Palestine:  Peace Not Apartheid???
Jimmy writes "books."
Greetings Ronbots!  You might be interested  in learning WHY I OPPOSE
RON PAUL.   Here are some random thoughts (fragmentary) which may provide
clues.  About 1 year ago I read a book which
could have been titled
Why The World Should Have Known -  Iran Is Building The Bomb
Excerpts from The Iran Threat by Alireza Jafarzadeh

Ayatollah Khomeini may be gone, but the oppressive and tyrannical
system he invented and installed in Iran is still very much alive.  The ease
with which he lied about his plans for the country, deceiving both the West
and his own people, remains a dark inheritance of the regime.  
The most
alarming evidence of this is that
Iran successfully hid its nuclear
program for 18 years
until my sources (the MEK* inside Iran) exposed
it in 2002.
 The underlying contempt that Khomeini bore for human beings,
considering them nothing more than brutes who would destroy each other
without his all-wise and strict leadership, is sealed into the laws of the land.  
And the radical Islamic zeal he promulgated, including the glorification of
martyrdom for the sake of the regime, lives on in the mullah's national call for
suicide bombers to sign up for missions in Iraq.  (p. 39)
The Mujahedin-e Khalq
*The MEK is the major resistance movement (click on link to learn more) both
inside and outside of Iran.  It's history traces back to the revolt against the
shah during the 1970's and was larger and more popular than the faction
controlled by the religious clerics associated with Khomeini.  In fact, Khomeini
HIJACKED the popular revolution and inserted himself as the absolute ruler of
the country in 1979!  
Dumbfounded By Politics?
I agree with a statement made by Ron Paul in which he explained that the economic
malaise of the 70's
was the result of deficits created by Lyndon Johnson's Great
Society (welfare programs) and the Vietnam War of the 60's.   

The strange thing about politics is that
Jimmy Carter was blamed for the resulting
inflation and the Fed's high interest rates which were set to "tame" that inflation!  

Clearly, Jimmy Carter was not responsible for any of this.   

Therefore I conclude that economics makes sense but  politics does not.  Political
reactions are driven by human emotions.  And politicians specialize in emotional
issues.  Thus politicians could be likened to trial lawyers.  Voters are like members of
the O. J. Simpson jury.  (Duh.)
Electing Jimmy Carter to the White House was not logical.  Supporting
Ayatollah Khomeini WAS.  Khomeini promised freedom.  And democracy.  
And free electricity for everyone.  

Khomeini lied.  
Go figure.   When OPEC created energy shortages and
Khomeini took hostages Carter took the blame.  

When Arafat killed more Israelis Carter was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize!
(Or, was it Arafat that got the Peace Prize?  I forgot.)
Random thoughts...  Dec 11, 2007
When Arafat killed more
Israelis Carter was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize?






Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy
Jimmy sounds A LOT LIKE Irrational A.N.S.W.E.R....
Could there be a link to Ramsey Clark?  
And those weird "human rights workers" who are
always being bloodied by the Israeli Gestapo...

Jimmy is RICH!  
The Saudis and the UAE.
Jimmy Carter got the
Zayed International Prize
for the
ENVIRONMENT??
Jimmy is owned by Stealth PAC?
Cynthia McKenny's daddy is Jew hater.  Ronbots are Jew haters/ Iraq war protesters.
Veterans for Peace ($1000 reward for evidence of plane)
John Perkins
Confessions of a Tree-hugging Draft Dodger
Soros
funds Chossudovsky and Democracy Now!  ...which featured the guy who wrote
about Mossadeq 1953, etc.
Alex Jones (Bohemian Grove) pushes
the Loose Boys???  ...and Ron Paul?
Syria and  Iran (radical Islam)  +   Cuba and Venezuela (socialist)
Carlos was a Latino socialist trained by the Soviets, embraced by the PLO.
Is China and North Korea part of stealthPac?  (Soros and Maurice Strong have
ties to China.)  
United Nations  Oil for Food Scandal
In April 2002, the Zayed Center hosted Thierry Meyssan, the French author of “The Appalling
Fraud,” which claims that the U.S. military staged the 9/11 attacks.
The center translated
Mr. Meyssan’s book into Arabic, hailed its publication and widely advertised the work. A month later,
Lyndon LaRouche, the fringe political figure who has made disparaging remarks about Judaism, was an
honored guest. Just last month, the center hosted Umayma Jalahma, a professor of Islamic Studies at
King Faisal University, who declared: “The Jewish people must obtain human blood so that their clerics
can prepare for holiday pastries.”

Source:

A Troubling Gift  By Rachel Lea Fish
Opinion Main  The Wall Street Journal  June 6, 2003
THE ZAYED CENTER?  ...Who is Rachel Fish?
When she received a master’s degree in theological studies last month, Rachel Fish accepted her
diploma from the dean of Harvard Divinity School and handed him something in return: 130 pages of
research and a petition.

The research was on
anti-American and anti-Jewish propaganda allegedly emanating from a Middle
Eastern think tank, the Zayed International Centre for Coordination and Follow-Up.
The petition
urged Harvard University to give back a $2.5 million gift from the center’s namesake, Sheik Zayed bin
Sultan Nahyan, president of the
United Arab Emirates.

Over the past six months, Fish, 23, has almost single-handedly created a furor over the sheik’s three-
year-old donation, which was earmarked for a professorship in Islamic studies at the divinity school and
had attracted little notice.

[The University president is Lawrence (Larry) H. Summers. ]
Random thoughts...   Dec 12-14
The Zayed Center, a well-known institution affiliated with the Arab League counts among its contributors,
Nobel Peace Laureate,
Jimmy Carter.

"We protested when this think tank embraced and validated the denial of the Nazi Holocaust, the blood
libel and lurid conspiracy theories that blamed America for September 11th and alleged a Jewish plot to
control the world,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Los Angeles-based Human Rights
group. “We therefore want to be among the first to commend the UAE for having the courage to do the
right thing and close the doors of the Zayed Center. We can only hope that this move will inspire other
Arab and Moslem governments, media and intellectuals to stop the incessant campaign to demonize and
delegitimize the State of Israel and the Jewish people,” Cooper added.

In recent years,
The Zayed Center, the Arab League’s prime think tank, was hailed for its
commitment to the
environment and awarded cash prizes to renowned international figures, including
former US president Carter.

However, the Center also hosted Holocaust deniers David Irving and Roger Garuday, published claims
that 9/11 was a US plot, hosted a Saudi professor who alleged Jews used human blood to prepare
“holiday pastries”; whose executive director said that “The truth is that the Jews are the enemies of all
nations” and which released a press statement that declared “The Zionists are the ones who killed the
Jews of Europe.”
why why why why
What we're trying to do is just show people that we're here. You know, like maybe not that many
more people are going to ride their [bikes] to school but just having that presence here and having
people -- I mean a lot of people came up to us today. And we're just like hey, what's going on.
if we can get these people going
Mother Earth
The first Earth Day in 1970
Water problems?
Huh?  Say again.  I missed that.
CNN's Jason Bellini reports from Portland College in Oregon.  **TRANSCRIPT**

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JASON BELLINI, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Adam Werbach in his buttoned-down
collared shirt is one of the young faces of today's environmental movement. And he's also a veteran
of it. The
[Edited 27-year- old] former president of the Sierra Club received an invitation to speak
at Portland College.

ADAM WERBACH, FORMER PRESIDENT, SIERRA CLUB: I don't know this as a really active school
so this is going to be one of those -- well, we'll see. It's going to be a challenge, I think, to figure out
if we can get these people going or not.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: So how'd we do on the streets?

BELLINI: Hocking their handmade, tie-dyed Mother Earth T-shirts, a new campus environmental
club is taking a modest stab at producing Portland College's first Earth Week celebration -- their
bike parking lot, the main attraction.

CHRIS SPARKS: Just trying to get people to ride their bikes instead of drive, sort of promote
different ways of transportation.

GINGER EMRICK: We don't want to be activists that scare people away. When people think of
activists, they think of, I don't know, people that are kind of rude and out there and in your face
activists.

BELLINI: This is not your hippie father's environmental movement. The first Earth Day in 1970, the
dawn of the modern environmentalism movement was a flamboyant, psychedelic, counter cultural
explosion. Thirty-one years later, the sons and daughters of the movement's founders are less
radical and less visible.

MARK HERTSGAARD, ENVIRONMENTAL AUTHOR: There was a lot more political ferment on
campuses 30 years ago then there is today. However, I think it's a mistake to think that young
people today are somehow politically uninterested.

BELLINI (on camera): But why did you start the group?

SPARKS: Why? Because there's no group there and changes can be made.

BELLINI: What are the changes you've been able to find?

SPARKS: Like in terms of concrete changes, we're saying, you know, shower heads are leaking, we
water the grass when it rains, you know, 250 days a year.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I agree. Open a logging center. Ultimately, I think that this whole
environmental movement is going to move to the biggest frontier and like it's going to take
businesses.

WERBACH: I mean you just nailed it. It's like if you can use the institution that exists to create
change then it's so much easier than breaking down all these decisions.

BELLINI: Many environmentalists say that in the '90s the sympathetic presidency dulled their roar
even as more scientists pointed to the dangers of global warming, air and water pollution and the
extinction of species. At the same time, however, many of these same young activists hope a new
president, who they perceive as hostile to the environment, will re-energize the movement.

WERBACH: When there's change back, in fact, to some of the emotionalism and some of the
righteous and some of the faith, that was actually at the core of the environment's movement when it
was founded.

BELLINI: After delivering his speech, Adam sat down with the organizers of the fledgling
environmental group. They discussed a strategy for this Catholic school. He advises these Portland
college students to partner with religious leaders.

WERBACH: This is their movement. I mean God, it's -- I mean it -- and 50 million Americans believe
that the Bible is written by the hand of God. This is a religious nation and religion needs to be put to
this.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Right now, what we're trying to do is just show people that we're here. You
know, like maybe not that many more people are going to ride their to school but just having that
presence here and having people -- I mean a lot of people came up to us today. And we're just like
hey, what's going on.

BELLINI: They may not yet know where to go from here or how to take on the giant global issues
they're concerned about. For now, they just want their Earth Week to be one worth repeating.

Jason Bellini, CNN, Portland, Oregon.

(END VIDEOTAPE)
MILES O'BRIEN, CNN ANCHOR: For more on Earth Day and what it means to
all of us, we turn to
Maurice Strong, who is hailed by the "New York Times" as the custodian of
the planet. No a bad title. Maurice is at the
United Nations and has written a weighty book entitled,
"Where On Earth Are We Going?"

Mr. Strong, thank you for being with us on CNN SUNDAY MORNING.

MAURICE STRONG, AUTHOR, "WHERE ON EARTH ARE WE GOING?": Great to be here on Earth
Day.

O'BRIEN: All right. Answer the question that is posed in your title. Where on Earth are we going?

STRONG: Well, the real answer is that it's up to us. The level of human population and the
scale and intensity of human activity has reached a point where we are literally affecting
the very conditions on which human life and well being depend. And our future depends
on how well we managed these processes. We're not doing it well at the moment.

O'BRIEN: Give me a sense of where the Bush administration stands on this. He's been criticized by
many quarters of the environmental ...  
[Editor: You get the idea.  You see what this is all
about.  It is not about protecting our environment.  Its a political power grab, an attempt
to mess with the minds of the young and unsuspecting. ]  
Maurice Strong, an "inconvenient truth" about the origins of Earth Deja Vu