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Tag Archives: Ambassador Chris Stevens
Islam and the Political Aesthetic
NOTE Sept. 22: With today’s events in Pakistan (and attending, preventable deaths and violence), my predictions about the numbers involved in the protests worldwide appears to have been off, certainly in scale. Nevertheless I still stand by my argument that … Continue reading →
Posted in Afghanistan, Books, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Politics and Political Theory, Uncategorized
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Tagged aesthetics and politics, Afghanistan, Ambassador Chris Stevens, american diplomats, artistic tradition, Benghazi, benghazi libya, Egypt, Innocence of Muslims, Islam, Islamic art, libya, middle-east, Moorish conquest, North Africa, politics, Prophet Muhammad, religion, Spain, sultan baybars, western political philosophy
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