UAE High Court Says Beat Your Wife, Just Do Not Bruise Her

What protections and treatment? Bakke said no quotas, the companion to Grutter, Gratz stuck down the point system used at UM. All AA does is allow schools to consider their diversity when accepting students. Compare that to the old system where NO BLACK students were in classes to the system now where there are SOME minority students with white students still being the largest plurality in most schools in the country. It has not harmed white people at all.

workplace protections...schools, due the above case, by and large can no longer use race as they used to and now it is more fair...however, why should the school consider race at all? when they consider race as a factor, you know as well as i that they don't view "white" as a positive factor
 
Here is a video from Bahraini TV, the woman is incredibly brave in pointing out the perverse practice of thighing young children. No doubt that Grind will turn his jaundiced eye on this and say that he's seen it all before!!

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENWaWcRvGtM"]YouTube - What is "thighing"?[/ame]
 
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There is some horrific stuff going on in the UAE, this video is an example.


http://www.truthtube.tv/play.php?vid=1741

I couldn't watch the whole video.

Congratulations to the UK court system, though, for convicting the Saudi prince who murdered his servant. These violent sociopaths need to learn their actions aren't untouchable just because they have a royal title.

"Many Saudis are cheering the verdict: they know that if this murder had occurred in Saudi Arabia, the killer would not have seen a single day in prison. The victim in this case had no hopes of receiving justice in his homeland, but the British court has upheld the fundamental principle of equality under law.

Millions of people in Saudi Arabia were watching the trial closely, and the outcome gives them hope that the impartial rules of western jurisprudence may one day be emulated in their land. In Saudi Arabia and other despotic regimes, where people are divided into rulers and subjects, the judicial system is guided by the whims of the ruling family and the accused prince would have been given a free pass.."
 
I couldn't watch the whole video.

Congratulations to the UK court system, though, for convicting the Saudi prince who murdered his servant. These violent sociopaths need to learn their actions aren't untouchable just because they have a royal title.

"Many Saudis are cheering the verdict: they know that if this murder had occurred in Saudi Arabia, the killer would not have seen a single day in prison. The victim in this case had no hopes of receiving justice in his homeland, but the British court has upheld the fundamental principle of equality under law.

Millions of people in Saudi Arabia were watching the trial closely, and the outcome gives them hope that the impartial rules of western jurisprudence may one day be emulated in their land. In Saudi Arabia and other despotic regimes, where people are divided into rulers and subjects, the judicial system is guided by the whims of the ruling family and the accused prince would have been given a free pass.."

You are probably right, though his being gay might have made a difference. I really don't think he ever expected to be found guilty.
 
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