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Changing the subject: from Messo-potamia to Peril in Persia |
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Written by Tom Turnipseed
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Thursday, 08 February 2007 |
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President Bush
faces a rebellion among the American people and Congress against his
call for a surge of troops that will escalate the killing in his Iraq
war of choice. So Bush is now attempting to change the subject from the
monumental mess of his making in Mesopotamia to an even more monstrous
peril in Persia. Iraq and Iran are contemporary names for the ancient
civilizations known as Mesopotamia and Persia. Bush lacks public and
Congressional support to widen the war in Iraq. His oft-stated cause
for war---that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction for imminent use
against the U.S. and was complicit in the 9/11 attacks---has proven to
be fabrication. Bush appears puppet-like under the influence of
Vice-President Cheney and his cabal of neo-con warmongers, the
principle architects of the imperialistic mis-adventure in Iraq. We are
facing another fear driven, made-up run-up to an even more costly war
against Iran to divert our attention from the debilitating debacle in
Iraq that has taken such a terrible toll in lives, suffering and money,
and to make more money for oil and war profiteers.
By
February 1, 2007, Bush/Cheney’s Iraq War had killed 3088 U.S. military
personnel, 130 Brits and 123 more coalition troops. 770 U.S. civilian
contractors were also killed by January 28th. Bush/Cheney’s war of
folly has killed about 655,000 Iraqis, according to a study led by
Gilbert Burnham of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
in Baltimore. By January 28, 2007, 23,114 U.S. military personnel had
been wounded in action.
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 08 February 2007 )
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The value of values: whose life counts? |
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Written by Fabienne Goux-Baudiment
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Sunday, 04 February 2007 |
A new book from Professor Mahdi Elmandjra, a respected futurist based in Morocco, explores the question of values and society. It was reviewed by Fabienne Goux-Baudiment in the World Futures Studies Federation's Futures Bulletin in January 2007.
Better intercultural communication, free from deceit and discrimination, would greatly contribute to the building of peace, says Mahdi Elmandjra. Respecting the values of "others" would help to put into perspective the concept of "universal values" without insisting on their artificial adaptation to a reductionist and meaningless universalism, bearing in mind the scale of human history.
Professor Almandjra points out that some western states, although they proclaim themselves as champions of values regarding human rights and democracy, violate them here and there with impunity. The test of this highly claimed universalism will be the day when the life of a Third World citizen will be worth as much as the life of an American, a European or an Israeli.
He shows how the last conflicts in Israel, Palestine, Iraq and Lebanon; the blind support from the western world of the American mega-imperialism and the unacceptable cowardice of most, if not all Arabic governments are as many proofs that w are very far away from these "universal" values.
The world of Professor Elmandjra's earlier book -- The First Civilizational War (1991) is mutating into a war of values.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 05 February 2007 )
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Global Warming: the Final Verdict |
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Written by Robin McKie
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Friday, 26 January 2007 |
A study by the world's leading experts says global warming will happen faster and be more devastating than previously thought, says The Guardian (UK)
(22 01 07)....
Global warming is destined to have a far more destructive and earlier
impact than previously estimated, the most authoritative report yet
produced on climate change will warn next week.
A draft copy of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, obtained by The Observer,
shows the frequency of devastating storms - like the ones that battered
Britain last week - will increase dramatically. Sea levels will rise
over the century by around half a metre; snow will disappear from all
but the highest mountains; deserts will spread; oceans become acidic,
leading to the destruction of coral reefs and atolls; and deadly
heatwaves will become more prevalent.
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Last Updated ( Friday, 26 January 2007 )
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