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  • bottom line humanity vs Rothschild in this Egypt skermish the people of Egpt have gained yet another victory for humanity. Iceland will always be remembered as the first victory. USA is fighting hard with the head messenger being Ron Paul. Enlightened disengagement.

  • Fill-Ah-sa-fick-ly

  • @TheTime4solutions

    Kennedy assassinated on Nov 22 1963 US Notes he issued taken out of circulation.

    Why did Lyndon Baines Johnson not continue President Kennedy’s Executive order? Was he afraid for his own life? ~ And just who owns the Federal Reserve Bank?

    1. The Rothschilds of London and Berlin;

    2. Lazard Brothers of Paris;

    3. Israel Moses Seif of Italy;

    4. Kuhn Loeb and Warburg of Germany;

    5. Lehman Brothers, Goldman, Sachs;

    6. The Rothschild-controlled Rockefeller interests of New York.

  • @obaidkarki G'Day Obaid, so i see another related topic..... so are you hinting at something here..... uh huh ... we spoke of the caliphate being weakened .... are we witnessing the start of something here ......and if so, would you support it?

  • @Dokhons

    no i don't support caliphate in its new form, simply because Muslim got contrasts of clergymen but but no leaders

  • @obaidkarki Well, someone has to push the envelope, now .... what is the other form then? Thank you for the snap shot on the caliphate history, but I felt it was missing so many players ..... I did send type my email last night yeah? .. thank you once again brother Obaid

  • Obaid, strange we did not hear from you about SOPA and PIPA!

  • @cancer19850624

    the premise is much larger than me. i like to absorb it first. this is the first raid after ndaa passed by the house, if pipa is passed then welcome to planet prison

  • "Italian cruise ship Costa Concordia's captain Francesco Schettino held". You comments please on this idiot coward in a short blurb?

    Also On

    Millions of Americans oppose SOPA and PIPA because these bills would censor the Internet and slow economic growth in the U.S.

  • Evidence that Mubarak himself ordered the killings remains largely circumstantial though, leaving some to conclude that the death penalty is unlikely to be applied.

    Both lawyers and human rights monitors say they are happy with the procedural fairness of the trial, with few complaints made against Judge Ahmed Refaat, who has promised to deliver a verdict soon after the defence rests "This trial has been conducted in a normal and professional way in accordance with Egyptian law," Khaled Abu Bakr

  • @obaidkarki Do you teach speed reading? How is it possible to read 200 pages per hour? Do you miss many details and nuances and read only the general information?

  • The second stage – establishing Mubarak's knowledge of these killings – has been trickier, though statements from officials declaring that they heard Adly authorising the use of "all means necessary" to stamp out the uprising, plus testimony from post-Mubarak interior ministers that such an order could only come from the head of state, and Adly's own insistence that he briefed the president on the unfolding security crisis, have all been used to substantiate the prosecution case.

  • he would be guilty of conspiracy in the murders and consequently face up to 25 years.

    Finally, if that conspiracy to murder can be shown to be premeditated – in other words, if Mubarak himself gave the order – then under Egyptian law his crime may warrant the death penalty.

    Through the use of autopsy reports, video evidence and witness testimony, prosecution lawyers are confident they have proved live rounds were deployed by police against protesters

  • Legal experts say there are three levels at which Mubarak could be found guilty. If the prosecution can prove that security forces were firing live ammunition at demonstrators then the former leader, who as president had a constitutional duty to protect the Egyptian people, could potentially receive a sentence of up to 10 years' jail even if he was unaware of the situation.

    If prosecutors can go further and establish that Mubarak did know about the killings and yet did nothing to stop them

  • Mubarak, his two sons Gamal and Alaa, his former interior minister, Habib al-Adly, and six senior police officers are all in the dock, facing a range of charges. Mubarak's one-time business associate, Hussein Salem, is being tried in absentia.

    The ex-president stands accused of economic fraud and exploiting his position for personal enrichment, but most serious charge against him is that of conspiring in the killing of protesters who were shot by police as anti-regime uprising gathered pace

  • "But he never attempted to crush the protests. On the contrary, he supported the protesters' demands … There is no case against Mubarak."

    Few observers will give any credence to the idea that Mubarak – who used his vast security apparatus to brutally repress political dissent for a generation – was secretly aligned with those who sought to overthrow him.

    But questions over the prosecution case are mounting, and they strike at the heart of what the "trial of the century" means to Egypt

  • and lambasted his courtroom adversaries for besmirching Mubarak's family with "libel and slander".

    The prosecution's arguments were speculation, and appealed more to public sentiment than the rule of law, insisted El-Deeb, as he laid out a seven-point defence of his client and declared the toppled dictator to be a closet revolutionary.

    "When Mubarak learned about the protesters, he wanted to respond to their demands immediately, all within the law," said El-Deeb.

  • Hosni Mubarak's fightback began. To cheers from his team of volunteer lawyers, the 83-year-old's attorney said the image of a corrupt, bloodthirsty tyrant painted by the prosecution bore no relation to the honest, noble and above all patriotic president stretched out before them, now clad in prison overalls and following proceedings wordlessly from within a secure metal cage.

    Instead, Farid el-Deeb painted an astonishing portrait of a leader who was "clean and could say no wrong",

  • "Integrity and transparency went down the drain [because] the defendant preferred his personal interests to those of the public," concluded lead counsel Mostafa Suleiman earlier this month, speaking with his back to the despot who held Egypt in an iron grip for 30 years.

    "He deserves to end up with humiliation and indignity, from the presidential palace to the defendant's cage, and then get the harshest penalty."

  • Egypt's Mubarak is no tyrant, defence tells court

    Hosni Mubarak's defence lawyers say former president never tried to crush Egyptian protesters, but instead supported their demands

    For the past five months, the elderly man behind bars at New Cairo's police academy has had to sit – or lie horizontal – as prosecutors steadily built their case against him, culminating in a dramatic demand that he be put to death by the state

  • I would love to visit Egypt again one day. It would be good for everyone if it would be a free country.

  • ...howdy buddy;

    ~hit the open bowl eye a 3rd time today, life finds a way :)

    =I am going to celebrate and risk a tuna fish sandwich (pre fukushima data) and start working on the 4th . The can say shark free, so it won't have any cancer curative properties though

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