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Article History
WASHINGTON (Map, News) - When Omid Safi of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, was asked recently by AP Press to comment on the Pew poll of American Muslims, which found that about a quarter of those between the ages of 18 and 29 approved of suicide bombings against civilians in at least some cases, he replied:
“Given what’s happened in Iraq and Palestine, I would be shocked if there wasn’t discontent.”
He expressed no outrage against the death of innocents, no blanket condemnation of a death-loving ideology. And, in academe at least, there was no reaction to Safi’s attempt to justify the most disturbing finding of the Pew poll.
Safi is a rising star in academic Middle East studies. He recently decamped from snowy Hamilton, NY, where he taught at Colgate University, to the idylls of Chapel Hill, where he is an associate professor of religious studies.
In April, the Carnegie Corporation awarded him a $100,000 research grant (his project is “Reforming Islam in the ‘Axis of Evil’: Contesting Islam in Post-Revolutionary Iran”) and he’s co-chair of the steering committee for the Study of Islam at the American Academy of Religion. Safi’s future in university circles looks bright.
Little wonder. Safi has mastered the art of postmodern double-speak pioneered by the late Edward Said of Columbia University, whose error-filled book Orientalism paved the way in 1978 for the politicization of Middle East studies. In Safi’s hands, politicizing becomes a way to cloak justifications for ensconcing radical Islam in the West in the language of peace.
This technique is on display in his 2006 Beliefnet article titled “A Path to Peace-Rooted Justice.” In it, Safi’s calls for peace among the children of a loving and peaceful God alternate with condemnations of the West (i.e., America, Europe, and Israel). His assertions are couched in a moral relativism that obscures, but doesn’t neutralize, his efforts to downplay anti-Western violence.
After establishing his peaceful bona fides by evoking Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Gandhi, and the Dalai Lama, Safi admonishes Muslims to engage in self-criticism, to cease treasuring “’our own’ lives … more than that of ‘others.’” A few paragraphs later, after further warnings against privileging the self over the “other,” we get this:
“I don’t see that happening right now in the Middle East.”
One hopes at this point that he’s going to call for an end to suicide bombings and indiscriminate attacks on civilians and condemn brutal governments that engage in dhimmitude, which is the oppression of religious minorities.
Not quite. The next sentence reads: “I see my fellow Muslims cherishing and lamenting the lives of Iraqi civilians and Palestinians who live under brutal oppression. We should continue to cherish those lives, but not at the expense of demonizing Israelis or others [i.e., Americans] in the region.”
Which, of course, he has just done. But Safi is only warming up. In the next paragraph, he charges that Israeli society “is far from acknowledging the humanity of those around them,” or of “coming to terms” with the “thousands of civilians shot dead by the Israel Defense Forces.”
As for “we as Americans,” Safi charges that “we have never [emphasis original] come to terms with the humanity of Iraqis and Afghanis — if we had, we would be having a public discussion about the tens of thousands of civilian casualties as a result of our military operations.”
In these self-serving charges, Safi ignores the extraordinary risks taken by the IDF to avoid civilian casualties in its responses to rocket and sniper attacks, suicide bombings, and kidnappings of civilians and soldiers alike, many from militias hidden in neighborhoods, schools, churches and mosques.
As for America’s recognition of the humanity of Iraqis and Afghanis, he cynically discounts the sea of goodwill that existed here ahead of both wars, the brutality of Saddam and the Taliban, and the belief by most Americans that in a post-Sept.11 world, Muslims in the Middle East deserved liberty bought with American blood.
Later, Safi writes: “When ‘peace’ is used in the context of ‘security’ to reinforce the ideology of the powerful at the expense of the weak, it is a mockery.” This is an attempt to delegitimize Israel’s right to self-defense.
Then: “As long as our definition of peace is simply the ‘absence of fighting,’ we are ... on our way toward stripping human beings of their ability to resist injustice.” Here again is the old argument that Palestinian “resistance” is legitimate in the face of Israeli “oppression.”
Whatever Safi’s technique — the language of peace, postmodernism, or war — his goal remains the same: the justification of radical Islam.
Winfield Myers is a member of The Examiner’s Blog Board of Contributors and blogs at campuswatch.org.
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Examiner Reader said:
The sugar grows in South Florida were where all the old DC-3's used to land heading in from Columbia before sophisticated radar was used to track smugglers. The Robber Barons of the Rhein would be proud.
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Jason said:
Government over step it's boundaries when it tries to impose moral law on churches and it's followers. I do not plan to replace God's wisdom with man's flawed wisdow. So therefore I will never see same sex marriage as equal. The person is equal but the union is a distortion. Respectfully, Jason
0 agree | 1 disagree
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OIF Vet said:
McCain and the GOP members of Congress are a different animal. The GOP is getting burned in Congress because it deserves so. There was some initial promise in 1994 but it soon evaporated when they became addicted to Pork. As a Republican, I can't make myself vote for a Democrat in Congress but will definitely abstain at the Congressional and Senatorial level. I'm hoping that the GOP loses at least 50 seats... it will be good shock therapy for the Party. Although I disagree with McCain over 50% of the time he will get my vote because of only one reason... I believe that he will appoint the right people to the Supreme Court. Maybe the GOP will get their act together, regain Congressional power in a few years and start producing legislation that matters to the people.
3 agree | 0 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Examiner Reader said: "Federal government knows it is good business to do business with BIG." Please submit the entire post as a letter to the editor. If the paper can commit 1000 words to an uninformed, poorly-researched screed, then it can commit 150 words to a letter that puts things into perspective. How about cutting back Melanie's weekly column to a bimonthly column, so she can devote more time to actually researching her topics.
2 agree | 0 disagree
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Ruby said:
With CPS interferring more and more in the lives of families, it will be amazing if parents get a chance to teach and guide their children in any of their own values. Parents will be afraid to take their children for medical treatment for injuries, afraid to discipline their children, afraid to home-school their children if they wish, all for fear that someone will falsely accuse them of "abuse" or "neglect". It makes it hard for parents to do our job of being parents effictively.
1 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Stirewalt's point should send chills down the GOP's spine. Every Republican will be branded racist by the mainstream media this year.
1 agree | 0 disagree
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A Mom and a Boss said:
As a mid-40s employer and mother of 3, I have been spectacularly unimpressed with the lack of drive in the teens/early 20s I meet. I don't know where the line between coddling and guiding is, but I certainly think this generation of parents ought to give it a harder look.
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Examiner Reader said:
Ms. Scarborough is misinformed. As stated by a previous comment, the organizations listed are indeed membership based. Secondly, for those organizations, such as, Blacks In Government, Inc. (BIG), that has received the designation as a "Recognized Employee Organization for Training," had to meet the strict guidelines set by the Department of the Treasury/Internal Revenue Service. Thirdly, DOD and the largest human resource organization in the country, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), qualified BIG's National Training Conference as being in compliance with Title 5 U.S.C. Chapter 41, Training. BIG provides certain CEU training tracks. In addition, over 25 federal agencies participate during BIG's National Training Conference as a venue to provide pertinent agency-specific information. BIG's conference is attended by all nationalities. And, as an organization, we are proud of the attendees. The federal government knows it is good business to do business with BIG!
5 agree | 3 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Melanie Scarborough: �Colorblind� government a joke 2008-05-12 07:00:00.0 shows an apalling lack of research. First, none of the organizations are anything but membership organizations - they are not federally funded. Second, when they put on training they are just as any other vendor - motivated to attract the best and most learned teachers and present courses germane to the federal workforce. You need to hire a professional writer.
7 agree | 5 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
All major , big cities run by democrats are sinking big time start in Philadelphia, and go from there.
9 agree | 8 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I guess it is only supposed to work one way. You support RLUIPA which imposing religious "freedom" on secular zoning, but oppose a law which imposes secular law on religious freedom I do support your representation of religiouos groups, e.g., freedom for polygamists and goat sacrifice. This is not meant to be a tongue in cheek observation. Robert I. Rhodes, Chairman, Preserve Ramapo
15 agree | 16 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
�Well, it isn�t the mindset,� Scalia said, as later reported in a CBS online account of the exchange. �It�s what did the words mean to the people who ratified the Bill of Rights or who ratified the Constitution.� How does this differ from Obama's opinion? I'm of the opinion that a constitutional scholar's interpretation is more meassured than appointed court judges!
15 agree | 15 disagree
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Terrence Briggs (Gaithersburg) said:
"Part of everyone�s problem is that it has become acceptable to express only certain views, to follow only certain narratives, and if your private thoughts depart from these, you�d better keep �em private." It has not "become acceptable", Ms. Gurdon; it has ALWAYS been this way. Most polite adults realize that there are some comments and observations that you cannot share with mixed company. (Remember, there are four things that you can't discuss: religion, politics, s-x, and The Great Pumpkin.) Of course, that goes for liberals, conservatives, black, whites, men, women, and so on. I realized this in college.
20 agree | 18 disagree
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Barely About Barack said:
Ms. Gurdon said, "...if blacks lean toward black candidates, why, nothing could be more natural". You will be hard-pressed to find many black voters who leaned toward Al Sharpton. Fewer leaned toward Alan Keyes. Very few leaned toward BOTH. I mentioned this fact to my uncle, who suggested that black candidates are innately more in tune with the concerns of black voters, and he conceded the point.
20 agree | 21 disagree
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Thomas said:
Typical. The far- & rabid-left news elites (& all the other F/RL's, for that matter) condemn tyrannical capitalism, big companies, & anyone who disagrees with them-until they get bribes. It's almost like MTPPV: Mob Tactics Pay-Per-View. I'll be the first to admit that there is some of that with the right (Ann Coulter isn't quite that bad, but comes close), but this is ridiculous. It takes an accomplished liar & bigot to do something like this, then clame that they are completely unpartisan, followed by shooting down anyone who disagrees.
22 agree | 22 disagree
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Jim Schulman, Sustainable Community Initiatives said:
1) Mr. Ambrose, Genetically modified foods have been shown to do documented genetic damage to insects and plants in the vicinity of where they are grown, thereby potentially affecting whole species (e.g. killing Monarch Butterflys) and impacting ecosystems. People who eat the modified food may not be directly impacted, but could be indirectly affected. 2) For those who have paid attention over the last couple of years, the process that selected the Nevada nuke waste repository has been revealed to be heavy on strong-arm politics and somewhat scientifically-fudged. The hydrology of Yucca Mountain looks like it could be a protected site for maybe 300 years, not 100,000! A big ooops! The nuclear power industry is sadly still thus fatally flawed. Conservation, windmills, photovoltaics, wave, and tidal power are looking awfully worth our attention.
22 agree | 30 disagree
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Anti-Partisan said:
By the time I graduated college in Texas, I experienced more than enough partisan elitism from both sides. Gurdon touched on liberal bigotry, but doesn't seem very bothered by the misogynistic, xenophobic, negrophobic, anti-Semitic, and Islamophobic bigotry that also infects conservatives. Are the targets of such bigotry not "common" enough to be branded as "elitist"? And what could be more "elitist" than chauvanism, which infects conservatives, as well. Gurdon's shallow charge against liberal snobbery isn't holistic mirror-gazing, but chauvanistic navel-gazing.
26 agree | 31 disagree
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Efficiency is King said:
Challenging one of Jay's remarks: "To avert imagined catastrophic climate change, the Senate is considering a bill that would mandate reductions of greenhouse emissions by 66 percent over the next four decades...that could give us catastrophic social change...we would simply have to live with less energy, which is another way of saying we would have to live with less of everything: Health care, transportation, food, clothing, housing, you name it." This binary logic eats away at your argument, Jay. Do you honestly believe that it's impossible to be more efficient energy consumers? Efficient use of indoor climate control, gasoline, and water is already being done! Future growth is NOT directly proportional to past energy use. Economies don't crumble because the air conditioner isn't set below 70 in the summer. Educated consumers will adjust to a more efficient lifestyle. So let's educate, rather than complain.
26 agree | 26 disagree
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Todd (2 of 2) said:
In truth, Melonie never offer solutions, just her personal outrage based on her narrow and rather unworldly views. She would have us all believe that abortion is the only issue upon which to select a U.S. President. Tragically, to her and others, it may be. As for the rest of us, with a more balanced perspective on abortion throughout the history of the human race, we may choose to elect a president on all of the issues facing our country, world and future. We understand that compromise may be necessary where our beliefs with each candidate differ. The fact that Melonie believes that making abortions illegal will stop abortions proves her inability to understand the real abortion issue, just as making animal abuse illegal did not stop the two workers from hurting cows in California (or Michael Vick or tuna fisherman). Melonie doesn�t have solutions to the real problem, just a platform provided by The Examiner to make spurious arguments for her personal causes. I vote to fire her!
30 agree | 39 disagree
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Erica Jacobs said:
Fine essay! I like the small revisions you've made recently.
33 agree | 33 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
You are, quite simply, wrong in almost all of your ill thought out beliefs.
32 agree | 28 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Very well said. California should not be able to sue others repeatedly for infringment of its patents, and then claim "sovereign immunity" from suit by others when it is itself guilty of wholesale infringment. It is even more egregious when, as in this case, the State of California enacted legislation which made it illegal for any private licensee under the BPMC patent to practice the patented procedure in California without sharing its data (and proceeds) with the State. This effectively precluded many existing commercial labs (including Labcorp of America, Quest Diagnostics, and SmithKline Beecham) from continuing a portion of their lawful business activities within the state. In effect, California usurped the legitimate rights of the patentee to reap the rewards of activities within the state that are covered by the BPMC patent. That's just wrong, from any viewpoint - and certainly cannot be within the purvue of what was intended by the framers of the U.S. Constitution.
22 agree | 23 disagree
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Bill Evans said:
Re: "Looking for hope in the wrong face". Mehgan, You seem to have a very limited view on the world. Let me point out to you that the pope does not have exclusive rights on hope. He is not God and everyone is not Catholic. But everyone can have hope for a better country and a better future. My hope is that we can focus on lifting people up instead of tearing people down. Is that all you have to contribute to the conversation is negativity?
23 agree | 23 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Business leaders and owners could have prevented this legislation by ceasing their practice of preventing unionization of their organizations. It was their decision to spend the last 30 years thwarting workers interests, now, because of their failure to act prudently, they find themselves confronted with an outcome guided almost entirely by the interests of organized labor. Bush, will, of course, veto the bill when passed, so it's hard to see what all the whining and hysterics are all about. But, the days of being able to "run the table" against workers is likely coming to an end and wise businesses will get prepared to negotiate with organized labor rather than just attempt to defeat them.
26 agree | 26 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
This article is full of lies. CCA, for instance, doesn't operate prisons for 5-20% less than public prisons. A good study on the issue was done for the state of Arizona. The for-profit prison industry has 30 times as many escapes as do public prisons. They overbill the states with whom they contract for millions of dollars. They've gotten away with a lot more theft than the inmates they hold.
35 agree | 29 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
churches dont have to marry people they can go and be married by a judge or something although i am not for gay marriage::i think that if we were meant to have gay marriage we would all be the same sex:: yet i believe we should let the gays do whatever floats their boat... as long as it dosnt interfere with me
31 agree | 32 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Mr. Stirewalt has come to the rescue of the urbane and sophisticated perceptions of themselves and those outside the beltway. Scrolling through the comments we see "offense" at the notion that voters in the upcoming Appalachian Democratic primaries may actually confront racial concerns in casting the ballot. Shocking! What the readers certainly are determined to say is that such behavior could only be exhibited in the Republican primary.. Nevertheless, hard truths (which are not necessarily inconvenient)are sometimes difficult and jagged pills. More difficult to swallow for one reader who offers up that their own Appalachian heritage was impugned. This fine West Virginian (and yes, I am one too) should note the polls. His or her WV party's support goes overwhelmingly to Sen. Clinton. Beyond being difficult to swallow for the "offend-istas", these columns are truly refreshing for your readers. I welcome such common sensical, and pleasantly communicated, commentary.
31 agree | 30 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
its not the media,its an ignorant,de-educated,sheep mentality population that allows for a total takeover of brain cells.
31 agree | 28 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Surely some American journalists are pacifists; surely many are not. I do think, however, that inevitably, individual viewpoints bleed into all but the very finest reporting (and perhaps is necessarily reflected even there, too), and that we are kidding ourselves to assume otherwise.
30 agree | 26 disagree
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Conscious Reader said:
How will gay marriage spark lawsuits against churches? Churches, from my understanding, don't have to marry a "straight" couple, if they don't want to! Straight people that aren't married by a church aren't suing them to make them do it. Who would want to be married in a church they had to force to do it in the first place? Not me! The churches are trying to strong arm the law, and this is just wrong. Separation of church and state was for good cause. It is sad that years after those bandits drafted the Constitution, implicitly keeping the church from having power over the law, that we seem to actually be going backwards from their thinking...Are Americans "really" getting dumber? Are we really so hell bent on creating enemies, religion is fine with creating enemies, that we have to start doing it to our own citizens? First it was through slavery (sanctioned by the church), then Jim Crow (church), interacial marriage...I could go on. We have to better, this is a waste of time!
28 agree | 29 disagree
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Jonathan for Equality said:
If anti-marriage-equality lawyers expect to win cases on the merits of the arguments of Mr. Severino, they are in for a heap of trouble. Remember the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;" Severino argues that government employees may impose their religious beliefs on people seeking government services: "We need only look at Massachusetts for a preview of what to expect. There, in 2004, justices of the peace who refused to solemnize same-sex unions due to religious objections were summarily fired." What about justices of the peace who believe in marriage equality but work in states that have banned it? Would Mr. Severino defend their religious liberty? Also Mr. Severino, it's not charitable to refer to families as "families". Would you like to be referred to as a "lawyer" or a "Christian"?
28 agree | 35 disagree
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John D said:
I would ask Mr. Severino this: interfaith marriages are completely legal in the United States. Many clergy will not perform marriages for individuals who are not in their denominations. Where are the lawsuits? There are no grounds for retaliation against denominations that do not perform same-sex marriages. They have the right to continue to do so. They trample on the rights of others when they seek to block civil authorities from applying the laws equally or to block other clergy from blessing marriages as they see fit. The flip side of this argument is the clergy forbidden to perform marriages their denominations permit. That's real oppression on the basis of religious belief.
23 agree | 28 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Firstly I would like to point out that this article is not only discriminatory but highly offensive. When talking about adoption rights, the author suggests that gay couples are incapable of properly raising a child or that they may have negative influence on the child. Also, I would like to say that times are changing and, although we can respect religious beliefs, we cannot let them stand in the way of the progression of our nation as an accepting one. Additionally we should recall that the United States practices the separation of church and state. By allowing religious influences to be the deciding factor in our government's position regarding gay marriage, we are therefor allowing church and state to mix. Similarly, a judge's duty is to make decisions based on the law of the state, therefor the judge in question should have kept his personal religious beliefs aside, and performed the marriage. I was shocked and dissapointed upon reading this article.
27 agree | 35 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
is this a joke? Do you really want to insult, ridicule and stereotype that many people who vote for Senator Clinton? So who are the other 49.25% of the Democrats who voted for HRC... actually it is probably more because BHO has gotten many Indie and Republican votes. I guess you should know you have created a firestorm among the "hillbilly's" in W.Va. and elsewhere. This article is becoming a viral email campaign to get out the vote. Even some Obama supporters are insulted and threatening to change their vote. Nice Work, Thanks a bunch! Oh, If you could write a few more of these columns stating such well thought out stereotypical "insights" insulting other swaths of society we would all greatly appreciate it. Gotta luve the internets. It even lets us ol hillbilly's figur out stuf we nvr cudda lernt without it. you no how 2 yuse that thart spell chickin thingy?
35 agree | 33 disagree
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Unplug Close to Home said:
I'm sure it would be nice to pay for an excurison to Maine or the Carribbean, but there are plenty of places to unplug that are clsoe to D.C. that don't require a massive schedule change. Pretty much any place on the Eastern Shore, or in the Appalachian Mountains can be reached in less than a few hours. At least you won't have to worry about the price of gas that way.
35 agree | 32 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Ms. Gurdon's column reminds me of a vacation on (what my husband and I thought was) a remote beach in the Caribbean. As we walked along the beach while the moon rose and the waves crashed, we saw a beautiful woman walking in a sarong padding along in the sand clad alongside a handsome man, who was yacking into his blackberry and completely ignoring her. My husband and I thought about chucking his blackberry into the sea in her honor, but decided the guy was probably a lost cause.
36 agree | 29 disagree
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...But Rocky Backs McCain! said:
Why did Chris Stirewalt's "Rocky" column completely ignore the fact that Rocky's writer-director-lead actor (Sylvester Stallone) is backing John McCain? Does that mean McCain shares Rocky's view on race? Even worse, is this why Arizona was so resistant to celebrating Martin Luther King's birthday as a federal holiday?! This makes Obama's connection to Jared Wright seem downright quaint! Wright will never win an Oscar for his racially provocative sentiments. Stirewalt's last two columns are perpetrating a disturbing meme about Hillary Clinton: That she's courting white bigots. Heck, Bill Sammon pretty much parrotted Chris' "hillybilly" story last week. (I guess the editor must be doing his job, if he's sending out the foot soldier journalists to support the story the editors want promulgated.) What next? Will Clinton push for referenda to same-gender marriage, as Carl Rove apparently did in the 2004 election?
30 agree | 30 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
"There�s a lot of money to be made in the global warming lobbying game, but there will also be plenty of losers. Will those losers include PepsiCo�s shareholders?" Probably not. They can just pass on the cost to their customers because guess what? Coke is going down the same route. Now if Pepsi didn't do what they are doing they would still probably face higher costs since much of this stuff looks inevitable; however, Pepsi would not have built up brand loyalty of young trendy consumers the way it is now by kowtowing to Green demands. Hence they lose brand equity; and brand equity is a lot more valuable to Pepsi than fighting a probably unsuccessful effort to keep input costs low. sorry, looks like they are doing right by their shareholders.
34 agree | 30 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Dont compare doctors with truckers when it comes to a strike.This united states could be helped by the president if he would only help but he does nothing,years ago other presi