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Desert campaign to save humanity
The Dalai Lama and a host of Nobel prize winners have joined actor Richard Gere for a conference aimed at righting the wrongs of modern humanity.
Yeah, when I think about saving the world, Richard Gere is the first person who comes to mind.
King Abdullah of Jordan is hosting the two-day meeting at the ancient desert city of Petra. Authors Elie Wiesel and VS Naipaul are among the artists and scientists in Petra to discuss the way things are - and the way they should be. Former US President Bill Clinton is also due to join the conference.
Psssst, Abdullah, I'd keep a close eye on the wife
In his opening address to the conference, entitled A World in Danger and held ahead of a World Economic Forum meeting on the Jordanian shores of the Dead Sea, King Abdullah said the modern world was at a "critical crossroads". He called for renewed efforts for a peaceful solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and a fresh emphasis on Islam as a religion of peace.
Keep trotting that old ROP meme out there, maybe somebody will believe it
"A process begins here - a process that all of you will shape, and by your effort, help shape our world," the king told delegates.
We're doomed!
Mr Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1986, wondered whether the 21st century could escape the legacy of its violent predecessor. "At the dawn of the 21st century, the planet is already in peril. The world is thirsty for stability," he said.
Why do they keep thinking stability is a good thing? Stabilty means a lack of change, and change is what we need in this region
"Will wars persist, will disarmament remain utopia? Terrorism, particularly suicide attacks, are preaching a culture of death. What can we do to stop that?"
Kill the bad guys
Delegates will discuss four key themes: terror and peace, economic development and poverty, health and environment, and education and media. Recommendations will then be presented to political and business leaders gathering for a three-day meeting of the World Economic Forum, beginning on Friday. Israeli Vice-Prime Minister Shimon Peres, former Northern Irish political leader David Trimble and Nigerian author Wole Soyinka are among a total of 44 delegates, 25 of them Nobel laureates. In his address, King Abdullah said the growth of extremism demonstrated that more effort was needed "to reinforce the basic values of humanity". Young people in the Middle East have known no existence without conflict and see a world wracked by division, he added. "They see diseases that wealthy nations have wiped out, that are still crippling people in the developing world.
SEE: Islamic clerics against vacinations
"They see gender inequality, holding back talents of half the world.
SEE: Islamic clerics against womens rights
They see the harm as well as the hope brought by globalisation."
SEE: Moonbats against free trade, development, democracy, etc....

Posted by: Steve 2005-05-18
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=119451