Tumgik
#Baha'i women
fromchaostocosmos · 5 months
Text
In the war between Israel and Hamas, there have been far too many casualties­—thousands of innocent civilians have died, primarily in Gaza. But this war has another less visible casualty: the hundreds of thousands of Jewish immigrants to Israel from the Middle East and North Africa known as Mizrahi, whose history is being erased from the popular narrative about Israel. My community is among them.
When angry protesters hurl charges of apartheid and colonialism at Israel, they are, knowingly or not, repudiating the truth about Israel's origin and the vast racial and ethnic diversity of its nation.
I was born and raised in Iran in a family of Jewish educators. I came of age during the tumultuous years of the Iranian revolution, just as Ayatollah Khomeini rose to power in 1979, and soon thereafter, annihilated his opposition­—feminists, leftists, even the Islamic Marxists who had long revered him as their spiritual leader. Until 1979, if anyone had told my observant Jewish family that we would someday leave Iran, we would have laughed. In fact, at our Passover seders, the words "next year in Jerusalem," were always followed by chuckles and quips, "oh, yeah, sure, Watch me pack!" all underlining our collective belief that we were exactly where we intended to remain. We loved Israel, but Israel was a Nirvana­—a place we revered but never expected to reach.
The 30 years preceding the Islamic revolution had led the Jewish community to believe that the dark days of bigotry were behind them. And for good reason! When my father was a schoolboy in the late 1930s, he was not allowed to attend school on rainy days. In the highly conservative town where he grew up, in Khonsar, his Shiite neighbors considered Jews "unclean," or Najes. They barred them, among other things, from leaving their homes on rainy days, lest the rainwater splashed off the bodies of the Jews and onto the Muslim passersby, thus making them "unclean," too. Yet, that same boy grew up, left the insular town, attended college in Tehran, earned a master's degree, and served in the royal army as a second lieutenant. (To his last day, my father's photo in military uniform was among his most prized possessions.) After service, he became the principal of a school, purchased a home in what was then a relatively upscale neighborhood of Tehran. The distance between my father's childhood and adulthood far surpassed two decades. It was the distance between two eras­—between incivility and civility, bigotry and tolerance.
Yet, as if on cue, the demon of antisemitism was unleashed again. The 1979 Islamic revolution summoned all the prejudices my father thought had been irretrievably buried. One day, on the wall across our home, graffiti appeared, "Jews gets lost!" Soon thereafter, the residence and fabric store my aunt and her extended family owned in my father's childhood town were set on fire after a mob of protesters looted it. Within days, she and her family, whose entire life's savings had burned in that fire, left for Israel. As young as I was, I could see that the regime was indiscriminately brutal to all those it deemed a threat to its reign, especially secular Muslims. But the new laws were specifically designed so that non-Muslims, and women, all but became second-class citizens. Members of religious minorities, especially the Baha'i, could no longer eye top jobs in academia, government, the military, etc. Restaurateurs had to display signs in their windows making clear that "the establishment was operated by a non-Muslim." In a court of law, members of religious minorities could offer testimony in criminal trials, but theirs would only count as half that of a Muslim witness. Jews were once again reduced to Dhimmis­—tax-paying citizens who were allowed to live, but not thrive. Then came a handful of executions of prominent Jewish leaders in the early months after the revolution, which sent shockwaves through the community. Jewish schools were allowed to operate, but under the headmastership of Muslims who were officially appointed.
Within a few years after the rise of Ayatollah Khomeini to power, the Jewish population of Iran, which once stood at 100,000, shrank to a fraction of its size. Today, of the ancient community whose presence in Iran predates that of Muslims, only 8,000 remain. For centuries, Iran has been home to the most sacred Jewish sites in the Middle East outside of Israel. But those monuments have either fallen into disrepair or are targets of regular attacks by antisemitic mobs. Only last week, the tomb of Esther and Mordecai­—the memorial to the heroine and hero from the Book of Esther who saved the Jews from being massacred in ancient Persia, was set on fire.
How is it that the 90,000-plus who left Iran, many for Israel, are now deemed as occupiers? How do Iranian refugees fleeing persecution become "colonizers" upon arrival in Israel? These families, my aunt among them, were not emissaries of any standing empire, nor were they returning to a place where they had no history. For them, Israel was not a home away from their real homeland. It was their only homeland. The vitriolic slogan that appeared across my home in 1979 demanded that we "get lost!" In 2024, once again, the same Jews are being called upon to leave, this time Israel. Where, then, are Jews allowed to live?
Iranian Jews were not alone. Jews from Iraq, especially in the aftermath of the 1941 pogrom called Farhood, similarly fled their homeland. So did the Jews of Yemen, Tunisia, Egypt, Turkey, Syria, Morocco, Algeria, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, etc. All, destitute and dejected, they took refuge in Israel. Today, they make up nearly 50 percent of Israel's population. To call such a nation colonial GRAVELY misrepresents the facts about Jews and Israel.
In his timeless essay, Looking Back on the Spanish Civil War, George Orwell said that in the Spain of 1937, he "saw history being written not in terms of what happened but of what ought to have happened according to various 'party lines.'" With the alarming rise of antisemitism around the world, and in light of the bloody attacks on Israel by Hamas on Oct. 7, the greatest massacre of Jews since World War II, 2024 bears an uncanny resemblance to Orwell's 1937. But perhaps in no way more ominously than the way truth has been upended to serve an ideological narrative­—one in which Jews, who have lived uninterruptedly in that land for more than two millennia, are cast as white non-indigenous interlopers, with no roots in what has always been their ancient homeland.
A public scholar at the Moynihan Center (CCNY), Roya Hakakian is the author of several books including, Journey from the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran (Crown, 2005).
221 notes · View notes
hussyknee · 1 month
Text
Idk why my TikTok FYP and Twitter are all about this today, but since I only scroll there instead of post, here's my 2 cents:
Idk if Justin Baldoni is a Zionist but being Baha'i doesn't excuse touring Israel and it doesn't excuse never having spoken up for Palestine. Plus, automatic distrust of "feminist" Hollywood men sorry. Blake Lively is a hollow Barbie doll and Ryan Reynolds played one role well and made it his whole personality. Added negative points for Blake Lively being besties with Taylor Swift. Overrated mediocre white women gotta stick together Ig. None of them have spoken up for any of the half a dozen genocides going on. Also, nothing that gives Colleen Hoover money is worth it.
All stans are fundamentally losers but anyone actually giving a shit about any of these nothingburger whiteys have no self-respect. Go lie face down on some grass till you feel better.
87 notes · View notes
luminalunii97 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Some tankie bs detection
I saw this post on my dash. The user is blocked now. But just to educate people so that they won't fall for idiotic claims online, here are a couple of facts:
1. The Islamic Republic is not anti imperialist, they're anti USA. The regime is very much in love with Russian imperialism. At this point, Iran is an unofficial russian colony. And by the support of their imperialist father figure they have their small version of imperialism in middle east. Ask Iraq and Lebanon.
2. There's no "safety" when it comes to economy in Iran. The "national sovereignty" is called "those fvckin thieves in power" here. Iran's regime is one of the most corrupt regimes by international index. Rent, nepotism, embezzlement and money laundering are serious issues in Iran. Done only and only by the governors and people in power. Social class is not only a thing, there's a raging gap between rich people and those in poverty. And the gap is getting bigger and bigger by month. If you have connections in government or you are in the government, you'll get richer and richer. Other wise, soon enough you'll be in poverty too. Many families, including mine, who used to be considered middle class, have incomes lower than the poverty threshold now.
About 15% of Iran's economic failure including inflation is on the sanctions. The rest is on the corruption within the regime.
Iran's banking system is also a corrupted organ. The so called Islamic banking is anything but Islamic. The loan interest rate is one of the highest worldwide, 23%, so that often you have to pay back more than twice the money you've received. It's called Riba in Islam and it's Haram. According to the regime themselves, the banking system in European countries, even in the USA, is more Islamic than us. The fact that some of the biggest embezzlement in Iran has been done by bank managers should give you a picture of how they're drinking our blood.
None of this is on USA imperialism. It's all the Islamic Republic.
3. The Islamic Republic doesn't support Palestinians. The regime is extremely racist and anti Arab. I dare you talk about this with an actual Arab. IR don't give two shites about Palestinians lives. The regime is antisemitic. That's what they are. Palestine is just an excuse to attack Israel. In the past 20+ years of my life, living in Iran and dealing with these posers, not once we've been educated about Palestine and Palestinians lives. Everything I know, I've learned from online resources and documentaries make by Palestinians. The regime doesn't talk about Palestinians when they pose as supporters. I'm pretty sure they don't know or care to know anything noteworthy about Palestine, considering my knowledge of the human rights violations there is always more than basiji people of my country, and I don't even know that much. All the regime talks about is how Israel should be eliminated. IR supports a terrorist organization called Hamas, not Palestinians.
4. Let's forget about everything I said so far. I wonder if tankies like the op has any ounce of humanity in them! The regime has been oppressing women, violating every type of human rights and murdering lgbtq people and other-thinkers for the last 40 years. The spectacular environmental disaster in Iran is the direct result of regime's policies and neglect. This is a case of human rights violation since it's ruining people's lives, especially ethnic minorities, like Arab farmers in south.
No religious minority is safe in Iran, be it atheist, Baha'i, Jew, christian, or Sunni Muslim. They commit crime against children, through labor and through war. IRGC have little regards for human lives in general but it descent into no regards at all for ethnic minorities.
They have MASS EXECUTED 30,000 leftists (members of Marxist Communist parties and their supporters) within the first decade of their autocratic rule. It's unbelievably funny to me when foreign leftists support a regime that has executed many of their fellow thinkers and still arrest and torture any left activist in Iran.
To say the reason the 1979 revolution happened was to get rid of western influence and to establish a democratic free independent government is true. But the Islamic Republic is not that result. Don't be fooled.
368 notes · View notes
my-vanishing-777 · 2 months
Text
"In 1983, Islamic Republic of Iran hanged 10 Baha'i women in a single night in a square in the city of Shiraz. The women were hanged one by one, each forced to watch the next woman’s death in a harrowing attempt to coerce them into recanting their faith. The youngest one was 17."
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
radfembri · 9 months
Text
Iran. Many Iranian women opposed the Shah's autocratic rule and his use of a cruel secret police, SAVAK, which tortured many women who joined underground anti-government guerrilla groups. In 1978, militant Muslim supporters of Ayatollah Khomeini incited massive demonstrations against the Shah. To placate the religious leaders of the revolutionary movement, he banned abortion.
But in 1979, the militants drove him out. Khomeini, who had been propagandizing from exile in Paris, returned to Iran in triumph. In March 1979, 100,00 women gathered at the University of Tehran to celebrate the overthrow of the Shah and the Ayatollah’s victory. But almost at once, Khomeini suspended reformed family laws, barred women from becoming judges, issued his first order on the veil, passed a series of laws to segregate schools, buses, beaches, and other public areas, and established theocratic rule.
Disregarding women's support, the Ayatollah abolished all laws granting women rights and showed no reluctance to kill women who upheld them. He established a ‘morals police’—made up, in a rare exception, of women, called the Zeinab Sisters—to exercise surveillance on women's dress and behavior and harass or arrest them. One of his first acts was to prosecute the first woman member of the Iranian cabinet, Farrokhrou Parsa. Tried by judges in hoods, allowed no defense attorney and no appeal, she was in fact declared guilty before the trial began. Parsa was charged, writes Mahnaz Afhjami, with ‘expansion of prostitution, corruption on earth, and warring against God.’ Her actual offenses were to direct schoolgirls not to veil and to establish a commission to revise textbooks to present a nonsexist image of women. In December 1979, Khomeini had Parsa executed; she was wrapped in a sack and machine-gunned.
Women protested the new rules in massive marches in Teheran and other Iranian cities; men beat, stoned, and even stabbed them as they marched. Men purged women from the public realm, then passed laws severely restricting them from taking jobs and making it almost impossible for them to talk to or deal with men at work. In 1981, Khomeini had fifty schoolgirls shot and thousands of girls and women arrested for ‘counterrevolutionary’ or ‘anti-Islamic’ activity. None were given trials, and reports indicate that 20,000 women, including pregnant women, old women, and young girls, were executed. In 1982, Khomeini set the legal minimum age for execution at ten years (or puberty) for girls and sixteen for boys, banned women from most sports eventsand launched a new campaign of arrest, executing 15,000 people. That same year, he intensified government persecution of religious minorities, especially Jews and Baha'is. In 1983, he made veiling compulsory for women, and had ten women hanged for refusing to convert from Baha'i to Islam: three were teenagers; others included the first Iranian woman physicist, a concert pianist, the former personnel director for Iran Television, and nurse. He recruited children to clear minefields during Iran's war against Iraq; hundreds of thousands were killed.
In 1989, a woman interviewed on a television program said she would rather model herself on a contemporary woman than on Muhammad's daughter, the self-sacrificing Fatima who has been held up as a model for women for thirteen hundred years. Ayatollah Khomeini ordered those responsible for the program arrested and executed. When his advisers assured him the producers had made an innocent mistake, he granted pardons—but by then Iranian women had surely gotten the message.
“The War Against Women,” Marilyn French
2 notes · View notes
tarajabbari · 1 year
Text
Watch the trailer for Who was she? Season 3!
youtube
This podcast is where your host, Tara Jabbari shares the stories of women throughout Baha'i history.
This season is about Hazel Scott, a talented musician and activist.
New episodes will start on August 1st wherever you listen to podcasts like Spotify, Apple, Google, Acast, and others.
2 notes · View notes
spokanefavs · 1 year
Text
Sunday recalled another anniversary, the public hangings, of 10 Baha’i women in Shiraz, #Iran.
This anniversary — the 40th — begins a year-long campaign led by the Baha'i International Community: #OurStoryIsOne
What can others do to show support? If you know Baha’is, ask how you might help.
Or you can call toll-free 1-800-228-6483 for information about reaching a Baha’i community near you. And of course, prayers are always welcome. Use your own prayers, or choose from a compilation of Baha’i prayers that can be found at the link.
3 notes · View notes
scentedchildnacho · 17 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
A woman doctor in Wisconsin told me I had a b vitamin deficiency.....so this is how I diagnosed myself ..instead of the psychiatrist who called what he did mentalism but I think they do take interest in atherosclerosis and blood thinners
Its the chromosome from my birth father that could be a genetic mutation...
The women at shelter like fashion and swear a lot.....so they appear LGBT proud in the sense they werent polite Muslims and weren't invited to prayer six times a day through sonic sound bombs so rap ..
Its nasty ass.....nasty ass....and the bitch
Haunting there maybe is a veteran grave site around and we must channel this
I did like walk to find jobs but other then fruit picking there isnt really much that would change my space orientation....I told them at Baha'i I use to go to museums but with COVID shut downs it's that's why never profitable for me to do so I'm trying to map differently
Eliza tibbet
They do feel butt shorts are for women to do the women at shelter and to me those are indigenous men's things to do like the hokulea and you have to ask them if you can do warrior things
I find women showing a lot of leg very menstrual....and don't like everybody looking at my physiology and if I have pooped yet ...
Why do we have to invite or conjure menstrual why does menstrual have to be heard....
Feminine yin energy cool dark shy moon fully covered feminine energy
0 notes
automatismoateo · 5 months
Text
I wore a "Women Life Freedom" shirt to campus yesterday and a Muslim girl spat on me. via /r/atheism
I wore a "Women, Life, Freedom" shirt to campus yesterday, and a Muslim girl spat on me. Yes, I filed the attack with my school's office. I live in America. My parents and I escaped the Islamic Republic occupying Iran in 1999. Not only were we Kurds, but my mom was Baha'i. We escaped as religious refugees and ironically, we are all now atheists and have been for years. Yesterday, I wore my shirt for Toomaj Salehi, the Iranian rapper who was just sentenced to be executed by the Islamic Republic. The "Women, Life, Freedom" movement came about in September of 2022 when the IRGC killed Mahsa Jina Amini because of improper hijab wear. Walking on campus yesterday to see the face of Khomeini on signs while many raised the IR flag was terrifying. Never in my life did I imagine walking onto my law school to find my peers supporting the Islamic Republic. I didn't talk to anyone, I didn't engage in anything, and while I walked past the group, one of the hijabi women spat on me. To which her friends pulled her back and it was just an awkward silence as I tried not to cry. Apparently, others saw the situation and also reported her to our dean. A few others fought her and asked her to leave. Not sure what will happen, but just wanted to shed a light on an encounter I never thought I would encounter. I posted this on r/NewIran, but I was hesitant to post it here. I know this topic is sensitive. My only goal is to spread awareness that the Islamic Republic occupying Iran is not a government that should be praised. I beg the atheist community to reject this theocratic, barbaric government. The people of Iran, especially the youth, are entirely against religion specifically Islam. Submitted April 28, 2024 at 02:00AM by Sresidingm (From Reddit https://ift.tt/bAlIKyL)
0 notes
swiftsnowmane · 11 months
Text
In what the Baha'i International Community is calling an "escalating pattern of persecution against the Baha’is in Iran," 39 more incidents targeting the community have been reported in recent days, affecting mostly women.
Ten women Baha’is, mostly young, were arrested while 26 additional individuals, 16 of whom were also women, have been sentenced to a total of 126 years in prison.
The 10 Baha’i women were arrested in Isfahan, in central Iran, earlier this week. Three other Baha’is were arrested in Yazd and three more have had court hearings and await sentencing.
The arrests took place after homes were raided and the personal property of several individuals was confiscated, including electronics, books, cash and gold. More than 10 agents were reported to have raided the home of one of the women during her arrest.
“Every one of the Baha’i individuals arrested, and whose homes were raided by the Iranian government, indeed every Baha’i in Iran, has a lifelong story of persecution which has affected every facet of their lives. These stories are a chilling testament to decades of heartless persecution against an entire community, only for their beliefs,” said Simin Fahandej, Representative of the Baha’i International Community to the United Nations in Geneva. “And as we see women in Iran targeted in general, Baha’i women face even greater persecution, not only as women but also as Baha’is, further demonstrating how, today, all Iranians face persecution and discrimination only for daring to stand up for justice and equality.”
“The international community must hold the Iranian government accountable for its human rights violations,” Fahandej said. The 10 women arrested this week have committed no crimes. The dozens sentenced to years in prison are also innocent. All they want is to serve their society. But instead of their contributions being welcomed, they are put behind bars, and the Iranian government deprives its entire society of some of the most capable individuals in its society.”
The latest arrests and prison sentences follow more than a year of intensified attacks on Iran’s Baha’i community. Dozens of other Baha’is have been either arrested, tried, summoned to begin prison sentences, barred from higher education or earning a livelihood over recent months. And in August the Baha’i International Community reported that 180 Baha’is had been targeted—including one 90-year-old man, Jamaloddin Khanjani, who was detained and interrogated for two weeks.
Two other Baha’i women, Mahvash Sabet and Fariba Kamalabadi—who along with Khanjani and four other Baha’is spent a decade in prison from 2008 to 2018—were re-arrested in July 2022 and are now each serving a second 10-year jail term.
See also: https://www.bic.org/news/twenty-six-bahais-iran-sentenced-126-years-prison-10-bahai-women-arrested-isfahan-and-3-bahais-yazd
6 notes · View notes
keyvanstories · 10 months
Video
youtube
When I interviewed Chuck Moore in 1994 he was working at the CSUF university outreach  program helping, guiding and mentoring young people to seek higher education. These digital releases of Transforming Human Consciousness originally were recorded at CPAT in Claremont California. The series were the individual initiative of Keyvan Geula and sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Claremont. These historic interviews though were recorded in 1994; about 30 years ago, feels very timely today. Humanity still is sadly grappling with great challenges of understanding, appreciating, and living the Baha'i principles of; the oneness of all humanity, the oneness of all religions, the oneness of God, the elimination of all prejudices, the equality of women and men, the independent investigation of the truth, the harmony of science and religion and the universal language.It would be wonderful if this posting on social media connects all the guests of Transforming Human Consciousness and advocates of the oneness of all humanity and I will hear from my old friend Chuck Moore and have a follow up conversation.I would like to thank to my family and friend, Melvin Jacobson for converting the VHS of 1994 to digital format of 2023 and my friend Jason Green for doing the final post production touches.
0 notes
Text
From the SDG Summit to the Summit of the Future: Building the United Nations We Need.
Panelists will discuss how the 2024 Summit of the Future may best accelerate the implementation of the outcomes agreed at the SDG Summit by promoting effective United Nations reform for a stronger, more accountable and inclusive multilateral system.
Side Event at the SDG Action Weekend organized by Coalition for the United Nations We Need, Permanent Mission of the Republic of Maldives to the United Nations, Permanent Mission of the Republic of Uganda to the United Nations, United Nations Department of Global Communications, Stakeholder Group of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent, Together 2030, International Development Law Organization, Global Women Leaders: Voices for Change and Inclusion, SDGs Kenya Forum, Stimson Center, Baha'i International Community, Oxfam International, International Alliance of Women, Global Call to Action Against Poverty.
To maximize the 2023 SDG Summit's impact, the Secretary General is convening an SDG Action Weekend, which will generate opportunities for stakeholders, United Nations entities, and Member States to convene inside the United Nations Headquarters and set out specific commitments and contributions to drive SDG transformation between now and 2030.
The SDG Action Weekend will consist of the SDG Mobilization Day on Saturday, 16 September, and the SDG Acceleration Day on Sunday, 17 September at UNHQ in New York.
The SDG Action Weekend includes a select number of high-level side-events identified through an open call that concluded in August. They are jointly organized by coalitions of Member States, United Nations agencies and other Member States, United Nations agencies , and global stakeholder networks.
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media
The On June 28, 1362, ten Baha'i women were executed in Shiraz. They were told that you have four sessions to become a Muslim and then be released. Most of them were less than 30 years old, and the youngest of them, 16-year-old Mena Mahmoudnejad, was executed while her father was also hanged three months ago. Before being arrested, Mena had written in an essay: Why are my co-religionists kidnapped from their homes in my country? Are they taken to mosques at night and in pajamas and are whipped? Why are their houses looted and set on fire? Because of the blessing of freedom that Islam has brought? Why am I not free to express my opinions in this society?
Akhtar Thabit (25 years old), Roya Eshraghi (23 years old), Simin Saberi (24 years old), Mahshid Niromand (28 years old), Zarin Moghimi (29 years old), Shirin Dalvand (27 years old), Tahereh Arjamand (30 years old), Nusrat Ghofrani (Yaldai) (56 years old), Ezzat Eshraghi (Janmi) (58 years old) are other Baha'is who were executed along with Mena. Each of them was forced to witness the hanging of their fellow prisoners until the last moment, so that they would return from their religion before it was their turn. Their bodies were never handed over to their families
FreeIran2023 #rising_to_overthrow #not_the_shah_not_the_sheikh
@M_Plus
0 notes
lowkeynando · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
problems. Job ultimately condemns all their counsel, beliefs, and critiques of him as false.
God then appears to Job and his friends out of a whirlwind, not answering Job's central questions. Job, by staying silent before God, stresses the point that he understands that his affliction is God's will even though he despairs at not knowing why. Job appears faithful without direct knowledge of God and without demands for special attention from God, even for a cause that all others would declare to be just. And the text gives an allusion to Job 28:28: "And unto man he said, Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; and to depart from evil is understanding".
God rebukes the three friends and gives them instruction for the remission of sin, followed by Job being restored to an even better condition than his former wealthy state (Job 42:10-17).
Job is blessed to have seven sons, and three daughters named Jemimah (which means
"dove"), Keziah ("cinnamon"), and Keren-happuch ("horn of eye-makeup"). His daughters were said to be the most beautiful women in the land. [3] Michael, [Notes 1] also called Saint Michael the Archangel, Archangel Michael and Saint Michael the Taxiarch [6] is an archangel in Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and the Baha'i faith. The earliest surviving mentions of his name are in 3rd and 2nd-century BC Jewish works, often but not always apocalyptic, wheres CLONES
1 note · View note
spokanefavs · 2 years
Text
Pete Haug discusses the religious persecution of two Iranian women who practice the Baha'i faith.
"Mahvash Sabet, 69, and Fariba Kamalabadi, 60, were first incarcerated in 2008 and released in 2018. At the time they were part of an informal group of five men and two women who tended to the basic pastoral needs of the Iranian Baha’i community."
1 note · View note
scentedchildnacho · 18 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Neighborhood pomegranate....it isn't really tart till you reach the center...abdul baha I told them I was interested in actions at a distance that had subconsciously affected my life like meeting the hare Krishnas in san Diego so he told me he recommended an author on out of body experience in Baha'i
He also told me to remember to ask will there be enough for my death...on protestant Catholic wars....
The wars for territory in northern Ireland from what I read weren't religious....Anthony King the upper classes had stuff on what a nation is and decided to see if they could do something all more experimental then religious
The french enlightenment was the worst thing that ever happened to women....its just to research and experiment because and has no feeling at all
All very modern ...
It can here kind of appear about God but it is all random and darwinism...it's too see if they can re start a monopolization
It just affects the people mother earth isn't in anyway bothered or disturbed
Violence for God i believe in Uncle Sam and david myths and ideas of experimenting on populations so they do most of the war for the invader...
Gods people are always an experiment to the upper classes and that's not democracy
Harper's ferry I believe in very shocking return violence about modern day slavery....
They wanted to know what I would do for a job....so I said I was influanced by what barak Obama would do for Muslims in executing Osama bin laden there was this private small beautiful fortune here after and a lot of slave driving expectations tended to be gone for social program opening
So after being allowed China labor unions on gesture and ergonomics find jobs calling people mad fools that expend and dissipate energy to do something simple
I have wanted a good....job....the ideas of urban agriculture produce the same amount of profits and actual material distribution but it's impact on the worker is dramatically reduced by realistic management
It is more a labor union for just compensation and asking what a wage realistically does...
But for now natchez Mississippi told me to realize that the economy shifted to an information economy and that all meditative experience is an economic component
But no matter object experiment there is still paternal battery ideas that women and children aren't owed for creating collectively a meditative media experience
So for now I'm mostly interested in who I may interact with.......to see corporately or governmentally I can find to tap into a reservoir of unpaid wages....because it didn't occur to people to do
Its more viewing finance as dark matter and trying to find that universe
Ephesians I am the body of Christ and drugging me with pills and stealing my blood will isolate an enzyme that will save the whole world
Harper's ferry though asking for wages though I think is viewed as naive and just an instigator to end financial markets and start a mass exodus out of the geography
They wouldn't stop impoverishing and experimenting on us and I think something warns that they need to die for crimes against humanity
Hidden African populations....
I am from Wisconsin so if I want to be poor and do Georgia o keefe and federal art grants I get experimented on....if they were immigrants nightmare of cutting ones own throat etc
The immigrants are very brave about wanting to be personnally promoted and I have to go to jews to remind me there are 10000 people at that school sure my production is free...
I told her I had to stay at a shelter but thats better for me right now...places more monetary are very despiritualized right now and if your too alone you can get really attacked if your not careful
I told him I had read about....Gideon and there appears an energy in the southwest states participants can't really stay sane under without calls to Muslim prayer
Its kind of everything has people kind of at each other for no reason it is kind of out of mind crazy like a poem by Michael ondaatje on something wanting to snipe at rats
Some of it is maybe al quaidas
So it would suprise you that issues of the jail like a fuck can attack you....if you dont learn anti trust contracts....criminally insane people are around people shouldnt have to put in jail anymore
Union rules more people are usually threats of more immediate consequences so bad behaviours stop .
0 notes