Dr. Aaron Lerner Date: 18 April 2013
“I believe the window for a two-state solution is shutting…I think we have
some period of time, a year, a year-and-a-half, or two years or it’s over.”
US Secretary of State John Kerry to the US House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee 17 April 2013
Hope he is right that the window for a two-state solution is shutting.
There is a
jawdropping expose in the Miami Herald today. Why has the full truth about Saudi Arabia and the 9/11 attacks not yet been told? And why is the FBI working so furiously to make sure the true story never makes the light of day?
Thanks to the dogged pursuit by BrowardBulldog.org of these documents under the Freedom of Information act, the release shows “information contained in the documents flatly contradicts prior statements by FBI agents in Miami and Tampa who have said the investigation found no evidence connecting the al-Hijjis to the hijackers or the 9/11 plot.”
Who are they working for, anyway? Read the entire article — it’s astounding and deeply disturbing.
By Ted Belman
As we know the Obama administration protected the Muslim Brotherhood and attacked al Qaeda. One of he tools it has used is to outlaw the use of words like Islamist and Jihad from government discourse. But is this can be problematic. Obama himself broke ranks with his policy, after releasing a Saudi citizen under questionable circumstances, by calling the bombings of the Boston Marathon, terrorism.
That last attribute of terrorism is the cause of the Obama administration’s paralyzing misgivings about the T-word. The president is mulishly determined to cultivate Islamic-supremacist governments and movements like the Muslim Brotherhood. The stubborn problem is that al Qaeda — the only Muslim outfit the administration seems willing to hang the “terrorist” label on — is also Islamic-supremacist. That is, al Qaeda is adherent to the same ideology — based on sharia, Islam’s legal code and societal framework — as the groups the administration considers “allies” and “moderates.”
(Read more…)