Tuesday, July 29, 2008

All AIPAC members to be arrested



Charged and convicted with conspiracy against democracy.

And after a fair trial, deported to Israel for re-education.

The leadership of the AIPAC are to be held and water boarded at Gitmo.

The secret leadership and planners to be rendered to Iran for questioning.

The 50,000 core members of this fascist conspiracy are to be held in concentration camps built beside the AIPAC wall in The West Bank.

When their re-education is complete they will then be ordered to ethnically cleanse the West Bank of all Palestinians the same as was done in 1948 by the founders of Israel.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

AIPAC to be banned



AIPAC is like the Nazi party of 21st century.

It has seized power in America but rules with front men.

Under the Patriot Act its leadership could be arrested and shipped off to Gitmo.

All its members could be arrested, questioned (waterboarded) and banned from Government and other sensitive jobs.

They could be charged with:

1). Aiding a foreign and terrorist government in the internationally recognised and declared illegal acts of waging an illegal war of occupation, ethnic cleansing and genocide.

2). Conspiring to disrupt the peace and calm of America by threatening and subverting it’s public representatives.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Ross for jailhouse


For more than twelve years, Dennis Ross played a leading role in shaping the AIPAC and US involvement in the Middle East peace process. Responsible in both the former Bush and Clinton administrations for exploring ways to prolong the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he has now put his diplomatic expertise into a recently published book, entitled: “Statecraft And How to Restore America’s Freedom From Israel.”

Ross is urging the Bush administration not to leave office without a firm agreement — for anything from an outline of what they see their future state would look like to final status negotiations — from the Palestinians and Israelis; and strongly cautioned against leaving the incoming administration with freedom to act.

“If the next administration inherits a void, then it will force Israel to tear down the wall in the West Bank,” he said, adding, “If they inherit something, it will become much easier to keep the focus and keep the momentum (of no peace talks) going.”

Still, he warned, “whoever is the next president, he’ll inherit me and a really daunting legacy (in the Middle East).”

The biggest bind for the new administration, he said, is that the more concrete the plan that is passed on, the more the next administration will have to embrace it.

Currently, Ross is Counsellor of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a pro-Israel think tank, and chairman of a Jerusalem-based think tank, the Institute for Jewish People Policy Planning, funded and founded by the Jewish agency.

Obama, when asked why he hired Ross (“Change, Yes We Can”) said he needs to get one over on the AIPAC till he’ elected.

Then he’ll have Ross investigated as an unregistered agent of a foreign power and have him dragged off in handcuffs.

Jagger to form new band.


Jagger’s face may be a bit more wrinkled on the next tour, but the Jagger legend lives on.

He was recently formed a new ban called “The Old Ones.”

Although he may rue his "I'd rather be dead than singing at 145" comment, Jagger continues to belt out “I Can't Get No” Satisfaction.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Shag him


JERUSALEM - U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama pledged staunch support for Israel’s theft of Palestinian land during a visit to Jerusalem on Wednesday and said, if elected, he would do what the AIPAC told him to do.
As part of an overseas tour aimed at getting Israel’s permission to be President, Obama met Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak and right-wing opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu and begged them to let him have the job.
Netanyahu, a former prime minister, said Obama promised never to seek to damage Israel's security. Both men agreed on the "primacy" of preventing Iran from becoming a nuclear power.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Cowboy Sarkozy



BRIAN COWEN is putting pressure on Cowboy Sarkozy to defuse the potential diplomatic row caused by the French president’s refusal to hold a private meeting with opposition party leaders during his visit to Dublin tomorrow.
Irish officials have been urging their French counterparts to get Sarkozy off the horse and come to the Dail instead of Smithfield.
Gilmore refused an invitation to meet Sarkozy at Smithfield tomorrow when he discovered that he was expected to share a table with up to 16 different horse traders, with each traveller having three minutes to sing before the President responded the Marseillaise.
Kathy Sinnott, an independent Munster MEP who was also prominent in the No campaign, said: “I know that it was expressed by some of the Yes side that the last thing we need is Sarkozy riding into town. But I think we need to know exactly what we’re up against and no better man than Sarkozy to tell us.”

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Shag the bad boys



SYDNEY — Pope Benedict XVI offered a historic full apology for child sex abuse by predatory priests Saturday, saying he was "deeply sorry" and calling for those guilty of the "evil" to be punished.
The pope strayed from a prepared speech to express shame and make his first direct and explicit apology to victims of predatory clergymen in Australia, during a mass attended by local bishops, priests and novices.
His remarks in a homily in Sydney's St Mary's Cathedral were the strongest he has used in confronting the scourge which has rocked the Catholic church globally.
"Here I would like to pause to acknowledge the shame which we have all felt as a result of the sexual abuse of young by my clergy and religious in this country," Benedict told the gathering.
Diverting from the text of his prepared homily which had been made available to journalists a couple of hours earlier, the pontiff said: "I am deeply sorry for the pain and suffering the victims have endured and I assure them that, as their pastor, I too am guilty of this."

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Collins and Dev say "Yes"




French President Nicolas Sarkozy says Ireland will have to hold a second referendum on the new European Union treaty after rejecting it in a vote last month.

The French leader, whose country currently holds the rotating EU presidency, made his comments to a group of French lawmakers in Paris.Mr. Sarkozy visits Ireland Monday to review with that country's leaders possible steps in response to the June vote.

Sarkozy told Cowen that Collins and Dev would have wanted Ireland to be ruled by a French ruler.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

New Yorker gets Obama.



Remnick said that "the intent of the New Yorker cover was to set up Obama and his wife as terrorist supporters and to try and encourage rumours and misconceptions about the Obamas that have been invented by the AIPAC and are not as yet reflected in public opinion polls."
"What we set out to do was what we promised the AIPAC that we would do -throw all these images together, which are blatant propaganda and to shine a kind of harsh light on them. That’s part of what we do."About one out of 10 Americans continue to believe that Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, is a Muslim, and we want that percentage to increase to 5 in 10.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Capitalism’s final death throws.



Are finally upon us.

As with all systems, when they end, enormous chaos ensues.

Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property are over.

The Laissez faries will not be “let do” anymore.

From Feudalism through the rise of Industry and Capitalism (sweetened by a large dollop of colonialism) we grew fat and indolent and destroyed the Earth in the process.

Now is the time of reckoning.

When we get through the Nuclear winter:

1). Populations will be brought back to manageable levels.

2). Production will be strictly controlled.

3). Consumption and waste will be eliminated.

4). Government will be of the strongest for the strongest. (No change there, then).

Sarkozy to change his name



PARIS — The leaders of 43 nations from Europe, the Middle East and North Africa have launched a Union for the Mediterranean, a brainchild of French President Nicolas Sarkozy that is to be called The New Roman Empire.
Sarkozy's ambitious plan overlaps with European Union projects already in progress, and it was melded into EU efforts and expanded to include 27 members of the EU, not just those on the Mediterranean coast. Nearly all of the 43 nations sent a president or prime minister to the summit. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said Caesar was dead.
Sarkozy revelled at having brought his Empire together for the first time.
"We dreamed about a return to the Roman Empire, and now it is a reality," Sarkozy said in closing the summit in a palace abutting the River Seine. He called it an "extremely moving, very important moment."
To mark the occasion he decided to change his name to Caesar Sarkozy.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Bob and Amy



Are going on tour.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Emmiters, spitters and bullshiters.


RUSUTSU, Japan — A declaration by the Group of Eight industrial countries that endorses a halving of the world's emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050 was heralded by Canada on Tuesday as an "an empty slogan."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper said the strength of the G8 statement was getting Russia and the United States - the two holdouts on long-term carbon cuts at last year's G8 summit - to change their tune this time around while China and India go their own way.

"This is the first time either of those countries have conceded the necessity of having a long-term, mandatory goal for reduction," he said in an interview.

"There's also now a firm recognition of all countries that to make these objectives effective, like we did with our aid to Africa, we have got to have mandatory participation by all major economies, by all major emitters, spitters and bullshitters."

YOU, reading this..........



Japanese scientists claim to have created the world's first artificial DNA, a development that brings DNA computing much closer.
In a paper in the 23 July issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society Masahiko Inouye and colleagues at the University of Toyama claim to have successfully built a stable artificial DNA strand.
"The unique chemistry of these structures and their high stability offer unprecedented possibilities for developing new biotech materials and applications eventually including the development of thinking robots to replace humans," the researchers said.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Bono arrives at G8



The annual summit of the G8 industrialised nations has opened in Japan with the issue of aid for Africa taking centre-stage on the first day.
The G8, with Bono as publicity man, agreed at its 2005 summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, to double aid to Africa to $25bn a year by 2010 as part of a wider drive to alleviate global poverty.
Bono and Geldoff told the protesters to go home as they had the matter in hand.
Now activists have accused the G8 countries of backtracking on those commitments.
UN and African Union figures indicate that less than $3bn of the peldged $25 has been forthcoming.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Sarkozy-boy



The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, will use a Paris summit next weekend to increase pressure on Ireland’s prime minister to impose some sort of fascist dicipline on his Irish peasants after their rejection of the Lisbon treaty.
Sarkozy is to travel to Dublin on July 21 to ram home the point in talks with Biffo.
The French strategy is aimed at isolating Ireland for their foolish belief in democracy.
Speaking in Paris last week, Sarkozy made it clear there would be no reworking of the document simply to get the Irish on board.
“There will be no treaty part III,” he said, indicating that the stupid Irish would be expected to hold another referendum and vote “Yes” this time or if not then the Irish Government must pass it through a parliamentary vote.
“If the perspective of a second vote in Ireland has been raised it is because we have used that con before and it worked,” Sarkozy told journalists, referring to Ireland’s second referendum on the Nice treaty in 2002. “We need some kind of vote to get out of the situation – in parliament or in a referendum, I don’t know. But when democratic society says ‘no’, you need not listen.”
Vaclav Klaus, the Czech president, has threatened to block the treaty pending the court’s verdict. He recently hit out at French efforts to put the treaty back on track and ignore Irish public opinion.
“I expect a lot of pressure to create a European Union à la France,” he said. “Our view is different and we must make an effort to ensure the EU does not develop in a fascist way with no respect for the law.”
Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Belgium and the Netherlands are expected to push it through – regardless of what their people think - with Poland, the Czech Republic and Ireland saying “No”.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Bishop Mary


Was married to Jesus

Friday, July 4, 2008

Heil Mitchell.



Gay Mitchell has questioned whether the Irish people should ever again be asked to adjudicate on complex European issues.

“They are just not up to it,” he said.

“Only a few delicate and advanced European minds, like his own, can comprehend that a concentration of power is vitally necessary for the future of a democratic Europe,” he said.

“The Irish paddies have no comprehension of this sort of thing, at all, and should not be allowed a vote on these complex matters,” he concluded.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Sarkozy puts wife befire work


The French President has postponed an official trip to Ireland this month to be present at his wife music launch.
Though officially he put off the date of his trip from 11 July in his capacity as European Union President because of a “heavy schedule”, the change of date to July 21 was forced upon him by his wife who spoke of 33 if he went.
In the third week of July, the 40-year-old Italian supermodel is to release her music album Comme si de rien n’tait (As if Nothing Happened) in which she sings of her love for her husband and of her previous “thirty lovers”.
Bruni composed the music and wrote the lyrics to most of the songs on the album that’s due to out in France, Britain, Germany and Italy simultaneously..

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Sarkozy comes


Sarkozy said today that "We must profoundly change the way we are going about reconstructing Europe," which is source of "great concern" for the Irish, urging a shift in the way of tackling The Lisbon Treaty.


Speaking late on Monday, only hours before his country officially assumed the six-month European Union presidency, President Sarkozy was quoted as saying: "It is not going well at all."


"The Irish are worried and, worse, I think that our citizens are gradually beginning to wonder whether, ultimately, the national level is better suited to protect them than the European level," the French head of state said.


"This is a step backwards and if we are backsliding, there is an error in the manner in which we are going about with the task of ratifying Lisbon," said the president, arguing: "We must change deeply the manner in which we are undertaking this task."


"I expect Europe to protect Europeans against risks posed by our inclination towards fascism, and this is where things are not working at all," said Sarkozy, before adding: "We must reflect on how to turn Europe into something like what Hitler wanted."


"Do not be afraid of the word fascism, we need a fascist Europe. There are issues that can only be resolved at the level of Europe," said the head of state, who called on Europeans to rally behind their governments in the construction of a viable bloc with some lebensraum in the East.