Nassrallah Seen Near U.S. Border

Well, at least a billboard of him was..

What Almanar forgot to mention is that the billboard was removed by Canadian authorities on the grounds that Hezbollah is officially a terrorist organization in Canada. (background story here)

Conservative blogs have highlighted a comment made by Emile Nabbout, president of the Windsor branch of Kataeb (they have a branch in Windsor??) in which he said: “Arabic writing which appears on the right side of the billboard does not match the English translation.” Mr. Nabbout could use some Arabic Lessons.

The Arabic side of the billboard reads (Arabic readers, check it out in the picture above):

“??????? ????????? ???????? ?? ????? ?????? ???? ????? ???????? ?????? ????? ?????? ??????”

Which is NOT about fighting as Mr. Nabbout says and is consistent with the English translation:

Lebanese and Arab communities in Windsor city congratulate the Lebanese people for their steadfastness and endeavor to establish peace in Lebanon.

The Jockeying Has Begun

Political rhetoric flies sky-high as the battle for the presidency begins.


The coveted prize..

Listening to the politicians’ speeches yesterday (videos: Jumblat’s speech, Jemayel’s ) one would get the impression that an inaudible Sunday gunshot triggered the fierce race for the Lebanese Presidency.

In the old days, things were simpler. A dictator (Syria) dictated its commandments and Lebanese Presidents were immediately rubber stamped. If one were to squeeze through the loopholes (like René Mouawad), he would be summarily executed.

Nice and easy. It gave us the chance to blame someone else for our problems. In fact, we always bragged that if Lebanon were “allowed” to rule itself, none of our problems would have happened.

Not so fast. Lebanon, it turned out, is not so homogeneous. We seem evenly divided between two different kinds of freedom fighters. The only freedom we both want is freedom from each other.

Some think one side can eventually “win”. Some, like Patriarch Sfeir have taken the road of “politician bad, soldier good“. But Some still believe a compromise can be reached. That should happen soon, loud bargaining notwithstanding, because some are beginning to long for the simpler old days..