The Madness of Zionism

“I am not a psychologist, but I think that everyone who lives with the contradictions of Zionism condemns himself to protracted madness. It’s impossible to live like this. It’s impossible to live with such a tremendous wrong. It’s impossible to live with such conflicting moral criteria. When I see not only the settlements and the occupation and the suppression, but now also the insane wall that the Israelis are trying to hide behind, I have to conclude that there is something very deep here in our attitude to the indigenous people of this land that drives us out of our minds.

There is something gigantic here that doesn’t allow us truly to recognize the Palestinians, that doesn’t allow us to make peace with them. And that something has to do with the fact that even before the return of the land and the houses and the money, the settlers’ first act of expiation toward the natives of this land must be to restore to them their dignity, their memory, their justness

After the 12th Tunisian Blogger Meetup

We got back from the 12th Tunisian blogger meetup a while ago, and what a meetup it was.

This meetup marks a year since we’ve been holding blogger meetups in Tunisia, and what a long way we’ve come ever since that first meetup that I organized, not knowing what to expect, and never dreaming that it would become such an anticipated monthly event, with different people eager to get involved with the organization every time.
When I look back on it all, it makes me so proud and so happy that I took that initial step.

Today’s meetup broke the record in the number of bloggers present with around 35 bloggers showing up, and the number of new faces exceeding old ones.
We actually took over a whole part of the caf

GTA Influence Puts Man In Jail

A New York man got two charges after a car chase with cops; He thought he could outrun police because he did it in the video game Grand Theft Auto.

Tyrone McMillan was taken into custody last year after leading police on a car chase when officers attempted to pull him over for a parole violation. After slamming into two cars, McMillan told police that he thought he could outrun them because he played games from Rockstar’s controversial Grand Theft Auto franchise.

McMillan, in his 30s, apparently thought that his gaming skills translated to the real world. His experience navigating the fictional streets of San Andreas and Vice City with a PlayStation 2 controller led to a 55-minute real-life car chase, part of which had his girlfriend’s 11-year-old daughter and her 10-year-old cousin in the backseat. The girls leapt from the moving car while it was turning onto a highway.

A court judge slapped him with two concurrent seven-year jail terms and 10 year parole afterwards.

This isn’t the first time Rockstar’s top-selling franchise has been part of a criminal case. Devin Moore stands trial for the slayings of three Alabama police officers, an act which prosecuting attorneys say was influenced by playing Grand Theft Auto III and Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.

It’s amazing how some people are easily influenced by video games and how they start thinking they can take what they’re doing in the game with them into real life.
I can’t deny I get some funny thoughts too sometimes, but not in the sense that I feel I can do certain things, but more like imagining how it would be if I did them.
For example, these days, influenced by playing a lot of “The Godfather“, I just imagine how it would be if I did all the stuff in the game in real life, but well, I’m fully aware that it’s just a game and that it stops when I turn off the game console.
Some people obviously don’t make that distinction…

[Source: GameSpot]

Tunis 94th Among World Cities for Quality of Life

So it turns out that Tunis is ranked 94th in the world wide index for quality of life.
That’s down one spot from last year, although it’s index score is the same at 82.2. It seems someone jumped a spot ahead of us or something.

The two leading cities in the quality of life index are Zurich and Geneva in Switzerland.

The only Arab cities ahead of Tunis are Dubai at the 85th place and Abu Dhabi at the 92nd.

The lowest ranking city is Baghdad at the 215th spot.

The analysis is part of Mercer’s annual World-wide Quality of Living
Survey, covering more than 350 cities, to help governments and
multinational companies place employees on international assignments. Each
city is based on an evaluation of 39 criteria, including political, social,
economic and environmental factors, personal safety and health, education,
transport and other public services. Cities are ranked against New York as
the base city, which has an index score of 100.

For the full list and more details, go to: World-wide Quality of Living Survey

[Via: 2:48AM]

Tunisian Blogger Meetup 12

So there will be a Tunisian blogger meetup this upcoming Saturday. This will be our 12th meetup in Tunisia, marking a year of great fun meetups.

This one is organized by Skydancer who is a Tunisian blogger living in France and who will be visiting Tunisia in this period.

So, the details are as follows: Saturday, April 15th, at 16:00 in Biwa (Les Berges du Lac).

I know it’s a bit on short notice, but please do your best to be there.
We’re expecting some new faces in this meetup, and it should be a lot of fun as usual.

For your information, the promised Zaghouan mountains blogger meetup should be following shortly after this one. It’s currently in the final planning stages.
Stay tuned for more details as they become available.

Google Calendar

After several months of development and a bunch of rumours and screenshots being leaked, Google has finally released their new service Google Calendar.

Like most Google services, the Google Calendar has a nice, clean, uncluttered, straightforward interface. A small “mini-calendar” on the left side of the screen shows the current month, and a larger view to the right shows either the current day, week or month view, the “next 4 days,” or an “agenda,” which is a linear list of all of your scheduled events.

A cool feature for Gmail users will recognize events in mail messages and give you an opportunity to add the event to your Google Calendar.
There’s also a “remind me with Google Calendar” button that lets you add events from web sites that display the button with just a couple of clicks.

You’re also not limited to one single calendar. You can create multiple calendars for specific functions, for example one for family events, another for work, and well others for whatever you might need them for.

You can import your outlook or iCal calendars into Google Calendar, and well you can also export them back.

In the essence of sharing, which seems to be the hype on the web these days, you can also share your calendar with other people if you want to.

Of course, this being Google, search through your events is also included. You can search across your calendars, and of course refine your search with options like “what,” “who” “where,” “doesn’t have,” or a date range.

For an initial beta release, I think this is a really good service and pretty well done. I’ll be testing it a bit more before making the decision of switching to it or not.
I know this is being a bit too demanding, but I hope someone comes up with a little tool that can synchronize between Google Calendar and other offline calendar systems whether it be on a pc, laptop, pocket pc or other handheld device. That would make it perfect, as not everyone can be connected all the time, and it’s be good to be able to carry that info around with you.

Muhammad Ali Sells Marketing Rights

Muhammad Ali, one of the world’s most recognized people, has sold 80 percent of the marketing rights to his name and likeness to a firm for $50 million.

The 64-year-old former heavyweight champion, who suffers from Parkinson’s disease, will retain a 20 percent interest in the business. The new venture will be operated by a company called G.O.A.T. LLC, an acronym for “The Greatest of All Time.”

Wow…
Ok, it’s decided, I’m selling marketing rights to my name, likeness and whatever else you want.
It all goes to the highest bidder.
Let the war begin ๐Ÿ˜›

Oh whatever…

[Source: Yahoo News]

Dogs & Me

I remember when I was a little kid, I had this big fear of dogs, especially ones that liked to bark a lot when running up to you, no matter how small they were.
It scared the hell out of me, I’d panic and run away at the sight of a dog.

My mom used to tell me that dogs smell fear and that I had to try and act all cool about it so they wouldn’t bother me. But being a kid, that was all blah blah to me, how was I supposed to keep myself together while a dog was running towards me, barking their ass off and showing me their shiny teeth. Impossible.

Until one incident made me change my mind…

In Zimbabwe, for some years we lived in a penthouse on the ninth floor of a building. It was really cool, and had a great view. I also remember when Hayley’s comet passed by, all the neighbours came up to see it from our roof.

Anyway, one day when my mom and I were waiting for the elevator to go up to our place, one of the neighbours walked in with her dog. The woman was one of those snobby short-haired blondes and her dog was a small white poodle, but a nasty ferocious one, or at least that’s how I saw it then.
It was unleashed and this hairy little thing just came running at me, barking in this annoying tone. I panicked and ran for the stairs and started leaping up them like my life depended on it. By the time I got to the ninth floor, I was breathless and totally pooped out.

That day I took the decision that no dog was going to make me have to go through that again, especially not that tiny dumb one, and that I’d just have to learn how to deal with it. I started turning my mother’s words around in my head, trying to find a solution for my problem and putting a plan together.

Luckily enough, I had the gift of acting, and so my plan was to act as if I wasn’t scared of dogs and as if they weren’t even there in the first place. Pretty shaky for a plan, but hey I was just a little kid at the time and that’s the best I could come up with.

Time went by and yet again we ran into the same neighbour and her stupid dog. I panicked, but I was determined to stick to my plan. The dog, as if with pure evil in his eyes, ran up to me, barking and all, and I just stood there, about to do it in my pants, but doing my best not to show it, trying to keep up a conversation with my mother, which I’m almost sure became pretty senseless.
The dog turned around me a few times, sniffing around, like the fear detector that it is, was dissapointed, threw me a bad look from the corner of its eye, and then just shut up and left. That moment was one of ultimate victory for me, I had prevailed.
From that day on, I would never be afraid of any dog no matter how big they were, how scary they looked or how loud they barked.

And that’s mostly true, if I count out the occasional huge rabid dogs jumping at me out of nowhere on a dark night.

Lately I’ve been thinking that maybe the same approach could work with people.

European Union Punishing Palestinians For Democracy

“It’s not acceptable to punish the Palestinian people. We cannot say to the Palestinians: ‘it’s good being democratic and at the same time we punish you’. The EU must find a mechanism to get aid to the people…”

Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority

After the US, the European Union moves to stop payments to the Hamas-led government in Palestine.

So, yeah, it’s good to be democratic as long as you choose who they want you to choose. Simple.

[Source: The Guardian]
[More: EU observer]
[Via: Je Blog]