Archive for August, 2010

29 Aug 2010

Bloodied be thy name

By Nadeem F. Paracha It was horrifying: the beating to death and then the upside down hanging of the two young brothers in Sialkot. Accused of theft, the teenagers were brutally beaten with sticks and kicks by at least four men — an event that was watched in silence by a couple of cops and [...]

26 Aug 2010

The limits of tolerance

By Irfan Husain The ongoing furore over the so-called Ground Zero Mosque shows no sign of abating after weeks of noisy controversy. In a sense, it has become a litmus test of America’s cherished freedom of worship, as well as its tolerance of other people and other faiths. But to put things in perspective, I [...]

25 Aug 2010

Putting a brave face on standing tall

A heartfelt thanks to the young American servicemen and women who are helping our people caught in the devastating floods. They are operating in a country that is considered hostile to America by pollsters. May the Almighty keep them in His care and return them to their loved ones safely. By Kamran Shafi There is [...]

25 Aug 2010

The American Morality Myth

By Bill Noxid It’s Time for Americans to stop making false proclamations about this Country that only demonstrate their ignorance and unwillingness to face what happened yesterday, much less the historical truth of the United States.  Since the brief shift of direction toward exposing truth during the end of the Bush era and 2008 Presidential [...]

18 Aug 2010

Scream!!!

Read this New York Times report. Then this Truth Spring story. Then compare the truth with the fiction.

15 Aug 2010

Pakistan, a Saga of Misrule

by Anwaar Hussain Every year for the past about nine years, the following article is run by the TS with only a date change. Alas, nothing else has changed for Pakistan. It is the same old story of the same old wine in the same old bottle except with a poisonous dash of religious bigotry [...]

05 Aug 2010

Tyranny’s worst form

By S Ifitkhar Murshed “Bad laws are the worst form of tyranny,” declared Edmund Burke, the brilliant 18th-century Irish statesman who served for many years in the British House of Commons as a member of the Whig Party. The purpose of all laws is to protect, and not persecute, citizens. Any deviation from this norm [...]

Copyright ©Truth Spring 2006 - 2009