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Humanity in Progress

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How to Know When Free Speech Is Real

June 10, 2011 by Leave a Comment

This one is going to be easy, you know free speech when it hits you, when you hear something you really do not like hearing, when the person in front of you has an opinion that is contradictory, even to the degree of offensive to yours. Free speech is not out there for all of us to enjoy, its out there for everyone to use and play with, for the idea that nothing will go unchallenged, that every idea out there will be contested, that any one of us will have a chance to know more because people are not afraid to speak their minds.

Free speech can be easily tracked to show how this is one of the major things that moved our civilization to a point that everyone could contribute, and present the free world its opinion, given that the idea expressed is not calling for the murder or people.

So unless you want to tell everyone that they should kill someone you can enjoy free speech and you can express your mind, and this is so dear to us in the west that we know we must protect it, and the founding fathers understood that at an age without internet and without computers, without a fax machine and fast printers, without RSS feeds and content syndication networks, which means that it is much more important today – and if there is one single thing that is precious to defend today is free speech – do not forget it.

If someone says something you do not like hearing, listen carefully and consider the arguments, wait for your turn to talk but do not close your ears to the claims of the other person, celebrate free speech and defend it always.

Free speech - The U.S. constitution

Filed Under: Free Speech Tagged With: free speech

UN Security Council Will Talk About Syria – After Lunch!

June 9, 2011 by Leave a Comment

The United Nations security council, better known as the “UN council Against anything Israel does”, had a pretty hard time discussing one of the member state little small issues, one that involves the slaughter or its citizens by the army. This joke of a council, who serves mostly to please the politics of people with power, or money, or both, needs to decide if it is actually going to say anything about the way the Syrian president has conducted himself and his brothers army in the argument over democracy in this country.

But obviously they can not say anything, because its perfectly alright to murder your own people, even if you do not have oil and power, as long as your powerful friends and business partners protect you. Nice and simple.

The scale of this absurd situation is so huge that even in the Palestinian refugee camp out of Syria’s capitol there was a roar of anger over the way Palestinian kids were sent to their death when asked to cross the boarded into Israel, with the full knowledge that this was a criminal and violent act since this is a enemy line. Now why would a Palestinian go to the Golan to protest over occupied territory when this is Syrian land which was lost when Syria tried to “Push the Jews into the sea”, did not work out too well for them.

Filed Under: Syria, United Nations Tagged With: Syria, un security council

The Shores of Tripoli

June 9, 2011 by Leave a Comment

1801-1805 Fight For Freedom

In 1801 the world was a different place, it was not connected by internet and phone lines, electricity was not available in most places on earth, news took a long time to travel and many of the countries we know today were very young or did not exist at all. The American nation was young and fragile, the nations of Europe were slowly moving into modern times and in the east a big empire ruled, one in which bribery and corruption marked the main pillars of government – the Ottoman Empire.

The world did not know of Zionism, the Jews were treated badly almost everywhere on earth, there was no state of Israel (and no real state of Palestine either by the way) but there was a ever lasting conflict between the Muslim world and the non Muslim world. Europe had taken back the land it lost to the Muslims but now had boarders with Muslim countries and needed to negotiate with them regularly. The U.S. had to learn the hard way.

According to Muslim law anyone who is not Muslim and passes through or lives in a country that is under the law of Islam should pay tribute, this is not only for the actual depletion of funds from non Muslims but also serves as a way to show that the non Muslim acknowledges the superiority of Islam. The tribute would be often paid by the non Muslim kneeling in front of the local officials, and would sometimes also have more elements of humiliation added to it.

People who could not pay the “Jizya” would have very limited options, mainly to become Muslim, to be killed as an infidel or to be treated like animals or objects, you can easily find Islamic religious leaders talking about how non Muslims should be treated in a Muslim land, which is generally “you can do whatever you want with the people or their possessions” type of an idea. If a non Muslim is found he or she (or them) can be sold as slaves in the markets, or killed on the spot, and according to the religious ones god does not have any problem with it whatsoever.

And so it was that in 1750-1800 approximately 1,5 million non Muslims (mainly Europeans and Americans) were captured on sea, near Muslim countries and taken as slaves, killed or converted forcefully. And so it was that counties like Tunisia and Algeria demanded and received tribute from the young United States of America, until one brave soul by the name of Thomas Jefferson (third president of the U.S.) put a stop to it and sent the U.S. Navy to crash this nasty habit of the Ottoman empire.

The American flag was raised in victory in another continent (outside of America) in that war, and it was in Libya, and the U.S. Marines Corps sing to this day a song about the Shores of Tripoli.

So there you have it, before any state of Israel was there, when Jews were spread out across the world and without any political and hardly any financial power, a struggle between Islamic nations and the West, based on the belief (and the explicit information in the Koran) that Muslims are superior and that anyone who is not a Muslim should surrender to Islam. This is where we are heading, regardless of what Israel does or does not do, regardless of the American foreign policy, and without Europe’s political stands. History tends to repeat itself, I do not think it will make an exception this time.

Filed Under: Islam Tagged With: American Wars, Freedom, Islam wars

June 6, 1944

June 7, 2011 by Leave a Comment

This did happen, and we owe these brave young men more than we can ever say.

There are no words to express such gratitude.

D-Day Landing June 6, 1944

We will not forget.

Filed Under: General Tagged With: d day

Dictionary of the Arab Spring Revolution

June 7, 2011 by Leave a Comment

If you have been following the news out of Syria these past weeks, and especially these past few days, you have probably learned that the struggle against the Assad regime is on full force, and that the demonstrations and protests have re-introduced themselves into many parts of the country.

Now it looks like much of the north of Syria is held by anti government forces, who have also attacked and killed a large number of police/army personal, according to some of the news from the Syrian TV station (the one that speaks for the regime). The good news in all of this misery is that it seems that the new protests came as a result of the meeting the opposition to government talks in Turkey last week, and the some say have ended with the agreement that the new Syria will not have a religious government, but will stay secular.

In a significant contrast to the Egypt and Tunisian revolutions evolution, Syria seems to have finally set the first stone for a real revolution, an understanding between the people who oppose the forced leadership on the new way they seek for their country.

However there are a lot of things that still need changing, especially the Arab habit of singing the same old songs and chanting the same old way, it almost looks like the only thing that actually changes are the words, you can plug in any word you like to match the day and the overall feeling. Watching some of the very violent videos that came out of Syria in the last days, one can not help but notice that the main thing that is sang, chanted or shout in the streets is the same old “God is Great”, the same cry uses suicide bombers, child killers and the opposition itself, everyone cries out the god loves them, and indeed they think so.

It will be refreshing and encouraging to see a new Arab culture rise from this revolutions, one that does not walk the streets chanting the same old way old regimes have forced it to do, one that truly understands the power of democracy and demonstrating.

Video –

 

Filed Under: Syria Tagged With: Syria riots, Syria riots 2011 video

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