DotCommunist
So many particulars. So many questions.
He is become death, destroyer of kleenex
Illustrated version?
I'm off to bed with my copy of the Baghavad Gita.
Now I dont pretend to know much about the various strands of Islam but I had always believed that the 'Sulfis' tended to be more on the easy going side of things and yet these pricks still seem to be happy to blow them up.
More than 100 people have died in violence in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, where eyewitnesses say police are firing on crowds with automatic weapons.
A source in Afghanistan's Interior Ministry told RIA Novosti on Sunday that the death toll had passed 100 in riots over the public burning of a Quran by a U.S. pastor.
.... policed by the Swedes for goodness sake, not even NAT0.
It at least shows rather drmatically that even Scandinavian led 'reconstruction' is winning no hearts and minds. Maybe because the UN is supporting the warlords running the local area?
No indeed, I imagine the local population have no idea about Scandinavia at all. But I mean that many of the local provincial reconstruction team efforts in the area are led by the Swedish aid authorites, which have a rather unique approach, attempting to disassociate themselves from the military involvement.Well it's not really Scandinavian led. The Swedes have a strange relationship with NATO. They're considered a "partner" rather than a member, which means they get to pick and choose which actions to participate in. So the fact that they've chosen to be involved in Afghanistan (as they did in Bosnia and Kosovo), rather than being there to fulfill any obligation may not have done them any favours with some of the locals.
But I mean that many of the local provincial reconstruction team efforts in the area are led by the Swedish aid authorites, which have a rather unique approach, attempting to disassociate themselves from the military involvement.
Do you think these millions of Indian Muslims might have contributed in any small way to the things on your list of Indian achievements? Or do they save the brainy jobs for Hindis
Creed, race, gender have nothing to do with why India is progressing and Pakistan is not and everything to do with the dynamism of a secular democratic state verses a theocracy that bases it's laws on a dark ages document (utterly fabricated one, as we all know God is a delusion). I would argue that there's been very few theocracies that prosper anyway in modern times.
And yes the Muslims do well in India (I belive there's even been a Muslim President) and as a consequence are growing in number. Conversly, I'd like you to have a look at Pakistans minority groups (Sufis/Xtians/Buddhists/Sheiks and Hindus) at 1947 and compare their numbers/percent of population to now.
It's constitution is secular. The official name is The Republic of India. (Bhārat Gaṇarājya in Sanskrit). It's does not allow the teaching of religion in any of it's schools, which is even further then the USA constitution (and one we would be advised to follow). Plus the Muslims are (by law) governed by their own family laws based on Sharia (unthinkable here). No such privalage is given to the minorities of Pakistan.
The problems with India are the problems of capitalism. Unfair distribution of wealth and land grabbing by multinationals and an inept political structure.
The parent is at liberty to educate/indoctrinate/brainwash their children as want. The state shuldnt pay for it. So there are private religious schools there.To be fair it sounds like you no more about the subject than me. I thought a large minority went to religious schools disproportionately Muslims?
Don't the Hindus, Parsis, and Christians also have their own family laws?
The parent is at liberty to educate/indoctrinate/brainwash their children as want. The state shuldnt pay for it. So there are private religious schools there.
Yes, that's what makes it secular.
Useless policing. Civil police need to keep protesting crowds or mobs intent on attack (hard to tell the difference initially) at an agreed protest line, which if passed without permission, especially in large numbers who can't be arrested then the attacking mob should be shot. It is up to the civil police to control the crowd. If they don't hold the crowd back it is the civil authorities fault when a mob gets shot down.Only about 60 police were deployed, and they appeared uncertain how to respond. Initial attempts to disperse the crowd by firing warning shots appeared only to inflame the demonstrators.
Useless. Nearby is not near enough. The UN base or compound should be embedded within ISAF bases so an attack on the UN looks like an attack on ISAF, which it is.They phoned for help from the nearby military bases of German and Swedish forces, according to a person briefed on the situation.
Useless. If the UN were depending on "swift" being swift enough to save them, they were wrong and misled. The UN should have leadership which tells them - you are not safe being "nearby" you need to be surrounded by a competent military defence.The U.S.-led military said the situation "escalated rapidly" and that a swift-reaction team didn't arrive until after rioters were gone.
Useless compound defence architecture. It should be impossible for a crowd to breach a secure compound and if they try there should be fire power to kill those attempting to breach the compound or base.Once demonstrators flooded the compound,
Useless guards. A dozen professional loyal soldiers manning 4 machine guns could probably have saved the day even at that stage.a dozen Afghan police guards—the first line of defense—dropped their weapons
Gurkhas are not useless man for man. But 4 to 6 Gurkhas is not enough to hold off such crowd who by this time are armed with guns taken from the police.Inside the compound, a small contingent of Nepalese Gurkha guards working for the U.N. faced a conundrum: They were under U.N. orders not to open fire on demonstrators. The videos show one guard feebly trying to wave an elderly demonstrator out of the compound.
Useless. Defence architecture needs to be more secure areas with secure areas. Those inside a safe room or bunker within a compound or base need to be able to kill those trying to enter the safe room.Inside the building, other attackers targeted one of the safe rooms. The door proved little protection against the mob.
Useless. Any defence attache worth their salt would know they were sitting in a death trap and would have refused to be responsible for such a poorly defended UN compound and would have ordered everyone out and relocated to the ISAF base.The attackers searched the darkened bunker with a lamp and discovered Lt. Col. Siri Skare, a 53-year-old Norwegian military attaché—the former fighter pilot—seconded to the U.N., along with Joakim Dungel, a 33-year-old Swede who had been working in the human-rights office for less than two months, and Filaret Motco, a 43-year-old Romanian who headed the mission's political section.
Ah, but unarmed rioters can overwhelm armed defenders, as this video from Attack on Precinct 13 illustrates.All that is needed is to be better armed and trained than the attacking mob, as this video from the movie "Zulu" illustrates.
Armed defenders in a prepared defensive stronghold or fort have a huge advantage against unarmed or lightly armed attackers. It takes a special kind of incompetence for armed defenders to throw that advantage away and get themselves killed.Ah, but unarmed rioters can overwhelm armed defenders,
What video?as this video from Attack on Precinct 13 illustrates.
Ah, but unarmed rioters can overwhelm armed defenders, as this video from Attack on Precinct 13 illustrates.
How it went down
The Wall Street Journal: Inside the Massacre at Afghan Compound
Useless policing. Civil police need to keep protesting crowds or mobs intent on attack (hard to tell the difference initially) at an agreed protest line, which if passed without permission, especially in large numbers who can't be arrested then the attacking mob should be shot.
Well, I read his stuff. He's got a very ... different .... perspective, but sometimes interesting things to say.
Do you think these protocols should apply in London?
I am the last one to suggest machine-gunning protesters or demonstrators, having been a protester or demonstrator myself on a number of occasions.
A mob incited to lethal violence is a different thing from a crowd of demonstrators and our soldiers need to know the difference and react differently in both cases.
The defence architecture of a military or diplomatic base - that means - security barriers, fences, walls, gates, guard posts etc - needs to be carefully designed so that only welcome guests, in good order, can enter with permission.
It is the responsibility of the civil authorities on the outside to hold any angry mob back outside the exterior defence barrier.
An angry mob which breaches the defence barriers must expect to be shot.
Now, if it is some disarmed British students occupying their administrative headquarters to protest education cuts, that is different. I don't know of any occasion when the NUS has killed university administrators.
However, we are talking about Afghanistan where the locals often are armed and there is a war going on, don't you know?
The defence architecture of this UN compound in Mazar-e-Sharif, was inadequate in the extreme and the numbers, quality, loyalty and arming of the guards was also inadequate in the extreme.
This is not a case of being "wise after the event". This is basic military tactics. The UN secretary general and his senior security advisors should not have put UN staff in the hands of such poor military experts as are advising them.
The failure for appointing people who don't know what they are doing is the responsibility of the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon who the UN should sack forthwith.
What part of -
- don't you understand?
No.
Attacks on property, is this vandalism? Who decides?
- protesting, demonstrating, peaceful occupation, vandalism, on the one hand
- a violent mob intent on violence, possibly lethal violence, on the other hand.
Still it's hardly relevant as you are so clearly on the side of any authority that is prepared to quell opposition by any means necessary.
The mob attack on the UN compound was not a case of spray painting "Go home infidels" and smashing a few windows. This was a determined attempt to enter a "secure" (supposedly) base wherein people are being defended.Attacks on property, is this vandalism? Who decides?
Still it's hardly relevant as you are so clearly on the side of any authority that is prepared to quell opposition by any means necessary.
The other protocol I want to see in London and elsewhere in Britain would be the revolutionary republican protocol wherein the military arrest, exile, execute or assassinate the royal family, but this is a different protocol for a different topic.
Creed, race, gender have nothing to do with why India is progressing and Pakistan is not and everything to do with the dynamism of a secular democratic state verses a theocracy that bases it's laws on a dark ages document (utterly fabricated one, as we all know God is a delusion). I would argue that there's been very few theocracies that prosper anyway in modern times.
And yes the Muslims do well in India (I belive there's even been a Muslim President) and as a consequence are growing in number. Conversly, I'd like you to have a look at Pakistans minority groups (Sufis/Xtians/Buddhists/Sheiks and Hindus) at 1947 and compare their numbers/percent of population to now.