DOMINICOS EN EL «NOVUS ORBIS »

De Dicionário de História Cultural de la Iglesía en América Latina
Revisión del 05:33 5 feb 2015 de 190.199.236.210 (discusión) (Will I have to work shifts? http://www.aufildujeu.com/carafate-medication-for-sale carafate uses for cats Ryan’s survey pins down crucial elements of al-Qaida’s appeal. Even many of its detractor)
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Will I have to work shifts? http://www.aufildujeu.com/carafate-medication-for-sale carafate uses for cats Ryan’s survey pins down crucial elements of al-Qaida’s appeal. Even many of its detractors in the Middle East would accept that the organisation is trying to respond to the humiliations meted out to the Arab people by colonial European powers, the US, Israel and, according to al-Zawahiri, the United Nations, the multinationals, internet providers, the global news media and international aid agencies. All these stand accused of using puppet regimes in the Middle East to continue the colonial project by other means. As I travelled around the Middle East during the Arab Spring, the word that most often cropped up in the slogans in various capitals was not ‘freedom’ – the one the Western media recognised and highlighted – but ‘dignity’. The failure of the Arab Spring has reinforced al-Qaida’s case. For a moment it looked as if people power rather than jihadi violence would topple the authoritarian regimes bin Laden railed against. Today those hopes have been dashed. Indeed, the Egyptian army’s successful assault on the democratically elected Muslim Brotherhood government may turn out to be as useful to al-Qaida as the US invasion of Iraq. It’s already a familiar argument that only the jihadis have the resolve and drive to sweep away entrenched dictatorial regimes.