Showing posts with label angry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angry. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

20 Atheist Quotes About Joy and Meaning That Crush ‘Angry, Empty’ Stereotype



When asked about their moral values or what motivates them in life, atheists use words that sound downright spiritual.








Recently an “educational” pamphlet designed for Christian children made its way around Facebook. It warned God’s little lambs to avoid sour unhappy people called “atheists.” A private school curriculum called Accelerated Christian Education includes cartoons in which the atheist characters are rude, mean and drunk; and bad things happen to them.


Stereotypes like these get echoed sometimes even in Christian books and lectures that are targeted at adults. I once attended a successful megachurch on the Sunday before Easter. The pastor wanted his audience to be clear that the resurrection of Jesus wasn’t merely some spiritual metaphor. “If the resurrection didn’t literally happen,” he shouted, “there is no reason for us to be here! If the resurrection didn’t literally happen—there are parties to be had! There are women to be had! There are guns to shoot! There are people to shoot!”


You caught the subtext?  Atheists (and even liberal Christians) have no basis for morality. Nothing—and I mean nothing!—stands between a godless person and debauchery or lechery or even violence.


Population demographics suggest otherwise, of course. Atheism is far more common among elite scientists and some of the most peaceful and equitable societies on earth are also the least religious. But believers persist in fearing that godless people are amoral, that unfettered by religion the world would descend into the anarchy and bloodbath depicted in the Left Behind movies.


In reality, when asked about their moral values or what motivates them in life, atheists use words that sound downright spiritual, very much like the words religious people use in fact, with a few noteworthy differences. To create his book, A better LifePhotographer Chris Johnson asked 100 atheists about what gives their lives joy and meaning. To some Christians the question is equivalent to asking an elephant where he gets his chocolate ice cream. The answers might surprise them even more. Themes include love and connection, compassion and service, legacy (leaving the world a little better), creativity and discovery, gratitude, transcendence, and wonder—all heightened by a sense that this one life is fleetingly transient and precious.


Here are 20 short quotes from Johnson’s assemblage, each of which is crushingly at odds with the standard stereotype of the angry, selfish godless scrooge.


·         Knowing there is a world that will outlive you, there are people whose well-being depends on how you live your life, affects the way you live your life, whether or not you directly experience those effects. You want to be the kind of person who has the larger view, who takes other people’s interests into account, who’s dedicated to the principles that you can justify, like justice, knowledge, truth, beauty and morality. – Steven Pinker, cognitive scientist


·         In the theater you create a moment, but in that moment, there is a touch, a twinkle of eternity. And not just eternity, but community. . . . That connection is a sense of life for me. – Teller, illusionist


·         We are all given a gift of existence and of being sentient beings, and I think true happiness lies in love and compassion.– Adam Pascal, musician and actor


·         Being engaged in some way for the good of the community, whatever that community, is a factor in a meaningful life. We long to belong, and belonging and caring anchors our sense of place in the universe. – Patricia S. Churchland, neurophilosopher


·         For me the meaning of life, or the meaning in life, is helping people and loving people . . . The real joy for me is when someone comes up to me and they want to just sit down and share their struggle. –Teresa MacBain, former minister


·         Joy is human connection; the compassion put into every moment of humanitarian work; joy is using your time to bring peace, relief, or optimism to others. Joy gives without the expectation—or wish—of reciprocity or gratitude. . . . Joy immediately loves the individual in need and precedes any calculation of how much the giver can handle or whom the giver can help. – Erik Campano, emergency medicine


·         Raising curious, compassionate, strong, and loving children—teaching them to love others and helping them to see the beauty of humanity—that is the most meaningful and joyful responsibility we have. – Joel Legawiec, pediatric nurse


·         Anytime I hear someone say that only humans have a thoughtful mind, a loving heart, or a compassionate soul, I have to think that person has never owned a dog or known an elephant. – Aron Ra, Texas state director of American Atheists


·         I find my joy in justice and equality: in all creatures having opportunities for enjoyment and being treated with fairness, as we all wish and deserve to be treated. . . . While I enjoy the positive feelings of self-improvement, this fire pales compared to the feeling of joy that comes from having contributed something to the greater good. – Lynnea Glasser, game developer


·         You’re like this little blip of light that lasts for a very brief time and you can shine as brightly as you choose. – Sean Faircloth, author, lawyer, lobbyist


·         Play hard, work hard, love hard. . . .The bottom line for me is to live life to the fullest in the here-and-now instead of a hoped-for hereafter, and make every day count in some meaningful way and do something—no matter how small it is—to make the world a better place. – Michael Shermer, founder and publisher, Skeptic Magazine


·         I hope to dissuade the cruel parts of the world from their self-imposed exile and persuade their audiences to understand that freedom is synonymous with life and that the world is a place of safety and of refuge. – Faisal Saeed Al-Mutar, writer


·         I look around the world and see so many wonderful things that I love and enjoy and benefit from, whether it’s art or music or clothing or food and all the rest. And I’d like to add a little to that goodness. – Daniel Dennett, philosopher and cognitive scientist


·         I thrive on maintaining a simple awe about the universe. No matter what struggles we are going through the miracles of existence continue on, forming and reforming patterns like an unstoppable kaleidoscope. – Marlene Winell, human development consultant


·         Math . . . music .. . starry nights . . . These are secular ways of achieving transcendence, of feeling lifted into a grand perspective. It’s a sense of being awed by existence that almost obliterates the self. Religious people think of it as an essentially religious experience but it’s not. It’s an essentially human experience. – Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, philosopher and novelist


·         There is joy in the search for knowledge about the universe in all its manifestations. – Janet Asimov, psychiatrist


·         Science and reason liberate us from the shackles of superstition by offering us a framework for understanding our shared humanity. Ultimately, we all have the capacity to treasure life and enrich the world in incalculable ways. – Gad Saad, professor of marketing


·         If you trace back all those links in the chain that had to be in place for me to be here, the laws of probability maintain that my very existence is miraculous. But then after however many decades, less than a hundred years, they disburse and I cease to be. So while they’re all congregated and coordinated to make me, then—and I speak her on behalf of all those trillions of atoms—I should really make the most of things. – Jim Al-Khalili, professor of physics


·         Just the idea that we, these little collections of atoms and molecules, are part of the world, but a part that can look at the rest of the world and figure it out in a self-referential way, is kind of breathtaking. – Sean Carroll, theoretical physicist


·         It doesn’t have to be the Grand Canyon, it could be a city street, it could be the face of another human being—Everything is full of wonder. – A. C. Grayling, philosopher and author


·         I don’t think anything gives your life joy and meaning. I think your life simply has joy and meaning. The love for my children, the love for my parents and the love for my friends is the end in itself. The meaning is life. – Penn Jillette, illusionist


The differences between how atheists express such values and how theists express them are apparent—the emphasis on curiosity for example, on relishing the unknown and the process of discovery; the fact that mortality gives a special emphasis or urgency to the life well lived; the notion that our continuity with other species creates a special kinship and compassion toward them.  But in the end, it is the similarities that are the most striking. As writer Nica Lalli put it,  “All the terms that describe people’s beliefs are nothing more than labels. Once we determine someone ‘is’ some religion—or no religion—we move on, thinking we know all about them. But what do we ever know from one word, whether it is Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, or atheist? We know nothing.”


All quotes are taken with permission from A Better Life:  100 Atheists Speak Out on Joy and Meaning in a World without God.  



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20 Atheist Quotes About Joy and Meaning That Crush ‘Angry, Empty’ Stereotype

Monday, January 27, 2014

Carney ducks Angry Birds question



The White House wouldn’t comment specifically Monday on intelligence agencies’ surveillance of terror suspects and their contacts through mobile apps including Angry Birds, but a reporter’s sharp-tongued question on the issue did draw some laughs.


“I’m not in a position to discuss specifics on intelligence collection,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said during his daily press briefing. “But to be clear, as the president said in his Jan. 17 speech, to the extent data is collected by the NSA through whatever means, we are not interested in the communications of people who are not valid intelligence targets. And we are not collecting the information of ordinary Americans.”







Drawing on documents shared by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the New York Times reported Monday that the NSA and Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters have been working together since 2007 to collect and store data from dozens of apps. So-called “leaky” apps release data including phones’ identification codes and locations onto networks, the Times said, making it ripe for the picking by spies.


In asking about the surveillance through apps, Victoria Jones of Talk News Radio Service framed her question around the avian app.


“The NSA is lurking in the background of your game of Angry Birds, waiting to scoop up all your personal data as you lob hapless creatures into the air,” she said. “This is the last bastion of American freedom has been breached. I mean, there seems to be something particularly egregious about going after leaky apps”


While making clear that he couldn’t discuss specific means of data collection, Carney stressed that surveillance efforts “focused on valid, foreign intelligence targets and not the information of ordinary Americans”


The U.S. and British spy agencies have also worked together to share strategies for collecting data from mobile versions of Google Maps, Facebook, Flickr, LinkedIn and Twitter, among other services, the Times said.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Carney ducks Angry Birds question

Friday, January 3, 2014

Two And A Half Men - The Angry Lady

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Two And A Half Men - The Angry Lady

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

VIDEO: Kanye West Flips Out On Stage!







It’s always something with Kanye West! He’s had beef with Jimmy Kimmel, Louis Vuitton, Nike, Zappos and of course… the paparazzi! The rapper’s latest drama went down this week while he was performing on his Yeezus tour in Tampa. While on stage Kanye called out his technical team for sound and lighting issues. A source says Kanye did not like the color of his face on screen and he didn’t think his voice sounded deep enough. The rapper began swearing and yelling before storming off stage. So he basically berated his crew in front of more than 7,000 fans. Classy! Check out Kanye’s meltdown here!













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VIDEO: Kanye West Flips Out On Stage!

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Angry Guy Fired Cannon at Neighbors: Cops

Angry Guy Fired Cannon at Neighbors: Cops
http://img1-cdn.newser.com/getimage.aspx?mediaid=957686&width=45&height=45&crop=Y&updateddate=20131116110119

Well, here’s one way to handle a disagreement with your neighbors: Fire up your trusty Civil War replica cannon and bombard them with blasts of noise. That’s what police in New York state are accusing Brian J. Malta of doing, the Buffalo News reports. The 52-year-old, apparently upset with one…
Crime & Courts from Newser




Read more about Angry Guy Fired Cannon at Neighbors: Cops and other interesting subjects concerning Crime and Justice at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, November 11, 2013

Angry survivors take to streets with guns in Philippines


news.oneindia.in


After a deadly typhoon Haiyan left at least 10,000 dead, an almost complete breakdown of law and order has struck Tacloban city, Philippines.


Three days after Haiyan roared across a huge swathe of the central Philippines, there is still no word from tens of thousands of people living on the islands that bore the full brunt of the typhoon’s fury.


Very little assistance had reached the city, residents reported. Some took food, water and consumer goods from abandoned shops, malls and homes. Aid convoys are being raided and shops stripped of everything remaining on their shelves by starving survivors, reports local media.


“Some people are losing their minds from hunger or from losing their families,” said Andrew Pomeda, a teacher, in Tacloban. As locals take to the streets with guns, there is speculation that President Benigno Aquino may have to declare martial law.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, November 11, 2013 at 11:14 am









Infowars



Angry survivors take to streets with guns in Philippines

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Aaron Alexis and the Angry Vet Narrative



FBI/Handout via Reuters

As I write this in a university library, dangerous and unstable people surround me. More than a third of college studentsexhibit depression, which drives suicide and murder among this fragile population, and more than a hundred murders occurred between 2005 and 2007 on college campuses. One can only conclude this terrifying behavior is the result of academic pursuits.


Of course, most reasonable people would reject that premise. Students carry mental health issues with them into college, and clinicians would say the stressors students encounter are only part of the equation. A majority would probably caution against a simplistic narrative that would paint an unfair picture of students, most of whom are well adjusted and make it through life without murdering anyone.


But veterans are not afforded similar restraint when we talk about the intersection between mental health, violent crime and personal backgrounds. On Sept. 16, Aaron Alexis opened fired in the Washington Navy Yard, killing 12 and wounding three before a police officer shot and killed him.


The Washington Post fueled early hysteria: “Navy Yard gunman said to be troubled veteran” led a report shortly after the incident. The Colorado Gazette blared “Gunman was in Navy Reserve; arrested in 2004.” The Fresno (Calif.) Bee went further with a sub-headline that read “Former navy reservist arrested in 2004 Seattle shooting; suffered anger-fueled ‘blackout.’”


A shallow discussion on mental health and the veteran experience has led to media shorthand for violence linked to former troops. Exposure to profound trauma mixed with weapons training invokes a strong image of downtrodden veterans, and news outlets drew tenuous lines from that idea to the Navy Yard shooter.


Alexis, a Navy reservist, never saw combat and maintained electrical instruments during his service. He was honorably discharged despite the Navy’s pursuit of a general discharge following a stream of bad conduct. Yet headlines that mentioned his service carried an unsettling subtext—his military training helped in the crime, and since he was a veteran, he had been struggled with post-traumatic stress.


Veteran advocates immediately protested the media’s portrayal, calling it inaccurate, damaging and untrue. The latest (and most prominent) comes from CNN’s Peter Bergen:


It’s a deadly combination: men who have military backgrounds — together with personal grievances, political agendas or mental problems — and who also have easy access to weapons and are trained to use them.



Bergen links Alexis and Nidal Hassan, the radicalized Fort Hood shooter, by virtue of their service. One issue noted by Bergen is access to weapons and military training.


He makes an extraordinary leap here.


Alexis murdered 12 people with a legally obtained shotgun and a handgun taken from a security guard, and while he may have fired a shotgun during basic training, nothing in his job description suggests proficiency with the weapon. Of course, the design of a shotgun demands little aptitude for effective use.


In the case of Hasan, sustained training on the issue M-9 pistol is relatively rare, especially for an officer in a non-combat role. Hasan sought an advanced pistol and practiced on civilian indoor ranges, and not only failed to integrate any semblance of Army training, he actively ignored it. A part owner of the range Hasan visited recalled that he fired at the heads of range targets instead of the center of the body, where soldiers are instructed to fire. Despite Bergen’s assertion, Alexis and Hasan were granted the same access to weapons as any civilian.


The other half of Bergen’s analysis falls on mental issues of troops and veterans. Kate Hoit at the Department of Veterans Affairs exhaustively debunked any notion between military service and violence, as well as any correlation between post-traumatic stress and murder, so I will not repeat it here. But in Alexis’ case, his mental health condition appears shoddy even before his Navy service after reports surfaced detailing gun-related offenses.  


Bergen’s implication is a worrying one: even with access to the same information I have, the impulse to implicate trauma and weapons training is strong enough to disregard the fact that both men hadn’t deployed to a combat zone and did not carry the stereotypical mark of post-traumatic stress—a pervasive characterization from which he draws conclusions in his piece. Bergen should know better but doesn’t, and as a result, many civilians who read his piece won’t know, either.


The debate has appropriately shifted to the rigors of background checks and security clearances along the fault lines of mental illness, which should have caught Alexis’ mental instability and Hasan’s communication with radical Islamists. Bergen pegs these themes in his piece, but an issue much closer to most of his audience is the mental state of young veterans in the workplace, where most civilians will encounter them.


survey conducted by the Center for a New American Security last year found more than half of the 69 company respondents practiced caution in hiring of veteran applicants due to stereotypes of a population riddled with mental illness. Only harm can come to veterans when small business owners, hiring managers and college application board members read and internalize the stories that Bergen and others wrote.  


And that’s a duality of experience our newest veterans face: standing ovations during the Super Bowl on one side, and on the other, a general unease as civilians confront those who went to war for them repeatedly over the last decade (though Alexis and Hasan never did). Aaron Alexis and Nidal Hasan are anomalies that Bergen and countless other journalists may have recast as the new normal. In the meantime, untold numbers of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are succeeding in all levels of public and private sectors because of their combat experience, and not in spite of it.


How’s that for a headline?






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



Aaron Alexis and the Angry Vet Narrative

Monday, August 19, 2013

"Angry" Idaho blaze


Jim Urquhart / Reuters



A helicopter tanker drops fire retardant near a home at the Beaver Creek wildfire outside Ketchum, Idaho, Sunday.




By Henry Austin, NBC News contributor


An all-out “ground and air attack” has failed to halt a furious Idaho wildfire that has spread to more than 126,000 acres, according to latest reports from the U.S. Forest Service, threatening the high-end homes of the rich and famous.


Despite an army of more than 1,200 firefighters, the lightning-sparked Beaver Creek fire continues to spread across parched sagebrush, grasslands and pine forests in the Sun Valley area.


“Every fire has a personality, and this fire has an angry personality,” Beth Lund, and incident commander with the U.S. Forest Service team managing the blaze in central Idaho told Reuters.



Jim Urquhart / Reuters



Dry conditions fuel blazes in the U.S.




More than 10,000 homes near the towns of Hailey and Ketchum remain threatened by the blaze, including luxury getaways owned by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tom Hanks and Bruce Willis.


The fire that has been burning for more than 12 days, scorching an area larger than the city of Denver, has already forced 2,250 homes into a mandatory evacuation order.


“Take your essentials, belonging and pets and GO NOW,” a news release on inciweb warned those in its path.


Another 7,700 homes are under what is known as pre-evacuation, giving them time to pack up essential belongings and get ready to go at a moment’s notice if the fire grows closer.


At the Sun Valley Resort, an all-season vacation getaway famed for its world-class skiing, workers turned on water cannons usually used to make snow to wet down a mountain whose southeastern face was the scene of a concentrated assault by firefighters. 


“We’ve fired up the snow-making guns,” resort spokesman Jack Sibbach, told The Associated Press. 


Red-flag conditions, including higher temperatures and wind gusts up to 38 miles per hour did not help firefighters tackling the blaze. And Kevin Noth, lead meteorologist at Weather.com, said that conditions Monday and Tuesday — including temperatures pushing into the 90s — would continue to “hinder” firefighters. 


“There will be more hot and dry weather for the region,” he said.


“So highs will be well into the 80s and a few into the lower 90s. Humidity will also be down, so it will be dry, so that will allow the fire to grow more quickly and it nwill be harder for them to contain.”


“There’s better news coming,” he added. “It looks like more clouds and higher humidity for midweek. There might also be some thunderstorms, which could bring some rain — but the possibility of lightning too.”   


Retardant was dropped Sunday on the flank of Bald Mountain — the Sun Valley Resort’s primary ski hill — to reinforce a fire line, fire spokeswoman Shawna Hartman told KTVB.


That meant the famed ski mountain known as “Baldy” and often used in publicity photos would have a red line of retardant visible from Ketchum.


Hartman expressed cautious optimism about their prospects for curtailing the blaze in the next week.


“Today they’re very optimistic that we will reinforce those lines in case the fire does flare up as we saw on Thursday and Friday,”  Hartman told the KTVB


About 20 Idaho National Guardsmen arrived in Hailey on Sunday to assist sheriff’s deputies with road blocks, the station reported.


The West has already suffered a series of destructive wildfires in 2013. Colorado experienced the most destructive wildfire in its history in June, which killed two and destroyed about 500 structures. As that fire burned, 11 other fires plagued the state and more threatened other parts of the Southwest.


The following month, 19 heavily trained Hotshot firefighters were killed in the Yarnell Hill wildfire in Arizona.


The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.


Related:






"Angry" Idaho blaze

Saturday, August 10, 2013

US angry over released of Mexican drug lord








The undated file photo distributed by the Mexican government shows Rafael Caro Quintero, considered the grandfather of Mexican drug trafficking. A Mexican court has ordered the release of Caro Quintero after 28 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena, a brutal murder that marked a low-point in U.S.-Mexico relations. (AP Photo/File)





The undated file photo distributed by the Mexican government shows Rafael Caro Quintero, considered the grandfather of Mexican drug trafficking. A Mexican court has ordered the release of Caro Quintero after 28 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena, a brutal murder that marked a low-point in U.S.-Mexico relations. (AP Photo/File)





The undated file photo distributed by the Mexican government shows Rafael Caro Quintero, considered the grandfather of Mexican drug trafficking. A Mexican court has ordered the release of Caro Quintero after 28 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena, a brutal murder that marked a low-point in U.S.-Mexico relations. (AP Photo/File)













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(AP) — U.S. law enforcement officials expressed outrage over the release from prison of Mexican drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero and vowed to continue efforts to bring to justice the man who ordered the killing of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent.


Caro Quintero was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of DEA agent Enrique Camarena but a Mexican federal court ordered his release this week saying he had been improperly tried in a federal court for state crimes.


The 60-year-old walked out of a prison in the western state of Jalisco early Friday after serving 28 years of his sentence.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it found the court’s decision “deeply troubling.”


“The Department of Justice, and especially the Drug Enforcement Administration, is extremely disappointed with this result,” it said in a statement.


The Association of Former Federal Narcotics Agents in the United States said it was “outraged” by Caro Quintero’s early release and it blamed corruption within Mexico’s justice system for his early release.


“The release of this violent butcher is but another example of how good faith efforts by the U.S. to work with the Mexican government can be frustrated by those powerful dark forces that work in the shadows of the Mexican ‘justice’ system,” the organization said in a statement.


The DEA, meanwhile, said it “will vigorously continue its efforts to ensure Caro-Quintero faces charges in the United States for the crimes he committed.”


But experts say the case against Caro Quintero was flawed from the beginning and his release is the result of a stronger federal justice system in Mexico, and it’s not likely to have an impact in U.S.-Mexico relations.


Caro Quintero was a founding member of one of Mexico’s earliest and biggest drug cartels. He helped establish a powerful cartel based in the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa that later split into some of Mexico’s largest cartels, including the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.


But he wasn’t tried for drug trafficking, a federal crime in Mexico. Instead, Mexican federal prosecutors, under intense pressure from the United States, hastily put together a case against him for Camarena’s kidnapping and killing, both state crimes.


“What we are seeing here is a contradiction between the need of the government to keep dangerous criminals behind bars and its respect of due process,” said Raul Benitez, a security expert at Mexico’s National Autonomous University.


“The United States wants Mexico to comply with due process but it is likely that due process was not followed when many criminals were caught 10 or 15 years.”


Mexican courts and prosecutors have long tolerated illicit evidence such as forced confessions and have frequently based cases on questionable testimony or hearsay. Such practices have been banned by recent judicial reforms, but past cases, including those against high-level drug traffickers, are often rife with such legal violations.


Mexico’s relations with Washington were badly damaged when Caro Quintero ordered Camarena kidnapped, tortured and killed, purportedly because he was angry about a raid on a 220-acre (89-hectare) marijuana plantation in central Mexico named “Rancho Bufalo” — Buffalo Ranch — that was seized by Mexican authorities at Camarena’s insistence.


Camarena was kidnapped in Guadalajara, a major drug trafficking center at the time. His body and that of his Mexican pilot, both showing signs of torture, were found a month later, buried in shallow graves. American officials accused their Mexican counterparts of letting Camarena’s killers get away. Caro Quintero was eventually hunted down in Costa Rica.


Times have changed since then, and cooperation has strengthened and this is likely to have little impact on the overall relationship between Mexico and the United States, said Tony Payan, an expert on U.S.-Mexico relations at the University of Texas-El Paso.


The U.S. and Mexico “will scramble for a bit, but in the end they will understand this is a very complex relationship and nothing is going to happen,” Payan said. “They are not going to jeopardize the overall relationship over this.”


Caro Quintero still faces charges in the United States, but Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office said it was unclear whether there was a current extradition request.


Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam later said in a statement that his office is analyzing whether there are any charges pending against Caro Quintero.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it “has continued to make clear to Mexican authorities the continued interest of the United States in securing Caro Quintero’s extradition so that he might face justice in the United States.”


Samuel Gonzalez, Mexico’s former top anti-drug prosecutor, said the U.S. government itself has been promoting, and partly financing, judicial reforms in Mexico aimed at respecting procedural guarantees for suspects, an approach Gonzalez feels has weighted the balance too far against prosecutors and victims.


“This is all thanks to the excessive focus on procedural guarantees supported by the U.S. government itself,” Gonzalez said. “I warned them (U.S. officials) that they were going to get out, and they are all going to get out,” he said referring to long-imprisoned drug lords such as Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, who is also serving a sentence related to the Camarena case.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



US angry over released of Mexican drug lord

US angry over released of Mexican drug lord








The undated file photo distributed by the Mexican government shows Rafael Caro Quintero, considered the grandfather of Mexican drug trafficking. A Mexican court has ordered the release of Caro Quintero after 28 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena, a brutal murder that marked a low-point in U.S.-Mexico relations. (AP Photo/File)





The undated file photo distributed by the Mexican government shows Rafael Caro Quintero, considered the grandfather of Mexican drug trafficking. A Mexican court has ordered the release of Caro Quintero after 28 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena, a brutal murder that marked a low-point in U.S.-Mexico relations. (AP Photo/File)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — U.S. law enforcement officials expressed outrage over the release from prison of Mexican drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero and vowed to continue efforts to bring to justice the man who ordered the killing of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent.


Caro Quintero was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of DEA agent Enrique Camarena but a Mexican federal court ordered his release this week saying he had been improperly tried in a federal court for state crimes.


The 60-year-old walked out of a prison in the western state of Jalisco early Friday after serving 28 years of his sentence.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it found the court’s decision “deeply troubling.”


“The Department of Justice, and especially the Drug Enforcement Administration, is extremely disappointed with this result,” it said in a statement.


The Association of Former Federal Narcotics Agents in the United States said it was “outraged” by Caro Quintero’s early release and it blamed corruption within Mexico’s justice system for his early release.


“The release of this violent butcher is but another example of how good faith efforts by the U.S. to work with the Mexican government can be frustrated by those powerful dark forces that work in the shadows of the Mexican ‘justice’ system,” the organization said in a statement.


The DEA, meanwhile, said it “will vigorously continue its efforts to ensure Caro-Quintero faces charges in the United States for the crimes he committed.”


But experts say the case against Caro Quintero was flawed from the beginning and his release is the result of a stronger federal justice system in Mexico, and it’s not likely to have an impact in U.S.-Mexico relations.


Caro Quintero was a founding member of one of Mexico’s earliest and biggest drug cartels. He helped establish a powerful cartel based in the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa that later split into some of Mexico’s largest cartels, including the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.


But he wasn’t tried for drug trafficking, a federal crime in Mexico. Instead, Mexican federal prosecutors, under intense pressure from the United States, hastily put together a case against him for Camarena’s kidnapping and killing, both state crimes.


“What we are seeing here is a contradiction between the need of the government to keep dangerous criminals behind bars and its respect of due process,” said Raul Benitez, a security expert at Mexico’s National Autonomous University.


“The United States wants Mexico to comply with due process but it is likely that due process was not followed when many criminals were caught 10 or 15 years.”


Mexican courts and prosecutors have long tolerated illicit evidence such as forced confessions and have frequently based cases on questionable testimony or hearsay. Such practices have been banned by recent judicial reforms, but past cases, including those against high-level drug traffickers, are often rife with such legal violations.


Mexico’s relations with Washington were badly damaged when Caro Quintero ordered Camarena kidnapped, tortured and killed, purportedly because he was angry about a raid on a 220-acre (89-hectare) marijuana plantation in central Mexico named “Rancho Bufalo” — Buffalo Ranch — that was seized by Mexican authorities at Camarena’s insistence.


Camarena was kidnapped in Guadalajara, a major drug trafficking center at the time. His body and that of his Mexican pilot, both showing signs of torture, were found a month later, buried in shallow graves. American officials accused their Mexican counterparts of letting Camarena’s killers get away. Caro Quintero was eventually hunted down in Costa Rica.


Times have changed since then, and cooperation has strengthened and this is likely to have little impact on the overall relationship between Mexico and the United States, said Tony Payan, an expert on U.S.-Mexico relations at the University of Texas-El Paso.


The U.S. and Mexico “will scramble for a bit, but in the end they will understand this is a very complex relationship and nothing is going to happen,” Payan said. “They are not going to jeopardize the overall relationship over this.”


Caro Quintero still faces charges in the United States, but Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office said it was unclear whether there was a current extradition request.


Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam later said in a statement that his office is analyzing whether there are any charges pending against Caro Quintero.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it “has continued to make clear to Mexican authorities the continued interest of the United States in securing Caro Quintero’s extradition so that he might face justice in the United States.”


Samuel Gonzalez, Mexico’s former top anti-drug prosecutor, said the U.S. government itself has been promoting, and partly financing, judicial reforms in Mexico aimed at respecting procedural guarantees for suspects, an approach Gonzalez feels has weighted the balance too far against prosecutors and victims.


“This is all thanks to the excessive focus on procedural guarantees supported by the U.S. government itself,” Gonzalez said. “I warned them (U.S. officials) that they were going to get out, and they are all going to get out,” he said referring to long-imprisoned drug lords such as Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, who is also serving a sentence related to the Camarena case.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



US angry over released of Mexican drug lord

US angry over released of Mexican drug lord



(AP) — U.S. law enforcement officials expressed outrage over the release from prison of Mexican drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero and vowed to continue efforts to bring to justice the man who ordered the killing of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent.


Caro Quintero was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the 1985 kidnapping and killing of DEA agent Enrique Camarena but a Mexican federal court ordered his release this week saying he had been improperly tried in a federal court for state crimes.


The 60-year-old walked out of a prison in the western state of Jalisco early Friday after serving 28 years of his sentence.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it found the court’s decision “deeply troubling.”


“The Department of Justice, and especially the Drug Enforcement Administration, is extremely disappointed with this result,” it said in a statement.


The Association of Former Federal Narcotics Agents in the United States said it was “outraged” by Caro Quintero’s early release and it blamed corruption within Mexico’s justice system for his early release.


“The release of this violent butcher is but another example of how good faith efforts by the U.S. to work with the Mexican government can be frustrated by those powerful dark forces that work in the shadows of the Mexican ‘justice’ system,” the organization said in a statement.


The DEA, meanwhile, said it “will vigorously continue its efforts to ensure Caro-Quintero faces charges in the United States for the crimes he committed.”


But experts say the case against Caro Quintero was flawed from the beginning and his release is the result of a stronger federal justice system in Mexico, and it’s not likely to have an impact in U.S.-Mexico relations.


Caro Quintero was a founding member of one of Mexico’s earliest and biggest drug cartels. He helped establish a powerful cartel based in the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa that later split into some of Mexico’s largest cartels, including the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.


But he wasn’t tried for drug trafficking, a federal crime in Mexico. Instead, Mexican federal prosecutors, under intense pressure from the United States, hastily put together a case against him for Camarena’s kidnapping and killing, both state crimes.


“What we are seeing here is a contradiction between the need of the government to keep dangerous criminals behind bars and its respect of due process,” said Raul Benitez, a security expert at Mexico’s National Autonomous University.


“The United States wants Mexico to comply with due process but it is likely that due process was not followed when many criminals were caught 10 or 15 years.”


Mexican courts and prosecutors have long tolerated illicit evidence such as forced confessions and have frequently based cases on questionable testimony or hearsay. Such practices have been banned by recent judicial reforms, but past cases, including those against high-level drug traffickers, are often rife with such legal violations.


Mexico’s relations with Washington were badly damaged when Caro Quintero ordered Camarena kidnapped, tortured and killed, purportedly because he was angry about a raid on a 220-acre (89-hectare) marijuana plantation in central Mexico named “Rancho Bufalo” — Buffalo Ranch — that was seized by Mexican authorities at Camarena’s insistence.


Camarena was kidnapped in Guadalajara, a major drug trafficking center at the time. His body and that of his Mexican pilot, both showing signs of torture, were found a month later, buried in shallow graves. American officials accused their Mexican counterparts of letting Camarena’s killers get away. Caro Quintero was eventually hunted down in Costa Rica.


Times have changed since then, and cooperation has strengthened and this is likely to have little impact on the overall relationship between Mexico and the United States, said Tony Payan, an expert on U.S.-Mexico relations at the University of Texas-El Paso.


The U.S. and Mexico “will scramble for a bit, but in the end they will understand this is a very complex relationship and nothing is going to happen,” Payan said. “They are not going to jeopardize the overall relationship over this.”


Caro Quintero still faces charges in the United States, but Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office said it was unclear whether there was a current extradition request.


Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam later said in a statement that his office is analyzing whether there are any charges pending against Caro Quintero.


The U.S. Department of Justice said it “has continued to make clear to Mexican authorities the continued interest of the United States in securing Caro Quintero’s extradition so that he might face justice in the United States.”


Samuel Gonzalez, Mexico’s former top anti-drug prosecutor, said the U.S. government itself has been promoting, and partly financing, judicial reforms in Mexico aimed at respecting procedural guarantees for suspects, an approach Gonzalez feels has weighted the balance too far against prosecutors and victims.


“This is all thanks to the excessive focus on procedural guarantees supported by the U.S. government itself,” Gonzalez said. “I warned them (U.S. officials) that they were going to get out, and they are all going to get out,” he said referring to long-imprisoned drug lords such as Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, who is also serving a sentence related to the Camarena case.


Associated Press



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US angry over released of Mexican drug lord

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Karzai, angry over Taliban"s Qatar office, quits peace, security talks


(CNN) — Afghanistan has suspended security talks with the United States, Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s office said Wednesday.


“In view of the contradiction between acts and the statements made by the United States of America in regard to the Peace Process, the Afghan government suspended the negotiations,” his office said.


Washington has been negotiating a bilateral security agreement with Afghanistan which would dictate the terms of an extension for U.S. troops past 2014 and could provide the basis for any future NATO role.




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Karzai, angry over Taliban"s Qatar office, quits peace, security talks

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Angry Pakistan summons envoy after U.S. drone strike kills nine

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan (Reuters) – A U.S. drone strike killed nine people in northwest Pakistan, security officials said, prompting newly sworn-in Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to summon America’s envoy on Saturday to protest against such attacks.



Reuters: Top News



Angry Pakistan summons envoy after U.S. drone strike kills nine

Angry Pakistan summons envoy after U.S. drone strike kills nine


Pakistan’s newly elected Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif (C) arrives to inspect the guard of honor during a ceremony at the prime minister’s residence after being sworn-in, in Islamabad June 5, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Mian Khursheed




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Angry Pakistan summons envoy after U.S. drone strike kills nine

Monday, May 13, 2013

Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !



British wanker Piers Morgan hell bent on pushing anti-gun propaganda to disarm the American people ahead of an economic collapse gets angry after losing gun …



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !

Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !



British wanker Piers Morgan hell bent on pushing anti-gun propaganda to disarm the American people ahead of an economic collapse gets angry after losing gun …



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !

Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !



British wanker Piers Morgan hell bent on pushing anti-gun propaganda to disarm the American people ahead of an economic collapse gets angry after losing gun …
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !

Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !

British wanker Piers Morgan hell bent on pushing anti-gun propaganda to disarm the American people ahead of an economic collapse gets angry after losing gun …



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !

Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !



British wanker Piers Morgan hell bent on pushing anti-gun propaganda to disarm the American people ahead of an economic collapse gets angry after losing gun …
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Piers Morgan gets angry after losing Gun Control debate and throws his notes towards his guest !