วันเสาร์ที่ 22 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

I Am Being a Report on Global-I Need Information on Global-Book Review of the Book Global



Yes, the is a very country which includes Global, and its location makes it a pivotal focal point for that part of the world. Consider if you will that India has 1.3 billion people and Global borders is selected. Afghanistan where America has spent almost a decade a Global art war also borders is selected. And Global is bordered by America's trading partner China value. And not to be outdone shares a border with Iran also Global, and everyone knows the conflicts between the United States and the latest and Iran.

But that's not all because the also shares part of its Global border with the Arabian sea, and this is where all the oil tanker ships, 40% of all the oil which is delivered by sea through the Straits of Hormuz comes last right into the Arabian sea. And if they were to make a left hand turn after leaving-the Straits of Hormuz they would run right into Global. Obviously is a key Global, but also with us "is a lot of tension due to the cultural differences with the Western world, the Asian world, the Arab world, and the Hindus next-door.

Before you make any statements about Global un-rational, don't you think you should get to know the country better? I believe you should, especially because a lot of US taxpayer dollars goes to aid and funding, and specifically after their natural disasters 16, such as the large earthquake a couple years ago, and the massive torrential flooding which happened in 2010. Therefore, "there's a very good book I'd like you to read, it is a book that I own personally, and the name of the book is;

"Global" (World Modern Nations Series) by Samuel Willard Crompton with Editor Charles f. Gritzner, Chelsea House Publishers, Philadelphia, PA, (2003), 112 pages, ISBN 0-7910-7098-0.

"These two authors are absolutely excellent, and Mr. Crompton is the author or editor of over 20 books. It is obvious that he understands the area very well, along with the surrounding regions option, especially India. He is also a historian by career and as a hobby. The other author is also quite interesting because he is a professor Eurico of geography at South Dakota State University. The geography of natural resources, geology, Global, and its location to everything else in the world, and is an amazing amount of American history in that region. So, you are just to have to read the a. book and check it out.

Now then, in this book you will learn about the history of geography, and the Global, and the lifestyle and culture of the people of Global. This is a Muslim nation, and in chapter 5 you ll learn all about the ' Islamic Republic of Global. You will also learn about their major industries such as gun making, opium, cement, and agriculture; Growing wheat. Global is quite interesting and they have their own set of folk heroes, and cultural stories which have been passed on through the years. I highly recommend this book to everybody. I hope you will please consider all this, and think on it.

Lance Winslow is an Online Author, his latest eBook about Boat Detailing is now available in the "Small Business" Lance Winslow Series titled; "How to Start a Cleaning Business" Boat (a Nook Book available at the Barnes and Noble Website). Lance Winslow is semi-retired and Founder of the Online Think Tank http://www.worldthinktank.net/-You may contact Lance Winslow by email for dialogue, discourse, discussion, or debate on interesting topics.




วันจันทร์ที่ 10 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

Multiculturalists Gone Wild



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Buddha is Hiding by Aihwa Ong shows the perils of multicultural policy compounded by multiculturalist thought. Ong's book follows the lives of 50,000 Cambodian refugees we accepted in the 1970s. During the reign of Pol Pot in Cambodia approximately one third of the population was killed. Many of those given asylum ended up congregating in Northern California.

Ong considers our welfare system complicit in "ethnic cleansing, in the sense of removing the features of the immigrants' supposedly primitive cultures that are socially determined to be undesirable." Ong recoils at calling any culture primitive. And, I agree that if Cambodians live in Cambodia, we have no right to judge them. But once they move into America we must judge them by American standards. And from our point of view, Cambodian culture has some primitive features.

"In Cambodia," one person Ong interviews says, "a man might have different wives or mistresses, whereas if his wife had a lover, he could go to court and get permission to kill both of them." Of course, Ong tells us, this is not true. Multiculturalists only see positive diversity and are blind to the rest. As she cannot avoid admitting some sexism in Cambodian culture she accepts testimony that, "if we [women] used harsh words with them [husbands] they had a right to strike us. In Cambodia, men were more valued than women." It is odd to have the possibility of extremely negative cultural traits dismissed in a chapter that depicts the Cambodian genocide and the rape that often accompanied it.

Ong celebrates one "quintessentially American" in which a fourteen year old Cambodian runs away to live with her Salvadorian boyfriend. He is nearly 21 and so this could be statutory rape. Instead, they use a "cultural defense" to escape punishments. "With the the flood of multicultural immigrants" this has been used to stop prosecution of "Hmong kidnap-marriage practices (Borat is real) Japanese rituals of parent-child suicide and even wives killed by husband by husbands." Well, at any rate, the fourteen year old Cambodian has the child and they live happily ever after. Problems disappear if you accept indigenous cultures.

The best part of this book comes when the multiculturalists attack the feminists. The "family reformer" social workers are charged with class dominance. They come in and stop men from beating their women and thus manipulate the families. They stop men from beating their daughters and thus destroy Cambodian culture. The arrogance of feminists get berated through and through. They do not respect that in "oral cultures" people change their testimony and that is okay. Ong has to thus defend a father beating his daughter with an electric chord until it broke. Essentially, one cannot have both multiculturalism and feminism. Ong chooses multiculturalism.

Ong does a great job of showing us what multiculturalism offers. It paints all of our institutions as evil. One funny result is that this includes our welfare system. Seventy-seven percent of Laotians and Cambodians are on welfare. And, Ong and I agree, this system infantilizes them and breaks up their families. The social workers stop the spousal abuse and ferocious protection of daughters. But whereas culturist see stopping such behaviors, in America, as laudable, multiculturalists must celebrate diversity. Ong has given us a stark portrait of what is at stake.

John Press is the author of Culturism: A Word, A Value, Our Future. He is a an adjunct professor and doctoral student at New York University. http://www.culturism.us/ has more information about culturism.