While Americans focus on terrorism; a more insidious Islamist threat to our way of life lurks. It is the agenda of sharia; Islam’s authoritarian legal and political system. The global Islamist movement aims; in the words of the international Muslim Brotherhood; to destroy the West by sabotaging it from within. Its principal strategy is not mass-murder but the exploitation of Western freedoms and the insinuation of sharia principles into Western legal systems. Because those principles are hostile to our core liberties - indeed; hostile even to the bedrock premise that people are free to govern themselves as they see fit - sharia’s advance gradually undermines our culture.The sharia agenda has found a friend in the Obama administration; which has embraced its vanguard; including the Brotherhood and the Organization of the Islamic Conference. President Obama is actively abetting the Islamist platform: promoting sharia in his foreign policy; easing enforcement of laws that stop Islamic “charities†from diverting funds to jihadist terror; and even sponsoring a United Nations resolution that - under the guise of insulating Islam from criticism - would stifle First Amendment rights.
#81567 in Books Adventure Publications Inc. 2004-08-03Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 6.10 x .56 x 4.32l; .60 #File Name: 159193043X296 pages
Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Disappointed that some birds are missing and it references a cd that doesn't come with it for the priceBy recycle-itall book with minimal information other than statistics; I would expect a book like this to cost less since it didn't come with the CD that it is referencing throughout the pages where it says where on the cd you could find the "call" of the bird. (Seems like this would come with the cd; since having the book come without the cd and referencing the cd in the book doesn't make sense to me) I like that it's color coded but I don't find it to be entirely accurate. For example; our common seagulls are with white heads....that's not their major color. This book is supposedly sorting the birds by their main color; and the seagull is in the white section. The mourning dove; which I would consider gray; is in the brown section. I was looking for what type of birds I saw recently; they were in a flock and all fluttering around over the river at this waterfall area; clearly eating insects. They looked very similar to cedar waxwings in coloring but did not have the crest. They flew like swallows. I watch birds all the time and do not see them anywhere else and have never seen them before. I was really hopeful this book would help; but I looked through the entire thing and didn't see those birds. :( I'm not sure if they're there and just look different in a book; or if the book is missing some of the less common birds. It does have all those that I have seen at my feeders and more; but it seems like some are missing; whip-poor-will for example. Just not worth the price; especially given there is no cd and it is referencing the cd throughout the book on the pages and in the reference also. It's like it goes along with the cd but the cd is not included.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Small birding book for the kids; easy to findBy ScottSmall book; easy to find the bird you want. There are colored tabs on each of the pages that correlate to the color of the bird. For male and female birds that are significantly different they show up on separate pages according to their color. They also have an inset image for the opposite gender of the bird so you know what they look like.I added velcro to the back of the book and have it hanging in our front bay window so the kids can take it down and look for the birds that are in the feeder.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great reference book for Michigan birds.By MikeNicely arranged book. Birds are organized by color and also show the female (or male version) on each page. The data for each bird is very useful and tells you everything you really need to know about the birds habits.This is a great reference book if you like to watch birds on your feeders.