Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- October 1, 2014

A farmer loads wheat grains onto a truck near the town of Makhmur, August 27, 2014. Picture taken August 27, 2014. Credit: REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal

Special Report: Islamic State Uses Grain To Tighten Grip In Iraq -- Maggie Fick, Reuters

(Reuters) - For Salah Paulis, it came down to a choice between his faith and his crop.

A wheat farmer from outside Mosul, Paulis and his family fled the militant group Islamic State early last month. The group overran the family farm as part of its offensive that captured vast swathes of territory in northern Iraq. Two weeks later, Paulis, who is a Christian, received a phone call from a man who said he was an Islamic State fighter.

“We are in your warehouse. Why are you not here working and taking care of your business?” the man asked in formal Arabic. “Come back and we will guarantee your safety. But you must convert and pay $500.”

Read more ....

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- October 1, 2014

Unifying the ‘moderate opposition’ is the biggest challenge in Syria -- David Ignatius, Washington Post

Here There Is No Why: For ISIS, Slaughter Is an End in Itself -- Roger Cohen, NYT

Saudi Arabia fears Yemeni tumult may boost its main foe Iran -- Angus McDowall, Reuters

Is a buffer zone on the Israeli-Syrian border feasible? -- Tony Badran, NOW

An Afghan miracle -- Peter Bergen, CNN

The Road to Bamiyan: A Public Works Debacle that Defines Afghanistan -- Jochen-Martin Gutsch, Spiegel Online

Hong Kong protests demand face-saving solution -- Boston Globe editorial

Special Report: In 'Umbrella Revolution,' China confronts limits of its power -- David Lague , James Pomfret and Greg Torode, Reuters

Is Xi Losing Control of China's ‘Peripheries’? -- J. Michael Cole, The Diplomat

China's Hopeless Quest for 'Friends' and 'Enemies' -- Kerry Brown, The Diplomat

Catalonia flexes its muscles - Deutsche Welle

Germany's Disarmed Forces: Ramshackle Military at Odds with Global Aspirations -- Spiegel Online

Russians Are Dangerously Addicted to Putin -- Maxim Trudolyubov, Moscow Times

A Battle Plan for NATO's New Secretary General -- Jan Techau, Real Clear World

Secret Service director quits: Here's why Congress was extra-mad with her -- Peter Grier, CSM

Let’s get a grip on Ebola fear in U.S. -- Chicago Sun Times editorial

The CDC Was Wrong About How to Stop Ebola -- Kent Sepkowitz, Daily Beast

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Middle English loverd, lord, from Old English hlāford, from hlāf loaf + weard keeper — more at loaf, ward

merriam-webster.com/dictionary/lord

I have also read a definition that said the Norse derivation of lord meant giver of bread.

If government is not right sized, you will be asking "Mother may I" more than you ought.

Now I ask you are the people, in charge of government the brightest and most upright?