51 slaps for village rapist

This story sounds like something out of the Borat movie. A guy in a village in India rapes a deaf and mute woman, and his punishment is 51 open handed slaps to the face. I would think 51 kicks to crotch would be more appropriate.

I had seen a documentary once were a rape victim in Africa got to bull whip 5 teens that raped her. They were strapped to a telephone pole and stripped naked and she got to go to town on them with a bull whip. Justice!

51 slaps for accused rapist

LUCKNOW, India (AP) — A man in northern Indian will be publicly slapped 51 times as punishment after village elders found him guilty of raping a neighbor who is deaf and mute, a village chief said Friday.

The elders stepped in to review the case because local police had failed to arrest the accused man after a complaint was filed by the victim’s husband, village head Badr-ul Hasan told The Associated Press.

“Police told us that since the woman is deaf and mute, she is not able to narrate the incident,” Hasan said.

A village court made up of five elders heard from both sides on Wednesday. It found the man guilty, fined him 5,000 rupees (US$110, euro90), and ordered he be publicly slapped with an open hand 51 times, he said.

“We can’t do more than that. The village court doesn’t have powers to arrest anyone,” said Hasan. “By public slapping, the court wants to put (him) to shame.”

White Greek guys can play basketball

What makes Greece beating the USA at basketball an upset? Who says the NBA is the best league in the World?

TSN : NBA – Canada’s Sports Leader
Vassilis Spanoulis scored 22 points Friday as Greece used a sizzling stretch of shooting across the middle two quarters to turn a 12-point deficit into a 14-point lead and beat the United States 101-95 in the semifinals of the world basketball championship.

Figuring out the Middle East

All I really know about the Middle East is that people often strap C4 to themselves and walk into crowded bars. Oh, and the Lebanese make great hummus.

Anyhow, got this cool chart via J-Walk Blog on how things are shaped up in the region.

middleeast.jpg

The Middle East Buddy List
Last month, Hamas militants tunneled into Israel and kidnapped an Israeli soldier. Israel immediately invaded Gaza. Hamas began lobbing rockets into Israel. The Lebanese group Hezbollah kidnapped two more Israelis near the Lebanon-Israel border. Israel responded by carrying out airstrikes against Lebanon. Egypt and Saudi Arabia condemned Hezbollah for instigating the violence. Syria, Iran, and Lebanon called Israel’s retaliation an excessive use of force.

Looks like Israel and the USA have allies with the European Union and that’s it.

This will get messy!

Greeks and Turks at it again

Jody sarcastically asked me “Greece and Turkey ever been to war? It’s about time, ain’t it?”

And then he sent me this.

The pilot of a Turkish fighter jet was rescued Tuesday, hours after colliding with a Greek F-16 following a mock dogfight over the southern Aegean Sea, according to the Greek and Turkish government officials.

Greek Coast Guard ships and helicopters are still searching for the Greek pilot.

The Greek fighter jet had been dispatched to intercept the Turkish F-16 because it had violated Greek airspace, according to the Greek Defense Ministry.

Nice!

BTW, the two countries have been grouped together in the qualifying stages of the 2008 European Championships.

Those smelly ass Brits

I see a new Tide commercial. “We even get the shit stains out of the Brits underwear!”

One in 10 people wear their underwear for three days in a row, a peep into the nation’s smalls has revealed.

And a similar percentage of people has owned a pair of knickers or underpants for more than 10 years.

The survey showed 5% of the population also admitted wearing their briefs inside out to get an extra day’s wear.

(via BBC)

Dog for supper anyone?

I don’t know if I could eat a cat or a dog. I can’t imagine eating a pet. Even though people keep pigs as pets, pork is way too good to get attached to Porky.

dog_for_supper.jpg

A dog destined for the dinner table is being thrown into a cage at the Xin Yuan animal market in Guangzhhou, China. France’s Society for the Protection of Animals (SPA) appealed to Chinese President Hu Jintao to put an end to the cruel slaughter of dogs, which it blasted as an affront(AFP/File/Peter Parks)

Woman Dragged by Car For 3 KM

How could you not know that you are dragging something? My question would be, “How did the woman get under the car in the first place?”

Woman dragged by car for 3 kilometers

A 25-year-old Polish woman was killed early yesterday morning in Treis Gefyres, western Athens, after being run over by a car outside a night spot and dragged through the city’s streets under the vehicle for more than 3 kilometers, police said.

The driver, 26, told police that he was made aware of the tragic event only after witnesses to the accident followed him home and informed him about the body that was stuck under the car.

An alcohol test showed that the driver’s blood alcohol reading was above the legal limit but police said that it was not excessively high.

The driver was taken to a local hospital for blood tests.

The man said that the music in his car had been turned up loud as he returned home from an outing along with two female friends and he had not heard anything unusual.

Putin, Bush and Blair to Appear on Ukrainian Toilet Paper

I wonder if it as soft as my Cottonelle?

A publishing house in Ukraine has started selling toilet paper with pictures of a number of world politicians, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, U.S. President George Bush, Belarussian President Aleksandr Lukashenko, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, U.S. State Secretary Condoleezza Rice and Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky, the Korrespondent.net website reported Monday.

The Inspired B publishing house prepared three “editions” of the product for sale in Ukraine, Russia, the United States and Great Brtain. The retail price for the Russian and Ukrainian products was announced at about $0.30 per roll.

The toilet paper is made in China by the Zhucheng Senke Paper-Making Company.

How Soccer Explains the World


This is the book that Michelle is getting me for my birthday. Ever since she told me about it, I have been really excited about getting to read it.

Here is a Amazon Review of the book:

The global power of soccer might be a little hard for Americans, living in a country that views the game with the same skepticism used for the metric system and the threat of killer bees, to grasp fully. But in Europe, South America, and elsewhere, soccer is not merely a pastime but often an expression of the social, economic, political, and racial composition of the communities that host both the teams and their throngs of enthusiastic fans. New Republic editor Franklin Foer, a lifelong devotee of soccer dating from his own inept youth playing days to an adulthood of obsessive fandom, examines soccer’s role in various cultures as a means of examining the reach of globalization. Foer’s approach is long on soccer reportage, providing extensive history and fascinating interviews on the Rangers-Celtic rivalry and the inner workings of AC Milan, and light on direct discussion of issues like world trade and the exportation of Western culture. But by creating such a compelling narrative of soccer around the planet, Foer draws the reader into these sport-mad societies, and subtly provides the explanations he promises in chapters with titles like “How Soccer Explains the New Oligarchs”, “How Soccer Explains Islam’s Hope”, and “How Soccer Explains the Sentimental Hooligan.” Foer’s own passion for the game gives his book an infectious energy but still pales in comparison to the religious fervor of his subjects. His portraits of legendary hooligans in Serbia and Britain, in particular, make the most die-hard roughneck New York Yankees fan look like a choirboy in comparison. Beyond the thugs, Foer also profiles Nigerian players living in the Ukraine, Iranian women struggling against strict edicts to attend matches, and the parallel worlds of Brazilian soccer and politics from which Pele emerged and returned. Foer posits that globalization has eliminated neither local cultural identities nor violent hatred among fans of rival teams, and it has not washed out local businesses in a sea of corporate wealth nor has it quelled rampant local corruption. Readers with an interest in international economics are sure to like How Soccer Explains the World, but soccer fans will love it. –John Moe

How Soccer Explains the World