Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, January 18, 2016

This story of a Sri Lankan drummer boy will tug at your heartstrings

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DRUMMER ANUSHKA WITH HIS MAKESHIFT KIT CREDIT: GAYAN NISHANTHA/FACEBOOK
Drummer Anushka with his makeshift kit
Good vibrations: Vintage Trouble, with Richard Danielson on drums, performing at the O2 Forum, in London, last November Anushka with his new drum kit
Good vibrations: Vintage Trouble, with Richard Danielson on drums, performing at the O2 Forum, in London, last November  CREDIT: REDFERNS-Different beat: Anushka with his new drum kit

    17 JANUARY 2016

The TelegraphWhen an LA rocker saw a video of a barefoot boy playing drums made of plastic bottles and tin cans, he vowed to find him...

Last February, a YouTube video touched the hearts of thousands. It showed a young boy, barefoot in blue shorts, playing drums outside a basic brick hut in a clearly hot, but unknown, country.
His kit was obviously home-made, constructed from old tin cans, plastic bottles and scaffolding poles, with random scraps of wood and sticks for pedals. Yet what made the clip so memorable wasn’t so much the makeshift equipment, but the huge passion and talent of the child, whose name, age and background were all a mystery.


kohomada?
Posted by Gayan Nishantha on Sunday, February 2, 2014
 DRUMMER ANUSHKA WITH HIS MAKESHIFT KIT CREDIT: GAYAN NISHANTHA/FACEBOOK

The post went viral, quickly attracting more than 30,000 views. Soon it was spotted by Richard Danielson, drummer with the LA-based rock band Vintage Trouble, who promised to give the boy a professional Gretsch Catalina drum kit worth £600, if only he could be found.
                        Full Story>>>

Can Buddhism Save the World?

hongyi
Most Buddhist traditions and lineages cultivate mindfulness—attending to our own impermanence, nature of our suffering, the emptiness of the “I” as well as attending to what is going on in the world. However, it does seem that the cultivation of “aspirational compassion or loving-kindness” could remain just that, an aspiration, inner experience that softens and opens our hearts to the anguish of the world, but leaves it at that.


by Michael Welton

( January 18, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) The topic of socially engaged Buddhism is complex and very important to the future of the dharma in our troubled, fast-moving and intensely competitive global world. Buddhist scholar Stephen Batchelor says that phrase “socially engaged Buddhism” was coined in the 1930s when some monks opposed France’s occupation in Viet Nam.

In his lucid historical study, The Awakening of the West: the encounter of Buddhism and Western culture (1994), he tells the story of Thich Quang Du who, while sitting in meditative calm repose on a street in Saigon, poured gas over his body and torched himself on June 1, 1963.

Images of monks aflame—“seated like a Buddha engulfed by fire in a country ravaged by war sears itself into the Western mind” (p. 353)—aroused incomprehension among those who imagined Buddhists as totally other-worldly.

But the practice of “engaged Buddhism” could really be said to begin with the Buddha himself. The Buddha didn’t remain silently seated under the Bodhi tree, keeping his awakening to himself, hidden in his soul’s depths. Rather, he went out into the world, and the dharmabegan to engage with its culture and society of 2500 years ago.

He created the sangha, a kind of community of resistance to the existing caste and hierarchical system. In itself, it was a model of community and community development. The Buddha also taught about worldly affairs. Yet we must recognize that the Buddha taught not only perennial truths about the human condition and the way to happiness. He also articulated his understanding of human suffering (dukkha) in the Iron Age world where society was viewed essentially as a collection of individuals (Stephen Batchelor, After Buddhism: rethinking the dharma for a secular age [2015], pp. 1-28).

Some Buddhist scholars argue that the socially engaged Buddhist movement is really the creation of modernity. That is, the central preoccupation of Buddhist Asian civilizations has not been the “saving of the world.”

As the dharma traveled from the East into the West, western teachers and practitioners had to speak the dharma into highly complex capitalist social formations, societies of immense material abundance and social and political complexity.                  Full Story>>>

Gautama Buddha For Sale


Colombo Telegraph
By V. Kanthaiya –January 18, 2016
You don’t need to go to Kovil and worship the god at all. What the god wants from you is very simple. Be a good person in your life. That’s enough. If you be evil, what’s the point in worshiping the god?” – Told to to V. Kanthaiya by his mother while he was a kid, when he asked why he should go to Kovil and worship the god.
I ask you a question. Do we really need a religion to interact with the God?
monks_fighting colombo telegraphTo answer this, I would like to define the parameters. Who/What is the god? The concept god is that he/she/it is the grand designer and the operator of the universe and every element in it and he/she/it is indefinite and beyond all boundaries.
What is a religion? Well, for that we need to first familiarize ourselves with the basic concepts of business and marketing.
We have several needs. One such is called spiritual need (not liquor). From the day we started to think, we are trying to find the answer why we exist at all. The concept of God came to fill this need. Religions are intermediaries between the common man and the almighty god. They are a set of institutions who act as the sole agents of God, each just creating different brands, out of the homogeneous product. This can simply be explained through the smart phone operating system market.
Google releases its nexus phones with its ‘pure’ android version, where as other players such as Samsung, LG, Sony, HTC and one plus one add their own flavor to the android OS, in terms of user interface and release under their own brand. This is what every religion practically does. They use the so called messengers, Jesus, Mohamad and some other rituals to prove that their product is superior to their competitor.
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Will the Bodu Bala Sena align with the Good Governance?

Will the Bodu Bala Sena align with the Good Governance?

Jan 18, 2016
The Bodu Bala Sena which was a close ally of the former Rajapaksa regime is trying to align with the current Good Governance, news reaching us confirms. Confirmed source informed Lanka News Web at this moment the secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena Rajakeeya pundit Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara, the chief executive orator Dilantha Withanage and a group of members is having a stealthy discussion at the president’s secretariat.

The president has organized this meeting for the request made by the Bodu Bala Sena.

The sources also confirmed the meeting was convened to raise awareness to the president about the rising Muslim extremism in Sri Lanka and in the south Asia. Bodu Bala Sena group is also supposed to meet the Indian high commission officials regarding this
Sexual harassment: Female MPs can complain to Speaker 

2016-01-19
Speaker Karu Jayasuriya has requested female Parliamentarians to inform him if they are subjected to any kind of sexual or other harassment, the Speaker’s office said yesterday.

It said that the Speaker would not hesitate to take tough action against those individuals, found guilty in this regard irrespective of the party or the positions they hold.

However, there were no complaints to the Speaker or any other Parliament officials about this as yet. The statement also said that the Speaker would look into the matter further by himself. (Chamara Sampath) - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/103327/sexual-harassment-female-mps-can-complain-to-speaker#sthash.13yAxMQ7.dpuf

Paris terror attacks: man arrested in Morocco

A Belgian national said to be linked to the terrorists who killed 130 people in Paris is arrested in Morocco.
News
Channel 4 NewsMONDAY 18 JANUARY 2016
The Moroccan government said the man was of Moroccan origin and had fought in Syria with al-Nusra before joining the Islamic State group, which has claimed responsibility for the bombings and shootings in the French capital.
It gave the suspect's initials in Arabic, which can be translated as JA or GA.
He was arrested on Friday in the city of Mohammedia and, according to Morocco, travelled to Syria with one of the Saint Denis suicide bombers.
Abdelhamid Abaaoud, a 28-year-old Belgian thought to have been the ringleader of the November attacks, was killed with other suspects when police raided a house in the Saint Denis suburb of Paris shortly after the shootings.
Morocco provided the tip-off that enabled French police to locate Abaaoud.
It has been holding Abaaoud's brother Yassine since October, while an arrest warrant has been issued for Salah Abdeslam, who is suspected of taking part in the attacks and is on the run.
The co-ordinated attacks on 13 November targeted central Paris and Saint Denis. Of the 130 people killed, 89 were watching a band at the Bataclan concert hall.
Three suicide bombers also struck near the Stade de France sports stadium in Saint Denis, where the French and German football teams were playing in a friendly. The three bombers and a bystander were killed.
Others were killed when gunmen opened fire at cafes and restaurants in central Paris.

With one eye on Moscow, Europe presses Ukraine on reforms


Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko attends a joint news conference with European Council President Donald Tusk and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (unseen) at the EU Council in Brussels, Belgium, December 16, 2015. REUTERS/Francois LenoirReuters




BY ROBIN EMMOTT-Tue Jan 19, 2016

The European Union pressed Ukraine authorities on Monday to overcome political feuding and implement promised reforms as it looks to shore up the country's democratic and economic credentials.

Having so far failed to end the Russian-backed war in eastern Ukraine, Kiev's western supporters are now seeking to shift the focus onto modernisation, concerned that the West's huge political investment in Ukraine could go to waste.

"We understand the pressures the Ukrainian government is under internally," said Britain's Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond at a meeting of EU foreign ministers. "But we continually remind them of their obligations under Minsk," Hammond told reporters, referring to the peace deal signed in February last year in the Belarusian capital.

Reforms tied to the Minsk accord, which was extended beyond its end-2015 deadline, would give Kiev more credibility, Hammond said.

That included changing Ukraine's constitution to grant special status to the Donbass industrial regions of eastern Ukraine now under rebel control.

Russia denies it has provided weapons to the rebels or that it has troops engaged in the conflict that has killed more than 8,000 people since it broke out April 2014, following Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula.

Rebels and the Ukrainians complain of violations of the ceasefire negotiated as part of the Minsk deal. Both say heavy artillery, meant to have been withdrawn, is still being used.

Seeking to cement Ukraine's historic shift away from Russia, senior U.S. and EU officials are trying to help Ukraine's leadership modernise the former Soviet state, where the shadow economy accounts more than half of output by some estimates.

In a note seen by Reuters on Monday, nine EU countries including Germany and Britain said Europe needed to show even more support for Ukraine, as well as calling for reforms.

While political rifts and the danger of the ruling Ukrainian coalition breaking up is less of an imminent threat since the government passed a 2016 draft budget in late December, other difficult reforms outside of the Minsk accord, ranging from the tax code to the judiciary, are pending.

"There are deficits in the justice system, especially in the fight against corruption," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told a news conference. "That has to be corrected as soon as possible ... Ukraine has to become more attractive for foreign investors."

Ukraine has already received almost $10 billion in 2015 from the International Monetary Fund and other international lenders to shore up its finances, crippled by the conflict and years of mismanagement and corruption.

(Additional reporting by Tom Korkemeier; editing by John Stonestreet)

UN whistleblower who exposed sexual abuse by peacekeepers is exonerated

Anders Kompass ‘relieved but sad’ after being cleared of wrongdoing for revealing abuse in Central African Republic
Anders Kompass was suspended by the UN for passing documents to the French authorities after becoming frustrated at the UN’s lack of action in investigating abuse by peacekeepers. Photograph: Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images
Anders Kompass


-Monday 18 January 2016
The UN whistleblower who exposed the sexual abuse of children by peacekeepers in Central African Republic has been completely exonerated after an internal investigation.
Anders Kompass, the director of field operations for the office of the high commissioner for human rights in Geneva, was suspended and faced dismissal after he passed confidential documents detailing the abuse of children by French troops in CAR to the authorities in Paris because of the UN’s failure to stop the exploitation.
The scandal was first reported by the Guardian in April last year, with the child sex allegations and the treatment of Kompass gaining worldwide attention. The UN repeatedly condemned his actions, insisting that he had breached protocols by sharing a secret internal document.
For nine months he was under a disciplinary investigation but a few days ago Kompass was informed in a letter that the internal investigation, run by the Office of Internal Oversight (OIOS), had cleared him of all charges.
His exoneration comes just weeks after an independent panel report – set up by the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon, into the child sex scandal in CAR – ruled Kompass had done nothing wrong in passing the internal document, which contained interviews with victims and descriptions of the perpetrators, to the French.
The panel report condemned the “gross institutional failure” of the UN in its inaction over the allegations of child sexual abuse in CAR.
Speaking for the first time about his ordeal, Kompass told the Guardian: “I feel relief and some sadness. It is still a mystery why most of the UN leadership decided to do this to me when they knew very well how badly the UN was handling these types of cases and they knew there was a big gap in terms of under reporting of these kind of cases.
                         Full Story>>>
Syrian refugee crisis builds at Jordan's borders

As Russian bombs continue to fall, tens of thousands of Syrians have fled to Jordan's borderlands, putting the country on edge 







As many as 17,000 Syrians are estimated to be marooned at the Jordanian border (MEE/Annie Sakkab) 


Sara Elizabeth Williams's pictureSara Elizabeth Williams-Monday 18 January 2016
AMMAN - Jordan’s newest camps for Syrian refugees are being built not amongst the deserts and urban sprawl of northern Jordan, but on the far-flung badlands of the eastern desert, on the southern fringe of Syria itself.
Here, in a demilitarised zone between the two countries, a rapidly growing outflow of Syrian refugees is hitting the limits of Jordanian hospitality. This week, Jordanian authorities and the NGOs that offer basic services estimate there are between 16,000 and 17,000 people marooned on the frontier.

A security-first directive

Of all Syria’s neighbours, Jordan has maintained the most controlled border policy throughout the nearly five-year conflict, and it is arguably the most stable. The terrorist attacks of Beirut, Baghdad, Erbil, Ankara and Istanbul are yet to rattle Amman, and Jordanian authorities are determined to keep it this way, which means prioritising security – a far-reaching directive that includes complex screening for refugees wishing to enter Jordan, and a vastly reduced intake.
Officials have, for the past two-plus years, maintained strict control over the flow of refugees into the kingdom, which officials say already shelters 1.4 million Syrian refugees – about 20 percent of the population. From a high of several thousand refugees per day in 2012, Jordan now admits an average of 50-100 people a day, and on some days, none at all.
But as Syria’s war grows more vicious and protracted, the refugees keep coming, streaming south through the demilitarised zone between the two countries until they press up against the man-made earthen strip that marks the northernmost edge of the reach of the Jordanian military. And here, in their thousands, they wait.

The long road south

Syrians from all over the country pay smugglers to pack them into trucks – “Like sheep,” said one middle-aged mother who had made the journey – and drive them through government-held territory through the eastern desert. The days are long, the roads are bad and there is little food or water on a journey that can take up to 21 days.
Israa al-Nasser, a young mother who was granted entry to Jordan on 14 January after spending three months on the berm, told Middle East Eye she paid smugglers around $430 to make the three-day journey. Her two small children rode free, she said bitterly.
According to Brigadier General Saber Taha Al-Mahayreh, who heads the border forces responsible for policing Jordan’s Syrian and Iraqi frontiers, smugglers take their human cargo into the demilitarised zone through any number of routes, but drop them off at one of 12 neighbourhoods or gathering points.
As the number of people seeking refuge via Jordan’s northern border has exploded – from 3,000 in late September, to 12,000 in December to 17,000 this week – these gathering points have swollen into what Mahayreh calls “semi-camps”.
Policing the borders, facilitating NGO access and carrying out the lengthy security and health checks required to admit refugees costs the Jordanian military manpower, equipment and vast sums of money. Mahayreh said the bill was close to $700mn since the start of the crisis.
“This is our human duty and we all need to take part in this national burden,” he said. “But Jordan cannot take this whole thing on alone.”

A crisis on the ridge

The logistical and economic challenges posed by the build-up on the ridge have been compounded by the growth of the groups at two main crossing points: Ruqban, on the far eastern tip of the border, where 16,000 people, mostly from eastern Syria, have gathered, and Hadalat, 100km to the west, where around 1,300 people from Damascus and the southern province of Daraa have arrived.
More people on the strip mean a greater need for supplies – water, food and medicine – tents, medical aid and logistical support. The border guard forces work with a half-dozen civil society groups and NGOs including the UN and the Red Cross to keep the humanitarian situation in check, but at Ruqban in particular, the situation is desperate.
According to a Red Cross situation report, in the first week of 2016, at least five people died at Ruqban, including two children. Five babies have been delivered so far at the border while 1,336 of Ruqban’s women are pregnant.
The size of the group on the strip has also become a security challenge in itself: while it’s easy to obtain the names of a group of 500 or 1,000 people, the makeup of the group at Ruqban is less knowable.
"The people on the border is a worry. Although they don't have military equipment, 16,000 or 20,000 people is a problem,” said retired General Ali Shukri, a former aid to King Hussein.

The Russia factor

The explosive growth of the group at Ruqban can be attributed to Russia’s deepening involvement in the Syrian war, and in particular, Russian airstrikes.
Border force boss Mahayreh said the majority of people at Ruqban came “[in a] short period of time, when attacks intensified.” He noted that early arrivals came from Homs and Idlib, areas targeted by Russia’s first strikes in late September and early October, and NGOs say recent arrivals hail from Aleppo, Raqqa and Deir Ezzor  – areas under continuing, heavy bombardment. These areas are also under the control of the Islamic State militant group (IS), which has repercussions along the border.
In an interview with CNN earlier this month, Jordan’s King Abdullah explained, “Part of the problem is that they have come from the north of Syria, from Al Raqqa, Hasaka and Deir Ezzor, which is the heartland of where [IS] is. We know there are [IS] members inside those camps.”
He continued, “[From] a humanitarian point of view and a moral point of view, you really can’t question our determination, but this particular group has a major red flag when it comes to our security.”
While they agree that preserving Jordan’s peace is paramount, NGOs say people who are running from terrorism – particularly women, children and the elderly – should not be viewed as terrorists. Lengthy and detailed security checks on the border may help some legitimate refugees reach safety, but diplomats pressing for Jordan to open its borders say not enough is being done.
“These people are not fleeing IS. They are seeking safety on Jordan's border away from coalition bombing. The large group in Ruqban comes from Daesh [the Arabic name for IS] areas and will not be let in,” said a senior European diplomat, speaking off-the-record so as not to damage relations with Jordan.
As the size of the group grows, its very existence becomes a security issue as well as a humanitarian challenge – something this diplomat believes will play into the security-first narrative and further endanger refugee lives.
“We will have a protracted emergency on the border. I am deeply concerned how this will play out."

If Russia moves south

The other major variable along Jordan’s border is what happens next in largely rebel-controlled Daraa province. Between 28 December and 3 January, Russian warplanes carried out a blitz of airstrikes on Sheikh Miskeen, a Daraa village near the Brigade 82, one of the Syrian army’s largest bases in the southern province of Daraa.
After years of heavy fighting and a year under rebel control, Sheikh Miskeen and its surrounding areas were largely depopulated, and the intense bombardment – including up to 60 strikes in one 48-hour period – didn’t trigger widespread displacement: there was no population to displace.
But if Russian planes were to turn their might on a more populated rebel-held stretch of Daraa, the flood of people on the run would have nowhere to go but south – to Jordan. This situation could quickly spiral into a humanitarian catastrophe and a security nightmare for the border guards who maintain that frontier from the Jordanian side.
Retired General Ali Shukri told Middle East Eye he doesn’t think it will come to this, given Jordan’s diplomatic ties with Russia.
"I don't think the Russians will allow the rebels to come closer to Damascus. They will do anything and use everything to stop them. And if it's about stopping them, that's one thing. But if it's about pushing them out, this becomes an issue for Jordan,” he said.
Shukri ultimately thinks this is all designed to prolong the province’s stalemate: "I don't see the Russians pushing those rebels in Daraa to the point where they have to run away and into Jordan – I don't think that is on the books."
But regardless of what happens in Daraa, Jordan is ever more acutely feeling the consequences of the entirety of the Syrian war. A small country with few natural resources in a tough neighbourhood, plucky Jordan has done more for Syria’s refugees than most other countries in the region – and certainly more than wealthier, more able Western states.
The cost of maintaining security may be visible now in terms of refugee lives endangered and lost, but the cost of losing control and seeing its own security fractured would doubtless be far harder for Jordan, and its allies, to stomach.

Longform’s Picks of the Week

The best stories from around the world.

BY FP STAFF-JANUARY 15, 2016

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In Exile” by Jonathan M. Katz, New York Times Magazine

Deportations and violence have driven tens of thousands of people of Haitian descent from their homes in the Dominican Republic — while the world is silent.

Last summer, people began to show up at the farmer’s mud-walled shack. They could speak Haitian Creole, but often with a Dominican accent. They said they had come from the Dominican Republic, where the government was planning to expel anyone of Haitian descent, by force if necessary. They told stories of vigilantes carrying machetes and axes. The threats reminded them of their grandparents’ stories of 1937, when Dominican soldiers massacred anyone living along the border they thought looked or sounded like a Haitian. “Every time there is a deportation, there is a massacre,” one refugee said.

The farmer said they could set up camp on his land. He figured they would move on or go back home soon. But the people didn’t move. More arrived every day. At bigger crossings farther north, many of the tens of thousands fleeing across the border went on to the Haitian interior. But in the far south, around Anse-à-Pitres, the chalky mountain roads are harder to cross, so the migrants set up camps just past the border.               Continue Reading →
By Colbert I. King-January 18

Martin Luther King Day honors the birthday of our nation’s 20th century conscience. MLK Day also serves as a benchmark against which to measure the extent to which three plagues cited by King — racism, poverty and war — have been eradicated.


Some judgments come easy. George Wallace’s cry, “Segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever!” is a sound of the past.

The Martin Luther King-led civil rights movement changed the political landscape of the United States. When the landmark Voting Rights Act was enacted in 1965, seven months after King launched the Selma march that spurred its passage, African American political office holders in southern states were near zero. By 2013, the number of southern black elected officials had blossomed to more than 300.

Since January 2010, a president who is African American has delivered the State of the Union address before a joint session of Congress.

Without question, there has been change and forward movement in the political arena. But we’re not there yet. Yes, Wallace, is off the scene. However, today we have Donald Trump and Ted Cruz.

There have been other achievements in the uphill struggle for equality. More African American students are graduating from high school and college since King’s assassination. The black middle class has grown. African American professionals are contributing to virtually every aspect of society.

Progress against racial oppression, however, does not equal victory over the inequalities that prevent African Americans from assuming a rightful place in this country. Glaring disparities exist. Academic achievement, graduation rates, health-care status, employment, incarceration — vast racial gulfs persist.

Then there’s war.

Vietnam broke King’s heart.

What would he think of the more than 6,000 U.S. military personnel and hundreds of U.S. civilians dying due to direct war violence in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan between October 2001 and April 2015? How would he view our 21st century flooded with millions of war refugees? Could he come to terms with an Iraq war federal price tag of $4.4 trillion?

But I believe that man of peace would be most troubled by the extent to which our scientifically advanced world has outdistanced our moral values.

Sixty-two years ago, in a sermon at his uncle’s church in Detroit, King delivered a sermon in which he said the great danger facing us was not so much the nuclear bomb created by physical science, but “that atomic bomb which lies in the hearts and souls … capable of exploding into the vilest of hate and into the most damaging selfishness.” A perfect reference to the toxic violence of Islamic terrorists such as the Islamic State and al-Qaeda — and haters here at home.

How far have we really come?

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Educating because Our Lives and Futures Are in the Balance

There is no afterlife so one life to give is our only option: educate, agitate, infiltrate, regenerate!

educationYes. I think that what is more important in Mexico is education. It’s for the children to be able to go to school. Of course, hunger is also a very big problem. But the one that really, really, really for me is very painful is education. And there’s very little money spent on education, on good teachers, on schools, on even rooms where children can go and work. And I think this is the worst problem in Mexico that has to be taken care of. And it has not been taken care of. I remember when I came to Mexico as a little girl, I loved my teacher, La Seño Velázquez. I loved her, and she was a very good teacher. And now I don’t know what happens with the teachers, because I haven’t been in school, but I think that children need education, especially in the country, in el campo, I mean, in wherever. They need to eat, and they need to be educated.
— Elena Poniatowska, Mexican writer
( January 18, 2016, Texas, Sri Lanka Guardian) Yes, indeed. We all could be Zapatistas … we all should be. Harmony in communities – poverty of the shiny stuff, poverty of the newest junk, but a wealth above all else: a right to housing, food, health, recreation, life, cultural attribution, the right to grow, the tools to do, and, of course, EDUCATION, from cradle to cradle! Justice and freedom prevail under that parcel of anti-capitalism because it is a project of building up and seeking harmony with environment and peace gathering.
I have been substitute teaching, subbing to use the vernacular, the past few years, ramping it up the past few months (to have current work under my belt why I compete in this Portland-Vancouver hell-hole job market looking for FT work), PK through 12 grade, in Washington, the state, where Gates and Bezos and Paul Allen live, and all those Zionists and criminals seeking to lobotomize sentient beings who might be a few dozen degrees left of their neoliberal project of total subjugation of soul and sanity for their economic chess game that has led to this carved up world, this PR-spinning fascism – the state with a billionaire class, akin to the uninitiated sorts like MD Ben Carson, or cold and calculating like a Chelsea Goldman Sachs Clinton, or just downright mean like a Tra-la-la bunch of near-millionaire libertarian coders and app creators and felonious biotech sorts all sipping boutique moonshine and flailing in their polyamorous beds.
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