By :Often,
International Media opens the eyes of common people like me in India.
One fine day in June 2011, I was shocked to be told that 1 out of 6 of
all my female friends were trafficked for prostitution. Not only that,
one out of six women I will meet at my workplace, on the street, or on
the train are also victims of human trafficking. I got enlightened that
day due to Trust Law, an NGO run by Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Trust Law Website says (link, link)
A back-of-envelope calculation by a 5th grader can show that this statistic is complete bullshit. India had 1.2 billion people with a female population of about 600 million. So, in the single year 2009, 100 million out of 600 million women and girls in India are involved in trafficking.
Why just stop here? I can do a roleplay of an international gender expert and now extrapolate this yearly data to calculate how many women and girls are involved in trafficking in a decade or 50 years? I can easily estimate that in a decade, there may be 150 million, and in a lifetime all women are trafficked at least once.
What pained me the most is the stupidity of thousands of journalists and sociologists across the world who failed to do a simple calculation. The collective stupidity is dismaying. Needless to say, India was soon ranked as 4th most dangerous place for women and the Indian parliament started shaking, with communists attacking the Government for the “plight of women.”
Hundreds of main stream new media outlets published the news and media channels in India debating endlessly for couple of days. (CNN, NDTV)
Of course, Trust Law claimed that the estimate is supplied to them by India’s Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta, a top Bureaucrat in India’s Home Ministry. Now, there is no way anyone track him, as he is not a public figure. Maybe he was misquoted. But, Trust law used his shoulder to fire the gun.
Why did Indian Home Ministry not challenge the figures?
For that, we need to understand something about India’s relation with western countries. For most of its history after independence, India was a poor country helplessly dependent on Russia and many Western countries. They used to get foreign aid. So, the Indian Government never used to be assertive in International politics (except when they blasted the nukes) and they used to lack confidence in dealing with even small countries like Sweden or Denmark.
I grew up watching news in media about how a low ranking Minister from Denmark has acknowledged India’s position in Kashmir. Basically, Indian politicians and Government often used to look for certificates from even the smallest western countries. This has stopped now.
The diplomatic rows India had with Australia, Norway, Italy in the last couple of years, and a recent diplomatic row with USA show, the current experimentation by the Indian Government in taking on other countries.
So, India is still not-so-confident country. So, the Government has not yet developed the skill or confidence to challenge the negative propaganda about India in western media, which has been going on many decades. Indian Politicians and older generation of bureaucrats often have no clue about how to deal with such propaganda, and they tend to avoid the issue.
But, if Trust Law had dared to publish ridiculous statistics, like, “100 million women in China involved in trafficking,” the Chinese Government would have asked the British Ambassador to stand in front of Forbidden Palace and apologize on behalf of Trust Law. They would have also banned any Reuters publications in China.
Irresponsible Main Stream Media
Today, many Main Stream Media editors openly claim about the accountability they have built into reporting, while they term social media as irresponsible. We can see how hollow their claims are. If they really wanted to lie or publish false statistics, at least they would have attempted to create some type of coverup. Maybe, they should have claimed 20 million women are girls in India are trafficked for prostitution. The fact that they did not even attempt to cover up shows they are incompetent and stupid. The question is, can we leave our societies to such idiots?
Expectation from British Government
The headquarters of the Thomson Reuters Foundation is in London. Its CEO is Monique Villa. The British Government should conduct an investigation into this issue and force Trust Law to give an unconditional apology to the people of India for publishing false statistics. The choice is with the British Government and the British people.
No one in the world likes false statistics about his culture or civilization. The British would not certainly like false statistics stating that 1 in 6 British women are forced into sex traficking being published in India or another country. As we know, the main stream media and NGOs are rarely held to account. It is time for British Government to step in and put the records straight. Such propaganda from British soil can and probably will eventually trigger a diplomatic row in the future.
Monique Villa should resign to set an example for others about restoring integrity in main stream media.
Now, if the British Government or Thomson Reuters do not act on this issue, they lose our respect and they degrade the reputation of the British people across the world.
Source
A Weird Spectacle: Destroying Children “for their own good”
By :Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW) is an ethos of freedom, an anti-slavery mindset. Yet so is FGTOW (Familes Going Their Own Way): homeschooling, rejecting State-sponsored ideological indoctrination, Pavlovian reward/punishment conditioning conducted in child-warehouses, refusing to cooperate with the government-pharmacological complex.
Below are three articles, the first of which is a dramatic story from 1907 showing a Nebraska American Indian family’s struggle against the United States government’s “re-education” policy.
This new story is followed by an article from1892 — 15 years before the event described in the Nebraska story — illustrating the treatment of American Indians by the Federal government as it was implemented in its progressive social engineering policy.
And below that is a much more recent account, from 1974, showing the horrible consequences of this government experiment in “outcome-based education” (the buzzword in current use by federal education experts) and the continuing struggle for civil rights waged by the target population, Indians.
The patriarchal natural family (whether “nuclear” or “extended”) is traditionally the target of ideologues who envision a cradle-to-grave all powerful nanny state. Feminist dogma, as it is promulgated today, claims it has a lollipop land of painlessness and unchecked bounty in store for us all if we would all just cooperate in its “it takes a village” vision. Here’s a book at what top-down bureaucracy can pull off.
The perversity of the early American experiment of government-implemented social engineering through the warehousing and “training” of children to make them more utilizable “human resources” will prompt you to wonder: “How the hell to think you can get away with calling that a ‘village?’”
Trust Law Website says (link, link)
India ranked fourth primarily due to female foeticide, infanticide and human trafficking. In 2009, India’s then-Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta estimated that 100 million people, mostly women and girls, were involved in trafficking in India that year.Trust Law and its noteworthy social scientists would actually deserve a Nobel Peace Prize for revealing the startling facts to the world that 100 million people, mostly women and girls, are involved in trafficking in India in 2009. If it were true.
The practice is common but lucrative so it goes untouched by government and police,” said Cristi Hegranes, founder of the Global Press institute, which trains women in developing countries to be journalists.
India’s Central Bureau of Investigation estimated that in 2009 about 90 percent of trafficking took place within the country and that there were some 3 million prostitutes, of which about 40 percent were children.
A back-of-envelope calculation by a 5th grader can show that this statistic is complete bullshit. India had 1.2 billion people with a female population of about 600 million. So, in the single year 2009, 100 million out of 600 million women and girls in India are involved in trafficking.
Why just stop here? I can do a roleplay of an international gender expert and now extrapolate this yearly data to calculate how many women and girls are involved in trafficking in a decade or 50 years? I can easily estimate that in a decade, there may be 150 million, and in a lifetime all women are trafficked at least once.
What pained me the most is the stupidity of thousands of journalists and sociologists across the world who failed to do a simple calculation. The collective stupidity is dismaying. Needless to say, India was soon ranked as 4th most dangerous place for women and the Indian parliament started shaking, with communists attacking the Government for the “plight of women.”
Hundreds of main stream new media outlets published the news and media channels in India debating endlessly for couple of days. (CNN, NDTV)
Of course, Trust Law claimed that the estimate is supplied to them by India’s Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta, a top Bureaucrat in India’s Home Ministry. Now, there is no way anyone track him, as he is not a public figure. Maybe he was misquoted. But, Trust law used his shoulder to fire the gun.
Why did Indian Home Ministry not challenge the figures?
For that, we need to understand something about India’s relation with western countries. For most of its history after independence, India was a poor country helplessly dependent on Russia and many Western countries. They used to get foreign aid. So, the Indian Government never used to be assertive in International politics (except when they blasted the nukes) and they used to lack confidence in dealing with even small countries like Sweden or Denmark.
I grew up watching news in media about how a low ranking Minister from Denmark has acknowledged India’s position in Kashmir. Basically, Indian politicians and Government often used to look for certificates from even the smallest western countries. This has stopped now.
The diplomatic rows India had with Australia, Norway, Italy in the last couple of years, and a recent diplomatic row with USA show, the current experimentation by the Indian Government in taking on other countries.
So, India is still not-so-confident country. So, the Government has not yet developed the skill or confidence to challenge the negative propaganda about India in western media, which has been going on many decades. Indian Politicians and older generation of bureaucrats often have no clue about how to deal with such propaganda, and they tend to avoid the issue.
But, if Trust Law had dared to publish ridiculous statistics, like, “100 million women in China involved in trafficking,” the Chinese Government would have asked the British Ambassador to stand in front of Forbidden Palace and apologize on behalf of Trust Law. They would have also banned any Reuters publications in China.
Irresponsible Main Stream Media
Today, many Main Stream Media editors openly claim about the accountability they have built into reporting, while they term social media as irresponsible. We can see how hollow their claims are. If they really wanted to lie or publish false statistics, at least they would have attempted to create some type of coverup. Maybe, they should have claimed 20 million women are girls in India are trafficked for prostitution. The fact that they did not even attempt to cover up shows they are incompetent and stupid. The question is, can we leave our societies to such idiots?
Expectation from British Government
The headquarters of the Thomson Reuters Foundation is in London. Its CEO is Monique Villa. The British Government should conduct an investigation into this issue and force Trust Law to give an unconditional apology to the people of India for publishing false statistics. The choice is with the British Government and the British people.
No one in the world likes false statistics about his culture or civilization. The British would not certainly like false statistics stating that 1 in 6 British women are forced into sex traficking being published in India or another country. As we know, the main stream media and NGOs are rarely held to account. It is time for British Government to step in and put the records straight. Such propaganda from British soil can and probably will eventually trigger a diplomatic row in the future.
Monique Villa should resign to set an example for others about restoring integrity in main stream media.
Now, if the British Government or Thomson Reuters do not act on this issue, they lose our respect and they degrade the reputation of the British people across the world.
Source
A Weird Spectacle: Destroying Children “for their own good”
By :Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW) is an ethos of freedom, an anti-slavery mindset. Yet so is FGTOW (Familes Going Their Own Way): homeschooling, rejecting State-sponsored ideological indoctrination, Pavlovian reward/punishment conditioning conducted in child-warehouses, refusing to cooperate with the government-pharmacological complex.
Below are three articles, the first of which is a dramatic story from 1907 showing a Nebraska American Indian family’s struggle against the United States government’s “re-education” policy.
This new story is followed by an article from1892 — 15 years before the event described in the Nebraska story — illustrating the treatment of American Indians by the Federal government as it was implemented in its progressive social engineering policy.
And below that is a much more recent account, from 1974, showing the horrible consequences of this government experiment in “outcome-based education” (the buzzword in current use by federal education experts) and the continuing struggle for civil rights waged by the target population, Indians.
The patriarchal natural family (whether “nuclear” or “extended”) is traditionally the target of ideologues who envision a cradle-to-grave all powerful nanny state. Feminist dogma, as it is promulgated today, claims it has a lollipop land of painlessness and unchecked bounty in store for us all if we would all just cooperate in its “it takes a village” vision. Here’s a book at what top-down bureaucracy can pull off.
The perversity of the early American experiment of government-implemented social engineering through the warehousing and “training” of children to make them more utilizable “human resources” will prompt you to wonder: “How the hell to think you can get away with calling that a ‘village?’”
***
FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 3):Waterloo, Iowa, Aug.
22. – With only one arm and one leg, an aged Indian, who kidnapped his
boy from an industrial school in Nebraska, to-day fought off two deputy
United States marshals who, having pursued him across two states,
overtook him in the woods thirty miles north of here. The red man’s nose
was also gone and as he fought desperately for the possession of his
son with his one hand, he presented a weird spectacle.
The officers were armed with revolvers and the
old man had only a club, but he flourished it so spiritedly that his
pursuers kept out of range. While the combat was in progress the boy
escaped and his in a cornfield.
The old Indian’s story is sad. One son died two
years ago. The boy that he kidnapped was the only remaining [male]
child. The government officials placed him in an industrial school for
some unknown reason. This grieved the father and mother. The father
imagined that his son was being worked so hard that he, too, might die.
Then, after a consultation with his wife, he decided to abduct the boy.
He succeeded, and the reunited family set out with a span of ponies for
the Wisconsin reservation. Officers took the trail and overtook them.
When the crippled old Indian saw the officers
approach he broke down and wept. His wife and daughter united their
tears with his. Seeing that tears would not avail to save his son, the
father grabbed a club and attacked the officers with terrible fury.
[“Crippled Father Fought For Son – Aged Indian
Held Two United Sates Marshals at Bay With a Club.” Manitoba Free Press
(Winnipeg, Canada), Aug. 23, 1907]
NOTE: The Indian Industrial School at Genoa,
Nebraska was the fourth non-reservation boarding institution established
by the Office of Indian Affairs. The facility opened on February 20,
1884, and, like other such schools, its mission was to educate and teach
Christianity to Native American children. The village of Genoa was
selected because the Federal Government already owned the former Pawnee
Reservation property there; however, existing buildings at the site were
unsuitable and in poor repair. Like many buildings designed for Indian
school campuses, this was a simple three-story structure with a hipped
roof and a small triangular pediment above the center entrance. The
pairs of tall windows and the strong horizontal lines across the front
created a balanced composition. This was a popular design during the
late 1880s. The school closed in 1934. [fromWikipedia]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 3): A dispatch, from
Kingman, in Arizona, announces that a few days ago representatives from
five tribes or bands of Indians met at Pine Springs to protest against
having their children taken away and sent to Government schools in the
East. It is said that some of them were for resorting to arms, and that a
great many families had gone to the mountains to prevent their boys and
girls from being carried off. It is quite possible that the parents
have exaggerated the risks they run, but their feeling that it is a
hardship to have their children carried a long distance away is natural.
The Fifty-first Congress at its second session passed a law authorizing
and directing the Commissioner of Indian Affairs “to make and enforce
by proper means such rules and regulations as will secure the attendance
of Indian children of suitable age and health at schools established
and maintained for their benefit.” This compulsory attendance law
furnishes the basis for the action of which the Arizona bands complain.
But whether Congress foresaw that the authority thus given would be used
to take children against the will of their parents hundreds of
thousands of miles from their homes may not be so clear. To civilized
people such a removal will, of course, seem a great opportunity for the
youngsters. They are cared for, fed, clothed, and instructed without
cost, and are made much fitter for citizenship and for success in life
than their companions who receive no such advantages. But while we
understand all this, to the Indian fathers and mothers the forcible
wresting away of their children must look very much like kidnapping.
The Indian Bureau itself has recognized this
difficulty in its rules and regulations, which prescribe that, “So far
as practicable, the preferences of Indian parents or guardians, or of
Indian youth of sufficient maturity and judgment, will be regarded as to
whether the attendance shall be at Government, public, or private
schools.” But it is further provided that, if schools in the
reservations are lacking or already filed,” or if for other reasons the
good of the children shall clearly require that they be sent away from
home to school, they will, be placed in non-reservation schools.” –
which seems to mean that, unless the parents part with them willingly,
they may be taken away by force. But a law which is perfectly sound and
wise, if administered by people with discretion, for procuring
attendance at the reservation schools, might cause some distress if
enforced to the extent of separating children from their parents for
years together. Nor is is it usually understood that the Eastern
training schools are unable to get their quota of pupils without such a
process. There are Indians, presumably, who allow their children to go
to these schools. But, however that may be, it is particularly
desirable, in neighborhoods where objection is made, if the Government
schools are full and private or contract schools can take them, that
they should do so where the provisions made by Congress will permit.
There is no doubt that the main hope of
civilizing the red man and of bringing them into line with American
citizens lies in the training of their children. It would be unwise to
allow the prejudices of ignorant parents to deprive the rising
generation of the provisions made by the Government for their benefit.
Yet it is quite evident that in this matter sound judgment and careful
consideration of the peculiar circumstances of the red men are needed.
Commissioner MORGAN has noted that the Indians “are loath to have their
children taken from them, even for a short time. They are devotedly
attached to them, miss their companionship, and are accustomed to rely
upon their assistance in the performance of such simple duties as they
are capable of.” Perhaps in this statement may be found an explanation
of the feeling of bitterness against the Government which is now
reported to exist among some of the Arizona bands. It would hardly be
fair to charge them with prejudice against education if what they are
really prejudiced against should turn out to be simply the sending of
their offspring far away. It does not appear from the dispatch that they
would object to having them instructed in schools where the parents
could still have a share in their companionship. The problem, no doubt,
is a difficult one, but it is evident that, while an admirable work is
done by the Eastern training schools – one of whose advantages is in
taking the children at an impressionable age away from their savage home
surroundings – yet the ultimate reliance for the great body of the
Indians must be in schools on and near the reservations. Commissioner
MORGAN in his last report made a strong appeal to Congress for the
multiplication of day schools, fully supplied with all the means to make
up for the lack of home instruction. It would require no very
extravagant amount to furnish sufficient schools and instruction for
such of the Indian children of school age as cannot now be accommodated
somewhere, and it might be a wise expenditure to do this within the next
few years. With more reservation schools the compulsory attendance law
would be enforced with a better grace and without embittering the lives
of Indian parents in seeking the benefit of their offspring. [“Indian
Education.” The New York Times (N.Y.), Sep. 20, 1892, p. 4]
***
FULL TEXT: (Article 3 of 3): Washington, D.C. —
At what point does governmental intrusion, whether federal, state or
local into Indian family life to protect a child become “kidnaping”
[sic] and “cultural genocide,” and what should be the role of a tribal
government in this area?
These questions were at the heart of testimony
taken from about 30 witnesses by the Senate Indian Affairs Subcommittee
in two days of hearings April 8-9 to document what Committee Chairman
Sen. James D. Abourezk, D-S.D., called “abusive child removal practices
which are destroying Indian families.”
Lead-off witness William Byler, executive
director of the Association on American Indian Affairs, stated that
based on his organization’s surveys, “approximately 25 to 35 per cent of
all Indian children are separated from their families and placed in
foster homes, adoptive homes, or institutions.” Institutions were
defined by Byler as federal or mission boarding schools or state
training schools.
Byler cited the following statistics: In
Minnesota the rate of adoption of Indian children per capita is five
times greater than that of non Indian children; in South Dakota the
foster care rate is nearly 16 times greater per capita; in Washington
state the adoption rate is 19 times greater, the foster care rate 10
times greater; in Michigan, 16 times greater.
A number of Indian parents before the
subcommittee recited a litany of abuses they and their children suffered
at the hands of state and county welfare workers eager to remove the
children from what they deemed a home environment of “neglect” or
“social deprivation.”
Margaret Townsend (Paiute) of Fallen, Nev.,
described how her children were forcibly taken from her home without her
consent and placed in foster care homes by county welfare workers after
she had been arrested — her first arrest — for driving while
intoxicated. With the aid of an MIA attorney Mrs. Townsend was finally
able to get a court to release her children from the custody of the
county and return them to her.
Her daughter Anna was also a witness. Anna was
supposed to describe to the subcommittee the treatment she and her
younger brother endured in their foster home. Instead, Anna gave more
effective testimony. After a brave start; she broke down and cried.
Other witnesses told of outright abduction of
Indian children from their parents Byler of AAIA told how Benita Rowland
had been taken by two Wisconsin women with the collusion of a local
missionary from South Dakota after her Oglala Sioux mother was tricked
into signing a form purportedly granting them permission to take the
child on a short visit but, in fact, agreeing to her adoption. It was
months before Mrs. Rowland could obtain counsel and regain her daughter.
Governmental intrusion in to the privacy of
family life is not confined to Indian families. However, witnesses
testified to the qualitative differences between removal of non-Indian
children and that of Indian children.
Non-Indian children are taken into custody by the
government when, said two physician witnesses, the child has no
recognized or legally appointed guardian, that is, is dependent or
abandoned; when the child has been involved in delinquent acts; when the
child’s needs are not being met by the family, constituting neglect;
and when the child is being physically abused.
According to the witnesses, Indian children are
removed for the above reasons and in addition for the following reasons:
to meet the educational needs of the child, or because a social worker
does not feel the reservation is a fit place for any child to be brought
up, or because the lowered birth rate in the dominant race leaves fewer
children available for adoption, and thus Indian children are
considered “fair game.”
The effects of these unwarranted removals and
placements with non-Indians are psychologically disastrous for both
parents and children, according to witnesses. Gov. Robert E. Lewis,
president of the National Tribal Chairmen’s association (NTCA), said:
“Children who must adjust to a new way of life
away from their own cultural group often must overcome a language
barrier, adjust to a new religion, learn new foods and are often faced
with overt and covert racism.”
Melvin Sampson, Yakima tribal councilman, while
acknowledging the good intentions of non-Indians who adopt Indian
children, said: “The damaging effect this creates on our Indian children
is beyond the scope of evaluation. The Indian is on the receiving end
of a total lack of understanding. They literally surfer when they
discover that their physical appearance is not that or their adopted
parents. The wonderment and search for true identity is crucial and
probably, at times never completed.”
The causes of this latter day “Indian removal”
campaign were described by witnesses as follows: a lack of standards for
what constitutes mistreatment that is relevant to Indian culture;
failure of social workers and courts to follow ‘due process of law”;
strictures in taking children away from parents; social conditions in
Indian families such as low income, poor health and substandard housing
which make Indian children prime targets for removal.
One particular problem stems directly from the
inadequacy of tribal courts to cope with demands by social workers that
they authorized the removal of a child. According to witnesses, they
have no independent means of either experts or resources to judge the
validity of a request by a social worker to remove a child from his
home. In states where tribes have lost civil and criminal jurisdiction
over their reservation under Public Law 280, the situation is even worse
because the tribes have absolutely no role in removal.
The BIA also came under fire at the hearings for
its role or lack of it in this area. A witness charged that the BIA is
spending over $1,040,000 in Minnesota to provide for foster care
payments. Since it is a PL 280 state, Minnesota should be picking up
this expense, according to Abourezk aide Sherwin Brodhead.
Recommendations for reform by witnesses included repeal of PL 280 so
affected tribes will have more control over what happens to their
children, revision of standards governing child welfare issues to
conform to Indian cultural life, and strengthening of due process to
protect parents faced with losing their children.
[“Indian Adoption vs. ‘Kidnaping’ Answers Sought,” Independent (Gallup, N.M.), Apr. 23, 1974, p. 2]
•••
Robert
St. Estephe–Gonzo Historian–is dedicated to uncovering the forgotten
past of marginalizing men. “Gonzo journalism” is characterized as
tending “to favor style over fact to achieve accuracy.” Yet history –
especially “social history” – is written by ideologues who distort and
bury facts in order to achieve an agenda. “Gonzo” writing is seen as
unorthodox and surprising. Yet, in the 21st century subjectivity,
distortion and outright lying in non-fiction writing is the norm. Fraud
is the new orthodoxy. Consequently, integrity is the new
“transgressive.”
Welcome to the disruptive world of facts, the world of Gonzo History.
No comments:
Post a Comment