Tuesday, September 28, 2010
The practice of pardoning Birtukan Mideksa
"...given her past practice, I wouldn't be surprised if she asked for pardon again, and given the practice of the government, I wouldn't be surprised if the government were to pardon her again..."
Video starts at the 46:36 minute mark. The quote is found at the 52:00 minute mark.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Reaganomics vs. Obamanomics
A Tale of Two Recoveries: The state of the economy after a year of 'rebound.' (WSJ, 9/22/2010)
Recession May Be Over, but Joblessness Remains (New York Times, 9/20/2010)
The verdict is clear: most of Obama's economic policies have proven to be ineffective in stimulating a recovery and job creation. It's no wonder that most of the architects of his economic policies have left the administration or are planning to leave soon.
Recession May Be Over, but Joblessness Remains (New York Times, 9/20/2010)
The verdict is clear: most of Obama's economic policies have proven to be ineffective in stimulating a recovery and job creation. It's no wonder that most of the architects of his economic policies have left the administration or are planning to leave soon.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Ethiopia's trends compared with some selected countries
The graphs below are made using Google's public data explorer. What's neat about this tool is that it allows you to quickly visualize data and spot trends. I wanted to see how Ethiopia's trends compared with some selected countries. The results speak for themselves, but I think you should take them with a grain of salt since the data comes from the World Bank which, in turn, gets a lot of its data directly from member countries.
Friday, September 03, 2010
"Radical Islam is world's greatest threat"
Tony Blair believes so and I agree.
Here is another example of radical Islam asserting its political muscle in the streets of France.
A quote from Tony Blair's new book "A Journey: My Political Life" makes this point crystal clear:
Here is another example of radical Islam asserting its political muscle in the streets of France.
A quote from Tony Blair's new book "A Journey: My Political Life" makes this point crystal clear:
Here is where the root of the problem lies. The extremists are small in number, but their narrative—which sees Islam as the victim of a scornful West externally, and an insufficiently religious leadership internally—has a far bigger hold. Indeed, such is the hold that much of the current political leadership feels impelled to go along with this narrative for fear of losing
support...
...Defeating the visible and terrifying manifestations of religious extremism is not enough. Indeed I would go further: This extremism won't be defeated simply by focusing on the extremists alone. It is the narrative that has to be assailed. It has to be avowed, acknowledged; then taken on, inside and outside Islam. It should not be respected. It should be confronted, disagreed with, argued against on grounds of politics, security and religion.
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