News and more…
Howard Stern Auctions off Natalie Dylan’s Virginity ?!? PICTURES
Published by admin on September 23rd, 2008 | Tagged News, Random News, Random Thoughts

Howard Stern, the king of controversy, is once again set to make headlines - This time, auctioning off Natalie Dylan’s virginity !
Natalie Dylan believes that she is a feminist and its a form of empowering, specially in a capitalistic society to auction off her virginity. When she was asked if she has any moral delimma, she said that “if I could capitalize on my virginity, and pay off for my school, I don’t see anything wrong with it “.
Natalie Dylan will be accepting bids at the Bunny Ranch brothel website. I wanted to provide the link but I don’t want to use work computer googling this brothel link..lol. But anyways, google it yourself if you are interested. If you are wondering why Bunny Ranch..well, Natalie Dylan’s sister works at Bunny Ranch and Howard Stern was contacted by the owner of Bunny Ranch for the arrangements of the Auction.
So far Howard stern has denied auctioning it, but with all the publicity, talk and gossip, Natalie already achieved the exposure she wanted and also, to further solidify her claim, she is willing to be tested by a gynaecologist to confirm her virginity prior to accepting the money.

If you look like the person above, with lots of money to “support a poor girl’s education” I suggest you just send her the money and not even try bidding - she also has a criteria - The bidder must be good looking..ahahha
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Google Phone : G1 Android Platform
Published by admin on September 23rd, 2008 | Tagged Other Stuff

The most awaited Google Phone was unvailed today but unfortunately it only beats Apple’s iphone by $20. The phone has been built by HTC and is carried by T-Mobile. Google phone is expected to acquire a huge market niche by allowing third party applications.
One of the most interesting features is the built-in compass, which displays a 360-degree Google Street view based on location. Other Google apps are also built right into the system, including support for Gmail and YouTube videos.
As for the hardware, the 5.6 ounce device is 4.60” x 2.16” and .62” thick, with a 3.17” display. It is as predicted, a swivel, sidekick-like flip phone with a QWERTY keyboard, and 3.17 inch touch display screen.

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Homaira Rahman - Complete story of her Murder (Washington City Paper)
Published by admin on September 22nd, 2008 | Tagged Homaira Rahman, News, Random News
Following is a story send to us by an anonymous sender (THANK YOU!) which appeared in WASHINGTON CITY PAPER. Full story by Angela Valdez.

On the balmy evening of July 3, 2008, three young women met in the stands of a soccer stadium in Woodbridge, Va. They were there to watch a preliminary match in the 2008 Afghan Cup, an annual event that draws hundreds of Afghan-Americans to the Virginia exurbs for a weekend of sports and music. The three friends, who all grew up in Northern Virginia, were waiting for one more to complete their group. Homaira Rahman, a tall, pretty 25-year-old, arrived around 9 p.m. She was her usual bubbly self.
Within half an hour, Rahman’s phone rang. It was Ehsan Amin, a man she had dated off and on for about two years. She had recently tried to finally, completely end contact with him. But his calls never stopped. This time, as usual, he wanted to know where she was. Rahman took the call and tried to be brief. She told him she was at the soccer game with friends, no big deal. She hung up. He called back. Again and again. Each time the phone rang, Rahman got more distressed. He was threatening her again, she said. Her friends were exasperated and worried. Amin’s bullying was an old source of anxiety.

When he called again, Zarlacht Osmanzoi, 19, asked Rahman to hand over the phone. “I was like, ‘Give it to me, I’m going to talk to him,’” Osmanzoi said two months later, in a courtroom. She told Amin that everything was fine. Rahman was with the girls. He said: “I don’t give a fuck who you are. Give the phone back to Homaira.”
Amin was in a rage. He threatened to hurt Rahman, and just as frightening, he had driven to her parents’ home in Vienna and said he was prepared to go inside and tell Sohail and Jamila Rahman about their relationship. Rahman begged him not to do it. Like many Afghan immigrants, Rahman’s parents did not approve of their daughter dating. She told Amin to go back to Woodbridge, were he lived with relatives.
Rahman’s friends thought they’d seen the last of these tantrums. She had finally dumped Amin, with no possibility of friendship, about three months before. But that night at the soccer game, they realized he wasn’t going to quit. “That’s when we all decided we needed to take serious action,” says a friend, who asked that her name not be used. “I said, ‘Listen. This is not the end. We need to fix it.’” The police wouldn’t do, stirring up too much attention and perhaps just making him more angry. Perhaps, they thought, they could report him to immigration authorities, since Rahman knew he was in the country illegally.
After the game, Rahman called Amin’s house and got word that he was headed home. Convinced the moment of danger had passed, she got into her car, still crying. Her friends told her they’d figure out what to do in the morning. “I thought, the most he’ll do is go and tell her parents,” the friend says. “I would not just let her go home.” She called Rahman from the road. “Everything is fine,” she said.
Rahman and Amin were both part of the 20,000-strong Afghan community in Northern Virginia, but their origins couldn’t have been more different. She was born in this country, had graduated from George Mason University in 2005, and had a good job in human services at Chevy Chase Bank in Tyson’s Corner. Like many unmarried Afghan-American women, Rahman continued to live in her parents’ home after graduation. Since she paid no rent, she could spend most of what she made. And although friends and family nagged her to save, she indulged her material desires, buying closets full of designer clothes and gaining a reputation as a fashionista who never wore the same outfit twice. She joked that Tyson’s Corner was her second home.
Amin had been in the States only a few years. He had entered the United States legally, possibly by virtue of a marriage confirmed by friends and law-enforcement sources, but the terms of his welcome had expired. Even Rahman knew he used an alias. His real name was Ajmal Hashemi.
Rahman had taken note of Amin’s handsome features when she first saw him waiting tables at the Afghan Kabob Restaurant in Springfield. Sparks flew, and she told her friends she thought their server was cute. Rahman’s interest in romance thrilled her friends. Rahman was shy and had never had a boyfriend. “For us it was, ‘Oh, finally! She finally thinks someone’s cute,’” a friend says.
An aunt, who was less conservative than Rahman’s parents, knew Amin and offered to set them up, according to a friend. It took several weeks, but pretty soon a romance blossomed. They were as much of a couple as they could be without telling Rahman’s parents or many of their friends or relatives. Amin’s career prospects improved soon as well. He got a job selling used cars at Autoquest of Stafford.
But the relationship quickly became dysfunctional, according to friends. (Family members say they are not convinced Rahman and Amin actually dated.) Amin, who seemed sweet and introspective at first, lost his temper if he didn’t know where Rahman was and who she was with. If she went out to clubs in D.C., he’d call before 11 p.m. and convince her to head back to Virginia. Rahman told her friends he went out without her and lied about his own activities.
Rahman was not entirely open about the details of her relationsh ip. She spoke about Amin in oblique terms, hinting that she wanted to move on but couldn’t quite make that happen. Whenever his calls interrupted shopping trips at the mall or outings in D.C., Rahman would wander away to answer the phone and return distraught.
On several occasions, friends say, Rahman broke up with Amin, but she never totally severed contact. “He just would somehow come back into her life,” says one friend. “I guess he just made her believe that no one else could love her like he did.” Whenever she dumped him, he’d shower her with perfume and flowers the next day. A friend says he acted like most players who “yell at their girlfriend, treat them like shit and then the next day buy her flowers.” Osmanzoi, testifying in court, said she’d seen Rahman and Amin together and happy just six months ago, when the three of them went out for dinner at the Cheesecake Factory in Tyson’s Corner.
Still, friends urged Rahman to end things. “There was no trust at all,” one says. “I asked her, ‘Where do you think this is going?’” When Rahman finally cut off contact with Amin, she says, “I was very relieved.…Little did I know.”
Sometime before midnight on July 3, Mary Just pulled onto Litwalton Court in Vienna and saw Rahman, her neighbor, standing in the street with a man. Rahman looked distressed and waved at Just as if she needed help. The man, whom she didn’t recognize, had his hand around Rahman’s upper arm. Just pulled into her driveway, got out and walked over to a friend who had arrived first in another car. “Do you think we should go check on that couple?” she asked. “What couple?” her friend said. When she turned to look, Rahman and the man had vanished.
The next morning, a man walking half a mile from Rahman’s home discovered her body lying in a pool of blood on a sidewalk. She’d been stabbed 91 times and beaten around the face. There were bite marks on her arm. Her purse and a broken pair of scissors lay on the concrete.
Fairfax Police Detective Steve Shillingford got the page at 7:45 a.m. At the crime scene half an hour later, he identified Rahman from the driver’s license in her purse. But there were few other clues to work from. Her parents knew nothing about her relationship with Amin, or his threats.
Shillingford realized that Rahman’s cell phone was missing and arranged for a “forced dump,” allowing police to collect data sent to or from her line. One number showed up again and again. It was a land line connected to a home in Woodbridge. Shillingford and his partner drove to the house and spoke with a man who told them that his cousin, Ehsan Amin, had been in a car accident and was being treated at Inova Fairfax Hospital. The detectives drove to the emergency room where they found Amin asleep on a gurney in triage.

According to Virginia State Police, Amin had caused a three-car collision on I-495 early that morning—probably less than an hour after Rahman’s neighbor saw her standing on the street. At 12:06 a.m. on July 4, a 2006 Mercedes E350 lost control on an exit ramp at the Springfield interchange and sideswiped a Honda Civic. The Mercedes then veered into a 2001 Lincoln Navigator, forcing it off the road. The Mercedes didn’t stop. It careered off the road to the left, hitting the guardrail and crossing back over the southbound lanes of traffic. The car finally came to a rest after colliding with the Jersey wall on the right side of the road. The driver fled on foot. Police traced the Mercedes to the Stafford dealership where Amin worked.
It’s unclear how Amin ended up at the hospital, but by the time homicide detectives arrived around 2 p.m., he had already been charged with reckless driving and felony hit-and-run. He was in bad shape. In addition to a slash wound on his throat, later determined to be self-inflicted, he had cuts on the fingers of his right hand, an injury police believe was allegedly caused when his hand slipped down the blood-coated scissors he used to stab Rahman. Doctors had cleared him to leave, pending an evaluation in the psych ward, which might not have fared well. Amin told hospital staff that he’d broken up with his girlfriend and wanted to kill himself.
An attendant wheeled the bandaged suspect into a private room. Shillingford introduced himself and placed a small recorder on the gurney.
Amin started talking. “Something bad happened,” he said, repeating it again and again. “Something bad happened.”
He went on: “I think I beat my girlfriend,” he said. “I didn’t mean to do it. I loved her so much.” He told the detective he’d been drinking when it happened.
Shillingford didn’t place Amin under arrest, not just yet, but he did read him his rights. Then he got to the point: Did you stab your girlfriend?
Amin responded, “With what?”
“That’s what I’m asking you,” the detective said.
“Well, she had some scissors,” Amin said.
It was enough to convince Shillingford, who placed Amin under arrest. He was charged with first-degree murder. If convicted, he stands to serve 20 years to life in prison, after which immigration officials would seek to have him deported.
Amin’s trial promises to reveal many details about the crime and the relationship between Amin and Rahman, details she had carefully hidden from her family and many friends. Rahman’s loved ones are bracing for their community’s reaction to a public airing of a very private relationship. One relative told me that gossip, and the subsequent pain and humiliation, would hurt her family as much as the murder itself.
Within hours of Amin’s arrest, speculation about the crime began erupting on local message boards and online Afghan forums. The posts included cruel rumors and criticism of everyone involved: Rahman, her friends and family, and Amin. Anonymous writers suggested that Rahman deserved what she got because she had abandoned tradition. If her parents had allowed her to date, others asked, might she have been comfortable enough to tell them she was in trouble? When several women spoke up about the dating difficulties of Afghan-American women, they became the subjects of personal attacks themselves.
Rahman’s friends and family have tried to counter the vitriol on the Internet by sharing stories of a young woman who strived to fulfill the expectations of two cultures.
Rahman’s generation of young, prosperous Afghan-Americans led busy social lives that served to preserve their culture and, at the same time, break down many old conventions. The Afghan Student Association at George Mason, which Rahman helped start, opened the door to mixed-gender outings that would have been impossible a decade ago. Rahman and her friends went clubbing in D.C., even though many of them didn’t drink, and attended concerts given by Afghan pop singers in hotels in suburban Virginia.
At a memorial service at George Mason in July, which drew a crowd of several hundred, Rahman’s friends and relatives took turns at the mic. Her girlfriends, clutching loose, unfamiliar head scarves, talked about “Homy’s” unending positive attitude, her giving nature. “She taught each one of us a powerful lesson,” one cousin said, quoting from Rahman’s Facebook page: “Live each day to the fullest, for tomorrow may never come.”
Homayun Yaqub spoke of growing up in Vienna with Rahman, who was his cousin but always felt more like a sister. Their parents had moved to Virginia in the 1980s, following the 1979 Russian invasion. They were educated and had the means to afford relocation but still struggled, working long hours at low-paying jobs so their kids could have a chance. Rahman’s generation took on the next challenge: assimilating to American culture while preserving their ethnic identity. Rahman and her cousins would speak English, not Farsi, when they hung out together, Yaqub said. But they still went to mosque and attended the countless engagement parties, weddings, and funerals that brought the community together.
Rahman’s taste for nice things reflected the importance of prosperity in the Afghan-American community. Every time I ask about her parents, people tell me her father is a successful businessman. Sohail Rahman did indeed provide well for his family, and he did it driving a cab.
Yaqub remembered seeing Rahman after he returned from an overseas assignment with the Army. His goofy little cousin had grown into a striking young woman who stood taller, in stiletto heels, than most men in the family. He called her “Stretch.”
While family members often scolded Rahman for her spendthrift ways, at the memorial her extravagance became a virtue. Yaqub recalled chastising her for spending $250 on a Dior bracelet when she could have purchased a knockoff for $10. “But it’s not the real thing,” she said, and that was that. When her grandmother fell ill for the last time, Rahman hurried to the hospital everyday after work with gifts of candy and perfume. Again, family members lectured about the excess, but Yaqub says Rahman had been right to do it. The attention made a dying woman happy.
“She was the wiser of the both of us,” he said.
The last to speak was an aunt from California, who walked slowly across the stage, her head wrapped tightly in a shawl. She spoke of the Quran’s instructions, written 1,400 years ago, for how women should dress. “God knew what the condition of the world would be like 1,400 years from then” she said. He spelled out “boundaries for women not to cross and that was for the safety of women.” She told the audience to read a page of the Quran every day. “That’s what’s going to help you, not the material life.” She worried that the American obsession with individuality would erode the Afghan community’s sense of collective identity.
Many Afghan-Americans I spoke with described their community, somewhat lovingly, as a network connected by gossip and judgment. While many things have changed, reputation and family name hold a powerful sway over individual lives. If a young woman gets a bad reputation—for dating openly or showing too much skin—her parents will share the blame for her behavior. Both young adults and parents I spoke with said the best option is often something like don’t ask, don’t tell, only vaguer. It might be acceptable to go to dinner with a young man; going out to dinner with a different man the next week could spell trouble.
Since dating is considered taboo in most households, especially for young women, most romances spring out of friendships that develop in public settings, like school or social gatherings. Lately, the Internet has provided an opportunity for unsupervised exploration, but even then, face-to-face meetings are carefully planned.
Ameena Kazem, 27, a friend of Rahman’s, says views about dating and gender roles have changed drastically just within the last five years. “The dynamic of the entire community has changed,” she says. “It’s very common now to see groups of girls and guys together. There are more independent women. Friends know who’s dating who. It used to be more hush-hush.”
Parents have been slow to accept the changes brought by their children, Kazem says, because their life experiences are so vastly different. “They grew up and got married in their teens. There was no dating involved,” she says. Add to that the importance of reputation, and parents become very fearful of sanctioning change. “Public embarrassment,” Kazem says. “That’s what it comes down to.”
“It’s a cultural thing,” says Yama Azami, who helped start the student association at Mason with Rahman. “To be honest with you…it’s unfortunate…most of the stuff that happens is kind of hidden.” The stigma against dating, he says, does not apply across the board. “It’s OK for guys but it’s not OK for girls,” he says.
Azami says the solution is not simple. Even if Rahman’s parents had given her permission to date, she may not have been comfortable with that freedom or the social implications of blatantly challenging the rules.
At a preliminary hearing on Sept. 3, Amin’s defense attorney, Peter Greenspun, argued that the prosecution’s case relied on speculation and that the evidence did not point to premeditated murder. “This man cared for her,” he said. No one could say who started what on the night of July 3, he said. “You can say who ended it perhaps,” he said, but the evidence supported “manslaughter, at worst.”
Amin turned around just once during the hearing, looking over his shoulder at the two groups of family and friends, his and hers, on opposite sides of the courtroom. A frown drew deep, triangular creases in his face. At the end, as his people walked out in silence, a woman from the other side said aloud, “He’ll pay for this.”
Outside in the hallway, a group of Amin’s friends stood waiting for Greenspun. They said they couldn’t talk about the case, but told me to remember that every story has two sides. “The truth will come out,” one said.
Weeks later, I get a call from a friend of Amin’s in the middle of the night. He tells me his friend is not a monster. He loved Rahman and wanted her to be his wife. She should have gone to her parents, the friend says, and told them that Amin was the man she wanted to marry. The friend says Islam dictates one man for each woman; Rahman chose Amin as her one man by choosing to spend time with him romantically. He knows Americans have a different take on what dating means. But, he says, “We are Afghans.” On the night of the murder, Amin asked him if he wanted to go to the soccer game. “If I had gone,” he says, “this never would have happened.”
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Skunk Bomb - Israel Army’s New Arsenal
Published by admin on September 21st, 2008 | Tagged News, Other Stuff
Israeli army scientists, have recently added a new aresenal to their cache of weaponery - A SKUNK BOMB. The idea behind a skunk bomb is to shower demonstrators with water jets containing a synthetic version of the skunk’s smelly fluid, and make them disperse, as the smell is intolerable and people would be forced to change their clothes or take a shower.

Since rubber bullets and pepper spray have come under scrunity by various human rights agencies, used mainly for disperssion of large demonstrating crowds, the skunk bomb which was tested recently in Israel, has had extremely promising results. Large crowds immediately disperssed and people were seen puking and extremely disgusted by the smell. Interestingly, the semll does not wear off immediately. Infact a day after a demonstration, those who took part in it can still be identified by the foul smell .. lol
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Your Opinion - Your Voice - AfghanBuzz.com
Published by admin on September 21st, 2008 | Tagged Afghan Government, Afghan Sports, Random News, Random Thoughts

Salam …
First of all, I hope Ramadan is ‘bakhair megzarad’ … Second of all, I finally decided to write this entry and ask for your comments/suggestions…because deep down, I feel that I may have let down a lot of AfghanBuzz.com site users and wish to take a few steps to rectify that.
When I first made this website, I was not thinking about its popularity or its growth or its annual revenue .. I made it simply as a fun little project. The more entries I added the more traffic I got. But with more Traffic, it meant more monitoring. Everyday I used to spend close to 2-3 hours reading/approving/deleting/editing comments. But with due course of time, I broke down. I give it all up.
If you are a regular site user, You may have noticed that I have failed to update the website in well over 5-6 months. It is a shame. But with my schooling, I find it absolutely impossible to update or monitor it.
A few days ago, a good friend of mine, Haider Hedayat (DJ H2MO) came over see me. Admist all the converstion, he referred to the comments section in AfghanBuzz.com and how it needs to be moderated.
Well, I showed him my website stats. For instance, since Sept 01 2008 till today 5:30am Sept 21 2008, I have over 4,95,023 visitor count. This is way too much traffic for one person to handle. And edit/read/moderate all the comments.
Yes, if running a website was my full time job, I may have been able to do so… but this is just a hobby of mine which has now gone out of control.
I guess, with any project, comes responsiblities - and I see myself as a failure for not living upto the expectation. I feel that a lot of my site users are disappointed in me..
Pages related to Humaira Rahman (RIP), Yama Djojan, Farhad Shams, Samira Atash and Rishad Zahir, required my utmost and immediate attention - people would leave disgusting comments that I should have deleted…..but I was so sicken tired of making webpages, editing pages, that I chose to ignore it. Yet, I felt uncomfortable in my own skin and felt totally defeated……
So please go ahead - Write your comments here. Tell me what you want removed/ updated/ fixed/ edited/ moderated/ ……….and I promise, I will try my best to fix it. I will take a few days off school to deal with all your suggestions. Also, if you have any positive comments, leave them too - cuz that would make me happy and give me some energy to work harder
.
Rozi Tan Peeroz baad !
Admin@AfghanBuzz.com
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Pakistan bomb blast targets Marriot Hotel - Pictures
Published by admin on September 20th, 2008 | Tagged News, Other Stuff, Random News, Random Thoughts
The capital city of Pakistan, Isalamabad, has been hit with a massive bomb blast just outside the prestigeous Marriot Hotel. The bomb blast has been extremely intense and body count currently surpasses 50 dead and scores injured.







A country which is a safe haven to terrorist networks and funds terrorist organizations around the world, is now paying heavily for the crimes they have committed in Kashmir, Afghanistan, London, NY and elsewhere.
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Sarah Palin email Hacked - Her Password Key : Wasilla High !?
Published by admin on September 18th, 2008 | Tagged News, Other Stuff, Random News, Random Thoughts

When governor Sarah Paulin announced that unlike John McCain who cannot use a computer, she can actually use a computer and uses Yahoo as her Email service provider, somewhere a curious little teenager decided to figure out her password. So what he did was, find Sarah Palin’s email … something like Sarah_palin@yahoo.com and clicked on FORGOT PASSWORD.
The secret Question that popped up, was “Where did I meet my husband” .. and Yes, that was the Secret QUESTION and the whole world knows that they met at Wasilla High. So he typed in Wasilla High and next thing u know, he is inside her account !!!
He read most of the emails and to prove his point, posted pictures of Sarah Palin’s inbox all over the net. People who had emailed Sarah Palin, confirmed that they had indeed send those emails to her.
The stupid little kid, is now in FBI custody and Sarah Palin learnt an important lesson - If she can’t safe guard her email account … can she safe guard the well fare of the entire country ?
Perhaps if she is given charge of the nuclear war head briefcase… she would use Bristol as her new password.
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Dr. Farid Younos : Democratic Imperialism
Published by admin on September 17th, 2008 | Tagged Afghan Blogs, Afghan Politics, News, Other Stuff, Random News, Random Thoughts
Dr. Farid Younos is an Afghan intellect living in California, USA and who also runs a popular TV show on Ariana TV. He is also the author of several publications and books.
In his book DEMOCRATIC IMPERIALSIM, Dr. Younos claims that the form of Democracy that the western world enjoys cannot be applied to the muslim world, specially Afghanistan.

I thought about his premise and wondered to myself - How come thousands and thousands of Afghan families, or millions of other Muslim families who have fled their home countries, live normal, happy, affluent life styles here in the west ?? How did they manage to immerse themselves within the Western doctorine of Democracy - WITHOUT ANY FORCE - and reap benefits from it ?
The other thing I must point out… in one of the episodes He mentioned of how terrible the US is…and his proof was “Confessions of an Economic Hit man” … and it just made me turn off the TV and play GTA on my XBOX 360…and jump off Empire state building.
ps: Have you read the Confession of an Economic Hit man? … You should if you haven’t ~_*. I got my copy when it first came out.

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Taliban - Warriors of Islam or Highway Robbers?
Published by admin on September 17th, 2008 | Tagged Afghan Government, Afghan Politics, News, Other Stuff, Random News, Random Thoughts
Following is a reply to an article on http://afghanforums.com/showthread.php?t=16665, and how some Afghans turn a blind eye to the Taliban brutality and still chant their rants of support.
So I had to step in and write my usual blah blah and decided to paste it here as well:

The first part of this video would make those supporting Taliban, while living affluently in the Weste under the banner of Western Democracy, applaud the ‘brave’ sword bearers of Islam aka Taliban.
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=423_1220816235
The second part of this video also shows Taliban with their constant chants of ALLAH AKBAR, attacking a second convoy…. interestingly the second convoy are Afghan men. Afghan muslim men with families. Afghan men with a brother, a sister, a mother and a father.. just like u and me. They are killed .. even the injured ones are shot dead.
Please make a note of how, one of the Taliban AKA WARRIORS OF ISLAM, tries to stuff his pockets with whateva he could snatch from the vehicle.
What prove do you have that these men - TALIBAN- are nothing but pirates, nothing but road robbers.
A true practising muslim would go to his mosque…return home…work…feed his family..and lead a humble life. A true muslim cannot take the life of another person…and he/she must simply leave the judgement to the God he/she prays for.
These were Afghan men who are being killed in this video… with proof with Taliban chanting their usual ALLAH AKBAR…
These moron MOTHER****ERS only know how to kill and rob. Assuming Afghanistan is returned to these highway robbers - Can they run a country? Do they know economics? Do they know finance…or is it that ALLAH WILL TAKE CARE OF IT ?
If tomarrow, Afghanistan be given to these highway robbers - WOULD YOU GO TO AFGHANISTAN WITH YOUR FAMILY and Live there?
Why was there a mass exodus of Afghans when Taliban were in power? Why were people running away from it? WHY ON EARTH THOSE WHO SUPPORT TALIBAN MOVEMENT DID NOT RETURN TO AFGHANISTAN WHEN YOUR WARRIORS OF ISLAM WERE IN POWER????
Hypocrite Afghans turn a blind eye to the life style they are leading here in the west, yet praising the killings, supporting the Jihad and so forth. And what jihad??? Highway robbery? killing another muslim man who earns a livelihood by being a police officer.
Can these highway robbers put down their weapons if their almighty Jihad is done and work as a carpenter…work as a teacher…work as an iron worker? NO … THEY ARE KILLING MACHINES.
LETS NOT TURN A BLIND EYE TO THE FACT THAT ANYONE WHO HAS COMMITTED AN ACT OF VIOLANCE…ANYONE WHO HAS KILLED A HUMAN BEING…ANYONE WHO HAS ORPHANED A FAMILY BY INSTIGATING THESE JIHADS OR SUICIDE BOMBINGS OR … THEY CAN NOT CALL THEMSELEVES MUSLIMS. AND TALIBAN HAS OVER AND OVER AND OVER … Confirmed that they have killed. DR. JACKIE KIRK OF McMaster University was in Afghanistan to HELP… She was butchered by Taliban and they claimed responsiblity…
but i guess at the end..its all one big CIA masterplan… Taleban only exists in our imagination… air strikes that kill a family is an act of INVADING US FORCES…and Taliban who plant bombs…kill Afghans…. are the Warriors of ISLAM who are allowed to do so.
I applaud the hypocrisy of Afghans
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Southpark and Comedy Network’s Imaginationland a reality !
Published by admin on September 16th, 2008 | Tagged News, Other Stuff, Random News, Random Thoughts
The other day I was watching Comedy Network’s SouthPark - Imaginationland. CLICK HERE TO WATCH SouthPark

Basically it is about how Islamists attack the Imaginationland and how US congress wants to Nuke the Imaginationland. The basic premise of the plot (and a very Smart one too!) is that American imagination has been infiliterated by AL Qaeda and how the US wants to nuke everyone’s imagination to kill the terrorists.
Just when you think American’s are not going crazy about this whole Terrorist thing - Here is the latest news about a Pentagon research involving VIRTUAL WORLD such as World of Warcraft, EverQuest, SecondLife and how those venues could be used by Osama bin laden and his allies to plot an attack on AMERICA.
And i am sure just like me, u would scratch your head and wonder…Why would turban heads hiding in Caves in Pakistan and Afghanistan, would use World of WarCraft to plan an attack on US soil ???
Following is an article I read on WIRED NEWS.
Pentagon Researcher Unveils Warcraft Terror Plot:

The American military and intelligence communities are increasingly worried that would-be bin Ladens might gather in a virtual world, to plan a real-life attack. But the spies haven’t given many details, about how it might be done. Now, a Pentagon researcher has laid out how such a terror plot might unfold. The planning ground is World of Warcraft. The main target of this possibly nuclear strike: the White House.
There’s been no public proof to date of terrorists hatching plots in virtual worlds. But online spaces likeWorld of Warcraft are making some spooks, generals and Congressmen extremely nervous. They imagine terrorists rehearsing attacks in these worlds, just like the U.S. military trains with commercial shoot-em-up games. They worry that the massively multiplayer games make it incredibly easy to gather plotters from around the world. But, mostly, virtual worlds are nerve-wracking to spies because they’re so hard to monitor. The accounts are pseudonymous. The access is global. The jargon is thick. And most of the spy agencies’ employees aren’t exactly level-70 shamans.
In a presentation late last week at the Director of National Intelligence Open Source Conference in Washington, Dr. Dwight Toavs, a professor at the Pentagon-funded National Defense University, gave a bit of a primer on virtual worlds to an audience largely ignorant about what happens in these online spaces. Then he launched into a scenario, to demonstrate how a meatspace plot might be hidden by in-game chatter.
In it, two World of Warcraft players discuss a raid on the “White Keep” inside the “Stonetalon Mountains.” The major objective is to set off a “Dragon Fire spell” inside, and make off with “110 Gold and 234 Silver” in treasure. “No one will dance there for a hundred years after this spell is cast,” one player, “war_monger,” crows.
Except, in this case, the White Keep is at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. “Dragon Fire” is an unconventional weapon. And “110 Gold and 234 Silver” tells the plotters how to align the game’s map with one of Washington, D.C.

The fictional plot was originally developed by Dan Arey, for the Director of National Intelligence’s Summer Hard Problems workshop, or SHARP. And its details are a little fuzzy. The terminology doesn’t match World of Warcraft lingo, all that precisely. There is no “White Keep” in World of Warcraft;“Dragon Fire” is a spell in EverQuest, the old-school role-playing game, not WoW. But the banter is reminiscent enough of World of Warcraft talk, to give outsiders an idea of how such a conversation might go down — and how hard it would be to identify.
Steven Aftergood, the Federation of the American Scientists analyst who’s been following the intelligence community for years, wonders how realistic these sorts of scenarios are, really. “This concern is out there. But it has to be viewed in context. It’s the job of intelligence agencies to anticipate threats and counter them. With that orientation, they’re always going to give more weight to a particular scenario than an objective analysis would allow,” he tells Danger Room. “Could terrorists use Second Life? Sure, they can use anything. But is it a significant augmentation? That’s not obvious. It’s a scenario that an intelligence officer is duty-bound to consider. That’s all.”
Toavs, for one, believes that spies will have to spend more time in virtual worlds like WoW, if they want to have a hope of keeping tabs on what goes on inside ‘em. Which means, some day soon, we might find secret agents in World of Warcraft, along with the druids and orcs and night elves.
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