Thursday 29 November 2012

Elites Will Make Gazans of Us All


Elites Will Make Gazans of Us All

By Chris Hedges

 Nov. 28th, 2012





















Gaza is a window on our coming dystopia. The growing divide between the world’s elite and its miserable masses of humanity is maintained through spiraling violence. Many impoverished regions of the world, which have fallen off the economic cliff, are beginning to resemble Gaza, where 1.6 million Palestinians live in the planet’s largest internment camp. These sacrifice zones, filled with seas of pitifully poor people trapped in squalid slums or mud-walled villages, are increasingly hemmed in by electronic fences, monitored by surveillance cameras and drones and surrounded by border guards or military units that shoot to kill. These nightmarish dystopias extend from sub-Saharan Africa to Pakistan to China. They are places where targeted assassinations are carried out, where brutal military assaults are pressed against peoples left defenseless, without an army, navy or air force. All attempts at resistance, however ineffective, are met with the indiscriminate slaughter that characterizes modern industrial warfare.

In the new global landscape, as in Israel’s occupied territories and the United States’ own imperial projects in Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan, massacres of thousands of defenseless innocents are labeled wars. Resistance is called a provocation, terrorism or a crime against humanity. The rule of law, as well as respect for the most basic civil liberties and the right of self-determination, is a public relations fiction used to placate the consciences of those who live in the zones of privilege. Prisoners are routinely tortured and “disappeared.” The severance of food and medical supplies is an accepted tactic of control. Lies permeate the airwaves. Religious, racial and ethnic groups are demonized. Missiles rain down on concrete hovels, mechanized units fire on unarmed villagers, gunboats pound refugee camps with heavy shells, and the dead, including children, line the corridors of hospitals that lack electricity and medicine.

The impending collapse of the international economy, the assaults on the climate, the resulting droughts, flooding, precipitous decline in crop yields and rising food prices are creating a universe where power is divided between the narrow elites, who hold in their hands sophisticated instruments of death, and the enraged masses. The crises are fostering a class war that will dwarf anything imagined by Karl Marx. They are establishing a world where most will be hungry and live in fear, while a few will gorge themselves on delicacies in protected compounds. And more and more people will have to be sacrificed to keep this imbalance in place.

Because it has the power to do so, Israel—as does the United States—flouts international law to keep a subject population in misery. The continued presence of Israeli occupation forces defies nearly a hundred U.N. Security Council resolutions calling for them to withdraw. The Israeli blockade of Gaza, established in June 2007, is a brutal form of collective punishment that violates Article 33 of the Fourth 1949 Geneva Convention, which set up rules for the “Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.” The blockade has turned Gaza into a sliver of hell, an Israeli-administered ghetto where thousands have died, including the 1,400 civilians killed in the Israeli incursion of 2008. With 95 percent of factories shut down, Palestinian industry has virtually ceased functioning. The remaining 5 percent operate at 25 to 50 percent capacity. Even the fishing industry is moribund. Israel refuses to let fishermen travel more than three miles from the coastline, and within the fishing zone boats frequently come under Israeli fire. The Israeli border patrols have seized 35 percent of the agricultural land in Gaza for a buffer zone. The collapsing infrastructure and Israeli seizure of aquifers mean that in many refugee camps, such as Khan Yunis, there is no running water. UNRWA (the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East) estimates that 80 percent of all Gazans now rely on food aid. And the claim of Israeli self-defense belies the fact that it is Israel that maintains an illegal occupation and violates international law by carrying out collective punishment of Palestinians. It is Israel that chose to escalate the violence when during an incursion into Gaza earlier this month its forces fatally shot a 13-year-old boy. As the world breaks down, this becomes the new paradigm—modern warlords awash in terrifying technologies and weapons murdering whole peoples. We do the same in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.

Market forces and the military mechanisms that protect these forces are the sole ideology that governs industrial states and humans’ relationship to the natural world. It is an ideology that results in millions of dead and millions more displaced from their homes in the developing world. And the awful algebra of this ideology means that these forces will eventually be unleashed on us, too. Those who cannot be of use to market forces are considered expendable. They have no rights and legitimacy. Their existence, whether in Gaza or blighted postindustrial cities such as Camden, N.J., is considered a drain on efficiency and progress. They are viewed as refuse. And as refuse they not only have no voice and no freedom; they can be and are extinguished or imprisoned at will. This is a world where only corporate power and profit are sacred. It is a world of barbarism.

“In disposing of man’s labor power the system would, incidentally, dispose of the physical, psychological, and moral entity ‘man’ attached to that tag,” Karl Polanyi wrote in “The Great Transformation.” “Robbed of the protective covering of cultural institutions, human beings would perish from the effects of social exposure; they would die as the victims of acute social dislocation through vice, crime, and starvation. Nature would be reduced to its elements, neighborhoods and landscapes defiled, rivers polluted, military safety jeopardized, the power to produce food and raw materials destroyed. Finally, the market administration of purchasing power would periodically liquidate business enterprise, for shortages and surfeits of money would prove as disastrous to business as floods and droughts in primitive society. Undoubtedly, labor, land, and money markets are essential to a market economy. But no society could stand the effects of such a system of crude fictions even for the shortest stretch of time unless its human and natural substance as well as its business organization was protected against the ravages of this satanic mill.”

There are 47.1 million Americans who depend on food stamps to eat. The elites are plotting to take these food stamps away, along with other “entitlement” programs that keep the poor from destitution. The slashing of trillions of dollars from Medicare, Medicaid and other social programs, given the political impasse in Washington and the looming “fiscal cliff,” now seems certain. There are 50 million people considered to be living below the poverty line, but because the poverty line is so low—$22,350 for a family of four—this figure means nothing. Add the tens of millions of Americans who live in a category called “near poverty,” including all those families attempting to live on less than $45,000 a year, and you have at least 30 percent of the country living in poverty. Once these people figure out that there is no economic recovery, that their standard of living is going to continue to drop, that they are trapped, that hope in the future is an illusion, they will become as angry as protesters in Greece and Spain or the militants in Gaza or Afghanistan. Banks and other financial corporations, handed trillions in interest-free money from the Federal Reserve, meanwhile hoard $5 trillion, much of it looted from the U.S. Treasury. The longer this worldwide disparity and inequality is perpetuated, the more the masses will revolt and the faster we will internally replicate the Israeli model of domestic control—drones overhead, all dissent criminalized, SWAT teams busting through doors, deadly force as an acceptable form of subjugation, food used as a weapon, and constant surveillance.

In Gaza and other blighted parts of the globe we see this new configuration of power. What is happening in Gaza, like what is happening to people of color in marginal communities in the United States, is the model. The techniques of control, whether carried out by the Israelis or militarized police units in our inner-city drug wars, whether employed by military special forces or mercenaries in Pakistan, Afghanistan or Iraq, are tested first and perfected on the weak and the powerless. Our callous indifference to the plight of the Palestinians, and the hundreds of millions of poor packed into urban slums in Asia or Africa, as well as our own underclass, means that the injustices visited on them will be visited on us. In failing them we fail ourselves.

As the U.S. empire implodes, the harsher forms of violence employed on the outer reaches of empire are steadily migrating back to the homeland. At the same time, the internal systems of democratic governance have calcified. Centralized authority has devolved into the hands of an executive branch that slavishly serves global corporate interests. The press and the government’s judiciary and legislative branches have become toothless and decorative. The specter of terrorism, as in Israel, is used by the state to divert gargantuan expenditures to homeland security, the military and internal surveillance. Privacy is abolished. Dissent is treason. The military with its mantra of blind obedience and force characterizes the dark ethic of the wider culture. Beauty and truth are abolished. Culture is degraded into kitsch. The emotional and intellectual life of the citizenry is ravaged by spectacle, the tawdry and salacious, as well as by handfuls of painkillers and narcotics. Blind ambition, a lust for power and a grotesque personal vanity—exemplified by David Petraeus and his former mistress—are the engines of advancement. The concept of the common good is no longer part of the lexicon of power. This, as the novelist J.M. Coetzee writes, is “the black flower of civilization.” It is Rome under Diocletian. It is us. Empires, in the end, decay into despotic, murderous and corrupt regimes that finally consume themselves. And we, like Israel, are now coughing up blood. 


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


Monday 26 November 2012

Ticket 2 English Student’s Book

Ticket 2 English Student’s Book









Overview:

Welcome to Ticket 2 English! This textbook provides you with different language activities to improve your English. You will find throughout the book many lessons, tasks and exercises to learn and practise the language. Each unit in the book evolves around a topic of interest to you and provides sufficient practice in the four language skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing.

Ticket 2 English also offers you other activities that aim at developing your life skills in general and linguistic ones in particular. Our aim is to help you improve your study skills and become an independent learner, especially because this year you will sit for your Baccalaureate and get prepared for your higher studies,

Each unit contains 7 activities and each activity uses a different background colour. These activities will help you to:

Expand your Vocabulary: review vocabulary and learn new words and expressions.

Listen and Speak: listen to different texts and boost your communication skills through this activity.

Read and Learn: read various texts and develop reading comprehension skills.

Study Grammar: review and consolidate grammatical structures and their uses.

Practise Writing: practise and develop your writing skills.

Study Skills: learn how to learn and develop your study skills.

Explore Culture: explore and learn about cultural aspects from different cultures.

After units 2,4,6,8,10 you will find two extra activities to:

Work out your Project: use what you have learnt in English lo produce a project.

Check your Progress: check and review what you have learnt in the two previous units.

At the end of your book, you will find four extra reading texts specifically designed for students in the Arts and Humanities streams. There is also a grammar reference, a list of common phrasal verbs, a list of irregular verbs and an index.



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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Epub 25th November 2012

Epub 25th November 2012










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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


Epub 24th November 2012

Epub 24th November 2012










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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


Epub 23rd November 2012

Epub 23rd November 2012










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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Saturday 24 November 2012

The Year That Follows Scott Lasser

The Year That Follows  Scott Lasser










Overview:

“A taut, masterfully controlled and profoundly moving novel about family ties—blood or otherwise… A novel with barely a wasted word or an emotion that doesn’t ring true.” Kirkus Reviews

“Scott Lasser’s succinct writing underscores the quiet emotional intensity of “The Year That Follows,” his tender novel about the powerful, complicated ties of family.” –Diane White, The Boston Globe

“A rich, complex tribute to the forces that bind families together and too often tear them apart.”–James Pressley, Bloomberg

The story of a woman's search for her brother's lost son, orphaned in the wake of his sudden death, drives Scott Lasser's riveting novel - a work of stunning economy and momentum about a woman's quest and a family's longing for wholeness and completion. Cat is a single mother living in Detroit when her brother is killed in New York, and she sets off in search of his child. Her search is still under way when she gets a call from her father. Sam is eighty and carrying the weight of a secret he has kept from Cat all her life. He asks her to visit him in California, intending to make his peace. Cat's journey - toward her father, and her brother's infant son - and Sam's journey toward his daughter, his lost son, and a new relationship to both his future and his past are woven into this superbly realized novel about families and the mysteries and ambiguities that inhere in our most primal relations. The result is a deeply stirring work that explores the complexities of home and heritage, and the bonds that even death is powerless to diminish.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Epub December 2nd 2012

Epub December 2nd 2012










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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Friday 23 November 2012

Dreaming in Public Amy Schrager Lang


Dreaming in Public  Amy Schrager Lang






Overview:

Dreaming in Public has accomplished an amazing feat: holding this book in your hands, you can feel the vitality, creativity, candor and collective puzzling and inclusive determination that is making the Occupy movement one of the most influential social movements of our times. This is a book that is both revealing and energizing.

The history of this movement will be written – and re-written – many times over in the future. For now, thankfully, New Internationalist has archived some of the important primary sources.

A stunningly comprehensive compilation of materials, from public statements to engaged reportage, essays focused on analysis and strategy, and documentation of the visual culture of the movement. Neither a narrative of the events nor an observer analysis but an assembly of primary sources - the ‘raw materials’ that developed within the movement.

Created by two New York-based Occupy movement participants, Amy Schrager Lang and Daniel Lang/Levitsky, the book includes contributions from a wealth of protagonists, including Barbara Kingsolver, Naomi Klein, Sara Paretsky, Lemony Snicket, and Staughton Lynd.

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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Epub 22nd November 2012

Epub 22nd November 2012









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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Epub 21st November 2012

Epub 21st November 2012







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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Damaged Cathy Glass

Damaged  Cathy Glass







Overview:

"Heartbreaking." The Mirror

"A true tale of hope." OK!

"A truly harrowing read that made me cry – and angry."The Sun

"A hugely touching and emotional true tale."
Star Magazine

"Foster carers rarely get the praise they deserve, but Cathy Glass’s book should change all that."
First Magazine

"Damaged is the best book I've read for a year. I was extremely moved by it and also uplifted. I am looking forward to her next book." Warren, Auckland, NZ  Times on Line

Although Jodie is only eight years old, she is violent, aggressive, and has already been through numerous foster families. Her last hope is Cathy Glass. At the Social Services office, Cathy (an experienced foster carer) is pressured into taking Jodie as a new placement. 


Jodie's challenging behaviour has seen off five carers in four months. Despite her reservations, Cathy decides to accept Jodie to protect her from being placed in an institution. Jodie arrives, and her first act is to soil herself, and then wipe it on her face, grinning wickedly. Jodie meets Cathy's teenage children, and greets them with a sharp kick to the shins. That night, Cathy finds Jodie covered in blood, having cut her own wrist, and smeared the blood over her face. As Jodie begins to trust Cathy her behaviour improves. 

Over time, with childish honesty, she reveals details of her abuse at the hands of her parents and others. It becomes clear that Jodie's parents were involved in a sickening paedophile ring, with neighbours and Social Services not seeing what should have been obvious signs. Unfortunately Jodie becomes increasingly withdrawn, and it's clear she needs psychiatric therapy. Cathy urges the Social Services to provide funding, but instead they decide to take Jodie away from her, and place her in a residential unit. Although the paedophile ring is investigated and brought to justice, Jodie's future is still up in the air. Cathy promises that she will stand by her no matter what -- her love for the abandoned Jodie is unbreakable.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Thursday 22 November 2012

Wherever Grace is Needed Elizabeth Bass


Wherever Grace is Needed  Elizabeth Bass





Overview:

In this thoroughly heart-warming novel, Elizabeth Bass-author of Miss You Most of All-creates an unforgettable story of friendship, compassion, and the extraordinary love that lies at the heart of every ordinary family.

When Grace Oliver leaves Portland for Austin, Texas, to help her father, Lou, recuperate from a car accident, she expects to stay just a few weeks. Since her mother’s divorce thirty years ago, Grace has hovered on the periphery of the Oliver family. But now she sees a chance to get closer to her half-brothers and the home she’s never forgotten.

But the Olivers are facing a crisis. Tests reveal that Lou, a retired college professor whose sharp tongue and tenderness Grace adores, is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Grace delays her departure to care for him, and is soon entwined in the complicated lives of her siblings-all squabbling over Lou’s future-and of the family next door…

Ray West and his three children are reeling from a recent tragedy, particularly sixteen-year-old Jordan, whose grief is heightened by guilt and anger. Amid the turmoil, Grace not only gives solace and support, but learns to receive it. And though she came to Austin to reconnect with her past, she is drawn by degrees into surprising new connections.

With wit, wisdom, and unfailing insight, Elizabeth Bass tells a story of loving and letting go, of heartache and hope, and of the joy that comes in finding a place we can truly call home.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



The Old Man and the Wasteland Nick Cole


The Old Man and the Wasteland  Nick Cole





Overview:

Forty years after the destruction of civilization... Man is reduced to salvaging the ruins of a broken world. One man’s most prized possession is Hemingway’s Classic ‘The Old Man and the Sea.’ With the words of the novel echoing across the wasteland, a survivor of the Nuclear Holocaust journeys into the unknown to break a curse.

What follows is an incredible tale of survival and endurance.
One man must survive the desert wilderness and mankind gone savage to discover the truth of Hemingway’s classic tale of man versus nature.
Part Hemingway, part Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, a suspenseful odyssey into the dark heart of the Post-Apocalyptic American southwest.

In Wasteland, we follow The Old Man, which is the only name we are given for this character. He hails from a village skirting a highway, forty some odd years after a great war occurred, with many cities wiped out and humanity grasping desperately at the last shreds of civilization. Cue the familiar scenes of post-apocalypse America, irradiated cities, savage bands of survivors, empty desert landscapes. Through all this The Old Man scavenges for scraps just as Santiago scavenged for fish.

Written in a style that owes far more to Hemingway than it does McCarthy, Wasteland is a page-turner, albeit a quick one. The prose is simple, with small bursts of eloquent description only when is necessary. It really does read like a classic novel. Not to pick on McCarthy too much, but it is a refreshing contrast to The Road, in that the story is not a hopeless, meandering slog through futility, despair and death, all aimed at getting people to see how great the author is at writing. There is real story, real heart here.
Written in the Stars Carly Syms


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



The Mountain Between Us Charles Martin


The Mountain Between Us  Charles Martin





Overview:

From the author of Where the River Ends, comes this page-turning story of love and survival.

On a stormy winter night, two strangers wait for a flight at the Salt Lake City airport.  Ashley Knox is an attractive, successful writer, who is flying East for her much anticipated wedding.  Dr. Ben Payne has just wrapped up a medical conference and is also eager to get back East for a slate of surgeries he has scheduled for the following day.   When the last outgoing flight is cancelled due to a broken de-icer and a forthcoming storm, Ben finds a charter plane that can take him around the storm and drop him in Denver to catch a connection.   And when the pilot says the single engine prop plane can fit one more, if barely, Ben offers the seat to Ashley knowing that she needs to get back just as urgently.   And then the unthinkable happens.  The pilot has a heart attack mid-flight and the plane crashes into the High Uintas Wilderness-- one of the largest stretches of harsh and remote land in the United States.

Ben, who has broken ribs and Ashley, who suffers a terrible leg fracture, along with the pilot's dog, are faced with an incredibly harrowing battle to survive.   Fortunately, Ben is a medical professional and avid climber (and in a lucky break, has his gear from a climb earlier in the week).  With little hope for rescue, he must nurse Ashley back to health and figure out how they are going to get off the mountain, where the temperature hovers in the teens.   Meanwhile, Ashley soon realizes that the very private Ben has some serious emotional wounds to heal as well.  He explains to Ashley that he is separated from his beloved wife, but in a long standing tradition, he faithfully records messages for her on his voice recorder reflecting on their love affair.  As Ashley eavesdrops on Ben's tender words to his estranged wife she comes to fear that when it comes to her own love story, she's just settling.  And what's more: she begins to realize that the man she is really attracted to, the man she may love, is Ben.

As the days on the mountains become weeks, their survival become increasingly perilous.  How will they make it out of the wilderness and if they do, how will this experience change them forever?

Both a tender and page-turning read, The Mountain Between Us will reaffirm your belief in the power of love to sustain us.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



The Final Piece Maggi Myers


The Final Piece  Maggi Myers





Overview:

Elizabeth Bradshaw has spent her life picking up the the pieces of her delicate past and hiding them. Her secrecy has worked until the day Beth receives word that her only confidant, Tommy, has been killed. Devastated, she leaves her new life behind to embark on a pilgrimage home for Tommy’s funeral.

When faced, yet again, with more pieces to pick up and pack away, Beth begins to question the choice to keep everyone in life at arm’s length.

As Beth reconnects with Ryan, Tommy’s nephew, she begins a journey that will unearth her secrecy and teach her grace, love and forgiveness.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



One Man's Bible Gao Xingjian


One Man's Bible Gao Xingjian





Overview:

Like another Nobel Prize winner, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Gao Xingjian, China's leading novelist and playwright, mixes autobiographical details with fictional techniques to create indelible portraits of daily life under a harsh, dehumanizing political regime. In One Man's Bible, Gao gives us a profound meditation on a life marked by personal and political trauma.


The nameless narrator of the novel -- which begins in contemporary Hong Kong -- is clearly Gao himself. In the intimate aftermath of a sexual encounter, Gao revisits the central moments of his life, traveling, in memory, to the Beijing of his childhood, a childhood scarred at the age of ten by his mother's accidental drowning. From emblematic moments like this, Gao's memory ranges across time and space, gradually illuminating the nature of life before, during, and after China's disastrous Cultural Revolution.

Gao Xingjian is one of the most eloquent, authoritative voices of 20th-century China, and his personal, political, and aesthetic musings shine a light on a world that very few Westerners have ever truly understood. Ultimately, through his honesty and his artistry, Gao locates the common ground connecting us all in this memorable, universal novel about "the perplexities of being human."


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Soul Mountain Gao Xingjian


Soul Mountain Gao Xingjian





Overview:

In 1983, Chinese playwright, critic, fiction writer, and painter Gao Xingjian was diagnosed with lung cancer and faced imminent death.B ut six weeks later, a second examination revealed there was no cancer -- he had won "a second reprieve from death." Faced with a repressive cultural environment and the threat of a spell in a prison farm, Gao fled Beijing and began a journey of 15,000 kilometers into the remote mountains and ancient forests of Sichuan in southwest China. The result of this epic voyage of discovery is Soul Mountain.

Bold, lyrical, and prodigious, Soul Moutain probes the human soul with an uncommon directness and candor and delights in the freedom of the imagination to expand the notion of the individual self.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



What You Don't See In The Media About Gaza

What You Don't See In The Media About Gaza



As Obama tours Southeast Asia to strengthen his alliances against China, Gazans are being killed and maimed by the hundreds, with the possibility of an incredibly bloody Israeli invasion. The United States still wields tremendous power internationally; its actions and inactions have direct consequences in international conflicts.

With this in mind, consider President Obama’s words on the conflict coupled with his inaction:  ”Let’s understand what the precipitating event here was that’s causing the current crisis, and that was an ever-escalating number of [Gazan] missiles…”

This is an incredible lie. It’s also an especially critical lie, since war crimes weigh heavier on those who fired the first shot.

The truth of the matter has been admitted by several mainstream media sources, including The New York Times. Israel purposely started the conflict by a planned assassination of Hamas’ top military leader, Ahmed Jaabari, who was killed while acting as the lead negotiator for Hamas, working on an Egyptian brokered peace deal with Israel.

The Israeli government knew this, and killed him because they wanted to destroy the possible peace; they wanted war. It’s important to remember that Hamas is the democratically elected government of the self-governing Gaza Strip; assassinating Jaabari is similar to a foreign nation using its military to assassinate Hillary Clinton, i.e., it’s an act of war.

When Hamas responded by firing its pathetic rockets, Israel then was given the “justification” in launching its previously planned military strikes, which commit daily war crimes, most notably by targeting non-military institutions like media, religious and educational institutions and other public buildings.

Israel uses massive bombs throughout the tightly packed civilian population of Gaza — another war crime.

Obama lies again when he says that “Israel has the right to defend itself.” It is the Gazans who have this right against a U.S. funded massive military machine that is bombing Gaza by land, sea, and air. Gaza has no army, navy, and its 1.5 million people essentially live in a giant walled off, caged slum.

Listing all of Israel’s war crimes in this conflict which are consistent with previous attacks on the Palestinians would take up too much space. Obama is forced to publicly approve of many of these crimes because he is guilty of the same offenses, as Glenn Greenwald points out. The war crime of “targeted assassinations” that caused this conflict is daily practiced by Obama in his drone wars in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia.

Not only is Obama supporting Israeli war crimes publicly, he is working at the U.N. to actively prevent a U.N. Security Council peace deal, after Russia publicly accused the U.S. of filibustering U.N. action over the conflict. The U.S. delegates would only approve of a resolution that equally blamed Israel and Gaza for the conflict. Reuters explains:  ”The Security Council is generally deadlocked on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which U.N. diplomats say is due to the United States’ determination to protect its close ally Israel. The council held an emergency meeting on Wednesday to discuss the Israeli strikes on Gaza but took no action.”

Israel’s move to provoke a war– and Obama’s reluctance to stop it — may seem insane, but the U.S.-Israeli alliance is planning for still bigger wars against Syria and Iran and possibly beyond as other nations get drawn into a regional war.

Israel’s attack was well timed. It felt its position was being eroded by the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions, which are now stronger advocates of the Palestinians than the previous regimes were. Meanwhile, Israel has been threatening to attack Iran for over a year and may have felt the window closing on that operation.

Now, the window is opened wider. Anything is possible. A region of the world that was already on fire is now being doused in kerosene. Amidst the flames, Israel and the U.S. are striving to re-build the region in their image, with more territory and oil and fewer enemies. The war against the Palestinians is the first act in a regional war. The U.S. and Israel are planning to spread the inferno across the Middle East and beyond.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



Wednesday 21 November 2012

FREE FALLING Debra Webb

FREE FALLING  Debra Webb







 

Overview:

Connor McFerrin is a savvy businessman and he is accustomed to being the boss. His Atlanta based development company is a top southern business and he intends to keep it that way. When he expands into Huntsville, Alabama, he runs into trouble with a tree-hugger who has no regard for his vision of progress. She is outrageously stubborn and incredibly beautiful and she is driving him out of his mind!

Free Renzetti will do whatever it takes to salvage and protect historic homes, including going up against the sexiest man she has ever laid eyes on. Somehow she must make this career-focused man see that he desperately needs to stop and smell the roses!



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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!



The Yellow Birds Kevin Powers

The Yellow Birds  Kevin Powers









 


Overview:

"The war tried to kill us in the spring," begins this breathtaking account of friendship and loss. In Al Tafar, Iraq, twenty-one-year old Private Bartle and eighteen-year-old Private Murphy cling to life as their platoon launches a bloody battle for the city. In the endless days that follow, the two young soldiers do everything to protect each other from the forces that press in on every side: the insurgents, physical fatigue, and the mental stress that comes from constant danger.

Bound together since basic training when their tough-as-nails Sergeant ordered Bartle to watch over Murphy, the two have been dropped into a war neither is prepared for. As reality begins to blur into a hazy nightmare, Murphy becomes increasingly unmoored from the world around him and Bartle takes impossible actions.

With profound emotional insight, especially into the effects of a hidden war on mothers and families at home, THE YELLOW BIRDS is a groundbreaking novel about the costs of war that is destined to become a classic.



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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

A Week in Winter Maeve Binchy

A Week in Winter  Maeve Binchy








 

Overview:

Stoneybridge is full of holiday-makers in summer, its beaches are full of buckets and spades and sandcastles; but in winter it's cold and wild. Few choose to walk along the fine sands, the big round pebbles and the exposed rocky promontories that make up the wind-swept Atlantic coastline.

Those who do can't help but see Stone House, the big house on the cliff; once falling into disrepair it is now a beautiful hotel specialising in winter holidays. Its big, warm kitchen, its open log-fires and its elegant bedrooms provide a welcome few can resist, whatever their reasons for coming.

Henry and Nicola are burdened with a terrible secret, while cheerful nurse Winnie finds herself on the holiday from hell. John has arrived on an impulse after he missed a flight at Shannon; eccentric Freda claims to be a psychic - and a part-time hairdresser. Then there's Nora, a silent watchful older woman who seems ready to disapprove at any moment...

A Week in Winter is full of Maeve's trademark warmth, humour and characters you want to spend time with.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

The Road to Grace Richard Paul Evans

The Road to Grace  Richard Paul Evans






 

Overview:

Join one of America’s beloved storytellers on a walk like no other: one man’s unrelenting search for hope. Reeling from the sudden loss of his wife, his home, and his business, Alan Christoffersen, a once-successful advertising executive, has left everything he knew behind and set off on an extraordinary cross-country journey. Carrying only a backpack, he is walking from Seattle to Key West, the farthest destination on his map.

Now almost halfway through his trek, Alan sets out to walk the nearly 1,000 miles between South Dakota and St. Louis, but it’s the people he meets along the way who give the journey its true meaning: a mysterious woman who follows Alan’s walk for close to a hundred miles, the ghost hunter searching graveyards for his wife, and the elderly Polish man who gives Alan a ride and shares a story that Alan will never forget.

Full of hard-won wisdom and truth, The Road to Grace is a compelling and inspiring novel about hope, healing, grace, and the meaning of life.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

The Return Victoria Hislop

The Return  Victoria Hislop






 



Overview:

From the internationally bestselling author of The Island comes a dazzling new novel of family betrayals, forbidden love, and historical turmoil.

Sonia knows nothing of Granada's shocking past, but ordering a simple cup of coffee in a quiet cafÉ will lead her into the extraordinary tale of a family's fight to survive the horror of the Spanish Civil War.

Seventy years earlier, in the RamÍrez family's cafÉ, Concha and Pablo's children relish an atmosphere of hope. Antonio is a serious young teacher, Ignacio a flamboyant matador, and Emilio a skilled musician. Their sister, Mercedes, is a spirited girl whose sole passion is dancing, until she meets Javier and an obsessive love affair begins. But Spain is a country in turmoil. In the heat of civil war, everyone must take a side and choose whether to submit, to fight, or to attempt escape.


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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


Epub 20th November 2012

Epub 20th November 2012












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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!




Epub 19th November 2012

Epub 19th November 2012












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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!







Monday 19 November 2012

Epub 18th November 2012

Epub 18th November 2012







 

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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!




Sunday 18 November 2012

Ameritopia The Unmaking of America Mark R. Levin

Ameritopia  The Unmaking of America  Mark R. Levin




 

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The Golden Age of Science Fiction Anthologies

The Golden Age of Science Fiction Anthologies 1 - 12







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50 MYSTERIES

50 MYSTERIES






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Creating A World Without Poverty Muhammad Yunus

Creating A World Without Poverty  Muhammad Yunus 






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Audio Companion to the Norton Anthology of Poetry

Audio Companion to the Norton Anthology of Poetry




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The Norton Anthology of Poetry

The Norton Anthology of Poetry V 1 - 4






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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


Epub 17th November 2012

Epub 17th November 2012










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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Civilization The West And The Rest Niall Ferguson

Civilization The West And The Rest Niall Ferguson






 


Overview:

Ferguson is the most brilliant British historian of his generation ... he writes with splendid panache.

The Times 

One of the world's leading historians.
Hamish McRae Independent 

Beautifully written... Breathtakingly clever .
Martin Van Weyer Sunday Telegraph

The tales he tells of boom and bust, of triumph and disaster, of bubbles that inflate... are the very essence of financial history.
Bill Emmott Financial Times 

An often enlightening and enjoyable tour through the underside of great events, a lesson in how the most successful great powers have always been underpinned by smart money.


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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences Michel Foucault

The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences Michel Foucault 







 

Overview:

When one defines "order" as a sorting of priorities, it becomes beautifully clear as to what Foucault is doing here. With virtuoso showmanship, he weaves an intensely complex history of thought. He dips into literature, art, economics and even biology in The Order of Things, possibly one of the most significant, yet most overlooked, works of the twentieth century. Eclipsed by his later work on power and discourse, nonetheless it was The Order of Things that established Foucault's reputation as an intellectual giant. Pirouetting around the outer edge of language, Foucault unsettles the surface of literary writing. In describing the limitations of our usual taxonomies, he opens the door onto a whole new system of thought, one ripe with what he calls "exotic charm". Intellectual pyrotechnics from the master of critical thinking, this book is crucial reading for those who wish to gain insight into that odd beast called Postmodernism, and a must for any fan of Foucault.

This is the most significant philosophical work of the twentieth century. While upon its initial release The Order of Things launched Foucault's international career, it has been largely ignored in favor of Foucault's analysis of power, discourse, and subjectivity. But, above all, Foucault was a philosopher of history and this book stands as the unacknowledged center of his oeuvre. It is a book of immense erudition, surprises, mystery, and wonderment. And contrary to Arendt's contention that philosophers do not laugh, this book begins with a laughter and sustains the mirth throughout. This is the proper sequel to Nietzsche's 'The Gay Science.' But this time, it really aims for science.

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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Saturday 17 November 2012

Epub 16th November 2012

Epub 16th November 2012



 



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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Epub 15th November 2012

Epub 15th November 2012










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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Epub 14th November 2012

Epub 14th November 2012



















 


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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!


November 25th 2012

November 25th 2012








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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Wednesday 14 November 2012

The Sirens of Baghdad Yasmina Khadra

The Sirens of Baghdad  Yasmina Khadra







Overview:

Yasmina Khadra's searing novel "The Sirens of Baghdad", the third in his haunting trilogy about Islamic fundamentalism, is the first to enter Iraq. Coming after the much-lauded "The Swallows of Kabul" and "The Attack," "The Sirens of Baghdad" tells the story of a Bedouin boy, the son of a well digger in the sandy village of Kafr Karam. He remembers his village as peaceful and tradition-bound, a place he describes as "so discreet it often dissolves in mirages, only to emerge at sunset." He's suspicious of big cities, respects his father and has just begun studying at the University of Baghdad. When bombs drop, he's forced to leave school and the girl he's just begun to eye.

The novel follows the nameless young man on a tumultuous journey from ex-student to terrorist. As war begins, Khadra (the nom de plume for Mohammed Moulessehoul, a former Algerian army officer) depicts the rising pressure, the straws that break the camel's back. For a generation of men, manageable anger - first of living under sanctions, then of having no work then of losing loved ones because of no health care - spills over in the face of seemingly small yet resonant insults.

After one or a collection of these affronts become too much, we follow the boy into the tangled back alleys of Baghdad. There, he aligns himself with one of the squads who not only resist the Americans, but also act as local thugs, brutalizing one another with varied and grotesque forms of mob-style violence.

Weirdly, his own stay among his gang is mostly boring, as he gets bossed around, does mundane errands and sweeps the front of a repair shop whose back area is devoted to making bombs. This also is a truth (reminiscent, in its way of Orwell in the midst of the Spanish revolution): that sometimes in the middle of the action one feels the doldrums.

What is interesting, in this time of extreme cultural misunderstanding, is the opportunity Khadra offers us by allowing us to inhabit his narrator's mind.

Through him we can see how the faceless, muscular Americans arriving in Iraq can appear hideous. It isn't merely that they are trigger-happy - shooting to a pulp a mentally-deranged boy who doesn't understand them - but they're blissfully ignorant of the traditions they violate as they go about their business. They humiliate revered old men and, at one point in the novel, shatter a delicate, centuries-old lute.

In this climate, the young man's anger is stirred up by the rhetoric around him, which begins swirling like desert sand.

He meets people such as Dr. Jalal, a formerly moderate Muslim who has come home from the West and begun to use his considerable rhetorical power to provoke outrage. Khadra gives a remarkably nuanced account of how this anger works. Hearing a terrorist speech, the narrator says, "I was completely bamboozled. I felt as though I were in the thick of a farce, in the midst of a play rehearsal, surrounded by mediocre actors who had learned their roles but didn't have the talent the text deserved, and yet - and yet - and yet, it seemed to me that this was exactly what I wanted to hear, that their words were the words I was missing."

Indeed, part of this novel is about how and where to search for a new voice. One of the book's most memorable moments comes when a pacifist Muslim author arrives in Beirut from France and challenges Jalal, his old friend.

The debate between the two is haunting, a heartfelt battle of ideals between two Muslim intellectuals confused about how to face the world's varied and multiple springs of hatred. Both men are victims of racism: The novelist is devoted to continuing to press for dialogue and peace, while Jalal asserts that talks are no longer worthwhile. The French novelist claims the war is not between Aryans and non-Aryans, but between Muslim intellectuals and their visions of what Islam should now be. Muslims need, he says, "someone capable of representing them, of expressing them in their complexity, of defending them in some way. Whether it's with pens or bombs makes no difference to them. And it's up to us to choose our weapons, Jalal. Us. You and me."

Jalal disagrees. "True racism has always been intellectual," he cries. "The West is nothing but an acidic lie, an insidious perversity, a siren song for people shipwrecked on their identity quest."

Nevertheless, the novel argues that the tragedy is that though the West may be a siren, so is Iraq. The country terrorists purport to be fighting for already seems unattainable, broken and peopled with ghosts. The narrator longs for his former world: "For generations beyond memory," he writes, "we had lived shut up inside our walls of clay and straw, far from the world and its foul beasts." That world, however, is gone. And the sirens of the book's title refer not only to the wailing noises of a city beset by bombs, or to the urban pleasures that lure pious young men to sin, but also to the siren of a violence whose maelstrom is impossible to resist.

Meanwhile, the terrorists decide to infect a traveling jihadist with a virus, giving disturbing meaning to the words "foreign body." In their minds, the West is not only attacking them, but also infecting their region. They want to infect the West back.

Khadra's work has been compared to that of his Algerian compatriot Albert Camus, and "The Sirens of Baghdad" has a similar blaze of heat, the same heavy, insoluble questions and the same need to face them down, even to one's death. As the young boy from Kafr Karam decides whether to accept his jihadi mission, the novel builds to a startling and wrenching finish.


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Sincerelyours

And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!