wow...nice page....as a historian i have always wanted to get much of discussed topics of ganthis issues and i think this is the right place.thanks Dr. yogendra for your friend request..
on my way to Yangon, but would like to send result of my years of study of Gandhi and King - a letter to my mentor Noam Chomsky of MIT:
Please comment: until March I am your appreciative jay janson
WHY King Had to be Silenced and Not My Prof. Noam or Any Chomsky Students
Dear Prof. Noam,
watching videos of my dear professor's lectures.
Since my enlightenment, what i notice even more than the erudition and charming and warm presentation is a firm stamp of amiable helplessness, ‘because that’s the way things are’ acclimated acceptance and a sense of appreciation for being knowledgeable about the crimes against humanitythat engulfs others more than us.
No fury or determination aroused, and Prof. Noam's scientific presentation and his 'What can one expect but these causes effected and these effects caused,' Buddha demeanor seems to project the idea that‘they’ have usperiod.
King was too dangerous to let stay alive and talking, because he, in wrathful anger ,accused rightfullyUS, WEas beinghorribly responsiblefor the crimes against humanity in the name of maintaining the predatory investments of our wealthy. And he included himself, anguishing over his previous silence that he called "betrayal."
Prof. Chomsky's educating thrust against aTHEYandTHEM, of a nicely delineated corporate conspiracy has been no threat toTHEM.
King's focused his anti-imperialism on OUR mass-murdering of millions and OUR plundering the vulnerable for OUR own blind benefit and like any good preacher cried out for US We to stop doing this.
Prof. Noam's excellent exposing corporations and government.
But King dismissed the government as "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world" and SPOKE toUS WEbeing responsible for being fully capable of making these crimes against humanity unacceptable and inoperable thru non participation non support and conscientious objection. Once King was silenced, almost all Americans went back to pointing his or her finger away from themselves.
We come away from rereading Beyond Vietnam - a Time to Break Silence admonished, ashamed, angry with ourselves and prone toDOsomething.
I come away from my teacher's lecture, beautifully informed, disheartened, frustrated as powerless to stop whatTHEYare doing toUS, but with a compensating feeling of knowing just how we are being played.
Now we have MP of UK Parliament George Galloway, Ex Prime Minister Mohamad Mahathir in Malaysia, Archbishop Desmond Tutu in South Africa and a growing number of writers and prominent people in Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Mexico and other Latin American nations, President Ahmadinejad in Iran, and Julian Assange openly calling for prosecution of US crimes against humanity.
Antiwar movement goes on exposing, clarifying, complaining and protesting each new US crime against humanity as innocents, steadfastly avoiding calling for the investigation and prosecution of US crimes against humanity with in depth indictments.
No intention to save one single life that will be taken in Africa or Middle East. ‘the US Antiwar movement has no clothes.’
charles edward
wow...nice page....as a historian i have always wanted to get much of discussed topics of ganthis issues and i think this is the right place.thanks Dr. yogendra for your friend request..
Jan 23, 2013
jay janson
Thanking Dharmpal Singh
on my way to Yangon, but would like to send result of my years of study of Gandhi and King - a letter to my mentor Noam Chomsky of MIT:
Please comment: until March I am your appreciative jay janson
WHY King Had to be Silenced and Not My Prof. Noam or Any Chomsky Students
Dear Prof. Noam,
watching videos of my dear professor's lectures.
Since my enlightenment, what i notice even more than the erudition and charming and warm presentation is a firm stamp of amiable helplessness, ‘because that’s the way things are’ acclimated acceptance and a sense of appreciation for being knowledgeable about the crimes against humanity that engulfs others more than us.
No fury or determination aroused, and Prof. Noam's scientific presentation and his 'What can one expect but these causes effected and these effects caused,' Buddha demeanor seems to project the idea that ‘they’ have us period.
King was too dangerous to let stay alive and talking, because he, in wrathful anger ,accused rightfully US, WE as being horribly responsible for the crimes against humanity in the name of maintaining the predatory investments of our wealthy. And he included himself, anguishing over his previous silence that he called "betrayal."
Prof. Chomsky's educating thrust against a THEY and THEM, of a nicely delineated corporate conspiracy has been no threat to THEM.
King's focused his anti-imperialism on OUR mass-murdering of millions and OUR plundering the vulnerable for OUR own blind benefit and like any good preacher cried out for US We to stop doing this.
Prof. Noam's excellent exposing corporations and government.
But King dismissed the government as "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world" and SPOKE to US WE being responsible for being fully capable of making these crimes against humanity unacceptable and inoperable thru non participation non support and conscientious objection. Once King was silenced, almost all Americans went back to pointing his or her finger away from themselves.
We come away from rereading Beyond Vietnam - a Time to Break Silence admonished, ashamed, angry with ourselves and prone to DO something.
I come away from my teacher's lecture, beautifully informed, disheartened, frustrated as powerless to stop what THEY are doing to US, but with a compensating feeling of knowing just how we are being played.
Now we have MP of UK Parliament George Galloway, Ex Prime Minister Mohamad Mahathir in Malaysia, Archbishop Desmond Tutu in South Africa and a growing number of writers and prominent people in Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Mexico and other Latin American nations, President Ahmadinejad in Iran, and Julian Assange openly calling for prosecution of US crimes against humanity.
Antiwar movement goes on exposing, clarifying, complaining and protesting each new US crime against humanity as innocents, steadfastly avoiding calling for the investigation and prosecution of US crimes against humanity with in depth indictments.
No intention to save one single life that will be taken in Africa or Middle East. ‘the US Antiwar movement has no clothes.’
Feb 10, 2013
DR. RAM SHARMA
pl. send your magazine
dr. ram sharma
c-26, shradhapuri phase2
kankerkhera , meerut , up-250001
Oct 10, 2013