Wind of Change


A Terrorist Country
November 19, 2009, 9:11 pm
Filed under: Egypt, Sport | Tags: , , ,

This barbarian country name ALGERIA should be banned from all international humanitarian activities. They did so many terrorist attack in several part of the world with really no clear reason except that they are uncivilized and again barbarian people.



Finnish Minister of Health on H1N1 (thanks Hala) !!!!!!!
November 10, 2009, 8:45 am
Filed under: Healthcare | Tags: , , , , , ,
What she said Finnish Minister of Health boldly and openly infinitely:

America aims to reduce the world’s population by two thirds without incur even earn billions and forced the World Health Organization classification of swine flu epidemic fatal degree in order to make vaccination compulsory for Akhiaria especially for the first segments of the target of the next generation who are pregnant women and children …

Our government refused Finnish classification and degree of the disease made to the Basic Aighebr one on vaccination ..

Did not know at all what Tothberat vaccine after a year or 5 years or 20 years!? .. Is it absolute sterility or cancer or other diseases and tumors deadly?!!

Most importantly, the American manufacturers exempted from bearing any responsibility as a serious indicator of intentions ….

The duty of all circular for each of you like and Tazzon ..

Saw and heard the tape and your recent decision



The Mukhabarat and Mahmoud: who mattered more to Egypt in the long run?
November 3, 2009, 2:46 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

 The wonderful Middle East Institute blogger Michael Collins Dunn noted the other day the passing of Amin Huwaydi, the former Egyptian Defense Minister and Intelligence chief.  But even he missed the passing of another iconic Egyptian:  Mustafa Mahmoud.  Who?  Mustafa Mahmoud

 

 

 Mustafa Mahmoud never held a government office as far as I know, and played no role in the great international diplomacy of the Middle East.  From what I can tell, his passing has received no coverage in the Western media.   I never got to meet Mustafa Mahmoud, who retreated from the public eye years ago while battling cancer.  But he did as much as anyone else to spread Islamist identity and ideology through the lower and middle classes of a rapidly urbanizing Cairo. 

 Mahmoud was the author of more than a hundred accessible cheap Islamic books which used to be available all over Cairo (and beyond). A medical doctor by training, he established the mosque and medical clinic which bears his name, which served as one of the leading examples of the kinds of Islamist social services which earned them such respect and support.  He became an Egyptian media star through his long running television program, “Science and Faith.” It is impossible to look around Cairo today without seeing his reflection:  the Islamicized public space and public discourse, the profusion of Islamist social services, the creative Islamist use of every new media technology.  

 Those Americans trying today to craft a new relationship with the Islamic world might ask themselves which of these men — the Defense Minister and Mukhabarat Director, or the media-savvy Islamic populist — ultimately had the greater impact on Egypt and the Middle East.  And they should ask themselves how American “strategic public engagement” with the Islamic world can respond to the world which Mustafa Mahmoud helped to shape.