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Today: 55 articles and 89 comments as of 5:42.
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Area: WoT Operations    WoT Background    Non-WoT        Politix   
Syrian Army Targets ISIL, al-Nusra Gunmen, Kills Top Leaders in Hama, Damascus
Today's Headlines
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Page 4: Opinion
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2 22:41 Shipman [14] 
1 08:30 Shipman [4] 
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Page 1: WoT Operations
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1 07:49 Shipman [7]
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Page 2: WoT Background
4 19:44 Abu Uluque [11]
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3 09:02 Procopius2k [1]
1 11:06 Clyde Borgia7976 [9]
2 08:43 Raj [2]
2 11:18 Mike Kozlowski [6]
1 08:05 Shipman [7]
1 08:13 Shipman [6]
3 10:44 Steve White [4]
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1 01:12 JosephMendiola [3]
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4 17:59 borgboy [10]
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1 14:53 Whonter Darling of the Bunions4601 [2]
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3 22:27 chris [1]
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Page 3: Non-WoT
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7 22:31 Shipman [4]
1 12:47 gorb [2]
3 23:24 CrazyFool [4]
5 11:56 junkiron [4]
3 18:10 Cheaderhead [9]
9 22:26 Shipman [2]
2 13:45 badanov [4]
6 22:33 Shipman [5]
3 20:50 Procopius2k [5]
1 06:58 Skidmark [5]
Page 6: Politix
8 22:23 Silentbrick [8]
China-Japan-Koreas
Two Koreas Have Little in Common After 70 Years
Interesting piece at the Chosun Ilbo that notes how far apart the two countries have grown in terms of culture, and how that complicates any reunification. It might be best for the North Koreans to extirpate the Kim family and their supporters and then build their country separately from either the South or China.
Posted by: Steve White || 07/11/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In due time, perhaps a federation of some sort. Think Mississippi and California.



Come to think of it, always think Mississippi because it's fun to type and has Oxford history and stuff.
Posted by: Shipman || 07/11/2015 8:30 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
The population disconnect
[DAWN]
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Pakistan


Some 7/7 thoughts
[DAWN] WITH the passage of time, even important events begin to resemble a dot fading fast in the rear-view mirror. It is surprising, then, that sometimes a trigger can lead to a detailed, vivid recollection of an event from many, many years ago and create shockwaves even today.

We were in London last week and were leaving our rented flat when traffic congestion, just a few yards up on Upper Woburn Place by Tavistock Square diverted our attention to a remembrance happening in the square to mark the 10th anniversary of the London bombings which became known as 7/7.

That remembrance with some officials, the family and friends of the victims and quite a few passers-by in attendance became a trigger for a flood of memories of July 7, 2005. On that day, from our south London home, I was driving to Bush House (in Aldwych, Central London) where I worked for the BBC World Service.

As usual, the morning drive was accompanied by radio news. It must have been around 9.30 when a news flash caught my attention. It said there had been a 'power surge' on the London Underground, the network had been shut down and the travelling public was being advised not to head towards the Underg­round without first checking all was back to normal.

We had the usual quota of summer visitors who were planning to head to town for some 'sightseeing' (read shopping), so I called home to ensure they checked before leaving as it is never pleasant to be stranded outside.

Having finished the call, and on reaching the Bush House car park, as I got out, I heard what sounded like an kaboom not very far off and the ground also seemed to shake a bit. But the din of traffic made me think my mind was playing tricks. So I walked into the building and took the lift to my office.

This is when the first details started to trickle in that there had been three bombings on the London Underground network and a fourth on a bus just a couple of hundred metres south of Euston Station on Upper Woburn Place on the road sandwiched between the British Medical Association and Tavistock Square.

With all the facts known much later, it was a chilling realisation that what I'd heard was actually the teenaged bomber on the bus detonating his explosives-filled backpack barely a mile and a half in a straight line from where I stood, sending several people to a violent death.

The bus blast was preceded by three near-simultaneous bomb kabooms (later three of them were attributed to jacket wallahs of Pak origin) on the network between King's Cross-Russell Square stations, Liverpool Street-Aldgate stations and at Edgware Road station, killing more than 50 people and injuring scores of others, some so grievously they'd have to live with disability for the rest of their lives.

As journalists, all of us got busy in covering the story and didn't realise till much later that the victims of that carnage were so representative of London itself, comprising the widest variety of origins, faiths, ethnicities, castes and creeds.

It was after these attacks, and several unsuccessful ones reportedly prevented by the security services, that most Londoners first caught sight of specialist firearms officers as coppers wearing sidearms and carrying submachine guns appeared on the scene.

While the events of 9/11 in the distant US did create anxiety and some racial tension in the UK, which scarred some close friends and colleagues when they were set upon by racist goons blaming them for the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now beyond all cares and woe...
's mayhem, things settled down pretty quickly.

It was, therefore, natural for similar anxieties to surface post 7/7 and some Islamophobia
...the irrational fear that Moslems will act the way they usually do...
was in evidence. But, despite random incidents of violence and attacks, the anger on London streets never approached anywhere near the hatred the suicide bombers vented on people ostensibly for the Iraq war; in fact, many among the victims were opposed to it.

It is admittedly naïve to expect that gunnies would be so discriminating. They aren't. One need only look at Pakistain's example where more than 50,000 citizens who had nothing to do with the US presence in the region were made to suffer the terrorists' wrath.

However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
in the case of the UK, it seems the gunnies who targeted Britons in London couldn't achieve what Wall Street bankers and their European counterparts, whose unaccountable greed and actions plunged the world into an economic meltdown, did.

Of course, coupled with the aura the self-styled Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
's slick social media wing has created around the terrorist organization with the help of gullible or callously complicit Western media groups, this has triggered ugly and often blatant xenophobia and racism.

Where in the past if one arrived with a Pak passport with a mere 'permanent residence' stamped on it, the immigration officers would often smile and say 'welcome home', now (non-white) naturalised British citizens are asked all sorts of outrageous questions such as 'how long do you plan to stay in the UK?'

In an environment where 'moderate' Moslem community leaders have been marginalised considerably in terms of their influence on some among the younger generation enamoured by the lure of IS; and where the 'other side' is now increasingly being hijacked by the xenophobic UKIP's thinking with even the governing Tories playing catch-up, the future doesn't look rosy.

All hope, however, isn't lost as a young woman university student of Asian origin recently told me. "Our reality is very different. Our generation is growing up in multiethnic/cultural Britannia. We are much more at ease with each other. Most of this nonsense will disappear when we take charge -- actually even before that -- wait and see how tensions dissipate when the economy and the job situation gets better."
Posted by: Fred || 07/11/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [14 views] Top|| File under: al-Qaeda

#1 
Our generation is growing up in multiethnic/cultural Britannia. We are much more at ease with each other. Most of this nonsense will disappear when we take charge


So she wants to take over Britain from the Brits?

Posted by: 3dc || 07/11/2015 5:15 Comments || Top||

#2  The last Brit will push the button..
Posted by: Shipman || 07/11/2015 22:41 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Of course the Syrian government's #SummerinSyria ad campaign backfired
Posted by: RJ45ACP || 07/11/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
Was Feminism Always Bad?
h/t Instapundit
Most fair-minded people deplore the excesses of modern feminism--its triviality, its mean-spiritedness, and its claiming of special privileges for women on the basis of their putative suffering under patriarchy.


What happened to "equal rights"? What turned feminism into a shrill, rancorous movement that hounds men for a plethora of claimed sexual crimes, harps on female moral superiority, and seeks to rid the world of masculine energy, competitive drive, and frank humor?

Did rape crisis feminists such as Andrea Dworkin, who saw all sex as rape and presumed all men guilty, ruin what was otherwise a reasonable, egalitarian program for reform?

Or was the strain of man-blaming always there?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 07/11/2015 02:45 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What happened to "equal rights"?

Missed the part about "equal responsibility". In the absence of which becomes privilege, prerogative, and power.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 07/11/2015 8:48 Comments || Top||

#2  We see how they behave nowadays---when they've the upper hand.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 07/11/2015 10:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Yes. Next question?
Posted by: Nguard || 07/11/2015 11:54 Comments || Top||

#4  John Stacy McCain has a series of articles ab out the poisonous roots of "modern" feminism.


And here's a look by McCain at unfiltered Tumblr feminism.
Posted by: charger || 07/11/2015 12:01 Comments || Top||

#5  Why would you care what a bunch on militant lesbos want?
Posted by: Whonter Darling of the Bunions4601 || 07/11/2015 14:07 Comments || Top||

#6  What P2K sez. Same fer all the Victim Classes.
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 07/11/2015 15:45 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
24[untagged]
13Islamic State
3Govt of Iran
2TTP
2Commies
2Govt of Pakistan
2Govt of Syria
1Salafists
1Govt of Saudi Arabia
1Abu Sayyaf
1Hezbollah
1Arab Spring
1al-Nusra
1al-Qaeda

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Two weeks of WOT
Sat 2015-07-11
  Syrian Army Targets ISIL, al-Nusra Gunmen, Kills Top Leaders in Hama, Damascus
Fri 2015-07-10
  Newest drone strikes kill 25 insurgents in Nangarhar
Thu 2015-07-09
  Syrian Army Establishes Control over Hasaka, near Palmyra
Wed 2015-07-08
  French Special Forces Kill Top Al-Qaida Militant in Mali
Tue 2015-07-07
  49 ISIS affiliates killed in Nangarhar drone strikes
Mon 2015-07-06
  Egyptian army kills 63 militants in North Sinai
Sun 2015-07-05
  At least 25 Nusra members dead in mosque blast in Syria's Idlib
Sat 2015-07-04
  Official: Drone kills 4 Qaida Suspects in Yemen
Fri 2015-07-03
  Bangladesh police arrest 'top Qaeda militant'
Thu 2015-07-02
  Al Qaeda Pakistan chief killed in Lahore raid: Punjab home minister
Wed 2015-07-01
  Tunisia says resort gunman was trained in Libya
Tue 2015-06-30
  Mosul resistance group 'kills 23 Saudi fighters'
Mon 2015-06-29
  US air strikes target militants near border in east Afghanistan
Sun 2015-06-28
  Activists: ISIS fighters kill 200 civilians in Kobani
Sat 2015-06-27
  UN chief condemns 'appalling' attacks in France, Tunisia, Kuwait


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