Did you forget something baker?
I even made a nice comfy bun for you.
Reposted again.
Digs on Q post #117
>>9659036, >>9659073, >>9659267, >>9659543, >>9659102, >>9659152, >>9659338
And again I forgot to mention those are all pb.
Looking up connections between Citigroup and the Harvard University Muslim Association, I found this which seems interesting although I'm not sure it's related.
Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) - Human Subjects
Harvard subscribes to CITI to provide its research community with comprehensive online training in Human Subjects research.
https://vpr.harvard.edu/faq/collaborative-institutional-training-initiative-citi-human-subjects
> Bandar bin Sultan [Bandar Bush] > Bush [HW & W] > Neo Conservatives & RNC & Halliburton > Iraq
! Muslim Brotherhood [MB] > Muslim Sisterhood > Abedin > Weiner & Hillary & Podesta > Clinton Foundation > DNC
! Harvard University Muslim Association [HUMA] > Harvard Law Review & Rhodes Scholars > Sidley Austin > Obamas > !!
!! NASA Shuttle Program Ended > Elon Musk [Rocket man] > SpaceX > North Korea > NK ICBM
!! $lush Funds & Debt & Ransom > Iran & SA & Palestinians [PA] & Soros & NK > NK Nukes
https://pastebin.com/n8LnXqDi
Harvard receives $20M gift for Islamic Studies Program
Prince Alwaleed: 'Bridging the understanding between East and West is important for peace and tolerance'
Harvard University Monday (Dec. 12) announced the creation of a University-wide program on Islamic studies, made possible by a $20 million gift from Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud. The new program will build on Harvard’s strong commitment to the study of the religious traditions of the world. It will also augment Harvard’s existing strength by increasing the number of faculty focused on Islamic studies, providing additional support to graduate students, and making rare Islamic textual sources available in digital format.
“We are very grateful to Prince Alwaleed for his generous gift to Harvard,” said President Lawrence H. Summers. “This program will enable us to recruit additional faculty of the highest caliber, adding to our strong team of professors who are focusing on this important area of scholarship.”
Islam represents one of the world’s great religious and cultural traditions, one that has spread far beyond its historical roots in the Middle East to encompass diverse populations and ethnic groups in Asia, Africa, Europe, and America.
“I am pleased to support Islamic studies at Harvard and I hope that this program will enable generations of students and scholars to gain a thorough understanding of Islam and its role both in the past and in today’s world,” Prince Alwaleed said. “Bridging the understanding between East and West is important for peace and tolerance.”
Scholarship on the Islamic tradition at Harvard currently encompasses a broad range of disciplines, from religious studies, history, and law, to art and literature. This gift will make it possible to add strength in important disciplines such as the history of science and new areas of study, such as Islamic Inner-Asian, Southeast Asian, or South Asian studies. “For a university with global aspirations, it is critical that Harvard have a strong program on Islam that is worldwide and interdisciplinary in scope,” said Harvard University Provost Steven E. Hyman, who will coordinate the new program’s implementation.
Harvard University has the largest assemblage in the English-speaking world of specialists in one or another aspect of Islamic tradition, including such scholars as Gurney Professor of History Roy P. Mottahedeh, a major Islamic social historian; Professor of Islamic Religious Studies Baber Johansen, a leading specialist in Islamic law; and Jewett Professor of Arabic Wolfhart Heinrichs, a pre-eminent literary expert. However, the primary strength of Islamic studies at Harvard lies both in the coverage of a broad range of fields of study in the early and middle periods of Islamic history (ca. A.D. 600 – 1800), particularly in the greater Middle East, and also in the truly exceptional collections of primary and secondary sources within the Harvard University library system. Harvard’s capacity in non – Middle Eastern and modern Islamic studies does not match its depth in traditional Islamic studies, and the new gift will do much to remedy this.
In order to represent more fully the global reach of Islam past and present, Harvard wants to expand its coverage of the vast field of Islamic studies. Building on existing strengths, a larger concentration of faculty focused on Islam and an increased number of the most promising graduate students in this area will make Islamic studies a more visible and important part of the curricula of Harvard’s faculties. This will improve its coverage of the historical, religious, and cultural aspects of Islamic life around the world and throughout history.
The Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic Studies Program at Harvard University will bring together faculty, students, and researchers from across the University and will be housed within the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) in close coordination with Harvard Divinity School. The program will establish four new faculty positions, enabling Harvard to attract a group of additional outstanding academics from a broad range of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. An endowed chair known as the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Professor in Contemporary Islamic Thought and Life will be created, and an additional endowment fund will be established to support three senior professorships in other areas of Islamic studies. The program also will provide support for research, tuition, fees, and stipends for graduate students.
https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2005/12/harvard-receives-20m-gift-for-islamic-studies-program/
Tanenbaum
Workplace Clients
Accenture
Adecco
Aetna
Agilent Technologies
Alliance of Civilizations
AllianceBernstein
American Express
American Muslim Lawyers Association
American Red Cross
BD Corporation
Bank of America
Bank Street School for Children
Bear Stearns & Co., Inc.
Bennett College for Women
Bloomberg
Blue Cross Blue Shield Florida
BP America
Boston College Center for Work & Family
California Association of Equal Rights
Professionals
Cargill
Catalyst, Inc.
Center for Family Services
Charter Communications
Chase Manhattan Bank
Chief Diversity Officers Forum
Chubb Corporation
Citigroup, Inc.
City of Houston
City of New York Police Department
The Conference Board
Cornell University
CVS Health
Dell
Diversity Best Practices
Empire BlueCross Blue Shield
EpsteinBeckerGreen
Equal Employment Advisory Council (EEAC)
Ernst & Young
Essence Communications, Inc.
Fannie Mae
FINRA
Forum on Workplace Diversity
Frederick Community College
General Motors Corporation
GlaxoSmithKline
The Greater Rochester Diversity Council
Harvard University
Hospital Corporations of America
Houston Human Resource Management Association
Human Resource Association of New York
IBM
Institute of Business Ethics
International Council of Christians and Jews
International Monetary Fund
Ivy Plus Diversity Conference
JP Morgan Chase
Korn/Ferry International
Lincoln Financial
Linkage, Inc.
Marsh, Inc.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Business Roundtable
MasterCard International
Merck & Co, Inc.
Merrill Lynch
MetLife
Michelin
Moody’s
National Council for Research on Women (NCRW)
National Industry Liaison Group
National MultiCultural Institute
New York Times Company
New York University
North East Human Resources Association
Novartis
O’Melveny & Myers
Oppenheimer Funds
Organization Resources Counselors
Out & Equal Workplace Advocates
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Prudential
SaskPower
Securities Industry Association
Shell Oil Company
Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM)
Sodexo
Southern California Edison
Starbucks
State Street Bank
Urban League
Target
Thomson Reuters Legal Executive Institute
TIAA-CREF
Tompkins County Diversity Consortium
Toyota
Walmart
Weil Gotschal & Manges
Wolf Institute
Workforce Opportunity Network
World Class Workforce Summit
World Diversity Leadership Summit
Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding
Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding (or Tanenbaum) is a secular non-profit organization that works to promote mutual respect and understanding and fight religious prejudice in workplaces, schools, health care settings and conflict zones. Headquartered in New York, New York, Tanenbaum was founded in 1992 by Georgette Bennett in memory of her late husband, Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum. Tanenbaum's activity revolves around five programs: religion and diversity in the workplace, religion in education, religion and healthcare, religion and conflict resolution, and the religious roots of prejudice and interreligious affairs.[1][2]
Tanenbaum's work is grouped around five practical programs, each with a specific set of tools and resources: religion in the workplace, religion in schools, religion and health care, religion and conflict resolution and interreligious affairs.
Tanenbaum's Peacemakers in Action Network is a group of individuals who are fighting violence and intolerance in some of the most dangerous conflict areas around the world. The Network allows these men and women to help share information and ideas, coordinate on-the-ground interventions and help each other get out of harm. Currently, there are 26 living Peacemakers in Action who operate in 23 conflict and post-conflict zones.[6]
In 2010, Tanenbaum received a two-year grant from the Henry R. Luce Foundation to develop case studies on religious peacemakers. It received a second grant from the foundation in 2015 to disseminate the second Peacemakers in Action volume.[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanenbaum_Center_for_Interreligious_Understanding
Obama Had Close Ties to Top Saudi Adviser at Early Age
Wednesday, 03 September 2008 05:58 PM
New evidence has emerged that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama was closely associated as early as age 25 to a key adviser to a Saudi billionaire who had mentored the founding members of the Black Panthers.
In a videotaped interview this year on New York’s all news cable channel NY1, a prominent African-American businessman and political figure made the curious disclosures about Obama.
Percy Sutton, the former borough president of Manhattan, off-handedly revealed the unusual circumstances about his first encounter with the young Obama.
“I was introduced to (Obama) by a friend who was raising money for him,” Sutton told NY1 city hall reporter Dominic Carter.
“The friend’s name is Dr. Khalid al-Mansour, from Texas,” Sutton said. “He is the principal adviser to one of the world’s richest men. He told me about Obama.”
Sutton, the founder of Inner City Broadcasting, said al-Mansour contacted him to ask a favor: Would Sutton write a letter in support of Obama’s application to Harvard Law School?
“He wrote to me about him,” Sutton recalled. “And his introduction was there is a young man that has applied to Harvard. I know that you have a few friends up there because you used to go up there to speak. Would you please write a letter in support of him?”
Sutton said he acted on his friend al-Mansour’s advice.
“I wrote a letter of support of him to my friends at Harvard, saying to them I thought there was a genius that was going to be available and I certainly hoped they would treat him kindly,” Sutton told NY1.
Sutton did not say why al-Mansour was helping Obama, how he discovered him, or from whom he was raising money on Obama’s behalf.
A Sutton aide told Newsmax that Sutton, 88, is ailing and is unlikely to do additional TV interviews in the near future. The aide could not provide additional comment for this story.
As it turned out, Obama did attend Harvard Law School after graduating from Columbia University in New York and doing a stint as a community organizer in Chicago.
The New York Times described how transformative his Harvard experience became for the young Obama: “He arrived there as an unknown, Afro-wearing community organizer who had spent years searching for his identity; by the time he left, he had his first national news media exposure, a book contract and a shot of confidence from running the most powerful legal journal in the country.”
https://www.newsmax.com/KenTimmerman/obama-sutton-saudi/2008/09/03/id/339914/
Funneling money to Obummer. From Alwaleed?
Citigroup
The company spun off its Travelers Property and Casualty insurance underwriting business in 2002.[80] The spin off was prompted by the insurance unit's drag on Citigroup stock price because Travelers earnings were more seasonal and vulnerable to large disasters and events such as the September 11 attacks. It was also difficult to sell insurance directly to its customers since most customers were accustomed to purchasing insurance through a broker.[81][82]
Travelers merged with The St. Paul Companies Inc. in 2004 forming The St. Paul Travelers Companies.[83][84] Citigroup retained the life insurance and annuities underwriting business; however, it sold those businesses to MetLife in 2005.[85] Citigroup still sells life insurance through Citibank, but it no longer underwrites insurance.[86]
In spite of divesting Travelers Insurance, Citigroup retained Travelers' signature red umbrella logo as its own until February 2007, when Citigroup agreed to sell the logo back to St. Paul Travelers,[87] which renamed itself Travelers Companies. Citigroup also decided to adopt the corporate brand "Citi" for itself and virtually all its subsidiaries, except Primerica and Banamex.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citigroup
Starting to suspect that 9/11 was a payoff to someone or someones.
I don't like to use the term, "iberal," anymore because the leftists have hijacked it. I just say leftists because that is what they are. Liberal comes from the same root as liberty, liberality etc. Words have meaning and the communist left has hijacked that one among many others. Ever wonder why they do that? Psychology.
There is nothing liberal about them. It's all about total control with those clowns.
Well, I guess I have to modify that, they ARE liberal, with OTHER peoples money.
Yup.
Thank you.