Archive for 25 October, 2009

Just a Quick Note

25 October, 2009

Friday, Obama declared a National Health Emergency.

For the past couple of days, I have been working on an article concerning the implications of this event.  It started out as a few thoughts and has mutated into a mini-novel.   I apologize for the sparse posting, but the research aspect of it has consumed most of my free time, as well as Mrs. Bulldog’s (she’s busy using our other computer to aid in the research).   I’ll probably finish the article later on tonight and will post that.

In the meantime, I suggest you all insure that your guns are in working order…

Cheers

– Dr. Bulldog

UPDATE:  Nope, I haven’t forgotten you all.  I’m still working on the National Health Emergency article, but I had to get away from the computer for a few hours to take care of personal stuff….  I’ve got a couple more items to research and write about, and then I’ll post it.

UPDATE 2: Alright, by now you have most likely seen my much reduced version of, “My Family and I WILL NOT Submit to a Dictator!” It was about 3 or 4 times as long as what you now see, and I could have gone on an on, but at some point, I just had to stop, regroup, and  edit out most of  my rants, tangent lines of thought, and delete subjects which didn’t really need to be in there, yet…  I hope you don’t mind.

Revealing Bosnia’s heroes

25 October, 2009

A good reminder that people do resist political, religious and ethnic hatreds. Placing yourselves and your loved ones in jeopardy to protect the helpless is true heroism.

By Nicole Itano, 25 Oct, 09- GlobalPost
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — In 1941, when Sarajevo’s Jews were being rounded up and sent to concentration camps, Dr. Muhamed Kundurovic, a Bosnian Muslim, reported to a military camp where Jewish women and children were being held and declared they were carriers of an infectious disease. It was a lie, but a well-intentioned one, intended to get the prisoners out of the camp so he could help them escape.

Among those saved that day was Albert Musafia, age 11. Over the weeks and months that followed, non-Jewish friends and neighbors repeatedly helped the boy and his family. For a while, they lived hidden in an apartment in the center of Sarajevo; their neighbors all knew but no one turned them in to the authorities.

In a nation whose painful recent history gave birth to the term “ethnic cleansing,” Eli Tauber wants Bosnians to remember that even in the darkest of times, many risked their own lives to protect others from the forces of ethnic and religious hatred. A leader of Bosnia’s dwindling Jewish community, Tauber is leading an exhaustive effort to document the story of Musafia’s family and other cases when Bosnians saved Jews.
“This was something I needed to do,” said Tauber, who has written a book about his research and created an exhibit that he hopes to bring to communities around Bosnia. “This is something that Bosnians need to hear about. People from many nations, many religions saved Jews.”
-Stories like these prove the common man can resist when authorities blind with power use that power as a weapon.

Before World War II, Bosnia had a thriving Jewish community of about 14,000 that dated to the 16th century. Many were Sephardic Jews who had fled Spain during the Inquisition and eventually settled in Bosnia, then part of the Ottoman Empire. An estimated 12,000 members of that community did not survive the war. Much of the country’s Jewish history was erased too, its synagogues looted and destroyed.

The Bosnia war in the early 1990s further decimated the country’s Jewish community, sending many of the country’s remaining Jews fleeing to Israel. In Sarajevo, the Jews who remained helped feed and provide medicine to besieged residents of the city and organized some of the most successful humanitarian evacuations of the war.
-While stationed in Bosnia I heard similar stories of Croats, Serbs and Bosniaks (Muslims) providing protection for others. There are plenty of blended families, close friendships and relationships between these groups. Many did stand up for their fellow man when they were needed. (more…)

Israeli police condemned by the media for protecting Jerusalem

25 October, 2009

The obvious media bias of this article shows the low standards of journalistic excellence have been met.

25 Oct 09
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli forces stormed the most sensitive holy shrine in Jerusalem on Sunday, firing water cannons and stun grenades to disperse a crowd of hundreds of Palestinian protesters that had pelted forces with stones.
-“Stormed” and “Pelted” rocks against storm troops, catch the hint of Israeli aggression? Tossing the palestinian victim card with the first line of text, obviously the author and editors have turned away from objectivity and landed squarely on propaganda. Here is what really happened, a bunch of thugs occupied the site and attacked the police. The “storming” was nothing more than law enforcement regaining control.

Although there were no serious injuries, it was one of the most intense incidents of violence in recent unrest around the hilltop compound known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Nobel Sanctuary. In the past, clashes at the site have erupted into deadly violence.
-Nice-now they are letting you know the poor palestinian victims were not seriously hurt, do you feel better?

Muslim leaders had urged the crowd to gather at the site’s Al-Aqsa Mosque early Sunday in response to what they said was “Jewish conquest.” Israeli police said the protesters hurled a fire bomb and poured oil on the ground to make the forces slip.
-Hmmm, amazingly the innocent palestinian victims just happened to have both firebombs and oil in their possession. I wonder how the media missed the indicator that this was an act of criminals and was premeditated.

A large wall of riot police, holding glass shields, closed in on the crowd, sending many protesters – overwhelmingly young men – running into the mosque for cover. Forces didn’t enter the holy site, but water could be seen squirting between the cracks of the shuttered doors and dripping onto carpets inside.
-More bias, you can visualize attacking police but not the violence or damage of the rioters. The poor mosque was damaged by water but no mention that it was the staging ground of the minions and helps fan the flame of hatred and encourages the minions to act out.

One police officer was lightly wounded, and 21 protesters were arrested, said spokesman Micky Rosenfeld.
-The only non-biased line in this article.

Hundreds of protesters remained holed up inside, and later Sunday, police said the crowd had gathered outside for a new round of clashes. Hundreds of police remained in the area, and emergency medical services were on high alert, in case of further violence, police said.
-“Holed up” can be read as barricaded. “Crowds” should be replaced with “reinforcements”. There is no doubt that “further violence” is imminent. (more…)