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Monthly Archives: January 2013

As Pakistan’s Election Season Approaches, Mobarak Haider Asks a Critical Question or Two

15 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Asia, Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Pakistan

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democracy, humanity, hypocrisy, Mobarak Haider, Pakistan, political psychology, political values, politics

Call it political poetry as it calls for considerate and patient reading.

Today, Pakistan approaches a general election for setting the National Assembly of the Parliament of Pakistan.  The run up to the event, which is to be held on or before March 18, 2013, is fraught with ambivalence over the direction of the country, overshadowed by the presence of Islamists, especially groups within the Pakistani Taliban, continuing to bring their intimidating and violent acts to the innocent of Pakistan, and haunted by memories of military dictatorship and fear of recurrence.

Mobarak Haider, who has long produced work in the area of political psychology, published the following with the Rationalist Society of Pakistan and on his Facebook page, and I’m please to post it here with the author’s permission.

Where is the End?

How many more do you wish to kill?

All Hazaras and Northern Shiites first?

Yes, they are comparatively easier to kill because they can be found in a herd, are peaceful and have no horns to hit back with.

Then all Shiite in smaller towns, followed by stronger ones in the cities? Then Christians en masse, if need be?

Good strategy by our strategic assets!

We must salute you Brave Lions of the Desert, before we salute the Men at their best who follow you to restore peace! Then will be a period of calm; vacation for you to eat in your cages your well-deserved meat and pats from the boss. Our great warriors in khaki will be admired for their immense courage and nobility in sparing their helpless brothers from carnage.

Our hearts ache in helpless frustration when we see you perform massacre after massacre with holy impunity.

We bite our lips in impotent rage when again and again our army manipulates our constitution against our constitution and brilliantly arouses civilians against civilians: “Well if law and order is to be restored by us , then what use are you?” asks the innocently bored general, “Now then, sit aside and face the cases of corruption which brought the nation to the brink of disaster”!

The politicians who have saved their skins by obediently playing second fiddle for five years will now save their skins by submitting confessions for pardon.

Great work!

As first step defeat the police and civil rule through your strategic assets, then get invited by an immense national clamor, to take over as interim or hopefully permanent government.

We are more aware than ever before that as a people crowd, we do not have the democratic option to have representatives.

We have to salute a savior.

Two of them, are available: Army Generals or Taliban Generals.

In fact it is not a choice but a possibility.

They will settle affairs among themselves; such is our destiny. In fact Allah seems to have chosen kings and soldiers as destiny of all Muslims for all times. In past centuries we had king like others had. Generals and Jihadists have appeared to combat the heretical trends of democracy and human rights. Perhaps that is why Muslim immigrants are struggling against representational democracies of the West, to attain their destiny of life-time rulers.

It is not true that generals and jihadists overthrow every rule they serve.

They are loyal to kings and sheikhs and Imams. They hate only modern Muslim rulers who choose heretical path of power: democracy.

Let us see some close cases.

Muslim kings ruled for centuries the Indian population which was deeply hostile most of the time. Throughout these centuries there were tiring wars, mass armed revolts and deep unrest which army alone handled, because no ‘darogha’ or ‘Kotwal’ could handle them.

But no general ever took over.

The British, foreign rulers with a foreign religion ruled us with a few thousand English soldiers and a large army of Muslims and other locals. Muslims soldiers faithfully fought to defend the British rule against Muslim jihadists led by Syed Ahmad Shaheed and others for half a century.

They finally fought for them in WW2.

The British hanged Muslim Ulama, they massacred in Jallianwala, they hanged freedom fighters, they hanged Ilm Din, a far greater hero of All India Muslims than is Mumtaz Qadri; he had acted over a book that strongly and directly insulted the Prophet of Islam, he had been defended by Iqbal and Jinnah, but he was hanged without the need of a Martial Law.

Musaddiq of Iran was easy to overthrow because of his democracy.

Ayatullahs rule till their death with an authority of Allah. They hanged hundred thousands, they plunged their people in a meaningless war of a decade. No protest from a general, not even grumbling.

Unlimited rule of kings, holy men and foreign rulers has been a norm because no general interfered with political power and no agency created independent civil brigades of assassins to create anarchy as a pretext for takeovers.

Isn’t it grotesque that an intelligence network which wrestles with CIA and KGB, locates and sends out their highly covered agents, fails in this godforsaken land to get hold of its own leashed Lions of the Desert?

As helpless observers of our disaster, we can just observe: “It is not wise to destroy your people, any people, for prosperity and power which already overflows from your coffers. Pain and disgrace will be the final reward of misdeeds”.

It would seem to take a general with a well comprised army to empower a president with a fairly elected government, and nowhere may this be more so than for Pakistan, a state naturally inclined to drift west toward peace and prosperity only to find itself several times yanked back toward medieval oligarchy embalmed by the honeyed venom of Islamic dogma working through the veins of some impassioned young and many venal and well positioned elders, all glorious in their mission, frequently bloody in fact.

Such an impression, however, may overlook assaults against Pakistan’s defense and other security elements on the ground as well as the effects of a sustained and still within-bounds presidency and perhaps an equally persistent drone-and-missile program targeting Taliban leaders and clarifying both a human message and a form of conversation and its influence.

Out of habit, we may perceive strings and puppets and some, say, Qatar-to-Pakistan connections — or, say, a Pakistan military and ISI mainline to Taliban — but autonomy and autonomy-seeking behavior and politics may play a stronger role in Pakistan’s restive frontiers than so many other invasive forces.  One might read — and I have read — a devout Pashtun’s equivalent of “they went that-a-way” in reference to the hotter heads in the area.

However Pakistan may wish to walk, one hopes it will be upright and down the middle of the street as opposed to slouching menacingly at one hour and  obsequiously the next down both sides of it for decades to come.

Related Reference

Ahmad, Riaz.  “Execution: Taliban slay 21 tribal policemen in FR Peshawar.”  The Express Tribune, December 30, 2012.

Ahmad, Riaz.  “Late-Night Offensive: Six policemen killed in attack.  The Express Tribune, October 16, 2012.

Ali, Zulfiqar.  “Car bomb kills 17 in crowded market in Pakistan.”  Los Angeles Times, December 17, 2012.

Bangkok Post.  “Militants kidnap 22 Pakistani soldiers: officials.”  December 28, 2012.

Imtiaz, Shah.  “Pakistan gunmen shoot 5 workers from anti-polio campaign.”  AlertNet, December 18, 2012.

Kouri, Jim.  “Terrorists kidnap and execute 21 police officers in Pakistan.”  Examiner, December 30, 2012.

Reuters.  “Bomb Kills 14 Pakistani Soldiers in North Waziristan.”  Updated News, January 13, 2013: “The court order came as an enigmatic preacher turned politician, Muhammad Tahir-ul Qadri, addressed thousands of supporters outside parliament and repeated calls for the government’s ouster. In earlier speeches, he said that a caretaker administration led by technocrats should take its place.”

Rosenberg, Matthew.  “Taliban Opening Qatar Office, and Maybe Door to Talks.”  The New York Times, January 3, 2012. Note: the article seems to deal with the Afghanistan side of Taliban political interest.

Walsh, Declan.  “Pakistan Supreme Court Orders Arrest of Prime Minister.”  The New York Times, January 15, 2013.

Zahra-Malik, Mehreen.  “Gunmen kidnap seven Pakistani soldiers.”  Reuters, January 2, 2013.

Facebook Dunks Freedom of Speech — Prefers Fascism?

15 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology

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Facebook, freedom of speech, Khaled Abu Toameh, social presence

Abu Toameh, the son of an Arab Israeli father and a Palestinian mother, is a former senior reporter for the Jerusalem Post. He has reported that as of yesterday, his Facebook page had been deactivated.

The Commentator has learned that following complaints from the Palestinian Authority and Jordanian security authorities about his articles dealing with corruption, Facebook had taken the steps necessary to effectively censor his work.

The Commentator.  “Facebook ‘censors’ Palestinian writer posting anti-corruption articles.”  January 15, 2013.

Mark, really, suppressing Khaled Abu Toameh is just totally uncool.

I mean thanks for the communicating infrastructure and all, but a writer like Khaled influences how the world works.

That people would want to fly over their office carrels by way of the pc-enabled web and so expand their consciousness of the world: who wouldn’t dig that?

And we’re glad that as the web developed, you figured out how to make it swing.

However, we need to know such as “Palestinians: Fatah’s Armed Gangs Are Back” (January 15, 2013), chatype about it on Facebook, and know we have in addition the option of becoming Facebook buddies with the writer or subscribing to his feed or “Liking” his page.

Truly, what were you thinking?

There’s more to this story, of course.  Calling out the top belies and hides the engineering on the floor.  Facebook, so a quick web search will tell, has been wrestling with the idea that some content may be unpopular, undesirable, or, on this story, undiplomatic in the political arena.  Does the virtual common carrier have input into what its servers and software will support in expression.

Must it support jihad sites, for example?

How about 9/11 Truthers?

How about bigots whom no one now dare call bigoted?

Additional Reference

Chen, Adrian.  “Inside Facebook’s Outsources Anti-Porn and Gore Brigade, Where ‘Camel Toes’ are More Offensive than ‘Crushed Heads’.”  Gawker, February 16, 2012.

The Oldspeak Journal.  “Facebook Censors Prominent Political Critics; Deactivated Accounts in Coordinated Purge.”  December 29, 2012.

Washington’s Blog.  “Political Witch Hunt by Popular Social Media Sites.”  December 27, 2012.

Webster, Stephen C.  “Low-wage Facebook contractor leaks censorship list.”  The Raw Story, February 22, 2012.

Vulnerable Choppers: A Note From South America

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology

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Al Qaeda, conflict, South America

The government of Colombia refuse to report what happened with the oil pipeline…

The government of Peru say that the helicopter had a mechanical failure only…

The government of Brazil say that they have the control over all the border with Peru and Colombia…

The government of Venezuela say that not have terrorists camps in your territory…

The government of Ecuador say that control all the national territory…

My correspondent seems to believe that the region’s governments know Al Qaeda is in business in their shadowlands and are cautious about the possibility of their being in possession of surface-to-air missiles.

Instead of sending out helicopter gunships for “hunting”, there may be some corresponding preference for ferrying troops to the vicinity of sightings and march them in for search and destroy.

The country that fails to control the terrorists groups in the jungle is Brazil.

Colombia, Peru and Ecuador have a hard battle against terrorists groups, every day even fighting body with body against them.

One day, I looked over the map of my friend’s nation and noticed how thin the infrastructure was — well, major highways and their secondary feeders — were outside the large cities and then out over the mountains and down to the jungle.

No one who care to look can miss these dark regional spaces in which multiple states may have declared boundaries and official “writ of government” for administration; however, such lands remain to this day wild frontier.

The country is poor, has no roads, bridges, military bases, which can guarantee the presence of the state in the remote places of the country….

For any who may wish to corroborate this assertion, Google Earth or other maps may suffice.

There are yet on earth places that are so Out There that their rural districts haven’t exactly bought into ecotourism and placid farming (and some international mining): such remote enclaves may be — depending on who is in the neighborhood — still the redoubts of bandits, and these days, those fly all kinds of banners.

I’ve mentioned to the correspondent, “You may need a new war of conquest Out Back to subdue the Cartelites and the Islamists.”

On the other hand, the values of the unnatural or out-of-bounds, all those a bit Out There and Out There in the Outback, have ways of stimulating some local action in their disfavor. Continue reading →

Firebase Mali

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Africa, Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Mali

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2013, Al Qaeda, Ansar al Dine, conflict, counter-terrorism, counterinsurgency, France, Islamist, Mali, North Africa, war

“I’d like the crisis to come to an end so we can go back home” (0:48).

Six months is not a “crisis”.

Six months is a tragedy.

Governments had launched plans for a push-back for September 2013, but as has happened about six years ago in Somalia, the Al Qaeda-type forces (Al Shabaab in Somalia; Ansar Al-Dine in Mali) have wasted little time flexing their muscles in a weak state.

Ever hard to see starting out, “jihadists” have a way of becoming seen as they become entrenched.

One may note that in either space, Somalia or Mali, or elsewhere, if they pick up hard assets in machinery, such become visible and more easily draw retributive fire and associated thumping, but the same have the option of then responding with a lower visibility, Iraq-style, brush fire type of insurgency, provided redoubts and hideouts of one sort or another.

“Paris has already acknowledged that the rebels have turned out to be better armed than originally thought.” (0:48)

Later, same video with reference to the revolution in Libya:

” . . . a lot of the ones trained by the U.S. defected when they were needed most, taking guns, and trucks, and their new found skills to the enemy in the heat of battle. . . .”

So here we go.

NATO (unintentionally) armed and trained them, and today, with unrepentant and stung Malian citizens ready to fight, with French boots on the ground and welcomed, and with African forces in training, perhaps God Almighty himself has devised a demonstration for so unnatural a turn in humanity.

Deliberately ambivalent and ambiguous in the above statement — an indirect comment on language — I nonetheless wish the French, the Mali, and all of North Africa much luck and God’s grace in shutting down “Al Ansar” — as far from The Answer or any answer as can be (and the true translation “The Helpers” has a merciless and remorseless absurdity to it) —  and the malevolent obscenity they have put before the witness of humankind.

Reference

All Africa.  “Mali: French Fighter Jets Pound Mali, Top Islamist Leader Reported Killed.”  January 13, 2013.

France24.  “The Plunder of Timbuktu: “What Can We Do Against Armed Men?”  December 26, 2012.

Front Page Magazine.  “Mali’s Sharia Nightmare”.  September 28, 2012.

Magharebia.  “Maghreb countries strengthen border security.”  January 14, 2013.

Radical Islam.  “Mali Islamists Threaten 60 More Amputations”.  August 29, 2012.

UPI.  “Algerian Forces Train to Fight Jihadists.”  January 7, 2013.

UPI.  “French push Algeria to join Mali incursion.”  December 17, 2012.

Wally, Omar.  “Gambia.  Counter-Insurgency Training Wraps Up at GAF Training School.”  All Africa,  December 17, 2012.

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Uncategorized

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A Middle Path for Pakistan? A Glimpse at Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri’s Long March

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Pakistan

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2013, January, long march, Pakistan, Tahir ul Qadri, winter

For this two year old clip, the YouTube introduction by “DarSahb” reads, “This is the real islam and he is a real Muslim scholar and a real man who loves humanity without considering which religion they belong to n thats wat islam teaches.  Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said that “respect the humanity” so, we all need to respect each other.”

Yesterday, from Pakistan:

Mobile services were also suspended in areas of Lahore that come in the route of the caravan,Express News reported. The areas include Ravi Town, Model Town, Shahrah-e-Quaid-e-Azam, Minar-e-Pakistan and Imamia Colony. According to government officials, the decision was taken due to security threats.

AFP, Rana Tanveer, Web Desk, Zahid Gishkori.  “Tahirul Qadri’s long march begins from Lahore.” The Express Tribune, January 13, 2013.

Buses have been stopped on the way to their step-off points.

Police have been mustered in the tens of thousands to secure the marchers (the noun in mind for that today seems to be “Taliban”).

Dr. Tahir Ul Qadri presents something of a mystery today.  His 604-page fatwa on terrorism (against it, thank God) seems to have brought him to David Frost’s attention, but before we believe the scholar “pro-west”, one may want to develop a larger view of the person.

Tahir-ul Qadri, who returned to Pakistan last month after years in Toronto, accuses the government of being corrupt and incompetent, and says polls cannot be held until reforms are enacted.

He claimed on Monday to be leading one million people into Islamabad, where they will camp out on the streets until their demands are accepted.

Geo Pakistan.  “Tahirul Qadri leads long march towards Islamabad.”  January 14, 2013.

Ul Qadri’s primary demand seems to be for honest government, an essential “no” to corruption.

Who (the world over) is not in favor of honest government?

The next video showing links to a YouTube page titled, “Misc. Dr. Tahir ul Qadri Videos” and maintained by Jawwad Sadiq.

It appears Sadiq is promoting Ul Qadri, but to western eyes and ears, at least two conversion-related clips in the series, one of a woman in burka talking about her experience (and how becoming Muslim helped her quit smoking) and the other of a young man accepting conversion (and affirming his belief in angels) might ruffle some feathers.

In a report filed today, Jewish News One notes that “Qadri went into exile in Canada in 2006 after falling out with Pakistan’s political leaders and the country’s political leaders are worried he is seeking to derail the upcoming elections which are vital for Pakistan’s transition from military rule as this could be the first ballot held after a civilian-led government has completed a full five-year term.”

Jewish News One.  “Pakistan cleric’s ‘long march’ amid sectarian violence.”  January 14, 2013.

Close to the present moment on this story:

But on Monday, Mr. Qadri’s threat to mount a million-person march on Islamabad to push for change in politics fell flat.

The march went ahead, but according to witnesses the number of participants was as low as 5,000 people and no larger than 30,000 as it neared Islamabad late Monday.

Symington, Annabel.  “Tahir ul Qaeri March Falls Flat”.  The Wall Street Journal: India: India Realtime, January 14, 2014.

Additional Reference

Dr. Muhammad Tahir Ul Qadri

Wikipedia.  “Muhammad Tahir-ul=Qadri”.

Blogger Ahmed Meligy Freed

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Free Speech, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ahmed Meligy, Egypt, free speech, journalism

The Facebook poster wrote on one of the Meligy’s support sites: “AHMED got released . . . .”

By whom?

From where?

My source says Meligy has no Internet access but his phone has been on . . . .

I don’t like this story.

Of course, I’m happy to hear of a fellow writer’s renewed presence in the world, but this is also signal of the shortcomings of the remote blogger’s “second row seat to history” in journalism: it is a good position from which to provide commentary.

For reporting, it stinks.

# # #

Ahmed Meligy – Eleven Days Missing

10 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology

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Conflicts are loaded with binary decisions: go forward / go back?  Shoot / don’t shoot?  Give the order / don’t give the order?

It’s like the ante at poker or the ring hovering over the romance: are you in / are you out?

This involving a young man with a courageous voice has been like that: speak / don’t speak?

Jim,

If I disappear will you just sit on the story?  Sorry. I live strongly by the Biblical Proverb (chapter 31) to speak up for those who have no voice.

For eleven days, Ahmed Meligy, a much loved and well regarded Egyptian blogger whose worked appeared regularly in The Jerusalem Post (blog: Egypt’s Missing Peace) has gone missing.

The report of Ahmed Meligy’s arrest on Monday morning, seems consistent from the first report through its echo in The Jerusalem Post.  “An individual in Egypt who has had some communication with Meligy’s family contacted the Post following the arrest, writing that the family claimed that five men had taken him around 7 a.m. on Monday because of his blog.”

What if it was you?

A knock on the door, a “come with us” in front of the house . . . .

You have been made invisible and only God knows where you are or what is happening to you.

The curious get an odd message (here I rephrase the gist of it): “He’ll be out in a couple of weeks.  Don’t make things worse.”

Uh huh.

Who says?

And worse in what way?

What, in fact, is going on?

In a civil society, an official representative of the government would tell the bones of the story or, at minimum, acknowledge it with the release of related information.    Such could come from a facilities clerk reading from a roster of who has been checked in.  Simple as that.

The Forouhars’ death was atrocious. Dariush, founder of the Hezb-e Mellat-e Iran (Iran Nation’s Party), was killed in his study on his chair by being inflicted with eleven knife blows. Parvaneh, his wife, was killed with twenty-four stabs. Their bodies were also mutilated. According to reports, Dariush was decapitated, while Parvaneh’s breasts were cut off.

Anne Mahjar-Barducci’s description of one of the Iranian “Chain Murders” (referring to the serial killing of Iranian intellectuals and other opponents in the post-revolutionary atmosphere) will go on to discuss the effects on opposition to the regime: “The serial murders shook the Iranian public opinion and in particular the Iranian students’ movements, which condemned the chain murders by organizing unprecedented demonstrations.”

Sounds good, right?

Didn’t work.

The “Iran Curtain” — the state’s blocking and tracking of cell and web communications — came down on the attempted “velvet revolution” to come (and the regime’s thugs took care of the rest).

Other Egyptian Bloggers Arrested, Past and Present

Alaa Abd El-Fattah (Mubarak Era): “On 7 May 2006, El-Fattah was arrested during a peaceful protest after he called for an independent judiciary.”

Alber Saber (Mursi Period): “an Egyptian blogger arrested on 13 September 2012 on allegations of having shared the YouTube trailer for the anti-Islam film Innocence of Muslims on his Facebook page.”

Al-Hosseiny Abu Deif (Mursi Period): From the Reporters Without Borders blurb: “died . . . in central Cairo’s El Qasr Al Aini Hospital of the serious head injury he received while covering clashes outside the presidential palace in Cairo in the early hours of 6 December./ Hospitalized in a critical condition after a rubber bullet was fired at his head at close range, Deif never recovered consciousness.”

Bassem Youssef (Mursi Period): ” . . . Egyptian lawyers have launched an investigationinto a popular TV host there, arguing that he insulted Morsi on his Daily Show-esque television program.” Touchy, touchy, all that.

Islam Afifi (Mursi Period): “Reporters Without Borders hails yesterday’s decision by President Mohamed Morsi to request Al-Dostour editor Islam Afifi’s release just hours after a court placed him in pre-trial detention . . . . The press freedom organization also welcomes an announced presidential decree repealing pre-trial detention for media offences. “Mr. Afifi will be released under this decree,” presidential spokesman Yasser Ali said.”

Kareem Amer (Mubarak Era)

Khaled Mohamed Saeed (Mubarak Era)

Mohamed Sabry — From the Reporters Without Borders reported (linked here and also cited in reference):

Sabry’s arrest follows a series of complaints against Egyptian journalists and media, in response to which the public prosecutor’s office has started several judicial investigations despite President Mohamed Morsi’s pledge, shortly after his June 2012 election, that “no one will touch press freedom.

Mona El-Tahawy — This journalist may claim arrests by the Mubarak regime (during the height of opposition to it) and for defacing one of Pamela Geller’s posters in the New York subway system.  Writing, raising hell, or both, Eltahawy lives in the west — base is New York City — and has her own web site.

Wael Ghonim (Mubarak Era — today he’s a Google executive and, from the banner on his Facebook page, appears to be a strong supporter of “Dr. Mohamed Morsy”).

I hope I am clear and accurate, but I know I am not complete.  The pattern of fascist flip-flop, from Mubarak’s military junta to Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood fueled new Islamist enterprise, it looks like the state’s scribes, a few at least, take it on the chin.

The Committee to Protect Journalists maintains a page for Egypt, and for this story, I’ve heard they’re looking into it.

I haven’t yet contacted Reporters Without Borders, but that organization also maintains a page for the not-quite-free-press news from Egypt.

A Reflection on an Alternative Explanation

People go batty when the odd and unexplained visits them.

In the regions given over to wild conspiracy theories in which anything is possible, many possibilities may be entertained without particularly the need to explain them.

Whatever the discomfort or evil perceived, it may be for many quite enough to blame the CIA, Mossad, and the Masons.

That’s entertainment!

Moreover, the methods in reason may not be so available or robust as they are to the modern and post-positivism mind.

So, all things considered, I have a different idea about Ahmed Meligy, one tied to the wild improbable question, reasonably grounded: what if the writer made himself disappear?

While putting together this post that includes the arrests of others critical and expressive with regard to Egypt’s governments — both Mubarak’s and Morsi’s — there has been little record, if any — not that I’ve looked too heard, but it’s still the kind of thing that would show up fast on a web search — for not acknowledging the custody of suspects.

Think about that.

The story launched with a text message: “I am being arrested now, they took me from my house without telling me why… I am at the police car now..pray for me.”

Who got it first?

Who posted it to the web first?

From The Jerusalem Post’s first notice: “Meligy had recently informed Post Blog editor Lidar Grave that he would have to take a short hiatus from blogging because he was receiving threats.”

Well, there’s one motive for disappearing.

It doesn’t rule out other motives.

Every life has its troubles.

In fact, for the United States, one web site asserts that “2,300 Americans are reported missing every day.”

That’s a little hard to believe, but it’s a certainty that however many Americans may go missing on any given day — or be missing (about 48,000 reported in the above linked article) — it’s not for being arrested by “the feds” (and the feds keeping mum about it).

What it does tell you is that for many souls, there’s powerful motivation in their lives for not hanging around.

I may take it easy here on this story.

With the theory of the “malignant narcissist” in place and fair explanation for very bad relationships between autocratic leaders and organizations and their critics — artists, bloggers, journalists, press, and assorted (and abundant) representatives of the free — the causes for suppression of political expression seem clear and the patterns of arrests and acts of intimidation practically predictable.

In this instance, we also know we have yet to see a story break about any pattern of disappearances out of Egypt’s political scene, this much unlike what Pakistan and Iran have experienced in their internal agonies.

Whatever the story — personally, I think Ahmed Meligy’s going to show up (some rumors counseled waiting a couple of weeks — well, we’re almost there).

Whatever the story, I’m looking forward to its corroboration, one of those things that happen where the press is truly free and the pack of “professional skeptics” get to do their thing.

Reference

Al Arabiya.  “Anger rises in Egypt over blogger’s arrest; rights groups criticize military trials.”  November 1, 2011.

Anne’s Opinions.  “A tale of two peace activists”.  January 3, 2013:  “Two peace activists have been arrested in Egypt this week, yet their stories could not be more different.”  Anne comments on the arrests of an (alleged) Israeli traitor, Andre Pshenichnikov, and a confirmed “bridge-builder between Israel and Egypt” — Ahmed Meligy.

BBC.  “Egypt court jails blogger Alber Saber for blasphemy.”  December 12, 2012.

Ben Solomon, Ariel and Herb Kenon.  “Egypt extends detention of Israeli ‘infiltrator'”.  The Jerusalem Post, January 2, 2013.

Booth, William.  “Egyptian blogger Alber Saber’s arrest inderlines differences on freedom of speech.”  The Washington Post, September 26, 2012.

Jezebel.  “Writer/Activist Mona Eltahawy Arrested, Beaten, Sexually Assaulted by Police in Cairo.”  November 24, 2011.

Khazan, Olga.  “Meet Egypt’s Jon Stewart, who is now under investigation for satire.”  The Washington Post, January 2, 2013.

Krajicek, David.  “America’s Missing”.  Crime Library.

Mahjar-Barducci, Anna.  “The Chain Murders of Iran”.  Gatestone Institute, December 17, 2008.

Holpuch, Amanda.  “Mona Eltahawy i court over defacing posters: ‘I’m proud of what I did’.”  The Guardian, November 29, 2012.

The Jerusalem Post.  ”‘Post’ blogger in Egypt reportedly arrested.”  December 31, 2012.

Reporters Without Borders.  “Journalist Dies from Head Injury After Six Days in Hospital.”  December 14, 2012.

Reporters Without Borders.  “President Orders Editor’s Release But Concerns Remain.”  August 24, 2012.

Reporters Without Borders.  “Sinai-Based Freelancer to be Tried Before Military Court.”  January 9, 2013.

Zakaria, Fareed.  “No Velvet Revolution for Iran.”  The Washington Post, June 28, 2009.

Related

Committee to Protect Journalists.  “Bloggers imprisoned in mass sentencing in Vietnam.”  January 9, 2013.

Moran, Rick.  “Egypt’s Morsi purges cabinet.”  American Thinker, January 7, 2013: Egypt’s President Mohammed Morsi replaced 10 ministers in his cabinet, moving out some who opposed his policies while naming several Muslim Brotherhood supporters to take their place.”
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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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