Parliamentarians should use their power of speech to create a groundswell of support for U.N. action on Mideast crisis

As the military-industrial complex makes gains, it has driven reason out the window and fuelled radical fundamentalism, which produces suicide bombers, not rhetoric, says Joseph Maingot.

When I was a law student at Osgoode Hall in the late 1950s, I recall being very sympathetic to and readily supportive of the passionate position of the Jewish students in mock Parliaments and discussions about the conflict in Israel and Palestine. Like everyone else, it seemed, my thoughts center...

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