Laboratory Mutation Of Reality

LABORATORY MUTATION OF REALITY
Siranuysh Papyan

Lragir.am
17:25:04 – 19/03/2012

Interview with Hayk Martirosyan, Candidate of Historical Sciences,
a doctoral student in political science at the Sorbonne, an expert
on media and political technology (New York)

Election processes have already been launched in Armenia but there has
been no talk show or debates on this issue yet. Is this a continuation
of the policy of the previous elections or Serzh Sargsyan did not
accept the opposition’s proposal to hold debates?

Informational programs on the Armenian television don’t enable to
make objective conclusions: they either have a clear direction or they
are amorphous. This reflects the culture of the Armenian television,
rather its absence.

Armenia cannot stay far from global processes: the Internet and
media come to the first horizontal lines. And in Armenia the media
revolution occurred rather abruptly. But the internet has not yet won
the TV. In countries such as Armenia, television is still popular. In
the U.S. and UK, TV is growing into internet, while Armenia in this
regard is still in the Middle Ages.

Informational blocs and socio-political programs have been in a
miserable state in Armenia since independence. The television has
always been under control, and I think it will be so in the near
future too. This is something particular to the East.

What do you think about the new media and what is their role?

What the media and Facebook and Twitter did in the Middle East is
the best example. In 2008, Obama fulfilled an unprecedented election
campaign in internet. In Armenia, internet is not a property of the
large masses, but is role is increasing. The youth in the capital uses
internet in Armenia which is politically inert and immature in the
intellectual sense. So, the role of the internet in the election should
not be overestimated though it should not be underestimated either.

Can we say our youths are self-determined citizens?

There have always been and there are competed self-determined citizens
but they did not show civic consciousness. As to the internet-activism,
it is formed very slowly. There is no need to expect net revolutions
in Armenia.

There is dignified youth in Armenia, but the overwhelming majority has
superficial interests, they are far little educated. The determined
youth in Armenia which follows the fascist leader, has undergone
laboratory mutations and this is a national tragedy. But, at the same
time, there are constructive internet-activists who influence on the
formation of the public opinion. I think there is no critical mass
of internet-activists in place yet.

Total “republicanization” is happening in the Armenian universities
while you say the youth is not politicized.

When I used to study in the university, then-Chairman of the National
Academy of Sciences, not the rector of Yerevan State University Radik
Martirosyan punished those who were against Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s
regime. The, he punished those who recalled Ter-Petrosyan. This is
the mirror of the political field of Armenia. Students need to study
in universities instead of dealing with politics. Though the youth
in the whole world is the most active mass, in Armenia it became a
miserable remnant of the soviet past.

Are there parties in Armenia the ideology of which is based on the
public interest?

I think there are as well as there are such public figures,
journalists, but the society has not achieved the level to vote
for ideology.

Why have journalists suddenly started running for the parliament?

In Armenia, the image and reputation have always been valued highly.

As to the journalists, so in the West, people with humanitarian
leanings run for the parliament – lawyers, political scientists and
journalists. Former journalists have a great influence in the U.S.,
Britain and France. In Russia and Armenia, journalists, unfortunately,
do someone else’s orders, and in this case their impact on the real
policy is zero.

This is not even a deal because many journalists don’t have enough
weight to make a deal. I think this is just a copy of the Russian
processes. A new fashion started – to introduce to parliament people
who will restrain the negative reaction of the society.

Besides, I think for example, Shushan Petrosyan can be a more useful MP
than many of the current MPs. Though the entrance of the show business
to the parliament is as harmful as the oligarchy’s presence there.

They say Serzh Sargsyan promised the West to hold fair elections and
called on everyone to check them.

It is necessary to believe, it is impossible to live without trust.

But I don’t think the election will be based on Norwegian standards.

The point is not the pledges but the political system.

Perhaps, it will be half a new, rejuvenated parliament but in terms
of the content, there will be little difference.

A Alep, Une Armenienne Tuee Dans L’attentat D’hier

A ALEP, UNE ARMENIENNE TUEE DANS L’ATTENTAT D’HIER
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
lundi 19 mars 2012

L’attentat qui s’est produit hier près de la Poste du quartier
chretien de Sulemanye a Alep a fait au moins trois morts et 25
blesses. L’une des victimes est Armenienne, Araxie Bedrossian, tuee
lors de l’explosion qui n’a pas ete revendiquee. Deux jours plus tôt
dans le double attentat a Damas, on comptait 5 victimes Armeniennes
parmi les blesses. Rappelons enfin qu’un jeune militaire armenien
avait trouve la mort a Alep le mois dernier lors d’un attentat contre
le bâtiment des forces de securite syriennes.

Dink’s Imprisoned Killer Writes Book On His Crime

DINK’S IMPRISONED KILLER WRITES BOOK ON HIS CRIME

news.am
March 19, 2012 | 12:10

ISTANBUL. – Ogun Samast, the murderer of Hrant Dink-the founder and
former chief editor of Istanbul’s Agos Armenian bilingual weekly, who
was gunned down in 2007 in front of his office building-, sent a
25-page letter from prison to the Taraf daily of Turkey, and informed
that he is writing a book about the dark pages of the murder.

Samast noted that the book will present the developments with respect
to Dink’s killing, and stressed that he is planning on publishing this
book in 4-5 months.

“Where are those people who put me on this ship and took advantage of
my lack of knowledge, and as a result I committed a crime? I told you
first that three months prior to the murder I met with someone who
plays a part in organizing Dink’s killing. I will write about him in
the book,” Samast wrote to Taraf daily, and added that he has
21-percent guilt in Hrant Dink’s murder, but he is paying for the 100
percent.

Activist Says Armenia Indifferent To Javakhk Problems

ACTIVIST SAYS ARMENIA INDIFFERENT TO JAVAKHK PROBLEMS

PanARMENIAN.Net
March 19, 2012 – 12:37 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Artak Gabrielyan, coordinator of Samtskhe-Javakhk
council of Armenian NGOs said Armenian government does not make enough
efforts to settle Javakhk’s problems.

Top level talks with Georgia always maintain a “friendship and mutual
understanding” attitude, while urgent topics, first of all problems
of Javakhk Armenians are either ignored or avoided, he told a press
conference in Yerevan.

According to Gabrielyan, in some cases Armenian authorities consider
Javakhk problems be a part of the issues the Armenian community in
Georgia faces, yet everybody knows the difference.

Two Turkish Investigative Journalists Threatened On Twitter

TWO TURKISH INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS THREATENED ON TWITTER

epress.am
03.20.2012

Reporters Without Borders is very disturbed by a message posted on
Twitter on the night of Mar. 16 about an alleged plot by the shadowy
ultranationalist network Ergenekon to murder Ahmet Sik and Nedim
Sener (pictured), two investigative journalists who were released
conditionally on Mar. 12 after a year in detention, reads a statement
issued by the freedom of information watchdog on its website.

“It is not alarmist to say that these threats should be taken
seriously,” Reporters Without Borders said. “The source of this tweet,
which is still unknown, needs to be investigated thoroughly. We call
on the Turkish authorities to launch an investigation at once in
other to shed light on this matter.”

Posted by someone using the pseudonym “Faiz Dusmani” (Enemy of
Interest), the message said: “Attention, attention. I warn the
government and those that can should also inform it. Ergenekon is
planning to assassinate Ahmet Sik and Nedim Sener. [The organization]
is going to kill them and then blame the [Fethullah Gulen religious]
community.”

Sik told Reporters Without Borders he took the threat seriously and
thought it was the work of “the circles responsible for the conspiracy”
that led to his being detained for a year on a terrorism charge. “They
want to silence me. They will be responsible for anything that happens
to me.”

He added that the comments he made outside Silivri prison on the
night of his release had upset certain people who were now trying to
silence him. The speech is meanwhile the subject of a new judicial
investigation by Istanbul prosecutor Muammer Akkas.

Several journalists have received death threats in recent years,
for the most part coming from ultranationalist circles. Despite
the lengthy trials of many persons accused in connection with the
January 2007 murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, those
who masterminded his murder have never been identified.

Sik has been spending time with his family since his release but plans
to resume working within a few days for Habervesaire.com, a website
run by the students of the communications faculty at Istanbul’s
Bilgi University. After a short rest, Sener plants to work for the
daily Posta.

Sik and Sener are being tried along with eight journalists working
for the Oda TV website, five of whom are still detained. They are site
owner Soner Yalcin, academic Yalcin Kucuk, publisher Baris Pehlivan,
news editor Baris Terkoglu and reporter Muyesser Ugur. They will not
have an opportunity to be granted a conditional release until the
next hearing in the trial, which is scheduled for Jun. 18.

The Problem With "Zero Problem Neighborhood"

THE PROBLEM WITH “ZERO PROBLEM NEIGHBORHOOD”
by Miguel Silva

Atlantic Sentinel

March 19 2012

While changes began in the foreign policy domain right from the onset
of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government, it was only
in his second term and after the nomination of Ahmet Davutoglu that
Turkey’s foreign policy acquired a more “independent” flavor. Until
now, Davutoglu has been lauded for his “zero problem neighborhood”
vision but as things stand today, there seems to be little merit for
that praise.

Foreign affairs is one of those portfolios with peculiar pros and
cons: there can be plenty of popularity gains for a foreign minister,
who gets to socialize with international leaders and opinion makers,
but there is also the inherent uncertainty of securing results as
diplomacy depends on at least two interlocutors and the government
he belongs to is but one of them.

That said, it is one thing for a particular diplomatic initiative to
founder into political oblivion, it is another altogether to turn a
would be close ally into a soon to be mortal enemy as was the case
recently in Turkish-Syrian relations.

No one expected diplomats or politicians to predict the Arab spring
but when dealing with an authoritarian regime, a crackdown on a
potential uprising is a policy option implied in any dictator’s job
description. Yet Turkey backtracked in its relations with Damascus.

Before Syria though there was Libya, where Turkey had also attempted
to improve relations.

Here Ankara secured several profitable contracts for Turkish companies
and Turkish diplomats hoped Libya would become–through the brother
leader’s petrodollar sponsored political and charity ties below the
Sahara–Turkey’s gateway to Africa.

Erdogan, the humanitarian who now lectures Bashar al-Assad and Benjamin
Netanyahu on human rights, had little compunction in accepting in
2010 the “Muammar Gaddafi Human Rights Award”–which he refused to
return even after the Libyan revolt.

Confronted with Libya’s uprising, Turkey’s diplomacy failed to react,
resigning itself to merely observing Western powers–from whom it had
sought equidistance–breed a rebellion that would destroy the regime
Turkey had so patiently cultivated

What could Ankara say? That Turkey had economic interests it wished
to safeguard? Surely not as Turkey was then an adamant proponent of
human rights after chastising Israel for its treatment of Palestinians
in the wake of the Gaza flotilla incident. It couldn’t possibly now
adopt a pragmatic speech favoring a dictator who referred to his own
people as “rats.”

There was also the attempt at multilateral diplomacy in the United
Nations Security Council earlier last year, where Turkey teamed up
with Brazil to promote an alternate compromise between Iran and the
West concerning the former’s nuclear program.

This too failed and Turkey, whose diplomats were rumored to be seeking
to include Ankara in a potential Security Council permanent members
expansion, was humiliated on the international stage. Both Iran and
the West hardened their respective positions and ignored Turkey.

The very Iran that Davutoglu and Erdogan had wooed, by remaining
largely silent during the Green movement’s protests against the
ayatollahs, by promoting bilateral trade while the West embargoed
and by engaging Islamist movements such as Hamas, rewarded Turkey’s
“friendship” by supporting Syria’s crackdown, in defiance of the
Turkish Government’s appeals for reform, and by promoting in Iraq
a government headed by the ShÄ”‘ah Nouri Al-Maliki against Ankara’s
preferred Sunni candidate Ayad Allawi.

Maliki is another problem as Iraq has been publicly supportive of
Assad and was even touted to mediate between Syria and the West. Iraq,
a country until recently half occupied by American troops and Iranian
agents; a country just barely rebuilding its economic infrastructure,
is now apparently more influential in the Middle East than Turkey.

Still, the Middle East is a tough neighborhood and surely Ankara’s
goodwill would have paid off in less tumultuous surroundings. If it
did though, it was not in Europe in spite of the fact that Davutoglu
has travelled extensively and worked tirelessly to bring to fruition
his new foreign policy vision.

Apart from the all but suspended–courtesy of France and
Germany–accession bid to the European Union, Ahmet Davutoglu enacted
a “football diplomacy” with Armenia to mend ties and ease tensions,
visited Greece offering to delay Turkey’s pursuit of Greek debt as a
good faith gesture and developed links with the Russian defense and
energy industries.

Of course what was gained with Russia was disparaged when Turkey
decided to hold military exercises with China outside of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization’s purview, sidelining Moscow, and more
recently by seeking to isolate Syria against Russia’s wishes.

Relations with Armenia have gone nowhere largely because of the
same old obstacles which had prevented it before–the unwillingness
to recognize the Armenian genocide and Turkey’s preference for its
fellow Turkic Azeris in any conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Finally, Greece has shown its appreciation for Turkish openings by
continuing to support Greek Cyprus in its political and energetic
disputes with Turkey and by moving quickly to sign mutual defense
guarantees with Israel following the Israeli-Turkish rift.

Bad blood between Tel Aviv and Ankara is also not entirely one sided
in blame. The Israeli commandos did lose their cool on board the Mavi
Marmara but Erdogan milked the media outrage over the flotilla deaths
as much as he could and moved quickly to identify Israel as a “regional
threat”–hardly the actions of an ally and far from the proper reaction
to what was always described as a “diplomatic incident.”

One should, on the other hand, not assign the onus for strained
American-Turkish relations to the AKP Government. The United
States Congress’ recognition of the Armenian genocide and the Bush
Administration’s failure to curb the activities of Kurdish militants
in Iraqi Kurdistan were what caused the strain. But if anyone deserves
credit for repairing them, that someone is President Barack Obama,
who made Turkey a personal priority, not Prime Minister Erdogan.

When confronted by such principles as national interest and balance
of power being applied by its interlocutors, Turkey’s “zero problem
neighborhood” doctrine has been found wanting. Time now for some
reflection on the part of Ankara’s leadership and those who made
its case.

Miguel Nunes Silva is a Master’s candidate at the College of Europe
in Bruges and a researcher with the geostrategic consultancy firm
Wikistrat. He has published with REvolve magazine and TransConflict .

He identifies with the political realist school of international
relations.

http://atlanticsentinel.com/2012/03/the-problem-with-zero-problem-neighborhood/

Salon du livre. Charles Aznavour, invité d’honneur

Le Télégramme, France
Mardi 13 Mars 2012

Salon du livre. Charles Aznavour, invité d’honneur

Une page de la programmation du Salon du livre a été dévoilée.
L’invité d’honneur de la cinquième édition sera Charles Aznavour. Bien
d’autres suivront: 160 auteurs sont attendus les 23 et 24juin
prochains.

On ne présente plus Charles Aznavour. À 87 ans, il est reconnu comme
l’un des derniers monstres sacrés de la chanson. Il était en concert à
l’Olympia en fin d’année dernière, puis en tournée dans toute la
France. C’est aussi un écrivain. Et c’est à ce titre qu’il sera
l’invité d’honneur de la cinquième édition du Salon du livre en
Bretagne, organisée les 23 et 24juin prochains dans les jardins des
remparts. «Ça nous honore, nous sommes heureux, estime Pierre
Defendini, le directeur du salon. Dans le panorama culturel, c’est
quelqu’un qui est au Panthéon, connu et reconnu par des millions de
gens. On va le mettre très en avant». Le Franco-Arménien rencontrera
le public pour son ouvrage «D’une porte l’autre», paru aux Éditions
Don Quichotte en 2011. Le dernier de ses quatre ouvrages, sans tenir
compte de la quinzaine d’autres qui ont été écrits sur sa vie et son
oeuvre. Un livre dans lequel il a choisi, sous la forme d’un
monologue, de raconter des instants qui l’ont marqué, passant d’une
anecdote à l’autre sans y donner sens. On y apprend, par exemple, son
attirance pour l’opérette.

Programmation connue le 10avril
À plus de trois mois du grand rendez-vous, les organisateurs n’ont pas
encore bouclé leur programmation. Elle sera présentée le 10avril,
riche de 160 noms. «Il y aura de la littérature, des romans, des
essais, du polar… Des gens très différents», relève Pierre
Defendini. Et pour certains très connus du grand public. Jean
d’Ormesson, invité du premier Café littéraire, ne sera pas de la
partie. Au contraire de Janine Boissard, de retour à Vannes avec son
livre «Une vie en plus» (éditions Fayard). Autres présences
confirmées, celles de Gilles Paris («Au Pays des kangourous», Éditions
Don Quichotte) ou de l’écrivain danoise Pia Petersen, pour «Le Chien
de Don Quichotte».

Turkish PM to Receive Tolerance Prize in Germany

Arutz Sheva, Israel
March 17 2012

Turkish PM to Receive Tolerance Prize in Germany

After the death of 12 Turkish soldiers in Afghanistan, Turkish Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan cancelled a trip to Germany on Saturday. He
was scheduled to receive the Steiger Award, an award given to
individuals who display honesty, openness, responsiblity and hardwork,
from the west German town of Bochum. However, thousands of protesters
went ahead with a rally against the decision to award him a tolerance
prize. An estimated 22,000 people from local Alevi, Kurdish and
Armenian groups who oppose the policies of Erdogan’s AK party joined a
pre-planned protest rally in Bochum.

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/234970

Azerbaijan Between the Hammer & the Anvil

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 16, 2012 Friday

AZERBAIJAN BETWEEN THE HAMMER AND THE ANVIL

Yaroslav Vyatkin
Source: Argumenty Nedeli, No. 9, March 11-17, 2012, p. 20
[translated from Russian]

TRANSCAUCASIA IS ON THE THRESHOLD OF A NEW WAR FOR NAGORNO-KARABAKH?;
The Ambassador of Azerbaijan in Iran was called to the Iranian Foreign
Ministry recently to provide explanations about the upcoming purchase
of weapons worth $1.6 billion by Baku from Israel, an enemy of Iran.
There the Ambassador released an official statement saying that the
armament was bought “to liberate the occupied land of Azerbaijan”
meaning the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. What is this, another
ritual phrase or the matter is driving towards a war really?

The Ambassador of Azerbaijan in Iran was called to the Iranian Foreign
Ministry recently to provide explanations about the upcoming purchase
of weapons worth $1.6 billion by Baku from Israel, an enemy of Iran.
There the Ambassador released an official statement saying that the
armament was bought “to liberate the occupied land of Azerbaijan”
meaning the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. What is this, another
ritual phrase or the matter is driving towards a war really?

Deal with Israel

The Ambassador was called because of the deal with Israeli armament
corporation IAI. Azerbaijan bought military hardware from this company
before, for example, small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). However,
the present package is special. Israel will sell UAVs with long flight
duration Heron and Searcher (the latter is produced in Russia under
Forpost name), as well as radio technical reconnaissance stations. The
package also includes two radar stations Green Pine. These stations
are parts of Israeli antimissile defense system Khets-2. Baku
evidently wants to use them as radar stations of early warning about
launches of Armenian, Iranian and probably Russian tactical theater
missiles.

There is also information that the newest middle-range air defense
missile systems Barak-8 with range of up to 70-120 kilometers created
by Israel for India are ordered too. In any case, this system did not
even pass tests yet and such acquisition looked like a “pig in a
poke.”

Purchases of the most modern weapons

Azerbaijan that receives big revenues from oil and gas production is
one of the biggest buyers of armament now. The country already grew
over the stage of purchase of “secondhand” Ukrainian, Bulgarian and
Belarusian armament and started purchasing the most modern hardware.

Among the main suppliers of modern armament are Russia, Israel and
Turkey. Quite recently, Azerbaijan purchased new air defense missile
system S-300PMU-2. Armenia does not have such system and has older
version of S-300PT-1. Azerbaijan buys armored personnel carriers
BTR-80A and armored trucks KamAZ. In South African Republic Azerbaijan
bough armored vehicles of MRAP class. Purchase of Cobra armored
vehicles in Turkey looks strange. Azerbaijani military officials say
that “servicemen in neighboring Georgia are very happy with them and
the protection is suitable for them.”

Georgian are probably content with them but in August of 2008 several
such vehicles were damaged and captured by Russian servicemen. The
verdict of specialists could be characterized briefly as “weekly
armored trash.” Baku evidently does a favor to its Turkish patrons in
such way.

T-90S and Mi-35M

Azerbaijani tanks T-72AV purchased in Belarus and Ukraine were
modernized by the Israelis according to the scheme similar to that of
modernization of Georgian tanks before the August war. These
T-72-SIM-1 were captured by Russian servicemen and were well
appreciated by specialists. Along with this, it was said that
modernization of the firing control system without replacement of the
gun and stabilizer drives (Israelis cannot do this without us) had
only a limited effect.

Officials in Baku made the same decision and bought T-90S. Neither the
quantity nor the configuration of the tank is known yet. Azerbaijan
also manifests its interest in T-90MS Tagil, the newest export deeply
modernized tank.

Special attention is paid to long-range destruction of Armenian
fortified installations in Nagorno-Karabakh and prevention of coming
of reserves from Armenia. From Ukraine Azerbaijan bought multiple
rocket launcher systems Smerch and Uragan, long-range artillery
systems Giatsint and Pion, tactical missile systems Tochka-U and from
Israel Azerbaijan bought modernized multiple rocket launcher systems
Grad-LAR. The contract on supply of 24 combat helicopters Mi-35M from
Russia is currently being fulfilled.

It is necessary to remark that Moscow tries to compensate for any sale
of weapons to Azerbaijan by armament supply to Armenia. Armenia as a
CSTO member receives weapons with discounts but it cannot buy weapons
in the same quantities as the neighbor. Along with this, it is obvious
that something will be supplied to Yerevan soon too, possibly even on
credit.

To be continued in the next issue of the bulletin

America: On the wrong side of the world revolution

America: On the wrong side of the world revolution
Yuram Abdullah Weiler

On Line: 05 March 2012 18:11
In Print: Tuesday 06 March 2012

`I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world
revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of
values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a `thing-oriented’
society to a `person-oriented’ society. When machines and computers,
profit motives and property rights are considered more important than
people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are
incapable of being conquered.’ — Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, April
4, 1967.

Almost half a century has passed since Dr. King uttered those dire but
eloquent words of warning when the United States of America was
engaged in a barbaric aggression against the Vietnamese people. Since
then, corporate greed, technology and consumerism have come to reign
supreme in the U.S., and the inherent evils of racism, materialism and
militarism as we were forewarned by Dr. King appear now to be
invincible.

In its rhetoric, the United States zealously touts itself as the
world’s foremost champion of democracy and human rights, but let us
briefly examine this self-proclaimed guardian of western civilization.
While there are many factors to judge the degree of democracy in
government, among the most important are freedom of the press,
independence of the judiciary, limits on executive power, vibrancy of
political opposition and transparency of elections.

Unfortunately for today’s Americans, their press is anything but free
since the vast majority of communications media in the U.S. is owned
by six corporations: General Electric, Walt Disney, News Corp.,
TimeWarner, Viacom and CBS. Down from 50 corporations in 1983, a
dozen in 1992 to six today, these megamedia monoliths own perhaps 90%
of all mass media in America: newspapers, magazines, TV and radio,
internet and cellular. Since the corporate media moguls have
interests intertwined with the military-industrial complex, news
reporting is severely slanted and any views contrary to the welfare of
the war establishment are sanitized, marginalized or censored.

While America may have an independent judiciary, which some consider
to have been a model for the rest of the world, access is restricted
to those who can afford it, and incidences of racial and ethnic
discrimination occur with alarming frequency. A 2011 report by the
World Justice Program asserts, `The [U.S.] civil justice system is
independent and free of undue influence, but it remains inaccessible
to disadvantaged groups. Legal assistance is expensive or unavailable,
and the gap between rich and poor individuals in terms of both actual
use of and satisfaction with the civil courts system remains
significant. In addition, there is a general perception that ethnic
minorities and foreigners receive unequal treatment from the police
and the courts.’

Despite relatively high marks, the independence of the American
judiciary must be questioned over election campaign funding practices
for judges, since large donations by wealthy benefactors obviously
have the potential to influence decisions made by the elected jurists.
In the U.S., bribery and corruption appear to take the more subtle
form of campaign contributions.

Not so subtle is the blatant racism within the U.S. judicial system,
which imprisons a disproportionate number of blacks and ethnic
minorities as documented in a report by Human Rights Watch. Black
non-Hispanic males are incarcerated at a rate over six times that of
white non-Hispanic males and almost three times that of Hispanic
males. Also disturbing is the trend toward privatization of
incarceration leading to what some refer to as the prison-industrial
complex. Prisons are a growth industry in the U.S., which also leads
the world in incarceration with 25% of the world’s prisoners.

Additionally, there are concerns over concentration of executive power
and circumvention of the judiciary as is exemplified in the recently
passed National Defense Authorization Act of 2012. It makes little
sense to laud the virtues of an independent judiciary, when the U.S.
president can bypass it at will to incarcerate or assassinate anyone,
including American citizens, anywhere in the world who may be on `The
List’.

While seeds of dissent are sprouting in America in the form of the
occupy movements, the lack of vibrant political opposition remains
truly striking. One blogger even asks, `Why aren’t Americans, like
the Armenians, or the Greeks, or the French, protesting/rioting in
various hard hit areas of the United States and demanding real
change?’ Unlike other western democracies, there is no true opposition
party in the U.S., as acclaimed linguist and political critic Noam
Chomsky points out, `In the U.S. there is basically one party — The
Business Party. It has two factions, called Democrats and Republicans,
which are somewhat different but carry out variations of the same
policies.’

Gene Sharp of the Albert Einstein Institution observes, `People in
many countries have experienced decades or even centuries of
oppression, whether of domestic or foreign origin. Frequently,
unquestioning submission to authority figures and rulers has been long
inculcated.’ The scholar concludes, `The result is predictable: the
population becomes weak, lacks self-confidence, and is incapable of
resistance.’ This certainly appears to be true for older Americans
who grew up in the 1950s and 60s in a fearful world seemingly on the
brink of nuclear war, with duck-and-cover drills in school and
Conelrad Civil Defense radio broadcasts at home. Perhaps the youth
will cause an American awakening to blossom this spring.

Concerning elections in the U.S., it is the Electoral College, which
consists of 538 electors chosen from among the party elites, that
actually elects the president and not the citizens. At least four
times, the candidate with a minority of the popular vote has been
elected in the Electoral College, essentially reducing the popular
vote to a charade; the most recent example was the Bush coup in 2000.
Incredibly, electors from 24 states holding 257 electoral votes — and
only 270 are required to win — are not legally bound to vote for the
candidate winning the popular vote in their respective states. In
other states, electors are `bound’ by a pledge or by law with
punishments ranging from cancellation of vote and replacement to a
$1000 fine. Any other country implementing a similar voting system
would be accused by the U.S. of election fraud.

No longer a democracy where `elected’ leaders represent the interests
of their constituents, America has become what some scholars term a
`democratic dictatorship’, which means that despite the pretense of
elections, the president wields such concentrated power as to be
indistinguishable from a dictator. Scholar Michel Chossudovsky
summarizes U.S. politics stating, `While the facade of democracy
prevails, supported by media propaganda, the American republic is
fractured. The tendency is towards the establishment of a totalitarian
State, a military government dressed in civilian clothes.’

Vietnam was on the right side of the world revolution as Dr. King
noted, `The Vietnamese people proclaimed their own independence in
1945 after a combined French and Japanese occupation, and before the
Communist revolution in China.’ Sadly, he also pointed out, `Even
though they quoted the American Declaration of Independence in their
own document of freedom, we refused to recognize them. Instead, we
decided to support France in its reconquest of her former colony.’
The U.S. dropped 88,500 tons of bombs and 19 million gallons of Agent
Orange defoliants on Vietnam in an effort to impose a dictatorial
regime in place of the legitimate government, whose leader Ho Chi Minh
originally had admired the U.S. And to compound the offense, the U.S.
dropped over 260 million cluster bombs on Laos, of which 75 million
did not detonate, killing over 200,000 people to date. Are these the
acts of a civilized western democracy or of a bellicose, imperialistic
fascist power?

No, America is and has been on the wrong side of the world revolution,
but Iran and Islam are on the right side. Iran, accused by the West of
being a `threat’, has not acted aggressively against other countries
since Nader Shah invaded India in 1738. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei states, `The Islamic Republic of Iran has presented a model
to the world of Islam: a model for religious democracy, a model for
independence and national glory.’ It is precisely this Islamic model
of religious democracy of which the U.S. and the West is most
apprehensive.

India, where one of the world’s largest strikes by 100 million workers
recently occurred, is on the right side of the world revolution.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the Indian political leader who played a
pivotal role in freeing India from Britain’s iron-fisted colonial grip
through non-violent resistance, recognized the peaceful power of Islam
while in prison. He writes, `I became more than ever convinced that
it was not the sword that won a place for Islam in those days in the
scheme of life. It was the rigid simplicity, the utter
self-effacement of the Prophet (S), the scrupulous regard for pledges,
his intense devotion to his friends and followers, his intrepidity,
his fearlessness, his absolute trust in God and his own mission.’

Bahrain, Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Palestine, Syria, Tunisia, Yemen and
most of the Middle East are on the right side of the world revolution.
While much of the world favors Islamic concepts of democratic
government, America remains obstinately on the wrong side of the world
revolution, imposing its supremacy, as it has since the worldwide
Islamic awakening began in Iran 33 years ago. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
writes, `Our enemies are alarmed and do not want our nation — which
is located in a strategic part of the world — to achieve these
accomplishments. They do not want the Iranian nation to be known as
the standard-bearer of Islam.’

The Holy Quran has a message for the United States and all the
hegemonic powers that seek to impose their supremacy over other
nations. It would benefit them to study it diligently.

`As for that abode of the Hereafter, We assign it to those who do not
want to impose their supremacy over others in the land, nor spread
corruption.’ (Surat al-Qasas 28:83)

http://www.tehrantimes.com/yuram-writings/96117-america-on-the-wrong-side-of-the-world-revolution