+  Mamjo Forum
|-+  Nieuwtjes» Tori Oso» Het kabinet van Obama
Username:
Password:
Advanced Search
Pages: 1 ... 69 70 71 72 73 [74] 75 76 77 78   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Het kabinet van Obama  (Read 12403 times)
Isaiah 34:16
Guest
« Reply #1095 on: 13-01-2009, 08:45:52 - GMT-1 »

Zegt de grootste haatzaaier hier...

mijn boodschap is duidelijk geweest vanaf het moment dat ik reageerde op dit forum, maar je wilt het maar niet snappen.

Jeremiah 17:5 Thus saith the LORD; Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm,
and whose heart departeth from the LORD.



DON'T put your trust in obama, or anybody for that matter, but for GOD and the Messiah.

Jeremiah 17:7 Blessed is the man that trusteth in the LORD, and whose hope the LORD is.

Jeremiah 17:8 For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river,
and shall not see when heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought,
neither shall cease from yielding fruit.


Jeremiah 17:9 The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?


DON'T follow your heart, thinking that obama is going to change things for the better. If anything, obamá will
only change things for the worse. This world is given into the hands of the wicked


Job 9:24 The earth is given into the hand of the wicked: he covereth the faces of the judges thereof; if not, where, and who is he?


Luke 4:5 And the devil, taking him up into an high mountain, shewed unto him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time.

Luke 4:6 And the devil said unto him, All this power will I give thee, and the glory of them: for that is delivered unto me;
and to whomsoever I will I give it.


Luke 4:7 If thou therefore wilt worship me, all shall be thine.

Luke 4:8 And Jesus answered and said unto him, Get thee behind me, Satan: for it is written,
Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.



PUT your trust in the LORD GOD. Walk in his commandments and hav faith in his only begotten SON that
ye may obtain salvation and have everlasting life.


GOD Bless you

Logged
Soms ??
Guest
« Reply #1096 on: 13-01-2009, 08:48:29 - GMT-1 »

Sen. Hillary Clinton is expected to win easy confirmation as U.S. secretary of state but will face questions about her husband's foreign business dealings when she appears before a congressional committee on Tuesday.

Clinton's testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will be scrutinized for clues on how U.S. President-elect Barack Obama may approach Iran, Iraq, North Korea and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when he takes office on January 20.

Obama surprised many by tapping his former rival for the presidency to become his secretary of state, selecting a political heavyweight who won more than 18 million votes in the Democratic primaries before dropping out of the race.

Analysts said there was little doubt about the Senate's ultimate approval of the former first lady to be the top U.S. diplomat. Clinton, who was elected in 2006 to a second term as a New York senator, is expected to benefit from the tradition of senatorial courtesy toward fellow senators appointed to high office.

"We have great confidence in her ability to do the job well," Sen. John Kerry, the committee's Democratic chairman who was himself once viewed as a candidate for secretary of state, told Reuters. "I think she will be overwhelmingly confirmed."

Analysts said members of the committee will ask about the business and philanthropic dealings of Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton, but they said they did not expect that to derail her nomination.

"She is going to have prepared answers for all those questions," said Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia. "At a certain point, the Republicans are going to let it go."

To preempt concerns about potential conflicts of interest, Bill Clinton's charitable foundation in December made public its donors, which include Saudi Arabia, Norway and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Logged
Soms ??
Guest
« Reply #1097 on: 13-01-2009, 08:50:00 - GMT-1 »

Democratic sources have said the former president offered to allow ethics reviews of his future business and charitable activities should his wife serve as secretary of state.

"We don't expect surprises," said Andy Fisher, a spokesman for Sen. Dick Lugar of Indiana, the panel's senior Republican. "There certainly will be questions on the Clinton foundation, and also on every corner of the world, as there always are for the confirmation hearing for the secretary of state."

Among the top issues likely to be raised is the military offensive that Israel launched in the Gaza Strip on December 27 with the stated goal of ending Palestinian rocket attacks on southern Israel.

Obama has said little about the conflict, stressing there is only one U.S. president at a time. However, on Sunday he said it was vital "to be engaged and involved immediately" in the search for Middle East peace.

Critics accuse President George W. Bush of having largely neglected the dispute until his final year in office, when his push for a peace deal by the end of 2008 ended in failure.

Bush also was faulted for initial reluctance to deal directly with North Korea and Iran to try to curb their nuclear ambitions.

Obama has said he is willing to open a dialogue with Iran and has suggested the possibility of presidential engagement with senior Iranian officials, a stance that Clinton dismissed as "naive" during the presidential primaries.

Analysts said that senators likely will search in vain for differences between Obama's and Clinton's foreign policy views, saying these were magnified on the campaign trail and will be minimized on Tuesday.

"Even when they disagreed, it was as much about instincts, style, tone as anything else," said Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution.
Logged
Patamakka
Guest
« Reply #1098 on: 13-01-2009, 15:22:14 - GMT-1 »

ik had niet zoveel te vertellen: nog 8 dagen.
Logged
Vin
Guest
« Reply #1099 on: 13-01-2009, 17:11:00 - GMT-1 »


Romans 12:14  Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not.


So, with that, Bless you Vin and I will pray or you.
JOE MA PANGPANG JERE!
Logged
@Patamakka
Guest
« Reply #1100 on: 13-01-2009, 18:21:42 - GMT-1 »

ik had niet zoveel te vertellen: nog 8 dagen.

Dan komt de duivel aan de macht, terwijl jij denkt dat hij god is!  Shocked
Logged
Soms ??
Guest
« Reply #1101 on: 13-01-2009, 18:27:07 - GMT-1 »

U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton must do more to ensure that the charitable activities of her husband, former President Bill Clinton, do not taint her service as secretary of state, a top Senate Republican said on Tuesday.

Clinton was expected to be confirmed as secretary of state, but Republican and Democratic lawmakers raised questions about the fund-raising activities of her husband as she began testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, the panel's top Republican, went further, saying an agreement worked out by President-elect Barack Obama's team and the William J. Clinton Foundation did not go far enough to minimize potential conflicts of interest and that the charity should forswear future foreign donations.

"The core of the problem is that foreign governments and entities may perceive the Clinton Foundation as a means to gain favor with the secretary of state," Lugar said in his opening statement.

"The Clinton Foundation exists as a temptation for any foreign entity or government that believes it could curry favor through a donation," Lugar said.

Clinton, who was accompanied by her daughter, Chelsea, but not her husband, listened to Lugar but did not address the matter in her opening comments, which broke no new ground on Obama's likely foreign policy.

Under the deal, the foundation has disclosed past donors, which include the governments of Saudi Arabia and Norway, and has agreed to submit future donations to a State Department ethics review and disclose donations annually, Lugar said.

"This agreement is a beginning, not an end," Lugar said, adding that the foundation, whose activities including fighting disease and global warming and promoting economic development, should be more transparent about its fund-raising.

The Democratic chair of the committee, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, said there were outstanding questions over her husband's fund-raising but said the New York senator would help restore the United States image abroad.

"Her presence overseas will send a strong signal immediately that America is back," Kerry said in his opening statement. "She will take office on a first-name basis with numerous heads of state.

Clinton said she and Obama would seek to renew American leadership through reinvigorated diplomacy and would pursue a "pragmatic" foreign policy.

In her first comments on foreign policy since her surprise nomination, Clinton said the United States must address Israel's security needs as well as the political and economic aspirations of the Palestinians.

She said the United States must effectively challenge Iran to end its nuclear weapons program and convince both Tehran and Syria to "abandon their dangerous behavior and become constructive regional actors."

Obama surprised many by tapping his former rival for the presidency to become his secretary of state, selecting a political heavyweight who won more than 18 million votes in the Democratic primaries before being the last Obama rival to drop out of the race.
Logged
Soms ??
Guest
« Reply #1102 on: 13-01-2009, 19:35:13 - GMT-1 »

Even lachen

Former President George H.W. Bush said his son Jeb should run for president and blasted the New York Times for its "grossly unfair" criticism of another son, President George W. Bush.

During an interview on "FOX News Sunday," the nation's 41st president said Jeb, the former governor of Florida, is "as qualified and as able as anyone I know in the political scene" to be president.

"I'd like to see him run," Bush said. "I'd like to see him be president some day.

"As president, it's about service, service for the greatest country on the face of the Earth and the honor that goes with it," Bush said. "I think Jeb fits that description."

He added: "I mean, right now is probably a bad time, because we've got enough Bushes in there."

In the meantime, Jeb could take another job, his father suggested.

"If Jeb wants to run for the Senate from Florida, he ought to do it," Bush said. "He'd be an outstanding senator. This is a guy that really has a feel for people, the issues in Florida and nationally. And his political days ought not to be over, says his old father."

But the current President Bush's political days will soon be over, prompting the former President Bush to unburden himself about what he calls unfair criticism of his eldest son.

"It's been tough on his father and his mother," the ex-president said. We're not very good sports about sitting around and hearing him hammered, I think, unfairly.

"Now, there were some things that clearly he deserved criticism for," he said. "But I think the idea that everything that's a problem in this country should be put on his shoulders -- I don't think that's fair. And I'm not trying to get back in game by criticizing people, for example, the New York Times, but you know, it's just grossly unfair."

Bush said "it burns me up" when critics suggest he and his son are presidential rivals.

"There isn't any such competition," Bush said." We're very close, and we remained close for many, many years. People don't quite get that. But we are very close as father and son."

On Wednesday, Bush will join his son for a White House lunch that will also be attended by former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, as well as President-elect Barack Obama. Bush does not know the incoming commander-in-chief well, but spoke highly of Obama.

"I talked to him right after the election and... assured him that he was my president," Bush said. "I've very impressed with his style on the campaign and his coolness and his articulate nature. I think he can give a sentence and it'll sound like it's been thought out by Shakespeare or something."

Bush said Obama should surround himself with people who "will not be out there talking to the press and... building their own nests." He also predicted that Obama's presidential honeymoon may be short lived.

"He should and will get people around him in whom he has their loyalty and to whom he can give his loyalty," Bush said. "But that'll change. Something will come up. Somebody will err. Something will come out of the unforeseen. This guy said that, he did that, and he'll have to move quickly to straighten that out."

Bush, known for skydiving well into his golden years, said he will "make one more parachute jump" in June, when he will be 85.

"Oh, there's a thrill with it," Bush enthused. "Just because you're an old guy, you don't need to sit around, sucking your thumb, drooling in the corner."

Bush said his "tears will be flowing" on Saturday, when the Navy commissions its newest aircraft carrier as the U.S.S. George H.W. Bush in honor of the former president, who was once the Navy's youngest pilot.

"It's very emotional to me and it's kind of the last big thing in my life," reflected Bush, who was shot down in the South Pacific during World War II. "This brings back a lot of memories. I mean, my going into the Navy at a young age was probably the best thing I ever did in my life. And then now to be, you might say, rewarded - certainly honored in this way - is just mind boggling."
Logged
Soms ??
Guest
« Reply #1103 on: 13-01-2009, 19:45:01 - GMT-1 »

MALIK ZULU SHABAZZ'S Q&A WITH KAM WILLIAMS: The New Black Panthers head man takes Obama to task over Israel and Gaza and more. ( ik vraag me af of hij straks ook wordt beschuldigt door de experts hier op Mamjo dat hij geen zwarte Jood is en een billenlikker terwijl hij is de leider van de Black Panthers )

"Right now, Obama is between a rock and a hard place. He pledged support to Israel in the election process; now he is in a position to get politically burned by that because Israel does not share his vision of reconciliation and justice. Ehud Barak, the defense minister of Israel and presidential candidate, is using Obama's previous statements as partial justifications for his current vicious and errant actions. So, as Israel continues to illegally pound and invade Gaza, we are not premature in calling on Obama to take the right position."

*Dr. Malik Zulu Shabazz is a freedom fighter/activist/attorney who has served as Chairman of the New Black Panther Party since 2001.



Reflective of the new leadership which has emerged from the Black liberation and Islamic movements, Dr. Shabazz is also the spokesman for the Black Lawyers for Justice.


A graduate of Howard University and its School of Law, his depth of his knowledge, professional organizing skills, potent legal advocacy and dynamic speaking skills have uniquely positioned Shabazz to weigh-in on a plethora of political and legal causes and struggles pertaining to African-Americans, the Muslim community, and African people worldwide.


Here, he weighs-in on Obama and Gaza and responds to criticism leveled at him by original Panther Chairman Bobby Seale.


Kam Williams: Hi Dr. Shabazz, thanks for the time.


Malik Zulu Shabazz: My honor, sir.


KW: How do you feel about Barack Obama’s becoming President of the United States?


MZS: Fundamentally, I feel good. After eight years of George Bush, Obama presents the possibility of real change. Ja wie is deze man ?


KW: Are you going to Washington, D.C. for the inauguration?


MZS: I will be there, organizing, networking and recruiting.


KW: Did you read Obama’s autobiography?


MZS: I liked that book. It wasn't heavy on my kind of ideology for but it gave me great insight into Barack's thinking and background. I felt a common experience with him as a community organizer, especially the road trips and the times when the struggles are so hard and your loved ones are telling you to give it up and pursue purely financial goals. I liked the fact that he had keyed into Huey Newton and the Black Power Movement. I like the fact that he chose Jeremiah Wright as his pastor. It was a good book, he is an inspiration to me and I see commonalities between his journey and mine,

KW: Do you think America is on its way to becoming a “post-racial” society?

MZS: America is in no way post-racial. Race is still a major factor, but Obama's election means that blacks can do what they will, regardless of systematic racism. Our youth, whose role models are over saturated with entertainers and athletes, needed to see a black man overcome all obstacles in an intellectual arena in order to understand that we as a people can overcome and master anything in our path in this world.


KW: Does Obama’s win mean there is less of a need for organizations like yours?


MZS: As far as the movement is concerned, Obama's election does not change the need to fight against racism, police brutality, bad education, lack of health care and housing, oppression abroad, or the litany of concerns our people face. Those problems are real and no one is lulled to sleep to think that because Obama has been elected those problems will disappear. What has happened is we have been inspired to do better in our organizational efforts to serve the people better. So, the New Black Panther Party, Black Lawyers for Justice is expanding now and building the Black Power Movement (www.Blackpowermovement.org) which is a broad based mass movement that includes 20 major ministries and organizing committees all over America and the world . We have been inspired by Obama's organizing to organize and serve the people like never before in 2009 and beyond.


KW: What do you think of Obama’s cabinet appointments so far? Do they reveal anything to you about how he is likely to govern?


MZS: Obama's cabinet appointments have been more conservative than expected. He has to be careful not become a Bill Clinton re-mix. I still think he needs 100 days to be judged to see if he has a superior vision to enact through that cabinet.


KW: I just read a recent article by you where you said that Obama needs to get it right on Gaza. Is it fair to be critiquing his position on the Middle East even before he’s been sworn in? After all, like he said, we only have one President at a time, and if anyone is going to intervene in Israel right now, it seems to me that it has to be Bush.


MZS: Obama has not been silent on the economy, nor the attacks in Mumbai, or on a number of other issues. If Bush is a lame duck, then Obama has to comment on critical matters that will be on his desk on January 21st. Right now, Obama is between a rock and a hard place. He pledged support to Israel in the election process, now he is in a position to get politically burned by that because Israel does not share his vision of reconciliation and justice. Ehud Barak, the defense minister of Israel and presidential candidate, is using Obama's previous statements as partial justifications for his current vicious and errant actions. So, as Israel continues to illegally pound and invade Gaza, we are not premature in calling on Obama to take the right position. Because if we wait to warn him, we will be behind the process, if he does what he is predicted to d back Israel unconditionally. If Obama does this, which we advise against, he will soon unravel the worldwide goodwill that made his presidency so attractive to the darker and oppressed peoples of the world.


KW: Normally, a new administration gets a pass from the press for its first hundred days? Are you going to give Obama that traditional wait-and- see period before criticizing any of his decision-making?


MZS: Not on foreign policy matters. On foreign policy matters, we call it as we see it. The world can be at war in one month, a lot less than one hundred days. On domestic policy, he gets a little longer because it is a more drawn out process to see what effect his infrastructure program, bailouts or market reforms will have. We want to be clear. We want Obama to succeed and make change and we are trying to give him the benefit of the doubt. One thing that Obama respects is good political pressure and advocacy.


KW: What issues do you think ought to be high on the President-elect’s agenda?


MZS: Setting a new tone abroad that is different than the Bush administration’s well as urban policy that the poor can benefit from. We heard a lot about the middle class during the election, but in my neighborhood the poor need help, the ex-felons need help, the youth and inner-city schools need help. So, urban policy and help in the inner cities is critical. Obama must make good on his pledges to close Guantanamo and to end torture, and he has to resist being swallowed up by the neoconservatives.


KW: How do you plan to get his attention?


MZS: By organizing the Black Power Movement, aligning with oppressed peoples, speaking up and engaging in vigorous politically-savvy advocacy. By using the legal tools available to Black Lawyers for Justice from my base in Washington D.C., we will be heard. I will be using my diplomatic hand heavily in 2009 in order to work with others to affect U.S. Government policy. Even if we don't get Obama's attention, it makes no difference, because the real work is re-organizing the movement so that it makes sense and becomes more organized and effective. When our liberation movement and its power is concretized, the powers that be will begin to bend to our will. We have taken a positive tone on Obama because the people are in a good mood and we respect the people.


KW: In October, Jesse Jackson predicted that after Obama was elected, “decades of putting Israel’s interest first would end” and that the “Zionists who have controlled American policy for decades” would lose their power. Do you agree?


MZS: I don't agree that Obama will necessarily end the Israel- first policy. He should, and can, but he has to have the will to do it. Today, it is mainly whites in the streets demonstrating against Israel's attack on Gaza. So, the American people do not support an Israel first policy and all Obama has to do is reverse the cycle of bias, thus helping himself and the world to be a more peaceful place. Obama promised he wouldn't be controlled by special interests. The pro-Israel lobby is not an American majority; it is merely a special interest. The choice is Obama's. He can either be an agent for peace and change or be used as a tool by a special interest group whose actions actually endanger U.S. national security. Every bomb that Israel drops on Gaza, every baby that is killed, will produce a martyr ready to avenge the murders of their people or to die trying. If Obama criticized the foreign policy of George Bush, then he can afford to be a hypocrite and back the policies of Israel as they are being carried out in this hour. He can change this; all he has to do is do it.


Ik heb geeneens meer zin om bepaalde uitspraken van deze man die slechts wetenschapper en leider van de Black Panthers mwaaah nhaaa nader te belichten  Grin
Logged
@Soms??
Guest
« Reply #1104 on: 13-01-2009, 20:38:31 - GMT-1 »

MALIK ZULU SHABAZZ'S Q&A WITH KAM WILLIAMS: The New Black Panthers head man takes Obama to task over Israel and Gaza and more. ( ik vraag me af of hij straks ook wordt beschuldigt door de experts hier op Mamjo dat hij geen zwarte Jood is en een billenlikker terwijl hij is de leider van de Black Panthers )

"Right now, Obama is between a rock and a hard place. He pledged support to Israel in the election process; now he is in a position to get politically burned by that because Israel does not share his vision of reconciliation and justice. Ehud Barak, the defense minister of Israel and presidential candidate, is using Obama's previous statements as partial justifications for his current vicious and errant actions. So, as Israel continues to illegally pound and invade Gaza, we are not premature in calling on Obama to take the right position."

*Dr. Malik Zulu Shabazz is a freedom fighter/activist/attorney who has served as Chairman of the New Black Panther Party since 2001.



Reflective of the new leadership which has emerged from the Black liberation and Islamic movements, Dr. Shabazz is also the spokesman for the Black Lawyers for Justice.


A graduate of Howard University and its School of Law, his depth of his knowledge, professional organizing skills, potent legal advocacy and dynamic speaking skills have uniquely positioned Shabazz to weigh-in on a plethora of political and legal causes and struggles pertaining to African-Americans, the Muslim community, and African people worldwide.


Here, he weighs-in on Obama and Gaza and responds to criticism leveled at him by original Panther Chairman Bobby Seale.


Kam Williams: Hi Dr. Shabazz, thanks for the time.


Malik Zulu Shabazz: My honor, sir.


KW: How do you feel about Barack Obama’s becoming President of the United States?


MZS: Fundamentally, I feel good. After eight years of George Bush, Obama presents the possibility of real change. Ja wie is deze man ?


KW: Are you going to Washington, D.C. for the inauguration?


MZS: I will be there, organizing, networking and recruiting.


KW: Did you read Obama’s autobiography?


MZS: I liked that book. It wasn't heavy on my kind of ideology for but it gave me great insight into Barack's thinking and background. I felt a common experience with him as a community organizer, especially the road trips and the times when the struggles are so hard and your loved ones are telling you to give it up and pursue purely financial goals. I liked the fact that he had keyed into Huey Newton and the Black Power Movement. I like the fact that he chose Jeremiah Wright as his pastor. It was a good book, he is an inspiration to me and I see commonalities between his journey and mine,

KW: Do you think America is on its way to becoming a “post-racial” society?

MZS: America is in no way post-racial. Race is still a major factor, but Obama's election means that blacks can do what they will, regardless of systematic racism. Our youth, whose role models are over saturated with entertainers and athletes, needed to see a black man overcome all obstacles in an intellectual arena in order to understand that we as a people can overcome and master anything in our path in this world.


KW: Does Obama’s win mean there is less of a need for organizations like yours?


MZS: As far as the movement is concerned, Obama's election does not change the need to fight against racism, police brutality, bad education, lack of health care and housing, oppression abroad, or the litany of concerns our people face. Those problems are real and no one is lulled to sleep to think that because Obama has been elected those problems will disappear. What has happened is we have been inspired to do better in our organizational efforts to serve the people better. So, the New Black Panther Party, Black Lawyers for Justice is expanding now and building the Black Power Movement (www.Blackpowermovement.org) which is a broad based mass movement that includes 20 major ministries and organizing committees all over America and the world . We have been inspired by Obama's organizing to organize and serve the people like never before in 2009 and beyond.


KW: What do you think of Obama’s cabinet appointments so far? Do they reveal anything to you about how he is likely to govern?


MZS: Obama's cabinet appointments have been more conservative than expected. He has to be careful not become a Bill Clinton re-mix. I still think he needs 100 days to be judged to see if he has a superior vision to enact through that cabinet.


KW: I just read a recent article by you where you said that Obama needs to get it right on Gaza. Is it fair to be critiquing his position on the Middle East even before he’s been sworn in? After all, like he said, we only have one President at a time, and if anyone is going to intervene in Israel right now, it seems to me that it has to be Bush.


MZS: Obama has not been silent on the economy, nor the attacks in Mumbai, or on a number of other issues. If Bush is a lame duck, then Obama has to comment on critical matters that will be on his desk on January 21st. Right now, Obama is between a rock and a hard place. He pledged support to Israel in the election process, now he is in a position to get politically burned by that because Israel does not share his vision of reconciliation and justice. Ehud Barak, the defense minister of Israel and presidential candidate, is using Obama's previous statements as partial justifications for his current vicious and errant actions. So, as Israel continues to illegally pound and invade Gaza, we are not premature in calling on Obama to take the right position. Because if we wait to warn him, we will be behind the process, if he does what he is predicted to d back Israel unconditionally. If Obama does this, which we advise against, he will soon unravel the worldwide goodwill that made his presidency so attractive to the darker and oppressed peoples of the world.


KW: Normally, a new administration gets a pass from the press for its first hundred days? Are you going to give Obama that traditional wait-and- see period before criticizing any of his decision-making?


MZS: Not on foreign policy matters. On foreign policy matters, we call it as we see it. The world can be at war in one month, a lot less than one hundred days. On domestic policy, he gets a little longer because it is a more drawn out process to see what effect his infrastructure program, bailouts or market reforms will have. We want to be clear. We want Obama to succeed and make change and we are trying to give him the benefit of the doubt. One thing that Obama respects is good political pressure and advocacy.


KW: What issues do you think ought to be high on the President-elect’s agenda?


MZS: Setting a new tone abroad that is different than the Bush administration’s well as urban policy that the poor can benefit from. We heard a lot about the middle class during the election, but in my neighborhood the poor need help, the ex-felons need help, the youth and inner-city schools need help. So, urban policy and help in the inner cities is critical. Obama must make good on his pledges to close Guantanamo and to end torture, and he has to resist being swallowed up by the neoconservatives.


KW: How do you plan to get his attention?


MZS: By organizing the Black Power Movement, aligning with oppressed peoples, speaking up and engaging in vigorous politically-savvy advocacy. By using the legal tools available to Black Lawyers for Justice from my base in Washington D.C., we will be heard. I will be using my diplomatic hand heavily in 2009 in order to work with others to affect U.S. Government policy. Even if we don't get Obama's attention, it makes no difference, because the real work is re-organizing the movement so that it makes sense and becomes more organized and effective. When our liberation movement and its power is concretized, the powers that be will begin to bend to our will. We have taken a positive tone on Obama because the people are in a good mood and we respect the people.


KW: In October, Jesse Jackson predicted that after Obama was elected, “decades of putting Israel’s interest first would end” and that the “Zionists who have controlled American policy for decades” would lose their power. Do you agree?


MZS: I don't agree that Obama will necessarily end the Israel- first policy. He should, and can, but he has to have the will to do it. Today, it is mainly whites in the streets demonstrating against Israel's attack on Gaza. So, the American people do not support an Israel first policy and all Obama has to do is reverse the cycle of bias, thus helping himself and the world to be a more peaceful place. Obama promised he wouldn't be controlled by special interests. The pro-Israel lobby is not an American majority; it is merely a special interest. The choice is Obama's. He can either be an agent for peace and change or be used as a tool by a special interest group whose actions actually endanger U.S. national security. Every bomb that Israel drops on Gaza, every baby that is killed, will produce a martyr ready to avenge the murders of their people or to die trying. If Obama criticized the foreign policy of George Bush, then he can afford to be a hypocrite and back the policies of Israel as they are being carried out in this hour. He can change this; all he has to do is do it.


Ik heb geeneens meer zin om bepaalde uitspraken van deze man die slechts wetenschapper en leider van de Black Panthers mwaaah nhaaa nader te belichten  Grin


Sommy Boy,

Het feit dat die Black Panther idioten Barack Obama steunen bewijst dat ze in werkelijkheid voor de CIA werken. Stelletje sell-outs!!!!!!!!!!  Angry
Logged
Surinam Hebrew Israelite
Guest
« Reply #1105 on: 13-01-2009, 21:31:34 - GMT-1 »

Thawada YHWH we know better.

Yah sees that we are trying to wake those Jakes up.  Smiley

YAHAWAH BA HA SHAM YAHAWASHI



Sommy Boy,

Het feit dat die Black Panther idioten Barack Obama steunen bewijst dat ze in werkelijkheid voor de CIA werken. Stelletje sell-outs!!!!!!!!!!  Angry


Logged
obama4eva
Guest
« Reply #1106 on: 13-01-2009, 22:05:11 - GMT-1 »

Denken die loonies nou echt dat ze door grotere letters te gebruiken de boodschap
wél aankomt............. Roll Eyes
Ben blij dat de Panthers er zo over denken, die hebben tenminste écht wat gedaan voor
de zwarte bevolking ipv deze zogenaamde isralieten, zout toch op met jullie gebral, how
pathetic can you be?
Waarom vechten ze niet voor je zogenaamde land dan? Waarom zitten ze hier hun tijd te verdoen?
Als ik dacht recht te hebben op een land dan zat ik er nu en niet zoals hun een beetje op internet
kletsen en er verder concreet niks mee doen, losers............... Grin
Logged
obama4eva
Guest
« Reply #1107 on: 13-01-2009, 22:09:16 - GMT-1 »

Denk dat 'm daar ook de pijn in zit bij die loonies, het feit dat Obama niet
alleen maar praat maar ook daadwerkelijk iets van zijn leven heeft gemaakt,
ouch...... Cool
Logged
Vin
Guest
« Reply #1108 on: 13-01-2009, 22:25:38 - GMT-1 »

Denken die loonies nou echt dat ze door grotere letters te gebruiken de boodschap
wél aankomt
............. Roll Eyes
Ben blij dat de Panthers er zo over denken, die hebben tenminste écht wat gedaan voor
de zwarte bevolking ipv deze zogenaamde isralieten, zout toch op met jullie gebral, how
pathetic can you be?
Waarom vechten ze niet voor je zogenaamde land dan? Waarom zitten ze hier hun tijd te verdoen?
Als ik dacht recht te hebben op een land dan zat ik er nu en niet zoals hun een beetje op internet
kletsen en er verder concreet niks mee doen, losers............... Grin

Maar ze hebben nu wel weer de aandacht. Dat is waar het om gaat. Hun methode is het volgende:

Je gaat door met reageren en posten totdat eentje toehapt en zo komen we weer 10 pagina's verder.
Logged
vrouwtje.
Guest
« Reply #1109 on: 13-01-2009, 23:11:04 - GMT-1 »

Denk dat 'm daar ook de pijn in zit bij die loonies, het feit dat Obama niet
alleen maar praat maar ook daadwerkelijk iets van zijn leven heeft gemaakt,
ouch...... Cool

Maar die duidelijke conclusie hadden wel al vanaf het begin getrokken toch?

Laat ze zich lekker uitleven hoor, in het dagelijks leven ziet niemand ze waarschijnlijk staan noch zitten. Hier zijn ze tenminste nog wat, al zijn het slechts een paar koeieletters. Wink
Logged
Pages: 1 ... 69 70 71 72 73 [74] 75 76 77 78   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to: