November 01, 2004
This woman needs to stop
This woman needs to stop driving in circles.
Somehow, this woman who apparently is intelligent enough to win the
frickin' Peace Prize , yet isn't smart enough to realize that Shari'a
isn't ever going to allow her to publish her seminal work...ever.
Yet, somehow, she believes she's entitled to publish her work here,
even though there's a law against doing just that, because Iran is a
repressive country that sponsors terrorism worldwide and the United
States has said we shouldn't do business with them.
Hmmmm. To be clear about it, Ebadi, has gone on record claiming that
Shari'a---particularly the Iranian version of it---is a valid form of
law. Even though she was a judge and the mullahs don't think she's
qualified to be one anymore because she's a woman.
Even though the people she defends have generally been shafted one way
or another by the government because they've run afoul of Islamic law.
She still thinks this system works; she's just advocating her clients
and perhaps striking a blow here or there.
Ahem. Bitch, if you want to publish your work here, move here. Only
then you will be entitled to conduct commerce on our shores. If you
want to publish your work in Iran, well then maybe you should stop
supporting repressive legal systems and work toward a free society.
One, in particular, that respects women and treats them as equals. I,
for one, don't want to read a book about a "{..}a woman, a mother and a
lawyer living and working in a country that confronts many human rights
problems." And I really don't want to read a book written by a woman
who supports a country she claims "confronts human rights problems"
when it's obvious even to Stevie Wonder that Iran is all about doing
precisely the opposite. To quote John McClane: If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem. Stop being part of the problem.
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi
has sued the United States because its economic embargo on Iran is
blocking publication of her memoirs in America, a literary agency said
on Wednesday. Iranian human rights lawyer Ebadi said she wanted to
write a book for a U.S. and international audience about her life and
career "as a woman, a mother and a lawyer living and working in a
country that confronts many human rights problems." The suit filed by
Ebadi and the Strothman Agency seeks to strike down U.S. Treasury
Department regulations requiring a license to publish authors from
embargoed countries such as Iran -- a nation dubbed in 2002 as part of
the "axis of evil" by President Bush along with Iraq and North Korea.
"The ... regulations seem to defy the values the United States promotes
throughout the world, which always include free expression and the free
exchange of ideas," Ebadi, who won the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize, said in
a filing to the court. She has completed a draft of the book in Farsi
but needs the help of an agent and editor in America to translate and
re-write the book for international readers, she said. But Office of
Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) rules are blocking her from signing a
contract with the Boston-based Strothman Agency, which wants to
represent her and negotiate with publishers on her behalf.
Somehow, this woman who apparently is intelligent enough to win the
frickin' Peace Prize , yet isn't smart enough to realize that Shari'a
isn't ever going to allow her to publish her seminal work...ever.
Yet, somehow, she believes she's entitled to publish her work here,
even though there's a law against doing just that, because Iran is a
repressive country that sponsors terrorism worldwide and the United
States has said we shouldn't do business with them.
Hmmmm. To be clear about it, Ebadi, has gone on record claiming that
Shari'a---particularly the Iranian version of it---is a valid form of
law. Even though she was a judge and the mullahs don't think she's
qualified to be one anymore because she's a woman.
Even though the people she defends have generally been shafted one way
or another by the government because they've run afoul of Islamic law.
She still thinks this system works; she's just advocating her clients
and perhaps striking a blow here or there.
Ahem. Bitch, if you want to publish your work here, move here. Only
then you will be entitled to conduct commerce on our shores. If you
want to publish your work in Iran, well then maybe you should stop
supporting repressive legal systems and work toward a free society.
One, in particular, that respects women and treats them as equals. I,
for one, don't want to read a book about a "{..}a woman, a mother and a
lawyer living and working in a country that confronts many human rights
problems." And I really don't want to read a book written by a woman
who supports a country she claims "confronts human rights problems"
when it's obvious even to Stevie Wonder that Iran is all about doing
precisely the opposite. To quote John McClane: If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem. Stop being part of the problem.
Posted by: Kathy at
01:26 AM
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