Tuesday, September 26, 2017

NEWSMAX: Who Are the Rohingya Fleeing to Bangladesh?

Who Are the Rohingya Fleeing to Bangladesh?

Image: Who Are the Rohingya Fleeing to Bangladesh?
The sprawling, overcrowded Thainkhali camp at sunset September 25, 2017, in Thainkhali camp, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. (Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
By Tuesday, 26 Sep 2017 01:26 PMCurrent | Bio | Archive
The Rohingya, a Muslim minority in Buddhist Arakan or Rakhine province in Burma, have garnered international outrage since over a million have fled into neighboring Bangladesh due to inexcusable discrimination and accusations of atrocities. Most Muslims in Arakan live on the border with Bangladesh, the Mayu frontier, and they are considered by Burma to be Bengal migrants. The United Nations has accused Burma of engaging in ethnic cleansing and the reputation of Burma’s leader Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has been questioned by liberal elites.
Who are the Rohingya?
The 12th to 16th century Muslim conquest of India involved genocide, the scale of which would not be matched until the 20th century genocides and democides of the Nazis and Communists. The slaughter of upwards of 400 million Hindus and
Buddhists virtually destroyed Buddhism and corrupted the peaceful Hindu culture of India. The Hindus of Afghanistan were annihilated which is why the Afghan mountains are called Hindu Kush meaning Hindu slaughter.
Dr. Aye Chan, Professor of Southeast Asian History at Kanda University of International Studies in Japan authored "The Development of a Muslim Enclave in Arakan State of Burma." Dr. Chan claims that the Rohingya are mostly Bengal migrants who began settling in the border region of Arakan in the late 19th Century. Other smaller Muslim groups in Burma, not called Rohingya, trace their arrival further back. Bengal intellectual Abdul Gaffar coined the term Rohingya in an article entitled "The Sudeten Muslims" published in The Guardian Daily, August 20, 1951. The Burmese Bengals were previously called Chittagonians by the British as Chittagong is on the Bengal side of the border with Burma. The Bengal migrants mostly became rice farmers.
Similarities can be drawn between the late 19th Century Bengal migration into Burma and the Arab migration into Ottoman controlled southern Syria which occurred at the same time. The Arabs migrated into that region to take advantage of the economic opportunities created by the Jews who were also settling into the region in increasing numbers. Like the Arab settlers, who would assume the term Palestinian as part of their effort to forge a national identity, the Bengals assumed the name Rohingya. The Arabs co-opted the term Palestine from the Jewish settlers as Palestine was the term given by the British to delineate the Jewish homeland after World War I and the withdrawal of the Turks.
According to Dr. Chan, many Bengal migrants were radicalized during World War II by the Bengali Faraidi movement which advocated Jihad. Violence broke out between Bengalis and Buddhist Arakanese before the Japanese occupation and the Arakanese sided with the Japanese hoping for independence. The British, fighting the Japanese in Burma, armed the Burmese Bengalis who turned their weapons on Buddhists destroying monasteries and Pagodas and engaging in terrorism.
In 1946, the Burmese Bengalis formed the Muslim Liberation Organization. In 1948, after the British ignored their request to join Pakistan and after Burma independence, the Muslims launched a full-scale uprising as the Mujahid Party.
After Bangladesh independence, 1971, arms began to flow to Rohingya gorillas and on July 15, 1972, a congress of Rohingya parties was held at the Bangladesh border which issued a call for “Rohingya National Liberation.” Successive Burmese governments have refused to recognize Rohingya parties in response to the secessionist agenda and the violent actions of the Rohingya movement.
Dr. Chan described the atmosphere in Arakan following Burmese independence:
The ethnic conflict in the rural areas of the Mayu frontier revived soon after Burma celebrated independence on 4 January 1948. Rising in the guise of Jihad, many Muslim clerics (Moulovis) playing a leading role, in the countryside and remote areas gave way to banditry, arson and rapes….there were more than two hundred Arakanese villages in Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships before the war began. In the post-war years only sixty villages were favorable for the Arakanese resettlement. Out of these sixty, forty-four villages were raided by the Mujahids in the first couple of years of independence. Thousands of Arakanese villagers sought refuge in the towns and many of their villages were occupied by the Chittagonian Bengalis.
From a human rights standpoint, aid should be offered to Bangladesh in term of aiding in the assimilation of the Bengali refugees from Burma. The political question ought to serve as a lesson to non-Muslim nations in terms of the possible long-term consequence of large Muslim immigration.
Chuck Morse is a radio host who broadcasts live Thursday's at 10 a.m. ET at WMFO-Tufts. Chuck hosts the podcast "Chuck Morse Speaks" on iTunes and Stitcher and his books are available on Amazon.com. For more of his reports — Click Here Now.

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Transgenderism, politics, culture

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Transgenderism, politics, culture"


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

PODCAST: Florida radio host Ian Trottier interviews Chuck Morse

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Florida radio host Ian Trottier interviews Chuck Morse "


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

PODCAST: Managing Cancer without Big Pharma

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Managing Cancer without Big Pharma"


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

PODCAST: Classic conversation between Chuck Morse and the late Dr. Sam Blumenfeld

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Classic conversation between Chuck Morse and the late Dr...."


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

Monday, September 18, 2017

PODCAST: A History of Palestine

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"A History of Palestine"


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

Sunday, September 17, 2017

PODCAST: Will America Fail? - The Adolescent Brain

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Will America Fail? - The Adolescent Brain"


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!


Friday, September 15, 2017

PODCAST: Part 1: How to guard American liberty Part 2: Suicide Prevention expert

New episode from
Chuck Morse

"Part 1: How to guard American liberty Part 2: Suicide P..."


Fresh off the press!
Chuck Morse just published a new podcast episode.

Listen to it now

Podcasters love their craft and love their listeners even more. Show you care, share this episode and spread the word!

Monday, September 11, 2017

Newsmax: Donald Trump Is the First Anti-Fascist President

Donald Trump Is the First Anti-Fascist President

Image: Donald Trump Is the First Anti-Fascist President
U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he and First Lady Melania Trump make their way across the South Lawn to board Marine One, bound for Camp David, on September 8, 2017, in Washington, D.C. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)
By Monday, 11 Sep 2017 03:08 PMCurrent | Bio | Archive
Unlike black leather masked communist Antifa totalitarians and their left-wing and liberal enablers, Donald Trump is the first anti-fascist president. He has already rescinded many of the executive orders that were issued by President Barack Obama who bypassed Congress, the representatives of the people, and who thus accelerated the fascistic trend of recent presidents who likewise tended to govern more like monarchs or, it could be argued, fascist dictators.
Bill Clinton advisor Paul Begala once described this fascistic trend to The New York Times, July 5, 1998, when, referring to executive orders he said: "Stroke of the pen. Law of the Land. Kinda cool."
Barack Obama famously told his cabinet: "I’ve got a pen and I’ve got a phone – and I can use that pen to sign executive orders and take executive actions and administrative actions that move the ball forward." Obama created laws out of thin air, such as DACA, while ignoring laws that he didn’t like such as border enforcement. Obama appointed judges with the same authoritarian orientation.
President Trump is returning immigration policy to its rightful constitutional source, the people’s representatives in Congress. He is asking Congress to assume its rightful constitutional responsibility to legislate in areas of immigration, healthcare, and taxes. As president, he will then have the prerogative to either sign or veto those laws. If a veto is issued, Congress can attempt to over-ride the veto. This is how the system of checks and balances works and, indeed, this is why America is not fascist.
Increasing numbers of Americans, particularly college students, have either forgotten or probably never learned how America works, how our government holds limited powers which leaves maximum power at its source, with the individual citizen under God. By this means, the minority is protected from the mob and the most vulnerable minority is the individual. In his inaugural address President Trump made his intention clear:
"We are transferring power from Washington, D.C. and giving it back to you, the American People. For too long, a small group in our nation’s Capital has reaped the rewards of government while the people have borne the cost."
Trump is trying to drain the swamp of the truly fascistic authoritarians, bureaucrats who make laws which they euphemistically call other names such as guidelines. These unelected and unaccountable mandarins remain in power regardless of who is elected. They are the so-called dark state and they represent an incremental slide toward a European style Fascism that was rejected when the founders declared independence from the tyrant King George III.
Trump is standing up to political correctness, the great cultural weapon in the fascist arsenal. He is knocking those grenades out of the hands of the left who, enabled by their media allies, can destroy their effectiveness of their enemies with bully boy tactics, by calling them names like “racist.” It is they, in fact, who are race obsessed as they push the same destructive racist ideas and policies that they have been peddling since the 1960’s. President Trump is pulling their masks off by supporting pro-business policies such as tax cuts and slashing onerous regulations. Trump opposes endless foreign wars, he favors trade agreements that benefit American industry and labor, he is removing the blank check from foreign nations, he supports measures that reduce the corrupt aspects of the fascistic nanny-state.
Trump is the first businessman to be elected president in a nation that is primarily made up of businessmen. As such, he is the antithesis of the fascist who seeks government control over business. An essential difference between Fascism and Communism, which are both leftist political experiments in mass control, is that Fascism offers monopoly power to select businesses who become governing partners while the Communist system constitutes a singular and massive state-run corporation that controls everything. Fascism views society through the collectivist lens of race and group identity while Communism focuses on the collectivism of class identity. Thus, Fascism promotes race consciousness and Communism promotes class consciousness. The American system is the exact opposite in that America promotes individual consciousness and empowerment. Donald Trump epitomizes this principle.
Chuck Morse is a radio host who broadcasts live Thursday's at 10 a.m. ET at WMFO-Tufts. Chuck hosts the podcast "Chuck Morse Speaks" on iTunes and Stitcher and his books are available on Amazon.com. For more of his reports — Click Here Now.

Posts by Chuck Morse