#MoreThanARefugee is the latest phase of Multicultural Propaganda. In this video, I take you outside the official narratives and do my best to show you what I think is going on.
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from T1
seen from Germany
#MoreThanARefugee is the latest phase of Multicultural Propaganda. In this video, I take you outside the official narratives and do my best to show you what I think is going on.
HOW TO UNDERMINE A CULTURE
The French writer Julien Benda coined the phrase la trahison des clercs, meaning ‘the treason of the intellectuals’. By this he meant that the intelligentsia had abdicated the proper standards of intellectual enquiry and argument in favour of political advocacy. He launched his attack on the intellectual corruption of the age in 1924. Today the West is faced by another treason: that of the…
View On WordPress
Muslim Illegal Migrant URINATES on the Pork Section in Grocery Store The religion of piss strikes again.
3 on a Middle Grade Theme: Black History Month
February is Black History Month, and we wanted to mark this important time by sharing these three powerful, heartbreaking, and educational middle-grade reads.
Chains, by Laurie Halse Anderson
As the Revolutionary War begins, thirteen-year-old Isabel wages her own fight...for freedom. From acclaimed author Laurie Halse Anderson comes this compelling, impeccably researched novel that shows the lengths we can go to cast off our chains, both physical and spiritual.
Stella by Starlight, by Sharon M. Draper
When the Ku Klux Klan’s unwelcome reappearance rattles Stella’s segregated southern town, bravery battles prejudice in this New York Times bestselling Depression-era “novel that soars” (The New York Times Book Review) that School Library Journal called “storytelling at its finest” in a starred review.
As Brave As You, by Jason Reynolds When two brothers decide to prove how brave they are, everything backfires—literally—in this piercing middle grade novel by the winner of the Coretta Scott King – Johnson Steptoe Award.
Chance Remarks-->Identity Crisis-->Language of Freedom
It’s strange how much effect a chance remark, stated without intent to hurt or even provoke thought, could influence a person so much. It’ strange that one person, who’s a friend of a friend, could say that I share only links to Western articles and cause me to wonder if I have internalised racism.
Aye! It’s food for thought, isn’t it? Whether we, or whether some of us, like me, for example :-), are so consumed and influenced by the Western media and Western culture that we don’t think much of the culture that brought us up and fed us, the culture that gave us our roots?
Though the thought is not new! After all, the story of Indian Independence is replete with examples of our struggles against colonial propaganda that strove to paint the Indian culture as juvenile and rudimentary; along with counter-cultural movements that tried to strike out the superstitious, abusive and misogynist practices that India had come to embrace.
And you still see repercussions of that in today’s national (and regional) political stage where you have folks promoting one uniform “supposedly” Indian culture on the one hand, while on the other hand, you have a myriad of people who ostentatiously stand for “freedom”; although their track record says that most of them just stand for re-election and lining their pockets.
And not just India; the struggle and questions within my heart, reflected in the nation’s centre stage, are also seen in every place in the globe where folks are subject to different and, at times, conflicting ethnic and culture values; which these days is pretty much everywhere.
Sigh! I am rambling now. And casting a wide net for an answer that is within my heart...
...Which says that “English” to me is freedom.
It’s the freedom to indulge in thoughts that are not reflected in my own language even if they may have existed unexpressed in some folks’ heart. Like when I first read the Fried Green Tomatoes and found something that made more sense to me (though it was a long while before I admitted that to myself) than all the Bollywood movies out there or the “popular” versions of Ramayana, Mahabharata and the Puranas.
It’s the freedom to go to places that do not speak my language or follow my culture and manage there adequately despite the foreignness of the new place. Like the time when my family moved to Dehradun and I found friends in Nancy Drew because I no longer had access to Malayalam books.
Most importantly, it’s the freedom to be me, and to connect with people like me, when my culture has long been silent about folks such as us. Like the time when I found AfterEllen and Autostraddle or Jezebel (although the introvert in me has not yet allowed me to do anything more than visit those places ;-)).
I’d feel stifled and claustrophobic if I were not to keep in touch with the Western media and Western world.
I don’t think opening yourself to different cultures, assimilating values that make sense to you even if they don’t originally hail from what you consider your own, is racist.
Neither do I think that accepting and recognising the values in other cultures that sings to you means that you are demeaning yourself and where you come from.
Why should it be an either/or rather than a both?
“Who Killed Higher Education?” would also be an excellent title.
@unicroneatsfeminists
/TheChristianLeft
Many of us enjoy going out to a nice Indian restaurant, and even indulging in a little smoke on a water pipe, commonly known as a hookah or shisha. With the recent surge in shisha lounges and the e...
When did this all come to the UK? Is it a recent phenomenon?