been criticised for the "presidential" level of security surrounding their trip, with roads to stadiums cleared and lined with armed guards.
"It provided some comfort at least," he wrote. "Nothing is 100 percent but you sure as hell want that percentage to be as high as possible in your favour.
"India is different. The traffic is often so bad in the big cities where a lot of the cricket is played that the coach can move along only slowly at times, which turns it into a sitting duck for terrorists.
Fletcher added: "There is nothing stopping a tuk-tuk pulling up alongside and detonating a bomb. I would be very nervous because that kind of attack is much easier to carry out in India -- and these guys can attack when they like."![]()
Pietersen and Flintoff are among 11 English players bought at last month's IPL auction.
He speaks from experience. It is Londonistan logic. They prefer to get their bus tops blown and thus fear a side attack.The Lahori (or should it be Bradfordabad award) goes to
How UK always plays second fiddle as America calls the tune
By Eric Waugh
Tuesday, 3 March 2009
There will be much humbug talked and written this week while the Prime Minister is in Washington.
It is two years now since the Americans refused to release their video of the US Air Force's disastrous mission in Iraq which killed a British soldier.
It reminds us that, when the chips are down, Churchill's ‘special relationship' may have to take a back seat. Although Winston coined the phrase after the Second World War — in 1946 — it really dates from five years earlier when Britain faced a risk of starvation from the fleets of German U-boats lurking beneath the Atlantic. Churchill wanted the 50 rusting old destroyers the Americans had laid up in their naval yards — and got them, so that he could keep the submarine wolf packs from his vital food convoys.
'
But those 50 rusting destroyers were not free. This was Lend LeaseChurchill wanted the 50 rusting old destroyers the Americans had laid up in their naval yards — and got them, so that he could keep the submarine wolf packs from his vital food convoys.
Wikipedia....
In exchange, the US was granted land in various British possessions for the establishment of naval or air bases, on ninety-nine-year rent-free leases, on:
* Newfoundland (today part of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador).
* Eastern side of the Bahamas
* Southern coast of Jamaica
* Western coast of St. Lucia,
* West coast of Trinidad (Gulf of Paria)
* Antigua
* British Guiana (present day Guyana) within fifty miles of Georgetown.
The agreement also stipulated Britain's acceptance of the US proposal for air and naval bases rights in:
* The Great Sound and Castle Harbour, Bermuda
* South and eastern coasts of Newfoundland
On US radio's Garrison show today, I was asked for my reaction as a true born Englishman to President Obama's double insult - first the sending back of the Winston Churchill bust, then his snub to Gordon Brown. "Tough one. Really tough one," I said, torn - as most of surely are - between delight at seeing Brown roundly humiliated, and dismay at having the special relationship so peremptorily, cruelly and bafflingly ruptured.
Dunno abt Michelle but my opinions about the $hitain, oops Britain, has met with reality fairly recently actually.We may just LURVE Michelle's fashion sense. But Michelle doesn't reciprocate our affection, one bit. Her broad-brush view of history associates Brits with the wicked white global hegemony responsible for the slave trade. Never mind that a white, Tory Englishman - William Wilberforce - brought the slave trade to an end. Judging by her record, Michelle does not make room for such subtle nuance.
In 1971, the plantations were closed because of the agreement between the United Kingdom and the United States to make Diego Garcia available to the U.S. as a military base. No payment was made as part of this arrangement, although it has been claimed that the United Kingdom received a US$14 million discount on the acquisition of Polaris missiles from the United States.[4] The agreement forbids any other economic activity on the island.
Britain's torture of Obama's grandfatherI was asked for my reaction as a true born Englishman to President Obama's double insult
Hussein Onyango Obama, the president-elect's paternal grandfather, had served with the British army in Burma during the second world war and later found work back in Kenya as a military cook.
During two years' detention he was subjected to horrific violence, according to the story's authors, Ben Macintyre and Paul Orengoh. Tortures inflicted on Kenyan prisoners sometimes involved such barbaric implements as "castration pliers". "The African warders were instructed by the white soldiers to whip him every morning and evening till he confessed," Sarah Onyango, 87, tells the Times.
Whatever happened to the stiff upper lip?difference between wishes and reality get too wide youre in the realm of fantasy. That applies both to the media, and some of the comments here.
The world hasn't seen the worst of times yet. I'd reserve judgment but then what would moi know....a knowing who you can rely on in the worst times that matters the most.
How long is too long? Just wondering.What I have seen in life, and in history is that the universe most of all punishes groups and individuals who do not respect reality - those who spend too long distracted by anger, greed, hatred, pride, shame, complacency, fear or any such emotion pay for it in spades. The 'Yindoo' Chanakya certainly knew what he was talking about there.
I actually think this where the jihadi relationship with globalisation breaks down.vsudhir wrote:We know nobody will mourn our losses anyway.
Johann wrote: What terrible things did the India do to earn its previous 1,000 years of hardship? There are no satisfactory, consistant moralistic answers to these sorts of questions.
What I have seen in life, and in history is that the universe most of all punishes groups and individuals who do not respect reality
- those who spend too long distracted by anger, greed, hatred, pride, shame, complacency, fear or any such emotion pay for it in spades. The 'Yindoo' Chanakya certainly knew what he was talking about there.
Hehhe, we did have a census taken on this similar to the one that "Great" britain took to propagate their "martial" theory. Please do liberally cite them like you normally do. After all, its my word for your word, no?!Johann wrote: For my part I saw far, far more schadenfreude on the forum than in India at large in the aftermath of 7/7. Mostly I saw revulsion at an act of terrorism against civilians, and concern about what this meant for jihadi confidence.
Johann,Johann wrote:I actually think this where the jihadi relationship with globalisation breaks down.vsudhir wrote:We know nobody will mourn our losses anyway.
There was unprecedented public sympathy in the West for the people of Mumbai, support for the Indian security forces, and revulsion against the attackers for the December massacre. India is less and less some strange, far away place filled with people we dont understand. That is very bad for Pakistan. Business and popular culture are very powerful forces at the popular level, regardless of the geopolitical complications.
For my part I saw far, far more schadenfreude on the forum than in India at large in the aftermath of 7/7. Mostly I saw revulsion at an act of terrorism against civilians, and concern about what this meant for jihadi confidence.