Regarding the riots spreading across the Muslim world - just click the blue links to see the full stories:
Stevens Video: Dancing With Corpses, Dancing in Blood - Phyllis Chesler (Israel National News) I have been looking at the photos and the brief video of Ambassador Stevens and I have spoken to two different Arabists, who assure me that the mob dragging Steven's body are chanting a song of victory over one's enemies and are praising God for it.
U.S. Buys Pakistani TV Time to Denounce Anti-Islam Film - John Eggerton (Broadcasting and Cable)
The Video Didn't Start the Riots - Michael Singh (Foreign Policy)
Cairo and Benghazi: The Writing on the Wall - Zvi Mazel (Jerusalem Post) The attacks in Benghazi and Cairo did not come out of the blue. There had been warnings. On Sep. 10, the Egyptian daily Al-Fajr published a communique signed by several jihadist
organizations announcing that they were going to set fire to the
American Embassy in Cairo and to capture whoever remained alive if the
U.S. did not release all the jihadists jailed in Guantanamo as well as the blind Sheikh Abdel Rahman.
The Video Didn't Do It - Lee Smith (Weekly Standard) White
House spokesman Jay Carney's comments send the message
to America's enemies that if you kill our diplomats and lay siege to our
embassies, the first move the American government will make is to tell
other Americans to shut up....To debate the right of an
American to criticize religion does not indicate sophisticated
sensitivity to the feelings of others but a willingness to turn tail and
abandon our principles at the first sign of a fight.
Jihadists Behaving Badly - Why The
West Must Stop Coddling Outraged Muslims - Henryk M. Broder (Die Welt/Worldcrunch) --
a visit to an oasis of reason and good sense: Al Jazeera. The
Qatar-based TV channel reports that ever more Syrians are wondering how a
video about Muhammad could be causing more uproar in the Muslim world
than the bloodbath in their country.
"Love For The Prophet Day:" Pakistan Blocks Cellphones As Cinemas Torched - (THE FRONTIER POST, DAWN (Pakistan), AL JAZEERA (Qatar), BBC NEWS (UK) Worldcrunch)