Almost forgot.
This one is about India.
Post 2/2
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=18159
sourcing [color="#0000FF"]timesofindia.indiatimes.com/assembly-elections-2013/mizoram-assembly-elections/Church-backed-watchdog-body-has-its-own-poll-rules/articleshow/25732972.cms[/color]
Anyway, just another day in a typical christian pardees, carved out of India.
Sermons on "democracy" are only directed at Hindu-majority Nepal and Hindu-majority Bharatam, but not at any christian-majority regions within either.
The moment anything becomes a christian state - and Mizoram of course has declared itself a christian state openly, as cryptochristo rag TOI jubilantly reported last year under the guise of a casual quote - if any part of the nation ever becomes *christian*, its (carving itself into an independent state and) regressing into a theocracy is reported by the christomedia such as TOI as "but par for the course".
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=16412&SKIN=B
Mizoram is a Christian state, so ban Soccer on Sundays - Church
Church diktat bans soccer on Sundays for Mizo youth
TNN Sep 21, 2012, 03.47AM IST
articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-09-21/india/34001444_1_mizo-youth-mizoram-presbyterian-church-church-service
"Don't vote if you're unmarried and having intercourse or if you're drinking (not water, liquor)."
Look how closely the govt is tied to christianism in Mizoram, as admitted by the christists interviewed in the above, and tell me that this is not a theocracy. (Compare with the OTT on-fire-for-jeebus christist laws Constantine made when he became emperor: e.g. death sentences for women having extra-marital affairs etc, but not men of course, since Saint Constantine famously fathered bastard children himself.)
Of course, christian drinkers/unmarried swingers have it good in Mizoram despite being told not to vote. That's because they're christian, so they don't have to bear the full face of christian love yet (the dark and middle-ages will descend later, after the heathen Empire has declined and fallen.) Contrast with how the last remaining Hindu natives of Mizoram, the Rheangs and Bru, were treated by the christian terrorist outfits of Mizoram when these last were still working to ethnically cleansing the Hindu heathen natives in order to make the state actually fully christian. Heathen voters were uh .... "dissuaded" from voting not by ominous threats issued by church figures/spokespersons, but by christian bomb attacks near voting centres where Hindus go to vote:
It's the same church now kindly telling errant christians to refrain from joining the more faithful flock in voting, a christian-only right before, a faithful-christian-only right now.
Fortunately, the "Hindu" protectionists of christianism will in time be getting a taste of what their treachery inflicted (if there's any justice), as converted mizos have promised:
christianaggression.com/item_display.php?type=NEWS&id=1079250023
Anyway, that shows how things still were in the first decade of 2000. Now Mizoram is a christian state and doesn't need to resort to blowing up people anymore, since they've already been almost completely converted.
christianaggression.org/item_display.php?type=ARTICLES&id=1067144874
And the actual news was:
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=18159
sourcing timesofindia.indiatimes.com/assembly-elections-2013/mizoram-assembly-elections/Church-backed-watchdog-body-has-its-own-poll-rules/articleshow/25732972.cms
This one is about India.
Post 2/2
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=18159
sourcing [color="#0000FF"]timesofindia.indiatimes.com/assembly-elections-2013/mizoram-assembly-elections/Church-backed-watchdog-body-has-its-own-poll-rules/articleshow/25732972.cms[/color]
Quote:Indian way of Secularism;Church-backed body has its own poll rules.
09/12/2013 10:22:27 TOI
'Thy Kingdom Come' . That's how Mizoram welcomes you. Painted big and bold across a giant Cross a few yards from the runway at state capital Aizwal's Lengpui airport, the message seems ominous as you get familiar with the political nitty-gritty of this Christian-dominated state.
The election process has a sense of divine edict about it. The Church pushed the Election Commission to reschedule polling and counting dates to accommodate the Presbyterian Church's fiveday Synod despite chief electoral officer Ashwani Kumar's protests; counting was postponed by a day to December 9 because 'Sunday is meant for prayers'. Not just that, the clergy also plays virtual election commission. The Church has issued a four-page list of do's and don'ts for voters and candidates. Apart from the honesty and harmony bits, it says: "Refrain from voting for those who drink or have extra-marital sex." With almost 70% of Mizoram following the Presbyterian Church, no party rubs them the wrong way.
Dr Robert Halliday, secretary of Mizoram Presbyterian Church, says: "Mizoram's common people are pious, they'll abide by any Church guideline. We can only urge them to lead a moral life. We don't want to interfere with the election, rather we want to facilitate the process."
[color="#800080"](What a comedy. "We don't want to interfere, but remember not to vote if you drink/are in an extra-marital relationship. Or else.")[/color]
Mizoram People's Forum, a Church-sponsored watchdog formed in 2006, has signed a 27-point 'MoU' with major political parties, including the ruling Congress and BJP, to ensure a 'free and fair' election. Apart from curbs on lavish campaigning, the charter prohibits tall promises in manifesto , bans public meetings and protest rallies and tells parties not to organize vehicles to drop voters to polling booths. Hinting at Rahul and Sonia Gandhi's visit later this month, MPF general secretary Lalramthanga said: "Rules won't be relaxed for star campaigners of national parties. MPF will conduct the public meetings permitted by the Mizoram Pradesh Congress Committee."
No party defies the diktats. If they do, the MPF would "invalid the party (sic)," says the MoU. "Constituencies here are small ââ¬â 15,000 to 20,000 ââ¬â each vote counts. No politician can afford to ignore the Church's guidelines ," says CEO Kumar.
Insisting the EC, MPF and the Church share a common goal ââ¬â free and fair elections ââ¬â Kumar explains: "In Mizoram, the Church is older than the government . The state was formed in 1986 after the Church facilitated the peace process. Until recently, they looked after the people's education and healthcare. The Church isn't just a religious institution here, it's a way of life, the centre of social activities."
[color="#800080"](Apparently, there was no government in the region before 1986. Oh, so the Church facilitated the formation of the christist state... I mean, it "facilitated the 'peace process' that formed the state all the way back in 1986".
To think the christists infesting Mizoram speak of 1986 as some ancient time on par with the invention of christianism in the 3rd century CE, all while pretending the region and heathen Mizos before that period didn't exist.)[/color]
While the EC's lauded the MPF's role, many question the religious body's role in a democratic process.
"Elections should remain secular . The scenario in Mizoram is like that of 18th century Europe when religious doctrine got mixed up with political administration," says Lallianchhunga, assistant professor of political science, Mizoram University. "Would similar orders issued by another religious body in another part of India be accepted by the politicians?" he asks. "Going by this logic, we shouldn't have elections on Fridays and Tuesdays either because they are holy days for some religions."
[color="#0000FF"]College-goer Nghaka believes MPF is a Frankenstein in the making . "What authority does it have to issue guidelines beyond those issued by the EC? We're supposed to elect leaders, not saints. Some of the best leaders in world history - including Churchill and Kennedy, one a heavy drinker and another known for extra-marital affairs - would never have been able to contest elections in Mizoram."[/color]
[color="#800080"](Christist college-goer Nghaka is reaping the rewards of his treacherous subvertible parents converting to christianism. Then again, he admires Churchill - who wanted his heathen Hindu ancestors bombed to dust - and the catholic Kennedy who was mostly milling around while christian Vietnamese were brutally suppressing the Buddhists of Vietnam, see "Vietnam: Why did we go?" by Avro Manhattan.)[/color]
Read More : timesofindia.indiatimes.com/assembly-elections-2013/mizoram-assembly-elections/Church-backed-watchdog-body-has-its-own-poll-rules/articleshow/25732972.cms
Anyway, just another day in a typical christian pardees, carved out of India.
Sermons on "democracy" are only directed at Hindu-majority Nepal and Hindu-majority Bharatam, but not at any christian-majority regions within either.
The moment anything becomes a christian state - and Mizoram of course has declared itself a christian state openly, as cryptochristo rag TOI jubilantly reported last year under the guise of a casual quote - if any part of the nation ever becomes *christian*, its (carving itself into an independent state and) regressing into a theocracy is reported by the christomedia such as TOI as "but par for the course".
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=16412&SKIN=B
Mizoram is a Christian state, so ban Soccer on Sundays - Church
Church diktat bans soccer on Sundays for Mizo youth
TNN Sep 21, 2012, 03.47AM IST
articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-09-21/india/34001444_1_mizo-youth-mizoram-presbyterian-church-church-service
"Don't vote if you're unmarried and having intercourse or if you're drinking (not water, liquor)."
Look how closely the govt is tied to christianism in Mizoram, as admitted by the christists interviewed in the above, and tell me that this is not a theocracy. (Compare with the OTT on-fire-for-jeebus christist laws Constantine made when he became emperor: e.g. death sentences for women having extra-marital affairs etc, but not men of course, since Saint Constantine famously fathered bastard children himself.)
Of course, christian drinkers/unmarried swingers have it good in Mizoram despite being told not to vote. That's because they're christian, so they don't have to bear the full face of christian love yet (the dark and middle-ages will descend later, after the heathen Empire has declined and fallen.) Contrast with how the last remaining Hindu natives of Mizoram, the Rheangs and Bru, were treated by the christian terrorist outfits of Mizoram when these last were still working to ethnically cleansing the Hindu heathen natives in order to make the state actually fully christian. Heathen voters were uh .... "dissuaded" from voting not by ominous threats issued by church figures/spokespersons, but by christian bomb attacks near voting centres where Hindus go to vote:
Quote:Bomb attack by Christian terrorists to scare away [color="#0000FF"]Hindu Bru (Reang)[/color] tribal voters in Mizoram
Posted November 20, [color="#FF0000"]2003[/color]
The Hindu/IACA
Aizawl, Nov. 19. (PTI): Three bomb explosions, at least two of which were directed at the Bru tribals, occurred in Mizoram just a day before the Assembly elections in the State, where the voting right of the tribal community remains an issue. Police said there were no casualties.
A powerful explosion rocked a building at Tuipuibari village, bordering Tripura, last night where 10 electronic voting machines have been installed for Bru voters housed in six refugee camps in the neighbouring State after fleeing Mizoram, the police said.
Another bomb exploded last night at Bru-dominated Dampa Rengpui village, the police said.
Two persons, with two gelatine sticks, riding a scooter near the place of occurence were arrested.
A third bomb exploded near Raj Bhavan here with the police arresting one suspect.
Chief Electoral Officer Lalmalsawma said security had been stepped up in Tuipuibari and Kanhmun where 10 and seven special polling booths respectively were set up for 4,266 Bru voters to exercise their franchise.
Large-scale conversions triggered a [color="#FF0000"]systematic ethnic cleansing campaign sponsored by the Church[/color] which lead to migration of Reangs and Brus from Mizoram to Tripura and Assam, who have since been languishing in different make-shift camps and demanding safe return and rehabilitation to their ancestral homeland.
[color="#0000FF"]More shocking is that the refugees were also deprived of their voting rights in the last November Assembly elections in Mizoram. There are now 45,000 refugees in the two states - about 36,000 in Tripura and another 9,000 in Assam. They are uncertain of returning to their ancestral land[/color] and their only hope now seems to rest on the Centre to resolve the problem.
[color="#800080"](What, the christist centre? Fat chance. The crypto christo Centre is happy that the inconvertibles are ethnically cleansed out of their ancestral homelands and languishing in refugee camps where they were dying from diseases.)[/color]
These refugees are living under terrible conditions in the make- shift camps. Last year, over 350 refugees had died following the spread of gastroenterities and other diseases. Even now, paucity of medicines and food exist as quantities supplied by the camp authorities are not sufficient.
Sixteen-year old Maniram Reang, sheltered in a refugee camp in North Tripura, said, "Our condition is like that of animals here," adding "We do not know what crime we have done to live away from our motherland in such terrible conditions in refugee camps."
[color="#800080"](Why is the heathen blaming himself? He and the other Hindus did nothing wrong. It is the evil christianism and the christoconditioned protectionists of christianism - the kind that refuse to out cryptochristianism - that caused his miseries.)[/color]
Similar camps for refugees are located at Gachirampara, Dosda, Anandbazar and Kanchanpur.
The recent bomb attack was intended to scare away Reangs who wish to participate in the upcoming elections in Christian dominated Mizoram.
[color="#800080"](That was 2003. Now it's 10 years later and Mizoram is no longer just christian dominated. It's practically all-christian. Tomorrow they'll pretend people had peacefully chosen to convert to the "love" of christ.)[/color]
It's the same church now kindly telling errant christians to refrain from joining the more faithful flock in voting, a christian-only right before, a faithful-christian-only right now.
Fortunately, the "Hindu" protectionists of christianism will in time be getting a taste of what their treachery inflicted (if there's any justice), as converted mizos have promised:
christianaggression.com/item_display.php?type=NEWS&id=1079250023
Quote:...chief minister of Mizoram, Zoramthanga, told a Welsh missionary on Wednesday that he wishes to see Christian domination of all of India by sending forth as many as one lakh missionaries (100,000) from his state.
Anyway, that shows how things still were in the first decade of 2000. Now Mizoram is a christian state and doesn't need to resort to blowing up people anymore, since they've already been almost completely converted.
christianaggression.org/item_display.php?type=ARTICLES&id=1067144874
Quote:Mizos will fight Govt's indifference in polls
Posted October 26, 2003
By François Gautier
Thursday, 23 October, 2003, 10:28
On November 20, Mizoram, goes to the polls and Chief Minister Pu Zoramthanga of the Mizo National Front will seek to return to power. Most Indians know very little about Mizoram. In the 1960s, the Mizos attempted to carve out a separate nation. Finally, under Rajiv Gandhi, protracted negotiations in various parts of the world followed and an agreement was reached. Mizo National Front leader Lal Denga was brought back from his exile in France to take over the reins of the State in 1986.
Today, Mizoram is peaceful. Yet one still finds an undercurrent of anti-Indianness in this lovely little State, where the 95 percent Christian majority has ethnically cleansed out the five percent Hindu Rheang minority for their refusal to convert to Christianity.
When Kiran Bedi was posted there, she discovered that not only was it a haven for drugs and that it had a very high incidence of AIDS, but also that Mizos often do not consider themselves as Indians, whom they call 'Vais' (foreigners). In fact, she and her daughter Saina had to literally flee Mizoram, as the Mizo students had started a violent agitation against mother and daughter.
What are the roots for this hostility to India? No doubt, the Central Government has often shown its inability to foresee insurgency in the North-East, and its shabby and motherly treatment of the tribal population of the North East is well known. But does that explain everything? Mizoram was opened more than a century ago to the missionaries by the British.
[...]
[color="#0000FF"]Koenraad Elst, a Belgium scholar and historian, writes that the missionaries were ultimately all set to trigger a Christian partition in India at the time of Independence: "Christian mission centres had dreamed up a plan for a Christian partition in collaboration with the Muslim League. The far north-east, Chotanagur and parts of Kerala were to become Christian states, forming a non-Hindu chain with the Nizam's Hyderabad and with Pakistani Bengal. The secret agreement between the Muslim League and missionaries acting as "representatives of tribal interest," was sometimes used in Muslim propaganda, as proof that "Muslims and tribals are natural allies".[/color]
[color="#800080"](Well, christianism and islam are always in bed together where a heathen majority is concerned.)[/color]
Sadly for the Christians, Sardar Patel foiled their plans. Even after Independence, the missionaries seem to have been involved in secessionist activities in India's north-east, as well as on the Burmese side of the border. Always pretending to act as mediators, they appear to have actually helped the separatists with vital informations. Since then, they have been dictating policies in Nagaland, Megalaya and Mizoram, which recently celebrated with great fanfare its century of Christian rule.
[...]
Many reports have come of how Church congregations use harassment, ostracism and other forms of force to increase their flock. Non-converted portions of a family land into disputes with neo-Christian portions over funeral customs, ownership of land and other matters and this result in clashes between groups which newspapers promptly label as anti-Christian acts, whereas these are often clashes between converted and non-converted tribals.
Look at the history of the North-East after missionaries were allowed in. In Tripura, for example, the tribals constitute 30 percent of the State population, and 10 percent of this group had been converted to Christianity by 1991. These Christianised tribals are trying to convert the Hindu tribals forcibly to Christianity often getting the help of the National Liberation Front of Tripura � NLFT.
The forcible conversions are accompanied by murders of Hindu priests in the area, forcible bans on Hindu festivities, abductions and killings. The Church's links with NLFT are acknowledged even by the State's chief minister. Church-supported insurgency is endemic in the Christian-dominated hilly areas of Manipur, and now the illegal Muslim immigrants from Bangladesh have joined hands with Christian insurgents to ethnically cleanse the Hindu minority from parts of that State. | Also read: Mizos have had enough of Cong: Pu Lalduhawma |
The increasing marginalisation of the Hindu minority in Christian-dominated Meghalaya has been recognised by the National Minorities Commission of India. Meghalaya has now become an epicentre for the growing Islamic fundamentalism in the region, by virtue of the State's proximity with Bangladesh. Pragjyotisha encompassed much of present day Assam, and large parts of Arunachal Pradesh and other northeastern states of India. A Hindu religious pilgrimage centre � the Parsurama Kunda, is also located in southern Arunachal Pradesh. M K Narayanan ('Footprints of the ISI in the North-East' in 'The Deccan Chronicle') notes: that "Meghalaya is today the nerve-centre of activities of several militant outfits in the region, apart from having its own homegrown militant outfits. Arunachal Pradesh has begun to emerge as a problem area. The crumbling edifice of law and order in a highly sensitive region is beginning to have a deleterious impact on the polity."
[color="#800080"](What was that dew-eyed tripe by nationalist types about how Bodo christians are bhai-bhai or something with Hindu Bodos and Assamese when islamania attacked Assam in recent times? My money says christians in Assam and the christoterrorist "Bodo" outfit NDFB are in league with islamania in the region and trying to make it and all the NE into a christian pardees, just like christians are working with islam to make islamic pardeeses in other parts of Bharatam.
Christianism and islam *always* work together in Hindu-majority India.)[/color]
And the actual news was:
haindavakeralam.com/HKPage.aspx?PageID=18159
sourcing timesofindia.indiatimes.com/assembly-elections-2013/mizoram-assembly-elections/Church-backed-watchdog-body-has-its-own-poll-rules/articleshow/25732972.cms
Quote:[color="#800080"]["Christian state" (theocracy) Mizoram:][/color]
Indian way of Secularism;Church-backed body has its own poll rules.
09/12/2013 10:22:27 TOI
The Church has issued a four-page list of do's and don'ts for voters and candidates. Apart from the honesty and harmony bits, it says: "Refrain from voting for those who drink or have extra-marital sex." With almost 70% of Mizoram following the Presbyterian Church, no party rubs them the wrong way.