Ambassador to Libya wiki snippet on his assasination
9/13/2012 12:58:01 PM
9/13/2012 1:04:16 PM
yea, at least this came from the #1 speculative source in America. And another reason I did NOT post this in chit chat. poor guy
9/13/2012 1:17:15 PM
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/15/world/meast/libya-diplomats-warning/index.htmlhttp://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/12/world/africa/libya-us-ambassador-killed-profile/index.htmlhttp://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/09/12/six-things-to-know-about-attack-that-killed-ambassador-stevenshttp://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/14/opinion/drotar-chris-stevens/index.htmlhttp://security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/09/14/in-attack-aftermath-disagreement-over-how-it-beganit is really sad, and being a mulsim (albeit, nominally), it really saddens and angers me what the protesters are doing around the world.the libyan attack involved machine guns and RPGs though, so it was not just common people from the street, but armed extremists/terrorists who took advantage of the situation.aside from the specific links above about the libyan attack and the profile of the slain ambassador, here is a good read:Arab Spring nations don't yet grasp freedom of dissenthttp://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/14/opinion/husain-arab-spring-democracy/index.htmli know the arab/muslim mind and psyche pretty well, and let me tell you, it ain't pretty. downright dangerous for a majority of the population.
9/17/2012 5:39:09 AM
As I've said several times, these protests (over a very low-budget movie made by an ex-con Egyptian-American Coptic Christian) are ridiculuos and deserve ridicule. Although I'm pretty sure it's just a convenient excuse.Lebanon's Hezbollah leader call for protest. http://www.wral.com/news/national_world/world/story/11555526/
9/17/2012 10:59:30 AM
I don't think this has anything to do with an "Arab/Muslim" mentality, given the hundreds of millions of Muslims worldwide (Including in Europe and America, and a few I know personally and see daily) who are doing absolutely no protesting at all, and "Arab" is an ethnicity. I think Islam serves as a bit of a rallying call, as is the West as an ambiguously-adversarial force in their lives, and groupthink takes over from there. Food prices in the region are also at all-time highs, and the protests themselves correlate oddly well with those food prices.I think what's really going on here is clear: People in the Middle East are hungry, poor, and battered. This is partly because of decades of the West negatively impacting them in one way or another, partly because of the failures of their own governments, and partly because of the simple material conditions of the lands they inhabit. Former invaders/underminers usually have dealt long-term damage to their economy and/or social order. Nearly every country that is seeing large protests is one that has seen US/NATO/Western interference, subversion, or simple manslaughter in their country in the last generation or two. They, like most poor shlocks, become engrossed with religious and nationalistic fervor, because both of these are comforting to them and put them into a larger commiserative group. They blame (sometimes accurately, sometimes not) their problems on historical enemies who make for perennial scapegoats, and try to declare their own group to be uniquely exceptional or special on the world stage with unique roles applying to them. If this sounds at all familiar it's because this describes the American South for a long time after the Civil War (Including the present to a degree).[Edited on September 18, 2012 at 12:32 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2012 12:27:12 PM
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2012/09/does-not-represent-us-moving-photos-pro-american-rallies-libya/56803/A lot of the comments are from both sides.
9/18/2012 5:31:00 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2012/09/21/world/africa/libya-benghazi-counter-protest/index.htmlAwesome.
9/21/2012 6:51:24 PM
^ goddamn!i have never had a bigger smile on my face from reading a news article!
9/21/2012 7:09:48 PM