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Faith, Diplomacy And India
#41
The New Cultural Imperialism: The Greens and Economic Development
http://www.theihs.org/libertyguide/hsr/hsr.php/64.html

by Deepak Lal

From Humane Studies Review Vol. 14, No. 3
Introduction

I am delighted to be able to inaugurate this memorial lecture series in honor of a personal friend and highly original economist, Julian Simon. I got to know him very well when we spent some years in Washington in the 1980s and fondly remember the numerous Jewish sedas at which the chosen texts for part of the service were from the writings of the great classical liberals Adam Smith and David Hume. Given their views of organized religion, I am not sure their shades would have been altogether happy at this use of their work.

In the second edition of his monumental The Ultimate Resource, Julian explains how, with a desire to do something about the seemingly burgeoning population of the world, he visited the USAID office in Washington in 1969 to propose a project to lower fertility in the Third World. "I arrived early for my appointment" he writes, "so I strolled outside in the warm sunshine. Below the building's plaza I noticed a road sign that said 'Iwo Jima Memorial'. There came to me the memory of reading a eulogy delivered by a Jewish chaplain over the dead on the battlefield of Iwo Jima, saying something like, How many who would have been a Mozart or a Michelangelo or an Einstein have we buried here? and then I thought: Have I gone crazy? What business do I have trying to help arrange it that fewer human beings will be born, each one of whom might be a Mozart or a Michelangelo or an Einstein-or simply a joy to his or her family and community, and a person who will enjoy life?"

Thereafter, he spent his professional life collecting data and producing analyses that showed that there was no evidence that rapid population growth harmed economic development. The plausibility of the contrary view in the public mind is just due to an arithmetic relationship, as per capita income (which is usually taken as a measure of a country's economic welfare) is defined as the ratio of GDP to population. So that with no change in the numerator, a rise in the denominator will arithmetically reduce per capita income. But as I noted in The Hindu Equilibrium, the absurdity of this view can be seen from the fact that if a cow has a child per capita income goes up, but if born to a human it goes down. But, as Julian Simon eloquently argued, men are not merely receptacles for output: they are also producers.

As the crude Malthusian fears subsided, with the growing recognition that the burgeoning populations in the Third World were part of a "demographic transition" similar to what had exorcised the Malthusian scepter in the industrialized countries, the doomsters changed tack. Beginning with the infamous Club of Rome's The Limits of Growth, the argument became that even though the world's population might stabilize as economic growth in the Third World led parents- as it had in the West-to choose quality over quantity in their desired family size and thence lower fertility, the expected world population-with the high standard of living which would have triggered the demographic transition-was unsustainable, as the natural resources which were required to provide this higher global income would run out.

Julian Simon then was willy-nilly pushed into the environmental debate. Again, as in all his work, based on careful empirical analysis he made a simple point; namely, that if the doomsters were right then we should see a sustained rise in the prices of these natural resources. He famously wagered Paul Ehrlich (one of the leading doomsters) that resource prices would be lower at the end of the 1980s than at the beginning despite rapid increases in world population and output. Simon was right and Ehrlich paid up-but Julian never cashed the check, framing it as a memento of his victory.

This did not stop the Greens from announcing various other doom-laden scenarios. They were thus playing on an ancient human fear of the Apocalypse. In The Ultimate Resource, Simon has a five-page list of the environmental resource scares that were subsequently disproven, beginning with the BC scare that the world was running out of flint, to the 1993 scare that cellular phones cause cancer. But the ones that have stuck concern what is now anthropomorphically called "the environment." They have even led to public action in the form of various transnational treaties-many of which India has signed-and continuing Green agitation for more. They pose a serious threat to the economic health of Third World countries, in particular India and China, and that is the subject I would like to discuss in this lecture in memory of Julian Simon.
I

I got involved fortuitously in debates on the environment when I was preparing the 1990 Wincott Lecture, the major theme of which was the illegitimacy of using arguments based on "pecuniary" externalities for international macroeconomic and exchange rate coordination, as pecuniary externalities being mediated through the market mechanism are Pareto-irrelevant (see Buchanan and Stubbelbine). For balance, I hoped to argue that the "global warming" which was then making the headlines was a "technological" externality which was Pareto-relevant and would require international action. Wanting to read up about global warming, I got in touch with Julian Simon, who sent me a reading list as well as put me in touch with a scientist, Fred Singer, who, though a respected atmospheric physicist, was skeptical that there was any evidence of man-made global warming that needed to be countered. Having read the scientific literature I was appalled at how the scientists like Stephen Schneider openly admitted they were creating alarm for a phenomenon which they themselves recognized was highly speculative. My lecture not surprisingly also ended up as an attack on this scientific attempt to bamboozle the public.

My friend John Flemming, who was then chief economist at the Bank of England, and also chairing a subcommittee of one of the UK's research councils, told me on reading the lecture that I would get nowhere by taking on the scientists who, at a meeting he attended to distribute funds for climate research, had explicitly said that they were not going to behave like economists by disagreeing with each other! Of course, the cornucopia of research funds that the climate change scare has generated provides a baser rent-seeking motive well known to economists for thus closing ranks. It would take me too far afield to describe the shenanigans of the International Panel of Climate Change, but just judging from its flip-flopping around about even the likely extent of global warming, I think it is fair to say that the scientific basis of any great global catastrophe following from the undisputed increase in greenhouse gasses that has and will accompany economic growth is highly insecure1.

But the Greens had found a cause that resonates with the public, with any hurricane or flood being easily sold as a sign of global warming, as witness the statements by British politicians about the recent heavy autumn rains and flooding in the UK. But despite this, openly Green parties that have contested elections in the public arena-outside Germany and some of the Scandinavian countries-have not had much public support. They have, therefore, adopted another tactic to push their agenda. Organized into nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that are the self-proclaimed voice of an international civil society, they have sought to push their agenda through various transnational organizations like UNEP and, increasingly, the World Bank and the WHO.

Their aim is to push through international treaties and conventions sponsored by these organizations to regulate various aspects of economies-particularly of the Third World. The following international treaties have either been concluded or are under negotiation: the biodiversity convention; the Basle convention; the convention to combat desertification; the POPs treaty; and of course, the Kyoto protocol. In all these cases the Green NGO's, having failed by and large to gain political legitimacy for their viewpoint through the ballot box, are attempting to legislate it through the unelected bureaucracies of transnational institutions. The big prize they seek and which is still not in their grasp is the WTO, where they would like to see trade sanctions being used to further their agenda.

So what is their agenda? Even though their shifting scares have been countered by rational and scientific arguments, it has had no effect on the Greens. For those who need the evidence which disproves the various Green scares until 1993, Julian Simon's The Ultimate Resource provides a comprehensive compilation. But, as he himself came to see at the end of a lifetime of trying to engage the Greens in rational debate, their position is not based on reason but is a new secular religion. Take just one example. Presented with evidence that some purported environmental threat is extremely unlikely and uncertain, they resort to a stock argument, the precautionary principle: "it is better to be safe than sorry." This has some resonance with the public, as it has echoes of Pascal's famous wager about the existence of God: viz. if God did not exist one would only have eschewed the finite pleasures from forsaking a sinful life, but if He did exist a sinful life would lead to damnation and the infinite pain of Hell. In expected utility terms (as economists would call it), it was better to give up the finite pleasures from a sinful life for even an infinitesimally small probability of burning forever in Hell.

But as Julian Simon points out in his riposte to the Ehrich's well-known restatement of this wager: "If I'm right we'll save the world by curbing population growth. If I'm wrong, people will still be better fed, better housed and happier, thanks to our effort [all the evidence suggests he is wrong. JLS] Will anything be lost if it turns out later that we can support a much larger population than seems possible today." But, says Simon, note "Pascals' wager applies entirely to one person. No one else loses if she or he is wrong. But Ehrlich bets what he thinks will be the economic gains that we and our descendants might enjoy against the unborn's very lives. Would he make the same wager if his own life rather than others' lives were at stake?" (Simon, 1996). So it does come down to a question of values after all-not facts or logic.
II

Sometime after my foray into the snake pit of the environmental debate it became clear that what we are witnessing here is another crusade, reminiscent of those that led to Western imperialism in the past. Recently, the Sarsangchalalk of the RSS, K.S. Sudarshan, attacked the Christian church and fundamentalist Islam as agents of destabilization of India. This was misplaced for two reasons.

Leaving aside the question of Islamic fundamentalism, the attack on the Christian church seems to have been provoked by Pope John Paul II's address in India last year, in which he declared that in the third millennium the Church's aim would be to evangelize the whole of Asia as it had Europe in the first and the Americas and Africa in the second. But this is an old objective of the West. In his still relevant book on "Asia and Western Dominance," the late K.M. Panikkar charted this aspect of the encounter between the old Eurasian civilizations and the newly resurgent West, and shown how despite repeated attempts at converting the people of Asia-even with the aid of gunboats and diplomatic pressure-the Christian missionaries failed in their evangelical mission. Whatever converts they made were from the lower social classes and were looked down upon by their compatriots, being contemptuously labeled as "rice Christians" and "secondary barbarians" by the Chinese. Even when the Christians tried various forms of syncretism by claiming their religion was compatible with local traditions, the indigenous cultures were too strong and did not accept the cultural superiority of the West.

So, if even at a time these missionaries could count on state support for their operations they failed, it is difficult to see that they are likely to succeed today, when the playing field is more level. The Pope's hopes of converting Asia are likely to be as frustrated as those of St. Francis Xavier who died on a rocky island off the Kwangtung coast in 1552, attended only by his Chinese servant, trying vainly to get to Beijing in the hope of repeating the early Church's victory in the Roman Empire through the conversion of Constantine. As Panikkar remarked, even in Goa, where conversion by force was undertaken, "the attempt to Christianize was not a complete success,...[as] the majority of the population after 430 years of Portuguese rule is still non-Christian."

Second, as I have argued in my Unintended Consequences, with the death of the Christian God in the minds of many in the West, the Christian cosmological beliefs have found expression in many different secular religions that they are now seeking to impose on Asia. It is these, and not the overt, strictly religious evangelism, which pose the threat of a new Western cultural imperialism. Like many generals, Sudarshan seems to be fighting the last war!

The ecological movement is the latest manifestation of the various secular religions in the West, which arose once the Christian God died for so many with the Scientific and Darwinian revolutions.

First, note that Western cosmological beliefs-to the extent they are coherent and commonly shared-are still deeply rooted in Christianity, particularly its theological formalization in St. Augustine's "City of God." There are a number of distinctive features about Christianity that it shares with its Semitic cousin Islam, but not entirely with its parent Judaism, and that are not to be found in any of the other great Eurasian civilizational religions, past or present. The most important is its universality. Neither the Jews nor the Hindus nor the Sinic civilizations had religions claiming to be universal. You could not choose to be a Hindu, Chinese, or Jew: you were born as one. This also meant that unlike Christianity and Islam these religions did not proselytize. Third, only the Semitic religions being monotheistic have also been egalitarian. The others have believed in Homo Hierarchicus2. An ethic which claims to be universal and egalitarian and proselytizes for converts is a continuing Christian legacy even in secular Western minds, and is the basis for the moral crusade of "ethical trading."

It would take us too far a field to substantiate this argument in any detail, but since Augustine's City of God, the West has been haunted by its cosmology3. From the Enlightenment to Marxism to Freudianism to Eco-fundamentalism, Augustine's vision of the Heavenly City has had a tenacious hold on the Western mind. The same narrative with a Garden of Eden, a Fall leading to original Sin, and a Day of Judgment for the Elect and Hell for the Damned keeps recurring. Thus the philosophes displaced the Garden of Eden with classical Greece and Rome, and God became an abstract cause: the Divine Watchmaker. The Christian centuries were the Fall and the Christian revelations a fraud as God expressed His purpose through His laws recorded in the Great Book of Nature. The Enlightened were the elect and the Christian paradise was replaced by Posterity (see Becker). By this updating of the Christian narrative, the eighteenth century philosophers of the Enlightenment thought they had been able to salvage a basis for morality and social order in the world of the Divine Watchmaker. But once as a result of Darwin He was seen to be blind, as Nietzsche proclaimed from the housetops at the end of the nineteenth century, God was Dead, the moral foundations of the West were thereafter in ruins.

The subsequent attempts to found a morality based on reason are open to Nietzsche's fatal objection in his aphorism about utilitarianism: "moral sensibilities are nowadays at such cross purposes that to one man a morality is proved by its utility, while to another its utility refutes it" (Nietzsche, 1881/1982)4. Nietzsche's greatness lies in clearly seeing the moral abyss that the death of its God had created for the West. Kant's attempt to ground a rational morality on his principle of universality-harking back to the Biblical injunction "therefore all things whatsoever ye do would that men should do to you, do even so to them"-flounders on Hegel's two objections: it is merely a principle of logical consistency without any specific moral content, and, worse, it is as a result powerless to prevent any immoral conduct that takes our fancy. The subsequent ink spilt by moral philosophers has merely clothed their particular prejudices in rational form.

The death of the Christian God did not, however, end variations on the theme of Augustine's City. It was to go through two further mutations in the form of Marxism and Freudianism, and the most recent and bizarre mutation in the form of Eco-fundamentalism. As both Marxism (in its postmodern form) and Eco-fundamentalism provide the ballast for ecological imperialism it is worth noting their secular transformations of Augustine's Heavenly City5.

Marxism, like the old faith, looks to the past and the future. There is a Garden of Eden: before "property" relations corrupted "natural man." Then the Fall as "commodification" leads to class societies and a continuing but impersonal conflict of material forces, which leads in turn to the Day of Judgment with the Revolution and the millennial Paradise of Communism-this movement towards earthly salvation being mediated, not as the Enlightenment sages had claimed through enlightenment and the preaching of good will, but by the inexorable forces of historical materialism. Another secular "City of God" has been created.

Eco-fundamentalism is the latest of these secular mutations of Augustine's "City of God" (Lal, 1995). It carries the Christian notion of contemptus mundi to its logical conclusion. Humankind is evil and only by living in harmony with a deified Nature can it be saved.

The environmental movement (at least in its "deep" version) is now a secular religion in many parts of the West. The historian of the ecological movement Anna Bramwell notes that in the past Western Man was

able to see the earth as man's unique domain precisely because of God's existence.… When science took over the role of religion in the nineteenth century, the belief that God made the world with a purpose in which man was paramount declined. But if there was no purpose, how was man to live on the earth? The hedonistic answer, to enjoy it as long as possible, was not acceptable. If Man had become God, then he had become the shepherd of the earth, the guardian, responsible for the oekonomie of the earth. (Bramwell, p.23)

The spiritual and moral void created by the Death of God is thus increasingly being filled in the secular Western world by the worship of Nature. In a final irony, those haunted natural spirits that the medieval Church sought to exorcise so that the West could conquer its forests (see Southern) are now being glorified and being placed above Man. The surrealist and anti-human nature of this contrast between eco-morality and what humankind has sought through its religions in the past is perfectly captured by Douglas and Wildavsky, who write: "the sacred places of the world are crowded with pilgrims and worshippers. Mecca is crowded, Jerusalem is crowded. In most religions, people occupy the foreground of the thinking. The Sierra Nevada are vacant places, loved explicitly because they are vacant. So the environment has come to take first place." The guilt evinced against sinning against God has been replaced by that of sinning against Nature. Saving Spaceship Earth has replaced the saving of souls!

But why should the rest of the world subscribe to this continuing Augustinian narrative cloaked in different secular guises?
III

There are ominous parallels between the last decades of the nineteenth and the present century. In both periods it seemed that a world increasingly closely knit through foreign trade and capital flows would bring universal peace and prosperity. This dream came to an end on the fields of Flanders. The First World War (which has been aptly described as a wholly unnecessary war) put an end to the first Liberal International Economic Order (LIEO) created under British leadership. It took nearly a century to resurrect a new LIEO under the United States.

One of the causes of the First World War was the imperial competition for colonies. This imperialism was fuelled by the territorial imperative as well as the "white man's burden" to save the heathen souls. In nineteenth-century India, as Stokes demonstrated, there was an unholy alliance of Evangelicals, with their belief in the Gospels, and Utilitarians and Radicals, with their faith in reason, who believed in the superiority of Western ways, religious and secular. Their attempts to transform Indian "habits of the heart" led to the nationalist backlash of the 1857 Mutiny. Today we see a similar alliance between some scientists and the eco-fundamentalists with a similar imperialist form, though differing content. But history never repeats itself. Whereas the nineteenth-century battles for "hearts and minds" were fought within and between "nation-states," the arena for today's imperialist project is various transnational organizations. It is instructive to see how this has happened and its likely consequences.

Stephen Toulmin's (1990) brilliant reconstruction of the origins of the "modernity" project provides the necessary clues. Toulmin argues that there were two strands in modernity: the skeptical humanism of the late Renaissance epitomized by Montaigne, Erasmus, and Shakespeare, and the rationalism of the late sixteenth century epitomized by Descartes' search for certainty, which underpinned the triumphs of the Scientific Revolution as well as the methods of mechanistic Newtonian physics as the exemplary form of rationality. Toulmin's most original insight is that the rationalist project was prompted by the Thirty Years' War, which followed the assassination of Henry IV of France in 1610. Henry's attempt to create a religiously tolerant secular state with equal rights for Catholics and Protestants mirrored the skeptical humanism of Montaigne. Henry's assassination was taken as a sign of the failure of this tolerant Renaissance skepticism. With the carnage that followed the religious wars in support of different dogmas, Descartes set himself the project of overcoming Montaigne's skepticism, which seemed to have led to such disastrous consequences by defining a decontextualized certainty.

This rationalist project, which created the Scientific Revolution, found resonance, argues Toulmin, in the coterminous development of the system of sovereign nation-states following the peace of Westphalia. The ascendancy of these two "systems" continued in tandem until the First World War, but chinks were appearing in the armor of the rationalist Cartesian project, with its separation of human from physical nature, with the developments in the late nineteenth century associated with Darwin and Freud. Despite the replacement of Newtonian physics by the less "mechanistic" physics of Einstein and his successors, the political disorder of the 1930s led, as in the 1630s, to a search for certainty, and the logical positivist movement was born.

The final dismantling of the scaffolding of the rationalist project begun with the Peace of Westphalia, according to Toulmin, occurred in the 1960s, with Kennedy's assassination being as emblematic as Henry IV's, with many hoping that Kennedy was about to launch a period ending the Age of Nations and beginning one of transnational cooperation through transnational institutions. Thus since the 1960s the world has been trying to reinvent the humanism of the Renaissance that was sidelined by the rationalist Cartesian project of the sixteenth century. As Toulmin writes:

By the 1950s there were already the best of reasons, intellectual and practical for restoring the unities dichotomized in the 17th century: humanity vs. nature, mental activity vs its material correlates, human rationality vs. emotional springs of action and so on.

He then goes on to argue that the post war generation was the first to respond: "because they had strong personal stakes in the then current political situation." The Vietnam War

shocked them into rethinking the claims of the nation, and above all its claim to unqualified sovereignty. Rachel Carson had shown them that nature and humanity are ecologically interdependent, Freud's successors had shown them a better grasp of their emotional lives, and now disquieting images on the television news called the moral wisdom of their rulers in doubt. In this situation, one must be incorrigibly obtuse or morally insensible to fail to see the point. This point did not relate to particularly to Vietnam: rather what was apparent was the superannuation of the modern world view that was accepted as the intellectual warrant for "nationhood" in or around 1700. (Toulmin, p. 161)

This is the place to introduce the insights of Douglas and Wildavsky concerning the cultural and political characteristics of the environmental movement. They define a hierarchical center that has been characteristic of the nation-state much as Toulmin does. Opposing this has been what they call "border" organizations. They comprise "secular and religious protest movements and sects and communes of all kinds." They argue that

the border is self-defined by its opposition to encompassing larger social systems. It is composed of small units and it sees no disaster in reduction of the scale of organization. It warns the center that its cherished social systems will wither because the center does not listen to warnings of cataclysm. The border is worried about God or nature, two arbiters external to the large-scale social systems of the center. Either God will punish or nature will punish; the jeremiad is the same and the sins are the same: worldly ambition, lust after material things, large organization. (p. 123)

Like Toulmin, they see the Vietnam War and Watergate undermining support for the center in the United States, and giving greater legitimacy to the border, particularly to the segment that emphasizes Nature. There are various more complex reasons that we cannot go into on this occasion why the moral authority of the center in many Western states has been undermined. This has given rise to sources of moral authority outside the hierarchical structure of the nation-state, which echoes a return to premodern Western medieval forms. As Toulmin notes,

One notable feature of the system of European Powers established by the Peace of Westphalia ... was the untrammeled sovereignty it conferred on the European Powers. Before the Reformation, the established rulers ... exercised their political power under the moral supervision of the Church. As Henry II of England found after the murder of Thomas A. Becket, the Church might even oblige a King to accept a humiliating penance as the price of its continued support. (Ibid., p. 196)

With the undermining of the moral authority of Western nation-states, Toulmin notes that this moral authority is increasingly being taken over by nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) like Amnesty International and, in many cases, the environmental NGO's. This unraveling of the Westphalian system and a partial reversion to the world of the Middle Ages poses in my view the real threat of eco-imperialism, modeled less on the model of the nineteenth-century scramble for Africa than the Crusades.

For whilst the West may be turning its back on modernity and its associated untrammeled sovereignty of nation-states, the Rest have no intention of giving up the latter and are eagerly seeking to adopt the technological fruits of the former without giving up their souls. Hence even religious fundamentalists in the Rest recognize the need for economic progress, if for no other reason than to acquire the ability to produce or purchase those arms that they feel are essential to prevent any repetition of the humiliation they have suffered at the hands of superior Western might in the past. As the Indian defense minister is reported to have said when asked about the lesson he learned from the Gulf War, "Don't fight the United States unless you have nuclear weapons" (cited in Huntington). Numerous developing countries for good or ill have, or are rushing to acquire, this new countervailing power. The attempts by the eco-moralists to curb their development of the industrial bases of this power, to save Spaceship Earth, will be fiercely resisted.

This has ominous consequences for the various transnational organizations like the United Nations, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization. As Huntington notes, currently

global political and security issues are effectively settled by a directorate of the United States, Britain and France, world economic issues by a directorate of the United States, Germany and Japan ... to the exclusion of lesser and largely non western countries. Decisions made at the U.N. Security Council or in the International Monetary Fund that reflect the interests of the West are presented to the world as reflecting the desires of the world community. The very phrase "the world community" has become the euphemistic collective noun ... to give global legitimacy to actions reflecting the interests of the United States and other Western powers. (p. 39)

It is not surprising therefore that the ecologists should seek to influence the agenda of these international organizations: see the above. But, as I have argued, given the globally divisive nature of their agenda, how long will it be before the frictions it causes will destroy these institutions?
IV

The time has surely come to take on these new cultural imperialists. The first point of resistance is to recognize what they are seeking to do. Bluntly, they would like to perpetuate the ancient poverty of the great Eurasian civilizations, India and China, with, as they see it, their burgeoning unwashed masses increasingly emitting noxious pollutants as they seek to make their people prosperous and achieve parity with the West.

For as economic historians have emphasized, it was not until the Industrial Revolution that humankind found the key to intensive growth-a sustained rise in per capita income-which, as the example of the West and many newly industrializing countries have shown, has the potential for eradicating mass structural poverty. The scourge in the past was considered to be irremediable (pace the Biblical saying that the poor will always be with us), for in the past most growth was extensive with output growing in line with (modest) population growth (Reynolds, 1983). As pre-industrial economies relied on organic raw materials for food, clothing, housing, and fuel (energy)-the supply of which in the long run was inevitably constrained by the fixed factor, land- their growth was ultimately bounded by the productivity of land. For even traditional industry and transportation-depending upon animal muscle for mechanical energy and upon charcoal (a vegetable substance) for smelting and working crude ores and providing heat-would ultimately be constrained by the diminishing returns to land that would inexorably set in once the land frontier was reached. In these organic economies (Wrigley, 1988), with diminishing returns to land conjoined with the Malthusian principle of population, a long-run stationary state where the mass of the people languished at a subsistence standard of living seemed inevitable. No wonder the classical economists were so gloomy!

But even in organic economies there could be some respite through the adoption of market "capitalism" and free trade defended by Adam Smith. This could generate some intensive growth, as it would increase the productivity of the economy as compared with mercantilism, and by lowering the cost of the consumption bundle (through cheaper imports) would lead to a rise in per capita income. But if this growth in popular opulence led to excessive breeding, the land constraint would inexorably lead back to subsistence wages. Technical progress could hold the stationary state at bay, but the land constraint would ultimately prove binding.

The Industrial Revolution led to the substitution of this organic economy by a mineral-based energy economy. It escaped from the land constraint by using mineral raw materials instead of the organic products of land. Coal was the most notable, providing most of the heat energy of industry and, with the development of the steam engine, virtually unlimited supplies of mechanical energy. Intensive growth now became possible, as the land constraint on the raw materials required for raising aggregate output was removed.

Thus the Industrial Revolution in England was based on two forms of "capitalism": one institutional, namely that defended by Adam Smith, because of its productivity enhancing effects, even in an organic economy, and the other physical, the capital stock of stored energy represented by the fossil fuels which allowed humankind to create, in the words of E.A. Wrigley,

a world that no longer follows the rhythm of the sun and the seasons; a world in which the fortunes of men depend largely upon how he himself regulates the economy and not upon the vagaries of weather and harvest; a world in which poverty has become an optional state rather than a reflection of the necessary limitations of human productive powers. (Wrigley, 1988, p. 6)

The Greens are, of course, against both forms of "capitalism," the free trade promoted by Smith, as well as the continued burning of fossil fuels, leaving little hope for the world's poor.

India, along with China, is therefore to be commended for standing firmly at Kyoto against any restriction of their carbon dioxide emissions. With the recent collapse of the negotiations for a climate change treaty at the Hague-largely because of differences between the US and Europe- this is perhaps an issue that the Greens will no longer be able to exploit. But India has already signed various international ecological treaties inimical to her interests.

Thus, for example, India is a signatory to the Basle Convention, which, by defining various metals as "hazardous," controls trade in waste, scrap, and recyclable materials. Greenpeace is using the treaty to organize a total embargo on trade with developing countries, excluding them from global scrap metal markets. This is already having deleterious effects. There are press reports that a recently highly profitable industry, shipbreaking, at Alang in Gujarat is likely to fall foul of this convention.

Shipbreaking was until the 1970s performed with cranes and heavy equipment at salvage docks in big shipyards. When labor costs and environmental regulations made this uncompetitive, the industry shifted to Korea and Taiwan. But in the 1980s, enterprising business men in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh realized that to wreck a ship they did not need expensive docks and tools; they could just drive the ship up onto a beach as they might a fishing boat and tear it apart by hand. The scrap metal obtained can be profitably sold in South Asia with its insatiable demand for low-grade steel, mainly for ribbed reinforcing bars used in constructing concrete walls. These rods are produced locally from the ships' hull plating by small-scale re-rolling mills of which there are close to 100 near Alang alone. Today nearly 90 percent of the world's annual 700 condemned ships are wrecked on South Asian beaches, nearly half of them at Alang. The economic effects are substantial. This industry is sought to be destroyed by Greenpeace under the auspices of the Basle Convention. India should walk away from this convention, just as many influential people in Australia are arguing for it to do.

Among the two other treaties currently under negotiation, which India should have nothing to do with, are the POP's treaty and the Biodiversity convention. These are attempts to ban DDT and GM food. As both are of vital interest to India's future, it maybe worth saying something more on these.

The Persistent Organic Pollutants (POP's) framework convention is being negotiated under pressure from environmental groups who want a binding treaty to ban "persistent organic pollutants," defined as pesticides, industrial chemicals, and their by-products. DDT is sought to be banned under the treaty. If India foolishly signs this convention, it will seriously damage the nation's health, for DDT is the most cost-effective controller of diseases spread by bugs like flies and mosquitoes that has ever been produced. The US National Academy of Sciences estimated it had saved 500 million lives from malaria by 1970. In India, effective spraying had virtually eliminated the disease by the 1960s, so much so that the mosquito nets that were ubiquitous in my childhood had disappeared from urban houses by the time I was at the university in the late 1950s. DDT spraying had reduced the number of malaria cases from 75 million in 1951 to around 50,000 in 1961, and the number of malaria deaths from nearly a million in the 1940s to a few thousand in the 1960s. But then in the 1970s, largely as a result of an environmental scare promoted by Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring, foreign aid agencies and various UN organizations began to take a jaundiced view of DDT, and the use of DDT declined. Not surprisingly, the mosquitoes hit back, and endemic malaria returned to India. By 1997, the UNDP's Human Development Report 2000 estimated there were about 2.6 million malaria cases.

The same story of a decline and rise in disease with the increase and decrease in DDT spraying can be told about kala-azar, which is spread by the sand fly. DDT largely rid India of kala-azar in the 1950s and 1960s, but with the subsequent decline in DDT use it has come back. The state Minister of Health in Bihar recently informed the Assembly that 408 people had died and 12,000 were afflicted with the disease in 30 districts of Northern Bihar.

So why did DDT fall out of disfavor despite its demonstrated merits? It was Rachel Carson in 1962 who started the DDT scare with her claim that its use had devastating effects on bird life, particularly on those birds higher up the food chain. It was also claimed that it caused hepatitis in humans. Numerous scientific studies showed these fears to be baseless. It was shown to be safe to humans, causing death only if eaten like pancakes. In 1971, the distinguished biologist Philip Handler, as President of the US National Academy of Science, said "DDT is the greatest chemical that has ever been discovered." Commission after commission, expert after Nobel-prize-winning expert has given DDT a clean bill of health (see E. M. Whelan, 1985, Toxic Terror).

Yet in 1972, President Nixon's head of the US Environmental Protection Agency, William Ruckelshaus, banned DDT against all the expert scientific advice he had been given. Most developed countries followed the United States and banned the chemical for all uses. Many developing countries followed suit by banning the pesticide in agriculture, and some for all uses. USAID, which along with the WHO had been at the forefront of the mosquito eradication programs based on house spraying with DDT, now turned its back on DDT. USAID has maintained that, as DDT is not registered by the EPA for use in the United States, foreign assistance is not available for programs that use DDT. Thus, despite the WHO's Malaria Expert Committee's ruling that DDT is safe and effective for malaria control, since 1979 the WHO itself has championed a strategy that ignores the causal link between decreasing numbers of houses sprayed and increasing malaria by emphasizing curative and de-emphasizing preventive measures. Instead of fighting malaria by the only effective method known, the WHO is spending its limited resources instead on the politically correct and highly dubious campaign against smoking (see Lal 2000).

The decline in house spraying created DDT-resistant mosquitoes. But even then, when DDT was vigorously used, as in Mexico, malaria rates declined despite the increasing DDT resistance of mosquitoes. Moreover, DDT is now increasingly needed as the Anopheles mosquito has become resistant to the pesticides currently used, synthetic pyrethroids.

The favored WHO strategy of distributing pesticide-impregnated mosquito bed nets and using chloroquine to treat the disease is vitiated by two factors. First, distributing and monitoring the use of bed nets is even more complicated than house spraying and likely to be much less effective. Second, the chloroquine resistance built up by mosquitos in the 1960s in South East Asia and South America has subsequently spread to most malarial countries around the world. There are some promising new drugs on the horizon, but the hope of a malaria vaccine is at least seven years away. While clearly curative measures must continue to form part of a malaria control program, preventive measures are just as important, and for this, killing the mosquitoes with DDT remains the most efficient and cost-effective measure (see http://www.malaria.org).

If both the science and economics favor DDT, why has this growing ban on DDT spread? Ruckelshaus' reasons for his unscientific decision to ban DDT in the early 1970s provides the clue. The environmental movement's supposedly key concept is "sustainable development." This was endorsed by the World Commission on Environment and Development's report, Our Common Future. The commission's chair was then the Norwegian Prime Minister, Gro Harlem Bruntland, who now of course heads the WHO. The notion of sustainability-at least in its strong form-
asserts that natural capital such as forests, wildlife, and other natural resources cannot be substituted by manmade capital. As pesticides are assumed to have adverse effects on natural capital, they are inconsistent with sustainable development. Hence, instead of using them to control bugs, the alternatives of bed nets and drugs to fight the disease should be used.

The argument that there is no scientific evidence that DDT spraying to kill mosquitoes damages natural capital is once again countered by the so-called "precautionary principle." Once again, the environmentalists are willing to ban DDT because they are willing to sacrifice human lives for those of birds.

This underlying misanthropy of the environmentalists is explicitly brought out by the following statement by Ehrlich about India: "I came to understand the population explosion emotionally one stinking hot night in Delhi ... The streets seemed alive with people. People eating, people washing, people sleeping, people visiting, arguing, and screaming. People thrusting their hands through the taxi window, begging. People defecating and urinating. People clinging to buses. People herding animals. People, people, people."

Not surprisingly, many environmentalists have argued since the 1950s that, in the words of one: "it maybe unkind to keep people dying from malaria so that they could die more slowly of starvation. [So that malaria may even be] a blessing in disguise, since a large proportion of the malaria belt is not suited to agriculture, and the disease has helped to keep man from destroying it-and from wasting his substance on it." Or, more recently, "some day anti-malarial vaccines will probably be developed, which may even wipe out the various forms of the disease entirely, but then another difficulty will arise: important wild areas that had been protected from the dangers of malaria will be exposed to unwise development" (cited in Tren and Bate).

The recent scare about GM food equally needs to be resisted. The Green Revolution having disproved the doomsters' predictions that the world would not be able to feed a burgeoning population, they are now attempting to stop the next stage in the agricultural revolution offered by biotechnology. As the father of the Green revolution, Norman Borlaug has recently noted that though "the Green Revolution is [not] over, [as i]ncreases in crop management productivity can be made all along the line: in tillage, water use, fertilization, weed and pest control and harvesting, however, for the genetic improvement of food crops to continue at a pace sufficient to meet the needs of the 8.3 billion people projected to be on this planet at the end of the quarter century both conventional technology and biotechnology are needed" (Borlaug, 2000).

In 1995 there were 4 million acres of biotech crops planted, which had risen to 100 million in 1999. In the United States, 50 percent of the soybean crop and more than one third of the corn crop were transgenic in 1999. These GM crops provide major economic benefits as they have reduced pesticide applications, higher yields, and lower consumer prices. (Krattiger, 2000). They have been readily adopted where they have been introduced. Yet, particularly in Europe, the Greens-again led by Greenpeace-have created mass hysteria about these crops, labeling them as Frankenstein foods.

But if GM crops are the creation of a Frankenstein, so is virtually everything we eat. Any method that uses life forms to make or modify a product is biotechnology: brewing beer or making leavened bread is a "traditional" biotechnology application. As Borlaug states, "The fact is that genetic modification started long before humankind started altering crops by artificial selection…. Thanks to the development of science over the past 150 years, we now have the insights into plant genetics and plant breeding to do what Mother Nature did herself in the past by chance. Genetic modification of crops is not some kind of witchcraft; rather it is the progressive harnessing of the forces of nature to the benefit of feeding the human race." For what biotechnology merely does is to isolate individual genes from organisms and transfer them into others without the usual sexual crosses necessary to combine the genes of two parents.

Nor is there any danger to health or the environment from GM food, as has been repeatedly noted: by a 2100 signatory declaration in support of biotechnology by scientists worldwide, by the US National Academy of Science, by the US House of Representatives Committee on Science, and by a Nuffield Foundation study in the UK. Since 1994, more than 300 million North Americans have been eating several dozen GM foods grown on more than 100 million acres, but not one problem with health or the environment has been noted (Whelan, 2000). Yet the hysteria continues. To see the misanthropy at its heart, there is no better example than that of the miracle "golden rice."

Scientists from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Zurich) and the International Rice Research Institute (Philippines) have successfully transferred genes producing beta-carotene, a precursor of vitamin A, into rice to increase the quantities of vitamin A, iron, and other micronutrients. As the GM rice produces beta-carotene it has a bronze-orange appearance, hence its name "golden rice." It promises to have a profound effect on the lives of millions suffering from vitamin A and iron deficiencies, which lead to blindness and anemia, respectively. It has been estimated that more than 180 million children, mostly in developing countries, suffer from vitamin A deficiency, of which 2 million die each year. About a billion people suffer anemia from iron deficiency. The new golden rice is being distributed free of charge to public rice breeding institutions around the world. Millions will be able to reduce their risks of these disabilities at little or no cost.

Yet as the inventor of "golden rice," Professor Portykus has noted, though it satisfies all the demands of the Greens, they still oppose it. As he notes, the new rice has not been developed by or for industry; benefits the poor and disadvantaged; provides a sustainable, cost-free solution, not requiring other resources; is given free of charge and restrictions to subsistence farmers; can be resown each year from the saved harvest; does not reduce agricultural biodiversity; does not affect natural biodiversity; has no negative effect on the environment; has no conceivable risk to consumer health; and could not have been developed with traditional methods. But, notes Professor Potrykus, "the GMO opposition is doing everything to prevent 'golden rice' reaching the subsistence farmer. We have learned that the GMO opposition has a hidden, political agenda. It is not so much the concern about the environment, or the health of the consumer, or the help for the disadvantaged. It is a radical fight against technology and for political success" (Potrykus, 2000).
Conclusion

There we have it. The Green movement is a modern secular religious movement engaged in a worldwide crusade to impose its "habits of the heart" on the world. Its primary target is to prevent the economic development that alone offers the world's poor any chance of escaping their age-old poverty. This modern day secular Christian crusade has exchanged the saving of souls for saving Spaceship Earth. It needs to be resisted.

First, by standing up to the local converts-the modern day descendants of what the Chinese called "rice Christians" and "secondary barbarians," the Arundhati Roys, Vandana Shivas, and Medhka Patkars of this world. Their argument that their views are in consonance with Hindu cosmology are reminiscent of those used by the proselytizing Christians promoting a syncretized Christianity in the nineteenth century, and are equally derisory.

Second, by refusing to accept the transnational treaties and conventions that the Greens are promoting to legislate their ends. As many of the environmental ministries have become outposts of their local converts, the economic ministries must play a central role in resisting this Green imperialism, by insisting on having the last say on any transnational treaty India signs. As China has shown, through its continuing production and use of DDT and continuing development of GM technology, there is no need to give into this latest manifestation of Western cultural imperialism, and in this fight, as the shining example of Julian Simon shows, there are still many in the West itself who have not been infected with this secular Christian religion, and will join in showing up the Greens and their agenda as paper tigers, much as the Christian missionaries found in the last phase of Western imperialism.


  Reply
#42
http://www.islam21.net/other%20issues/Plur...tionalAsia.html





Multi-Civilisational Asia: the Promise and the Peril

By Chandra Muzaffar

This essay is divided into five sections. We begin by reflecting on civilisational dialogue in the first epoch, the autochthonous epoch, before we move on to the second epoch, the colonial epoch. The third epoch which receives most attention is the contemporary epoch which will focus upon globalisation and civilisational dialogue. This will be followed by a discussion on the reaction to certain patterns of power and dominance associated with globalisation in the contemporary epoch. The fifth and final section of the essay will explore the alternative -- meaning by which the alternative to the communal response to the identity crisis in contemporary civilisations.

The Autochthonous Epoch

The autochthonous epoch is the epoch of indigenous, independent kingdoms and empires which spanned long centuries of Asian history. During this period, there were both positive and negative elements in the interaction between civilisations on the continent. Chinese scholars travelled to India to study Buddhism just as Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese literati journeyed to China to imbibe Confucian ethics. Muslim Rulers dialogued with Christian and Jewish notables in parts of West Asia in the eight and ninth centuries while Muslim savants such as Ibn-a-Nadim and as-Shahrastani in the tenth and eleventh centuries wrote with much warmth about the exemplary qualities of the Buddhists living in their midst in parts of what is today Iran and Afghanistan.[ ]

An even more outstanding example of an Islamic scholar reaching out to ‘the other’ was Abu Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni (973-1051 C.E). He not only studied Hinduism, Christianity and Judaism but also developed principles for the comparative analysis of religions. It is remarkable that he tried to be as objective and unbiased as possible in examining the tenets and practices of religions other than his own. Al-Biruni’s Kitab al-Hind which probes Hinduism and Hindu society is a brilliant testimony to this. By studying the religion and civilisation of the Hindus, Al-Biruni hoped it would be easier for the Muslims to dialogue with them. As he put it, “We think now that what we have related in this book (Kitab al-Hind) will be sufficient for anyone who wants to converse with the Hindus, and to discuss with them questions of religion, science or literature, on the very basis of their own civilization.”[2]

Through the scientific study of other religions and civilisations, Al-Biruni, in a sense, paved the way for the dialogue of civilisations. At a time when the world is beginning to recognise the vital importance of civilisational dialogue -- as reflected in the United Nations’ proclamation of 2001 as the year of the dialogue of civilisations -- it behoves us to remember the pioneering role of that celebrated interlocutor, Al-Biruni.

The flow of religious and cultural ideas across civilisational boundaries was part and parcel of a larger flow involving ideas on science, technology, architecture and art. Between China and the Arab world, the Arab world and India, and India and Southeast Asia, there was an active exchange of knowledge and information which, though restricted to a small elite, was nonetheless significant. It was through such creative interaction that Islamic civilisation which absorbed ideas in both the sciences and the humanities from every conceivable source, became the storehouse of knowledge for the whole of humankind between the eighth and thirteenth centuries.[3]

In this transmission and synthesis of ideas, trade between different states and empires in Asia played a major role. The famous silk route for instance not only facilitated the exchange of goods but also enabled illustrious cities to flourish in what is today central Asia -- cities such as Samarkand and Bokhara which became homes to great libraries and museums. Likewise, trade between China and Southeast Asia brought with it ideas on public administration, town planning, architecture and aesthetics from the former to the latter.[4]

It should be emphasised, however, that while there was intellectual and cultural exchange among an infinitesimal few at the apex of the different civilisations, the vast majority of people lived within their own geographical and social spheres, hardly interacting with outside elements. Needless to say, communities in the distant past bound by kinship ties and ethnic relationships were much more culturally homogenous and physically insulated than they are today. ‘The cultural or religious other’ just did not exist in their thinking. To put it in another way, communities of antiquity were simply oblivious of other cultures and civilisations. This was understandable, given the nature of political organisation, the type of economic activities and the modes of communication that obtained in what were largely agrarian societies.

Even when communities and cultures came into contact with one another, it was not always peaceful. The history of Asia is littered with tales of wars and conflicts, sometimes between adherents of different faiths and sects. The underlying causes of these conflagrations might not have been linked to religious doctrines or religious practices but they undoubtedly exacerbated inter-community relations.[5] The victor would be subjected to ethnic stereotyping just as the vanquished would be the victim of communal prejudice. Of course, in some instances, after a generation or two, adverse sentiments about ‘the other’ were gradually eradicated. This had happened in a number of Muslim societies where the more all encompassing Muslim identity appears to have been successful in at least minimising communal consciousness. Even in their treatment of non-Muslim communities, Muslim states often ensured that their religious and cultural rights were protected, and that they had the freedom to participate in the economic and social life of the larger society in which these minorities were domiciled.[6]

The Colonial Epoch

Unlike the autochthonous epoch the second epoch characterised by Western colonial dominance over Asia, caused much more stress and strain to inter-community and inter-cultural relations. There is no need to repeat that whether it was the British or the Dutch or the French, colonial policy invariably sought to ‘divide-and-rule’ the local population. Thus, Hindus were pitted against Muslims in British India, the Javanese against the Sumatrans in Dutch Indonesia, and the Khmers against the Vietnamese in French Indo-China. Specific policies in relation to land, agriculture, employment, the public services and education, served to widen the chasm between the communities.

There was yet another dimension to colonial policy which also generated negative consequences for ethnic ties. In Sri Lanka, Malaysia and the Fijis, among other countries, the British brought in immigrant labour to work in certain sectors of the economy and thus created ethnic enclaves which remained separate and distinct from the indigenous communities. Because the economic and political dichotomies which divided the immigrant and indigenous communities were so severe, the communal problems associated with these two groups have often been perpetuated into the post-colonial era.[7]

But more than the policy of divide and rule, the greatest disservice that colonialism did to inter-community, inter-cultural and inter-civilisational relations in Asia was to redirect the face of each and every Asian country, away from its neighbour towards the metropolitan power in the West. From the economy to education, from administration to entertainment, the colonised state was influenced by, and paid obeisance to, the colonial overlord in London, the Hague, Paris and Washington. It was not just a question of dependence brought about by the colonial exploitation of indigenous resources or economic bondage created by colonial hegemony. For the colonised, the coloniser became, through coercion and persuasion, the exemplar par excellence. Laws, institutions of governance, the mechanics of the market, the school curriculum, the health system, public transportation and indeed each and every facet of life derived its guidance and inspiration from the colonial model.[8]

As a result, the colonised developed a vast corpus of knowledge and information about the coloniser -- his land and history, his culture and geography, his politics and social mores. A student in colonial Malaysia, as a case in point, would know much more about English poetry and British history than he would about Thai music or Indonesian geography. Likewise, it was very likely that a Filipino living under the aegis of American rule would empathise more readily with American literature than with Vietnamese literature even if it had been translated into the English language. To extend the argument further, an English educated Hindu in British India would have greater rapport with Christianity -- because it was perceived as Western -- than with Islam which had millions and millions of adherents in the Indian sub-continent during the height of colonial rule (compared to a few thousand Christians).

By altering relations between cultures and religions in the Asian neighbourhood, colonialism erected formidable barriers against civilisational dialogue. It removed the objective conditions -- the political, economic and social imperatives -- which would make dialogue a necessity. Since there was no real relationship with one’s neighbours, there was no compelling need to engage and interact with them.

Besides, colonialism developed the notion that Asian cultures and communities, religions and civilisations had little to contribute towards human progress.[9] It was a notion which became deeply entrenched in the psyche of many Asians, partly because of the overwhelming power of colonial dominance. Asians began to believe -- as their colonial masters wanted them to -- that their cultures and civilisations had become inert and static. They lacked drive and dynamism. Indeed, their cultures and civilisations, so they were told, only served to keep the people in shackles. Asians had to be liberated from their serfdom by Western civilisation.

What this suggests is that the colonial experience created a deep sense of cultural inferiority in a lot of Asians.[ 0] This inferiority complex became an obstacle to cultural and civilisational dialogue. For if one’s civilisation is bereft of any greatness, how can one take any pride in it? What is the point of talking to others about one’s civilisation if it is devoid of noble values and outstanding accomplishments? If dialogue is about exchanging ideas, how can intellectually impoverished civilisations engage in dialogue?

It is significant that while Asians were assailed with doubts about their cultures and civilisations in the colonial epoch, they seemed to be a little more certain about the strength and viability of their religions. This is one of the reasons why in spite of the power and potency of colonial rule in Asia, only a small minority, in relative terms, embraced Christianity -- the Christianity that came with Western dominance. Apart from the Philippines, no other Asian country adopted Christianity on a national scale in the colonial period. Only small percentages of Chinese, Indians, Indonesians, Vietnamese, Thais and other Asians became Christians. The vast majority chose to remain Hindu or Buddhist or Muslim. In fact, very, very few Muslims in particular converted to Christianity anywhere in Asia.

It is an equally remarkable fact of history that when Asians began to organise and mobilise the masses to throw off the colonial yoke, many of them turned to religion to provide them with the inspiration and impetus for their nationalist struggle. The Arya Samaj and Brahmo Samaj of India, the Sarikat Islam of Indonesia and the Young Men’s Buddhist Association of Burma would be some examples. Religion, in other words, was for many Asians, the most meaningful conduit for articulating the quest for freedom, justice, identity and dignity.

Does this indicate that within Asian civilisations, religions have a special role? In the dialogue of civilisations, will the religious dimension emerge as the most significant factor in a continent whose unique attribute is that it is the birthplace of all the world’s religions? These are some of the questions we will try to answer in the latter part of the essay. For now, we shall turn to the third epoch.

The Contemporary Epoch

The third epoch, or the contemporary epoch, begins with the end of formal colonial rule in 1946. That was the year Indonesia proclaimed its Independence from the Dutch. For the last four decades or so, most of Asia has been independent, in the legal and constitutional sense. Has independence resulted in inter-cultural and inter-civilisational dialogue among Asian communities and religions? Is there greater interest in, and commitment towards, developing better understanding among the myriad religions and civilisations of Asia?

There is certainly much more interaction among Asian governments today than in the colonial or the autochthonous epochs. This is a product of a growing realisation among the continent’s political elites that their nations’ destinies are closely intertwined and that they must endeavour to cultivate good neighbourly relations, however immense the odds. It is out of this awareness that a multi-civilisational regional grouping like the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has managed to sustain itself.[ 1] It comprises all the 10 states of Southeast Asia -- Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and Burma. ASEAN, at least in terms of its background, embodies 5 religious civilisations -- Buddhist, Christian, Confucian, Hindu and Muslim. There is also the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) consisting of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, and the Maldives and, in a sense, reflecting the religious diversity of the region, with its Hindu, Muslim Buddhist, Christian and Sikh populations. The former has been far more viable than the latter as a regional organisation.

If governmental ties have expanded within regions and between regions in the Asian continent, it is largely because of trade and economics. There is much more intra-ASEAN trade today, for instance, than 10 years ago. With increasing business ties, comes exchanges in the technological and educational spheres, and even in the cultural arena. Independent of these exchanges, has been the continuous interaction among Asians in the field of sports and, to a much lesser extent, in the entertainment sector.

  Reply
#43
<b>Pope invites new look at Catholicism</b>


<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->In a meeting Monday with Muslim diplomats from 21 nations and the Arab League, Benedict urged both Christians and Muslims to "guard against all forms of intolerance and to oppose all manifestations of violence." He did not, however, offer a direct apology for his earlier remarks as demanded by some Muslim leaders and clerics.

Benedict's speech found a sympathetic ear among many in the West. A German theologian, the Rev. Martin Schuck, said any backtrack by the pope would amount to "intellectual surrender" to radical Islam.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->In a meeting Monday with <b>Muslim diplomats from 21 nations </b>and the Arab League, Benedict urged both Christians and Muslims to "guard against all forms of intolerance and to oppose all manifestations of violence." He did not, however, offer a direct apology for his earlier remarks as demanded by some Muslim leaders and clerics.

Benedict's speech found a sympathetic ear among many in the West. A German theologian, the Rev. Martin Schuck, said any backtrack by the pope would amount to "intellectual surrender" to radical Islam.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#44
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Boston Globe series on America Exporting faith</b>
Boston Globe, October 11, 2006
Source Link:
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles...reach_the_soul/
http://www.christianaggression.org/item_di...S&id=1161098955

<b>Articles in this four-part series examine how American religious
organizations benefit from an increasingly accommodating government:</b>

PART 1: CHANGING THE RULES:
Bush brings faith to foreign aid,
As funding rises, Christian groups deliver help -- with a message
http://tinyurl.com/yfy2wd
or
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=508&Itemid=125

PART 2: CHURCH MEETS STATE: EXPORTING FAITH:
Religious right wields clout, Secular groups losing funding amid pressure
http://tinyurl.com/ylluj4
or
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=509&Itemid=125

Part 3: THE MUSLIM WORLD | EXPORTING FAITH:
Together, but worlds apart,
Christian aid groups raise suspicion in strongholds of Islam
http://tinyurl.com/wer7g
or
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=511&Itemid=125

PART 4: MISSIONARIES IN TRAINING | EXPORTING FAITH: Healing the body to
reach the soul, Evangelicals add converts through medical trips
http://tinyurl.com/y5l2cn
or
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=512&Itemid=125
         
*  *  *
         
NYTimes Series: Part 1:
In God’s Name:
As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=513&Itemid=125
         
NY Times Series: Part 2:
IN GOD's Name:
Limiting Workers' Rights
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=514&Itemid=125
         
NYTimes series: Part 3:
In God's Name:
Giving Exemptions
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=515&Itemid=125

NYTimes Series: Part 4:
In God's name:
Religion-Based Tax Breaks: Housing to Paychecks to Books
http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?opti...=516&Itemid=125
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#45
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/rw/3566

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->This past June, the Israeli Embassy in Washington held a reception for several high-powered leaders of the Christian right. Among those attending the so-called Israel Solidarity Event were former presidential candidate Gary Bauer; Rev. Ted Haggard, head of the National Association of Evangelicals; Rev. Glenn Plummer of the Fellowship of Israel and Black America; and Rev. John Hagee, chairman of Christians United for Israel (Washington Times, June 12, 2006).<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

This article is worth a read just to see the names involved with these fellows.
  Reply
#46
http://www.jewsonfirst.org/foreignpol.html
  Reply
#47
<b>Diplomacy the focus of LDS offices in D.C</b>

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->By Robert Gehrke
The Salt Lake Tribune

Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated:11/14/2006 12:45:21 AM MST

WASHINGTON - The LDS Church's offices in the nation's capital are nondescript and have a low profile, much like the operation run out of them.

  <b>For about two decades, the faith has maintained a presence in Washington, primarily to keep up relations with ambassadors from various countries where the church maintains or looks to expand its missionary work. </b>

  “It is mainly to put a face on the church so [the ambassadors] know there are people they can talk to,” said Kenneth Bowler, director of international and government affairs for the church. “We have a lot of international activities, mainly our missionaries who are in <b>167 different countries,</b> and in a lot of those countries, we have not only missionaries, we have congregations, we have buildings and are building buildings.”

  Spearheading the diplomatic outreach efforts, Bowler supervises six full-time staffers, along with Ann Santini, the wife of a former Nevada <b>Democratic</b> congressman.

  The office hosts dozens of ambassadors and their families at events each year, such as last month's Western Family Picnic at the Marriott Ranch and the Christmas light extravaganza at the LDS temple.

  The diplomatic work takes the vast majority of the office's effort. The Washington office also coordinates a lecture series for ambassadors at Brigham Young University and hosts interns from the university. The Washington office and church headquarters are advised by the church's Public Affairs Committee, a panel of influential D.C. Mormons. Bowler estimates that just 5 percent of the work done at the office is focused on Congress or the administration.

  On the occasions in which the church does get involved in policy issues, it is usually done in conjunction with other religious groups that bring an issue to the church. For example, the church recently joined other faiths in publicly supporting an amendment banning same-sex marriage.

  Sometimes there is involvement behind the scenes, often through a group of lobbyists who volunteer their time to the church. It supported legislation that allowed it to lease land at Martin's Cove in Wyoming, a site where as many as 150 Mormon pioneers are believed to have died in a blizzard. And it helped craft a provision that protects the church from prosecution if it sends undocumented immigrants to do missionary work.

  Other times, the D.C. office is consulted by members of Congress on matters that might affect the church. Sen. Orrin Hatch, for example, notified the church when he sponsored legislation to ensure individuals filing for bankruptcy can continue to pay religious tithing.

  “I don't know that it made that much difference because he'd already decided he was going to introduce it,” Bowler said. “It's typical when you have a large constituent. One, you don't want to do them harm, and, second, if you're going to do something to help them, you want to let them know.”

  It's much more common, Bowler says, for another religious organization to approach the church and ask it to lend its support for some cause, such as an anti-smoking campaign. The requests are sent to the church's headquarters in Salt Lake City. Generally, the requests are rejected. 
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
  Reply
#48
More Relevant in this thread and lot of other threads..

<b>Congressman Trent Franks Introduces Resolution on Untouchability</b>

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The resolution was introduced shortly after a briefing with the Congressional Human Rights Caucus entitled “Untouchables : The Plight of Dalit Women” with testimony from DFN President Nanci Ricks ; Joseph D’souza, international President of the DFN ; Kumar Swamy, South India director of the All India Christian Council ; Smita Narula, Executive Director of the Center for Global Human Rights and Global Justice at the New York University School of Law ; and T. Kumar, Advocacy Director Asia & Pacific, Amnesty International.
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The resolution and briefing arrive following a flurry of action in the United Kingdom and in the European Union on the issue of Untouchability. Last month, the UK House of Lord and House of Commons took up the issue in a public debate while the Conservative Human Rights Commission held a groundbreaking hearing on Untouchability. In February, the European Union passed a resolution on Untouchability which called on the government of India to drastically improve its response to the egregious human rights violations caused by Caste and Untouchability.
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>We are in the midst of a worldwide movement,”</b> commented Dr. D’souza following the briefing. “The world is just now awakening to the oldest and largest human rights atrocity. Now is the time for action, and we call on others to join with leaders like Congressman Franks in calling for movement by the United States Government and other world governments.”

<b>The Dalit Freedom Network’s mission</b> is to partner with the Dalits (India’s Untouchables) in their quest for religious freedom, social justice, and human dignity by mobilizing human, informational, and financial resources.
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Check the "Unreached Peoples" link - to the right of the page.
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#49
Xposting..

<b>Is there imperial design behind conversion overdrive?</b>

By Sandhya Jain

<i>There is empirical evidence that the evangelical movement operates through multinational corporations (MNCs). A special section has been devoted to the Seventh Day Adventist church (to which <b>Andhra Chief Minister Samuel Rajshekhar Reddy is affiliated), which targets Dalits for conversion.</b> It is closely associated with Maranatha Volunteers International, engaged in church planting. </i>


A journalist researching how permissions were obtained for such a vast numbers of churches found that a rough estimate at $ 5,000/church x 1,000 churches gave a turnover of $5million. One churches in 1,000 days, and $5m turnover! There is no land cost because most churches are built illegally on Poromboke or Mandir lands.

In recent weeks, allegations of assault by Christian evangelists in BJP-ruled states have once again turned the spotlight on conversions. <b>Now, meticulous research by Ms. Anuja Prashar, director, Transnational Identity Investments (TII), documents the political, economic and secular backing by Western-Christian governments for this imperialist project and its special focus upon India. </b>

Ms. Prashar's report, titled "Conversion and Anti-Conversion in India Today," owes its genesis to British MPs Andy Reed and Gary Streeter protesting to India's Deputy High Commissioner in London that certain laws in the country restricted religious freedom. They presented a letter signed by a cross-party group of 16 MPs; Reed is a member of the board of Christian Solidarity Worldwide. <b>This exposes the hollowness of the secular principles of the British Government, as evangelical paradigms are so openly supported across political parties. </b>

This agitated Hindus organisations in Britain and America, and independent academics, social analysts, and observers joined hands to prepare a report which convincingly establishes that Western Christian charity and faith organisations have a clear agenda to convert the socially disadvantaged, and a global imperialistic mission. There is empirical evidence that the evangelical movement operates through multinational corporations (MNCs). A special section has been devoted to the Seventh Day Adventist church (to which Andhra Chief Minister Samuel Rajshekhar Reddy is affiliated), which targets Dalits for conversion. It is closely associated with Maranatha Volunteers International, engaged in church planting and 25-villages and 50-villages conversion programmes.

Dr Vijay Chauthaiwale of Gujarat studied some multinational Christian organisations, such as the Evangelical Church of India which belongs to OMS International. Its motto is the imperialistic slogan "Reaching Nations for Christ."

The website openly proclaims the targets as Latin America, Europe and Euro-Asia, Africa and Asia , where the organisation is actively involved in training and preparing native evangelicals, and church planting. In 2005 alone is succeeded in getting 103,464 people make a decision for Christ and 10,592 undergo lay leadership training. The donor nations include the United States (HQ), Australia , Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United Kingdom.

<b>The Evangelical Church of India (ECI), established in 1954, targets the slums, scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, in cities and villages. "We must go to where the fish are found …where the fish bite the bait on the hook," it boasts inelegantly.</b> Its logo depicts a cross struck deep in a lotus, seat of Hindu divinity. Dr. Chauthaiwale also studied the US-based Mission of Joy (MOJ), whose mission is "to bring the gospel to a million unreached believers and provide temporary and permanent assistance to orphans." MOJ has three orphanages in Tenail, Nasaraopet and Vijiwada.

But the most organised movement is the US-based AD 2000 and Beyond Movement and its 'Joshua Project 2000' which lists 216 people groups throughout the world as Priority-I. These include nine Indian tribes (Bhilala, Binjhwari, Chero, Kawar/Kamari, Lhoba, Majhwar, Panika, Shin or Sina, and Sikkimese Bhotia). The Joshua Project has identified the North India Hindi belt as "the core of the core of the core" because of its population density (40% of the Indian population); its political importance; its is very deprived (the "Bimaru" states of Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh lie in this region); it is the religious hub of India; and it has the smallest Christian presence in India. Detailed plans have been drawn up to target India's 75,000 Pin Codes.

An umbrella called North India Harvest Network (NIHN) has been organised on the principles of "Plug, Prem and be NICE" to avoid duplication of effort. Plug stands for People in every Language in every Urban centre in every Geographic division.
Prem means Prayer, Research, Equipping & training and Mobilisation. NiCE involves Networking, Initiative, Catalyst and Encouraging the missionaries.
<b>Virtually a war strategy. </b>

Britain 's South Asian Development Partnership (SADP), led by Mr. Ram Gidoomal, a Sikh convert to Christianity, is supposed to "facilitate and catalyze entrepreneurial initiatives in the UK and South Asia ." Its website explains how the principle of NICE can be applied to SADP working. If there is a link between SADP and Indian evangelical movements, how do these programmes fit into the developmental programmes of Asian and UK professionals? Ms. Prashar further points out that Mr. Gidoomal has co-authored a book with Robin Thompson, an Evangelical Minister with South Asian Concern (SAC), a Selsdon Baptist Church keen to convert South Asia.

The Seventh Day Adventists owes its Indian success to Canadian evangelist Ron Watts, President for the South Asian Division, who entered India on a Business Visa. He operated out of Hosur. When Watts arrived in 1997, the Adventist Church had 2.25 lakh members after 103 years of operations. In five years, to took it to 7 lakhs. Dorothy Watts' recorded their methodology, namely, the 25-Village and the 10-Village Program.

This involved five sets of laymen, going two by two, under guidance from a regular pastor, and exploring the villages in a district, to identify 25 villages in close proximity, with people of the same family groups and castes, so they could continue to have social relations and marriage alliances after conversion! Once the villages were selected, the teams would approach the leaders of each village and invite them to send two leaders to a 10-day seminar at a nearby resort, at the organisation's expense. They were then brainwashed in the idea of better living, which was offered to their villages, along with the tenets of Christianity. Then they were denied baptism till they convinced the village to convert.

In 1998, there were 17 Ten Village Programmes and 9,337 were baptized. In 1999, forty programs were held and nearly 40,000 people baptized. The 25-village plan made proselytization a flourishing business, which got a further boost with the arrival of the Maranatha Volunteers International. Under Andhra Chief Minister Samuel Reddy, the Adventists shifted to a 50-village plan. They began baptizing at the rate of 10,000 persons per month.

The US-based Maranatha Volunteers International focused on providing buildings for the Seventh-day Adventist Church . The Fjarli family, who own a construction company, Southern Oregon Builders, went on their first Maranatha project in 2001. They raised funds to build 1000 churches at a rate of 1 per day. A journalist researching how permissions were obtained for such a vast numbers of churches found that a rough estimate at $ 5,000/church x 1,000 churches gave a turnover of $5million. One churches in 1,000 days, and $5m turnover! There is no land cost because most churches are built illegally on Poromboke or Mandir lands.

<b>When deportation proceedings were launched against Ron Watts, Dr. K.J. Moses testified that Watts had committed fraud, spending Rs. 1.30 crores as bribes to stay in India </b>. Advocate V.S. Raju said Watts was in the business of conversion to Christianity, offering petty cash concessions and allurements of employment to educated persons in Christian schools and hospitals; sending youth for education to the Spicer Memorial College, Pune, and arranging marriages between young men and women belonging to SDA. <b>Watts, however, remained in India after a much-publicised meeting with Ms. Sonia Gandhi! </b>

<b>Besides America , the European Union is funding a seven year Sustainable Tribal Empowerment Project (STEP), targeting 200,000 tribal households in Srikakulam, Vizianagaram, Vishakhapatanam and East Godavari.</b>
  Reply
#50
Thought this was the most appropriate thread for this..


I was going through Indian Embassy (DC) website for passport services. This is the list of holidays they observe...

http://indianembassy.org/newsite/embassyho...ys.asp#holidays


Consular Holidays

The following holidays will be observed during the year 2007
Dates may change at short notice. Please check with the Embassy by calling (202) 939-7000



Holidays Day Date

Bakrid Monday January 1
Republic Day Friday January 26
Muharram Tuesday January 30
Mahavir Jayanti Saturday March 31
Milad-Un-Nabi Sunday April 1
Good Friday Friday April 6
Buddha Purnima Wednesday May 2
Memorial Day Monday May 28
American Ind Day Wednesday July 4
Independence Day Wednesday August 15
Labor Day Monday September 3
Gandhi's Birthday Tuesday October 2
Idu'l Fitr Sunday October 14
Dussehra Sunday October 21
Diwali Friday November 9
Nanak's Birthday Saturday November 24
Christmas Tuesday December 25


Strange that there are 4 muslim holidays and only 2 Hindu holidays (5 if you include Jina, Buddhist and Sikh)
  Reply
#51
welcome Nachiketa.

Please refer to older discussion on IF from this post onwards.

Also see The Prime Minister and Rama Navami?
  Reply
#52
<!--QuoteBegin-Bodhi+Jun 20 2007, 02:43 PM-->QUOTE(Bodhi @ Jun 20 2007, 02:43 PM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->welcome Nachiketa.

Please refer to older discussion on IF from this post onwards.

Also see The Prime Minister and Rama Navami?
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Thanks, I will follow it there.
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#53
<span style='color:red'>Hindus missing the wood for the trees</span>
By Dr Gautam Sen

Hindu understanding of the world they inhabit and their associated political activity sadly give the impression of missing the wood for the trees. Running around like headless chickens disconsolate Hindus protest a myriad of slights, insults and assaults. But they are failing to grasp the alarming interconnectedness of outwardly disparate events and how profoundly consequential they are for the destiny of Hindus.

<b>For more than a thousand years luck (being relatively numerous at a time when the physical reach of predators was limited) and fierce intermittent resistance combined to prolong fragile Hindu survival. In the contemporary world, there is an intensification of the on going war against Hindus</b> whether by the jehadi pornographer Husain trashing the most sacred Hindu objects of veneration, abetted by their own obscene elites, or the brazen denunciation of their ancient epic, the Ramayana by some ASI low-life.

Hindus are apparently failing to grasp that these persistent attacks constitute a prelude to the kill of a grievously injured prey. Disputing the veracity of the unremitting libel and abuse against them, as if it was all an unfortunate misunderstanding that could be dispelled by reason and logic, merely confirms that Hindus, like the doomed Bourbons of France, have learnt nothing and forgotten nothing. The Mahatma has indeed reached out from his samadhi to ensure that an instinct of ‘collective suicide’, as he constantly enjoined, remains the default setting in the Hindu psyche. That the Mahatma is the guiding light of Hindus rather than a Shivaji, Vivekananda or Aurobindo is a final testament to their degradation and impending demise.

The world is going to be apportioned between Christians and Muslims, with China the outlier entering the fray in competition with them at some future date. However, Islamo-Christian conflict has constituted the unfolding history of the world for the past 1500 years, with the religion of love coming into deadly conflict with the religion of peace after 571 AD. Christian imperialism advanced with spectacular brutality after Emperor Constantine turned it into the political ideology of the Roman State and the Islamic reprise that earlier swept all in its path ended at the gates of Vienna in 1683. Hindus have simply remained the last frontier until the counterparts of the Red Indians are finally erased and the domination of the white Christians or the execrable bearded clergy becomes unassailable.

Of course, an ideologically intransigent and demographically <b>expansionist Islam may terrorise Hindus into complete submission at an opportune moment. Women of the defeated fancied by the conquerors will be consigned to their notorious harems and a surge in religious conversion will occur</b> in the name of the religion of peace and tolerance. They will then resume their world-historical struggle against white Christian societies of European origin. <b>But it is the Christians, who are militarily pre-eminent at present and they have also cornered the current market in intellectual thought, ideas and moral purpose. They will duplicitously eulogise and lament the passing of the creative Hindus, having wreaked havoc on them in the first place themselves. To destroy and then ceremoniously shed tears as you do so dramatically signifies a civilisation’s complete political dominion.</b> It is achieved by taking control of legitimate intellectual discourse, the associated custodianship of interpreting human experience and the transmission of ideas, so that even the victims upon whom destruction is being inflicted lose their capacity to know their own fate. White Christians have achieved this remarkably blessed status by truly making their own industries that fabricate human knowledge and the world’s media that disseminates it.

This is why the insistence of various so-called Hindutva surrogates abroad on engaging in interfaith dialogue is baffling in the extreme. Of course the era of Bania primacy could provide a mundane explanation since Hindu activists of all stripes have succumbed to the values of low commerce. The lure of money seems to breed stupidity and instil self-righteous confidence; attributes instantly observable in the political activists concerned despite feigned phoney self-deprecation. Since interfaith dialogue ought to imply mutual respect evangelical activity is in blatant and hypocritical contravention of its basic purport. Christians simultaneously engage in interfaith dialogue and evangelical activity to lull potential victims into a false sense of security and misguided notions of self-worth. Such a devious stratagem only highlights utter contempt and disrespect for Hindus with whom they engage in the charade of interfaith dialogue. Petting a goat before its slaughter is a well-known routine before the kill. But Hindus aim to please and the unspoken question that seems forever poised on their lips is how low they need to bow when self-abasement is required of them.

<b>The other wood Hindus cannot seem to fathom amid the trees is the diabolical role the British played in their history. After inflicting on them famines and mass death in the 1760s, resulting in seven million dead (quarter of Bengal’s population) because of rapacious looting immediately after Plassey, they caused the deaths of untold millions in the same Bengal on the eve of their departure almost exactly 180 years later.</b> During the interim colonial history countless manmade famines are recorded and the post-1857 holocaust of mass murder is only being uncovered now. This is the period in which the British went on exultant killing sprees to avenge the alleged rape of their women during the first war of Independence itself. Needless to say that there was enthusiastic domestic British support for the mass murder, with the writer Charles Dickens himself declaring his fervent approval.

In more recent times, the British political establishment, having first assiduously promoted Indian’s partition in 1947, cynically sought India’s further disintegration by inciting the notorious Khalistani assassin Jagjit Singh Chauhan to declare independence from British soil on the very day Dhaka fell to the Indian army. And it was a British High Commissioner who invented the figure of 2000 killed in post-Godhra Gujarat that has become the stick to beat Hindus with for all time to come. Avarice and racial hatred were always the dominant themes of the British interaction with India.

Yet many Indians exhibit an embarrassing infatuation for all things British. India’s allegedly Rightist journalists swear by inferred British values, which only ever apply to the white British of course. Indeed the most ‘celebrated’ among them once notoriously dubbed Britain’s Queen India’s monarch too! The Left playing havoc with India’s future imbibed their half-baked, bankrupt ideas and political whims from British universities in which intelligence agents routinely masquerade as Leftist radicals. Today, the majority of British Leftists have discovered in Hinduism the greatest threat posed to human civilisation since the Nazis. Most of them attribute Islamic terrorism partly to Hindu oppression and quietly applaud the punishment being meted out to Hindus in various Indian cities by Islamic terrorists.

Yet Indians cannot avoid being seduced by the machinations of the British State and its minions, not least some intelligence agents, who have made India their home, disguised as writers. One of the most sickening spectacles is the way all and sundry lionises them in India, so irresistible are charms of proximity to a bona fide white presence. It was therefore unsurprising to learn that a British academic, involved with British intelligence, was able to place an Indian Leftist in a major university post in Delhi, so compelling is the value placed on white intercession. But to witness the Prime Minister of India standing next to him at an inauguration ceremony in Delhi recently was startling nevertheless.

Hindus need to understand that Islamo-Christianity is essentially hostile to their survival as an autonomous culture and political society. Their imperialistic impulses are a grave danger to Hindus because the porosity of the modern world has made their society vulnerable to inimical influences in familiar and novel ways. The eventual outcome for Hindus will have nothing to do with whether are good or bad people, talented or not, etc. It will have everything to do with the fact that politics abhors a power vacuum and politically divided Hindus without a government prepared to defend them and their interests, which has been their dismal fate for hundreds of years, at least since the great visionary soldier Shivaji, cannot survive. All the bad things constantly happening to them, from California and Bangladesh to everywhere in India, which is probably the most dangerous place in the world for Hindus, is part of a relentless pattern.

It is this political pattern that Hindus need to recognise and comprehend. And its evolution highlights starkly for anyone willing to see that appeals to justice and fairness are totally misplaced. What is taking place is a war of extermination, which is simultaneously social, political and biological, and Hindus are its victims. They will be converted, subjugated or destroyed as the two Semitic religions have unfailingly done to all rivals or any group that happens to differ from them. Christians and Muslims will eventually engage in even deadlier conflict with each other than they are already, but they will destroy the weak Hindus first because it is too tempting an opportunity to disdain.

http://www.organiser.org/dynamic/modules.p...pid=206&page=35
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#54
<b>Kerala origin priest helps to set up US consulates</b>

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->He is a man of god, but Kerala native Fr. Alexander Kurien also plays a crucial role in the American scheme of things. <b>He is, after all, the director of strategic planning in the US Department of State</b>.

He has been helping set up US missions across the world since he was inducted into the department in 1999, but also doubles up as a priest, providing solace to his church members.

"In the last one decade of my job in the US State Department, I have travelled to 147 countries and have played a crucial role in opening 65 new consulates and embassies (also relocating existing ones)," Washington-based Kurien, 45, said.
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#55
Jay Ho !!

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090814/jsp/...ry_11360359.jsp

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--> The US Commission on International Religious Freedom has placed India on its watch list for the first time, specifically mentioning the attacks on Christians in Orissa last year and the Gujarat riots of 2002.

...

<b>The Indian government and the US panel had been on a collision course earlier this year when Delhi denied visas to a commission team that wanted to visit the country before finalising the report.</b>
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#56
It's a priviledge to be placed on this list. This is useful information against the Christian Missionaries, it proves their political connections to foreign governments and organizations engaged in subversive activities in India. Arrogant racist Christo says we Hindus are devil worshipers and need to be destroyed (like the Islamo-fascists), and they expect "toleration" in return. Keep dreaming. Hindus will never allow the one-world religion and government sought by Christo-fascists.

A dangerous cult like Evangelical Christianity cannot be tolerated. All conversions are either by force or psychological brainwashing. Jesus is a myth, never existed. He is derived from Egyptian myths (Isis and Horus).





<!--QuoteBegin-rajesh_g+Aug 14 2009, 04:30 AM-->QUOTE(rajesh_g @ Aug 14 2009, 04:30 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->Jay Ho !!

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090814/jsp/...ry_11360359.jsp

<!--QuoteBegin--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--> The US Commission on International Religious Freedom has placed India on its watch list for the first time, specifically mentioning the attacks on Christians in Orissa last year and the Gujarat riots of 2002.

...

<b>The Indian government and the US panel had been on a collision course earlier this year when Delhi denied visas to a commission team that wanted to visit the country before finalising the report.</b>
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#57
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/in...how/5069595.cms
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->In what should be bad news for Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi, the <b>Jesuit Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US has named, Fr. Cedric Prakash of Ahmedabad as the Wade Chair Scholar for the Academic Year 2009-'10</b>.

...

The chair will allow Fr. Cedric a 3-month stay in the US, where he'll speak before various audiences on the human rights issue in India, with specific reference to Gujarat.

...

Fr Cedric was among the three Indians called to testify before the US Commission for International Religious Freedom in June 2003 in the context of the Gujarat riots. Apart from the riots, he also raised the issue of the proposed legislation against religious conversions in Gujarat.

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