February 03, 2007

Feb. 3, 2007: Environment, Russia, China, Sudan

Russia probes smelly orange snow , Feb. 2, 2007, BBC

news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/
europe/6323611.stm

Russia has flown a team of chemical experts to a Siberian region to find out why smelly, coloured snow has been falling over several towns.

Oily yellow and orange snowflakes fell over an area of more than 1,500sq km (570sq miles) in the Omsk region on Wednesday, Russian officials said.

[....] the snow had four times the normal levels of iron in it.

[....] The TV also reported that coloured snow had fallen in the neighbouring regions of Tomsk and Tyumen.

Omsk, in western Siberia, is a centre of Russia's oil industry. About 27,000 people live in the areas affected by the snow, Russian officials said.





Chinese leader boosts Sudan ties
China's President Hu Jintao agrees more economic deals in Sudan, which China protects from UN sanctions.
, Feb. 3, 2007

news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/
africa/6323017.stm

Chinese President Hu Jintao has agreed on a series of economic deals in Sudan, which China has protected from UN sanctions over the Darfur conflict.

China announced an interest-free loan to build a new presidential palace, and said it would build two schools. China already buys most of Sudan's oil.

[....] China has used its veto at the UN Security Council to block moves to impose sanctions on Sudan unless it stops the fighting in Darfur.

The BBC's Jonah Fisher in the capital, Khartoum, says the Sudanese government meanwhile has violated numerous ceasefire agreements, bombing civilians and launching ground assaults - often with weapons bought directly from China.

[....] In the 1980s and 1990s, when human rights abuses and civil war forced Western companies to pull out, China stepped in. [....]


Search: the lack of conditions , Liberia

Remember the cries of activists over Talisman in Sudan? Talisman had to leave; it was getting such bad press, though there may have been other reasons. Is Sudan any better off today with China as mentor?

Feb. 3, 2007: Climate, Spin, Awards, Politics

Note, my comments are in navy or dark blue.


Update post:
Note that this is the summary, not the full report.

Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis
Summary for Policymakers



Harper would attend UN climate-change meeting , Andrew Mayeda, CanWest / Ottawa Citizen, February 01, 2007

www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.ht
ml?id=e0d0ede6-742b-4aec-ba1c-b60423c03b47

"The first is that we all recognize this is a serious environmental problem that needs immediate action. Canada's decision to do nothing over the past decade was a mistake, and we want to do better," said the prime minister. "At the same time, to have a truly effective international effort, we must have the participation of all major emitters, including countries like China, India, the United States and others."

The last statement is noteworthy, because Harper last year expressed interest in a parallel agreement supported by the U.S., China and India, called the Asia-Pacific Partnership, which sets voluntary targets, rather than mandatory ones under the Kyoto Protocol.

The U.S. has not ratified Kyoto, and China and India are not required to reduce emissions under the environmental agreement. [....]


End of update



Whenever I read of awards in Canada, I check for political connections ... and business intersecting ... and I am seldom disappointed. See what you find. Check prize lists; it is always informative of what has been planned ... although, it won't be phrased quite like that. Distinguished Citizens all, of course.

Al Gore, Inuit activist, Sheila Watt-Cloutier gain Nobel Peace Prize nod , John Acher, Reuters, February 01, 2007


www.canada.com/nationalpost/story.html?id=
3a6107fd-0366-442e-87a6-e52cb7da09fa&k=0


[....] They also nominated Inuit campaigner [and international activist] Sheila Watt-Cloutier of Canada for her work to show how climate change is affecting the lives of the Arctic indigenous people, Brende said.

Brende said Gore had also boosted the chances of reaching a consensus among world leaders on measures to tackle climate change from 2012 when the first period of the Kyoto Protocol curbing emissions of greenhouse gases ends.

The United States signed the Kyoto pact in 1997 when Gore was vice president but President Bill Clinton never submitted it to the Senate for ratification, knowing it would be defeated [....]

Brende teamed up with a political opponent from the Socialist Left party, Heidi Soerensen, to nominate Gore for the peace prize by the Feb. 1 deadline for nominations.



Background: excerpts only -- Check the full post and other links.

Jan. 20, 2007: #2
Kyoto, The Science and the Scientists, Native Input, Funding, Special Arrangements and More


frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/
2007/01/jan-20-2007-2.html

Sheila Watt-Cloutier

Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Conference [As an Inuit social worker and one involved in treaty negotiations, what background makes her views on climate change important for this roundtable? She would have anecdotal and personal background but .... perhaps political connections?]

[....] May 29, 06 #2: Kyoto, Scientists & Data

Project Green would have cost $12 billion by 2012, with much of that money being spent outside Canada.

[....] Climate Change, the Networks, NRTEE National Roundtable on the Environment and the Economy

[....] Inuit land claims ... and the NRTEE: National Roundtable on the Environment and the Economy

... Sheila Watt-Cloutier, originally from Kuujjuaq, Nunavik, Northern Quebec, "oversaw the administration of the Inuit land-claims body established under the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement as Corporate Secretary of Makivik from 1995 to 1998."

[....] She champions ... traditional ecological knowledge ...


"Offering a safe haven for discussion"? Is that the purpose of the NRTEE: National Roundtable on the Environment and the Economy?

[....] the promotion of key energy technologies.

Economic Instruments for Long-term Reductions in Energy-based Carbon Emissions – State of the Debate report, released in August 2005


Didn't we used to call "economic instruments" taxpayer funding? Just which "key energy technologies" were planned

[....] Sheila Watt-Cloutier

Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Conference [As an Inuit social worker and one involved in treaty negotiations, what background makes her views on climate change important for this roundtable?]

[....] Watt-Cloutier ... Inter- American Commission on Human Rights .... by connecting climate change to human rights, .... There are some cases where they can refer to the Inter-American Court on Human Rights, but that court, based in Costa Rica ....

TIKSI, Russia ....

[....] Inuit Circumpolar Conference ... represents 155,000 Inuit scattered across Canada, Greenland, Russia and the United States has enlisted lawyers .... [Remember Adrienne Clarkson, then-GG, and her Circumpolar Tour?]

[....] environmental justice issues

[....] ECOSOC [Read, search, check further -- very interesting]

[....] arguing that the international community has a 'right to protect' [What might that entail?]

Responsibility to Protect - Engaging Civil Society R2PCS. The project, which is a collaboration of the WFM and Canadian government, aims to bring NGOs into lockstep with the principles outlined under the original R2P project. [....]


Et cetera ... There are links to more.

Somehow, my cynicism kicks in when I note the past government's plans, the appointments, the awards (think Award of Excellence, for example), the travel by the Ex-GG to the polar regions, retinue in tow, including Ms. Watt-Cloutier who is to be awarded a Nobel Peace (why Peace?) prize, the trip by ex-Languages Tzar Dyane Adam to the Asia-Pacific area that just happened to coincide with planned business deals, the trip by the present GG to Africa (Mali, Libya and ... business deals in the offing ... when things get back to normal, politically) and I smell plans in the works a long time ago.


I posted on
the IPCC report: Frost Hits the Rhubarb Jan. 29, 2007: Climate, IPCC, CBC, Film

frosthitstherhubarb.blogspot.com/2007/01/
jan-29-2007-climate-ipcc-cbc-film.html

From what I can tell, the current news reports are based upon the Summary, not the full report, which may be less certain in expression about the causes, given the uncertainty among scientists. I have posted several items on Kyoto, global warming, and related. Search Technorati, as well as elsewhere.

[United Nations / UN ] Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) latest report.

Actually, the spin will come mostly in the Summary for Policy Makers. The report itself, running to several hundred pages, will consist mostly of dry scientific papers that are usually far less definitive about the causes and effects of climate change. [....]

Feb. 3, 2007: Various

Canada:

Telus defends cellphone porn offerings -- and we must service the lowest common denominator of society, of course , February 2, 2007, CBC

www.cbc.ca/canada/brit
ish-columbia/story/
2007/02/02/bc-telus.html?ref=rss

[....] "We can't make adult content go away. It's on your TV, it's on your home computer, it's now coming to your cellphones."

[....] 135 customers have registered complaints [....]


If you don't like it and think we should change what we see as wrong for our society and its children, write. While you're at it, write a few advertising companies. Then, you may also resolve to take note of companies who skirt pornography in the interest of sales, and refuse to buy from them. By our choices, we shape our society and our children's environment.



How Canada can make a difference in the Middle East , Peter MacKay, National Post, January 31, 2007

Peter MacKay is Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency


[....] Third, I spoke frankly with both Palestinian and Israeli leaders.

I discussed with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas his plans to deal with the challenges that lay ahead for him and the Palestinian people. I reminded him that the essential first step for Palestinians toward peace is ending terror and violence and building strong democratic institutions for a vibrant and accountable society. Reform of his Fatah party must be a top priority and he needs to give the Palestinian people real options and a real choice for true democratic governance.

I learned that ordinary Israelis and Palestinians are frustrated with the conflict and the violence. They want solutions and the prospect of a peaceful future.

I also found that there was shared concern about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's regime in Iran and the dangerous direction it is headed with its nuclear weapons aspirations and its antagonistic role in the region. I shared Canada's deep concerns and discussed our efforts to date -- in the International Atomic Energy Agency, the G8, the UN and with friends and partners -- to address this challenge. I explained that Canada takes the position that all non-military options to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons must be widely and creatively explored. [....]

Violence in Gaza and the West Bank, and continued attacks against Israel -- such as rocket attacks on the town of Sderot and this week's tragic suicide bombing in Eilat -- must come to an end to build trust in the peace process. He said he was ready to push this forward but that he needed support -- from us, the Quartet (United States, Russia, the European Union, the United Nations), the Arab world and of course, from Israel.

Sounds great. I won't hold my breath.


US

Surrendering to Weak Enemies , By William R. Hawkins, FontPageMagazine.com | February 1, 2007

[....] Professor Bell blames the Enlightenment for having “popularized the notion that war was a barbaric relic of mankind's infancy, an anachronism that should soon vanish from the Earth.” But the history of the last 300 years clearly indicates that the Enlightenment has not reached much beyond the ivory tower of liberal intellectuals. They are the ones who overreact with horror when the world does not behavior in accordance with their naive notions. They seek to deny the basic nature of our violent and contentious world and retreat from it. That is not the path to enlightenment, it is only the path to defeat.




Agency targets human trade , By Jerry Seper, Washington Times, February 1, 2007

www.washingtontimes.com/national/
20070131-112532-9528r.htm

Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales yesterday created a Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit and assigned it the task of developing strategies to combat modern-day slavery and expand the Justice Department's anti-trafficking enforcement programs. [....]

You know those pornographic images people download? The women in these photos and films are as often as not, modern day slaves to pimps and photographer, who may add drugs to the mix to keep the women enslaved. Think of that the next time you're tempted to look at porn.


Ben Stein's America , By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. February 2, 2007, via newsbeat1

www.washingtontimes.com/commen
tary/20070201-084312-9997r.htm

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. is founder and editor in chief of The American Spectator, a contributing editor to the New York Sun, and an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute. His most recent book is "Madame Hillary: The Dark Road to the White House."

This contains a good paragraph on what is best about America.
[....] There is something else about our military that I do not believe even Ben has mentioned. When they return to civilian life they will become leading members of society. Their record as good citizens is a matter of fact. I recall years ago spending time in a retirement community with a learned intellectual named Huntington Cairns. He, a leftist with tendencies toward pacifism, one day confided that in this community of retirees and octogenarians, the old folks who could always be counted on to look out for the community and for its most fragile members were most likely retired military.

There is no reason to doubt that the members of the military defending us abroad today will return to be leaders in their communities tomorrow in a country as pleasant and just as Ben insists that it is. [....]


Worth reading.

January 31, 2007

Jan. 31, 2007: Bud Talkinghorn

Saint Evergreen is being attacked

Oh, the horror! Stephane Dion is subject to "attack ads", or, as the Tories would refer to them, a heads-up on the man who did nothing for the environment. Depending on your sources, the 13 year reign of the Liberals, with Dion in the Minister of Environment for the last part, has resulted in a 30% to 36% increase in pollution emissions. Now the Liberal Party, along with their old buddies, the MSM, are hyping him as the saviour of the planet. A very late conversion on the road to Kyoto, if you ask me. Dion is also the man. who is so lusting after the Prime Ministership, that he threatens a defeat of the Tory budget--even though it has never been announced. The CBC and The Globe and Mail will have to work overtime to denounce these despicable attack ads.

© Bud Talkinghorn--A friend's term -- "the only virgin in the whorehouse."


Saint Atwood attacks the cultural troglodytes, aka, the Tories

It seems the Conservatives have cut the funding for Canadian Culture Abroad. This is the equivalent of the Vandals sacking Rome according to Margaret Atwood. She is shocked that this "world -renowned Canadian talent" is being denied a world-wide audience. Now, I know that I am a philistine, but what I don't understand is why these "world-renowned artists" can't go it on talent alone. Yesterday, Joni Mitchell was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. She made a small name for herself here, and then left for the big show down south. Did she ever get a grant, gratuity, foundation scholarship or any other taxpayer welfare paid inducement to sing? I suspect not. Ditto, Neil Young, The Band, or other musical icons. Maybe I'm just prejudiced by knowing a poetess, who wrote the most appallingly incomprehensible rubbish, yet managed to snag two hefty arts grants. She did, however, spend a lot of time cultivating her local cultural abiters of taste. I am glad that a handful of excellent Canadian TV series were able to survive because of ... Fill in any of the numerous government donors. Don't feel constrained to name one or two, only. Nevertheless, those are outweighed by the gushers of mediocrity that also were funded. "Cold Squad" was so good that it probably could have survived without the government largesse. "Everwood" is more doubtful.

Then there is the CRTC, which as Mordecai Richler sarcastically explained, was "the government dumping a law that insisted on (and bankrolled to a yummmy degree), a Canadian pollution of our airwaves." In its earliest manifestation, a.m. radio stood for Ann Murray. I ask you, how many of you have ever seen one of the hundreds of films financed by taxpayer dollars? Who, other than their cultural buddies, does get to see them? Those that are shown on CBC docs display a minnowesque talent and a Moby Dick's load of lefty agitprop. Even though they are supposedly "showing Canadians to Canadians" they lean rather heavily on anti-Americanism. Often they are referred to as "experimental films" -- a favourite term to cover-up their commercial failure. Canada is loaded with talented people who don't belong to the cultural clique that agitates for taxpayer money or who sign the cheques. They manage to survive and prosper, anyway. It is time for governments to get out of the culture racket. In the old days, if you wanted that Paris experience you travelled there steerage, lived in a garret, drank vin ordinaire and produced successful work, or sank without a trace. That is as it should be.

© Bud Talkinghorn



"The Palestinian never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity" -- Abba Eban

Under the treacherous Arafat, the Palestinians had their best chance ever to have a full-fledged independent state. But, no, Arafat decided what the people needed was a second intifada. That new violence, including suicide bombings in Israeli cities, led to the "apartheid" wall. Palestinians were blocked from their Israeli jobs and the Israelis assassinated the suicide ringleaders--as always with civilian casualties. Israeli pulled out of the Gaza settlements and their rewards was that Gaza used as a rocket launching area. So what is the logical answer for the Palestinians now? Why, to vote in a Hamas government, who promised Israel's destruction, of course. Finally, even the most liberal pro-Palestinian Westerner had to cry "uncle". The death wish of the Palestinians was undenialable. They were going to shoot themselves in the foot, come what may.

As the Western welfare dried up, the Palestinians suddenly realized what a mistake their hatreds had wrought. Granted, that some of that vote was a rebuke to the endless corruption of the old Arafat Fatah operation. On paper, destroying the Israelis sounded so good; but the reality was a hard lesson in economics. The situation became so dire that Fatah felt it had to topple Hamas. The Israelis even helped arm them. The result is a budding civil war between the two main groups. However, nothing is ever that straighforeward in that region. Even before the conflict between Fatah and Hamas, Gaza was devolving into anarchy. The lawlessness extended to drug cartels, clan violence and lots of free-lance extortionists, kidnappers, and strong arm robbers. The mayhem was so prevalent that the MSM rarely reported it. Besides, it muddied their favourite linear story line of oppressors and "insurgents". For the left, it was too painful to contemplate. It must somehow be the Israelis' fault.

Today, there has been another truce called; unfortunately sullied by the assassination by Fatah of a top Hamas commander. Stay tuned for the never ending saga of self-inflicted carnage.

© Bud Talkinghorn--Oh yes, there was a meaningful attempt at reconciliation ... by a suicide attack on an Israeli resort. All the major political terrorist groups claimed some responsibility for the act. That should help bring down the "apartheid wall" and free up Western guilt gelt.

January 29, 2007

Jan. 29, 2007: Climate, IPCC, CBC, Film

The Preaching, the Politics and the Science ... and the Hockey Stick Graph

Preaching the climate catechism , Lorne Gunter, National Post, January 29, 2007

www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.ht
ml?id=34b2c4eb-1788-4242-a04d-eaa286afa9c7

You've no doubt heard there is an international scientific consensus that the planet is warming, that the warming will likely be catastrophic and it is being caused by human-produced emissions. The IPCC shows how this vaunted consensus is reached, not by getting all scientists to agree, but by defaming or ignoring those with opinions and research cast doubt on the dogma.

That's not science, it's shunning, the ancient religious punishment for heretics.

On Friday, the United Nations' global warming spin factory will switch into high gear with the release of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) latest report.

Actually, the spin will come mostly in the Summary for Policy Makers. The report itself, running to several hundred pages, will consist mostly of dry scientific papers that are usually far less definitive about the causes and effects of climate change. [....]

Remember headlines late last year such as "Greenhouse gases help make 2006 warmest year ever"? What didn't get reported was the fact those doom-laden records were based on only the first 11 months of last year. When the temperatures for December were added to the mix last week, 2006 turned out to be the coolest year in the past five.

[.... details, details ....]

These inconvenient truths would be bad for the cause of international central planning.


Worth reading.


Politics first, science second , Terence Corcoran, Financial Post, January 27, 2007

www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/archives/story.ht
ml?id=41b3dfe3-89ca-4683-b967-d79ea381ea84

If you've been lifting intellectual weights and taking extra runs around the science track to build mental stamina for next Friday's release of the much-hyped 1,600-page science report on climate change, you can now take it easy. There will be no report. You will not need to know about or read any science, because there will be no science. Instead, we are going to get a few ginned-up pages of generalized political scaremongering. [The summary]

[....] Steve McIntyre, the Canadian statistics expert who blew the whistle on the IPCC's junk-science creation -- the 1,000-year-old climate record, the infamous hockey stick -- reads those words to mean the IPCC will go through the science to get the science to back up the summary. "IPCC insiders should not be allowed to change a comma of the [final] report after Feb. 2," he says.

We have, therefore, an extraordinary operating scheme in which brief sensational summary statements are produced, while the basis for the summary is kept confidential so they can get the science to correspond to the summary. [....]

Today, the IPCC says the 1,000-year graph, the focal point of the February, 2001, summary, was a very minor part of the climate-science effort. The hockey stick, they say, played no big scientific role. But it played a major political role as part of the IPCC's campaign, which will be the sole purpose of next Friday's over-hyped event.



CBC is worried about attack ads ... if they harm Stephane Dion, CBC's environmental wunderkind or their Liberal Party.



CBC has a trust problem. I have caught them in lies but sometimes, there is so much going on, I don't have the time to post the details.



CBC "apology" wasn't really an apology , Arthur Weinreb, Canada Free Press, Thursday, August 24, 2006 , posted on CBC Watch, August 24, 2006 -- More here also

www.cbcwatch.ca/?q=node/view/2024

[....] After Stephen Taylor and others exposed what had happened, many outraged Canadians sent letters of complaint to the CBC. This led to a so-called "apology" earlier this week. At the conclusion of the news, Diana Swain talked about the two clips being juxtaposed and expressed "regret" that the CBC did not make it clear that Stephen Harper’s comments were not in answer to the woman’s statements about burning children and killing innocent people.

There was a glaring omission in Swain’s recounting of the original CBC segment. The two clips were not merely shown one after the other without comment. After the woman’s comments but before the Harper clip was shown, reporter Christina Lawand said, "Stephen Harper clearly wasn’t swayed". What wasn’t he swayed about — his wife wanting to have a dog at 24 Sussex? The only logical interpretation of Lawand’s voiceover was that Harper clearly wasn’t swayed about what the woman had said about stopping the killing of innocent civilians.

Swain’s statement at the conclusion of the news was not an apology. Swain, on behalf of the CBC expressed regrets that they did not make it clear (that Harper’s statement was not in answer to the woman’s statement). There was no acknowledgement of any error, especially when it came to Lawand’s role in linking the two video clips. By expressing regrets that the CBC did not make it clear was in effect saying that the network feels sorry that their viewers were just so dumb that they automatically assumed that Harper was responding to the woman’s statement instead of something completely different. The mainstream media is the only business in the world where the customer is always wrong. [....]


This is the kind of despicable politicized reporting that I have noted more than once on CBC. You'd have to live with a Blackberry and be ready to type to record all their dirty little ruses ... but, CBC, we know and we pass the word around.



All Canadian taxpayers should be interested in the National Film Board response, in this one.

Quebec film hits socialiste nerve -- Targets unions, state monopolies , Graeme Hamilton, January 27, 2007, National Post

www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.ht
ml?id=eb2120a5-2513-40e8-b236-77bf958fe685&k=
99482&p=3

MONTREAL - A new disaster movie is playing in Quebec theatres, but this one features no tidal waves or nuclear Armageddon. The nightmare scenario in L'illusion tranquille involves an ageing society living beyond its means, unable to shake the grip of meddlesome government and powerful trade unions. The place is Quebec, and the year is 2007.

The low-budget documentary, made by two novice filmmakers and financed from their own savings, is fuelling debate on a topic considered taboo until recently. Has the so-called "Quebec model" for development, with its emphasis on government intervention in the economy and sweeping social programs, run its course?

"What I concluded is very simple," the film's director, Joanne Marcotte, says through the voice of a narrator as the film opens.

"Quebec is suffocating under the weight of state monopolies and a new union clergy. Our system for redistributing wealth is obsolete. Universality is an illusion, and the glory years of Quebec's union movement are well behind us." [....]


Search: Quebec media were largely ignoring , At the Montreal headquarters of the National Film Board , more important to be different than , daycare at just $7 a day , university tuition fees , DVD

Worth reading.

Jan. 29, 2007: Various

RCMP identify two Cape Breton businesses under investigation
Neither gym, nor supplement shop owners charged
, By Sharon Montgomery, January 27, 2007, Cape Breton Post, via newsbeat1

www.capebreton
post.com/index.cfm?sid=
1575&sc=1

SYDNEY — RCMP have identified the two Cape Breton businesses investigated in connection with a major drug and money laundering case based in Fredericton, N.B.

Sgt. Dan Quirion of the RCMP J-division proceeds of crime unit, confirmed search warrants ... Naturally Fit in Sydney and Perry’s Gym and Fitness Centre in Glace Bay.

[....] in relation to the financial aspects of our investigation,” ....

[....] businesses in Cape Breton, New Brunswick and Ontario is continuing.

[....] Operation Jellybean [....]

RCMP drug units from Saint John, Fredericton and Moncton, along with the Fredericton Police Force, arrested 18 people ... charges including drug trafficking and conspiracy to traffic....

... including 1.2 pounds of cocaine, more than 55 pounds of marijuana, large quantities of allegedly counterfeit prescription pills and anabolic steroids. Also seized were cash in excess of $350,000, several vehicles, two custom motorcycles, an all-terrain vehicle, a boat and trailer, several restricted and one prohibited firearm. [....]



Essay: This Holocaust will be different , By Benny Morris, Jan. 18, 2007 12:45 | Updated Jan. 21, 2007

www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?apage=
1&cid=1167467762531&pagename=
JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

[....] Some of the dead will inevitably be Arab - 1.3 million of Israel's citizens are Arab and another 3.5 million Arabs live in the semi-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Jerusalem, Tel Aviv-Jaffa and Haifa have substantial Arab minorities. And there are large Arab concentrations immediately around Jerusalem (in Ramallah-Al Bireh, Bir Zeit, Bethlehem) and outside Haifa. Here, too, many will die, immediately or by and by.

It is doubtful whether such a mass killing of fellow Muslims will trouble Ahmadinejad and the mullahs. The Iranians don't especially like Arabs, especially Sunni Arabs, with whom they have intermittently warred for centuries. And they have a special contempt for the (Sunni) Palestinians who, after all, though initially outnumbering the Jews by more than 10 to 1, failed during the long conflict to prevent them from establishing their state or taking over all of Palestine.

Besides, the Iranian leadership sees the destruction of Israel as a supreme divine command, as a herald of the second coming, and the Muslims dispatched collaterally as so many martyrs in the noble cause. Anyway, the Palestinians, many of them dispersed around the globe, will survive as a people, as will the greater Arab nation of which they are part. And surely, to be rid of the Jewish state, the Arabs should be willing to make some sacrifices. In the cosmic balance sheet, it will be worth the candle. [....]




Intelligence Test

CSIS Fear That......by Fabrice de Pierrebourg , Sun Media, posted by Vulgar Bulgar

www.forums
vibe.com/elwoodpdowd/view
topic.php?t=2091&mforum=elwoodpdowd

MONTREAL -- Canada's spy agency feared last summer's conflict between *** and *** in *** might spill over into Canada, Sun Media has learned.

Fears centred on Montreal, where [....]


Make an educated guess; then check.

Photos from a Peace Demonstration -- Snopes Status: True

www.snopes.com/photos/
politics/muslimprotest.asp



Memory Lane: Frost Hits the Rhubarb June 3, 2005
Compilation 3: Roaming Around


China's a cautious oilsands investor , Jon Harding , Financial Post, Jun. 2, 05

[. . . . ] The latest plunge was Tuesday when Sinopec Group invested $105-million with privately held, Calgary-based Synenco Energy Inc. in a deal that gives China's second-largest oil producer a 40% share, or about 40,000 barrels a day, worth of production from Synenco's proposed Northern Lights oilsands mine.

The deal ensures, for the first time, a share of production.

A pact in mid-April between PetroChina Co. Ltd. and pipeline company Enbridge Inc. aims to secure 200,000 barrels a day of future supply from various producers in northeastern Alberta to be moved west to the B.C. Coast. The oil would then be shipped by tanker to China.

That same week, CNOOC Ltd. acquired a 17% interest in oilsands startup MEG Energy Inc.


National Energy Board Declines Regulating Commercial Matters On Mackenzie Gathering System , Parvez Khan, Blake, Cassels & Graydon, July 2006

www.blakes.com/english/publications/Regulatory/
July2006/Energy_Regulatory_July2006.pdf

In the ongoing regulatory hearings for the Mackenzie Gas Project, the National Energy Board declined to assert authority under the National Energy Board Act to impose tolling, tariff and access conditions on the gathering system portion of the Mackenzie Gas Project, leaving it to (unregulated) open market processes.

[....] The Motion On April 7, 2006, a group of companies known as the Mackenzie Explorer’s Group (the MEG) – comprised of: Anadarko Canada Corporation; BP Canada Energy Company; Chevron Canada Limited; Devon Canada Corporation; EnCana Corporation and Nytis Exploration Company Inc. – brought a motion asking the Board to issue the following two orders:

* an order declaring that, when constructed and placed into service, the Gathering System and the Mackenzie Pipeline will be a single “pipeline” as defined in Section 2 of the NEBA and, as such, will be subject to regulation in its entirety under Part IV of the NEBA; and

* an order directing Imperial to prepare, file and serve on participants the toll principles and the tariff(s) for the Gathering System and the Mackenzie Pipeline for approval under Part IV of the NEBA in this proceeding.

The motion sought to bring the whole of the Project under the NEBA purview, to be assured of equitable rights of access and pricing in the future. Many of the interveners participated in the argument.

Submissions were filed by: Apache Canada Ltd. (Apache); Ayoni Keh Land Corporation (Ayoni Keh); the Government of the Northwest Territories (GNWT); the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation (IRC); Mosbacher Operating Ltd. (MOL); Paramount Resources Ltd. (Paramount); PetroCanada Oil and Gas (PetroCanada); and Talisman Energy Inc. (Talisman). The positions varied from no position (PetroCanada), to partial support (Paramount), to full support (Ayoni Keh, GNWT, IRC, MOL and Talisman), to full opposition (Apache) of the motion.

Notwithstanding the fact that two federal statutes were involved, the MEG relied on jurisprudence on division of powers between the federal and provincial governments for determining what constitutes a “pipeline” within the meaning of section 2 of the NEBA – relying on the decision in Westcoast Energy Inc. v. Canada (National Energy Board). The MEG submitted that the Gathering System is functionally integral to the Mackenzie Pipeline and, therefore, should be regulated pursuant to the NEBA. The MEG argued that both the Gathering System and the Mackenzie Pipeline will be subject to common ownership, management, control and direction. The MEG emphasized that in the context of a basin-opening initiative, public policy dictates that tolls, tariffs and access be regulated. [....]



If I have already posted this, I apologize, but I'm drowning in files:

China nuclear and other energy sources
China's nuclear industry -- or here

www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/
nuc_reactors/china/china.html

There are notes, a table Nuclear Generation Projections for Asia and related links.

China

Interactive
Map of Reactors
Built or Under Construction

Chinese Nuclear Industry Timeline

Outlook

Reactor
Summaries

Jan. 29, 2007: More selflessly doing good

Canadian taxpayers might be interested in how Canadians' tax money funds various groups purporting to do good. There is funding for foreign students to encourage them to come to Canada to study - link at the bottom of this post. I noted in one or more of these programs that there is concern over women's rights ... abroad ... Meanwhile at home, skirting around certain abuses of women in Canada ... in certain communities ... is the Status of Women - SoW, which, for example, has not been vocal about exposing Canadian instances of cliterectomy, honour killing, plural marriage ... but that would mean ... well, what groups would they discomfit were they to speak out? Reason enough, says the tabby cat, for the selflessly doing good groups to concentrate on the poor and downtrodden elsewhere, in Latin America or South America, for instance. But there are other organizations devoted to ... well, whatever they concentrate on. Read on.


More selflessly doing good -- organizations, NGO's, institutes, non-profits, university departments, forums, international network(s), professional association(s), training institute(s), community colleges, coordinating committee, umbrella organization for Canada's international education agenda [webpage dated ] ... and the list of those doing good goes on and on. -- under the aegis of CIDA's Office for Democratic Governance -- or -- check here

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebByOrganizationEn?
OpenView&Start=1&Count=
1000&ExpandAll

Search: CIGI , research , poverty

www.google.com/search?q=
cache:zim9yaWyNNwJ:www.ac
di-cida.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebByOrganizationEn%
3FOpenView%26Start%3D1%26Count%
3D1000%26ExpandAll+cigi,+research,+poverty&hl=
en&gl=ca&ct=
clnk&cd=10

For example:
Aga Khan Foundation Canada is a non-profit, non-denominational development agency that focuses on creative, equitable, and sustainable solutions to problems related to poverty and social development in Asia and Africa.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/
CanadaCorps.nsf/vLUWebDocEn/
9DB3BB25FFAFD6BD8525714700440470?OpenDocument

Agriteam Canada Consulting Ltd. is a private Canadian company that provides professional management and administrative and technical services in the area of international development in Canada and developing countries.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebDocEn/F94559CB1CD8E
9CD852571A1005074E4?OpenDocument

The Canadian Bureau for International Education [CBIE] is an umbrella organization composed of Canadian educational organizations and institutions. It engages in policy development, research, advocacy, and public information on Canada's international education agenda.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebDocEn/C46CC04D092D68BF85
25721B00631F16?OpenDocument

Canadian Centre for International Studies and Cooperation (CECI) fights poverty and exclusion in partnership with local organizations in developing countries. The centre strengthens the development capacity of disadvantaged communities. It supports initiatives for peace, human rights, and equality. It mobilizes resources and promotes the exchange of know-how.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebDocEn/C9D3C71465000C81852
5717200458C7E?OpenDocument

TakingITGlobal fosters and supports an online community that connects young people from around the world to find inspiration, access information, get involved, and take action in their local and global communities.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/
CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebDocEn/9C9556574CFF02F
1852571DA004B0035?OpenDocument

Terradigm is a consortium of private Canadian firms that provides specialized services in geomatics, land administration, and land information systems focused on advancing security of land tenure, both in Canada and internationally.

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/Cana
daCorps.nsf/vLUWebDoc
En/276BC787FAC5146
D8525721B0069F6FD?OpenDocument




More here:

Where a few of the above lead is ... intriguing. Note: social sciences and women's rights.

The Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL) is an independent non-governmental policy institute that fosters analysis and debate on social, political and economic issues facing the Americas. FOCAL supports a greater understanding of hemispheric issues in Canada and throughout the region. The Foundation contributes to stronger relationships between Canada and the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean. [Founded in 1990 -- Funded by CIDA , FAC (Foreign Affairs Canada / current name DFAIT ) ]

www.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/President/CanadaCorps.nsf/
vLUWebDocEn/9F5D1C4224E96D9585
2571730042DD91?OpenDocument

Search: Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL)
Result: Peacebuild: The Canadian Peacebuilding Co-ordinating Committee
.

Apparently, they are the same. Check further.

Links with other Organizations / Constituencies:

FLASCO - Chile; FLASCO - Guatemala; SER EN EL 2000 (Argentina); ILACIM (Peru)

[Instituto Latinoamericano de Estudios Civiles-Militares (ILACIM) -- See also:
[FLACSO-Chile, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales. Organismo internacional dedicado a la docencia y la investigación de las ciencias sociales en ...
Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLASCO-Chile).]

[PDF] Culture and Rights: Anthropological Perspectives
View as PDF or HTML

assets.cambridge.org/052179/3394/
frontmatter/0521793394_frontmatter.pdf

www.google.com/search?q=cache:6JuzCm-BxcwJ:
assets.cambridge.org/052179/3394/
frontmatter/0521793394_front
matter.pdf+FLASCO+,+Guatemala&hl=
en&gl=ca&ct=clnk&cd=7&client=firefox-a

[Rachel Sieder is a] fellow at FLASCO Guatemala, where she is involved in research on indigenous customary law and legal reform. Her books include ...
assets.cambridge.org/052179/3394/
frontmatter/0521793394_frontmatter.pdf

Note at the bottom of the webpage:

Civil-Military Relations
Peacekeeping Centre of Argentine Armed Forces
Return to Database Main Page

Search: funding, Canadian Foundation For The Americas

One result: Institute for Connectivity in the Americas - [Canadian Founding Stakeholders | International Funding Institutions | ICA Project Partners | International/Regional ICT Initiatives] -- or here

www.icamericas.net/index.php?module=
htmlpages&func=display&pid=231

Submission — Canadian Bureau for International Education
Creating New Knowledge and Bringing It to Market More Quickly
-- or here

www.innova
tion.gc.ca/gol/innovation/
site.nsf/en/in02263.html

www.google.com/search?q=
cache:Figk2wPcXh4J:www.inno
vation.gc.ca/
gol/innovation/site.nsf/
en/in02263.html+
Canadian+Bureau+for+Inter
national+Education&hl=
en&gl=
ca&ct=
clnk&cd=
8&client=
firefox-a

Awards for Study in Canada / Becas para estudiar en Canada

For those of you wondering how you are going to afford to send your own child or children to university, that should be of interest.

January 28, 2007

Jan. 28, 2007: Selflessly doing good

Note: Double click the screen captures to see them enlarged-- then "back" to return.

Update: Jan. 29, 2007

Canadian taxpayers might be interested in how money is spent for the good of Russians and their judicial system, particularly the part about taxes. Considering the negative comments about the laxity of Canadian courts and the underfunding of our security services for the protection of all Canadians, considering the tax implications of the income trusts and whatever was going on there, a look at how money was being spent to help the Russian judicial system--necessitating travel and much lawerly cogitation at meetings--seemed of interest, perhaps because Jean Chretien had or has been involved in consulting in Russia, something about the oil company Yukos, I believe.


The Commisioner for Federal Judicial Affairs

OTTAWA, November 8, 2001 - The Honourable Anne McLellan, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, after consultation with the Canadian Judicial Council, today announced the appointment of David Gourdeau as Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs. He replaces Guy Goulard, Q.C. who retired last year. -- or here

canada2.just
ice.gc.ca/en/news/ja/
2001/doc_27860.html

Mr. Gourdeau received a Bachelor of Laws from Université Laval in 1976 and, following his call to the Bar of Quebec in 1977.... In 1995, Mr. Gourdeau became a member of the former Canada Labour Relations Board and has continued his participation with the Canada Industrial Relations Board since that time.


End of Update





The following explores examples of only three directions in which Canadian taxpayers' funding goes, but I found them instructive:

* Participation of the Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs in Judicial Co-operation Projects [Ethiopia , Ukraine , Russia - model courts and future training centres , Kaluga, Kursk and Voronezh]

* Global Governance? Deep Integration Planned at Secret Conference [Centre for International Governance Innovation , CIGI , Canadian based North American Forum on Integration , North American parliament , Raymond Chretien , CIDA / CIGI is part of the Igloo Network]

* Joe Clark speaks to ... or is it for ... CIGI? [Centre for International Governance Innovation's annual conference in Waterloo , Joe Clark interview , Africa , Newfoundland and Labrador's Conservative MP Loyola Hearn on Joe Clark -- Note: The Joe Clark interview was extremely difficult to find until you know it exists.]



Selfless Canadians: Doing good globally ... in every direction ... with help from the usual funding source ... This is an attempt to reveal where some of the money goes.

An example from a 2005 webpage.








Note in the second screen capture, in case you might miss it, there are two links for language training. Did this have anything to do with the former languages tzar's [Dyane Adam's] visit to Asia? What was the purpose of that visit? Keep digging.

Source: index

www.fja.g
c.ca/Inter_coop/in
dex_e.html

This is only one example:

Russia

www.fja.g
c.ca/Inter_co
op/russia_e.html

In the fall of 1997, the Office was mandated to develop and deliver a two week program under the auspices of the Yeltsin Foundation for two delegations of Russian Constitutional Court judges and a delegation of Arbitrage Court judges headed by the Chairman of the High Arbitrage Court, Professor Yakovlev. These missions of high ranking Russian Judicial officials led to a request for a multi-year Russia/Canada Judicial Cooperation Project. On December 10, 1999, a Memorandum of Agreement was signed in Moscow, formally launching a four year, $3.4 million Russia/Canada Judicial Partnership Program.

This program partners the OCFJA with the three highest judicial bodies of the Russian Federation: the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation, the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation and the Supreme Arbitration Court of the Russian Federation.

The program consists of three separate components; one under the authority of each of the high courts of the Russian Federation. Under the Supreme Court and the participation of the Russian Judicial Department, three model courts and future training centres have been established at the Raion court level in Kaluga, Kursk and Voronezh. With the Russian Constitutional Court, round-table discussions will take place both in Russia and Canada [....]

.... the program will develop new court procedures for an open, fair, and efficient resolution of tax disputes.

... based on the similarities of the Canadian and the Russian federal systems ....

In January 2000, ... First Steering Committee Meeting in Ottawa. ... round-table discussions ... April 2000. In May of 2000, .... Second Steering Committee Meeting was held in Moscow in November 2000 and the third one in Montreal, Canada in November 2001.


Was it not Jean Chretien who was consulting with Pres. Putin over Yukos and its tax problems? This program began in 1997. Check further.



Memory Lane:
Sept. 26, 2006: Global Governance?

Deep Integration Planned at Secret Conference


The Centre for International Governance Innovation / Centre pour l'innovation dans la gouvernance internationale (CIGI) is located in Waterloo, Ontario, where it was founded in 2002.

N. American students trained for 'merger' -- 10 universities participate in 'model Parliament' in Mexico to simulate 'integration' of 3 nations

[....] Under the sponsorship of the Canadian based North American Forum on Integration, students met in the Mexican Senate for five days in May in an event dubbed "Triumvirate," with organizers declaring "A North American Parliament is born."

A similar event took place in the Canadian Senate in 2005.

The intentions of organizers are clear.

"The creation of a North American parliament, such as the one being simulated by these young people, should be considered," explained Raymond Chretien, the president of the Triumvirate and the former Canadian ambassador to both Mexico and the U.S.

[....] Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI)

[....] CIGI Building Ideas for Global Change (tm)

CIDA ‘s Canada Corps and CIGI partner

CIDA joins CIGI’s Innovation Network to promote public engagement in democratic development using IGLOO technology.

[....] CIDA/CIGI is part of the Igloo Network.



There was mention of this somewhere, related to the Banff meeting: www.fina-nafi.org at the Banff Springs Hotel.




Memory Lane: Joe Clark speaks to ... or is it for ... CIGI? , Sept. 2006

CIGI: Joe Clark shows his leftist and Liberal bona fides

Joe Clark Embassy [Embassy Magazine is not produced by an embassy] Sept. 20, 2006 by Lee Berthiaume, Waterloo

Q & A: Joe Clark and Berthiaume.

Error Not Sign of Weakness: Former PM Clark , Embassy [Magazine], September 20th, 2006, Q & A, By Lee Berthiaume, Waterloo -- or Yahoo cached copy


Yahoo search: "Error Not Sign of Weakness, embassy"
This still worked Jan. 27, 2007.


www.embas
symag.ca/html/ind
ex.php?dis
play=story&full_pa
th=/2006/sep
tember/20/jclark

Every time I tried to post this one, it was changed or corrupted. Strange, because it did work. Must be an election coming up. Makes things wonky.

66.218.69
.11/search/cache?p=
Joe+Clark%2C+embas
sy+&
fr=yfp-t-501&
toggle=
1&ei=
UTF-8&u=
www.embas
symag.ca/html/
index.php%3Fdisplay%3D
story%26full_path%3D/2006/
september/20/jclark/&w
=joe+clark+embas
sy&d
=c2ibV-xsOJB
X&icp=
1&.intl=us



This is a funny beginning, given that Mr. Clark was a speaker at CIGI and that Mr. Berthiaume's articles are featured on CIGI which is, like so many of these groups, stuffed with Liberals such as appointee Louise Frechette, late of the UN (and who had some connection to UNSCAM, according to an earlier post, this week), other Liberal appointees and their network of those who did not like the Conservative merger and who often, also, fall into cushy places and positions.

Embassy caught up with Mr. Clark, who also served as foreign affairs minister under Brian Mulroney, at the Centre for International Governance Innovation's annual conference in Waterloo last weekend to discuss his thoughts on the foreign policy being followed by Mr. Harper's government. The following is an edited transcript of that conversation.

What do you think of the current government's foreign policy?

I think that an effective Canadian foreign policy has to balance two preoccupations. One is working very closely with the U.S. The other is pursuing an independent policy in the world. [....]

This is a new government. It is a government that doesn't have a lot of international experience. Given your experiences when you were prime minister, what lessons did you have to learn and that this government has to learn? [....]



Is it possible the current government has more experience with ethics than the previous government? Perhaps with doing what is right rather than mouthing platitudes, Joe? Does anyone remember Joe's "broader political tradition"--Would that be pettiness, Joe, when conservatives actually want a party that represents their views? Does anyone remember, particularly, Joe's demonstration of knowing about the world? Remember his trip to Israel and moving the Canadian embassy? Then, of course, there is knowing about the world ... sophisticated in the Maurice Strong mould ... or in the mould of Stephen Lewis-UN worldly sophisticate-preacher-AIDS-victimology-appointed to the UN-travel on other people's money to the better hotels of the world on leftist speaking engagements schtick ... and by the way, Canadians owe everybody except their own. ... Just what is Joe doing now? Besides trying to undermine this government, that is. How very petty. What appointment has he received ... perhaps from Chretien or Martin? Back to Joe Clark.


It's an interesting parallel because we came from really different places. I came from a much broader political tradition, and we had a lot of people who had been involved in foreign policy quite actively before. Not as ministers or members of the government, but in very active ways. They knew about the world. We had a party that had a strong tradition. [Former Prime Minister John] Diefenbaker's activism on issues that we later followed gave us that advantage. [Stephen Harper's government] didn't have that advantage because they come from a different background. [....]


How revealing ... of Joe Clark.

Yes, Joe, we come from different places. We are Conservatives and conservative. You, on the other hand, slide into bed with the Liberals very easily. Telling your followers to vote Liberal rather than for Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party of Canada was not your most honourable move, but it places you firmly in the Liberal camp ... not exactly a place some of us would want to be. ...

But keep reading ... Joe, too, has found his metier, it seems.




I am doing a lot of work on Africa, as are a lot of Canadian investors. There is a surprising, substantial amount of Canadian investment in Africa. [....]

... part of what makes it easier for our companies to operate in developing places, part of what makes it easier for our diplomats to get European and Asian audiences, [....]


Africa?

By cracky! Joe has finally arrived! Joe has become a worldly sophisticate, in the usual mould. He must go fishing in the right pools too.




Memory Lane: News Junkie Canada Sept. 2, 2004

newsjunkie
canada.blog
spot.com/2004_09_02_news
junkiecanada_archive.html


Joe Clark? Sleeping with the enemy? September 1, 2004, Bill Rodgers, Ottawa Bureau Chief

www.can
oe.ca/NewsStand/
TorontoSun/News/
2004/09/01/611314.html

A ONE-TIME loyal supporter of Joe Clark is attacking the former PM for "sleeping with the enemy." Newfoundland Tory MP Loyola Hearn, one of the architects of the new Conservative Party, launched his assault after learning Clark flew to Germany and Afghanistan last February on a personal invitation from a Liberal cabinet minister.

Some of the details of the trip were revealed in an access to information request obtained by Sun Media. Hearn says the timing of the trip with former defence minister David Pratt is highly suspect because it came shortly after Clark split from the new Conservative Party and just weeks before he expressed his support for Paul Martin's Liberals. He sat in Parliament as an independent. [This is the real world of politics!]

[. . . . ] The trip took Clark and Pratt to Munich for a conference on defence policy and Kabul where Canada was in command of the allied forces. [. . . . ]

[My Comments] .... What frightens people like Joe Clark is that Canadians might have a choice to vote for real change, to vote for conservative Conservatives.


I think this is important because of what I see happening. Figure it out.


Another link: CIDA and Federal Judicial Affairs

Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs - International Cooperation -- with a CIDA link -- and CIDA: Office for Democratic Governance

www.fja.g
c.ca/Inter_co
op/index_e.html

les.acdi-ci
da.gc.ca/servlet/
JKMSearchControl
ler?desTemplateFile=
ccoFocusSearchEn.ht
m&desClientLocale=
enUS&AppID=
CanadaCorpsEn

Jan. 28, 2007: Mowing the grass

Army soldier with his tiny "plot" of grass in front of his tent




He asked his wife to send him dirt (Canadian soil), fertilizer, and some grass seed so that he could have the sweet aroma, and feel the grass grow beneath his feet. When the men of the squadron have a mission that they are going on, they take turns walking through the grass and the Canadian soil - to bring them good luck. .... He is even cutting the grass with a pair of a scissors.

Say a prayer for our Canadian soldiers who give and give (and give up) so unselfishly for others.



Thanks to a friend.

Jan. 28, 2007: Documentary: Hezbollah

See if this documentary is going to be re-broadcast: “Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America.”. There is mention of connections to Canada. Also, note Venezuela and Lebanon. It has been shown by FoxNews at least once.

Hezbollah Inside America: FOX News Tells All in Documentary , By David Asman, January 18, 2007


foxnews.com/printer_friend
ly_story/0,3566,244002,00.html

Does any terrorist organization pose a greater threat to Americans than Al Qaeda?

[....] Hezbollah operatives have been quietly setting up operations in the U.S. for years.

One of those operations is the subject of Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America,” an exhaustive FOX News report about a Hezbollah cell that was operating for several years in Charlotte, North Carolina. FOX followed the many tentacles of this cell, which extended far beyond Charlotte — to Michigan, to the West Coast, to Canada and to Beirut, Lebanon, where most of the members were from. FOX News spent months tracking this story to all these places and more. [....]

We highlight their heroic efforts and the flaws in our own system that allowed this terror network to flourish.

Initially, the hardest part of the job for FBI terror investigators was convincing their cohorts that Hezbollah was a genuine threat to Americans. There was much skepticism, despite the fact that before 9/11, no terrorist group had killed more Americans in the Mideast than Hezbollah. And Hezbollah extended their killing spree to this hemisphere, with a 1994 bombing that killed dozens of women and children at a Jewish center in Argentina. [....]

.... An FBI agent who refused to allow the taunts and skepticism of his colleagues to dissuade him from tracking the connections that linked a group of Lebanese illegals operating in Charlotte to terror cells in Canada and Beirut. An alert sheriff’s deputy, working part time at a tobacco wholesaler in Charlotte, who spent his own time tracking down a suspicious group of Arabic-speaking customers who were trading wads of cash for tons of cheap tobacco. A young prosecutor willing to bet his reputation on a case that had to leapfrog over terrorist laws that were either antiquated or hadn’t even been written yet. [....]


Think about the flaws in Canada's system that would facilitate terrorists entering. How many illegal aliens does Canada have who were supposed to be deported but weren't. Do some or many of these come from a particular voting block who might be upset?


Police rethink use of "stop and search" , by Michael Holden, Jan. 24, 2007

news.scotsman.com/
latest.cfm?id=126842007

LONDON (Reuters) - Police are holding a review of much-criticised "stop and search" powers over concerns the tactic used to target possible terrorists was causing more harm than good by alienating the Muslim community.

Senior officers are warming to "new thinking" about the powers which would see people only stopped on the basis of prior intelligence and not their appearance, according to the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO).

"I think we need to move from the concept of stopping on appearance and ethnicity," Richard Gargini, ACPO's national coordinator for community engagement, told Reuters at a conference to discuss Islamophobia. [....]


Why worry about alienating a community which, given the reality of extremist Muslim violence around the world, finds reason to complain about the slightest mention of this truth, yet has done little to disown those who perpetrate the violence while calling out "Allah is great"? Granted, a few Muslims are speaking out in Canada against the jihadis and the extremism, but mainly, we are fed reports of what is termed "racism" and that Muslims don't like it one bit. In the media, particularly CBC, terrorists have morphed into "miltants". There has been little journalistic investigation of the infiltration of Canadian mosques by extremist imams nor of their influence, nor of which branch(es) of Islam are most virulent, nor of the 17 or so who were picked up last summer, the ones who would have blown up the CBC, the PM and others they don't like. Those alleged extremists have morphed into "students" or "youths".