Revised Page: I've enjoyed the penguins but not the "boom boom" every time I open my blog, so to see what was here, lol, I've elected to maintain the entry with reference to the video that it featured.
Reference: Jagadish. "Mentor kurtishi vs Ibrahim Tatlesis Kush te ka than Dj Bici": http://www.sumo.tv/watch.php?video=3044897
Wikipedi. Ibrahim Tatlises: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C4%B0brahim_Tatl%C4%B1ses
I don't really know what the National Security Agency is doing or how, but often when I set out to crawl across the magic carpet, no cloak either, and search out its darkest corners to lift the material and illuminate so much unswept dust (and, frankly, if at home, kitty litter, still), I as often wind up in a clean, well lighted place despite myself.
From early on with this blog,I've pulled in this entertainment.
Sometimes there's an odd juxtaposition: Andre Bocceli sings to a Muppet in between commentary on the latest and most obscene misery out of Somalia.
Sometimes there's a point, and you may listen to a sampling of Pashtun folk music while I bring up examples music retail shut down or the punishment of folk dancers by the Taliban and suggestions elsewhere on the web as regards what may disappear with another part of Arab expansion and influence.
Sometimes there's no point but to sanctify art for art's sake, and embed a comedian or graphic arts work with fractals.
International Culture pulls its own Napolean in reference to the Islamist Fronts: it doesn't confront them; it doesn't argue with them; it just goes around the unhappy nodes and beyond to put its little bit of heaven on the World Wide Web.
This one above by artist Ibrahim Tatlises, a Turkish artist of Arab and Kurdish descent--has some features in the the look-alike penguins with their big dance-alike chorus numbers that may echo Islamic design tenets, but the work departs through love, humor, and technology.
Wise men know every departure embarks.
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