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neil-gaiman:

Just watch this. (If it lets you watch it where you are. If it doesn’t, I recommend Tunnelbear.)

“You’ve confused a war on religion with not always getting everything you want.”

“When the Nazis came for people, they also left with them. It wasn’t a metaphor.”

thedailywhat:

This Is All Kinds Of Wrong of the Day: Hamza Kashgari, a young writer for the Saudi daily newspaper Al Bilad who fled his homeland after being charged with offending Islam and the Prophet Mohammed, was seized upon arrival in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and will be sent back to Saudi Arabia to face a possible death sentence.

Kashgari took to Twitter last week, prior to the anniversary of Muhammad’s birth, and wrote down a series of seemingly innocuous reflections.

“On your birthday, I find you wherever I turn. I will say that I have loved aspects of you, hated others, and could not understand many more,” the 23-year-old tweeted.

The response from tens of thousands of Saudis was immediate and unequivocal: Kashgari was a blasphemer and deserved to die.

He attempted to withdraw his comments and apologize — even beg — but the damage had been done. A short while later, King Abdullah personally ordered his arrest, and Kashgari became a fugitive.

He managed to escape Saudi Arabia, but didn’t get very far. “The Malaysian authorities are coordinating with Saudi Arabia to hand Kashgari over,” the Saudi newspaper Al Youm reported.

The country’s powerful Islamic Fatwa Committee has released a statement saying Kashgari must be punished in accordance with Islamic law. In other words: Execution. 

[emirates247 / dailybeast.]

This is why we fight.

Although the leader’s family (and presumably the leader himself) seems to have preferred Gathafi, TheAtlantic.com International Channel will stick to its style of ‘Qaddafi’ for reasons of consistency until such point as Muammar Qaddafi specifically requests otherwise in a letter to the editor — preferably one with a return address.

Rebel Discovers Qaddafi Passport, Real Spelling of Leader’s Name

Few & Far Between

I’ve been reorganizing my music collection all summer. It shouldn’t have taken this long, but once I got the CDs in alphabetical stacks, I realized the next step would be putting those CDs in giant cases and disposing of the jewel cases—some of which I’ve had since I was 10. I know this is ridiculous, but some of those went to the Netherlands with me in 1993. They’re just plastic, but those scratches—some of those probably came from when I droped my CDs down a stairwell in Amsterdam. That’s history, folks.

Anyway, I just came across the 10,000 Maniacs single for “Few & Far Between.” In addition to the album version of that song, it also has a live version of “Candy Everybody Wants” with guest vocals from Michael Stipe, a live covers of “To Sir with Love” and “Let the Mystery Be” (by Iris DeMent, who also wrote “Our Town,” which was the last song played on Northern Exposure and of which Kate Rusby does a moving cover), the latter of which is a duet with David Byrne from MTV Unplugged.

The single came out in 1993. Inside the “Printed on recycled paper” packaging is the following message:

Dear friend,

in 1992, young people turned the tide of political apathy—11 million of us went to the polls on November 3, a record breaking turn-out.

By voting in large numbers we seized the nation’s attention. Now we have a chance to make an impact on those issues that effect young Americans everyday, like tolerance, censorship, health care, the economy, and educational funding.

Rock The Vote gives you a way to get involved in politics and make your voice heard—as part of a huge movement of young Americans fighting together for the youth agenda in our schools, our communities, our workplaces and our culture.

Last year we won political power. ROCK THE VOTE is the way to use it.

Natalie Merchant

I tried to copy this accurately, including “issues that effect young Americans.” I won’t hold that against Natalie or Elektra’s copyeditor. Effect/affect aside, the message is a very interesting read, all these years later.

On one hand, if Merchant and MTV’s Rock the Vote people could have seen the 2008 election in the future, they would’ve been that much more driven. On the other hand, if they could have seen the intervening years—or, for that matter, much of 2009 so far—they probably would’ve shut the whole thing down.

In 15 years or so, someone’s going to look back at the Will.i.am video and wonder the same thing. Hell, half the country’s probably thinking it now about … I don’t know, did any musicians do songs about John McCain and the hope he brought to the nation?

Election season (however long or short) is a time for action. You can be hopeful and exuberant or angry and soapboxing, but it’s easy to be active—to feel like things might go your way if a percent of the population swings one way or the other.

And then, a few weeks later, when half the voters come down from nirvana, and the other half climb up out of their doldrums, we all meet in the middle and sit around and wonder what why we feel pretty much the same as we did a year ago.

Maybe it’s a problem with the two-party system. Maybe it’s just a problem with systems in general. Maybe it’s a problem with us.

Everybody’s wondering what and where they all came from.
Everybody’s worried ‘bout where we’re gonna go when the whole thing’s done.
Nobody knows for certain, and so it’s all the same to me.
I think I’ll just let the mystery be
.

The Daily Show writers may, in fact, be smarter and more resourceful than all the rest of us put together. Brilliance. (via Sarah Palin Gender Card | The Daily Show | Comedy Central)

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