A tribute to Rosa Parks

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We, the
people of the world, and particularly non-white immigrants from around the
world salute you to express our deeply felt gratitude for your courage in becoming a
catalyst in removal of the evil Apartheid practice from the United States.  Dear Rosa, we thank you from the depth of our
hearts.
Today is her anniversary, she passed away 9 years ago today in Detroit, Michigan,
leaving a rich legacy of service to humanity.  Rosa Louise McCauley Parks was an
African-American civil rights activist, whom the United States Congress called
“the first lady of civil rights” and “the mother of the freedom
movement”.  

Had it not been for her defiant civil disobedience by courageously sitting in
the bus despite the orders to get up from the seat where only white people can
sit, and had it not been for the follow up by MLK, the Civil rights act would
not have been a reality, and perhaps none of the non-white immigrants would have
made it to the United States. You are one of the reasons I am here today in
these United States.

In Dallas, there were no more than 5 Pakistani and 10 Indian families prior to
the passage of Civil rights act in 1964, then a wave of immigrants came,
knowing that they don’t have to drink the water from a different fountain;
don’t have to sit in the back of the bus, or cannot eat in a restaurant and
forget all other privileges we enjoy today because of her bold step.

I just Googled “Rosa Parks Mike Ghouse” and to my delight, I found 4,710
entries, and felt good that I have expressed my gratitude adequately.  Thank you Rosa, I would not have come to the
United States without the Civil rights act and I will do my share of work in
making America a great nation on the earth.

On May 1, 2010, I paid my tribute to Rosa Parks to a group of 8000 people at
the Immigration Rally in Down Town Dallas – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrjU0KULv-Y

We, at the
Foundation for Pluralism paid our tribute to Rosa Parks at the 9th
Annual Thanksgiving Celebrations at Embassy Suites Hotel in Frisco in November 2005;
she had passed away on October 24 the same year.  Narration of Thanksgiving was given by Mary
Ann Thompson-Frenk, and Tribute to Rosa Parks was read by Cheryl Smith and the
tribute to MLK was offered by Anne Marie Weiss and the plaque was presented to
Rev. Perry Crenshaw by TV Host Ester Davis. Julie Ann Turner and Najma Ghouse
were the other MC’s of the program and I delivered the Key note address “the Community
is a bus.” http://www.foundationforpluralism.com/TG2005_REPORT.asp

 

On December 7, 2013, another mention of Rosa Parks in “A Muslim’s Prayer for
Nelson Mandela” – http://therecoveringpolitician.com/rp-nation/mike-ghouse-a-muslims-prayer-for-nelson-mandela

 If you are in Dallas, we are holding the 16th
Annual Thanksgiving event on Saturday, November 22, and I am pleased to invite
you to join us – details at: www.ThanksgivingCelebrations.org
 


The following information is from Wikipedia.
Rosa
Louise McCauley Parks

(February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an African-American
civil
rights
activist,
whom the United States Congress called “the
first lady of civil rights” and “the mother of the freedom
movement”.[1] Her
birthday, February 4, and the day she was arrested, December 1, have both
become Rosa Parks Day, commemorated in both California and
Ohio.

On December 1, 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, Parks refused to obey bus
driver James F. Blake‘s order that she give up her seat in
the colored section to a white passenger, after the white section was filled.
Parks was not the first person to resist bus segregation. Others had taken
similar steps, including Irene Morgan in 1946, Sarah Louise Keys in 1955, and
the members of the Browder v. Gayle lawsuit (Claudette
Colvin
, Aurelia Browder, Susie McDonald, and Mary Louise Smith) who
were arrested in Montgomery months before Parks. NAACP
organizers believed that Parks was the best candidate for seeing through a
court challenge after her arrest for civil disobedience in violating Alabama
segregation laws, although eventually her case became bogged down in the state
courts while the Browder v. Gayle case succeeded.

Parks’ act of defiance and the Montgomery Bus Boycott became important
symbols of the modern Civil Rights Movement. She became an
international icon of resistance to racial segregation. She organized and
collaborated with civil rights leaders, including Edgar Nixon,
president of the local chapter of the NAACP; and Martin Luther King, Jr., a new minister in
town who gained national prominence in the civil rights movement.

At the time, Parks was secretary
of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP. She had recently attended the Highlander Folk School, a Tennessee
center for training activists for workers’ rights and racial equality. She
acted as a private citizen “tired of giving in”. Although widely
honored in later years, she also suffered for her act; she was fired from her
job as a seamstress in a local department store.
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. He is commentator on Fox News and syndicated
Talk Radio shows and a writer at major news papers including Dallas Morning News
and Huffington Post.  All about him is listed in several links at www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are at
www.TheGhousediary.com and 10 other
blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic
solutions on issues of the day.

Warning to Terrorists – includes a red poster

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The
acronyms SOB, AH, BS and others are certainly uncouth, but they effectively
communicate a purposeful message, hence I made that choice.  The Warning poster to Terrorist is a double
edged sword and is at the bottom.

The following comments have been received against the poster below.

  1. “sometimes your brain goes on strike I guess”,
  2. “Don’t jeopardize”
  3. “Who gave you the authority to represent Muslims?”
  4.  “Not appropriate and
    safe for you in today’s hostile environment.”
  5.  “this is a
    mindless drivel”
  6. “You are not qualified to speak for Islam”
  7.  “Do you think your
    severe warning will have any darn effect on these fanatics”
  8. “I second it”
  9. “it is appropriate
    response”.

In a learning environment, good thoughts and concrete ideas
are developed with criticism and feedback; here is why this kind of response is
needed.  

  1. Don’t bark at the
    religion for the acts of bad guys. Punishment is set for bad acts, to restore the trust in a given society. When a
    Rapist is running around in a neighborhood, everyone is apprehensive, but when
    the guy is caught and nailed, peace of mind is restored in the neighborhood. Instead
    of catching the guy, if we blame his raising, his family, his religion, his
    race or nation, and his imam, rabbi, pastor or pundit – we will not restore
    peace. I intend to aggressively communicate this idea, the right idea, and
    intend to speak at various law enforcement agencies as well as religious
    institutions.  
  2. The criminal ought to know that he will be punished; we will not allow the poor
    alibi of religion, not at all. The Law enforcement and the media people also
    need to get this in their heads, the purpose of investigations and chasing the
    bad guys is to restore trust and not to aggravate by barking at a non-entity
    like Religion. The more you bark at criminal’s religion, race or ethnicity, the worse it gets.
    You cannot shoot, kill, hang, beat or bury the religion, then why bark at it?

  3. 72 Virgins are
    promised. Both the terrorists and the communicators of the problem (Media and
    Politicians) to the world at large have gotten it wrong. The poor guy needs to
    be outraged at the recruiters that he was duped, and there are no 72 virgins
    waiting for him, instead the SOB will rot in Jail if we Americans get him, or
    killed mercilessly if he is caught by the opposite party. No Geneva conventions
    will be observed by either the terrorist or his chasers.  The Media needs to stop the BS of propagating
    the falsity with nothing to back up in the Qur’an.

  4. Both the criminal and
    the law enforcement (coupled with the media and politicians) must be aware that
    it is the Sin, and not the sinner we are after. The clarity should prevent us
    from being unjust.  We should not be
    abusive in disciplining or punishing the wrong doer. As a civil society, we
    cannot become the very evil we want to eradicate.
     
  5. We should seek the
    criminal to lead us to the source of recruiting material and the recruiters by
    mitigating his punishment. 
  6. The Challenge to
    “read the right translation/interpretation” of Qur’an applies to both the
    criminal and the law enforcement. I am certain, the criminal will become a
    genuine repenter, and the law enforcement will not buy or propagate the dished
    out non-sense in the market or bark irrelevantly.

This is the right
time to forge peace to the society in general, and
American society in particular by boldly and loudly getting people to get
the message, and i.e.,

I am being assertive,
never has any Muslim or other communicated this so clearly and it is time we do
that, thank God for the opportunities he has blessed us with to find
solutions.   If I don’t, no one will
speak, and I sincerely hope many of us to speak up, do it on your own or join
me.

It is time we separate the evil from good.

Bottom line is to free Islam and Muslims from the stupid stereotyping, and focus
on punishing the bad guys and restoring trust in the society. 

 

 ———————————————————————–

CLICK ON THE RED POSTER TO VIEW IN FULL SIZE

You
SOB, you are the damned murderer, you messed up the peace, and your ass will nailed big time.

Don’t give me the BS about your job, childhood,
parents, kids, siblings, spouse, imam, rabbi, pastor or the pundit. You did it and you’ll pay for it.

I
am not stupid to buy in your argument that your religion made you do
that, and then bark at the religion endlessly. AH, you are the bad guy
and you are going to pay for it. I am here to restore justice in the
society and not be detracted and scream at your religion like a stupid
ass. I can hang you, shoot you, bury
you and beat you up to restore justice and trust in the society, and that is my goal

 Note:
Mr. Terrorist, I don’t condemn you, it is your sin I condemn. If you
claim to be a Muslim, just remember, those guys who recruited you, and
cheated you with  false promises of Hoories and virgins in paradise were
dead wrong. There is no such thing nor is it mentioned in Qur’an,
instead you will rot in jail for life. Would you turn in your recruiters
for cheating you? Would you read the correct translations of Qur’an, we
might minimize your sentence?

This should be the attitude of Law enforcement
Authorized by Mike Ghouse, World Muslim Congress.


Thank
you
 
Mike Ghouse

(214)
325-1916
text/talk
www.WorldMuslimCongress.com 
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. He is commentator on Fox News and syndicated
Talk Radio shows and a writer at major news papers including Dallas Morning News
and Huffington Post.  All about him is listed in several links at www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are at
www.TheGhousediary.com and 10 other
blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic
solutions on issues of the day.

Mike Ghouse with Sean Hannity on Radio Show today

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Mike Ghouse on Hannity radio show today at 4:00 PM- check your local listing- warning to terrorists

My message is for the terrorists as well as the right wingers.

1. Don’t bark at religion for the acts of bad guys

2. 72 virgins are robbed from you, there is nothing like that.


3. Instead you’ll rot in the jail.

4. We need to punish the individual wrong doer

5.  It’s not the sinner, it’s the sin we need to punish, which means more precise punishment.

I’ll be on nationally syndicated Hannity radio show to elaborate on this

# # #

You
SOB, you are the damned murderer, you messed up the peace, and I will
nail your ass big time. Don’t give me the BS about your job, childhood,
parents, kids, siblings, spouse, imam, rabbi, pastor or the pundit.

Text is on the side, or click on the image to enlarge

I
am not stupid to buy in your argument that your religion made you do
that, and then bark at the religion endlessly. AH, you are the bad guy
and you are going to pay for it.

I can hang you, shoot you, bury
you and beat you up to restore justice and trust in the society, but I
cannot do that with your religion. I am here to restore justice in the
society and not be detracted and scream at your religion like a stupid
ass.

This should be the attitude of Law enforcement

Authorized by Mike Ghouse, World Muslim Congress.
 

Note:
Mr. Terrorist, I don’t condemn you, it is your sin I condemn. If you
claim to be a Muslim, just remember, those guys who recruited you, and
cheated you with  false promises of Hoories and virgins in paradise were
dead wrong. There is no such thing nor is it mentioned in Qur’an,
instead you will rot in jail for life. Would you turn in your recruiters
for cheating you? Would you read the correct translations of Qur’an, we
might minimize your sentence?


……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. He is commentator on Fox News and syndicated
Talk Radio shows and a writer at major news papers including Dallas Morning News
and Huffington Post.  All about him is listed in several links at www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are at
www.TheGhousediary.com and 10 other
blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic
solutions on issues of the day.
 

Texas Faith – Religious liberty vs equal rights in Houston. Is it ever right to subpoena religious sermons?

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Let me throw in the monkey’s wrench here, what if a Mosque was delivering
sermons that cause disturbance in the society, should the Mosque
hide behind First Amendment and not share its sermons? We all should be
open to scrutiny for public good and need to protect the rights of the
individuals that are being violated. Mike Ghouse

TheGhouseDiary.com 
http://nabsites.net/demo/texas-faith-religious-liberty-vs-equa/

TEXAS FAITH: Religious liberty vs equal rights in Houston. Is it ever right to subpoena religious sermons?
By Wayne Slater
wslater@dallasnews.comPublished at Dallas Morning News 12:55 pm on October 21, 2014 | Permalink


The city of Houston sparked a firestorm when it subpoenaed the sermons of five pastors who led opposition to the city’s equal rights ordinance. Christian conservative groups and politicians, including Attorney General Greg Abbott and Sen. Ted Cruz, denounced the action as an attack on religious liberty. Faced with the criticism, the city amended its subpoenas to remove any mention of “sermons.” But it still seeks “all speeches or presentations related to” the ordinance and a petition drive aimed at repealing it.

Opponents had mounted the petition drive but the city ruled there weren’t enough valid signatures to put the repeal issue on the ballot. Opponents filed suit. The case is set for trial in January.

The ordinance bans discrimination by businesses that serve the public and in housing and city employment. Religious institutions are exempt. Critics complain the ordinance grants transgender people access to the restroom of their choice in public buildings and businesses, excluding churches.

Mayor Annise Parker says the city wasn’t trying to intrude on matters of faith. She says it just wants to know what pastors advised folks about the petition process. But critics are deeply suspicious the Houston subpoena could set up a test case aimed at revoking the tax exemption of religious organizations that advocate political activity the government doesn’t like.

What to make of the balancing act between the city’s effort to defend its equal rights ordinance and pastors who encouraged people to oppose it in speeches and correspondence?

What are the limits, if any, of religious leaders to speak out as a matter of religious faith without facing a government subpoena?

We asked our Texas Faith panel of religious leaders, theologians, academics and faith-based activists what they thought of the clash between faith and politics in Houston. Their responses: diverse and provocative.

“I celebrate the courage of preachers who, like the ancient prophets, become critics of the political system,” said one Texas Faith panelist.

But another said: “Foolish paranoid irrationality aside, the city of Houston does not restrict preachers’ ability to pontificate on why some people should be given human rights, but others should not.”

And there was this: What if they had been mosques? Would Ted Cruz & Co. have been so quick to proclaim religious liberty?

If you think there’s consensus – even among those in the faith community – you’re wrong.

MIKE GHOUSE, President, Foundation for Pluralism and speaker on interfaith matters, Dallas

The problem started when the City of Houston passed an ordinance prohibiting discrimination against transgender identity in accessing restroom facilities in public and private employment.

The religious folks took it as an infringement of their rights protected under the First Amendment and started the petition to do away the ordinance or put it on the ballot as a referendum.  Mayor Parker called in for the sermon notes to build up her case to stick with the ordinance, and then backed off saying that it was not the sermons but the notes.

The mayor ought to stick with the subpoenas with sermon notes and not let the issue be derailed; it will be a long drawn battle about First Amendment rights, but what we forget is those rights are in place when they do not violate the rights of others.

Let me throw in the monkey’s wrench here, what if a Mosque is delivering sermons that may cause disturbance in the society, should the Mosque hide behind First Amendment and not share its sermons? We all should be open to scrutiny for public good and need to protect the rights of the individuals that are being violated.

We have come a long way in becoming a civil society, one by one; we are becoming what God wanted us to be – to respect all his creation supported by our declaration that all men are created equal.  It took us nearly 150 years to recognize that women were equal citizens, then the African Americans, and after many more recognitions we are reaching the pinnacle of civility by including the GLBT community as equal in every aspect of life and honor their legitimate needs in a civil society.

Here is a possible solution, in the process of becoming the most civilized nation, among other things, we have banned smoking, we have built ramps for handicapped individuals in public and private facilities, even though the percent of users is few and far in between. Now, we may consider adding a bathroom facility for the transgender. Let every American live in dignity.

The civility of a society is determined by how it protects its women, minorities, children, poor, the weak and the unprotected. In brutal societies, the state or the mob has all the rights, whereas the ordinary citizens don’t, and are subjugated to the whims of the mob. In civil societies on the other hand, the value of unprotected individuals is equal to the value of the ones in power or majority.

It is the responsibility of a society to safeguard the rights of individuals in their pursuit of life, liberty and happiness.  The civility of a society is reflected in fulfilling that requirement.

To read the take of other panelists, visit Dallas Morning News at : http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2014/10/texas-faith-religious-liberty-v-equal-rights-in-houston-is-it-every-right-to-subpoena-religious-sermons.html/#more-45898

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. He is commentator on Fox News and syndicated
Talk Radio shows and a writer at major news papers including Dallas Morning News
and Huffington Post.  All about him is listed in several links at www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are at
www.TheGhousediary.com and 10 other
blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic
solutions on issues of the day.

Happy Diwali – Essence of the Indian festival of Lights

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Diwali
is the Indian festival of lights and is celebrated on a large scale
throughout India and the Indian Diaspora. It is also celebrated in
Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Malaysia, Singapore, Guyana, West
Indies, Fiji, and of course, here in the United States. Diwali is about hope, Diwali brings light, Diwali signifies end of darkness and Diwali signifies end of ignorance and beginning of enlightenment.  You can greet your friends with any one of these phrases, “Happy Diwali”, “Diwali Mubarak”, Diwali ki Shubh Kamnayein” and the very Best of Diwali to you. 

Diwali
is spelled differently, and is called by many names. There is Divali
among others, and Deepavali, meaning the festival of lights. Although
Diwali is a Hindu tradition, many a people of different faiths
participate in celebrations – Jains, Muslims, Sikhs, Christians,
Buddhists, Zoroastrians and others of India and Indian origins.

People
decorate their homes with lights and Rangoli, i.e., colorful drawing in
the front yard of the home, sidewalks, even roads in India with
colorful powders or colorful pieces of chalk. Women and Children look
forward to expressing their artistic talent in this season. Their
surroundings filled with colorful lights to enliven the day, to mark the
dawn of a new era in one’s life.

My childhood is filled with good memories of Diwali; the sparklers, the food and everything joyous you can imagine.
A
few years ago, Jyoti and Nishi Bhatia, former President of DFW Hindu
Temple and President of Dallas Hindi Association respectively, asked me
to speak about Diwali in a dinner gathering to a group of people from
different faiths and cultures, and I cherished it, I love talking about
Diwali, as its essence reflects the ideals of pluralism, and symbolizes
hope and positive energy, victory of good over evil; a new beginning.
It is indeed seeing the light at the end of tunnel.
  
Diwali
Celebration is a part of the epic Ramayana, and the Ram Lila (enactment
of the story on stage) is played out all night long in towns across
India. I grew up watching it in front of my house, and my friends played
different roles in the show. Indeed, one of my former relatives played
Hanuman’s role.
It
was a challenge for me to teach Ramayana to a group of people who knew
nothing about it. It turned out to be a successful program. I prepared
the nearly all white audience that I will be narrating the story through
the power point and along will be reinforcing the names and roles of
the key persons in the story and will ask them for feed back at the end.
Friends, I cannot tell you the joy, the Bhatias and I felt when each
one of them answered the questions from the story. They got it! It is a
powerful story and takes about 30 minutes to narrate.
The
epic is filled with educative tales, edifying poems, and fables. It is
probably through their constant retelling in the villages over centuries
that Hinduism is most efficiently disseminated from generation to
generation.
Whenever a society rots with adharma (wrong path), where no one cares about the other, lying, stealing and dishonesty become rampant, Lord Krishna says,I will emerge among you and restore the righteousness and trust in the society to function smoothly.” Zarathustra, Moses, Jesus, Buddha, Muhammad, Krishna, Nanak,
Mahavira, Confucius, Tao and others served the same purpose. it is
almost like the laws of physics ; water finds its own level, and
righteousness finds its own existence.
Rama
is one such incarnation who reestablished the moral code for social
conduct and proper relation of mankind to divinity. He was truthful and
a just king.
Diwali symbolizes hope and positive energy
  • People wear new clothes
  • Share sweets as a symbol of happiness
  • Renew the relationships
  • Strengthen the bonds
It signifies a new beginning, starting out fresh.
  • for most businesses it is the new financial year
  • An inventory of assets is taken
  • An assessment of family and relationship
  • Last harvest for the farmers
  • New things are bought
To those celebrating Diwali, I wish you, your families and loved ones Happy Diwali and Saal Mubarak.”
Today,
on this blessed day, we have a blank slate to start, let’s plan on
filling it with doing good things for ourselves, to our family, friends,
community, nation and the world until next Diwali.
What
are good things? Words and actions that bring peace, Mukti, salvation,
Moksha, nirvana, Nijaat and freedom to us, yes us. There is so much of
joy waiting to be had. If we can remove hatred and anger towards others,
forgive others and ask for forgiveness (Michami Dukadam is a beautiful
phrase the Jain’s use), then a blissful year is sure to come for each
one of you and me.
  • May this Diwali purge your heart, mind and soul from hate, malice, anger and ill-will;
  • May this Diwali open your hearts and minds towards fellow being;
  • May this Diwali brighten your life, and may this Diwali mark the dawn of a new era;
Muslims
are a big part of Diwali as well, and innumerable poets have written
poetries and songs about Diwali. Here is my effort, I wrote this seven
years ago on the occasion when Diwali and Ramadan were celebrated
around the same time.
ये मेरी दिवाली है, ये मेरी ईद है
दोनों में खुशी ही खुशी है
A meri diwali hai, a meri eid hai
donon may khushi hi khushi hai –
दिवाली से नया साल शुरू होता है
रमज़ान एक नया इंसान बनाता है
 Diwali say naya saal shuru hota hai
Ramzan ek naya insaan banata hai –
दिवाली मैं एक एक बात का हिसाब होता है
रमज़ान में हर बात का रिव्यू होता है
 Diwali may ek ek baat ka hisab hota hai
Ramzan may her baat ka review hota hai –
दिवाली नए साल के लिए क्लीन स्लेट देता है
रमज़ान पिछले साल का स्लेट क्लीन करता है
Diwali nayay saal ke liye clean slate deta hai
Ramzan pichlay saal ki slate clean karta hai –
बात ही बात में मैंने एक नयी नज़्म लिख दी साहिर
दिवाली और रमज़ान से सबका अच्छा ही होता है
Baat hi baat may, my nay a sher likh diya Sahir
Diwali aur Ramzan say subka acha hi hota hai
Happy Diwali to you my friends, may this Diwali bring happiness, serenity and peace to you. Amen!
दोनों में खुशी ही खुशी है


Thank
you
mike
Mike Ghouse

(214)
325-1916
text/talk

Published at:

  1. www.TheGhouseDiary.com
  2. http://foundationforpluralism.blogspot.com
  3. http://MikeGhouseforIndia.blogspot.com
  4. https://www.saddahaq.com/humaninterest/EssenceOfDiwali/essence-of-diwali-the-indian-festival-of-lights

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. All about him is listed in several links at
www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are
at www.TheGhousediary.com and 10
other blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day.

Supreme Court upholds women's right to abortion

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Thanks to the SC for upholding the rights of women to make their
personal health care decision with the guidance from family and Doctors.
Government has no Goddamn business in interfering in personal
liberties, the SC is the only hope for America and it has usually
supported the conservative values of liberty and one’s right to eat,
wear and believe whatever the hell one wants to, as long as he or she
does not mess others’ space, food and loved ones.

Conservatism is about holding on dearly to the values enshrined in our
constitution – that of liberty and justice for all. Many a Republicans
pose themselves as conservatives, but are hell bent on restricting
freedom of women, freedom of speech (even Hannity) against equal pay for
women, they are against freedom of religion, against glbt communities
right to marry each other, and liberty of Citizens, they are against
abortion even in the case of incest and rape.
 ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. All about him is listed in several links at
www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are
at www.TheGhousediary.com and 10
other blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day.

Are Republicans conservative?

      Comments Off on Are Republicans conservative?

Thanks to the Supreme Court for upholding women’s rights

Thanks to the SC for upholding the rights of women to make their
personal health care decision with the guidance from family and Doctors.
Government has no Goddamn business in interfering in personal
liberties, the SC is the only hope for America and it has usually
supported the conservative values of liberty
and one’s right to eat, wear and believe whatever the hell one wants
to, as long as he or she does not mess others’ space, food and loved
ones..

Conservatism is about holding on dearly to the values enshrined in our
constitution – that of liberty and justice for all. Many a Republicans
pose themselves as conservatives, but are hell bent on restricting
freedom of women, freedom of speech (even Hannity) against equal pay for
women, they are against freedom of religion, against glbt communities
right to marry each other, and liberty of Citizens, they are against
abortion even in the case of incest and rape.
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. All about him is listed in several links at
www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are
at www.TheGhousediary.com and 10
other blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day.

Should I remain a Republican?

      Comments Off on Should I remain a Republican?
This is has been one of most difficult
decisions for me. I was hoping to find anchors to hang on to the
Republican Party – it is a good party, but sadly taken over by
extremists. I did not take the time to become active in the party
machinery to make a point and do my share of work in fixing the rogue
elements or at least speak out against the bad guys and go on the
record.

I have been a Republican since 1984, but since 2006, I have not heard any
republican who can talk peace, all they want to do is bomb, kill and
destroy – they are not builders anymore. They always hate someone or the
other. You rarely find them in interfaith gathering… or peace meetings.
They have voted against equal pay for women – and how can women vote
for these guys? They are anti-many things… is there a hope that we will
have some sensible guy among them to lead? 

I am the kind who believes in freedom of speech, you mind your own
business, let me mind my own, but let’s be responsible for keeping the
societal balance in tact, I believe in responsible capitalism, where we
do not take advantage of things for our gains at the cost of others and
the environment. Let me not be a pain in the butt for you, nor should
you be one to me. I am against Republican prejudices towards others.

Can a Republican share what is good about the current GOP? I have
written over two dozen pieces how good it “was” or “is” in theory, but
is it good and practical now? Is the party in sync with the public
sentiment of inclusiveness?

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on
Pluralism at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture,
ethnicity, food and foreign policy. All about him is listed in several links at
www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are
at www.TheGhousediary.com and 10
other blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day.

95% of Child Rape convictions were committed by Muslims, it is bad reporting.

      Comments Off on 95% of Child Rape convictions were committed by Muslims, it is bad reporting.

www.TheGhousediary.com

95% of Child Rape and Molestation
Convictions in the UK Were Committed by Muslims, reports a right wing British site. 


First of all, the entire humanity in general, and Muslims in particular need to
condemn these rogues and punish them to the maximum the British Law allows.

Secondly, it is the responsibility of the society to prevent build up of
prejudices towards any single group by their religion. Ultimately we need to
work towards shaping cohesive societies where no human has to live in
apprehension or fear of the other.  Evil attitudes
like Homophobia, Misogyny, Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and Xenophobia destroy the
fabric of the society.
There is a lot more by those who want to spread hate and divide the nation.  I do not respond to any one, they are a dime by dozen, however, a friend requested and hence this note.

Thirdly, blaming religion is the dumbest things that there is, men commit crimes,
not religions. You can punish the individuals and restore faith in the society –
like arresting a rapist in a neighborhood relieves people of the anxieties, however
if you blame the religion, you cannot beat, kill, shoot, bury and hang religion
– and it does not restore a sense of safety, it flares up insecurity in the
society. Blame the criminal and not his parents, siblings, spouse, kids, mayor,
minister or the religion.

If I get a chance, I will question the reporting methodology.

Look at the shameful reporting, “95% of Child Rape and Molestation Convictions
in the UK Were Committed by Muslims “that is based on report of 17
prosecuted.  Doesn’t it sound like 95% of
2.7 Million British Muslims or British Pakistanis are rapists? This is
ridiculous!

Just Google it – I went to wiki, there were 330 other cases… and you will find
a whole lot more.

The question is do we need to allow stupidity that endangers the lives of 2.7 Million
British Muslim for the acts of 17 Muslims? New York (Google it) had 1162 Rapes
and 419 Murders in 2012 – should we report New Yorkers are rapists and
murderers?

 These are the results of an investigation into “Child Grooming” (Child
Rape and Molestation) in the UK.
17
Cases were investigated between the years of: November 1997 – July 2013.

Here is from Wikipedia, and there is plenty of information available.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_trafficking_in_the_United_Kingdom

Cost and revenue of a human trafficker

In 2012, a report showed that most victims
being trafficked into the United Kingdom were from China, Vietnam and Eastern Europe. According to
Rosa Silverman, the revenue generated by one sex worker was estimated to be £48,000;
therefore, the market is worth tens of millions of pounds. The
reported sales value of a victim in the United Kingdom is usually between £3000
and £4000.[8]

Prosecution

The British government continued its
proactive law enforcement efforts to combat trafficking.[9] The UK prohibits all forms of
trafficking through the Sexual Offences
Act 2003
,[10] the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 2003[11] and the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants, etc.)
Act 2004
.[12] These prescribe penalties of a
maximum of 14 years’ imprisonment, although the specific punishments prescribed
for sex trafficking are less severe than those prescribed for rape.[13]

A
study conducted by the government in 2007 identified a minimum of 330
individual cases of children trafficked into the UK and, the same year, the
government reported prosecutions involving at least 52 suspected
trafficking offenders. Although the government reported 75 ongoing
prosecutions during the previous reporting period, it convicted only ten
trafficking offenders in 2007, a significant decrease from 28 convictions
obtained in 2006. Sentences imposed on convicted trafficking offenders in 2007
ranged from 20 months’ to 10 years’ imprisonment, with an average sentence of
four years.[9] In one case in 2008 in the U.K.,
girls were trafficked for forced prostitution and a man was sentenced to 10
years in prison[14] In January 2008, police arrested 25 members of
Romanian organized crime organizations using Romanian children, including a baby
less than a year old, as pickpockets and in begging schemes.[9] The Rochdale
sex trafficking gang
, a group of predominantly British Pakistani paedophiles that preyed
on under-age girls in Rochdale, were the
first people in Britain to be convicted of sex trafficking, on 8 May 2012[15]

I am committed to build cohesive societies, where we
blame the wrong doer, punish him/her, restore trust in the society and fight
against stereotyping Atheists, Muslims, Hindus, Jews, Sikhs, Mexicans, Native
Americans, Pagans, and Wicca – the most vulnerable of communities.  

Thank you
mike
Mike Ghouse

(214) 325-1916 text/talk
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Mike Ghouse is a public speaker, thinker, writer and a commentator on Pluralism
at work place, politics, religion, society, gender, race, culture, ethnicity,
food and foreign policy. All about him is listed in several links at www.MikeGhouse.net and his writings are
at www.TheGhousediary.com and 10
other blogs. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers
pluralistic solutions on issues of the day.

If Malala were an Ahmadi Muslim?

      Comments Off on If Malala were an Ahmadi Muslim?

Published at World Muslim Congress and Redeeming Pakistan
No copy rights – anyone can copy and post anywhere. 

By Mike Ghouse

On October 13, 2014, Dawn News paper Published, “a letter from Dr. Abdus Salam to Malala” at http://www.dawn.com/news/1137319/a-letter-from-dr-abdus-salam-to-malala which is produced below. Thanks for publishing it.

On October 10, 2014, three days before Dawn published, I wrote at   http://worldmuslimcongress.blogspot.com/2014/10/malala-and-dr-abdus-salam-two-nobel.html

 I congratulated Malala for winning the
Nobel Prize, and reminded her that she is not the first Pakistani to win
the Nobel Prize, Dr. Abdus Salam has also won the prize and a great
injustice is done to him by depriving him his place in Pakistan’s
history. As a Nobel Prize laureate she can consider working on getting
him his rightful place in Pakistan, he is celebrated around the world
for his research, and it is time Pakistan does it too. As a Muslim I
celebrate you and Dr. Abdus Salaam.

A few years ago, when I was
searching for Muslim Nobel laureates, I found Dr. Abdus Salam’s name,
but Pakistan did not list him. Here, I am trying to take pride in
listing Muslims who have made it, and this country which was created for
Muslims did not honor him properly, not only that they have desecrated
his name and title on his headstone.  Is anyone going to do anything
about it?

What’s wrong?

Justice for Sunni Muslims
regardless of injustice to others is not Justice. Quran talks about
justice for all – it talks about telling the truth even if it goes
against you. There are numerous examples set by Khulfa-e-Rashidun where
they punished their own kith and kin for a complaint of injustice lodged
by Jews, Christians and others of that time.  What’s wrong with the
Pakistani people to deny Ahmadiyya their rights (if you are not aware of
it, please Google) -what is sad and shameful is the attitudes of
Pakistani Americans living here in the United States who want to deprive
Ahmadiyya from every possible human right. Should America do to them,
what Pakistan does to Ahmadiyya? Do Pakistani American voices have
strength?

We may have to ask Pew research to do a survey, if
Muslims understand the word Justice means justice for every party or
just them. Second part of that survey is how much brainwashing is done
to Pakistanis after Bhutto-Zia combine passed the laws declaring
Ahmadi’s to be non-Muslims? Had it not been for the laws, and had it not
been for Maududi, would Pakistanis have developed so much hatred for
fellow Pakistanis?
I felt saddened, when Dean Obeidallah (not sure
his origin) on facebook produced a picture of Muslim Nobel Prize
Laureates that did not include Dr. Abdus Salam.

What I see is
deliberate attempt of Pakistani Authorities to not give credit to an
Ahmadi Muslim, that brainwashing has done it to Malala and Dean
Obeidallah and many a current generation of Pakistani Muslims. I wonder
if Malala were an Ahmadi, or a future scientist from Ahmadiyya Muslim
Community wins, would Pakistan deny him or her rightful place in their
history. If you read about Dr. Salam, despite the treatment, he
preferred Pakistan; he was one of the greatest Patriots of Pakistan.

Of
course there are many more Muslims, but missing the one whose name
continues to be appreciated in the scientific community is not Kosher

Muslim voices will gather strength, when
we are just, just to everyone. Until such time, no one will give a
listen – all the Islamic nations can join together, but still will not
have the power in their voices – we have been partial and unjust, when
Muslims do wrong, we grudgingly or shamefully remain silent.

As a Muslim I am speaking up, would you?
Mike Ghouse
A Sunni Muslims
# # #
Now here is that letter from Dawn

Dear Malala,

Despite all that occurred, I’d
always lugged around with me a sliver of optimism. They referred to me
as Pakistan’s ‘only’ Nobel laureate; I insisted on being called the
“first”.

I was born in a small town called Santokh Das; arguably
not as beautiful as your Swat valley, but it did have much to offer. I
grew up in Jhang, a city now tainted by its name’s association with
dangerous groups.
My father was an education officer working for the Punjab government. I have a feeling your father would’ve liked him.

Like
you, I took a keen interest in my studies. I enjoyed English and Urdu
literature, but excelled at mathematics. At a very young age, I scored
the highest marks ever recorded then, in my matriculation exam.
My education, however, was never as politically challenging as yours.

I
did not have to contend with the Taliban destroying my school, or
forbidding boys from receiving education. But whatever barriers they
constructed in your way, you bravely broke through them.
In fact, you continue to defy them with every breath you take.

Winning the Nobel Prize has enraged your attackers, as it has annoyed many of your countrymen.
It takes courage to walk through it all, and knowing you, courage is not in short supply.
Not
a lot has changed in this country. You were mocked and alienated by
your countrymen, when you did nothing wrong. I know something of that.

As a nation, we do not want to be celebrated.

What we wish for is to be pitied.

They
were pleased with you as long as you were another local victim. But
then, you cast off your victimhood and emerged as a hero, a beacon of
hope for young girls around the world. That’s where you lost them.
We don’t like heroes, Malala.

We
like battered souls that we can showcase to the world. We want to
humiliate the ‘colonialists’ and the ‘imperialists’ for their crimes,
real or imagined, against the Muslims of the subcontinent.

We
want them to acknowledge the Iqbalian paradise we lost to the plots and
schemes of the ‘outsiders’. Any mention of the incalculable harm caused
by perpetrators within us, does not assist that narrative.
We do not want to acknowledge the bigotry within, of which I know something too.

This
is not something I had fully realised the day I received my Nobel
Prize. Standing in ceremonial Punjabi garb among a group of men in
tuxedos, I was proud to represent my country, though my country was far
less thrilled being represented by me.

I was demonized and
successfully disenfranchised for my religious beliefs; I was not allowed
to offer lectures in certain universities due to threats of violence;
my work was belittled by my own people.

I decided that working
abroad was better than being treated as foreigner in my own homeland.
That only gave further wind to the hurtful theories about me being a
‘traitor’ to my country.

Now, the mantle passes to you, dearest child.

And with it, I regret to pass onto you the heart-wrenching burden it brings.

You are the new ‘traitor’.
You are presented with the dire challenge of bringing peace and pride to a country, that doesn’t want your gift.
Like
a mother of a particularly rebellious child, you must find a way to
love them nonetheless. Eventually, I pray, they will understand.

I had the privilege of being the first to offer this country a Nobel Prize. But now there are two of us.
And, I’m still counting.

Yours truly,
Abdus Salam

# # #
To
be a Muslim is to be a peace maker who seeks to mitigate conflicts and
nurtures goodwill for peaceful co-existence of humanity. Our work is
geared towards building a cohesive society where no human has to live in
apprehension or fear of the other. World Muslim congress is a think
tank and a forum with the express goal of nurturing pluralistic values
embedded in Islam to build cohesive societies.  If we can learn to
respect the otherness of others and accept each other’s uniqueness, then
conflicts fade and solutions emerge. Mike Ghouse is a Muslim Speaker 
thinker and a writer.