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wagonrunner wrote:toyota2nr wrote:wagonrunner wrote:toyota2nr wrote:I can agree with that. My issue is and continues to be that the PNM supporters seem to be blind to everything their party does. So while we making noise for Section 34 let's pretend our boys did nothing wrong.rfari wrote:PNM - senior member makes a statement perceived to be racist on a political platform ; loses his deputy leader position.
UNC - member made statements over the years perceived to be racist; elevated to a ministerial position in its government.
The low socioeconomic sheep wouldn't see that
oho, and once again. if yuh speak ill of the pp, yuh is a pnm. they speak of freeing others from mental slavery while their supporters thinking is stuck. go figure.
I like how you side step the issue there......good one.
how was it side stepped? unless of course emotion is your forte, and reasoning isnt due to such strong self-denial.
By your emotion, the complainant and 6 witnesses are all dutty PNMites ent?
http://www.guardian.co.tt/news/2013-01-25/acting-cop-complainant-against-ex-minister
kurpal_v2 wrote:Hey seeing as most you guys are highly opinionated, which one would you rather go Rama or machel Monday?
rfari wrote:Sat is a chamar. His opinion has negligible weight
zoom rader wrote:rfari wrote:Sat is a chamar. His opinion has negligible weight
Whether his opinion has negligible weight he does hold alot a weight. This is a guy that took on the PNM all the way to the Privy Council and won.
And just what is a chamar?
zoom rader wrote:^^^ It is not proper protocol to have outsides meddling with your internal affairs
The Indian High Commission issued a statement on Monday on the matter raised by the General Secretary of the Maha Sabha, Sat Maharaj. It explained that the visit was primarily a business visit and not in any way intended to lobby the THA on any land issue.
In response, the Indian High Commission outlined that that statement by Maha Sabha’s General Secretary, Sat Maharaj as, “continued intervention by intrusive and divisive actions into the affairs of the Hindu community of Trinidad and Tobago” as false, baseless and malicious. In listing the facts, the press release explained that the Indian High Commissioner, Malay Mishra did in fact visit Tobago on June 2nd through to the 3rd accompanied by an Indian businessman who was interested in setting up an industrial unit in the context of the visit of a THA delegation to India and signing of a MOU between the THA and the NSIC in April 2010, following the High Commission’s initiative in bringing a MSME delegation to Trinidad and Tobago earlier this year.
The release continued that the visit was primarily a business visit and not in any way intended to lobby THA on land issue of any such. It added that since Mr. Mishra was visiting Tobago after a gap of six months, he wanted to give an interaction with the Indian community to be appraised of the current situation and their requirement, if any. This meeting was part of the high commissioners remit and it was in fact arranged by the President of the Tobago Hindu Society, Ms. Rayan Ramoutar.
He outlined that the High Commissioner is always in constant contact with Tobago, one such explained outlined is the visit of the Tobago House of Assembly delegation to India as part of a 3- nation tour of Asia, coordinated by the Indian High Commission. It stated that the visit last week was basically a follow up on that and this can be attested to from his discussions with Dr. Anselm London,
rfari wrote:Sat is a chamar. His opinion has negligible weight
AllTrac wrote:rfari wrote:Sat is a chamar. His opinion has negligible weight
dai meh uncle dan, take it down ah notch nah, please
rfari wrote:zoom rader wrote:^^^ It is not proper protocol to have outsides meddling with your internal affairsThe Indian High Commission issued a statement on Monday on the matter raised by the General Secretary of the Maha Sabha, Sat Maharaj. It explained that the visit was primarily a business visit and not in any way intended to lobby the THA on any land issue.
In response, the Indian High Commission outlined that that statement by Maha Sabha’s General Secretary, Sat Maharaj as, “continued intervention by intrusive and divisive actions into the affairs of the Hindu community of Trinidad and Tobago” as false, baseless and malicious. In listing the facts, the press release explained that the Indian High Commissioner, Malay Mishra did in fact visit Tobago on June 2nd through to the 3rd accompanied by an Indian businessman who was interested in setting up an industrial unit in the context of the visit of a THA delegation to India and signing of a MOU between the THA and the NSIC in April 2010, following the High Commission’s initiative in bringing a MSME delegation to Trinidad and Tobago earlier this year.
The release continued that the visit was primarily a business visit and not in any way intended to lobby THA on land issue of any such. It added that since Mr. Mishra was visiting Tobago after a gap of six months, he wanted to give an interaction with the Indian community to be appraised of the current situation and their requirement, if any. This meeting was part of the high commissioners remit and it was in fact arranged by the President of the Tobago Hindu Society, Ms. Rayan Ramoutar.
He outlined that the High Commissioner is always in constant contact with Tobago, one such explained outlined is the visit of the Tobago House of Assembly delegation to India as part of a 3- nation tour of Asia, coordinated by the Indian High Commission. It stated that the visit last week was basically a follow up on that and this can be attested to from his discussions with Dr. Anselm London,
I d'oh see the issue here
Row over Hinduism
By Julien Neaves
Story Created: Jan 25, 2013 at 10:03 PM ECT
Story Updated: Jan 25, 2013 at 10:14 PM ECT
AS HIGH COMMISSIONER to a secular state, Indian High Commissioner to Trinidad and Tobago Malay Mishra should be speaking about goods and services and not about Hinduism.
So said secretary general of the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha (SDMS), Sat Maharaj, on Thursday in response to statements made by Mishra earlier in the month during a media briefing on the 150th birth anniversary celebrations for famed Indian spiritual leader, Swami Vivekananda, at the Indian High Commission on Victoria Avenue, Port of Spain.
At the briefing, Mishra had expressed concern about "errors creeping" into Hinduism locally, saying there was too much emphasis on ritualism with a "very shallow understanding of the philosophy of the religion".
He also commented that a lot of confusion and errors had been creeping into religion, both in India and locally, among "so-called priests and pundits".
The Express received a number of letters following the article on January 5 reporting his comments.
Some of the writers praised Mishra on his comments, applauding his urgings to local Hindus to follow the teachings of Vivekananda on spiritual equality, while other writers accused him of attacking local Hinduism, and they especially took issue with the phrase "so-called priests and pundits".
Maharaj, speaking to the Express via telephone, said the SDMS is concerned about a diplomat representing a secular state "pronouncing on religion".
He pointed out that one would not hear the US ambassador or the Canadian high commissioner commenting on religion.
"Why is the (Indian) High Commissioner pronouncing on religious matters?" he asked rhetorically.
He questioned why Mishra did not speak about Christianity or about Islam, which has millions of followers in India, and "all the killings" in the name of those religions.
Maharaj also responded to Mishra's comments in two columns in the Guardian newspaper. In the second column, he defended the importance of rituals in Hinduism and criticised Mishra for having a lack of understanding about Hinduism locally and in general.
Mishra defended himself in a letter to that newspaper published on Thursday, noting that his comments "may have created some controversy".
He said his "so-called" remark was directed at a certain category of priests and pundits who have a superficial understanding of the religion and "take only to rituals to secure their own future, much less to advance the cause of religion".
Mishra stressed that he has "profound respect for priests and pundits who speak for the universality of an all-embracing nature of Hinduism, key hallmarks of the religion".
He said he was also aware of the role played by priests and pundits, both locally and in the Hindu diaspora.
On the issue of rituals, Mishra said he never meant to "denigrate" them, noting that they formed an "integral part of any religion".
He also said there was a need for the younger generation of Hindus to "rational and scientific validation of Hinduism".
Maharaj, in response to Mishra's letter, said he was "back-tracking" on his previous comments.
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/letters/Disgraceful_appeal_to_race-188445971.html
Disgraceful appeal to race
Story Created: Jan 25, 2013 at 10:03 PM ECT
Story Updated: Jan 25, 2013 at 10:17 PM ECT
The issue of the THA elections and the unadulterated and obscene appeal to race in the name of political expediency by the THA must not, and can never be, simply "wished" away or be put in some crevice in our backward minds and remain there festering until, like the nasty abscess that it is, be allowed to spew its filthy pus again whenever it suits the moronic, self-opinionated and backward politician who feels the urgings of expediency and draws it from his odoriferous back-pocket and with a bash on the table, trumps every sane and serious issue with a less-than-subtle appeal to prehistoric and uncivil racial cliquishness, and be allowed to return it to its lair, nicely hidden away until the next time he feels power slipping away and draws it out once again.
I will shout an emphatic no to that type of behaviour which, along with its indulgent owner, should be condemned to the filthy gutter where they both belong.
Such behaviour will forever keep this country rooted in backwardness and feigned, strained "tolerance", if not overt mindless incivility. It is an impediment to our progress as a learning society, which is absolutely vital to our future survival as a nation.
Such behaviour keeps us firmly anchored to a mindset that has no place in the modern world for it is only un-evolved animals that exhibit that type of blind instinctive appeal to the clannish pseudo-protection of the herd.
It is a base type of behaviour rooted in racist bigotry that needs to be exposed to the sunlight if it is to be eradicated not only from our adult minds, but most importantly, from the impressionable minds of our children! And it is those charged with stewardship over the common good who should be the first to condemn racist utterances if only because an absolute prerequisite of that stewardship is to show neither "fear nor favour" to anyone!
We have reached the absolute pit of the fetid mire when we are not in the least concerned that we can climb a podium and expose our bigotry for all and sundry, and then limp to some other podium in pomp and splendour to put our filthy hands on a holy book as if to convince a stultified mob that we will truly function without "favour" or "fear". What are we? What have we become? Why do we do this over and over?
When I heard this putrid garbage, my heart sank to the bottom of some dark pit and with it every sense of ownership, kinship and identity that I felt with the people of Tobago and more so with the PNM as an organisation. I shudder at what the future holds if this behaviour is not seen by all and their children, to be roundly punished for what it truly is.
Steve Smith
via e-mail
AllTrac wrote:rfari wrote:Sat is a chamar. His opinion has negligible weight
dai meh uncle dan, take it down ah notch nah, please
Political analyst Kirk Meighoo says the key factors were ethnicity, not race. "Tobagonians voted on an island nationalist basis, which IS an ethnic basis, but not a racial basis. There is a big difference between race and ethnicity," he explained to the Sunday Express in an e-mail response. "Insofar as politics is mobilised ethnically — in that wider sense of ethnicity — then the Tobago ethnicity was awakened with a vengeance."
rfari wrote:Excellent article
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