Political Chit Chat

July 13, 2008

Prevent Cruelty Towards Animals

Filed under: Protecting Animals — orion2007 @ 12:01 am

Today, I heard a very heart-breaking story on TV. This really sweet-eyed dog was beaten up by his owner with a stick. Then he was hung on some heat-generating device (don’t recall the name) and left to die. When he was rescued, his one leg had to be amputated to save his life. It was so shocking to hear this. Who would do such a thing to an innocent cute animal?  And the dog’s eyes were full of pain, just one look tells you that. 

So, the TV program then talked about this Vancouver based organization, BSCPCA,  that works to save abused animals and provide them with better home. Its possible to volunteer with them, adopt an abused animal through them and donate for this cause. 

Also, check out Toronto Humane Society

So, go check them out today. :-)

Later days

take care

Kind Regards

July 12, 2008

U.S. is murdering Afghani civilians.

Filed under: 9/11 and Aftermath, Afghanistan, Something's Rotten — orion2007 @ 12:26 am

US ‘Killed 47 Afghan Civilians’

By BBC

11/07/08 “BBC” — – A US air strike in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday killed 47 civilians, 39 of them women and children, an Afghan government investigating team says. 

Reports at the time said that 20 people were killed in the airstrike in Nangarhar province. The US military said they were militants.

But local people said the dead were wedding party guests.

Correspondents say the issue of civilian casualties is hugely sensitive in Afghanistan.

President Hamid Karzai has said that no civilian casualty is acceptable.

Demand for trial

Mr Karzai set up a nine-man commission to look into Sunday’s incident.

The commission is headed by Senate deputy speaker, Burhanullah Shinwari whose constituency is in Nangarhar province. He told the BBC: ”Our investigation found out that 47 civilians (were killed) by the American bombing and nine others injured. 

“There are 39 women and children” among those killed, he said. The eight other people who died were “between the ages of 14 and 18″.

Source

 

July 10, 2008

FBI is “profiling” Muslims

Filed under: 9/11 and Aftermath, Something's Rotten — orion2007 @ 10:54 pm
Tags:

Why don’t they do at least one thing correctly?  This is totally illegal. Funny how one president is messing around with the entire American constitution. Is democracy for real or is it just a fad?

The FBI’s Plan to ‘Profile’ Muslims

By Juan Cole

10/07/08 “Salon” — – The U.S. Justice Department is considering a change in the grounds on which the FBI can investigate citizens and legal residents of the United States. Till now, DOJ guidelines have required the FBI to have some evidence of wrongdoing before it opens an investigation. The impending new rules, which would be implemented later this summer, allow bureau agents to establish a terrorist profile or pattern of behavior and attributes and, on the basis of that profile, start investigating an individual or group. Agents would be permitted to ask “open-ended questions” concerning the activities of Muslim Americans and Arab-Americans. A person’s travel and occupation, as well as race or ethnicity, could be grounds for opening a national security investigation.

The rumored changes have provoked protests from Muslim American and Arab-American groups. The Council on American Islamic Relations, among the more effective lobbies for Muslim Americans’ civil liberties, immediately denounced the plan, as did James Zogby, the president of the Arab-American Institute. Said Zogby, “There are millions of Americans who, under the reported new parameters, could become subject to arbitrary and subjective ethnic and religious profiling.” Zogby, who noted that the Bush administration’s history with profiling is not reassuring, warned that all Americans would suffer from a weakening of civil liberties.

In fact, Zogby’s statement only begins to touch on the many problems with these proposed rules. The new guidelines would lead to many bogus prosecutions, but they would also prove counterproductive in the effort to disrupt real terror plots. And then there’s Attorney General Michael Mukasey’s rationale for revising the rules in the first place. “It’s necessary,” he explained in a June news conference, “to put in place regulations that will allow the FBI to transform itself as it is transforming itself into an intelligence-gathering organization.” When did Congress, or we as a nation, have a debate about whether we want to authorize the establishment of a domestic intelligence agency? Indeed, late last month Congress signaled its discomfort with the concept by denying the FBI’s $11 million funding request for its data-mining center.

Read the rest here: Source

Blog at WordPress.com.