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Month: February 2006

An interesting op-ed piece about the recent cartoon craziness

Posted on February 6, 2006 By admin

Hindus consider it sacrilegious to eat meat from cows, so when a Danish supermarket ran a sale on beef and veal last fall, Hindus everywhere reacted with outrage. India recalled its ambassador to Copenhagen, and Danish flags were burned in Calcutta, Bombay, and Delhi. A Hindu mob in Sri Lanka severely beat two employees of a Danish-owned firm, and demonstrators in Nepal chanted: ''War on Denmark! Death to Denmark!”In many places, shops selling Dansk china or Lego toys were attacked by rioters, and two Danish embassies were firebombed.

It didn't happen, of course. Hindus may consider it odious to use cows as food, but they do not resort to boycotts, threats, and violence when non-Hindus eat hamburger or steak. They do not demand that everyone abide by the strictures of Hinduism and avoid words and deeds that Hindus might find upsetting. The same is true of Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Mormons: They don't lash out in violence when their religious sensibilities are offended. They certainly don't expect their beliefs to be immune from criticism, mockery, or dissent.

But radical Muslims do.

The current uproar over cartoons of the Muslim prophet Mohammed published in a Danish newspaper illustrates yet again the fascist intolerance that is at the heart of radical Islam. Jyllands-Posten, Denmark's largest daily, commissioned the cartoons to make a point about freedom of speech. It was protesting the climate of intimidation that had made it impossible for a Danish author to find an illustrator for his children's book about Mohammed. No artist would agree to illustrate the book for fear of being harmed by Muslim extremists. Appalled by this self-censorship, Jyllands-Posten invited Danish artists to submit drawings of Mohammed, and published the 12 it received.

Most of the pictures are tame to the point of dullness, especially compared to the biting editorial cartoons that routinely appear in US and European newspapers. A few of them link Mohammed to Islamist terrorism — one depicts him with a bomb in his turban, while a second shows him in Heaven, pleading with newly arrived suicide terrorists: ''Stop, stop! We have run out of virgins!” Others focus on the threat to free speech: In one, a sweating artist sits at his drawing board, nervously sketching Mohammed, while glancing over his shoulder to make sure he's not being watched.

That anything so mild could trigger a reaction so crazed — riots, death threats, kidnappings, flag-burnings — speaks volumes about the chasm that separates the values of the civilized world from those in too much of the Islamic world. Freedom of the press, the marketplace of ideas, the right to skewer sacred cows: Militant Islam knows none of this. And if the jihadis get their way, it will be swept aside everywhere by the censorship and intolerance of sharia.

Here and there, some brave Muslim voices have cried out against the book-burners. The Jordanian newspaper Shihan published three of the cartoons. ''Muslims of the world, be reasonable,” implored Shihan's editor, Jihad al-Momani, in an editorial. ''What brings more prejudice against Islam — these caricatures or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras?” But within hours Momani was out of a job, fired by the paper's owners after the Jordanian government threatened legal action.

He wasn't the only editor sacked last week. In Paris, Jacques LeFranc of the daily France Soir was also fired after running the Mohammed cartoons. The paper's owner, an Egyptian Copt named Raymond Lakah, issued a craven and Orwellian statement offering LeFranc's head as a gesture of ''respect for the intimate beliefs and convictions of every individual.” But the France Soir staff defended their decision to publish the drawings in a stalwart editorial. ''The best way to fight against censorship is to prevent censorship from happening,” they wrote. ''A fundamental principle guaranteeing democracy and secular society is under threat. To say nothing is to retreat.”

Across the continent, nearly two dozen other newspapers have joined in defending that principle. While Islamist clerics proclaim an ''international day of anger” or declare that ''the war has begun,” leading publications in Norway, France, Italy, Spain, Holland, Germany, Switzerland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic have reprinted the Danish cartoons. But there has been no comparable show of backbone in America, where (as of Friday) only the New York Sun has had the fortitude to the run some of the drawings.

Make no mistake: This story is not going away, and neither is the Islamofascist threat. The freedom of speech we take for granted is under attack, and it will vanish if it is not bravely defended. Today the censors may be coming for some unfunny Mohammed cartoons, but tomorrow it is your words and ideas they will silence. Like it or not, we are all Danes now.

It's an interesting read. I disagree with some points though. There are radicals in every religion. Think about the cruisades, the current silliness in the states regarding evolution. It is quite heavy handed at times, especially saying that it's the “civilized world vs muslim fundies” and talking about “islamofascism”… Anyway. The full text is below the cut.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/02/05/we_are_all_danes_now/

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[Recipe] Bagels!!!

Posted on February 5, 2006 By admin

I found a recipe for a little taste of home. I was dubious about the results for a while there, but dayum, they taste wonderlicious!

Yield: 9 bagels

INGREDIENTS

3 cups flour
2 tablespoons white sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 cup warm water
1 packet active dry yeast

3 quarts boiling water
3 tablespoons white sugar (to boil)
1 tablespoon cornmeal
1 egg white

DIRECTIONS

Combine flour, yeast, sugar, salt and water into a firm dough. Let it raise in warm area for 30 minutes. Once dough has raised, bring 3 quarts of water to boil in a large pot. Stir in 3 tablespoons sugar.

Cut dough into 9 equal pieces and roll each piece into a small ball. Flatten balls. Poke a hole in the middle with your thumb. Twirl the dough on your finger to enlarge the hole and to even out the dough around the hole. Cover bagels with a clean cloth and let rest for 10 minutes.

Sprinkle ungreased baking sheet with cornmeal. Carefully transfer bagels to boiling water. Boil for 1 minute, turning half-way through. Drain briefly on clean towel. Arrange boiled bagels on baking sheet. Glaze tops with egg white, and sprinkle with poppy seeds or another topping of your choice.

Bake in preheated 350°F oven for 20 – 25 minutes until well browned. Cool on wire rack.

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I hate the waiting…

Posted on February 3, 2006 By admin 5 Comments on I hate the waiting…

The cambridge property market is insane!

The property we went to see on monday has already been let. It was taken off the website this morning. There was another, identical, property that was listed yesterday. We went to see that one too to see if the view was better. Since I'd noticed that the one we were interested in had already been taken, we'd filled in all the forms, gotten a reference from the HR people at work and brought our checkbook.

At the time of writing this, there are at least 2 offers on the table, ours and another dudes. As we were leaving, I think that somebody else was also there to see it. What really pisses us off is that the agent was running late and the first dude visited the apartment with us. He stayed behind to fill in the forms and pay the fee because he saw us leave all the kit to the agent. If she'd been on time, I don't think he'd have made an offer today. Damn…

Anyway, I think the odds are in our favour (unless the oily little bugger of a man bribes the agent). We're a professional couple that both work within 5 minutes of the flat. He's a single parent who just wants a weekend place to have his kids around.

We should have an answer by the end of the day.

*finger crossed*

*toes crossed*

*bites nails*


Edit: Damn! Shit! Crap! POOOOOO!

We didn't get it. The landlord went with the other dude. Fucker.

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Yes of course this is hello?

Posted on February 3, 2006 By admin

Saw this in [info]userpicks. I confess that I couldn't stop watching it and was almost late for work.

I'm weird.

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Euromillions

Posted on February 3, 2006 By admin

Hee hee. We're 22 people at the office who are playing the euromillions. The jackpot is 125 million pounds. However, we do have a better chance of being eaten by a great white shark than winning, but hey :)

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Property updates

Posted on February 2, 2006 By admin 2 Comments on Property updates

I don't know why I'm afraid of our landlady. She's a lovely lady. She is. I told her that Katy'd found a job at the Sanger and that we weren't going to renew our contract because we'd found the perfect flat that reduced our commute from 25 minutes to 5, and it also let us have a cat, and that it was also a 3-bedroom semi. She said that she understood and was sad to see us go. I also said that the perfect property we saw was available now, so I kindly asked her if it would be possible to get out of our contract early.

She said that she had no problem with that provided she could get a tenant, so basically, she's going to start announcing the property now (I told her that we'd make certain to keep the place in a fit state to visit to give a good impression) and if she finds somebody, we can leave early, otherwise we pay the rent until april. It's a fair deal. I also told her that we planned to get a firm to come give the place a good scrub after we'd gotten all our stuff out. She said that we should coordinate on that as there are good places and bad ones, but I think she's happy about that.

I also mentioned the noise from the neighbours. I kinda feel bad about that because they are lovely people in person but bad neighbours. I told her about the conversations late at night, the frame-rattling walking and the fact that we had to make our TV louder so that we didn't have to listen to theirs. She was a bit surprised about that. I was really uncomfortable about that bit, to be honest, and I did mention that we spoke to them repeatedly about it and they made an effort for a little while, but quickly reverted to their old ways. I feel bad about getting them into trouble, I do.

Now, we're waiting from feedback from 3 letting agencies. Hope we get some good news.

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Duxford or Hinxton

Posted on February 1, 2006 By admin 18 Comments on Duxford or Hinxton

We went to see another property yesterday, in Duxford. It's about a 5 minute drive from the office (compared to the 5 minute walk for the Hinxton one). The property is on a newly built estate, about 3 years old. The neighborhood don't look all that grand, but that might be because it's on an old military base so there's not a whole lot to work with. The house itself looks wonderful. 3-story, 3 bedrooms, one with en-suite, one main bathroom, one toilet on the ground floor. The white goods are included are look nice. There's assloads of rooms and we can have a cat.

The only thing that isn't making me jump for joy is something that might be purely circumstantial, but doesn't make a good impression. Our immediate neighbour's car has the front grill bashed in and there was an empty bottle of beer left on the outdoor light right besides his door.

Like I said, there might be a perfectly good reason, but still… it looks bad. We're moving to get away from annoying neighbours. We don't want to do this again in 6 months… We're going to get in touch with the current tenant and see what her impressions are.

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