- YouTube - All I Got's Gone
- Israel and Complete 911 Timeline
- Obsessionwithhate.com - The Real Story behind the Obsession Hate DVD
- Talk to Hamas - Haaretz
- McCain Leads Obama in Palestinian Territories: Angus Reid Global Monitor
- US 'War on Terror' Has Not Weakened al Qaeda, Says Global Poll - World Public Opinion
Ernest Stoneman's recording "All I Got's Gone" (1928). Film footage from 1937 film: Telephone Operator. Music and video are in the public domain.
1987: Hamas Forms with the Support of Israeli Intelligence. Sheikh Ahmed Yassin forms Hamas as the military arm of his Islamic Association, which had been licensed by Israel ten years earlier (see 1973-1978). According to Charles Freeman, a former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia, "Israel started Hamas. It was a project of Shin Bet, which had a feeling that they could use it to hem in the PLO." [CounterPunch, 1/18/2003; Dreyfuss, 2005, pp. 191, 208]
Obsessionwithhate.com The Real Story Behind the Obsession Hate DVD Project and the Radical Right's War Against Islam
In the winter of 1991, Saddam Hussein bombed Tel Aviv. For a month and a half, long-range missiles landed on the city. People panicked and many fled to Jerusalem, while the leaders issued pompous statements about the terrible blow the Iraqi dictator was about to receive.
But nothing happened. We did nothing.
One-in-three residents of the West Bank and Gaza Strip would like Republican John McCain to win the 2008 United States presidential election, according to a poll by the Palestinian Center for Public Opinion. 33.5 per cent of respondents favour McCain, while 27.7 per cent support Democratic nominee Barack Obama.
The US's 'war on terror' has failed to weaken its prime target al Qaeda, according to people in 22 out of 23 countries surveyed in a new poll for the BBC World Service. On average only 22 per cent believe that al Qaeda has been weakened, while three in five believe that it has either had no effect (29%) or made al Qaeda stronger (30%).
And while negative views of al Qaeda are most common in nearly all of the countries surveyed, this is not the case in Egypt and Pakistan - both pivotal nations in the conflict with al Qaeda.
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