Monday, October 9th, 2006


In Appreciation & Social Justice & Respect For Diversity & Personal and Global Responsibility09 Oct 2006 06:49 pm
by Angry White Liberal

The Holocaust was an Arab story, too.

Yet when Arab leaders and their people deny the Holocaust, they deny their own history as well — the lost history of the Holocaust in Arab lands. It took me four years of research — scouring dozens of archives and conducting scores of interviews in 11 countries — to unearth this history, one that reveals complicity and indifference on the part of some Arabs during the Holocaust, but also heroism on the part of others who took great risks to save Jewish lives.

Neither Yad Vashem, Israel’s official memorial to Holocaust victims, nor any other Holocaust memorial has ever recognized an Arab rescuer. It is time for that to change. It is also time for Arabs to recall and embrace these episodes in their history. That may not change the minds of the most radical Arab leaders or populations, but for some it could make the Holocaust a source of pride, worthy of remembrance — rather than avoidance or denial.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/06/AR2006100601417.html

campaigns09 Oct 2006 06:03 pm
by karma432

The Greater Baltimore Urban League sponsored Maryland’s first three way debate including a third party candidate on Oct. 4. Senate candidates Ben Cardin (D), Michael Steele (R), and Kevin Zeese (G, L, P) spent two hours debating and fielding questions. By all accounts, Kevin Zeese won the debate.

Steele presented himself as an independent, asking people to judge him as a person. Cardin asked people to vote for him on the basis of “my record” although he played fast and loose with that record. Only Kevin ran on a vision for the future: getting off our oil addiction, taxing wealth instead of income, ensuring voting systems that we can trust.

All candidates had their share of raucus supporters, but Cardin’s supporteres became noticeably quieter as the night wore on. Kevin won over some of the undecided voters present. The Afro-American News. reported on one voter who commented that Zeese gave her pause for thought;

I liked what he talked about. I liked the values that he talked about. I liked the slate that he’s running on. So I haven’t made my mind up yet.

John Ford, a 39-year-old state employee, said although he came expecting to choose between Cardin and Steele, he also was impressed by Zeese’s performance.

The only real person that seemed genuine was Zeese. I was kind of split between Cardin and Steele, but Zeese was the better guy out of all three of them. I want somebody who’s going to care about people — genuine Americans,” he said. “Not somebody who’s already rich and once they get where they want to go, they forget about the people that put them there.

A video of the debate can be seen here.

A second three way debate is scheduled for October 25.


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