Condi Rice Sticks it to some Stanford Students

Condi talks “torture” with typical idealistic, indoctrinated ivy league students…

Update: Obama Eases Travel and Monetary Regulations to Cuba, Plans to Meet Castro Without Pre-Conditions; New Cuban Policy; Congressional Black Caucus Meets with Castro and Obama Opens Restrictions

UPDATE:

Well, it’s official, Obama will make an announcement to ease travel restrictions to Cuba and monetary regulations as well.  Obama naively believes this will help alleviate the dependence upon the Castro regime.  This will only pad the pockets of those who have been in power for decades – Just like any corrupt organization – if you don’t require them to change and make concessions first, the minute you change for them or send money, they will go back on their word.

With the changes, Obama aims to create new space for the Cuban people in their quest for political freedom and a democratic government, in part by making them less dependent on the Castro regime, the official said.

Other steps taken Monday include allowing gift parcels to be send to Cuba, and issuing licenses to increase communications among and to the Cuban people. About 1.5 million Americans have relatives in Cuba.

Obama had promised to take these steps as a presidential candidate. It has been known for over a week that he would announce them in advance of his attended this weekend of a Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago.

“There are no better ambassadors for freedom than Cuban Americans,” Obama said in a campaign speech last May in Miami, the heart of the U.S. Cuban-American community. “It’s time to let Cuban Americans see their mothers and fathers, their sisters and brothers. It’s time to let Cuban American money make their families less dependent upon the Castro regime.”

Why don’t we ask Gloria Estefan how she feels about all of this?  Read more

Afghan Law That Legalizes Rape Poses Problem for Obama and Clinton

WASHINGTON — As first lady, senator and then Democratic candidate for president, Hillary Clinton was vocal in her fight for the rights of women in Afghanistan.

But, as President Obama’s secretary of state, Clinton now finds herself in the uncomfortable position of watching as the U.S.-backed Afghan president signs a law that critics say gives Shiite men the right to rape their wives.

International criticism pressure forced President Hamid Karzai to say Saturday that the law is under review, and he has spoken to Clinton about it.

The developments come as Obama seeks NATO support in Europe for his plan to ramp up the war against terrorists in Afghanistan. Back at home in Washington, administration officials have struggled this week with how to respond to Karzai’s signing of the so-called Shia Family Law without debate in the Afghan parliament. The law’s most controversial provisions address sexual intercourse in marriage.

“As long as the husband is not traveling, he has the right to have sexual intercourse with his wife every fourth night,” Article 132 of the law says. “Unless the wife is ill or has any kind of illness that intercourse could aggravate, the wife is bound to give a positive response to the sexual desires of her husband.”

Such a law runs contrary to the stated goals of the U.S. mission in Afghanistan — to pursue human rights and to help liberate women from religious oppression. It is a cause that has been championed by previous administrations, and particularly by previous first ladies.

The details of the law surfaced this week, just days after one of those former first ladies, Clinton, told the International Conference on Afghanistan at The Hague, Netherlands: “Women’s rights are a central part of American foreign policy in the Obama administration; they are not marginal; they are not an add-on or an afterthought.”

Afghanistan’s constitution, which was passed in 2004, calls for equal rights for all men and women. But the constitution also says that no law can contradict the laws of Islam. And in situations where the constitution lacks provisions, courts are allowed to use Islamic law, which critics say does not allow for equal rights.

This is so outrageous, I just don’t know what to say. Unbelievable. Beat, Kill, Rape. It’s all good in Afghanistan.

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