Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Recommended Viewing
The issue is that they've got real power and it is having a dire effect on attempts to solve some of the world's serious problems.
It first screened on the BBC on 16 September 2006 and is hosted by the one and only Tony Robinson. A brilliant piece of work, something everyone should watch.
If you've got 100 minutes and enough download in your month left free, do yourself a favour.
Monday, September 25, 2006
You may have missed this in the news
But swords are awesome.'Jihad' car commercial upsets US Muslims
Monday Sep 25 06:51 AESTA car commercial proclaiming a jihad on the US auto market and offering "Fatwa Fridays" with free swords for the kids is offensive and should not be aired, Muslim leaders say.
The radio advertisement for the Dennis Mitsubishi car dealership in Columbus, Ohio, has "a whole jihad theme," said Adnan Mirza, director of the Columbus office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
"They are planning on launching a jihad on the automotive market and their representatives would be wearing burqas ... ," Mirza said. "They mentioned the pope in there and also about giving rubber swords out to the kiddies - really just reprehensible-type comments."
Details of the radio ad, which has not yet been broadcast, have been reported in the local media, but officials at the dealership declined to comment about the content of the radio spot.
Two employees at the dealership said they had been deluged with calls about the commercial.
"The ad has has never been released, it is not out for public listening," said one employee who declined to give his name. He would not say whether the dealership had changed its mind about airing the commercial.
Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Motors Corp. could not immediately be reached for comment.
Mirza said several local radio stations had already rejected the ad and he hoped the controversy would convince the dealership to rethink its sales strategy.
He also said the Council on American-Islamic Relations would likely contact the dealer to "offer some kind of cultural or sensitivity awareness training."
Reuters.

