Republicans Are Doomed; Al-Jazeerah Endorses Democrats

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Apr 20, 2005
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By Mohammed Khaku

Al-Jazeerah, July 25, 2006

Sen. Rick Santorum (R., Pa.) remarks at the National Press Club on Wednesday July 19th 2006 calling for regime change in Iran and described "Islamic fascism" as the "great test" of this generation, as threatening to the United States as last century's German Nazism and Soviet communism was inappropriate. These prejudicial remarks were derogatory, and highly unbecoming for a member of US senate. The Senator rhetoric in a public forum demeans both himself and the party he represents, particularly at a time when entire Middle East is in turmoil. Muslim of Lehigh Valley strongly condemned Senator remarks outrageous, inflammatory and un-American.

The Senator should know that extremists come in all faiths, and do not reflect the values and beliefs of the vast majority of the members of the religious groups to which they belong. The Senator's inflammatory comments do nothing to advance America's role in the world as the leading voice for tolerance and religious freedom and should be soundly condemned as election rhetoric and appeasing the neo-conservatives and American extremism ("millennial" or end-time Christians and Zionist zealots).

True to form, Senator Santorum has crossed the line and shows his clear hatred of Muslims. It is irresponsible that such comments are coming from someone who self-righteously claims to be holier than thou. Elected officials should be a voice of moderation and peace, not a voice of hatred and violence. America's image is damaged by such inciting and irresponsible rhetoric, at a time when we are trying to demand that other countries challenge their own religious extremists. All religious and political leaders should project true American values of tolerance and pluralism by condemning Senators remarks and his hate speech at National Press club.

Senator Santorum has a long history of derogatory remarks against homosexuals and other minority groups. His speech was irresponsible and ill informed, and he remarks are likely to fan hatred of Americans in parts of the Middle East. Senator’s goal was to instill fear. Just like Fascism and Zionism achieved their objectives through fear, resulting in the vast societal FEAR syndrome. People who believe in peace with justice must do exactly the opposite of what the fear-mongers want. We must struggle in solidarity to promote more education, mutual knowledge, a "living together" based on universal values, on respect for life and diversity, for democracy, for freedom, and for justice.

By associating the words "Fascism" with the Islam is to instill fear and by not acknowledging that a political agenda is not the same thing as a belief system, Senator Santorum invoked the oldest and the strongest kind of human fear -- fear of the unknown. Zionist and the pro-Israel lobby continue to instill fear in Americans by escalating unsubstantiated threats against them and fabricating a vast web of lies to justify their actions against Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Iran. By instilling fear of orange and red alerts we Americans have witnessed increased government intrusion into our daily lives and the erosion of our basic rights and freedoms.

Don’t ask Santorum to “apologize,” folks. Vote Democratic.

http://www.aljazeerah.info/Opinion ... Islam, Iran, and Syria By Mohammed Khaku.htm
 
I would really, REALLY like to see this article reprinted during Santorum's re-election campaign. Hell, run that puppy all over the place.

It's better be know not for your friends, but for your enemies.

Sounds fitting....
 
So...

a criticism of the Adminstration and the Republicans means that they support the Democrats...


black is white
up is down
freedom is slavery
war is peace
 
cgd75 said:
So...

a criticism of the Adminstration and the Republicans means that they support the Democrats...


black is white
up is down
freedom is slavery
war is peace

Did you even read the article:

And I quote: Don’t ask Santorum to “apologize,” folks. Vote Democratic.

If I read that someone said, "Vote Democratic," I would assume they they are support Democrats.

Check this out-it might help:

www.hop.com
 
Opinion is now called fact, correct?

"Democrat" and "Democratic" are two different words, aren't they?

To you, they are one in the same.


did you learn to parse arguments from www.hop.com too?? Or just words?
 
cgd75 said:
Opinion is now called fact, correct?

"Democrat" and "Democratic" are two different words, aren't they?

To you, they are one in the same.


did you learn to parse arguments from www.hop.com too?? Or just words?

The name of their Party is the Democratic Party... Are you being deliberately obtuse?
 
cgd75 said:
Opinion is now called fact, correct?

"Democrat" and "Democratic" are two different words, aren't they?

To you, they are one in the same.


did you learn to parse arguments from www.hop.com too?? Or just words?


The liberal media in the US or Al-Jazerrah - what is the difference?
 
cgd75 said:
Opinion is now called fact, correct?

"Democrat" and "Democratic" are two different words, aren't they?

To you, they are one in the same.


did you learn to parse arguments from www.hop.com too?? Or just words?

Are you drinking?

How in the world do you not understand this?

When you read a ballot, the names have little letters next to their name.

Those little letters (D, R, etc) stand for their party.

Last I checked, if you were going to run as a Democrat, you had to be a member of the Democratic party.

I could be wrong but...

When someone says "Vote Democratic" - I'm guessing he/she is encouraging people to vote for Democrats.
 

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