burma

Posted at 9:33am on Jun. 4, 2008 Beyond Caricature

By streiff

Late cartoonist Doug Marlette once opined that the most difficult character in his Kudzu strip was the televangelist the Rev. Will B. Dunn. He said it was nearly impossible to come up with things for the Rev. Dunn to do that hadn't already been done in real life by one televangelist or another.

Marlette would have been more challenged if he had included a member of the far left.

Having failed, at least for the moment, in their quest to have people, not including themselves, to invade Burma to force the junta there to allow disaster relief, they now have a new strategy. Send them panties. Seriously.

The Panties for Peace campaign plays on the regime leaders’ superstitious fear that contact with a woman’s underpants will rob them of their power. Women around the world are asked to post their panties to local Burmese embassies in a bid to strip the regime of its power and bring an end to its gross violations of human rights, especially those committed against Burma’s women.

You really can't make this stuff up. And you really can't even make up stuff that is more outrageous and addlepated than what the left comes up with daily.

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Posted at 8:40am on May 17, 2008 China Backs Up the Burmese Leadership

Intransigence

By blackhedd

China backs up the Burma leadership’s refusals to allow foreign aid workers to enter the country. The Burmese generals want our food and our equipment, but not our people. Obviously, because they don’t want their own people to have any contact with the outside world. Might lead to calls for a leadership change, you see. Can’t have that.

China’s position is a standard one they have taken for decades: no nation (especially not those do-gooding Americans) has the right to “interfere in the internal affairs of another.” Obviously, because the Chinese leadership is awfully sensitive about when foreigners (read, us) try to infect their own people with crazy notions about freedom and democracy.

(Of course, China has never hesitated to interfere in the internal affairs of other states when it serves their interests. But let’s not be pointing fingers here.)

The noteworthy thing about this is that China is no longer hesitant to raise their voice and speak up about this, in international forums like the UN, and elsewhere. Obviously, they’re trying to increase the size of their footprint in global affairs.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but this is ground on which we need to be competing against the Chinese, and not only because their position is morally wrong. The rest of the world is constantly watching for signs of who the heavyweight champ of soft-power really is.

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Posted at 8:55am on May 7, 2008 The Tragedy of Nargis

By AcademicElephant

It is to be hoped that these children are still alive to continue their protest.

With all the hoopla surrounding yesterday's primaries in North Carolina and Indiana, most in our country have been distracted from the tragedy unfolding across the globe.

Cyclone Nargis struck Burma on Saturday, causing at least 22,000 deaths. The situation has been made worse by the criminal inaction of the ruling junta, which did nothing to warn the population about the approaching storm, and has done its best to stall or refuse international aid in its wake. It's not clear to me if the government is trying to avoid external scrutiny, is trying to get access to unfettered relief funds for its own purposes, or is simply incompetent--or is motivated by an unsavory combination of all three.

It hardly matters at this point as the slow moving train wreck that has gone on for the last three days could claim many, many more lives. Some 40,000 people are still unaccounted for. Millions of Burmese live in the disaster zone, now cut off from essential services. The wounded, displaced and vulnerable are waiting for help, but they cannot wait for long and the clock is ticking.

The tragedy is that these people do not have to die. Response to the 2004 tsunami demonstrated that rapid, targeted relief can make an enormous difference in the aftermath of a disaster. Yet such help is being denied to the people of Burma by their own government, which is accountable to no one and so has no incentive to act.

It is to be hoped that the United Nations can stir itself to take some action both to help the Burmese and to condemn the disgraceful behavior of this junta, which may well prove far more deadly to the country than Cyclone Nargis.

If you would like to donate, these two charities may be able to get some aid into Burma. [UPDATE: The Salvation Army is also on the ground, if you would like to help them.]

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Posted at 11:23pm on Jan. 18, 2008 Freedom Crab

By bluegrassredstate

I realized moments ago while reading the text of this episode of Common Sense with Paul Jacob that we really should stop calling crab rangoon as such, because as Mr. Jacob points out:

So, how does Burma shave away knowledge? By increasing taxes on satellite dishes!

Most Burmese get their news from satellite TV. Since the Burmese government does not allow a free press within the country, access to the free press outside the country vexes the current junta. So the rulers decided to rocket the cost of satellite dishes upwards, beyond reach of most citizens.

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