The religion of peace strikes again...

texan

Well-Known Member
The laughter is dying down in Egypt
“Prosperity,” wrote stoic philosopher Seneca, “fosters bad tempers.” This helps explain why Egyptians have such
good ones. Humor has always served as a transformative outlet for sorrows and frustrations, and laughter as the
balancing pole of Egypt’s psychological high-wire act. But heaviness has lately crept into the nation’s psyche. There’s
nothing funny about street clashes, soccer riots, body counts and cynical political maneuvering; or about the fact
that Egypt’s dourest citizens have risen so loudly to the fore.

Read more: THE DAILY STAR :: Opinion :: Commentary :: The laughter is dying down in Egypt
(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: THE DAILY STAR :: Breaking News, Lebanon News, Middle East News & World News)
 

texan

Well-Known Member
Shariah's Police?
A Saudi newspaper columnist named Hamza Kashgari was detained in Malaysia, reportedly on the basis of an alert by
the International Criminal Police Organization, better known as Interpol. Reuters quotes a Malaysian police spokesman as saying that, “This arrest was part of an Interpol operation which the Malaysian police were a part of.”
It was apparently mounted in response to a “red notice” (or request for help apprehending an individual) issued by
Saudi Arabia. Kashgari was then sent back to Saudi Arabia where he faces almost certain death.

Center For Security Policy

 

moreluck

golden ticket member
Sort of like christianity telling us that we cannot buy alcohol on sunday before a certain time.
My grocery store opens at 6 AM on Sunday and you can buy Jack Daniels at that time.....so I don't know what you are talking about. There are no blue laws here!!
 

804brown

Well-Known Member
[h=2]History[/h]
  • Blue laws have been in effect in New York since the colonial days of the 17th century. The early laws forbade playing, working, exercise, and drinking in public on Sundays. Violators could be slapped in the stocks for three hours. In the early 18th and 19th centuries, both the sale of alcoholic drinks and the playing of professional and amateur baseball were illegal on Sunday. State legislators began to try and pass legislation to allow professional baseball games on Sundays in 1907, but it took them 12 years to succeed. In 1919 baseball was allowed on Sunday, but the sale of alcoholic drinks still was not. This Sunday closing law was replaced in 1920 by the 18th Amendment, a national prohibition law that forbade all alcohol sales. After Prohibition was repealed in 1933, a new ban was passed on the sale of alcohol on Sunday in New York.

[h=2]2003 Revisions[/h]
  • In 2003, the New York legislature allowed the sale of alcoholic beverages on Sunday for the first time. The new law did not allow grocery stores to sell wine on Sunday but did allow them to sell beer after noon. A business that sold alcohol on Sunday was also required to choose another day to close, so the Sunday closing law was changed to a one-day-a-week closing law. The day of closure was part of the licensing agreement with the state.

[h=2]2006 Revisions[/h]
  • In 2006, the New York legislature liberalized the law on the Sunday sale of alcoholic beverage, allowing businesses to sell beer beginning at 8 a.m. instead of waiting until noon. This was intended for the convenience of consumers who have activities planned for the day.

[h=2]County Regulations[/h]
  • In New York State, the counties have the right to enact more strict regulation on the sale of alcohol. Some counties have more limited hours than the state allows.



Read more: New York State Blue Laws | eHow.com New York State Blue Laws | eHow.com
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
History

  • Blue laws have been in effect in New York since the colonial days of the 17th century. The early laws forbade playing, working, exercise, and drinking in public on Sundays. Violators could be slapped in the stocks for three hours. In the early 18th and 19th centuries, both the sale of alcoholic drinks and the playing of professional and amateur baseball were illegal on Sunday. State legislators began to try and pass legislation to allow professional baseball games on Sundays in 1907, but it took them 12 years to succeed. In 1919 baseball was allowed on Sunday, but the sale of alcoholic drinks still was not. This Sunday closing law was replaced in 1920 by the 18th Amendment, a national prohibition law that forbade all alcohol sales. After Prohibition was repealed in 1933, a new ban was passed on the sale of alcohol on Sunday in New York.
2003 Revisions

  • In 2003, the New York legislature allowed the sale of alcoholic beverages on Sunday for the first time. The new law did not allow grocery stores to sell wine on Sunday but did allow them to sell beer after noon. A business that sold alcohol on Sunday was also required to choose another day to close, so the Sunday closing law was changed to a one-day-a-week closing law. The day of closure was part of the licensing agreement with the state.
2006 Revisions

  • In 2006, the New York legislature liberalized the law on the Sunday sale of alcoholic beverage, allowing businesses to sell beer beginning at 8 a.m. instead of waiting until noon. This was intended for the convenience of consumers who have activities planned for the day.
County Regulations

  • In New York State, the counties have the right to enact more strict regulation on the sale of alcohol. Some counties have more limited hours than the state allows.

Read more: New York State Blue Laws | eHow.com New York State Blue Laws | eHow.com
There are 56 other states according to the messiah..........so move!
 

wkmac

Well-Known Member
So the underwear bomber is guilty and it's game over. Well there may be more to this story than is letting be told.

Oh and if you think it's beyond the pale that a US gov't agent would supply the means to kill people then please explain Fast and Furious and if you are one of those here who have made a big deal of that operation yet reject the underwear bomber as false flag patsy, then you should just shut up and no longer make any mention of Fast and Furious.

Fast and Furious clearly shows when it comes to innocent lives, our gov't doesn't give a MFing damn about any of us, innocent or otherwise. Thereby making the underwear bomber as false flag operative very plausible.
 

Babagounj

Strength through joy
As well as the newest threat in DC , where the gov't supplied a person with a suicide vest and then took him down. Heck I've seen better plots on tv.
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
| Monday, February 20, 2012 @ 8:58 am | Kuwait Considering Ban On Construction of Churches…

I eagerly await CAIR’s condemnation.
(Arabian Business) — A Kuwaiti parliamentarian is set to submit a draft law banning the construction of churches and non-Islamic places of worship in the Gulf state, it was reported at the weekend.

Kuwaiti Member of Parliament (MP) Osama Al-Munawer announced on Twitter he plans to submit a draft law calling for the removal of all churches in the country. However, he later clarified that existing churches should remain but the construction of new non-Islamic places of worship should be banned.

Fellow MP, Mohammad Hayef supported the draft law. “Kuwait already has an excessive number of churches compared to the country’s Christian minority”, he was quoted as saying by the Kuwait Times newspaper.

The country’s Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs recently granted a licence for the construction of a new church, which Hayef described as “an error”.

 
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