Word: hating
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...both sides." Egteyah isn't the first documentary about Jenin - in the Middle East, a battle so mythic was bound to produce its own sub-genre. But it's the first to examine both sides of the fight without propaganda. Hassan found something else in the camp: "Victims feel hate because they are passive," he says. "But by resisting, the people of Jenin camp acted. They weren't passive at all." Hassan focuses much of the movie on an Israeli soldier who drove one of the massive Caterpillar D9 bulldozers that demolished over 100 buildings in Jenin camp...
...broader issues raised by the Zayed gift have complicated ramifications for many other large donations to the University and its schools. Harvard University Art Museums has done admirable work in looking to return art that may have been looted by the Nazis. Clearly gifts from those who endorse hate and bigotry have no place at Harvard...
...from ACT UP’s die-ins—which themselves were meant to illustrate the group’s brutal slogan, Silence=Death. When the Day of Silence came to college campuses in 1996, it sought to literalize the fatal silence surrounding the victims of hate crimes. In another decontextualization of a once-potent political action, the BGLTSA’s event re-defined silence as the silence of the closet. Needless to say, the silence of the closet is not the silence of the grave. To be, as one sign put it, “Silenced...
...talks would merely be a stalling tactic to provide the North with cover to carry on N-bomb development. And although Washington has consistently expressed confidence that a diplomatic solution can be reached, its own motives are suspect. Bush has said he "loathes" Kim, and Republican hawks say they hate the idea of dickering with the North. The previous U.S. President, Bill Clinton, used economic blandishments to get North Korea to mothball its nuke program - but in October the North triggered the current crisis when it admitted it was violating that 1994 deal. If the secret agenda of the Bush...
...enemy programmed to hate and fear is not the adversary the U.S. wants to face across the bargaining table. But assuming that Kim is driven primarily by a desire to stay in power, he might realize his nuclear plan has a fundamental flaw. Using or threatening to use the bomb will almost certainly spell the end of his regime, no matter the cost. Logic should be telling him that the only sure way he can survive is by giving up his nukes, in return getting much-needed aid and living to be obnoxious another...