A Pakistani Rosa Parks?
by Anwaar Hussain
Picture: Ms. Rosa Parks.
A young Pakistani girl student belonging to the Christian faith has delivered a massive blow to our collective hippocratic attitude toward our minorities with a simple query. She dared to ask a straight forward question of Pakistani Courts. Her question is;
Am I, a Pakistani Christian, equal to a fellow Muslim citizen?
A little background would help the reader better understand her question. Read more
The Strappado Rendition
by Anwaar Hussain
In one of the most widely disseminated images from the Abu Ghuraib scandal, the thuggish grinning faces of Specialists Sabrina Harman and Charles Garner peer out with an evil force. Each is offering a “thumbs-up” gesture as if posing for a pride of performance award.
In the background is a cellophane wrapped, ice packed corpse of one Manadel al-Jamadi, an Iraqi who was tortured to death during interrogation at Abu Ghuraib prison. The U.S. military ruled the death a homicide. Read more
Our Man Cheney
by Anwaar Hussain
William I was King of England from 1066 to 1087. He was also known as William of Normandy, William the Conqueror and William the Bastard. He earned the last title due to the fact that he was the illegitimate and only son of Robert the Magnificent, Duke of Normandy, and Herleva, the daughter of Fulbert, a tanner. William succeeded to the throne of England by right of conquest by winning the decisive Battle of Hastings in 1066 and suppressing subsequent English revolts, in what has become known as the Norman Conquest. Following the Norman Conquest, the machinery of government developed further, producing long-lived national institutions including Parliament. Four Norman kings presided over a period of great change and development for Britain. The Domesday Book, a great record of English land-holding, was published; the forests were extended; the Exchequer was founded; and a start was made on the Tower of London. Read more
A Kick in the Shin?
by Anwaar Hussain
Picture: General Mohammed Elbaradei.
Is the 2005 Peace Nobel for Mohamed ElBaradei a kick in the shin for the US Government or a routine award?
Born on June 17, 1942, in Cairo, Mohamed ElBaradei is the son of the late Mostafa ElBaradei, lawyer and former president of the Egyptian Bar Association. He earned his Bachelor of Law degree at the University of Cairo in 1962, and doctorate in International Law at the New York University School of Law in 1974, receiving several other honorary degrees along the way.
ElBaradei joined Egyptian diplomatic service in 1964, serving in missions to the United Nations in New York and Geneva, in charge of political, legal and arms-control issues. He joined the IAEA in 1984 and held a series of high posts before succeeding Hans Blix as director general in 1997. A charge that he holds to date after being reappointed to the same portfolio for a second and a third term in years 2001 and 2005 respectively despite firm opposition from the United States. Read more
Powwow With God
by Anwaar Hussain
The current President of United States finds himself in God’s company more often than any other modern American President.
One has been hearing about George Bush’s close encounters with God for years now. We have all heard about how God talks to the President, giving him instructions on how to conduct foreign policy (particularly: which countries to invade). Quite evidently, President George W. Bush did a good job at following orders because he got reelected to a second term. Read more
Elementary! My Dear Watson?
by Anwaar Hussain
Last month John Bolton, the controversial new US ambassador to the UN, submitted a whopping 750 amendments calling for wholesale changes to the draft declaration for this month’s summit to strengthen the UN and review progress towards its Millennium Development Goals to halve world poverty by 2015.
It may be recalled that John Bolton is the same gent who in 1994 asserted that “there is no such thing as the United Nations” and later that “if the UN Secretariat building in New York lost ten stories, it wouldn’t make a bit of difference.” Read more








In the United Vegetative State of America, Anwaar Hussain, a Masters in Defense and Strategic Studies, delivers a comprehensive and unsettling analysis of the dissolution of liberty in America and how an administration of neo-conservatives is using the threat of lost freedoms and increased terrorism as a justification for international aggression and violence.
