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Thread: The Arabs are not happy

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    Australia Avalon Member Cjay's Avatar
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    Default The Arabs are not happy

    I received this by email today. It is not my personal view. I wonder how accurate this is.

    Quote The Arabs are not happy

    • They are not happy in Gaza.
    • They are not happy in the West Bank.
    • They are not happy in Jerusalem.
    • They are not happy in Israel.
    • They are not happy in Egypt.
    • They are not happy in Libya.
    • They are not happy in Algeria.
    • They are not happy in Tunis.
    • They are not happy in Morocco.
    • They are not happy in Yemen.
    • They are not happy in Iraq.
    • They are not happy in Afghanistan.
    • They are not happy in Syria.
    • They are not happy in Lebanon.
    • They are not happy in Sudan.
    • They are not happy in Jordan.
    • They are not happy in Iran.

    Where are the Arabs happy?

    They are happy in England.
    They are happy in France.
    They are happy in Italy.
    They are happy in Germany.
    They are happy in Sweden.
    They are happy in Holland.
    They are happy in Denmark.
    They are happy in Belgium.
    They are happy in Norway.
    They are happy in the U.S.
    They are happy in Canada.
    They are happy in Romania.
    They are happy in Hungary.
    They are happy in Australia.
    They are happy in New Zealand.
    They are happy in any other country in the world that is not under a Muslim rule.

    And who do they blame?
    • Not Islam.
    • Not their leadership.
    • Not themselves.
    But the countries in which they are happy to live.

    This is so true... Democracy is really good for them:

    In a democracy they can live comfortably,
    enjoy the high quality of life which they did not build and work for,
    they don’t have to be productive and earn a living,
    they can be wild, and break the law,
    exploit the social services, wear Burkas and make a mockery of our Police and Courts and generally bite the hand that feeds them.

    The question is why do they always try to bring their failed system with them, why do they want to turn Australia & other countries into the country they left for a better life...?
    Australian Muslims make up less than 3% of our population yet our Government is fixated on pandering to them... Why??
    The more I learn, the more I realise I don't know

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    (Peace Love Respect Equality)

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    When you think about it... Its so true haha

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Sorry to know this, Cjay. I think it reflects more or less the same sentiments of the indigenous people in UK, outside of me at least.
    Last edited by ktlight; 12th September 2011 at 14:53.

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Last edited by jagman; 12th September 2011 at 14:51.

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    More divide and conquer games being played on us.

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    Costa Rica Avalon Member ulli's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    It's genetic....and their desert environment made them that way...

    Fierce climate creates fierce people,
    as it demands that the survival instinct is at it's optimum.

    After the revolution in Iran in 1978 when there was a huge influx into England
    school teachers became desperate about discipline...the fights in the school yards had become bloody,
    Something that never happened before the Iranians arrived.
    Then they noticed something about how one specific group of kids never got into fights:
    Those who had lived in the gentler climates of Iran.
    So this observation became a story that made it into the Sunday Times, where I read it. I never forgot it.

    Soon afterwards I moved to Barbados, where I lived on the gentle west coast,
    a lovely climate where there was a constant gentle breeze,
    but just enough to keep you cool.
    But whenever we went to spend a weekend on the east coast, the Atlantic side,
    where the trade winds howled and the beach sand was being blown quite hard
    we would return home totally altered in our personalities, and not really relaxed at all,
    but quite wired and uptight...more like we were ready for battle.

    That always reminded me about that article in the Sunday Times
    and the statement about the effect climate had on personality.
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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    ulli, what an interesting (made sense to me) effect gentle breezes -v- howling winds had on you. I love the winds, even at their most fierce. Had a vivid dream about one, which is not for this thread.

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    sounds to me like the person who sent you that e-mail is a racist ....

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by beyondmyctrl (here)
    sounds to me like the person who sent you that e-mail is a racist ....
    As is, you could be right. But, don't you think it is possibly from someone wanting to provide information?

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by beyondmyctrl (here)
    sounds to me like the person who sent you that e-mail is a racist ....

    It does seem that way indeed, to even bother to compile such a list...unless they only forwarded it, to get a reaction.

    But whoever compiled it must have a similar personality, or at least have major unhappiness issues.
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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    that is called environmental determinism and it is a dangerous philosophy, to believe that the environment affects the people who live in those environments. it almost destroyed my discipline, geography, after the 1st world war, in the states at least, as all of the ivy league colleges got rid of their geography departments.

    the idea is old, though, that climate affects the people. some of the more extreme aspects of it state that people from warm climates are lazy while people from cold climates are industrious. this was used to justify racism in a so-called scientific manner from the age of darwinism (social) onwards, was part of the background philosophy justifying eugenics and, obviously, a partial justification for institutional racism as well as personal prejudice and xenophobia.

    i think perhaps that since we are souls first, before we are people, our behavior is more learned, cultural in nature, rather than genetic. especially since the newest science states that genetics can be changed relatively easily, with sound, no less, words, music, etc. people are imminently changeable, we can adapt to any environment. i find this original posting to be quite sad here in this forum, but i suppose such things must find their expression.
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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by Rahkyt (here)
    that is called environmental determinism and it is a dangerous philosophy, to believe that the environment affects the people who live in those environments. it almost destroyed my discipline, geography, after the 1st world war, in the states at least, as all of the ivy league colleges got rid of their geography departments.

    the idea is old, though, that climate affects the people. some of the more extreme aspects of it state that people from warm climates are lazy while people from cold climates are industrious. this was used to justify racism in a so-called scientific manner from the age of darwinism (social) onwards, was part of the background philosophy justifying eugenics and, obviously, a partial justification for institutional racism as well as personal prejudice and xenophobia.

    i think perhaps that since we are souls first, before we are people, our behavior is more learned, cultural in nature, rather than genetic. especially since the newest science states that genetics can be changed relatively easily, with sound, no less, words, music, etc. people are imminently changeable, we can adapt to any environment. i find this original posting to be quite sad here in this forum, but i suppose such things must find their expression.
    The fact that heat saps energy has been used as a weapon, I totally agree.

    I have major issues with people who even use terms like "lazy".
    The arrogance that came out of the industrialized world and it's accompanying racism
    blinded people from seeing qualities in other cultures, especially across the north south axis.

    I spend decades trying to scrape off my own cultural programming,
    by immersing myself into the cultures where I lived.
    This has helped me with the discovery that all of life ought to be seen as personal, rather than general.
    Meanwhile allowing those who have not yet found themselves and
    like to lump people into groups in order to understand their world, is part of their journey.

    I was 30 then, and at that point examining the roots of distinct cultures, while erasing my own racism.
    At that point I was committing to laziness as a lifestyle, because I was turning my back on the rat race.
    I sold my business in England and got rid of my German hard work ethics, consciously, to find my soul.

    While turning my back on my own roots I surrounded myself with friends who were desperately searching for their African roots. Meanwhile I tried to make them see our shared future of togetherness.
    Another story there.

    And as you said, such things must find their expression, then one can move on to the next life lesson.
    Last edited by ulli; 12th September 2011 at 15:48.
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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Thank you to everyone for your insight.

    In this era of political correctness being taken to extremes, it is dangerous to make observations of cultural differences and say some things out loud, lest we are branded as racist. I like to think I am not racist, as I grew up in a strongly multi-cultural society where the majority seem to be very tolerant. At various stages of my life, I have had friends from almost every country in the world. However, what I have noticed is that the people who protest loudest about being victims of racism are often racist themselves.

    I have often wondered whether my avatar - one world, one people - is seen by some as NWO globalist. I assure you it is not. I wish we could all get along as friends and co-operate to solve the problems on Earth.
    The more I learn, the more I realise I don't know

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    (Peace Love Respect Equality)

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by Cjay (here)
    Thank you to everyone for your insight.

    In this era of political correctness being taken to extremes, it is dangerous to make observations of cultural differences and say some things out loud, lest we are branded as racist. I like to think I am not racist, as I grew up in a strongly multi-cultural society where the majority seem to be very tolerant. At various stages of my life, I have had friends from almost every country in the world. However, what I have noticed is that the people who protest loudest about being victims of racism are often racist themselves.

    I have often wondered whether my avatar - one world, one people - is seen by some as NWO globalist. I assure you it is not. I wish we could all get along as friends and co-operate to solve the problems on Earth.
    Understood, Cjay. I am with you on that.

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    I think it´s not a problem with the Arabs only. People aren´t quite happy these days all over the world.
    The house is on fire, the fire alarm is ringing, you can smell the smoke, you can feel the heat, but somehow, refuse to get out of the bed and do anything about it; Maybe you´re just scared, maybe you believe the fire is an illusion, or maybe you´re just waiting for a miracle to save you...Eventually, you die. So, what is it worth to be "awake" if you don´t get out of the bed and do something?

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Keith Richards has a home in Jamaica and spends most of his time there. In his autobiography he explains rastafarianism beautifully as he's accepted into their tightnit community there. I cant remember the exact words he used but basically the guys he's hangs out with smoking and making music with refuse to work for the system. They see it as slavery. Lisa x

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    I'm happy.

    I have numerous serious worries but I am healthy, happy and very grateful.
    The more I learn, the more I realise I don't know

    Pax Amor Veneratio Parilitas
    (Peace Love Respect Equality)

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by Lord Sidious (here)
    More divide and conquer games being played on us.
    Ego thrills at the prospects of this kind of "reasonable compassion" whispering as you read these "observations"; "Ah yes, the dirty sand people, I feel for them of course I do, for I am a noble being who is concerned with the welfare of others, because that is good and right and after all I am good and right. And of course they are violent, these swarthy nomads, fighting a hard scrabble existence out there in the hot sandy desert. They are savages, yes, but really I can feel my loving compassion (patronizing elitism) for their poor little souls. Forgive them, for they know not how superior we are."

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    What is a "Arab" and how do you know if it is happy or not?
    “Bundinn er bátlaus maður”

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    Default Re: The Arabs are not happy

    Quote Posted by ulli (here)
    The fact that heat saps energy has been used as a weapon, I totally agree.
    Just another weapon in quite the long list of them. Environmental Determinism was of course an entire scientific paradigmatic viewpoint that gained credence in the late 1800s but finds expression even earlier in the writings of geographers and other european explorers as they traveled the world and interacted with folks who had no real desire to leave their countries - let alone conquer and consume - and who did not have to fight against nature itself in order to survive or eke out a living. I'm not exactly sure why it became anathema in the elite colleges and universities of the United States, except for the fact that geography was such a german discipline, many of the men that I learned about who were instrumental in the formation of geography as a university discipline were germans of the 19th and early 20th century. Geopolitics was the framework within which the Reich methodically went about their machinations, to devastating effect. In that context, this sort of culturally anthropological viewpoint about the nature of different types of humans was a subtext to the overall goals of that movement, which I think have been explored in other threads here.

    What has always been interesting to me, personally, has been my lived experience versus the historical record on these matters. I lived in Germany for 5 years back in the late 1980s and early 1990s. My barometer of innate racism within a culture as it pertains to skin-color has a setting that I call the 'child meter'. How parents act when I'm near their children determines their quotient of ingrained fear based only upon my physical appearance. That fear is set by the way the culture presents people who look like me through the mainstream media, as well as ongoing streams of regional xenophobia. So if parents who are otherwise calm and relaxed call or run to their children when I come near, looking at me with distrust, suspicion or fear automatically, then there is some sort of programming going on there. In Germany, there was none of that. There were other experiences I had, with a pack of neo-nazis in Nuremberg in '89 after the Wall came down, a group of punks at a gas station and an older man on a fussgangerzone in Kaiserslautern, but the experience in the parks was quite memorable. It was a different kind of experience. The United States, of course, is much different. Canada is somewhere in-between.

    Quote Posted by Cjay (here)
    However, what I have noticed is that the people who protest loudest about being victims of racism are often racist themselves.
    My posts have nothing to do with political correctness. I speak the truth I know and encourage those I interact with to do the same. If someone wishes to address me directly, I respond directly.

    Of course there are happy people of southwest Asian descent in the nations of their origins. And it is not necessarily true that they want democracy, but they want the foot of democracy - as expressed through the economic and political support of their dictators - off their backs. And they want a form of governance where they can be free of persecution and suppression by their leaders, who have been, again, supported if not overtly then covertly by to so-called democratic countries at various times since their inception as countries, most of which, again, being founded by those selfsame European powers. These forms of governments, based upon pyramidal structures, create inequality automatically and our current problems in this area are originally related to that primary issue.

    Unfortunately it has become the new political correctness to blame people who have valid and realistic concerns regarding the lingering effects of institutional and personal racism and make it seem as if their personal prejudices amount to the same thing as the forms of xenophobia that are supported by the institutions of many societies. As if an American Indian in the United States or an Albino in the Congo doesn't have to deal with forms of culturally supported inequality that marks them as separate from the rest of society. It has become all too common to turn the tables against these smaller groups of individuals in order to effect some sort of political agenda of oneness that totally attempts to ignoring continuing prejudices by large groups and institutionalized instances of racism.

    There is no moving forward until the past is addressed. As Bill says that we all individually have to do our personal spiritual work in order to move forward toward ascension, the same thing is true of societies as well. The collective ills of larger soul-groups must be addressed for them to be transcended. There must always be an accounting, and, again unfortunately, too many people believe that they can continue to ignore this particular aspect of our shared reality and still move forward themselves. I wrote an article about how this affects the so called New Age community called The Gathering of the Rainbow Tribe: New Age delusions and rude awakenings.

    It got no traction here, which I thought was interesting considering the fact that a lot of Bill's research has to do with the racist nature of the NWO and the depopulation agenda of the Elite. This topic always results in a drawing of lines and of people taking sides and continues to be a major barrier to that unity that you mentioned in your prior response, but that perspective is not present in the text of your original post. I will quote myself to end:

    Quote i think perhaps that since we are souls first, before we are people, our behavior is more learned, cultural in nature, rather than genetic. especially since the newest science states that genetics can be changed relatively easily, with sound, no less, words, music, etc. people are imminently changeable, we can adapt to any environment.
    Last edited by Rahkyt; 12th September 2011 at 18:05.
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