Sunday, April 25, 2010
All the Shah's Men
When the CIA teamed up with the British intelligence, there was no stopping them. Now that religious extremists are in power in Iran and countless lives have been lost to corruption, torture, and nepotism, no one is held accountable. If reading books like All the Shah’s Men are supposed to enlighten us, what is supposed to strengthen us to take action. Is it the amount of evidence of the system failing the people? Is it the number of occurrences around the world? The number of deaths that have occurred? There is plenty of all three, however history does not seem to stir the masses into action, only a continuously decreasing quality of life will, which brings the next question: how bad does it need to get? I am grateful to have found a basis of proof for my existing biases against the western governments and the institutions they sponsor, now I believe more than ever that hypocrisy runs deeps in its veins.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Gazamom.com
There is a picture of Yousuf’s paper, his address city: Gaza, Country: USA. Leila was obviously touched to see that her own child was carrying his real home within, despite his surroundings. I believe that if more people were exposed to this kind of information, that of the suffering of people that are just like us, would bring more compassion, and maybe, maybe some reaction strong enough to bring about change. As long as Palestinians continue to be portrayed as angry Arabs, injustice will continue to be justified and cloaked with a web of lies. This blog made me more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause than I already was as it showed me a humane side of the Palestinian population that I had not, could not find in the current media.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
The Mandate System
The language used to describe the Mandate System by the League of Nations is hilarious. It is Hilarious in its covering up the word colonialism with “mentorship” and “guidance” or even “protection”. The fact that Western countries were supposedly more experienced in matters of international affairs and global trade apparently made them experts of ruling foreign countries as well; how unrealistic! These League of Nations Mandates were destined to fail, as these made up countries could not be lead by an iron fist forever. The idea that the western countries would nurse these foreign countries’ economies back to health and then leave them be once they were stable is synonym to a vampire saying it will leave its victim once it is done sucking its “bad” blood.
Perhaps this is an especially pessimistic analogy; however common knowledge dictates that no nation will exert special effort for the sole benefit of another. In other words, why would England invest so much time and money in Egypt if it were not for money and special interests in exchange? The blatant denial of the economic interest in the Mandate System shows how dishonest international institution decrees are written to sound more philanthropic in nature than they truly are. What the League of Nations was doing in the Middle East is essentially protecting their interest in the region, making sure no non-western or western country got the upper hand, or no powerful alliances were made which would of course, impede on the Western countries’ ability to impose its influence. The way the Western countries divvied up their share of the Middle Eastern wealth in order to remain key decision makers, proves that no international institution or foreign institution knows or intends to do what is best for another country; none.
Genocide
The story of Vahan struck a chord within me because of my personal history. Coming from Rwanda, where Genocide was carried out in just a hundred days and yet claimed the lives of a million people, the painful story of the young Armenian was all too familiar. Fortunately, I was safe during the genocide as I was residing in another country; however Vahan’s story greatly resembles those that are told during the month of April, the month of the Commemoration, where the dead are remembered and the survivors tell their stories. This is a painful process both for the survivor and the audience, as the most inhumane acts were carried out in plain daylight and no one screamed bloody murder. The most painful aspect however is one of denial.
Turkey’s current position on the Armenian genocide is an insult for all those who were driven out of their homes, shot, raped or left to starve. The fact that they claim it was a civil war, or a way to deal with treason does not explain the systematic mistreatment of civilians by organized governmental institutions. Armenians were discriminated against for years before the Genocide was carried out, therefore the Turkish population was used to seeing these human beings as subhuman, their fate was inconsequential. The same goes for the Rwandan Genocide. When people are lead to see another group of people as inferior, it is easier to kill, rape,and enslave that group. It is also a shame that the master minds of this Genocide were shot in cold blood, and did not have to face justice.