BITSANDPIECES

one hope one quest witness the fitness

76 notes

I’m curious: Why didn’t we call for intervention when Sri Lanka butchered thousands in single month in 2009?

Joshua Foust.

Important question. Naresh Fernandes further asks: “How come they’re all so upset about Syria but let Sri Lanka get away with much worse in 2009? And Israel all the time?” You know where this is leading to. While the plight of the ongoing massacre in Syria will never be downplayed, it is essential to keep an eye on foreign policy decisions and how interventions are prioritized for reasons a little too obvious.

(via mehreenkasana)

Also, I have been out of loop, but has it been established the regime’s forces were responsible? I do not see them killing civilians with knives and obviously I could be wrong but Bashar cannot be dumb enough to think he would get away with massacring people, especially children, in such a fashion. If any one benefits from this atrocity, it is those who seek military intervention and regime change. Please, I do not support Bashar (he needs to go) but you have to ask such questions.

(via globalwarmist)

To all of those who don’t know what has been happening in Sri Lanka, then please go through these tags, also watch this documentary! However there’s always 2 sides to one story, so please do your own research as well. I just know I support the Tamil minority anyway.

(via leptiir)

(via leptiir)

229 notes

8 Destructive thinking patterns and how to change them

kemetically-ankhtified:

  1. ‘Life is shit’ Thinking pattern –Everything in life is bad, everybody is not to be trusted and nothing good will ever happen to them e.g. “I won’t get that job, the interviewer didn’t like me, I didn’t particularly like them anyway.”
  2. ‘Unsubstantiated conclusive’ Thinking pattern– You tend to make a lot of conclusions without any evidence to back up your conclusions. This can be a really destructive pattern as it can limit you in seeing reality for what it is e.g. “He walks a bit funny, he must be gay.” (I actually heard someone saying this about a colleague last week).
  3. ‘Never to me’ Thinking pattern – This is when you think nothing good will ever happen to you. This can be a deep seated way of thinking and it is a deep down inability to believe you are worthy of anything good happening to you e.g. “I’ll never have money, I’ve never had it before so I’ll never have it in the future, might as well carry on with this shitty job, at least it pays the mortgage.”
  4. ‘The negative psychic’ Thinking pattern – Presuming you know what people are thinking about you and it’s all bad. e.g. “She thinks I’m an idiot, I’ll try to avoid talking to her.”
  5. ‘Should, would, could’ Thinking pattern – This type of person knows what they have to do to change their life, they are capable and they know it and they would do it if only……… e.g. “I know I could go to university and I would, but I’m just to busy with other things right now, I’ll apply next year.”
  6. ‘Emotion based’ Thinking pattern – Your emotions control what you are thinking and therefore your vision of what reality is e.g. “I feel incapable of doing that so I must be incapable”.
  7. ‘It’s all my fault’ Thinking pattern – You see yourself as being the cause of everything bad that has happened e.g. “It’s my fault he left me for another woman.” You’ll notice this type of person does not take responsibility for the good things that happen.
  8. ‘They’re all wrong’ Thinking pattern – You see everyone as incapable of doing anything right and your way is the best way to do it e.g. “He can’t do it right, I’ll stay late tonight and fix it when he’s gone.”

Click for full article

this is important

(Source: sharvondaphotog)

5 notes

photowolff:

The favela Roda de Fogo is home to some 30,000, residents say, although official figures are much lower.  The population has sporadically jumped during numerous spontaneous land invasions since the 1960s.  1) A boy relaxes in front of his home early Monday afternoon; 2) Cramped in the tiny walkways of a squatters hub, a woman finishes breast feeding her baby; 3)  A few years before she was born, the young girl’s family squatted upon the ruins of an abandoned mansion, where she now stands in the foyer;  4) Residents often complain of the State’s failure to build adequate sanitation and drainage systems.  Indeed, the State has built nothing in the area but a police post; 5) In a poorly ventilated shanty home, children sleep to the buzz of makeshift wall fans under the protective eyes of Jesus.  (photos by Michael Wolff)

19 notes

The difference between an admirer and a follower still remains, no matter where you are. The admirer never makes any true sacrifices. He always plays it safe. Though in words, phrases, songs, he is inexhaustible about how highly he prizes Christ, he renounces nothing, gives up nothing, will not reconstruct his life, will not be what he admires, and will not let his life express what it is he supposedly admires.
Søren Kierkegaard (via acceptandembrace)

(via revolutionofconsciousness)

177 notes

It is reported that about 30% of the world’s population is unemployed. That’s worse than the Great Depression, but it’s now an international phenomenon. You have 30% of the world unemployed, a huge amount of work that needs to be done just rebuilding the society alone. The people who are unemployed want to do the work, but the system is such a catastrophic failure that it cannot bring together idle hands and work. This is all hailed as a great success, and it is a great success - for a very small sector of the population.
Noam Chomsky  (via warriorsrise)

(Source: fyeahnoamchomsky, via warriorsrise)

75 notes

thepeoplesrecord:

Lies & Consequences in Our Past 15 WarsMay 28, 2012
Afghanistan -
Bin Laden, as a justification for the longest war in U.S. history, had always had weaknesses.  As with Saddam Hussein or Muammar Gadaffi or Manuel Noriega, past U.S. support for bin Laden had to be kept out of the discussion.  And a crime had to be transformed into an act of war.  A crime by a non-state group was used to implicate the nation of Afghanistan, even though 92% of Afghans not only didn’t support the crime of 9-11, but they have to this day never heard about it.
If bin Laden was not the reason for over a decade of war in Afghanistan, perhaps al Qaeda more generally was the cause.  When President Obama continued the war in 2009 and tripled the number of U.S. troops in it, he and his subordinates argued that if the Taliban had power it would work with al Qaeda, and that would allow al Qaeda to endanger the United States.  Some of the same officials who made this claim, including Richard Holbrooke, at other times admitted that al Qaeda had virtually no presence in Afghanistan, that the Taliban was not likely to work with al Qaeda, and that al Qaeda could easily plan attacks on the United States in a dozen nations other than Afghanistan, just as the 911 attack had been planned, in part, in Europe and the United States.
Libya -
The New York Times admitted to “scores” of dead from NATO strikes unacknowledged by NATO.  Over 600,000 civilians fled the country, including 100,000 Libyans, while another 200,000 Libyans were internally displaced.  NATO had bombed the city of Tripoli for months, occasionally apologizing for the deaths of civilians, but leaving many observers with the impression that the goal was “shock and awe” — or “terror bombing” as opposed to “precision bombing.”  Among the targets were media outlets, in which journalists were killed by NATO’s missile strikes.
Because cruise missiles and drones did the dirty work, U.S. Department of State Legal Adviser Harold Koh told Congress that the war was neither a war nor even “hostilities” (the language in the War Powers Act).  If no U.S. pilots or soldiers were at risk, then the bombs were not hostile.  They were friendly explosions. 
Drone Wars -
In February 2002, a drone pilot thought he’d killed Osama bin Laden, but it turned out to be an innocent man.  Expert observers, including Shahzad Akbar, a Pakistani lawyer representing drone victims, believe the vast majority of drone victims are not the individuals who were targeted.  Noor Behram, who photographs drone victims, says, “For every 10 to 15 people, maybe they get one militant.”  President Obama has instructed the government of Yemen to keep a reporter locked up whose crime appears to be having reported on the victims of a U.S. drone strike.  Over a million people, by Amnesty International’s estimate, have fled the areas of heavy drone bombing in Pakistan.
Drones have killed Americans in “friendly fire,” including on April 6, 2011, in Afghanistan.  Afghans have killed CIA drone pilots and other U.S. officials inside their offices.  Even drone “pilots” working in the United States can commit suicide.  They are suffering extremely high rates of stress and burnout, according to the Air Force.  A Pakistani who tried to blow up a car in Times Square in 2010 said it was revenge for drone attacks.  Eventually, blowback for drone attacks may come in the form of drone attacks.  U.S. companies sell drones to democracies and dictatorships alike.  Al Qaeda stole a crashed U.S. drone from Yemeni police in February 2011.  And in December 2011, Iran captured a U.S. drone a decade after the CIA had given Iran plans to build a nuclear bomb, any possible progress on which the drone was no doubt supposed to be spying on.
Iraq I - 
In 1995, President Clinton announced that he would “help the people of Bosnia to secure their own peace.”  Almost two decades later, U.S. and other foreign troops have never left , and the place is governed by a European-backed Office of High Representative.[xiv]  U.S. involvement in Yugoslavia gave NATO a reason to exist after the collapse of the Soviet Union.  It was also not unrelated to lead, zinc, cadmium, gold, and silver mines, cheap labor, and a deregulated market.
Iraq II -
President George W. Bush had decided on the war and sought ways to get it started for many months, while publicly pretending to be striving to avoid a war.  Vice President Cheney pressured the CIA to fudge the facts, and set up an even more compliant “intelligence” operation within the Pentagon.  Secretary of State Colin Powell made a war sales pitch to the United Nation despite his own staff having warned him that many of the claims he would be making were not backed up by the evidence.  The U.N. refused to authorize the war, but Bush launched it anyway, resulting in over a million deaths and over 4 million people displaced from their homes, along with such complete devastation of Iraqi society that commentators began popularizing the term “sociocide.”  This disaster cost the U.S. trillions of dollars in direct expense and indirect economic impact.
Bosnia -
In 1995, President Clinton announced that he would “help the people of Bosnia to secure their own peace.”  Almost two decades later, U.S. and other foreign troops have never left , and the place is governed by a European-backed Office of High Representative.[xiv]  U.S. involvement in Yugoslavia gave NATO a reason to exist after the collapse of the Soviet Union.  It was also not unrelated to lead, zinc, cadmium, gold, and silver mines, cheap labor, and a deregulated market.
Full article explaining impact of other U.S. wars
This Memorial Day, ask - Who is sending these men & women overseas to risk their lives in a destructive war? Who is calling for more soldiers to be killed?
Honor fallen veterans by fighting for an end to all wars. 

thepeoplesrecord:

Lies & Consequences in Our Past 15 Wars
May 28, 2012

Afghanistan -

Bin Laden, as a justification for the longest war in U.S. history, had always had weaknesses.  As with Saddam Hussein or Muammar Gadaffi or Manuel Noriega, past U.S. support for bin Laden had to be kept out of the discussion.  And a crime had to be transformed into an act of war.  A crime by a non-state group was used to implicate the nation of Afghanistan, even though 92% of Afghans not only didn’t support the crime of 9-11, but they have to this day never heard about it.

If bin Laden was not the reason for over a decade of war in Afghanistan, perhaps al Qaeda more generally was the cause.  When President Obama continued the war in 2009 and tripled the number of U.S. troops in it, he and his subordinates argued that if the Taliban had power it would work with al Qaeda, and that would allow al Qaeda to endanger the United States.  Some of the same officials who made this claim, including Richard Holbrooke, at other times admitted that al Qaeda had virtually no presence in Afghanistan, that the Taliban was not likely to work with al Qaeda, and that al Qaeda could easily plan attacks on the United States in a dozen nations other than Afghanistan, just as the 911 attack had been planned, in part, in Europe and the United States.

Libya -

The New York Times admitted to “scores” of dead from NATO strikes unacknowledged by NATO.  Over 600,000 civilians fled the country, including 100,000 Libyans, while another 200,000 Libyans were internally displaced.  NATO had bombed the city of Tripoli for months, occasionally apologizing for the deaths of civilians, but leaving many observers with the impression that the goal was “shock and awe” — or “terror bombing” as opposed to “precision bombing.”  Among the targets were media outlets, in which journalists were killed by NATO’s missile strikes.

Because cruise missiles and drones did the dirty work, U.S. Department of State Legal Adviser Harold Koh told Congress that the war was neither a war nor even “hostilities” (the language in the War Powers Act).  If no U.S. pilots or soldiers were at risk, then the bombs were not hostile.  They were friendly explosions. 

Drone Wars -

In February 2002, a drone pilot thought he’d killed Osama bin Laden, but it turned out to be an innocent man.  Expert observers, including Shahzad Akbar, a Pakistani lawyer representing drone victims, believe the vast majority of drone victims are not the individuals who were targeted.  Noor Behram, who photographs drone victims, says, “For every 10 to 15 people, maybe they get one militant.”  President Obama has instructed the government of Yemen to keep a reporter locked up whose crime appears to be having reported on the victims of a U.S. drone strike.  Over a million people, by Amnesty International’s estimate, have fled the areas of heavy drone bombing in Pakistan.

Drones have killed Americans in “friendly fire,” including on April 6, 2011, in Afghanistan.  Afghans have killed CIA drone pilots and other U.S. officials inside their offices.  Even drone “pilots” working in the United States can commit suicide.  They are suffering extremely high rates of stress and burnout, according to the Air Force.  A Pakistani who tried to blow up a car in Times Square in 2010 said it was revenge for drone attacks.  Eventually, blowback for drone attacks may come in the form of drone attacks.  U.S. companies sell drones to democracies and dictatorships alike.  Al Qaeda stole a crashed U.S. drone from Yemeni police in February 2011.  And in December 2011, Iran captured a U.S. drone a decade after the CIA had given Iran plans to build a nuclear bomb, any possible progress on which the drone was no doubt supposed to be spying on.

Iraq I - 

In 1995, President Clinton announced that he would “help the people of Bosnia to secure their own peace.”  Almost two decades later, U.S. and other foreign troops have never left , and the place is governed by a European-backed Office of High Representative.[xiv]  U.S. involvement in Yugoslavia gave NATO a reason to exist after the collapse of the Soviet Union.  It was also not unrelated to lead, zinc, cadmium, gold, and silver mines, cheap labor, and a deregulated market.

Iraq II -

President George W. Bush had decided on the war and sought ways to get it started for many months, while publicly pretending to be striving to avoid a war.  Vice President Cheney pressured the CIA to fudge the facts, and set up an even more compliant “intelligence” operation within the Pentagon.  Secretary of State Colin Powell made a war sales pitch to the United Nation despite his own staff having warned him that many of the claims he would be making were not backed up by the evidence.  The U.N. refused to authorize the war, but Bush launched it anyway, resulting in over a million deaths and over 4 million people displaced from their homes, along with such complete devastation of Iraqi society that commentators began popularizing the term “sociocide.”  This disaster cost the U.S. trillions of dollars in direct expense and indirect economic impact.

Bosnia -

In 1995, President Clinton announced that he would “help the people of Bosnia to secure their own peace.”  Almost two decades later, U.S. and other foreign troops have never left , and the place is governed by a European-backed Office of High Representative.[xiv]  U.S. involvement in Yugoslavia gave NATO a reason to exist after the collapse of the Soviet Union.  It was also not unrelated to lead, zinc, cadmium, gold, and silver mines, cheap labor, and a deregulated market.

Full article explaining impact of other U.S. wars

This Memorial Day, ask - Who is sending these men & women overseas to risk their lives in a destructive war? Who is calling for more soldiers to be killed?

Honor fallen veterans by fighting for an end to all wars. 

(Source: thepeoplesrecord, via warriorsrise)

1,724 notes

The press still thinks [global warming] is controversial. So they find the 1% of the scientists and put them up as if they’re 50% of the research results. You in the public would have no idea that this is basically a done deal and that we’re on to other problems, because the journalists are trying to give it a 50/50 story. It’s not a 50/50 story. It’s not. Period.

Neil deGrasse Tyson, podcast interview (via dionthesocialist)

I’ve come to learn that the truth often does not lie halfway between viewpoints. An important lesson. (via project-argus)

(Source: wiredforlight, via stay-human)

1,289 notes

No Malcolm X in my history text, why is that?
‘Cause he tried to educate and liberate all blacks.
Why is Martin Luther King in my book each week?
He told blacks, if they get smacked, turn the other cheek.
Tupac (via lifeisliterallylimited)

(via stay-human)

48 notes

Five banks — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup Inc. (C), Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) together held $8.5 trillion in assets at the end of 2011, equal to 56 percent of the U.S. economy, compared with 43 percent in 2006, according to central bankers at the Federal Reserve.
Source: Bloomberg financial news. (via pieceinthepuzzlehumanity)

(Source: oldenough2burmom, via stay-human)

47 notes

So far as the United States seems to be concerned, it is only a slight overstatement to say that Muslims and Arabs are essentially seen as either oil suppliers or potential terrorists. Very little of the detail, the human density, the passion of Arab-Muslim life has entered the awareness of even those people whose profession it is to report the Arab world. What we have instead is a series of crude, essentialized caricatures of the Islamic world presented in such a way as to make that world vulnerable to military aggression.
Edward Said, Islam Through Western Eyes (via arielnietzsche)

(via stay-human)