Isabelle’s Corner: Top Picks of July 14th - Bastille Day
Bastille Day Celebrations
Today is Bastille Day, a celebration of the fall of the hated Bastille Prison back in 1789 which ushered in the French Revolution and within a few years, the Reign of Terror. It is estimated that between 16,000 to 40,000 people lost their lives under the blade of Madame la Guillotine between September 1793 through July 1794. I often think about that time and how man can become so inhuman to his fellow man when the desire to control other’s thoughts and beliefs leads to chaos and murder, not unlike another revolution going on in our world today.
When I was a freshman in high school I had to read Charles Dickens’, “A Tale of Two Cities”. It has been my favorite book ever since because of it’s handling of politics, religion, misinformation, the rule of the mob and on the flip side, friendship, loyalty, love for one’s neighbor and the willingness to lay down one’s life for a friend. My all time favorite rendition in movie form is the 1935 version with Ronald Colman, but I remember a miniseries back in 1989 from Masterpiece Theatre, starring an aloof and seemingly lost James Wilby as Sidney Carlton. (He was really good!)
The thing I remember most about that movie was an explanation by Alistair Cook, the master of ceremonies for Masterpiece Theatre at that time, about the Bicentennial Bastille Day Celebration in 1989 in Paris in which many foreign heads of state were invited to attend and review the parade, including the Prime Minister of England at the time, Mrs. Margaret Thatcher. He said that when Mrs.Thatcher quipped that “all the French Revolution produced was a cart full of headless corpses and a tyrant,” apparently referring to a quote by Edmund Burke who wrote the scathing, Reflections on the Revolution in France, she was relegated to the third row of foreign dignitaries. I’ll never forget when Alistair Cook said that before she left, the ever gracious Mrs. Thatcher handed President Mitterand a parting gift, a beautifully bound copy of, “A Tale of Two Cities.”
So rather than celebrate the fall of the Bastille, I’d like to remember why it is important for good men to fight evil, and I’ll leave you to watch this YouTube video and wish you, Vive la Liberte!
Here are today’s picks.
Honor killing perpetrators welcomed by society, study reveals
“Murder becomes inevitable when honor is at stake and turning to murder in such a situation is seen as a respectable act by the society.”
Three British Muslims admit bid to bomb Heathrow and Commons with liquid explosives
They planned to use powerful hydrogen peroxide liquid bombs disguised as soft drinks to bypass airport security, jurors were told. The devices would be assembled by injecting the chemicals into plastic soft drinks bottles and detonated using a battery from a camera flash, it was claimed.
“…he was instructed by a senior government figure to recruit Islamic Arabic speakers from the north of Sudan, then personally led 5000 horsemen in a murderous campaign against black southerners who did not share their religion.”
Punjab: underage Christian sisters kidnapped and forced to marry Muslims
The uncle of the victims launches an appeal for justice. He denounces a climate of silence and complicity on the part of the provincial government and the police, who are afraid of retaliation or episodes of violence.
Understanding The Libel Tourist and it’s Consequences
God Bless Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, a very courageous woman!
U.S. terrorism watch list tops 1 million
“The list is very effective. In fact it’s one of the most effective counterterrorism tools that our country has.”
Israel gets ready for prisoner swap with Hezbollah militants
Israel would free five imprisoned Lebanese, including the perpetrator of one of the most notorious attacks in Israeli history, in exchange for two soldiers captured by Hezbollah in a cross-border raid that sparked the 2006 war. Israel believes the soldiers are dead.
July 14th, 2008 at 6:46 • Isabelle's Corner • top picks of the day • 0 Comments •
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