Saturday, 31 December 2011

"A Nation Passing Through Psychological Trauma"

On my drive towards my workplace I was very intently listening and humming along Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World,” the lyrics going like this: “I see trees of green, red roses too, I see them blue for me and you, and I think to myself, what a wonderful world.”” I SEE SKIES ARE BLUE, clouds of white, bright blessed days, dark sacred nights, and I think to myself. What a wonderful world!”  Indeed a wonderful world blessed to us by our Creator, The Lord of the Heavens and the Earth. Just then we came to a sudden halt due to a car accident two cars ahead of me, the driver of the car in his mid-twenties accusing another driver who seemed somewhere in his fifties that he was recklessly driving and that the accident happened because of the older gentleman’s negligence. I intently watched and saw them bicker about what to do next, as I looked left and right, I saw drivers of other vehicles(all cars) watching but with deep frowns. I pulled down the window and started enquiring the gentleman in the next car about what had really happened? His answer was: "I don’t know how it happened but I am really concerned about the fact that we all should not stand here, with these pile of cars, its very dangerous, what if there is a suicide bomber standing amidst us? What if there is a grenade attack?" In no time at all several men jumped out from their cars and asked the two affected cars to be pulled away from the road and that we should disperse as soon as possible since these are not safe times. Every face I noticed looked insecure, panic-stricken, timid and terrified, with deep frowns  and an agitated manner. I figured, this is the aftermath of the Bomb scare we face!
Pakistanis as a nation have been encountering a plethora of bomb blasts since the Russian invasion of Afghanistan almost 30 years back. Our Army jawan’s targeted, our security personnel brutally killed, civilians, women and children suffering from these deadly attacks leaving us battered, perforated and bruised on a daily basis now. As if this wasn’t enough to torment the people, the constant price hikes, the fading act of wheat, sugar from the consumer market. The constant, electricity breakdown; list of impact of this on-going crisis.
One obvious and tragic price of this open war is the toll of death and destruction. But there is an additional cost, a psychological cost borne by the survivors of war and socio-economic pressure, and a full understanding of this cost has been too long repressed by a legacy of self-deception and intentional twisting. After peeling away this “legacy of lies” that has perpetuated and glorified warfare there is no escaping the conclusion that combat, and the killing that stays at the heart of combat, is an extraordinarily traumatic and psychologically costly endeavour that profoundly impacts all who participate in it. This psychological cost of such a crisis is most readily observable and measurable at the individual level. At the national level, a country at war can anticipate a small—but statistically significant—increase in the domestic murder rate, probably due to the glorification of violence and the resultant reduction in the level of repression of natural aggressive instincts essential to the existence of civilization.
At the group level, even the most elite unit is usually psychologically destroyed when between 50 and 60% casualties have been inflicted, and the integration of the individual into the group is so strong that this destruction often leads to depression and suicide. However, the nation (if not eliminated by the war) is generally resilient, and the group (if not destroyed) is inevitably disbanded. But the individual who survives combat and bomb blast may well end up paying a profound psychological cost for a lifetime. The increasing impact of these effects on hundreds and thousands of survivors is pervasive, with significant potential to have a profound effect on society at large. A psychiatric casualty is a participant who is no longer able to partake in combat due to mental (as opposed to physical) debilitation. Psychiatric casualties seldom represent a permanent debilitation, and with proper care they can be rotated back into the line. Research has demonstrated that, after combat, psychiatric casualties are strongly predisposed toward the more long-term and more permanently debilitating manifestation of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
The actual casualty can manifest it in many ways, ranging from effective disorders to somatoform disorders, but the treatment for the many manifestations of combat stress involves simply removing the affected from the combat environment. But the problem is that the military does not want to simply return the psychiatric casualties to normal life, it wants to return them to combat these casualties understandably reluctant to do so. The evacuation syndrome is the paradox of combat psychiatry. A nation must care for its psychiatric casualties, civilians who are of no value on the battlefield indeed, their presence in combat can have a negative impact on the morale of other combatants and they can still be used again as valuable seasoned replacements once they have recovered from combat stress. But if combatants begin to realize that within them the insane are being evacuated, the number of psychiatric casualties will increase dramatically.
The civilian victims of war may suffer the greatest psychological harm, for they have not been prepared by the expectation of military training to manage the stress, shock, and fright of violence and loss as soldiers have. The civilian population from the Northern and tribal areas of Pakistan in particular; the IDPs, who were drawn away from their safe surroundings and pushed out deliberately to live in the camp sites and makeshift toilets to use. The children who have lost their parents in this uncalled for war are the real casualties we need to take into consideration. Even if collateral casualties among civilians are few, significant wars universally scare many more people into fleeing from danger if soldiers do not deliberately force them away (as in “ethnic cleansing”); wars typically create up to vast populations of displaced refugees who may live dangerous and desperate lives with uncertain futures.
If this isn’t enough the sleep disorders faced by people affected in this mental trauma are huge. Insomnia or lack of sleep in simple terms is another problem faced by people living in the proximity or war/ bomb blast. The body clock starts ticking and tells the neural links that the surroundings are unsafe for sleep. The results of this are very dangerous to health of the civilians and the soldiers alike. Continued proximity to the war/bomb blast situation combined with an “expectancy” of rapid return to combat, are the principles developed to overcome the paradox of the evacuation syndrome. These principles of proximity and expectancy have proven themselves quite effective since World War I. They permit the psychiatric casualty to get the rest that is the only current cure for his problem, while not giving a message to still healthy comrades that insanity is a ticket away from the madness of the battlefield.
Even with the careful application of the principles of proximity and expectancy the incidence of psychiatric casualties is still enormous. During World War II, 504,000 men were lost from America’s combat forces due to psychiatric collapse—enough to man 50 divisions. The United States suffered this loss despite efforts to weed out those mentally and emotionally unfit for combat by classifying more than 800,000 men 4-F (unfit for military service) due to psychiatric reasons. At one point in World War II, psychiatric casualties were being discharged from the U.S. Army faster than new recruits were being drafted in. Swank and Marchand’s World War II study of US Army combatants on the beaches of Normandy found that after 60 days of continuous combat, 98% of the surviving soldiers had become psychiatric casualties and the remaining 2% were identified as “aggressive psychopathic personalities.” Thus it is not too far from the mark to observe that there is something about continuous, inescapable combat which will drive 98% of all men insane, and the other 2% were crazy when they got there.
Where can anyone begin to detail the consequences of war? Prominent or insurmountable losses compile and historians duly record them. But the “little” tragedies of which personal hells are made; these may so easily be forgotten. Even worse, they may never be fully known, except perhaps by a very few. The impact of war may be terrible. Many may suffer immediate pain, horror, destruction and death. But the legacy of war may just as easily be absences: things which never were, or things which were lost to those who go on afterwards. A contribution never made. A composed state of mind never regained. These “little” things are tremendous things to some human world called a person, yet they are so difficult to really know.
In order to understand war, we must try to appreciate the real effects of war in scales both sweeping and individual — for the sweeping developments come down to the individual, where they are really felt. Only this way can we understand war as humans suffer it. We must not shy away at this basic education demanded by the enthusiasm of fighting future war simply because war disgusts, or because of any other lack of encouragement. Mental anguish during and after warfare should not be underestimated compared to more visible wounds inflicted on other parts of the body which bleed. The invisible wounds to the psyche may actually feel more acute (and are certainly more common), whether resulting from combat it self, living in or near a combat zone, personal connection to a soldier, or simply exposure to war from bomb blasts as the member of a warring population, including intake of propaganda and ideology.
This nation of ours was created to lead as in the times of Khalifa Harun Rashid, or Aaron the Upright as he was popularly recognized, in 763 when he laid down the foundation of the Abbasid’s rule in Baghdad. Exemplary advances were made in those times in Mathematics, Literature, Science, Astronomy, and Medicine. Baghdad was known to be the centre for learning. Eminent names in their professions were brought forward to serve the nation. I am still hopeful as the citizen of this God gifted country. I believe we were created on a special day and for a definite purpose. The philosophy of Allama Iqbal needs to be revisited for I believe the youth of this nation are the future custodians this country has.


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Thursday, 29 December 2011

"Highway is my way"



                             
      
The word Traffic in English is taken from the Arabic word taraffaqa, which means to walk along slowly together. Traffic binds the commuting network all across the world. Most of the road accidents that occur in Pakistan, including fatal ones, are a result of traffic law violations. Even otherwise, if no accident takes place still driving on roads in Pakistan is a job that leaves one in anxiety because most of the drivers are least bothered about observing rules. Traffic in Pakistan seems to get worse by the day. It’s not that the authorities have kept a blind eye towards the menacing issue on the rise. Efforts by the traffic police are commendable to deal with the mammoth flow of vehicles during peak rush hours. On the other hand, it has more to do with the public at large who are oblivious about the rules and regulations put forward by the traffic police.
As responsible citizens of this country it is our foremost duty to abide by the laws, rules and regulations put on us. This is civic sense, which is being practiced by all the citizens of this world in whichever country they reside.
Reckless driving, underage drivers, jam-packed vehicles, ill-trained drivers, lust for earning more money by overloading commuters, out-lived vehicles mostly owned by sets of elite class; flabbiness by those responsible to check the plying buses, coasters, vans, wagons and even cars, non-implementation of traffic rules by the authorities concerned with multiple identical critical aspects like rampant corruption backed by the vile of pecuniary frustration are deemed to be the root causes of almost all the road accidents, which have, in a way, become a routine in our lives.
A majority of the traffic law violators are the commercial drivers. All are mostly uneducated and have no idea about traffic rules and regulations. Even educated lot, for some reasons, ignore the traffic rules by taking wrong turns, going on the wrong side and in opposite direction on double roads, driving in wrong lanes, breaking signals, usurping rights of pedestrians, bicycle and motorcycle riders. The worst breaking of rules happens at night when the traffic signals aren’t operating and there are no wardens on duty.

 
Juvenile drivers too are visible on the roads in Pakistan with notable offences. Single wheeling youngsters on motorbikes flaunting their abilities have injured many who come in their way. In other instances they take out their parent’s vehicles to drive on their own, with no license they  are visibly over speeding around the city limits with confidence that surpasses a mountain! Such underage offenders should be reprimanded, their parents put through penalty, or their car impounded. They are not only a hazard to themselves but also for those who come into direct contact with their reckless driving abilities. They blatantly move around as if they are above the clutches of law. At home, parents should take strict notice of prohibiting their juveniles from driving. A responsible action needs to be administered by the parents in this respect.

Getting driving license in the country is said to be done on the basis of a test taken by the licensing authority but unfortunately citizens usually require no driving skills or knowledge of traffic rules rather it requires acquaintance with the traffic police officials and the guts and audacity to bribe.
A media report suggests that traffic rules violation and lack of adequate road safety standards in the country claimed 45,000 lives in 90,000 road accidents during the last nine years causing a loss of approximately Rs.5 million annually. Every year 1.7 million people die in road mishaps around the world. About 70 per cent deaths occur in the developing countries, out of which 65 per cent involve pedestrians, 35 per cent of them children. Besides, over 10 million people are maimed or gravely injured each year, the report suggests.
 
A third world country like Pakistan is facing the world’s ninth biggest life-threatening problem, traffic accidents. About 87 percent accidents happened due to the negligence of drivers that were over-speeding, overloading, wrong overtaking and driving under the influence of alcohol or other intoxicants.
There are several other traffic rule violations & factors which are a cause of road accidents in the country. Most vehicles use blazing headlights during the night which dazzle the driver coming from the opposite direction and this sometimes result in a head-on collision. 
Zebra crossing is ignored by some drivers. They do not reduce the speed when they are close to it. People are seen using mobile phones while driving with the careless note to the public around which also cause accidents.

Speed breakers put on major traffic areas have also proved to be useful in bringing down speed of motorists and other vehicles. Hence: Ensuring safety for the citizens commuting on foot or other less protected modes of transport. 
Today we have better technology in braking systems and at least 20 times more traffic on roads than decades ago when these traffic rules were framed.

In comparison to other countries, the rules of the road are codified, setting out the legal requirements and punishments for breaking them. Lets see how::

In the United Kingdom, for instance the rules are set out in the Highway Code, which includes obligations but also advice on how to drive sensibly and safely for the citizens.
In the United States, traffic laws are regulated by the states and municipalities through their respective traffic codes. Most of these are based at least in part on the Uniform Vehicle Code, but there are variations from state to state. In states such as Florida, traffic law and criminal law are separate; therefore, unless someone flees a scene of an accident, commits vehicular homicide or manslaughter, they are only guilty of a minor traffic offense. In Australia, traveling in any lane other than the "slow" lane with a speed limit at or above 80 km/h (50 mph) is an offence.

In more sophisticated systems such as large cities, this concept is further extended: some streets are marked as being one-way, and on those streets all traffic must flow in only one direction, but pedestrians on the sidewalks are generally not limited to one-way movement. A driver wishing to reach a destination he already passed must use other streets in order to return. Usage of one-way streets, despite the inconveniences it can bring to individual drivers, can greatly improve traffic flow since they usually allow traffic to move faster and tend to simplify intersections.
During the week days in most major cities, traffic congestion reaches great intensity at predictable times of the day due to the large number of vehicles using the road at the same time. This phenomenon is called rush hour or the peak hour, although the period of high traffic intensity often exceeds one hour. To override the rush hour for example, in São Paulo, Manila and in Mexico City, each vehicle has a specific day of the week in which it is forbidden from traveling on the roads during rush hour. The day for each vehicle is taken from the license plate number, and this rule is enforced by traffic police and also by hundreds of strategically positioned traffic cameras backed by computerized image-recognition systems that issue tickets to offending drivers.
If one analyses in Pakistan, it is very clear that proper Highway Code rules are applied on the Motorway, where drivers abide Highway code and the Motorway police stays vigilant in apprehending the offenders. A proper speed limit for LTV and HTV is observed, where changing lanes with indicators for left and right are used and caution is practiced by the drivers. Wearing a seat belt is mandatory; followed by whosoever is travelling on this route. If complete abiding of rules and regulations are practiced by motorists everyday on the Motorway, why not in the inter city routes?

In Pakistan the citizens of this country can help improve with collateral effort. Authorities alone cannot function correctly unless we start practicing responsible behavior. Correction always starts at home on individual level; abiding of rules and regulations not only inculcates a reliable and an accountable attitude but it also improves the quality of life for people around us. Think about it.





                                                  
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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

The Woman of Pakistan

Samina Baig, the first Pakistani female Mountaineer


        I salute you, for you are an inspiration
            A country: that put you in gradation
            For them, let your brilliance shine through
            Your wisdom increased as you grew

            
Resilience in you is your donation
            For a society that uses condemnation
            All your achievements leave them blue
            They often question: How could it be you?

            
Being steadfast you show determination
            Your enthusiasm packed in acclamation
            They seem to have a second hand view
            Of your success, this makes a queue

             
For the young girls who follow in admiration
             A will to stand up and prove their qualification
             They stop your progress, you already knew
             Your chains stretch a little, understand a few

            
A daughter is a mother’s proud possession
                Whereas a father’s joyous adoration
             What is the difference of importance so undue?
              For a girl, the mutuality of parentage eschew

             
Prove them, you have a solid foundation
            Their faults & catastrophe’s aren’t your negation
                  Pack codes and tribal laws do not glue
               The triumphs of a female & her debut

           
Into this world of equality which is God’s formation
           Woman of Pakistan, in standing up is your salvation
               The future and destiny that our Lord drew
               
Has your share in it when you know it is true!

(This poem is dedicated to Samina Baig, the first Pakistani female Mountaineer to climb any unclimbed peak in the Karakorum Range. Extreme Adventure – Chaskin Sar Expedition, 2010) and the rest of the Pakistani Women who are proving that they CAN and WILL.
 

"Team Pakistan Creates Tsunami"


By Ayesha Zee Khan

                                                                                           


The noon of December 25th 2011 brought the PTI Tsunami to Karachi: The atmosphere electric, the stage humongous, the people jubilant with a Captain who carried the spirit of a true warrior there to win the Match for his Team Pakistan. What a show of resilience, unity, courage, commitment and love for the country! Karachi became exultant coming together with Captain and his team who vouched for a peaceful Karachi. After months and years of violence, kidnapping, target killing and extortion in the city, people became alive and kicking with this congregation of an Ocean of people celebrating with their families the spirit of patriotism and unity beneath the umbrella of Mr. Jinnah’s Mausoleum. Every Pakistani watching on the television or witnessing it first hand at the venue had one common thought: Pakistan!  What an amalgamated mentation!

The highest point to this Rally was the playing and singing of the National Anthem, when the nation sang as one. The charged up people chanted in favor of Pakistan, their beloved country whom they are witnessing before their eyes being plundered, raped and beaten up! The Anthem left goose pimples on all those who were singing it and all those who were witnessing on the television via live broadcast. A nation of nearly 190 million people glued to one spectacle: A breath-taking history in the making, in short, the Rally Rocked!

Tsunami, for many Imran Khan’s opponents may be a humongous wave of water that sweeps away humanity and its belongings, since they only consult the English dictionary. Metaphorically, Tsunami here reflects the sweeping away of Nepotism, Bribery, Corruption, lies, deceit, plunder, aristocracy wrongly termed as Democracy in the country, and incompetence: With a harsh force that it gets flushed out in the Arabian Sea!                                           

Powerful addresses made by Brig (Retd) Samson Simon Sharaf, Fauzia Kasuri, Jahangir Tareen, Justice (Retd) Waji, Dr. Yasmeen Rashid, rendition of Naat by Ibrar-ul-Haq, Azam Khan Swati, Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri, Qasim Khan Suri, Ahsan Rasheed, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Makhdoom Jawed Hashmi and Imran Khan left an impact on the crowd present at the venue, and on the ones intently watching from the comfort of their homes. Amidst all this IK informed that Sardar Asif Ahmad Ali called to join PTI soon.

The opposing parties should ask this question to themselves: What has brought this Tsunami? The answer lies in the following replies that the have-nots give: The lack of Jobs, Opportunities, Electricity, Gas, Education, Health Facilities, Drones, bomb blasts, killings, US's role in the matters of Pakistan and the falling apart of Railways etc, contributed to a change in the mindset of the people.

People who joined PTI in the past one month were termed as: “seasonal opportunists” by contradicts of IK. Chairs that were taken away at the end of the Rally at Kasur were made fun of by many commentators. PPP’s Faisal Raza Abidi went to the extent of saying on a television Channel, “If Imran Khan will not change his ways the “Awaam” will take off his clothes too which he got through begging.” Such a remark from a senior politician of PPP was highly arrogant, and in that haughtiness he forgot he behaved like the Pharaoh (Firon) of Egypt who too was Egoistic in front of God at one time. Whatever IK got for the Shaukat Khanum Cancer Hospital as Charity or Zakat cannot be termed begging, for if you bring the former to the level of the latter you refute the commands of Allah which are thoroughly instructed in the Quran. For Zakat is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, it has been mentioned along with the daily prayers (Salah or Namaz) over seventy times in the Quran. Faisal Raza Abidi should recite “Astaghfar” on his behalf for such a chesty observation.
If lifting the chairs was a crime people noticed on the television screens, talked gravely about PTI’s workers as “Chair Lifters” why don’t the ones who oppose this party talk about the gravity of misfortune people of Pakistan are suffering from? Those chairs taken could be sold at Rs.300/500 at least, the laminated boards with their wood taken away can be used to burn for cooking at homes of those have-nots who have no electricity and gas. The Primary fault of this ruling Government is that of plunder, why isn’t that visible?

IK talked about bringing a change amidst the mayhem created in the country. He referred to ridding the country of the occult of Feudalism. He talked about animal rights; a person who thinks of animals is a great humanitarian at the core of his heart. He indicated to making a strong team from his party that will be made on merit with no recommendations attached. Bring forward the Education Policy, Tax reforms that will bring Pakistan to self reliance, a forceful civil service appointed on merit, Police clear of Political Interference. Agricultural reforms (giving a reference to the Indian Punjab, with free seed, fertilizer and subsidized electricity to the farmers), labor reforms: giving a raise to the 50% downtrodden of this country. Wave off Corruption and attract foreign investors, encourage Pakistani Diaspora to vest in Pakistan with confidence.

Why are the so-called democratic forces insecure of all this? How can Pakistan build and strengthen democratic institutions that provide good governance to solve its international and domestic problems? Is it the fault of Pakistan’s military or the poor performance of civilian governments that have failed to solve its major problems? Have the poor performance politicians ever thought about human development and industrialization in the country? Have they ever invested anything in the fields of research and science? Will the contradictors of PTI ever solve: The lack of Intra-Party Elections?  There are no elections in the political parties that are in coalition today. The Founder of the party becomes the Prime Minister for life and then his/her relatives take the queue e.g. Nawaz Sharif, Benazir Bhutto, and the rest in line are Asfandyar Wali, Pervez Elahi etc. Will they ponder over all this? And if they will, then when will they take action?




Tuesday, 27 December 2011

"Our Mr President"

When our Mr. President of this poor nation
     Came to the country via favored migration
     He saw the citizens in poverty and distress
     No electricity, food and Industrial progress

     Intellectually sound sir, you loved the new location
     Promised people, you understood their situation
     The masses welcomed you & gave their bless
     They understood little, it was your game of chess

     With price hikes, bombs, utility bills & Inflation
     The citizens moved towards a dark starvation
     Difficult for them to make ends meet, they press
     They marvel at your lavish life & the way you dress

     Foreign trips, deals, political maneuvers & flirtation
     Achieve no good for the country’s foundation
     Your popularity graph fell drastically I must confess
     Little you understand the gravity of this mess

     You await the next rules and dictation
     Seat secured & power stays in Coronation
     Introducing ethnicity to land leaves much to guess
     The division of people that you so express

    Oh, Men & Women if you want celebration
    Stop being slaves to charity and donation
    Your numbers are high & hard work you possess
    Walk towards self reliance & deeply assess

    Do you want the vultures to do your eradication?
    Eat your hearts out and incarceration?
    Get up and fight for your rights to repossess
   Your lost dignity and livelihood that they dispossess

   Join hands to throw away these bigots vocation
   They use the provincial and ethnic amputation
   Make this country a fort of your acquiesce
   Get over this convalesce

   Why are you thrown in this miserable degradation?
   When the Lord blessed you with perfect combination
   Show the world & our sold out Noblesse
   No force in this world can ever repress

   The human will power, labor & motivation
   Keep in mind, Jinnah’s most valued quotation
   Faith, Unity, Discipline will always fetch success
   No matter how much the corrupt wrongly profess

   Leaders are chosen by people for correct legislation
   If they fail; they have proved their ugly mutation
   Evil shall perish, good shall always harness
   The infrastructure & society: in God’s Calmness.


Note: 
This poem is from my book; "Building Bridges", it is not written on any entity rather it is against the system that we live in.


Copyright ©2011-2050 Ayesha Zee Khan. Reproduction: Poetry/articles/stories strictly prohibited.. Watermark template. Template images bymicheldenijs. Powered by Blogger.

Fruits, Vegetables And Untruths



My writer friend Tahir Gul Hasan's rebuttal concerns itself with the following article (titled, ‘Islamic cleric bans women from touching cucumbers, bananas for sexual resemblance’), whose excerpts I am presenting here:

“An Islamic cleric residing in Europe said that women should not be close to bananas or cucumbers, in order to avoid any ‘sexual thoughts’. The unnamed sheikh, said that ‘if women wish to eat these food items, a third party, preferably a male related to them such as their a father or husband, should cut the items into small pieces and serve.’

He said that ‘these fruits and vegetables resemble the male penis and hence could arouse women or make them think of sex’ and added carrots and zucchini to the list of ‘forbidden foods for women’. When asked how to control women when they are out shopping for groceries and if holding these items at the market would be bad for them, the cleric answered saying ‘this matter is between them and God.’


Who is behind it?                                                                                      

People these days will believe anything and everything that the mass media prints or beams at them. Most people did not find the time to research or ponder over a matter that came to light recently on the internet and which concerned Muslim identity. Thus ran an article’s headline: Islamic cleric bans women from touching bananas, cucumbers for sexual resemblance.

First, this impious cleric is not a Muslim. Second, some female relative within his own unbelieving family might have ‘touched’ the said items in ways that one need not mention in this article. Third, believing Muslim women need not be compared with unbelieving women who, without the fear of God in their hearts, will readily revel in such perversions if the right price is paid.

Since God and the Prophets never forbade believers from touching fruits such as cucumbers and bananas or odd looking vegetables, who is this unheard of ‘Islamic cleric’ to prevent one from doing so?

Programmers of mass ‘controlled’ media

The global media is controlled by a half a dozen conglomerates whose sole job is to mow down true public opinion and replace it with perversion and untruths. Journalists, the channels, websites, the talk-show hosts, all need that elusive ‘something’ to rocket their ratings skywards, and they will devour any lie, spin any fabric and do whatever it takes to serve the media moguls. Every little useless bit is featured as ‘headline’ or ‘breaking news’, trivia triggers worthless debates, and panels of covert spin-doctors work overtime to do the bidding of their invisible pay-masters who know how to ‘programme’ our thought patterns. One only has to stop and think: who is against Muslims in this global war of error (G-WOE)?                                                           
 
The answer is painfully obvious but even more painful is the fact that, leave alone Christians, even decent Muslims fall into deceptive Zionist traps. 


Apology

While investigating the accusation against Muslim women, I came across the apologetic editorial, whose excerpts are as follows:

The “Islamic cleric bans women from touching cucumbers, bananas for sexual resemblance,” article should not have run when it did; it should not have been run at all. We should not have published about an ‘unnamed sheikh’ in an unnamed European country unless we were able to garner more information on the issue, both on the sheikh himself and the news website the information was gathered from, independently.


You can find the above COMPLETE article on the following link:

http://writersblocktgh.blogspot.com/2011/12/fruits-vegetables-and-untruths.html