Sunday, November 2, 2008

Salafism, a Conservative Strain of Islam, Gains Ground in Algeria

ALGIERS, Algeria — "The Taliban are among us!"

The recent headline in one of Algeria's leading newspapers was designed to shock. It also spoke volumes about fears that an austere, conservative strain of Islam is gaining ground in this North African nation, prized by the West for its oil and gas wealth and its help in fighting Al Qaeda-linked terror.

Algeria is worried about Salafism, an extreme branch of Islam that is a concern for authorities across North Africa. Imported from Saudi Arabia and backed by Saudi oil money, Salafism has gained a significant following not only in Algeria but in neighboring Morocco, and has grown dramatically across the Middle East in recent years.

The latest alarm came when authorities in a Sahara Desert town, Biskra, rounded up people who failed to fast during the holy month of Ramadan and sentenced six of them to four years each in prison.

The arrests caused an outcry — and El Watan's headline — because Algeria has traditionally taken a more relaxed attitude to religious observance than places like Saudi Arabia. No law in Algeria explicitly bars people from drinking, smoking or otherwise breaking the daytime fast during the holy month, which this year fell in September. ....

Obama Promises San Francisco Audience He Will Bankrupt Coal Industry!!

from Gateway Pundit

OBAMA TOLD A SAN FRANCISCO AUDIENCE THAT HE WILL BANKRUPT THE COAL INDUSTRY!!!

ATTN: Coal states Virginia , Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado, and Indiana, guess what Obama told San Francisco about you?

OBAMA TELLS SAN FRANCISCO HE WILL BANKRUPT THE COAL INDUSTRY:

Hat Tip Über
Here's the transcript via Free Republic from his talk to San Francisco Gate in January 2008:

Let me sort of describe my overall policy.

What I've said is that we would put a cap and trade system in place that is as aggressive, if not more aggressive, than anybody else's out there.

I was the first to call for a 100% auction on the cap and trade system, which means that every unit of carbon or greenhouse gases emitted would be charged to the polluter. That will create a market in which whatever technologies are out there that are being presented, whatever power plants that are being built, that they would have to meet the rigors of that market and the ratcheted down caps that are being placed, imposed every year.

So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can; it's just that it will bankrupt them because they're going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that's being emitted.

That will also generate billions of dollars that we can invest in solar, wind, biodiesel and other alternative energy approaches.

The only thing I've said with respect to coal, I haven't been some coal booster. What I have said is that for us to take coal off the table as a ideological matter as opposed to saying if technology allows us to use coal in a clean way, we should pursue it.

So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can.

It's just that it will bankrupt them."
This goes hand-in-hand with what he's said about nuclear energy.
His preconditions make it impossible to expand nuclear energy at this time.
From The Wall Street Journal:

On nuclear power, Sen. Obama says he's open to expanding nuclear energy, which now provides 20% of the nation's electricity, as part of an effort to increase power sources that emit little or no carbon dioxide. But he also has said there is no future for expanded nuclear energy until the U.S. comes up with a safe, long-term solution for disposing of nuclear waste. He opposes the Bush administration's plan for storing waste at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.
No wonder Rupert Murdoch is worried about an Obama presidency.

Nuke plant faulted for using janitors as guards

For a week in early October, members of a contract cleaning crew stood guard along sections of the plant’s perimeter fencing during repairs to the plant’s alarm system.

Sweden’s Radiation Safety Authority (Strålsäkerhetsmyndigheten – SSM) criticized OKG, the plant’s operators, for violating its own internal safety practices by using untrained workers to guard the facility and for failing to document the break with standard operation procedures. ....

Global meltdown to have a negative impact on food security

by ASHOK B SHARM

Food security usually becomes the casualty in the event of any crisis, be it financial or political. It is not unusual for the recent global financial crisis to invite concerns from ogranisations like FAO and other food policy groups.

The global meltdown in the financial and equity markets follows hard on the heels of soaring food price and energy crisis caused primarily on account of intensified bio-fuel programme. The global commodity prices, though still ruling high, has marked a dip due to good harvest in the current season. According to the latest issue of FAO’s Crop Prospects and Food Situation report, global grain production this year is forecast to increase 4.9% to a record 2,232 million tonne. However, some 36 countries are still in need of external assistance as a result of crop failures, conflict or insecurity or continuing local high prices, the report noted. ....


Terrorists try to infiltrate UK's top labs

(Compiler's note: This wmd warning must be taken very seriously!)



by Mark Townsend

The security services have intercepted up to 100 suspects posing as postgraduate students who aim to acquire weapons material and expertise
A British scientist wears a protective suit in a lab

A British scientist wears a protective suit in a laboratory. MI5 has warned that al-Qaida is seeking to recruit scientists who develop deadly viruses. Photograph: Alamy

Dozens of suspected terrorists have attempted to infiltrate Britain's top laboratories in order to develop weapons of mass destruction, such as biological and nuclear devices, during the past year.

The security services, MI5 and MI6, have intercepted up to 100 potential terrorists posing as postgraduate students who they believe tried accessing laboratories to gain the materials and expertise needed to create chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons, the government has confirmed.

It follows warnings from MI5 to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office that al-Qaeda's terror network is actively seeking to recruit scientists and university students with access to laboratories containing deadly viruses and weapons technology.

Extensive background checks from the security services, using a new vetting scheme, have led to the rejection of overseas students who were believed to be intent on developing weapons of mass destruction. A Foreign Office spokesman said the students had been denied clearance to study in the UK under powers 'to stop the spread of knowledge and skills that could be used in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery'.

He added: 'There is empirical evidence of a problem with postgraduate students becoming weapons proliferators.' The overseas students, a number of whom are thought to be from 'countries of concern' such as Iran and Pakistan, were intercepted under the Academic Technology Approval Scheme, introduced by universities and the security services last November.

The findings raise questions over how many terrorist suspects may have already infiltrated the UK's laboratory network. Rihab Taha, dubbed 'Dr Germ', who worked on Saddam Hussein's biological weapons programme, studied for her PhD in plant toxins at East Anglia University's School of Biological Sciences in Norwich.

In addition, a number of well-educated Iraqi scientists - funded by Baghdad - infiltrated several British microbiology laboratories in the run-up to the Gulf war of 1990-91. Britain has about 800 laboratories in hospitals, universities and private firms where staff have access to lethal viruses such as Ebola, polio and avian flu or could acquire the technology and expertise to develop deadly weapons. Whitehall sources remain concerned about the number of countries intent on acquiring the materials and knowledge to develop a nuclear or biological warfare capability.

John Wood of the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control said: 'Any scientist would say it's important that we know who is working in our laboratories, and also why they are working there.'

The trial of two NHS doctors, Mohammad Asha, 27, a Jordanian national, and Bilal Abdulla, 29, from Iraq, who allegedly plotted widespread carnage through car bomb attacks in London's West End and Glasgow airport last year, has intensified scrutiny on the radicalisation of students. Named in the plot is 27-year-old Indian PhD student, Kafeel Ahmed, who drove a Jeep laden with gas canisters into Glasgow Airport's main terminal building but died several weeks later from severe burns. Ahmed studied for his PhD in the technology department of Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge.

A spokesman for Universities UK, which represents vice-chancellors, said the security scheme had so far proved effective. He added: 'It is important to protect the UK from people who may wish to use technology and materials here inappropriately.'

Michael Stephens, head of security at the Medical Research Council, which runs some of Britain's most sensitive laboratories, said they took the issue of biosecurity 'extremely seriously'.

Concern that al-Qaeda is intent on developing a more sophisticated weapons capability moved the former director-general of MI5, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, to warn publicly that terror attacks in Britain could involve weapons of mass destruction. She said: 'We know that attempts to gather materials are there, we know that attempts to gather technologies are there.'

Extremist groups are known to have targeted students, offering to fund courses in return for using their newly acquired expertise. It is unclear if any of those denied 'clearance' to study in the UK during the past year were funded by grants from host governments such as Tehran.

A Foreign Office spokesman said 'efforts' on scrutiny of foreign postgraduate students would continue with only a few of the 20,000 applications rejected for security reasons. In the US, draft legislation advocates banning all non-Americans from laboratories which possess potentially dangerous bacteria and viruses, a measure the UK government believes is too draconian.

Professor George Griffin, chairman of the advisory committee on dangerous pathogens, has warned of the lack of a national standard required for people to work in high-security laboratories.

The move comes as the government considers plans to build a new pathogen research facility in central London, between King's Cross station and the British Library. Experts have warned that a terror attack would prove catastrophic to the surrounding area.

Why Isn’t ACORN’s Voter Fraud A Bigger Story?

(Compiler's note: Must read. You're not hearing this from the standard media. This "ice berg" leading to voter fraud is a national security issue.)

from Nice Deb

You would think that with ACORN being investigated in at least a dozen states for voter fraud, this close to an election, the media would be a little more interested in the story. It’s an important one with major ramifications if the election is a close one, as many think it will be. It should be front page news in every newspaper, and topping the nightly newscasts.

What could possibly account for the media’s silence on so important an issue? This goes beyond the ordinary bias we see every day in the MSM. This is a major scandal, and the only thing that could account for the silence, may be that many of the big wigs in the media, are also fellow travelers.

Consider the Robin Hood Foundation, a group funded 100% by donations, but with George Soros as a major benefactor.

Just as the name implies, their goal is to take from the rich and give to the poor by funding community organizing groups. Groups like ACORN.

Some names on the board of the Robinhood Foundation include Tom Brokaw who is considered the “conscience” of NBC/MSNBC news, and Jeff Immelt, Chariman of GE which owns NBC, as well as Harvey Weistein, ultra lefty movie producer (Fahrenheit 911).

Newsbusters reports:

Brokaw sits on the board of the Robin Hood Foundation, a charity that, according to its website, targets poverty in New York City by applying “sound investment principles to philanthropy.” The foundation awarded ACORN a $456,000 grant in 2003 and a $365,000 grant in 2004. Brokaw does not appear to have played a role in the grants because he didn’t become a member of the board until 2005 according to the guidestar.org database, but these are nevertheless the left-wing circles in which he travels.

The Soros Fund Charitable Foundation, as in George Soros, a major bankroller of the left, gave the Robin Hood Foundation a $9,859,453 community development grant in 2000.

It seems clear that many in the media aren’t just sympathetic to the ACORN zombies, they are active participants in its leftist philosophy, and that’s why so few are talking about it.

This McCain/Palin ad sums up nicely what is being underreported by the MSM:



Miami County Suspects Possible Voter Fraud In Absentee Voting

by Steve Baker

Miami County Sheriff’s Department is looking into the possibility of voter fraud involving absentee ballots. Deputies have in their possession 70 sealed absentee ballots. The suspected voter fraud was brought to the attention of the Miami County Board of Elections, said Election Board Director Steve Quillen, after those who requested absentee ballots be mailed to them claimed they never received the ballots and notified the election board.They are clearly fraudulent,” said Miami County Prosecutor Gary Nasal, who attended a special election board meeting Friday.

Those attending that meeting along with the Board of Elections and county prosecutor and his staff, included the sheriff’s department and postal inspectors from Cincinnati. The election board in Miami County had mailed out approximately 10,000 absentee ballots for this presidential election, said Quillen. As of Friday, 14,603 of Miami County’s 71,373 registered voters have cast their ballots. Of those 14,603, early voters accounted for 4,133 and mailed-in absentee ballots accounted for 9,160.

Those who still want to vote early can do so Monday at the Board of Elections on the ground floor of the Miami County Courthouse in downtown Troy from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.Polls on Election Day will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The election office in Miami County is predicting a record 80 percent voter turnout on Tuesday.

Voter fraud can be a real problem

from the FresnoBee

ERIC PAUL ZAMORA/THE FRESNO BEE
Julia Faller, 20, an au pair from Germany who arrived in July to work for a Fresno family, holds a voter identification card she received in the mail after being solicited to register.



Julia Faller is a serious person. She's honest, too. She would make a good voter.

In fact, she even has a Fresno County voter identification card.

But she can't vote -- not legally. She's not a U.S. citizen.

The story about how she got that card provides a sobering lesson about why voter fraud is a problem to take seriously.

It provides a glimpse into the shady dealings of professional signature gatherers and the risks posed by them. And it illustrates why Gov. Schwarzenegger was wrong to veto legislation two years ago that clamped down on bounty hunters who are paid up to $10 per signature.

Faller, 20, moved to Fresno in July from Heide, a small town north of Hamburg in Germany, to work as an au pair. Among her goals: improving her English.

After her English class at Cesar Chavez Adult School, Faller walks to Courthouse Park to board the bus that takes her back to northwest Fresno, where she lives with Peter and Renee Kinman.

At the park bus station, Faller became the object of unwanted attention.

"Every day this woman asks me to sign up to vote," Faller says, her words wrapped in an unmistakable German accent.

"I told her that I think I wasn't allowed because I had come here just a few months ago."

But the woman persisted, Faller says, and so did others at the park pushing voter registration cards.

Faller finally caved on Sept. 26 after the signature gatherer told the au pair that she would be helping her because she got money for every card.

Says Faller: "She said to sign, and she would check if I can vote."

Faller also says that the woman didn't tell her that she had to be an American citizen to register.

Nor did she mention that it was a felony to sign if she wasn't an American.

After registering, Faller says, the bounty hunter rewarded her with a candy bar.

Faller says she forgot about it until a voter identification card arrived at the Kinmans' home.

The card, proclaiming her a registered Republican, alarmed Renee Kinman because she knew that Faller wasn't eligible to vote.

"I'm worried that this is just the tip of the iceberg" with registration problems, says Kinman, who notified The Bee about Faller's experience.

This time, the safeguards worked.

According to Fresno County Clerk Victor Salazar, the card sent to Faller acknowledged her registration pending verification by the Secretary of State's office.

But, because Faller's card wasn't completely filled out -- lacking either a driver's license or Social Security number -- the state rejected it.

Had she supplied a number, she might be allowed to vote on Tuesday.

Paid signature gatherers, Salazar says, "are one of the major problems in voter fraud because they often misrepresent what they're doing. They'll say, 'Do you want to sign a petition and then get people to sign a registration form.' "

Salazar says that one of the best ways to prevent fraud is to take money out of the process. But political parties, as well as interests trying to qualify state ballot propositions, rely on bounty hunters to drum up signatures.

Schwarzenegger vetoed legislation by Assembly Member Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, in 2006 that would have banned payment on a per-signature basis and tightened rules for proposition signatures.

"The prohibitions on per-signature payments will make it more difficult for grass-roots organizations to get the necessary signatures in the time allotted," Schwarzenegger said at the time.

Maybe the governor disagrees, but stricter oversight of voter registration is needed to protect against fraud.

And, as Salazar points out, it's a bad idea to risk identity theft by giving personal information to a stranger.

"Unless you know who the circulators are, voters should be cautious filling out a form that asks for your name, address, date of birth, phone and Social Security number," Salazar says.

He recommends registering at government venues such as the elections office, fire stations and libraries -- or downloading a form on-line and mailing it in.

Salazar says that while Faller shouldn't have signed the registration card, she did the right thing by telling what happened: "Usually people don't come forward. She can be helpful to ensure that appropriate action is taken."

He says that the case, including the name of the signature gatherer, has been forwarded to the Voter Fraud Unit of the Secretary of State's Office. Salazar declined to identify the woman, citing privacy laws.

At the least, this bounty hunter is on notice: Gaming the system could cost you a lot more than $10.

ACLU Supports Fraudulent Voting in Georgia

(Compiler's note: Must read. This sort of thing appears to be rampant throughout the our nation. If we don't get control of our ILLEGALs in this nation we will loose it. Come on America, we can do better than this. rca)

A federal appeals court in Georgia is the latest venue where the ACLU is fighting to keep illegal "voters" on the rolls. The requirement to use Social Security and drivers license records to confirm that new registrations are what they claim to be, legitimate voters, comes from a federal law. The effort to keep illegal "voters" on the rolls comes from Democrat officials and their supporters.

The facts for this article, but not the legal conclusions, come from an article in the Augusta Chronicle on 23 October, 2008. The ACLU and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund are asking a federal Circuit Court in Atlanta to prevent Georgia from removing apparent aliens from its "voter" rolls.

The state has used Social Security and drivers license records to identify 4,538 "voters," 3,821 of them newly registered, as noncitizens. Election officials sent letters to all apparently illegal voters, informing of them of the data mismatches, and giving them an opportunity to clear up the discrepancies.

The lead plaintiff in the case is one former alien who claims to have become an American citizen in November, 2007. However, he did not respond to two letters asking him to confirm his citizenship. The ACLU and the Mexican group claimed that the very sending of such letters are "a form of intimidation."

The article refers to these two organizations in its lead sentence as "voters rights groups." From the evidence of this case, now on appeal, these are "NON-voters rights groups." They are willing to have a close election in Georgia, at the local, state or national level, decided by "voters" who are not citizens, or for other reasons including death or multiple voting, have no right to vote as currently registered.

The same issue of using Social Security and drivers license information to verify the legitimacy of "voter" registrations have arisen in many states, because the use and comparison of such data are required in the Help Americans Vote Act passed by Congress. The opposition to using such data is coming almost entirely from Democrats and their ideological supporters, who apparently believe that the illegal voters they are protecting, will vote for Democrats if given the chance.

Source of original story on the Net:

http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/102308/met_480491.shtml

Pentagon Unveils New Unmanned Spokesperson

On a lighter note:


By Stable Hand