Human Rights
2012: Israel’s Apocalypse
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Some people believe the Mayan calendar predicts a global catastrophe in 2012. This was the premise of the film 2012, which imagined the earth’s temperature rising to the point where much of the planet and its population is destroyed. Israel could face its own apocalypse in 2012 if the political heat continues to rise.
Imagine the following scenario …
Read more of 2012: Israel’s ApocalypseThe Killing Fields of Cambodia: Never Again?
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Today, the capital of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, has a population of about two million, but only thirty years ago the city was a ghost town.
All the people were driven out of the city by the dictator Pol Pot (a student of Mao Tse Tung and Hitler) and his evil Khmer Rouge regime in an attempt to form a communist peasant farming society, which resulted in the death of 25 percent of the country’s population from starvation, overwork and executions.
Read more of The Killing Fields of Cambodia: Never Again?Progress in Pakistan: Building a Sustainable Peace
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With all the talk of drone attacks and terrorist offensives, it’s easy to miss positive developments coming out of Pakistan, particularly in the troubled frontier provinces.
Despite the reports of widespread Taliban sympathies, there is another side to this region—one where people struggle to stay safe, provide for their families, work for human rights, and dream of a return to peace.
Read more of Progress in Pakistan: Building a Sustainable PeaceHaiti and the U.S.: Unimaginable Waste, Unimaginable Want
Ireland’s New Civil Right to be Outraged
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Last July the Republic of Ireland approved a law newly defining the ancient crime of blasphemy to include “publishing or uttering matter that is grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters sacred by any religion, thereby intentionally causing outrage among a substantial number of adherents of that religion.”
The law became effective New Year’s Day.
It will be interesting to compare the progress of this issue with the episode of the cartoons depicting Muhammad in a Danish newspaper a few years ago.
Read more of Ireland’s New Civil Right to be OutragedTop Cuban Blogger Yoani Sanchez Detained, Beaten
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MIAMI HERALD: Famed Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez said Friday she and another blogger were punched and thrown violently into a car by presumed state security agents as they walked to participate in a peaceful march in downtown Havana.
Sánchez, the best-known Cuban blogger on the island and off, said she and bloggers Pardo and Claudia Cadelo and a woman friend were walking to join a “march against violence” organized by several young musicians when they were intercepted by three men in civilian clothes. Cuba’s state security service agents frequently operate out of uniform.
Here’s one reaction:
It shows that the Cuba Michael Moore touts and the left praises is nothing but a vicious police goon state. This is the real Cuba. For a long time everyone wondered how Yoani could get away with the blogging she did without coming under fire from the Castroites, and well, now it looks like she can’t.
I think they’ve struck because Castro can’t stand the truth coming out about his hellhole regime, Yoani’s fame is growing, and Columbia J-School recently offered her an award that the Castroites wouldn’t allow her out of the country to accept. Now these animals won’t stop till they get her.
Read more of Top Cuban Blogger Yoani Sanchez Detained, BeatenVoting on Rights is Wrong: The Real Problem With Maine
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On Tuesday opponents of Maine’s Referendum 1 woke up in shock and anger. Some 52% or 53% of Maine’s voters opted to repeal the state’s new same-sex marriage law.
The issue is this: Maine’s voters should never have had the opportunity to decide this issue.
The U.S. Founding Fathers never drafted a provision for a public vote on any specific policy issue.
Read more of Voting on Rights is Wrong: The Real Problem With MaineOn Herta Müller, Winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Literature
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The winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in literature is a 56-year-old Romanian-born German writer, Herta Müller.
An ethnic German from the town of Nitchidorf (Nitzkydorf), she became a vocal opponent of the Ceausescu regime while in university. Dismissed from her job and effectively barred from publishing, she fled from Romania in 1987 and moved to Berlin, where she remained after the revolution that overthrew Ceausescu two years later.
She has since earned great esteem as a writer in her adopted country, so much so that German journals across the political spectrum have hailed her election.
Read more of On Herta Müller, Winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in LiteratureClay Shirky: How Twitter Can Make History
What do Twitter and other social-networking sites have to do with the current upheaval in Iran?
New-media maven and occasional Britannica blogger Clay Shirky explains in a recent talk at, of all places, the U.S. State Department.
The talk apparently took place before the crisis over the Iranian election broke, but Clay addresses that situation in a subsequent Q & A session.
Read more of Clay Shirky: How Twitter Can Make HistoryChina Pulls the Plug On Social Media; No More Tweeting From the Great Wall
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Breaking News:
Seeking to quiet social media networks before the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre on June 4, China has blocked the population from accessing a surprising range of the Internet’s most popular communication tools.
Currently affected by the ban are: Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, Wordpress, Blogger, Bing (which hasn’t officially even launched), Hotmail and MSN’s Live.com.
Read more of China Pulls the Plug On Social Media; No More Tweeting From the Great Wall