Thursday, October 29, 2009

| Gibbs: Obama closer to decision on Afghanistan

Gibbs:-Obama-closer-to-decision-on-Afghanistan ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE - The White House said Tuesday that President Barack Obama has nearly finished gathering information and advice on how to proceed in Afghanistan, but he will weigh his options before announcing a plan on U.S. troop strength there.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters that a planned meeting on Friday with the Joint Chiefs of Staff will be among the last events in the decision-making process.

I think the president will take some time after these meetings to pick through what hes heard, what weve all learned, and evaluate this process with whats best for our country, whats best for Afghanistan, Pakistan and for the region as a whole, Gibbs said.

The top U.S. military commander in Afghanistan has urged Obama to send up to 40,000 more troops to confront Taliban forces who control large swaths of the country. But many liberals and some top Democratic lawmakers want a much smaller increase in U.S. troops, if any.

Gibbs said the president will announce his decision in the coming weeks, a phrase he has used often before.

Gibbs spoke as Obama flew from Florida to Norfolk, Va., where he was to attend a campaign rally for Virginia gubernatorial nominee Creigh Deeds.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.var url=location.href;var i=url.indexOf + 1;if{i=url.indexOf + 1;}if{i=url.indexOf;}if{url = url.substring;document.write;if{window.print;}}
MSN Privacy .
Legal © 2009 MSNBC.com - | Gibbs: Obama closer to decision on Afghanistan |

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

| Goodbye Steering Wheel Here Comes Drive-by-joystick

Goodbye-Steering-Wheel,-Here-Comes-Drive-by-joystick Goodbye Steering Wheel, Here Comes Drive-by-joystick - | Goodbye Steering Wheel Here Comes Drive-by-joystick |

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

| Maldives government dives for climate change

Maldives-government-dives-for-climate-change GIRIFUSHI, Maldives -Members of the Maldives Cabinet donned scuba gear and used hand signals Saturday at an underwater meeting staged to highlight the threat of global warming to the lowest-lying nation on earth.
President Mohammed Nasheed and 13 other government officials submerged and took their seats at a table on the sea floor — 20 feet below the surface of a lagoon off Girifushi, an island usually used for military training.
With a backdrop of coral, the meeting was a bid to draw attention to fears that rising sea levels caused by the melting of polar ice caps could swamp this Indian Ocean archipelago within a century. Its islands average 7 feet above sea level.
What we are trying to make people realize is that the Maldives is a frontline state. This is not merely an issue for the Maldives but for the world, Nasheed said.
As bubbles floated up from their face masks, the president, vice president, Cabinet secretary and 11 ministers signed a document calling on all countries to cut their carbon dioxide emissions.
The issue has taken on urgency ahead of a major U.N. climate change conference scheduled for December in Copenhagen. At that meeting countries will negotiate a successor to the Kyoto Protocol with aims to cut the emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide that scientists blame for causing global warming by trapping heat in the atmosphere.
Wealthy nations want broad emissions cuts from all countries, while poorer ones say industrialized countries should carry most of the burden.
Dozens of Maldives soldiers guarded the event Saturday, but the only intruders were groupers and other fish.
Nasheed had already announced plans for a fund to buy a new homeland for his people if the 1,192 low-lying coral islands are submerged. He has promised to make the Maldives, with a population of 350,000, the worlds first carbon-neutral nation within a decade.
We have to get the message across by being more imaginative, more creative and so this is what we are doing, he said in an interview on a boat en route to the dive site.
Nasheed, who has emerged as a key, and colorful, voice on climate change, is a certified diver, but the others had to take diving lessons in recent weeks.
Three ministers missed the underwater meeting because two were not given medical permission and another was abroad. - | Maldives government dives for climate change |

Saturday, October 10, 2009

| Fears urges and more: What dreams reveal

Fears,-urges-and-more:-What-dreams-reveal Harry Potter roams my daughter’s dreams. So does Hermione Granger and, to keep things interesting, Harry’s adversary, Draco Malfoy. All this is intentional, I learned recently. Libby, who is 12 and has devoured every one of J. K. Rowling’s books, joins these characters every night after telling herself to dream about them. “I put myself in the movie,” she says. On other nights, for variety, she practices martial arts with characters from “Kung Fu Panda.”

My wife, Diana, takes wing in her dreams. Sometimes, she tells me, she simply elevates from a standing start. “I just spread my arms out and fly,” she says. It’s always a sunny day, warm, and the dream is usually set near her childhood home in a small Indiana town. Occasionally there’s drama — she’ll lose control and regain her flying ability right before she hits the ground. But most of the time she’s just soaring.

As for my own dreams, the other night I was running across a town square. A guy was shooting at me. I ducked for cover into a blue sedan only to find the shooter inside the car. My heart skipped two beats — but then the villain suddenly morphed into a harmless old man.

Other dreams I have are much more fun. There was the one a while back in which I ended up with — ahem — sexy blonde twins. More about those kinds of dreams later.

What are dreams anyway?
The ancient Greeks said they were messages from the gods. Sigmund Freud called them a “royal road” to the unconscious mind, full of threatening sexual and aggressive urges that we normally keep in check. In the 1970s scientists figured out that dreams are regulated by a chemical that comes from our primitive brainstem and kicks off the rapid-eye-movement, or REM, phase of sleep. Some scientists concluded, then, that our dreams were simply random stories concocted by the brain. Freudians were not happy with this view. Three decades later scientists are still arguing, still studying — and now beginning to bring the dreaming mind into sharper focus, showing us why we should pay attention to what goes on each night.

Here’s how the road to dreamland works: As you doze off, your brain waves slow, your muscles relax and your heart rate and blood pressure fall. About an hour and a half later your brain stem sends its chemical signal and your brain waves speed up, your heart beats faster, your temperature rises and REM sleep kicks in. The sleep cycle repeats four to five times a night, with progressively longer periods of REM sleep each time. That’s why dreams tend to pile up as morning approaches — or diminish when you’re sleep-deprived.

When you’re asleep, two key functions of the brain stay off-line. The area that controls movement is shut off, paralyzing you from the base of the brain down, which is why your legs and arms don’t pump when you’re fleeing a dream monster. A brain region near your forehead that usually lets you distinguish reality from, say, a movie, is also shut down, says Ross Levin, Ph.D., a sleep specialist in private practice in New York City. That’s why you don’t think it’s strange when you see elephants in your dream living room or George Clooney seems about to kiss you.

On the other hand, the limbic system, which controls your emotions, is working overtime. It pulls fragments of memories — the snooty comment yesterday from the woman in the next cubicle, your friend from eighth grade who didn’t invite you to her party — and creates a story out of them. So all this helps explain why dreams are emotionally intense and surrealistic yet feel utterly real.

Image control
In 2007 Dr. Levin and a fellow psychologist came up with a theory to explain why the brain goes to all this trouble: By mixing unrelated memories with your revved-up emotions, the brain can actually defuse your fears while you sleep. “When you put the memories in a new context, they lose their power,” Dr. Levin says. The process seems to work whether you remember your dreams or not.

But it’s worth holding on to those dream images anyway — long-dead relatives, those elephant houseguests, the smelly cafeteria from your elementary school, all mixed together — what the heck does that mean? I don’t know. Neither did Sigmund Freud, or that friend of yours who’s into astrology, or the dream dictionary on the Internet. Only the dreamer can understand the dream, says Deirdre Barrett, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and editor-in-chief of the journal Dreaming. There are no simple answers or one-size-fits-all interpretations. Basically, your dreams are personal to you. A thoughtful analysis of the images in them can lead to surprising insights and sometimes even life-altering decisions, says Gayle Delaney, Ph.D., the founding president of the International Association for the Study of Dreams.

Certain types of problems are more likely to be solved in dreams, especially ones where the answers can be visualized or where a creative approach is needed. Novelists have dreamed up plots and characters, she says. Computer programmers stuck on a bit of code have envisioned watching the program run. Students have dreamed up answers to homework problems, and at least one person discovered a creative way to arrange furniture in his cramped apartment. “Dreams are not good at logic,” Dr. Barrett says. “But they are good at helping you think outside the box.”

Be an interpreter
In her dream work with clients, Dr. Delaney uses a dream interview technique to help them discover the meaning in their dreams. One client was an attorney in her early 30s, divorced, who had dreamed about a black cat that would sit on her windowsill, hop into the room, raise a ruckus, then leave her in tears. Dr. Delaney asked the woman to describe the cat as if to a visitor from another planet. Cats are distant, aloof, agile, love you when they want and take off when they want, the woman said.

“Is there anyone in your life that is like a black cat and leaves you in tears?” Dr. Delaney asked. The description fit the attorney’s new boyfriend. She recognized that she picked catlike men when what she really needed was to choose someone loyal, affectionate and loving, somebody more like a dog. This realization helped her change her criteria for choosing men to date.

Patti Allen, then 27 and living in Lakewood, Calif., was married, pregnant with her third child and seriously considering getting her tubes tied after giving birth. She dreamed she was in the Hollywood Bowl on a beautiful evening and a concert was about to begin. In the seats far above the stage, Allen made her way down a seemingly endless aisle, squeezing past one person after another to reach her seat. She passed by a family friend she was fond of, not stopping to talk.

Finally she came upon another acquaintance named Judy, who was sitting with her brand-new husband.

Judy’s real-life first husband had died in a car crash, leaving her with two kids, and she had recently remarried and had two more. “The dream absolutely changed my thinking,” recalled Allen, now a 56-year-old psychotherapist in Toronto. “It was telling me, don’t do anything permanent because you don’t know what’s around the corner in life.” Because of that, she chose to forgo the tubal ligation and seven years later she gave birth to her fourth child, a daughter.

The wilder side
Some of the most memorable dreams are the ones not filled with symbols and metaphors, but with more straightforward, basic urges. Until recently psychologists had done very little research on people’s erotic dreams. That’s why Jennie Parker, Ph.D., a senior psychology lecturer at the University of the West of England, asked 93 men and 100 women, all college-aged, to record a dream, including sexual ones. Almost half the men and a third of the women reported sexy dreams. Of those, Dr. Parker says more than half of the men said their dream focused on the act of intercourse, while the women’s tended to focus more on kissing and foreplay. Many women also reported that their partner was unfaithful to them in their dreams. They were likely to dream about people they knew, usually their partner or their partner’s friends, although the occasional celebrity showed up as well.

The men were a bit more adventurous. “They were reporting sex with women they didn’t know, and quite often with more than one,” Dr. Parker says. Men’s sexual dreams are also more self-centered, according to a 2007 study by Antonio Zadra, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychology at the University of Montreal. For the people in Dr. Zadra’s studies, who averaged around 30 years old, orgasms were more common in women’s dreams, and it was often their partner who had one. But in men’s dreams, the pleasure was all theirs. “Even in dreams, it seems, men only think about themselves,” Dr. Zadra jokes.

Of course, sexy dream scenarios, like all dream images, are not meant to be taken literally. If you dream of getting frisky with your favorite movie star, it usually doesn’t mean that you’re wanting or planning to cheat on your husband. But you should take a look at the impulses that caused your mind to cook up this dream. Talking about sexual dreams can be useful as well. “It helps us get over inhibitions about our sexuality,” Dr. Delaney says.

That’s why it’s worth learning what your dreams have to tell you. When you see that dream images are a part of your methods of expression, it opens up a whole new world.

Make the most of your dreams
You can unlock the clues to your own dreams by following these steps:

Remember it. Dream images live only in short-term memory and are easily lost, Dr. Barrett says. As soon as you realize you’re waking up, close your eyes and mentally review the plot and images of your dream before you think about anything else.

Write it down. Keep a small notebook and pen on the nightstand and jot down the most vivid images. Describe that black cat, the scary man chasing you, the endless hall of mirrors, even a bright red sports car, using descriptive words and all your senses to capture the scene. Include how it made you feel.

Let it simmer. Reread your description. Let it stay with you. Is there anyone or anything in your life with the characteristics you just described? It might be a person you know, or it might be a part of yourself. Surprising insights may hit when you least expect them. Don’t look for that to happen every time, though. Some dreams, like some waking thoughts, are just mundane and trivial. Focus on the dreams that really strike you.

Follow your heart. Your dreams can help you resolve issues and solve problems. If a dream points you toward a major decision, ask a friend or family member to help you think it through, but don’t be swayed by her interpretation. Your own insight is the only one that really matters.

For more on dream analysis, please visit the Web site for Ladies’ Home Journal. For more on author Dan Ferber, please visit his Web site.

- | Fears urges and more: What dreams reveal |

Friday, October 9, 2009

| Hero brothers pulled boy 4 out of burning SUV

Hero-brothers-pulled-boy,-4,-out-of-burning-SUV Firefighting brothers John and Joel Rechlitz are somewhat the worse for wear after their amazing rescue of a Tennessee boy trapped in a hell on earth — but they are happy and modest to bear the bandaged wounds of heroes.

The off-duty Milwaukee firemen were preparing for a family birthday Sunday when John’s wife Joy called him in a frantic state — just four blocks away, an SUV had flipped over and burst into flames, trapping a mother and her two young children inside.

The Rechlitz brothers arrived on the scene within moments to find a group of good Samaritans already at work, struggling to free the family from the blazing vehicle — but it took guts and a combined 29 years of firefighting experience to save the life of the 4-year-old boy trapped inside by his car seat.

One free, one still inside
John and Joel Rechlitz appeared live via satellite on TODAY Monday, recounting their efforts to free a boy who was literally burning to death in front of their eyes — a rescue that was captured in graphic video by bystander Jerry Lepkowski as his nephew Jason joined in on the frantic rescue bid.

Joel Rechlitz told TODAY’s Lester Holt that the mother — who had come to town to work a booth at the local county fair and had apparently fallen asleep at the wheel — had already managed to hand off her 2-year-old to Joel’s wife when the brothers arrived on the scene. Joel and John managed to smash out what was left of the front windshield and free the mother as well. But they were shocked to see the 4-year-old boy still lodged firmly in his car seat.

“It was horrific,” Joel Rechlitz told Holt. “The car was engulfed in flames and the child was in there screaming. All I could see was that child’s face, seemed just perfectly fine, but you could see the car seat around the child was burning. The child was literally burning in front of me.

“It was horrific,” he reiterated. “It compelled you to act.”

Burned but helping hands
Joel and John took turns trying to wrest the child free from his seat restraint, both burning their hands badly in the process. John Rechlitz cursed his luck for not having a knife on him when every second was a matter of life or death.

“We tried looking for the seat belt release and we couldn’t find it in the mess, and that’s when I came out,” John said. “I’m screaming for somebody to hopefully have something in their pocket for me — I normally carry a pocketknife, but at the time I didn’t, and for me that was extremely frustrating.”

Joel ran to his car and retrieved a knife and John was able to cut the boy loose. Another quick-thinking neighbor had a garden hose at the ready to douse the boy in cold water to stop the burning.

Civilian rescuer Jason Lepkowski told NBC affiliate WTNJ: “ got burned pretty bad — when he got out, he was on fire. We did a good job, and thank God for the firefighters there.”

The Rechlitz brothers appeared on TODAY with heavily bandaged hands as the result of touching melting metal during their rescue ordeal — but still wore smiles as well as bandages, knowing they had likely saved the boy’s life. The boy, whose identity is being withheld, suffered burns over 30 percent of his bodyand required surgery. He was listed in critical condition on Monday morning. Still, the brothers were told he is likely to recover.

Joel Rechlitz sloughed off the brothers’ own injuries. “We’ll be OK; we’re hanging in there,” he told Holt.

Milwaukee Police Lt. Mark Wroblewski praised the efforts of both the Rechlitz brothers and the local citizens for turning what could have been an unspeakable tragedy into a near-miss for the family involved.

“It just shows the true spirit of this city ,” Wroblewski said. “Everybody’s willing to help.”

- | Hero brothers pulled boy 4 out of burning SUV |

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

| Americas most bizarre restaurants

Americas-most-bizarre-restaurants Sometimes, food alone cannot make a meal. A significant part of tasting a meal is the mindset you are in. This means flavors, even from a simple dish, and your overall enjoyment in a restaurant can be radically enhanced by the right atmosphere and setting.

For example, many believe that fish and seafood taste better in view of water. It’s not that the composition of the food is actually any different, but rather that when your brain is stimulated your reception to seafood is altered.

Wise restaurants can put a smile on your face or get you excited as soon as you walk in the door, and well before you take your first bite. As the percentage of independent restaurants in the United States grows smaller and corporate chains modeled after just a handful of concepts explode, offbeat and non-traditional concepts tend to stand out even more.

At San Francisco’s Supper Club you are treated to a multi-sensory dining experience that extends far beyond your taste buds. Anything can happen here and every night the entertainment is different. You dine in your private bed in an all-white industrial space, while in between courses you might get a massage or see an aqua ballet or a fashion show.

Dark dining, either blindfolded or in pitch-black rooms, is a concept that arose in Germany and Switzerland in the late 90s and has begun to appear in various parts of the States to much applause, including at Opaque in Los Angeles.

The multi-course menus are served by blind waiters and selected in the light, thus diners see nothing for several hours. Diners frequently call the experience “mind opening” and “an awakening of the senses.”

In rural Wisconsin, a Scandinavian restaurant with live goats munching on a grass-covered roof is obviously going to be the talk of town. While menu items at Al Johnson’s Swedish Restaurant like Swedish pancakes with lingonberries or pickled herring are exotic, few will argue that the goats and grass roof outside have not had an equal hand in keeping the restaurant in business for six decades.

An element of secrecy, commonplace in bars and clubs in New York and L.A., gives guests a sense of pride when they enter. You feel privileged to be there. This is the case at what seems to be a run-of-the-mill Milwaukee warehouse where you must give the covert password to the doorman.

The Safe Houses location is hard to find and the food is typical American pub grub, yet since the 1960’s the place has been the city’s go-to place to bring visitors. If you don’t know the password, don’t worry—you can hop on one leg , with everyone at the bar watching on TV screens.

A restaurant can transport you to another time and place. You can be walking down the street in Manhattan one moment, and the next you are being led through a subterranean labyrinth into a feudal era ninja castle at Ninja New York.

The $3.5 million design takes the concept to great lengths, but the dramatically presented Ninja Art Dishes and performances from the ninja servers involving throwing stars, swords, smoke, and explosions take theatrical dining to new heights. And while the food may not always live up to the dining experience; sometimes a little character can go a long way.

var url=location.href;var i=url.indexOf + 1;if{i=url.indexOf + 1;}if{i=url.indexOf;}if{url = url.substring;document.write;if{window.print;}}
MSN Privacy .
Legal © 2009 MSNBC.com - | Americas most bizarre restaurants |

| Did Zazi heed call to terrorize Americans?

Did-Zazi-heed-call-to-terrorize-Americans? NEW YORK - If he chose to listen, Najibullah Zazi could hear the calls for violence all around him.

The Afghan immigrant accused of plotting a terror attack on New York City spent his earliest years in his wartorn homeland, a center of strife and fighting against a Soviet invasion and, after the occupiers left, clashing warlords.

When Zazi was a teenager, his family shared a Queens apartment building and worshipped with an imam linked to a former Afghan warlord later identified by the U.S. as a global terrorist.

And as a young man, Zazi traveled to a region of Pakistan known for training terrorists and visited camps where al-Qaida teaches how to kill with horrific bombs made from household ingredients like hair dye and flour.

Along the way, Zazi was transformed from a snappily dressed young man with a taste for computer games and basketball to a bearded devotee of Islamic traditionalism — while also selling coffee from a cart at the epicenter of American capitalism, Wall Street.

Zazis friends and relatives say he never chose to listen to others urging violence, instead working long days and spending his little free time with his family. He was a very normal, very life-loving guy, said Naiz Khan, who befriended Zazi nearly 10 years ago when the two teenagers attended the same mosque and high school in Queens.

Federal prosecutors offer a different view. They say the 24-year-old Denver airport shuttle driver eagerly heeded the call to kill, maim and terrorize Americans.

Zazi is being held without bail after pleading not guilty to conspiring to use weapons of mass destruction. Prosecutors claim Zazi, who returned to New York to stay with his friend Kahn days before the eighth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, had been planning his own terror, possibly a deadly subway bombing.

The whole family right now is stunned, said Habib Rasooli, an uncle to Zazis father and one of the few relatives willing to talk about the case. I could never believe in 1,000 years that something would happen to the family.

He liked American life
The family, from a large tribal clan with hundreds of relatives living in the U.S., left Afghanistan to live across the border in Pakistan when Zazi was 7. At 14, he, two brothers, a sister and his mother moved to Queens, where his father drove a cab. Another brother and sister were born after the family moved to the U.S.

A tall, skinny boy who could eat anything and never worry about his weight, Zazi struggled as a student at Flushing High School before dropping out. With friends who called him Najib for short, he practiced his English and adapted to life as a jeans-wearing American teen, playing basketball, pool and computer games.

He wore very nice, expensive shirts and boots, Khan said. He liked American life. He liked all the brand names. He never complained.

Zazi was also surrounded by his Afghan culture, living with others from his country. His familys apartment was in the same small building as that of Saifur Rahman Halimi, an imam who was a chief representative for top Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Halimi attended the same mosque as the Zazi family.

Hekmatyar, one of three main U.S. enemies in Afghanistan, was a major figure in that countrys civil war and was briefly installed as prime minister. The U.S. declared Hekmatyar a global terrorist in 2003, and forces loyal to Hekmatyar openly fight American and international forces in Afghanistan.

Liberation from these devils
In Queens, Halimi became a trusted voice for Hekmatyars cause and a vocal supporter of the global jihad. A video from one of Halimis speeches in 1992 captures his zeal for a pure Islamic system in Afghanistan and denunciations of Western intervention. In the very near future, we will liberate all human beings from these devils, he said then. They know the power of Islam.

Halimi and the Zazi family joined others who split from their Queens mosque during a leadership dispute. They also gathered at times with a close-knit group that prayed, ate and socialized together, said Mohammad Sherzad, the imam on the other side of the schism.

Halimi, 61, now imam of a Philadelphia mosque, told The Associated Press he was stunned by Zazis arrest.

He was not such a person, he said. He was busy with his work. Halimi said he hasnt spoken to the Zazi family in six years.

Zazi worked a coffee cart on Wall Street, getting his license in 2004.

Mohammed Yousufzai, who operated his own cart, said he marveled at how, after five months working in the area, Zazi was running his own.

He was a nice guy when he first came in, Yousufzai said.

Zazi began making trips back to Pakistan, his first in 2006 for an arranged marriage. His wife stayed there, and cares for their two children. Zazi began to change in appearance, Yousufzai said.

He gave up his clean-shaven look for a bushy black beard.

Cuckoo
After a second trip to Pakistan, Yousufzai said, Zazi grew his beard longer and gave up American fashion for tunics and more modest traditional clothing. He began playing holy music in the garage he shared with other food cart vendors, and grew irritated when Yousufzai rolled in playing modern dance music, calling it dishonest to your religion.

People tried to avoid him, he said. They figured out he was kind of cuckoo.

Zazis finances changed, too, finally plunging him into bankruptcy with $51,500 in debt.

From April to June in 2008, Zazi opened six credit cards. He opened several other credit accounts in about the same period, including with Best Buy and Sony electronics, according to bankruptcy records. This was all done before he left Queens in August 2008 for Pakistan, where prosecutors say he visited al-Qaida camps for explosives training.

Zazi told reporters before his arrest that he was not aligned with terrorists and never planned an attack. He said he went to Pakistan to see his wife and children.

Zazi returned from his latest trip on Jan. 15 and quickly picked up his life in Queens to move to Aurora, Colo., a suburb of nearly 300,000 people on the eastern edge of Denver. Like his taxi-driving father in New York, Zazi turned to driving an airport shuttle.

He passed a criminal background check and signed up with ABC Airport Shuttle. Dispatcher Tony Gonzales described Zazi as a hardworking guy.

No trouble, no problem whatsoever, Gonzales said. Very quiet guy. Hes always on time. When we give him a pickup, he always does it.

Dedicated to work
Zazis aunt and uncle offered him a place to stay in Aurora. Rabia Zazi, his aunt, said her nephew had little time for anything other than work, not even an interest in finishing his high school education.

He skipped school and hes helping his father, she said, sitting on the front porch of a building with several children and wearing a traditional veil and dress. Rabia Zazi described her nephew as a serious man, an avid soccer fan.

Seven or eight members of Zazis extended family moved to Aurora over the past several years, including his aunt and uncle. Abdulrahman Jalili, president of the familys Queens mosque, said Zazis father told him a month before Ramadan that he was moving to Colorado, but didnt say why.

The father, Mohammed Wali Zazi, faces a charge of lying to federal agents, accused of withholding information when he was questioned after a series of raids in Queens last month.

They know something about him
The emerging federal case against Zazi and others surprised Jalili, who said the FBI interviewed him recently about Zazi.

I never saw any wrong acts, Jalili said. He wasnt acting strangely or anything. I never suspected him of doing anything like that.

But there are unknowns, Jalili admitted, things he wouldnt see in those like Zazi who worshipped alongside him or others he wouldnt know who may have influenced Zazi.

The government knows better than us, Jalili said. The FBI knows better than us. They did the investigation. They know something about him. Thats why they arrested him.

More on: Zazi

- | Did Zazi heed call to terrorize Americans? |