• برنامج أحمد شفيق الانتخابي
  •  وكالة ناسا تثبت ان محمد مرسى يحمل الجنسية الامريكية عام 1980 اثناء عمله بها
  • رشاوي ومخلفات الاخوان في انتخابات الرئاسة ويكيليكس ابناء مبارك
  • مجلة الوقائع حقائق ستعرفها لأول مرة عن الرئيس مبارك وحقائق اخري

الجمعة، 1 يونيو 2012

وكالة ناسا تثبت ان محمد مرسى يحمل الجنسية الامريكية عام 1980 اثناء عمله بها

في 

مفاجأة من العيار الثقيل .. وكالة ناسا تثبت ان محمد مرسى يحمل الجنسية الامريكية عام 1980 اثناء عمله بها 


الجزء المظلل بالاخضر (The ****er Nasa engineer) مهندس ناسا السابق ؟؟ 
نتاكد من تلك المعلومه من تفاصيل الخبر فى صحيفه الجارديان ايضا فى الجزء التالى 

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he worked at Nasa on the development of space shuttle engines in the early 1980s.
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كان يعمل في وكالة ناسا على تطوير محركات المكوك الفضائي في أوائل 1980s.
اذا مرسى على حسب صحيفه الجارديان البريطانيه مرسى عمل لدى وكاله ناسا وهى صحيفه موثوق بمعلوماتها اليكم المفاجاه من موقع وكاله ناسا وهى ان وكاله ناسا لا يعمل لديها مواطنين اجانب كل العامليين لديها حاصليين على الجنسيه الامريكا واليكم الدليل 


ترجمه المكتوب فى الصورة من موقع وكاله ناسا 

هل تقوم ناسا بتعيين الأجانب "الحاصلين على جنسيات أجنبية"؟ ( يعنى الغير أمريكيين) ؟

بما أن ناسا وكالة تابعة لحكومة الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية ، فإن التعيين بوكالة ناسا يقتصر فقط على الحاصلين على الجنسية الأمريكية

اذا بما ان محمد مرسى عمل لدى وكاله ناسا فى التمانينات وعلى حسب قوانين وكاله ناسا يقتصر عمل موظفى ناسا على المواطنين الحاصليين على الجنسيه الامريكيه ..!!!! 


واليكم لينك الخبر بانه عمل لدى وكاله ناسا من صحيفه الجارديان  
                                الخبر من صفحة الجارديان اضغط هنا 
من موقع ناسا مصدر المعلومه اليكم لينك المعلومه 
                                      من موقع ناسا اضغط هنا

Mohammed Morsi: Brotherhood's backroom operator in the limelight


Like many of his Muslim Brotherhood colleagues, Mohammed Morsi – seen here at a rally in Cairo – has spent time in prison in the Mubarak era. Photograph: Fredrik Persson/AP
Mohammed Morsi, presidential candidate for the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party, is an uninspiring figure but he is backed by the best-organised political force in the country, now honing its strategy to secure what would be a historic victory in a second round of voting in June.
Morsi, 60, is an engineer who has taught in the US as well as at Egyptian universities. An expert on precision metal surfaces, he worked at Nasa on the development of space shuttle engines in the early 1980s.
Making a virtue out of his modesty, Brotherhood officials say he was reluctant to run but was persuaded to do so when the more charismatic businessman Khairat al-Shater was disqualified.
Inside the Brotherhood, Morsi has long been a backroom operator who dealt with security – often liaising discreetly with the Mubarak regime – and internal discipline.
Little-known to the wider public, Morsi is a famously boring speaker who reduces Egyptian journalists to teeth-gnashing frustration as he rarely says anything remotely quotable. He was ridiculed as a "spare" after Shater's disqualification, and some people waved tyres at his rallies to emphasise the point. But the Brotherhood's well-oiled machine seems to matter more than his underwhelming personality.
Like many Brotherhood activists he spent time in prison in the Mubarak era. After the rigged 2005 elections he led demonstrations in support of judges demanding their independence. He was arrested during the revolution in January 2011 in an attempt by the regime to halt widening protests. "Morsi is a good man," said Muhammad Sa'ad, an old friend. "He faced the oppression of the tyrant so he will not be a tyrant himself."
Morsi first made it into parliament as an independent in 2000 and was a member of the Brotherhood's powerful guidance bureau before being elected to chair the newly created FJP. In the 2005 parliamentary elections, he was denied victory due to fraud. In meetings with western governments, the Brotherhood stresses its moderate and democratic credentials. But Morsi's religious views are highly conservative and are certainly a big part of the FJP's appeal.
"His cheerleaders have tweaked the revolution's famous slogan, 'The people want to bring down the regime' into 'The people want God's sharia to be implemented,'" commented journalist Noha Hennawy. At one election rally in the Delta town of Mahalla, the Brotherhood's supreme guide, Mohamed Badie, compared Morsi to one of the prophet Muhammad's most venerated companions and the first rightly-guided caliph.
"The ummah [Islamic nation] had sworn allegiance to Abu Bakr, and by the same token the ummah will swear allegiance to Morsi as president ofEgypt, God willing," said Badie. At his first rally Morsi reportedly chanted the Brotherhood's controversial slogan: "The Qur'an is our constitution."

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