Danish
Pastries Taste Better Than Explosives From Iran
This page is about SEO - search engine optimization. It's about exposing the present Iran government for what it is - terrorists from Iran. Terrorists who fund Hamas and Hezbollah in murdering, blowing up innocent men, women and children in Israel and throughout the West. These terrorists believe we are all infidels - no different than the terror actions of Osama bin-Laden. The Israel News Agency is asking every SEO advertising marketing professional to create Web pages and optimize the keywords: "Iran Holocaust Cartoon Contest" in order to prevent the Iran newspapers, the enemies of Israel, the Jews, the Christians and Western democracy from attaining a high Google and Google News position. The SEO contestants will wrap these keywords "Iran Holocaust Cartoon Contest" around their comments of how Iran has sponsored Islam suicide bombing terror attacks against innocent men, women and children in Israel. Iran directly funds the activities of the terrorist groups Hamas and Hizbullah. Wikipedia defines a SEO (search engine optimization) contests as when SEO marketing Webmasters compete to rank best on Google for a given keyword or keyword combination. They have become an often important method for webmasters to promote their web sites and gain web traffic. While the contestants compete for prizes, fame or glory, the organizing body often benefits as well. The Israel News Agency is launching an SEO contest, not for money but rather in memory of those Jews, Christians, Gypsies - men, women and children who were murdered in the gas ovens of the Holocaust.
So please excuse our grammatical mistakes and rambling as these words are meant to attract search engines. Iran is holding a cartoon contest on the Holocaust. Was there something funny about the Holocaust? I don't think that shooting, gassing and hanging 6 million Jews is funny.
Iran has decided to rename Danish pastries "Mohammedan" pastry - a new twist in the crisis which has triggered protest by Muslims throughout the world against cartoons of Mohammed first published in Denmark. The name change recalls when some Americans started calling French fries, "Freedom fries" to protest France's opposition to the United States-led invasion of Iraq. Iran has recalled its ambassador from Copenhagen, and on Tuesday announced a halt to all imports of Danish products. Demonstrators in Tehran on Tuesday attacked the Danish embassy with stones and petrol bombs, the second such assault in two days. Denmark says it holds the Iranian authorities responsible for the embassy attacks. A series of cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed published in a Danish daily in September has triggered protests throughout the Islamic world which in recent days have led to at least five deaths in Afghanistan, one in Lebanon and one in Somalia. Islamic tradition explicitly prohibits images of Allah and the Prophet Mohammed. What is Danish pastry? This butter-rich pastry begins as a yeast dough that is rolled out, dotted with butter, then folded and rolled again several times, as for PUFF PASTRY. The dough may be lightly sweetened and is usually flavored with vanilla or cardamom. Baked Danish pastries (often referred to simply as Danish) contain a variety of ffllings including fruit, cream cheese, almond paste and spiced nuts. But renaming Danish pastries as an insult to Denmark and the Western world is nothing compared to creating Holocaust cartoons of the holocaust. But where did all of this Holocaust cartoon garbage from Iran start? With some idiot at a newspaper in Denmark who compared Mohammed to a terrorist. Mohammed is the leader of the Islamic religion and should be respected. It was a mistake for which the Denmark government apologized for. But no, Iran and Syria saw this as an excuse to create a Holocaust cartoon contest, actually a diversion from the real issues facing us all - Iran, which believes in destroying democracy, is building nuclear weapons.
A Iran newspaper said on Tuesday that it would hold a competition for cartoons on the Holocaust. Hamshahri, one of Iran largest papers and owned by the city council of Tehran, made clear the contest is a reaction to European newspapers' publication of Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, which have led to demonstrations, boycotts and attacks on European embassies across the Islamic world. Several people have been killed. Hundreds of terrorists from Iran hurled stones, and sometimes gasoline bombs, at the Danish and Austria embassies in Tehran, Iran in protest against the cartoons Monday. Austria currently holds the European Union presidency. The newspaper said the Holocaust cartoon contest would be launched Monday and co-sponsored by the House of Caricatures, a Tehran exhibition center for cartoons. The paper and the cartoon center are owned by the Tehran Municipality, which is dominated by allies of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, well-known for his opposition to Israel. Ahmadinejad, who was Tehran's mayor until being elected president in June, provoked outcries last year when he said on separate occasions that Israel should be "wiped off the map" and the Holocaust was a "myth." Iran said last month it would sponsor a conference to examine the scientific evidence supporting the Holocaust, an apparent attempt to give voice to Holocaust deniers. Hamshahri invited foreign cartoonists to enter the competition. The cartoons were first published by a Danish newspaper in September. As Iran Muslim protests mounted, numerous European newspapers have reprinted them in recent days in the name of free expression, provoking wider and angrier protests. The drawings — including one depicting the prophet wearing a turban shaped as a bomb — have touched a raw nerve in part because Islam is interpreted to forbid any illustrations of the Prophet Mohammed for fear they could lead to idolatry. Iran made Holocaust denial government policy when Iran foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki said in December that remarks made by the Iran president that the Nazi mass murder of Jews during World War II was a "myth" was the official Iranian government's position on the issue. "The words of [president] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the Holocaust and on Israel are not personal opinions, nor isolated statements but they express the view of the Iran government," Mottaki said.
The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. "Holocaust" is a word of Greek origin meaning "sacrifice by fire." The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933, believed that Germans were "racially superior" and that the Jews, deemed "inferior," were "life unworthy of life." During the era of the Holocaust, the Nazis also targeted other groups because of their perceived "racial inferiority": Roma (Gypsies), the handicapped, and some of the Slavic peoples (Poles, Russians, and others). Other groups were persecuted on political and behavioral grounds, among them Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and homosexuals. In 1933, the Jewish population of Europe stood at over nine million. Most European Jews lived in countries that the Third Reich would occupy or influence during World War II.
By 1945, close to two out of every three European Jews had been killed as part of the "Final Solution", the Nazi policy to murder the Jews of Europe. Although Jews were the primary victims of Nazi racism, other victims included tens of thousands of Roma (Gypsies). At least 200,000 mentally or physically disabled people were murdered in the Euthanasia Program. As Nazi tyranny spread across Europe, the Nazis persecuted and murdered millions of other people. More than three million Soviet prisoners of war were murdered or died of starvation, disease, neglect, or maltreatment. The Germans targeted the non-Jewish Polish intelligentsia for killing, and deported millions of Polish and Soviet citizens for forced labor in Germany or in occupied Poland. From the earliest years of the Nazi regime, homosexuals and others deemed to be behaving in a socially unacceptable way were persecuted.
As Iran focuses on securing Holocaust cartoons, the EU’s executive office today warned Iran that attempts to boycott Danish goods or cancel trade contracts with European countries would lead to a further rupture in already cool relations. The EU was trying to confirm comments made by Iran’s president that the country should boycott Danish products in protest of cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed, said EU spokesman Johannes Laitenberger. “A boycott of Danish goods is by definition a boycott of European goods,” Laitenberger said. “A boycott hurts the economic interests of all parties, also those who are boycotting and can damage the growing trade links between the EU and the countries concerned.” The Brussels-based Conference of European Rabbis (CER) denounced the idea of Holocaust cartoons coming from Iran and urged the Muslim world to do likewise. Iran daily paper said the contest was designed to test the boundaries of free speech.
In Paris, CER President Joseph Sitruk, who is also Chief Rabbi of France, said: "The Iranian regime has plummeted to new depths if it regards the deaths of six million Jews as a matter for humor or to score cheap political points. "Sadly, we are not surprised by this action," he said, recalling Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's calls last year for Israel to be "wiped off the map" and his dismissal of the Holocaust as a myth. In a statement issued by the CER, which represents chief rabbis from over 40 European countries, Sitruk said the Iranian government menaced Jews and the whole international community. Sitruk noted that European religious leaders had condemned the publication of images likely to offend believers' feelings. "This is a test for the Muslim world to react immediately to condemn their own co-religionists in Iran for such obscene behavior as we condemned those who sought to insult them," he said. US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said he saw the initiative by Iran largest-selling paper as an extension of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's campaign of virulent anti-Israeli rhetoric. "Any attempt to mock or to in any way denigrate the horror that was the Holocaust is simply outrageous," McCormack said. Iran Hamshahri newspaper announced the competition over cartoons depicting the Nazi slaughter of Jews before and during World War II as a reprisal for Western papers printing satirical images of Mohammed. McCormack reiterated US support for freedom of expression throughout the world, including in Iran. But he saw no comparison between the plans by Hamshahri and the move by a Danish paper to run the Mohammed cartoons. "I don't think that anybody would draw any equivalencies between, quote/unquote, 'freedom of the press' in Iran and freedom of the press in Western Europe or the United States," he said. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) said in response to the Iran Holocaust cartoons controversy stemming from the twelve cartoons depicting Mohammed featured in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten and reprinted in other Europe newspapers: ADL is opposed to religious, racial and ethnic stereotyping in the media. The ADL said that it found some of the cartoons in Jyllands-Posten troubling, particularly the direct linkage of Mohammad and violence. "At the same time, we are gravely concerned by the extreme violent reaction these cartoons have generated in Muslim communities in Europe, and particularly in the Middle East. It is certainly the right of individuals and governments to express their disagreement with these depictions. However, the use of violence, threats, boycotts and other extreme reactions are highly inappropriate and bode ill for future debates involving Islam, democracy and free speech." The ADL statement concluded: "what has been overlooked in the controversy is the fact that despicable anti-Jewish caricatures appear daily in newspapers across the Arab, Iran and Muslim world. In a democratic society, newspapers need to be free to publish controversial content without fear of censorship or intimidation of their writers and editors. At the same time, newspapers and all media outlets should to take into account the sensitivities of racial, ethnic and religious groups."
A senior Iran cleric called on Muslims on Friday to direct their fury over cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Mohammed at the United States, rather than Denmark. When crowds of worshippers in Tehran chanted “Death to Denmark” during his fiery sermon, Tehran Friday prayers leader Ahmad Khatami told them, “We shouldn’t say ‘Death to Denmark’. Denmark is nothing! We must say, ‘Death to America’. It’s the Americans who set up the likes of the Danes”. Khatami, who is not related to Iran’s former president, accused the European Union of “double standards” in its approach to the publication of cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad and Iran’s denial of the Holocaust. He said that the victory of the radical Islamist group Hamas in the Palestinian elections was the “most effective blow” to U.S. prestige. The US has entered the row over the Muhammad cartoons, accusing Syria and Iran of stoking up protests against the caricatures to suit their own ends. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she had no doubt Iran and Syria had gone out of their way to inflame sentiments and have used it for their own purposes.
"The world ought to call them on it," she said. Syria ambassador in Washington, Imad Moustapha, dismissed Dr Rice's comments, telling CNN it was the US-led military presence in Iraq and the Israeli presence in Palestinian lands that was "fuelling anti-Western sentiment". The European Union may try to draw up a media code of conduct to avoid a repeat of the furor caused by the publication across Europe of cartoons of the prophet Mohammed, an EU commissioner said yesterday. The EU Justice and Security Commissioner, Franco Frattini, said the charter would encourage the media to show "prud- ence" when covering religion. "The press will give the Muslim world the message: we are aware of the consequences of exercising the right of free expression," he said in an interview. "We can and we are ready to self-regulate that right." British imams have demanded changes in the law and a strengthening of the UK Press Complaints Commission code to outlaw any possible publication of the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad in Britain. Amid escalating tensions provoked by the controversy throughout Europe and the Middle East, more than 300 religious leaders and scholars met yesterday to highlight the distress of British communities and to plan a way forward. They have scheduled a march through London next weekend and say at least 20,000 people are likely to attend. The EU foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, is due to visit Muslim and Arab countries in an effort to build bridges. The cartoons were published in more than 20 countries. Hindus consider it sacrilegious to eat meat from cows, so when a Danish supermarket ran a sale on beef and veal last fall, Hindus everywhere reacted with outrage. India recalled its ambassador to Copenhagen, and Danish flags were burned in Calcutta, Bombay, and Delhi. A Hindu mob in Sri Lanka severely beat two employees of a Danish-owned firm, and demonstrators in Nepal chanted: ''War on Denmark! Death to Denmark!"In many places, shops selling Dansk china or Lego toys were attacked by rioters, and two Danish embassies were firebombed. It didn't happen, of course. Hindus may consider it odious to use cows as food, but they do not resort to boycotts, threats, and violence when non-Hindus eat hamburger or steak. They do not demand that everyone abide by the strictures of Hinduism and avoid words and deeds that Hindus might find upsetting. The same is true of Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Mormons: They don't lash out in violence when their religious sensibilities are offended. They certainly don't expect their beliefs to be immune from criticism, mockery, or dissent. But radical Muslims and those in Iran and Syria do. That anything so mild could trigger a reaction so crazed - riots, death threats, kidnappings, flag-burnings - speaks volumes about the chasm that separates the values of the civilized world from those in too much of the Islamic world. Freedom of the press, the marketplace of ideas, the right to skewer sacred cows: Militant Islam and Iran knows none of this. And if the jihadis get their way, it will be swept aside everywhere by the censorship and intolerance of sharia. Here and there, some brave Muslim voices have cried out against the book-burners. The Jordan newspaper Shihan published three of the cartoons. ''Muslims of the world, be reasonable," implored Shihan's editor, Jihad al-Momani, in an editorial. ''What brings more prejudice against Islam -- these caricatures or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras?" But within hours Momani was out of a job, fired by the paper's owners after the Jordanian government threatened legal action. In a further development, the Danish editor behind the original publication of the cartoons said he was trying to liaise with an Iranian paper planning to publish cartoons about the Holocaust. "My newspaper is trying to establish a contact with the Iranian newspaper and we would run the cartoons the same day as they publish them," Flemming Rose, culture editor of Jyllands-Posten, told CNN. The Iran newspaper, Hamshahri, had earlier announced a competition for Holocaust-related cartoons. French President Jacques Chirac accused newspapers printing the cartoons of "provocation", after the Paris-based weekly, Charlie Hebdo, ran the controversial caricatures. "Anything that can hurt the convictions of another, particularly religious convictions, must be avoided. Freedom of expression must be exercised in a spirit of responsibility," Mr Chirac told his cabinet, according to a Government spokesman. "I condemn all manifest provocation that might dangerously fan passions." The President spoke out after the magazine printed the 12 cartoons first published by Jyllands-Posten in September, as well as a new front-page caricature of its own. Under the headline "Muhammad stressed out by the fundamentalists", it showed a cartoon of the prophet with head in hands uttering the words: "It's hard to be loved by fools." As well as the cartoons that have prompted fury in the Islamic world, it published other drawings poking fun at different religions.
Whether the economists are right in their analysis or the Neocons or the sociologists, or any other gogues that might offer up an analysis, one thing is eminently clear. The peoples in such a rage over Danish cartoonists are a deeply troubled people. They are incapable of reason or even of governing themselves. They are the enemy of civilization, whether it be Western civilization or some civilized order that might emerge in the Middle East. I hope the Europeans who have been so critical of US military action in Iraq and Afghanistan take note. The Islamofascists are as great a danger as was Hitler, who left Europe in the kind of desolate chaos that the Islamofascists adumbrate.
Latest news reports state that thousands of Islam terrorists in Iran who are dressed as Nazis and are creating Holocaust cartoons are now throwing Danish at every Western embassies in Iran. They state that any coffee shop seen serving Danish with coffee will be closed unless the Danish is stale, the coffee is cold and books are burning in the stove. Large crowds are presently gathering at every Western capital in the free, democratic world protesting Iran, terrorism and suicide bombers. "This
is a test for SEO professionals in every democratic nation who have a rich background
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"On-line news sites do not optimize their news stories with search engine optimization
SEO technology and as a result their stories get lost in cyberspace. Rather than
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