Monday, September 3, 2012
Cult Leader Sun Myung Moon Dies
I heard that Sun Myung Moon, leader of the Unification Church, whose followers are often called Moonies, has died aged 92.He was widely regarded as an infamous cult leader.
See this blog, The Real Sun Myung Moon for more details on this man.
See this blog, The Real Sun Myung Moon for more details on this man.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
The Plain Truth on The Vietnam War
Using Don Tiger's index of Plain Truth and Good News articles here is a list of the articles about the Vietnam War written in the Plain Truth.
All articles are from the Plain Truth.
The articles are arranged chronologically.
1965
THE TRUTH ABOUT THE VIETNAM CRISIS Apr-65
1967
WORLD NEWS: VIETNAM Jan-67
HOW THE U.S. CAN END THE VIETNAM WAR...NOW! Feb-67
1968
PRIDE OF U.S. POWER-WHERE IS IT? Feb-68
IS VIETNAM IN PROPHECY? May-68
WORLD NEWS: ASIA'S FORGOTTEN WAR Jun-68
WHY PARIS CONFERENCE WON'T BRING PEACE TO VIETNAM Sep-68
1969
WHY THE BIG CHANGE IN U.S. FOREIGN POLICY? Apr-69
THE ENDLESS WAR-VIETNAM Dec-69
1971
RED CHINA-A PAPER DRAGON? Jan-71
PERSONAL: I VISIT THE WAR ZONE May-71
THE PLAIN TRUTH ABOUT THE VIETNAM WAR May-71
1972
AS THE PARIS PEACE TALKS GO ON ... AND ON...AND ON... Jan-72
PERSONAL: MEETING WITH PRES SUHARTO OF INDONESIA-VIETNAM AND FAR EAST Nov-72
1973
PEACE AT LAST? Jan-73
VIETNAM CEASE-FIRE" HOW LONG WILL IT LAST? Mar-73
PERSONAL: BEYOND VIETNAM Apr-73
PERSONAL: AFTER VIETNAM-THE NEW BASTION May-73
1975
THE WAR THAT WON'T GO AWAY 8-Mar-75
US FOREIGN POLICY COLLAPSING AROUND WORLD 19-Apr-75
INDOCHINA'S AGONY: MEN & BILLIONS SPENT IN VAIN 19-Apr-75
BLOODY BABY BANNED 19-Apr-75
GTA: ALL FOR NOUGHT 19-Apr-75
HANOI'S GRAND DESIGN? 19-Apr-75
WATERGATE AND THE VIETNAM DEBACLE 3-May-75
SOUTH VIETNAM AND ALL SOUTHEAST ASIA FALLING TO COMMUNISTS! HERE'S WHY 3-May-75
HUMANITARIAN EFFORT OR KIDNAPPING? 3-May-75
VIETNAM RETREAT PARALLELS NAPOLEON'S 24-May-75
AFTER VIETNAM-NEW ERA OF UNCERTAINTY 24-May-75
ART BUCHWALD: DETENTE WITH VIETNAM 24-May-75
SAIGON-BEFORE THE FALL 24-May-75
IN BRIEF: COMMENTS ON VIETNAM, PHILIPPINES 24-May-75
IN BRIEF: VIETNAM, HENRY KISSINGER 7-Jun-75
1983
THE USA: PARALYZED BY THE GHOST OF VIETNAM Jul-83
All articles are from the Plain Truth.
The articles are arranged chronologically.
1965
THE TRUTH ABOUT THE VIETNAM CRISIS Apr-65
1967
WORLD NEWS: VIETNAM Jan-67
HOW THE U.S. CAN END THE VIETNAM WAR...NOW! Feb-67
1968
PRIDE OF U.S. POWER-WHERE IS IT? Feb-68
IS VIETNAM IN PROPHECY? May-68
WORLD NEWS: ASIA'S FORGOTTEN WAR Jun-68
WHY PARIS CONFERENCE WON'T BRING PEACE TO VIETNAM Sep-68
1969
WHY THE BIG CHANGE IN U.S. FOREIGN POLICY? Apr-69
THE ENDLESS WAR-VIETNAM Dec-69
1971
RED CHINA-A PAPER DRAGON? Jan-71
PERSONAL: I VISIT THE WAR ZONE May-71
THE PLAIN TRUTH ABOUT THE VIETNAM WAR May-71
1972
AS THE PARIS PEACE TALKS GO ON ... AND ON...AND ON... Jan-72
PERSONAL: MEETING WITH PRES SUHARTO OF INDONESIA-VIETNAM AND FAR EAST Nov-72
1973
PEACE AT LAST? Jan-73
VIETNAM CEASE-FIRE" HOW LONG WILL IT LAST? Mar-73
PERSONAL: BEYOND VIETNAM Apr-73
PERSONAL: AFTER VIETNAM-THE NEW BASTION May-73
1975
THE WAR THAT WON'T GO AWAY 8-Mar-75
US FOREIGN POLICY COLLAPSING AROUND WORLD 19-Apr-75
INDOCHINA'S AGONY: MEN & BILLIONS SPENT IN VAIN 19-Apr-75
BLOODY BABY BANNED 19-Apr-75
GTA: ALL FOR NOUGHT 19-Apr-75
HANOI'S GRAND DESIGN? 19-Apr-75
WATERGATE AND THE VIETNAM DEBACLE 3-May-75
SOUTH VIETNAM AND ALL SOUTHEAST ASIA FALLING TO COMMUNISTS! HERE'S WHY 3-May-75
HUMANITARIAN EFFORT OR KIDNAPPING? 3-May-75
VIETNAM RETREAT PARALLELS NAPOLEON'S 24-May-75
AFTER VIETNAM-NEW ERA OF UNCERTAINTY 24-May-75
ART BUCHWALD: DETENTE WITH VIETNAM 24-May-75
SAIGON-BEFORE THE FALL 24-May-75
IN BRIEF: COMMENTS ON VIETNAM, PHILIPPINES 24-May-75
IN BRIEF: VIETNAM, HENRY KISSINGER 7-Jun-75
1983
THE USA: PARALYZED BY THE GHOST OF VIETNAM Jul-83
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Two Stories: Religious Hypocracy Turns Away a Believer, and an Elderly Man Remembers His Former Religion
Just saw some intriguing stories from Godreports.
First Saudi Woman Publicly Announces Her Faith in Christ.
A Saudi woman announces her conversion to Christianity. What caught my interest was her statement that the oppression of the morality police, a clerical police force that enforces religious rules throughout Saudi Arabia, seems to have caused her to become disillusioned.
The false prophets of Armstrongism are also guilty of this sort of sickening religious hypocrisy. And like the morality police in Saudi Arabia many of them from Herbert W. Armstrong onwards have also imposed an authoritarian way of life upon their deceived followers that stifles their natural potential in life. Many are the painful sorrows these false prophets imposed on us.
And now this story:
He Waited a Lifetime to see God’s Holy Book
A very touching story about one Mauritanian Christian who has a most intriguing encounter with one of his fellow countrymen.
It turns out this man came from a tribe that was Christian but was forcibly converted into Islam around 1950.
First Saudi Woman Publicly Announces Her Faith in Christ.
A Saudi woman announces her conversion to Christianity. What caught my interest was her statement that the oppression of the morality police, a clerical police force that enforces religious rules throughout Saudi Arabia, seems to have caused her to become disillusioned.
“The morality police’s treatment caused me to not take fasting and prayer seriously and to eventually convert to Christianity.”I had heard about this police force while reading Princess by Jean Sasson and the main subject of the book, Sultana, a Saudi princess who pours out the terrible injustices she has seen in Saudi society, speaks very negatively of this morality police, as an insufferable force that oppresses women and force them to live in a dysfunctional society according to a terribly narrow minded version of Islam. It does not surprise me that their oppression has caused this Saudi woman to be disillusioned.
The false prophets of Armstrongism are also guilty of this sort of sickening religious hypocrisy. And like the morality police in Saudi Arabia many of them from Herbert W. Armstrong onwards have also imposed an authoritarian way of life upon their deceived followers that stifles their natural potential in life. Many are the painful sorrows these false prophets imposed on us.
And now this story:
He Waited a Lifetime to see God’s Holy Book
A very touching story about one Mauritanian Christian who has a most intriguing encounter with one of his fellow countrymen.
It turns out this man came from a tribe that was Christian but was forcibly converted into Islam around 1950.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Gerald Flurry Thinks America Overthrew Mubarak: Exposing A Dictatorial Mindset
Just listened to The Trumpet Weekly podcast, America Should Not Have Toppled Mubarak, by Gerald Flurry.
America toppled Mubarak? That is nonsense. The Egyptian people toppled him.
This statement exposes how Flurry is simply unable (or refuses) to believe that ordinary people, when they act together, are capable of overthrowing a mighty and established power.
The Egyptian people's brave protests are callously ignored.
The thought that ordinary people could overthrow someone like Mubarak is impossible for Flurry to comprehend, so he simply assumes that someone more powerful than Mubarak overthrew him, namely the United States.
Perhaps the thought of seemingly powerless people overthrowing those who rule over them seems scary to him. Maybe he fears PCG members could try to do something like that for themselves.
I believe the US government was wise to leave Egypt alone and let the Egyptian people and authorities deal with this matter themselves. Trying to force the Egyptian people to let Mubarak rule over them when they are unwilling to let him do so would have been a disastrous policy for the US government. That is what Russia is presently doing in Syria, but their support has been useless in preventing protesters and armed opposition groups from continuing their revolt against the Assad regime. The US avoided such a mess by letting the protests take their course.
At one point Flurry cites a statement from Mubarak who states that the protesters are striving to create an Islamic theocracy. Flurry cites this as evidence that Mubarak should have stayed in power to (supposedly) restrain Muslim fundamentalists.
It is more likely Mubarak was scared he would be overthrown and tried to scare people in order to weaken support for the demonstrators and strengthen support for himself.
Mubarak knew if you believed the protesters wanted democracy more people would support the protesters and not Mubarak. But if he could convince you that the protesters are striving towards a goal you do not like it would make you less likely to oppose him and allow Mubarak to stay in power.
Did Flurry ever discuss this possibility? No. He did not.
Throughout this broadcast Flurry denounces the Muslim Brotherhood in the strongest terms as terrorists, linked with Iran (which he teaches is to be the King of the South which will rally the Muslim world behind it and set the stage for the Great Tribulation), all in order to make people scared about what is happening in Egypt.
As far as I know it appears to me that the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt no longer practice terrorism. I am under the impression that it was formerly engaged in such things or at least more open to that. But today it seems they no longer indulge in such practices. So I am willing to dismiss this accusation as crude fear mongering.
Flurry, it is called democracy. If enough people vote for them they get the right to rule. You and I may not like them very much (I certainly would never be a member of the Muslim Brotherhood) but enough other people are willing to support them and in a democratic society that means they get to rule for a term. It is absurd to so callously dismiss the considered opinion of so many Egyptians.
At one point Flurry says Mubarak made peace with Israel. Flurry is wrong. It was Mubarak's predecessor Sadat who made the peace treaty with Israel.
In this video Flurry speaks of Mubarak highly, that he made peace with Israel, that he called Iran a cancer and regarded them as an enemy, etc. He makes Mubarak sound like a swell guy. Why would anyone want to overthrow him? Flurry seems to be saying.
Flurry never mentions the 850 people who were killed trying to overthrow him. No, their blood does not matter to Flurry.
He never mentions how many Egyptian people lived in fear of an authoritarian police force that often abused their power and tortured detainees.
Once I read The Looming Tower by Lawrence Wright, a history of Al Qaeda up to December 2001. It mentions that Ayman al-Zawahiri, the current head of Al Qaeda and the main ideologist for them, became radicalized and embraced terrorist tactics after experiencing torture by Mubarak's police force following the widespread suppression of Islamist groups after Sadat's assassination in 1981. Mubarak's crude suppression of dissent contributed to the radicalization of one of the main leaders of Al Qaeda. Does Flurry take any of this into account? No, of course not.
Why does Flurry give a dictator like Mubarak such sympathetic coverage? I cannot help but think that Flurry sees in Mubarak a kindred spirit. Like Mubarak before the revolution Gerald Flurry live in a group which revolves entirely around him and which he rules with power few outsiders can comprehend. And Flurry sees that even a dictator who ruled for nearly 30 years can be tossed out after 18 days of protests. This makes him fearful that something like this could happen to him. So he does everything he can to demonize this astounding achievement of the Egyptian people to blind his abused followers from learning from these events and applying its lessons for themselves.
America toppled Mubarak? That is nonsense. The Egyptian people toppled him.
This statement exposes how Flurry is simply unable (or refuses) to believe that ordinary people, when they act together, are capable of overthrowing a mighty and established power.
The Egyptian people's brave protests are callously ignored.
The thought that ordinary people could overthrow someone like Mubarak is impossible for Flurry to comprehend, so he simply assumes that someone more powerful than Mubarak overthrew him, namely the United States.
Perhaps the thought of seemingly powerless people overthrowing those who rule over them seems scary to him. Maybe he fears PCG members could try to do something like that for themselves.
I believe the US government was wise to leave Egypt alone and let the Egyptian people and authorities deal with this matter themselves. Trying to force the Egyptian people to let Mubarak rule over them when they are unwilling to let him do so would have been a disastrous policy for the US government. That is what Russia is presently doing in Syria, but their support has been useless in preventing protesters and armed opposition groups from continuing their revolt against the Assad regime. The US avoided such a mess by letting the protests take their course.
At one point Flurry cites a statement from Mubarak who states that the protesters are striving to create an Islamic theocracy. Flurry cites this as evidence that Mubarak should have stayed in power to (supposedly) restrain Muslim fundamentalists.
It is more likely Mubarak was scared he would be overthrown and tried to scare people in order to weaken support for the demonstrators and strengthen support for himself.
Mubarak knew if you believed the protesters wanted democracy more people would support the protesters and not Mubarak. But if he could convince you that the protesters are striving towards a goal you do not like it would make you less likely to oppose him and allow Mubarak to stay in power.
Did Flurry ever discuss this possibility? No. He did not.
Throughout this broadcast Flurry denounces the Muslim Brotherhood in the strongest terms as terrorists, linked with Iran (which he teaches is to be the King of the South which will rally the Muslim world behind it and set the stage for the Great Tribulation), all in order to make people scared about what is happening in Egypt.
As far as I know it appears to me that the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt no longer practice terrorism. I am under the impression that it was formerly engaged in such things or at least more open to that. But today it seems they no longer indulge in such practices. So I am willing to dismiss this accusation as crude fear mongering.
Flurry, it is called democracy. If enough people vote for them they get the right to rule. You and I may not like them very much (I certainly would never be a member of the Muslim Brotherhood) but enough other people are willing to support them and in a democratic society that means they get to rule for a term. It is absurd to so callously dismiss the considered opinion of so many Egyptians.
At one point Flurry says Mubarak made peace with Israel. Flurry is wrong. It was Mubarak's predecessor Sadat who made the peace treaty with Israel.
In this video Flurry speaks of Mubarak highly, that he made peace with Israel, that he called Iran a cancer and regarded them as an enemy, etc. He makes Mubarak sound like a swell guy. Why would anyone want to overthrow him? Flurry seems to be saying.
Flurry never mentions the 850 people who were killed trying to overthrow him. No, their blood does not matter to Flurry.
He never mentions how many Egyptian people lived in fear of an authoritarian police force that often abused their power and tortured detainees.
Once I read The Looming Tower by Lawrence Wright, a history of Al Qaeda up to December 2001. It mentions that Ayman al-Zawahiri, the current head of Al Qaeda and the main ideologist for them, became radicalized and embraced terrorist tactics after experiencing torture by Mubarak's police force following the widespread suppression of Islamist groups after Sadat's assassination in 1981. Mubarak's crude suppression of dissent contributed to the radicalization of one of the main leaders of Al Qaeda. Does Flurry take any of this into account? No, of course not.
Why does Flurry give a dictator like Mubarak such sympathetic coverage? I cannot help but think that Flurry sees in Mubarak a kindred spirit. Like Mubarak before the revolution Gerald Flurry live in a group which revolves entirely around him and which he rules with power few outsiders can comprehend. And Flurry sees that even a dictator who ruled for nearly 30 years can be tossed out after 18 days of protests. This makes him fearful that something like this could happen to him. So he does everything he can to demonize this astounding achievement of the Egyptian people to blind his abused followers from learning from these events and applying its lessons for themselves.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Bigotry Towards South Vietnamese in Plain Truth
Recently I've been reading about the Vietnam War. In the course of this I looked through old issues of the Plain Truth to see what they had to say about it. I came upon an article in the May 1968 Plain Truth, 'Vietnam in Prophecy?' by Raymond F. McNair and C. Wayne Cole, pp. 9-15 (PDF pp. 11-7.).
It is your standard COG world news article which details the issues and at the very ends advertizes one of their booklets in the hope of tricking you into joining a high demand group that takes three tithes from members.
But in reading this article I was shocked and appalled to see these scornful and bigoted words directed at the people of South Vietnam.
Such dismissive condescension took my breath away.
A backward people? The Vietnamese are an ancient nation that have existed long before the Anglo-Saxons migrated to Britain. How dare Raymond McNair and C. Wayne Cole call them that.
Apathetic? Like Herbert W. Armstrong telling members not to donate money to ease the plight of refugees of the Biafran Civil War in Nigeria (1967-70). How does such words not encourage an apathetic outlook on world events?
And what is so bizarre and shameful about wanting to be fed and not wanting to be killed? They speak of these common human desires as though they are something to be ashamed of.
It amazes me that two men who lived in peace all their lives could be so dismissively judgmental towards a people who had had to endure over twenty years of on and off warfare.
Who was in charge of this magazine? Why didn't the senior editors, namely, HWA, GTA, Hoeh, Meredith, Albert J. Portune, David Jon Hill, etc, object to these statements and just left this nasty piece of bigotry in this alleged magazine of understanding?
This all goes back to the false idea of British Israelism. An idea HWA stole and pretended to have gotten from God. Claiming that white Americans have some special connection to God have historically caused many within the COGs to focus mainly on supposed descendants of Israel and view others as not as central to God's plan on Earth at the present time as the alleged Israelites.
Such bigotry is the disgusting fruit of this incorrect theory.
It is your standard COG world news article which details the issues and at the very ends advertizes one of their booklets in the hope of tricking you into joining a high demand group that takes three tithes from members.
But in reading this article I was shocked and appalled to see these scornful and bigoted words directed at the people of South Vietnam.
The South Vietnamese people are a rather backward, semi-illiterate people. Many of them don't understand why the war is being fought. Many (if not most) of the Vietnamese people are very apathetic. They aren't willing to work hard to build their country. Neither are they able to bear the brunt of the fighting.
The Vietnamese just want to make sure they get their rice, and have freedom from fear of being attacked and killed by the Communists, the Americans or anyone else! They don't want to have to pay too heavy taxes. Beyond these points, they couldn't care less which government rules over them! (pp. 11-3. PDF pp. 13-5)
Such dismissive condescension took my breath away.
A backward people? The Vietnamese are an ancient nation that have existed long before the Anglo-Saxons migrated to Britain. How dare Raymond McNair and C. Wayne Cole call them that.
Apathetic? Like Herbert W. Armstrong telling members not to donate money to ease the plight of refugees of the Biafran Civil War in Nigeria (1967-70). How does such words not encourage an apathetic outlook on world events?
And what is so bizarre and shameful about wanting to be fed and not wanting to be killed? They speak of these common human desires as though they are something to be ashamed of.
It amazes me that two men who lived in peace all their lives could be so dismissively judgmental towards a people who had had to endure over twenty years of on and off warfare.
Who was in charge of this magazine? Why didn't the senior editors, namely, HWA, GTA, Hoeh, Meredith, Albert J. Portune, David Jon Hill, etc, object to these statements and just left this nasty piece of bigotry in this alleged magazine of understanding?
This all goes back to the false idea of British Israelism. An idea HWA stole and pretended to have gotten from God. Claiming that white Americans have some special connection to God have historically caused many within the COGs to focus mainly on supposed descendants of Israel and view others as not as central to God's plan on Earth at the present time as the alleged Israelites.
Such bigotry is the disgusting fruit of this incorrect theory.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Hope in Sudan (#SudanRevolts)
Recently mass protests (#SudanRevolts) have arisen in Sudan against the dictatorial regime of Omar al-Bashir, sparked off by the introduction of austerity measures. I think this is a wonderful development.
Omar al-Bashir, since seizing power in a military coup in 1989, has lead Sudan in waging a catastrophic civil war by the Muslim majority north against the predominantly animist and Christian South until 2005, aided the infamous so-called Lord's Resistance Army led by the most evil Joseph Kony, and then lead Sudan into another horrific war in the Darfur region which gained infamy all over the world and made Omar al-Bashir wanted by the International Criminal Court, and recently he nearly succeeded in plunging Sudan into another war with the South.
Frankly I had long ago given up hearing good news from Sudan. I heard about how some northern Sudanese abducted slaves from the Southerners. I knew Sudan's government as mainly a regime that was constantly at war, spreading death, slavery and misery in an already blighted region of the Earth.
Recently I heard about alleged attempts by Omar al-Bashir to make life impossible for non-Muslims in Sudan, even contemplating changing the name of his political party to the Party of God like Hezbollah. These developments made me think no good news would come from Sudan. I knew little about attempts to resist among the Sudanese people.
And so I am quite pleased to see that brave Sudanese people, such as Gifirna, have chosen to rise up against this irresponsible and blood strained government. As far as I know this revolution was first started from among the women's dorms of the University of Khartoum.
Although I am not Sudanese, I don't even personally know any Sudanese person, either from the north or the south, I wish the protesters well in their attempt to reorganize society. I hope this will be the first stage in better and brighter days for Sudan.
This weekend about 1000 Sudanese protesters were arrested and sent to 'ghost houses'. Like other authoritarian countries facing mass protests a wave of arrests have been unleashed by the dictatorial Sudanese government. May victory swiftly follow these brave protesters.
Omar al-Bashir, since seizing power in a military coup in 1989, has lead Sudan in waging a catastrophic civil war by the Muslim majority north against the predominantly animist and Christian South until 2005, aided the infamous so-called Lord's Resistance Army led by the most evil Joseph Kony, and then lead Sudan into another horrific war in the Darfur region which gained infamy all over the world and made Omar al-Bashir wanted by the International Criminal Court, and recently he nearly succeeded in plunging Sudan into another war with the South.
Frankly I had long ago given up hearing good news from Sudan. I heard about how some northern Sudanese abducted slaves from the Southerners. I knew Sudan's government as mainly a regime that was constantly at war, spreading death, slavery and misery in an already blighted region of the Earth.
Recently I heard about alleged attempts by Omar al-Bashir to make life impossible for non-Muslims in Sudan, even contemplating changing the name of his political party to the Party of God like Hezbollah. These developments made me think no good news would come from Sudan. I knew little about attempts to resist among the Sudanese people.
And so I am quite pleased to see that brave Sudanese people, such as Gifirna, have chosen to rise up against this irresponsible and blood strained government. As far as I know this revolution was first started from among the women's dorms of the University of Khartoum.
Although I am not Sudanese, I don't even personally know any Sudanese person, either from the north or the south, I wish the protesters well in their attempt to reorganize society. I hope this will be the first stage in better and brighter days for Sudan.
This weekend about 1000 Sudanese protesters were arrested and sent to 'ghost houses'. Like other authoritarian countries facing mass protests a wave of arrests have been unleashed by the dictatorial Sudanese government. May victory swiftly follow these brave protesters.
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Weinland Teaching Apocalypse Again
Ronald Weinland deserved to be cursed for once again teaching his abused followers that the apocalypse is coming and making them act upon this unrealistic fear.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Bashar al Assad Must Go
Over the months I have watched the situation in Syria in despair at the humanitarian catastrophe that is being caused because Bashar al Assad refuses to give up power and has decided that he must kill, murder, torture as many people as it takes just to stay in power.
At first the protesters were peaceful but the ceaseless and merciless violence of the Assad regime which literally killed thousands, made it inevitable that some of the protesters would take up arms, an act which only occurred after literally thousands had already been killed, the vast majority of whom were peaceful protesters. As John F. Kennedy wisely observed, "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."
Bashar al Assad has no one to blame for the rise of the Free Syrian Army except himself.
For 29 years Syria lay under the shadow of the Hama Massacre of 1982, in which thousands of civilians had been murdered. Because of the fear such ghastly atrocities produced the Syrian people lived under the shadow of the Assadite dictatorship.
But beginning in December 2010 Syrian witnessed what happened in Tunisia, when people rose up to protest against the Ben Ali dictatorship, and against all odds Ben Ali was overthrown and forced to flee to Saudi Arabia. Then the Syrian people saw the Egyptian people rise up and overthrow the dictator Hosni Mubarak after 18 days of protests. Similar popular protests occurred in Yemen and Bahrain.
And after all this people starting asking, Why is this not happening in Syria?
Some said, "Oh well...Bashar's young and photogenic. That must be it.""It's because he is anti-American. That must be it."
People thought that popular uprisings like those in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Bahrain would not happen in Syria.
But even then their impact was felt. As this report from the International Crisis Group put it:
Suddenly the people went out into the street in vast numbers, and soon they discovered that Bashar al Assad has no legitimacy to rule the Syrian people. If he did why is he so determined to crush, destroy, murder, torture anyone who opposes him? Why did he rely on the fear caused by the Hama Massacre? Why did he ban foreign journalists from Syria when they could verify any alleged terrorist attacks that occurred? (Peaceful protesters were from the start demonized by the Assad dictatorship as terrorists. It was only later that some violent acts of terror did occur, a response made practically inevitable due to Assad's massacres.)
For the first time in 29 years the Syrian people broke through the barrier of their fear.
The Assad regime has been spending over a year trying to put the genie back in the bottle, but this is not 1982, this time the whole world sees what they are doing. In a completely ineffectual attempt to hide the murders and torture they are inflicting the Assad regime banned foreign journalists from reporting in Syria. Instead every citizen in Syria became a journalist, as one Syrian memorably put it on TV. Anyone who can record footage and post it on the internet could show the world that the illegitimate Assad dictatorship is destroying the Syrian people.
The most sacred duty of a government is to protect its people.
The Assad dictatorship has been on a wild shooting, torturing, even shelling rampage throughout Syria for over a year. That is not a government. That is a criminal gang.
I have no sympathy for the Bashar al Assad regime. The sooner it is gone the better.
As far as I am concerned justice demands nothing less.
Some people fear that something worse may occur if Assad is overthrown.
As far as I am concerned a murderous gang is utterly intolerable and must be removed before we can even begin to start seriously thinking how Syria can be rebuilt.
There is no hope in the Assad dictatorship.
The tortures, the disappearances, the killings are how the Assad dictatorship has always been "ruling" (I really mean oppressing) the Syrian people. How can an unpopular regime which has brought so much pain and suffering to the Syrian people bring any hope to the Syrian people?
Some are worried that if the Syrian opposition gains power religious minorities such as Alawites and Christians will be thrown under the bus and will be oppressed by fundamentalist Muslims.
Again there is no hope in the Assad dictatorship.
It has always ruled by fear and terror. The dictatorship has been desperately trying to make religious minorities fear change and simply put up with the dictatorship as most of Syria had been doing since 1982 and before Deraa. I regard it as wrong to ask people to submit to such a cruel and degrading regime for fear of something worse, to protect criminals and child killers like Assad. The Syrian people deserve far more than what the Assad criminal gang can give them. The regime must go.
At first the protesters were peaceful but the ceaseless and merciless violence of the Assad regime which literally killed thousands, made it inevitable that some of the protesters would take up arms, an act which only occurred after literally thousands had already been killed, the vast majority of whom were peaceful protesters. As John F. Kennedy wisely observed, "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."
Bashar al Assad has no one to blame for the rise of the Free Syrian Army except himself.
For 29 years Syria lay under the shadow of the Hama Massacre of 1982, in which thousands of civilians had been murdered. Because of the fear such ghastly atrocities produced the Syrian people lived under the shadow of the Assadite dictatorship.
But beginning in December 2010 Syrian witnessed what happened in Tunisia, when people rose up to protest against the Ben Ali dictatorship, and against all odds Ben Ali was overthrown and forced to flee to Saudi Arabia. Then the Syrian people saw the Egyptian people rise up and overthrow the dictator Hosni Mubarak after 18 days of protests. Similar popular protests occurred in Yemen and Bahrain.
And after all this people starting asking, Why is this not happening in Syria?
Some said, "Oh well...Bashar's young and photogenic. That must be it.""It's because he is anti-American. That must be it."
People thought that popular uprisings like those in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Bahrain would not happen in Syria.
But even then their impact was felt. As this report from the International Crisis Group put it:
In what had long been – or forced to become – a depoliticised society, casual discussions suddenly assumed a surprisingly political tone. What the regime used to do and get away with came under intense and critical public scrutiny. Subtle expressions of insubordination surfaced. Previously routine – and unchallenged – forms of harassment and extortion by civil servants met unusual resistance on the part of ordinary citizens, emboldened by what they had seen in Tunisia, Egypt and beyond. More broadly, Syrians – who like to imagine themselves as the Arab vanguard – increasingly were frustrated at being left on the sidelines of history at a time when much of the region was rising up.Then came the protests in Deraa.
Suddenly the people went out into the street in vast numbers, and soon they discovered that Bashar al Assad has no legitimacy to rule the Syrian people. If he did why is he so determined to crush, destroy, murder, torture anyone who opposes him? Why did he rely on the fear caused by the Hama Massacre? Why did he ban foreign journalists from Syria when they could verify any alleged terrorist attacks that occurred? (Peaceful protesters were from the start demonized by the Assad dictatorship as terrorists. It was only later that some violent acts of terror did occur, a response made practically inevitable due to Assad's massacres.)
For the first time in 29 years the Syrian people broke through the barrier of their fear.
The Assad regime has been spending over a year trying to put the genie back in the bottle, but this is not 1982, this time the whole world sees what they are doing. In a completely ineffectual attempt to hide the murders and torture they are inflicting the Assad regime banned foreign journalists from reporting in Syria. Instead every citizen in Syria became a journalist, as one Syrian memorably put it on TV. Anyone who can record footage and post it on the internet could show the world that the illegitimate Assad dictatorship is destroying the Syrian people.
The most sacred duty of a government is to protect its people.
The Assad dictatorship has been on a wild shooting, torturing, even shelling rampage throughout Syria for over a year. That is not a government. That is a criminal gang.
I have no sympathy for the Bashar al Assad regime. The sooner it is gone the better.
As far as I am concerned justice demands nothing less.
Some people fear that something worse may occur if Assad is overthrown.
As far as I am concerned a murderous gang is utterly intolerable and must be removed before we can even begin to start seriously thinking how Syria can be rebuilt.
There is no hope in the Assad dictatorship.
The tortures, the disappearances, the killings are how the Assad dictatorship has always been "ruling" (I really mean oppressing) the Syrian people. How can an unpopular regime which has brought so much pain and suffering to the Syrian people bring any hope to the Syrian people?
Some are worried that if the Syrian opposition gains power religious minorities such as Alawites and Christians will be thrown under the bus and will be oppressed by fundamentalist Muslims.
Again there is no hope in the Assad dictatorship.
It has always ruled by fear and terror. The dictatorship has been desperately trying to make religious minorities fear change and simply put up with the dictatorship as most of Syria had been doing since 1982 and before Deraa. I regard it as wrong to ask people to submit to such a cruel and degrading regime for fear of something worse, to protect criminals and child killers like Assad. The Syrian people deserve far more than what the Assad criminal gang can give them. The regime must go.
Modern Day Martyr
Read this story about "Mark" a husband and father of two and a Christian missionary who was murdered for it. The report is kept very vague.
Though we did not work directly with Mark (a colleague sent by an African partner mission), across the Arab World our African colleagues are among our strongest discipleship partners. We thank God for their cultural understanding and contribution to ministry.
Mark was part of a team of two families serving in a Muslim region. Late in August, the team received death threats. The families were evacuated, but Mark stayed for one last meeting with believers before joining them.
Saturday night after the meeting while at home preparing his dinner, Mark was shot. He was discovered the next morning in his home, but he had lost too much blood to survive. At his passing, Mark leaves a young wife and two infant twin daughters.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
ASSIST News Wins Passion for the Persecuted Award from Open Doors
I have heard that ASSIST News has been awarded Passion for the Persecuted award from Open Doors.
ASSIST News Service Receives Top Media Award from Open Doors USA
I would like to say congratulations to the staff of ASSIST News for having their work documenting the persecution of Christians.
ASSIST News Service Receives Top Media Award from Open Doors USA
I would like to say congratulations to the staff of ASSIST News for having their work documenting the persecution of Christians.
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