Khazen

A Legislator

Written By Malek El Khazen – Currently, while writing this article, I am watching the funeral of Senator Ted Kennedy. An amazing, fascinating Leader and above all being a leader is really secondary to what he was a true and one of the most powerful Legislators worldwide. In his last 3 decades after his fail […]

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The Week in an Article- Paul Kerbage

الأسبوع في مقال

 

شهد الأسبوع الفائت تطورات سياسية محلية هامة دفعت بالواقع اللبناني من جديد إلى حضن الواقع الدولي الراهن الذي لا يزال عالقاً بين الخلافات والتحالفات العربية الطارئة بين كل من مصر، السعودية وسوريا لا سيما حول تأليف الحكومة اللبنانية التي وبعد انقضاء أكثر من شهرين على عملية الإنتخاب ، لم يفلح الرئيس المكلف سعد الحريري بتأليفها أو حتى إتمام المشاورات اللازمة عرفياً.
فالرئيس بري صائم عن الكلام، الحريري معتكف حتى إشعار آخر.. والبلد لا يزال معطلاً تحركه وتسيره حكومة تصريف أعمال.
قطع المؤتمر الصحفي الذي عقده العماد عون بداية الأسبوع الصمت الإعلامي ليعلن أنه ومن جديد سيحارب المافيا حيثما يكون وأكد إعادة تمسكه بتوزير جبران باسيل بعد أن اتهمته الموالاة بتعطيل تشكيل الحكومة. واعتبر أنه معني بالوحدة الوطنية اكثر من موضوع التشكيلة الوزارية بعد تصاعد اللهجة التصعيدية الإسرائيلية ضد لبنان.
في مقلب آخر، برزت قضية محطة الإنترنت الإسرائيلية في الباروك التي استطاعت إسرائيل زمن خلالها التنصت غلى رئاسة الجمهورية ووزارة الدفاع لمدة تجاوزت السنتين مما يشكل خرقاً خطيراً للسيادة اللبنانية. أعلن جمبع الأطراف تنصلهم من هذه القضية غير أن المعلومات تحدثت عن  تركيبها على عهد الوزير السابق مروان حمادة الذي بدوره أنكر وأدان حملات التحريض ضده.
أياً كان المسؤؤل، تبقى القضية في عهدة السلطات القضائية بشقيها الأمني والمالي والتي لابد من أن تحاسب المسؤولين عن هذا الخرق الأمني الفاضح والذين سهلوا عملية التجسس، وذكرت معلومات عن تورط وامتلاك المحطة من قبل اشخاص معروفون في الوسط السياسي الأمر الذي يطرح علامة استفهام عديدة.

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US Health Care Concerns

Creating an improved health care system is everyone’s objective who does not seek improvement? Or cut cost? Or covering all of the uninsured? But the big question is do we need universal healthcare? Do we really need it? Or do we need improvement of our current health care system and identifying clearly the problems by tackling them one by one.

 
Major concerns about a universal healthcare still unclear:
 
1- Cost:
 
President Obama in one of his town hall meeting has responded by outlining how he planned to fund the program, by eliminating medical-practice waste and insurance expenses, to cover two-thirds, and one-third by taxing those who make over $250,000 a year. Noting that he is in the higher-income bracket, Obama said, "There’s nothing wrong with me paying a little more to help people with less."
 
But it is important to note that “Massachusetts’s universal health plan, long discussed as a possible model for the nation, is getting a $115 million haircut. Faced with lower revenues and a growing number of citizens who lost their jobs and their health insurance… Because of all of these new unexpected variables added the state didn’t have enough money to pay for insurance subsidies for needy residents under the current plan. Higher health care costs fueled a combined $9 billion gap in the state’s 2009 and 2010 budgets that had to be closed last month, leaving less for education, public safety, the environment and other services.” (USA-Today, Richard Wolf)
 
Having clarified this if Massachusetts a state of 6.5 millions residents needed to cover a total of 680 000 uninsured were able to offer health insurance to 439,000 leaving 2.6% of the total population of the state or 115K without insurance. “As of June 30, 2008, the estimated number of uninsured had dropped to 2.6%. 115000 still uninsured” (Boston.com). In reality, Massachusetts needed to cover 680K and they were able to cover 439K which is only 65%of the uninsured. Additionally this has led a deficit in the budget by billions.  My next question would be how would the government be able to cover currently 46 millions uninsured? Let us imagine they match Massachusetts performance because as we are all aware it is simply unlikely especially during the first years to cover all uninsured. It is fair to state by implementing the new universal system they will be leaving out of the 46 millions still 16 millions uninsured. Then will this be a failure or success? My biggest concern will still be the deficit that we are already facing which on top of this adding more deficit because of high unemployment, foreclosure rates, house values decreasing, the easy answer seems to be taxing citizens with a salary more than 250K but the money seems simply not to be there or not enough, to cover all of these new costs where you really will NOT be able to cover all of the uninsured especially in the first decade.
 
We also fail to notice that the cost of Insurance will increase with time, a fast growing population, unemployment rising, what is decreasing is the number of jobs, Revenue of companies decreasing, more debts, government bailing out large companies, stimulus packages, fighting 2 wars, global warning. We cannot simply continue printing money or we will be hit by inflation. These are the expected variables, usually you still have unexpected variables after taking into account all of these variables.
 
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Nayla, Fares, Boutros, Dori, Samir…Lost to dust- Paul Kerbage

            It was quite a surprise for some and normal for others witnessing Jumblat’s deviation via its recent statements and critics towards his unnatural allies in the 14th of March camp. There is no doubt that these changes were stronger than the atomic bomb as described by some Lebanese media. […]

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Diaries… by Soha Kerbage

  يوميات…….     يوميات….ساعات….دقائق….ثوان……وأنا أفكر….وأخطط  لاكتب ما سأكتب .ما هو موضوع اليوم؟أهو موضوع الامس؟لا بل موضوع الحاضر الذي هو خبر المستقبل……ما ان أكتب حتى أجد نفسي في عالم اخر الا وهو عالم الحروف والكلام,عالم الورقة والقلم,عالم الفكر,عالم" الاعالم"عالم الموجود وعالم الغائب,عالم الواقع وعالم الخيال ……نعم انها حياة" التضاد":القوي مقابل الضعيف,الغني مقابل الفقير,الذكي مقابل البسيط….. […]

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LEBANON: Quietly, Jewish community begins synagogue renovation

Since Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, Beirut’s Maghen-Abraham synagogue sat empty as other buildings in the Wadi Abou-Jamil neighborhood were renovated into multimillion-dollar condos, offices or hotels.  Last week, restoration began on the 84-year-old synagogue, Beirut’s oldest remaining Jewish house of worship, launching what will be a yearlong, million-dollar undertaking.  Private Jewish donors abroad, many of […]

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Jumblatt reacting to regional trends

By Tom Perry

 

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri has taken a holiday to "think and reflect" after a once close ally quit his anti-Syria coalition in a move expected to delay the formation of a new government.

 

Druze leader Walid Jumblatt’s departure from Hariri’s "March 14" alliance this week has redrawn Lebanon’s political map and undermined the coalition’s June parliamentary election victory over rivals including the powerful Iran-backed Hezbollah group.

 

Hariri, a Saudi- and U.S.-backed billionaire businessman, had been expected to conclude talks this week on the formation of a coalition government grouping his alliance with parties allied to Syria, including Hezbollah and the Amal movement.

 

But he left the country Monday night for a holiday, his media office said. The trip aimed to give Hariri a chance to "think and reflect calmly," according to a statement released after a meeting of MPs from his Future Movement.

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Glamour drives fashion in sophisticated Lebanon

BY ZEINA KARAM, The gowns are cut low in the front, slashing down to the navel, or low in the back, swooping below the waist, inset with delicate see-through fabric. They couldn’t be further from the modest dress generally worn by women in the Muslim Arab world.

Yet these fashions come from Lebanon, a tiny Arab country of 4 million on the Mediterranean. This nation better known for military conflicts than the arts has produced an impressive crop of designers, including Reem Acra and Elie Saab, whose work is showcased at celebrity events such as the Oscars and the Golden Globes.

"Lebanon’s name has always been synonymous with war, but when it comes to fashion … these designers really make us proud," said Laura Seikaly, 39, who was among a recent crowd of bikini-clad sunbathers on a beach north of Beirut. "I guess it comes from the society itself, the way Lebanese women dress. They’re very courageous, even more than Europeans."

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The Last Jews of Saida

road trip to the South this weekend brought me and some friends up close to the remnants of one of Lebanon’s prouder former Jewish communities. For some reason the Jews of Lebanon have been a hot journalistic subject around here recently, at least ever since this article in Ha’aretz reported that a group of Lebanese Jews in exile were planning to fund the restoration of Beirut’s once-noble synagogue near downtown. (For more on that story, seen Ben Gilbert’s sharp follow-up in GlobalPost. Ben is also the highly capable editor of the regional business magazine Executive, which recently featured “The Jews of Lebanon” on its cover; this has resulted in the curious sight of a giant photograph of a menorah sitting in doctor’s office waiting rooms and on the desks of bank executives all across town.)

What we found on the way south from Saida was something less prominent, but perhaps more telling: the scattered ruins of Saida’s Jewish cemetery.

Saida, like many Middle Eastern cities, still has a neighborhood known as the Jewish Quarter. (In fact, back in the old city we had briefly puzzled over a martyr poster of a little boy — below that of a deceased resistance leader — that said, in bold script, that it was “paid for by the youth of the Jewish Quarter,” which seemed like an odd juxtaposition. Turns out the boy, tragically, fell into the sea near town and drowned.) According to Kirsten E. Schulze’s book, “The Jews of Lebanon: Between Coexistence and Conflict,” the Jewish presence in Saida dates back at least a thousand years and those who remained in the 1960s and  early 1970s had a fine relationship with their Lebanese neighbors. By 1975, though, there was only one Jewish family left in town, that of Josef and Jamila Levy.

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The Siege of Manger Church- Paul Kerbage

حصار كنيسة المهد

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

مقدّمة

 

 

شاء القدر، أو بتعبير آخر الإرادة الإلهية أن تكون هذه البقعة الجغرافيّة على الساحل الشرقي للبحر المتوسط، والتي تعاقب عليها الغزاة واختلطت فيها الأجناس والشعوب، من الكنعانيين حتى قبائل الفلسطو واليهود مروراً بالمصريين والأشوريين والرومان، ساحة مواجهات مفتوحة بين كل هذه العناصر المتناقضة، إنها "فلسطين" التي سمّاها هيرودوتس.

"فلسطين" عامةً والقدس خاصةً مهد الديانات السماوية الثلاثة. ويمكن القول مهد النزاعات والحروب في العالم، بين اليهودية، المسيحية والإسلامية. ففي أورشليم القدس، حائط المبكى، المسجد الأقصى وكنيسة المهد. والأخيرة هي المكان نفسه الذي يعتقد أنّ مريم العذراء وضعت فيها ابنها يسوع. وكنيسة المهد بنيت في القرن الرابع الميلادي، والكنيسة تحوي عظام الأطفال الذين قتلهم هيرودوس خوفاً أن يكون أحدهم المسيح المنتظر. وهي بدون شك إرث حضاري و أثري عظيم وكبير.

هذا الإرث أضحى في نيسان من العام 2002 دراما حقيقيّة، رصاص ولهيب ودم ونار وحصار ومفاوضات.

إنّه حصار كنيسة المهد.

 

 

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