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International News Title: Saudi Cleric: The Sun Revolves Around the Earth A Saudi cleric is garnering headlines for declaring that the sun revolves around the Earth, a clear rejection of all scientific evidence. The comments have sparked discussion about Saudi Arabias ultra-conservative religious authority, which holds sway over the nations newly enthroned monarch, King Salman. The controversial cleric, Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari, was caught making the comments in a short video clip posted to YouTube on Monday. In response to a question posed by a student, al-Khaibari says the Earth is stationary and does not move. While al-Khaibaris remarks have been mocked on social networking sites such as Twitter, regional experts say his anti-science stance is embraced and promoted by leading Saudi clerics in charge of the countrys religious authority. It makes perfect sense for a Saudi cleric to be arguing that the sun revolves around the Earth because this is the sort of message they are getting from on high, according to David Weinberg, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD). Saleh al-Fawzan, one of the most influential members of the regimes highest religious body, the Senior Ulema Council, said the same thing last year, explained Weinberg, who has also tracked the new kings past support for radical terror groups. King Salman restructured most of his government last month after coming to power, but he kept Fawzan on the Ulema Council, dismissing only one member who was considered a relative moderate. This is a sign that Salman, who has been touted by many as a moderate, could continue to allow the countrys strict religious authority to clamp down on civil rights and other Western values. Al-Khaibarys lecture on astronomy took place in late January, during a government-sponsored lecture in the United Arab Emirates, according to sources provided by FDD. He has given similar lectures sponsored by the Saudi government. In addition to promoting the notion that the Earth is stationary in space, al-Khaibarys mentor cleric Fawzan has claimed that the Islamic State (IS) terror group is a creation of Zionists, crusaders, and Safavids, according to Weinberg. Thats the sort of message that Saudi religious officials are receiving from the states favorite clergy, Weinberg said. Al-Khaibarys comments, while surprising to a Western audience, have been echoed in the past by religious leaders such as Fawzan, who is regularly cited by al-Khaibary as a rational man. Other posts on a Twitter account appearing to belong to al-Khaibary claim that Shia Muslims, a minority population in Saudi Arabia, are more insidious than Christians and equivalent to Jews. The cleric also states on Twitter that Christians in all their three main sectsCatholics and Orthodox and Protestantsare infidels, and whoever doubted their infidel status is himself an infidel, according to another positing. Anti-science stances have long been promulgated by leading Saudi clerics, including one of the countrys most influential and celebrated religious leaders, the now deceased Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Baz. Bin Baz is perhaps most notorious for his 1976 ruling that the Earth is flat. FDDs Weinberg said Fawzans position on Saudi Arabias religion council provides a sign of the direction that country is heading. This gives you an idea of where Saudi Arabia is headed under King Salman, he said. Salman kept Fawzan on the Senior Ulema Council while dismissing a relative moderate. He [enjoys close ties to] the current grand mufti, who says that all churches in the Arabian Peninsula should be destroyed. And he sat for years on the board of the foundation set up to honor the legacy of Abdul Aziz bin Baz, even though bin Baz also memorably suggested that women who study with men are akin to prostitutes.
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#3. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
Mr Bolden said: "When I became the Nasa administrator (2010), he [Mr Obama] charged me with three things. "One, he wanted me to help re inspire children to want to get into science and math; he wanted me to expand our international relationships; and third, and perhaps foremost, he wanted me to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations to help them feel good about their historic contribution to science, math, and engineering." I guess the cleric was not in the loop
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