Word: ladenã
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They certainly do not draw our attention to an unexamined issue—it was all too clear that bin Laden??€™s spectre was all around us on Friday when the audience collectively flinched as several planes (didn’t they seem particularly noisy?) flew low overhead during the speech. Nor have they complicated our understanding of Sept. 11—Bush’s subtle diction need only remind us of the sort of rhetoric we hear today...
When Palestinian Authority (PA) police fired on anti-American protesters in the Gaza strip on Oct. 9, Chairman Yassir Arafat permanently cast his lot against Osama bin Laden??€”and therefore with the U.S.—in the current conflict. We are deeply concerned by the use of deadly force to quell the protests and deplore the PA’s attempt to suppress news reports of the events. But we hope that its opposition to the horrific Sept. 11 attack on innocent civilians will convince the PA that it must combat terrorism, in all its forms...
...Hamas has expressed strong support for Osama bin Laden, and Palestinian officials have said it was behind the Oct. 9 riot in Gaza. Its sympathies are, and have always been, clear. Arafat must realize that there is no substantive difference between groups like Hamas or Hezbollah and Osama bin Laden??€”all are willing to slaughter innocents for their own misguided political objectives, and none will stop unless they are brought to justice...
...Responding to bin Laden??€™s statements, Arafat rightly said that he would not allow anyone to use Palestinians’ struggles to justify killing thousands of American civilians. It is now time for him to apply that rhetoric to Palestinian terrorists. He must realize that doctors, stockbrokers and children in Tel Aviv and Haifa have the same right to live their lives in peace as those in New York City...
...late-night comic for disagreeing with government policies and has attempted to restrict the editorial independence of the trusted Voice of America news reports. More recently, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice requested that television news executives consider the appropriateness of airing uncensored versions of videos released by Osama bin Laden??€™s al Queda organization. Rice argued that the propaganda effects of the videos might incite further violence against the United States, and that they might transmit coded messages to al Queda operatives still in this country...