What will President Obama say in his Nobel Peace Prize speech?
(The Nobel War Prize?)
We have heard the Nobel Peace Prize speech yesterday and came to a conclusion that Obama is not Mahatma Gandhi or Martin Luther King, he is none the less a President of the United States of America (just like all other President of USA). There were a lot of lines in this speech that George Bush could have given.Obama acknowledged that, while accepting an award for peace, he is commander in chief of a country engaged in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He said “I am the Commander-in-Chief of the military of a nation in the midst of two wars, one of these wars is winding down. The other is a conflict that America did not seek; one in which we are joined by 42 other countries -- including Norway -- in an effort to defend ourselves and all nations from further attacks.”
"We have to confront the world as we know it," he said. Newly enshrined among the world's great peacemakers, President Barack Obama offered a striking defense of war. Eleven months into his presidency, a fresh Obama doctrine. Evil must be vigorously opposed, he declared as he accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on Thursday. At the same time, he made an impassioned case for building a "just and lasting peace."
"I face the world as it is, and cannot stand idle in the face of threats to the American people," Obama told his audience in Oslo's soaring City Hall. "For make no mistake: Evil does exist in the world."
Pronouncing himself humbled by such an honor so early in "my labors on the world stage," Obama nevertheless turned his Nobel moment into an unapologetic defense of armed intervention in times of self defense or moral necessity. The hawkish message was an inevitable nod to the controversy defining his selection: an American president, lauded for peace just as he escalates the long, costly war in Afghanistan.
It was a jarring moment when Obama, in the midst of the ceremony, said of his troops in Afghanistan: "Some will kill. Some will be killed."
He lauded Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., preachers of nonviolent action. But he added, "A nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler's armies. Negotiations cannot convince al-Qaida's leaders to lay down their arms."
"To say that force is sometimes necessary is not a call to cynicism, it is a recognition of history."
The president laid out circumstances in which war is justified -- in self-defense, to come to the aid of an invaded nation, on humanitarian grounds such as when civilians are slaughtered by their own government.
At the same time, he also stressed a need to fight war according to "rules of conduct" that reject torture, the murder of innocents and other atrocities.
"We lose ourselves when we compromise the very ideals that we fight to defend," he said. "And we honor those ideals by upholding them not when it's easy, but when it is hard."
He emphasized a need to exhaust alternatives to violence, including worldwide sanctions with teeth to confront nations such as Iran or North Korea that defy international demands. He pushed himself away from George W. Bush in defending diplomatic outreach that engages even enemies. He defined peace as civil rights, free speech and economic opportunity, not just the absence of conflict.
"Let us reach for the world that ought to be," Obama said. "We can understand that there will be war, and still strive for peace."
My conclusion: It was pretty dull, inconsequential speech that was filled with boilerplate. Given that Obama didn't do anything to merit getting the prize in the first place, and gave such a dull speech, I'm not sure he was such a great choice.
Prophet Mohammad Facts: . 1. Trade Trip to Syria with his grandfather at age 13. 2. Shepherd for his grandfather from age 14 to 21. 3. Hired by Business Woman Khadija, age 22. 4. Married to 40 years old Khadija, at age 25. 5, 610 A.D. Prophet-hood at age 40. 6. 612 A.D. start of serious problems, trouble & Business Failure of Wife, Khadija. 7. 619 A.D. start of incarceration by Ibn Abi. 8. 622 A.D. Fleeing to Medina. 9. 633 A.D. Death age 63 as ruler of Arabian Peninsula Desert Land. 10. About 20 Marriages in last 11 years of life. 11. Total Life after Prophet-hood, 23 years but the name lives on as founder of religion Islam, not as a Conqueror. . Comparison with Alexander the Great: . 1. 337 B.C. King of Macedonia at 19 after death of his father Phillip. 2. Emperor of Greece, Turkey to Morocco in the West, whole Middle East and up to River Indus in the East at age 29 or in 10
years. 3. 323 B.C.: Dead at age 33 but his name lives on as World's biggest War Genius, Conqueror. . Comparison with Baber: .. 1. King of Farghana, a city of Turkistan in Central Asia at age 14. 2. Emperor of all countries of Central Asia, Easterm Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India at age 43 or 29 years later. 3. 1530 A.D.: Dead at age 49 but the name lives on as Founder of Moghal Empire. . CONCLUSION: . Mollaas can not sell Islam on so called 'Short Period of Time' Victories of Prophet Mohammad over other Nations as some of them have recently come up with. . S U Turkman ------------ ------
Thanks for letting us know, building Roads in Afghanistan is Terrorism of India against Pakistan and ISI's game of blowing-up Pakistanis through Taliban to tell USA why Pak Army can not control its own Irregular Army, the Taliban is an Indian Conspiracy. . This means, ISI and Pak Army are Indian Agents. You already told us, Zardari, PPP, PML-Q, your father's relative Balochis and MQM are US Agents so, now the only patriotic Pakistani Political Leader left is Mr. Punjab Sharif, ... err I'm sorry, Nawaz Sharif, right? ------------------
--- aziz khattak <azizullahkhan90@...> wrote: > > "India's dangerous Game" > > by *SHIREEN M MAZARI * THE NATION > > > > It is fascinating to watch the Indian propaganda machine come into full play > > as it is a field in which India excels unlike in the realm of dialogue and > > peace where India has always been found wanting as the neighbourhood will > > testify - from the small neighbours to China. Once again, instead of seeking > > to move towards substantive peace through resumption of dialogue with > > Pakistan, we are witnessing the propaganda machinery in all its full glory > > with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit to Washington. The visit comes at > > a time when Pakistan's leadership is finally getting over its > > "India-shyness" and admitting to Indian involvement in the terrorism in > >
Balochistan and FATA. Indian weapons have also been found and the link > > between Indian covert activities from Afghan soil and the violence in > > Pakistan is now well established by any rational assessment. Since Pakistan > > is also raising the Indian issue with the US, the Indians are countering by > > a massive propaganda offensive against Pakistan on all fronts. The Indian > > defence minister is once again targeting Pakistan's nukes - something for > > which there is always a ready market in the US; and Manmohan Singh has taken > > it upon himself to hold forth on issues which have nothing to do with India > > but are purely Pakistan's internal affair. He has declared his doubts over > > whether President Zardari has any control over the military and has > > complained that he does not know who to deal with in Pakistan. This is > > ridiculous since
inter-state dealings are done through proper channels and > > state institutions. So South Block should be clearing up any confusion that > > may be clouding his mind these days in terms of who to talk to in Pakistan. > > > > Of course, the terror mantra is a favourite of the Indians and they have > > picked up the US jaded refrain of "do more" and now declare that Pakistan is > > not doing enough on the Mumbai terror attacks issue. This merely hides > > India's own reluctance - for whatever reason - to provide all the relevant > > material on the case. So Pakistan has had to proceed without much > > cooperation from India. Despite this, there has been a surprising degree of > > transparency from the Pakistani side. But the Indians want Pakistan to > > arrest and punish suspects without India having to give any concrete proof > > from its side.
Perhaps that would open a Pandora's Box for India. As it is, > > India is also strangely reluctant to move on the Samjhota Express carnage > > despite knowing who the guilty are. It is all about keeping a lid on India's > > Hindu extremists and their links to the political elite. But that lid has > > been blown open with the inquiry report on the Babri Mosque's demolition, > > since the report has indicted the leadership of the BJP in the shape of > > Vajpayee and Advani. It is indeed worrying to know that such extremists have > > and can again have their finger on the nuclear button in India. Perhaps, it > > is time for the US and its allies to seriously re-examine their nuclear > > cooperation with India given how militant religious extremism reaches to the > > very top of their mainstream political elite. For Pakistan, this should also > > be an issue
to be raised internationally as questions now arise about the > > safety and security of India's command and control structures which have > > every chance of falling into extremist hands if the BJP was to have > > electoral success again.. Surely, Manmohan Singh should be particularly > > concerned about this pathway to nuclear access the Hindu extremists have. > > > > What makes this Hindu extremism-nuclear access issue particularly worrisome > > is the latest statement coming from the Indian military leadership about the > > possibility of a limited war within the nuclear umbrella that exists in the > > subcontinent. Earlier this week, the Indian Army Chief, General Deepak > > Kapoor declared that a limited conventional war was a possibility "under a > > nuclear overhang." In fact, India has been seeking ways of rationalising a > > limited war
doctrine in a nuclear environment and one such strategy was the > > Cold Start one where India would seek a rapid strike inside southern > > Pakistan, with air and ground forces, on a dangerous assumption that the > > international community would step in before Pakistan could put in place its > > nuclear threat. Both Pakistan and India know that the nuclear environment > > does allow them tactical freedom in that the other side would be loathe to > > escalate a limited conflict lest it lead to a nuclear exchange. But such > > adventurism has an inbuilt instability with brinkmanship in a nuclear > > context being highly volatile. India is therefore deliberately seeking > > unstable strategic doctrines within a reckless military mindset. This has > > been apparent in General Kapoor's view that a state can intervene in another > > state "on purely
humanitarian" grounds if, as he put it, "the diaspora is > > under threat" and sovereignty is threatened by subnational groups that > > target missions abroad and so on. Basically the Indians now are seeking to > > rationalise first strikes against states when threatened by > > subnational/ non-state actors anywhere across the globe. This is as > > open-ended a doctrine of aggressive military action as the US neocon > > doctrine of pre-emption embodied in the Bush policies and not yet retracted > > by the Obama Administration. > > > > It is no wonder then that India is not willing to talk peace and stability > > with Pakistan. Encouraged by its strategic partnership with the US, which > > has allowed India all manner of leeway to continue its hostile Pakistan > > posturing, India is in a new muscle-flexing mode which one has not seen > >
since the days of Indira Gandhi. Pakistan would do well to remember what > > happened when India was allowed, by our ruling elite's own follies, to find > > the space in what was then East Pakistan to fulfil its hostile agenda > > towards Pakistan. Let us not allow India the same space again in either > > Balochistan or FATA - especially now that India has a military-strategic > > partnership with the US which has a nuclear component also. If India is > > unwilling to dialogue let us not plead for the same. But we need to continue > > pressing the US to ensure that the Afghan government under its occupation > > does not continue to allow India the use of its territory for covert > > operations against Pakistan. Even more important, we need to ensure > > stability in Balochistan by removing the un-monitored US clandestine > > activities in that province,
and by reaching out to the Baloch people and > > delivering on their political and economic demands. India's aggressive > > designs have never been clearer. Are we as clear, not only in our counter > > strategies but also in devising some proactive policies to counter this > > threat from the eastern front?
There's no country in the world that is playing more dangerous game than Pakistan right now. Pakistan has been receiving tons of money in Charity and Loans from USA for just telling USA that she is any ally of USA in War against Terrorism but has been actually financing, arming, training and infiltrating Taliban in to Afghanistan to kill US and NATO Troops. To make it look like that 700,000 strong Pakistan Army has no control over 10,000 Taliban, on Pakistan Army's own orders Terrorist Acts are taking place in Pakistan day and night, while Pakistan Army is having a fake Wrestling March or 'Nooraa KooshTi' with Taliban. . Pakistan is blaming MOSSAD, CIA, UK and India for all that her own ISI on directives from Pakistan Army is doing in Pakistan. Thousands of Pakistanis are being
made Sacrificial Lambs every year in this greedy game of tens of billions of dollars but they still call it, Fort of Islam, Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Allaho Akbar ...! ------------------------
--- Ahsan Waheed <pakistanpal@...> wrote: >
"India's dangerous Game" > by *SHIREEN M MAZARI * > > It is fascinating to watch the Indian propaganda machine come into full play > as it is a field in which India excels unlike in the realm of dialogue and > peace where India has always been found wanting as the neighbourhood will > testify - from the small neighbours to China. Once again, instead of seeking > to move towards substantive peace through resumption of dialogue with > Pakistan, we are witnessing the propaganda machinery in all its full glory > with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit to Washington. The visit comes at > a time when Pakistan's leadership is finally getting over its > "India-shyness" and admitting to Indian involvement in the terrorism in > Balochistan and FATA. Indian weapons have also been found and the link > between Indian covert activities from Afghan soil and the violence in >
Pakistan is now well established by any rational assessment. Since Pakistan > is also raising the Indian issue with the US, the Indians are countering by > a massive propaganda offensive against Pakistan on all fronts. The Indian > defence minister is once again targeting Pakistan's nukes - something for > which there is always a ready market in the US; and Manmohan Singh has taken > it upon himself to hold forth on issues which have nothing to do with India > but are purely Pakistan's internal affair. He has declared his doubts over > whether President Zardari has any control over the military and has > complained that he does not know who to deal with in Pakistan. This is > ridiculous since inter-state dealings are done through proper channels and > state institutions. So South Block should be clearing up any confusion that > may be clouding his mind these days in terms of who to talk
to in Pakistan. > > Of course, the terror mantra is a favourite of the Indians and they have > picked up the US jaded refrain of "do more" and now declare that Pakistan is > not doing enough on the Mumbai terror attacks issue. This merely hides > India's own reluctance - for whatever reason - to provide all the relevant > material on the case. So Pakistan has had to proceed without much > cooperation from India. Despite this, there has been a surprising degree of > transparency from the Pakistani side. But the Indians want Pakistan to > arrest and punish suspects without India having to give any concrete proof > from its side. Perhaps that would open a Pandora's Box for India. As it is, > India is also strangely reluctant to move on the Samjhota Express carnage > despite knowing who the guilty are. It is all about keeping a lid on India's > Hindu extremists and their links to
the political elite. But that lid has > been blown open with the inquiry report on the Babri Mosque's demolition, > since the report has indicted the leadership of the BJP in the shape of > Vajpayee and Advani. It is indeed worrying to know that such extremists have > and can again have their finger on the nuclear button in India. Perhaps, it > is time for the US and its allies to seriously re-examine their nuclear > cooperation with India given how militant religious extremism reaches to the > very top of their mainstream political elite. For Pakistan, this should also > be an issue to be raised internationally as questions now arise about the > safety and security of India's command and control structures which have > every chance of falling into extremist hands if the BJP was to have > electoral success again. Surely, Manmohan Singh should be particularly > concerned about this
pathway to nuclear access the Hindu extremists have. > > What makes this Hindu extremism-nuclear access issue particularly worrisome > is the latest statement coming from the Indian military leadership about the > possibility of a limited war within the nuclear umbrella that exists in the > subcontinent. Earlier this week, the Indian Army Chief, General Deepak > Kapoor declared that a limited conventional war was a possibility "under a > nuclear overhang." In fact, India has been seeking ways of rationalising a > limited war doctrine in a nuclear environment and one such strategy was the > Cold Start one where India would seek a rapid strike inside southern > Pakistan, with air and ground forces, on a dangerous assumption that the > international community would step in before Pakistan could put in place its > nuclear threat. Both Pakistan and India know that the nuclear
environment > does allow them tactical freedom in that the other side would be loathe to > escalate a limited conflict lest it lead to a nuclear exchange. But such > adventurism has an inbuilt instability with brinkmanship in a nuclear > context being highly volatile. India is therefore deliberately seeking > unstable strategic doctrines within a reckless military mindset. This has > been apparent in General Kapoor's view that a state can intervene in another > state "on purely humanitarian" grounds if, as he put it, "the diaspora is > under threat" and sovereignty is threatened by subnational groups that > target missions abroad and so on. Basically the Indians now are seeking to > rationalise first strikes against states when threatened by > subnational/non-state actors anywhere across the globe. This is as > open-ended a doctrine of aggressive military action as the US
neocon > doctrine of pre-emption embodied in the Bush policies and not yet retracted > by the Obama Administration. > > It is no wonder then that India is not willing to talk peace and stability > with Pakistan. Encouraged by its strategic partnership with the US, which > has allowed India all manner of leeway to continue its hostile Pakistan > posturing, India is in a new muscle-flexing mode which one has not seen > since the days of Indira Gandhi. Pakistan would do well to remember what > happened when India was allowed, by our ruling elite's own follies, to find > the space in what was then East Pakistan to fulfil its hostile agenda > towards Pakistan. Let us not allow India the same space again in either > Balochistan or FATA - especially now that India has a military-strategic > partnership with the US which has a nuclear component also. If India is > unwilling to
dialogue let us not plead for the same. But we need to continue > pressing the US to ensure that the Afghan government under its occupation > does not continue to allow India the use of its territory for covert > operations against Pakistan. Even more important, we need to ensure > stability in Balochistan by removing the un-monitored US clandestine > activities in that province, and by reaching out to the Baloch people and > delivering on their political and economic demands. India's aggressive > designs have never been clearer. Are we as clear, not only in our counter > strategies but also in devising some proactive policies to counter this > threat from the eastern front? > > *Article Source :* > http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Opinions/Columns/25-Nov-2009/Indias-dangerous-games
Sommillito Sanskritik Jot Bogra Wing (a cultural organization) has organized a cultural program Moha Shommelon in Bogra on 1 st and 2nd Dec. 2009. Participants are: Khurshid Alam, Azmal Huda Mithu, Shawkat Hayat Khan, Nadira Begum, Mostafa Nurul Islam, Kanak Chapa, Shuvash Dutta, Tipu and many Bograian and Ex-Bograr-Chol.
May Eid-Ul-Adha bring endless joy and happiness to Bogra members and give us the
strength to serve our nation to build a society free from exploitation,
deprivation and injustice. Let us also be united to unleash our national
strength to achieve a respectable place in global stage. May God bless the
nation of 150 million people of ours!
To Turkman? Just wondering why you write moslim instead of Muslim?
From: S Turkman <turkman@...> To: wideminds@yahoogroups.com Cc: banglarnari@yahoogroups.com; insaaniyatlist@yahoogroups.com; 7 ro <sa7rong@yahoogroups.com>; bogra@yahoogroups.com; khabor@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thu, November 19, 2009 11:45:10 AM Subject: [Bogra] Racism in UK
Right, right. Like we have no Racism in our Moslim Countries. We permit Non Moslims to immigrate in our countries legally or illegally and give them equal rights just like British give to us. Who the hell are you fooling by spreading this hate?
How you people dare to talk like this?
------------
Faruque Alamgir <faruquealamgir@...> wrote: > > Friends > > This is nothing new that the father of the hated *"Racism n Colonilism n > Violator of HR"* *the British* can not forget their past so easily. > After losing the empire of the majority territory of the globe they are > simmering n now resorted to such inhuman,indecent, obnoxous and uncivilized > ways to express their frustration. > Unless the blood of their ancestors, the stuch Racist are purified it will > remain for ages to come. > > On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 2:51 AM, Mahmudul Hasan <mahmudwp2000@...>wrote: > > > > > > > BBC, Monday, 19 October 2009 06:02 UK > > > > Reduced to a four-letter word > > >
> *Cannot play media.*You do not have the correct version of the flash > > player. Download the correct version<http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash> > > > > Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep > > > > *Tamanna Rahman spent two months living on a Bristol housing estate for > > the BBC's Panorama programme Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep.* > > > > *Here she explains her reasons for agreeing to take part in the programme > > and describes how it felt to be a daily target of racist abuse, both > > physical and verbal. Her report contains details of racial abuse.* > > ------------------------------ > > > > In 2000, as a 16-year-old at my culturally and racially diverse Manchester > > secondary school, I was asked by a local television news team examining the > > hopes and
aspirations of the first class of the new millennium if I felt > > that racism in Britain was a thing of the past. > > > > Fresh-faced, nave and optimistic, I answered yes; racism is dead. > > > > Fast-forward to the summer of 2009 and my answer is very different. > > > > What changed? As part of a Panorama programme, I spent two months working > > undercover on a Bristol housing estate. > > *Over the course of our investigation I would have glass, a can, a > > bottle and stones thrown at me* > > > > The assignment came just months after Trevor Phillips, head of the Equality > > and Human Rights Commission, said in an interview that having neighbours of > > a different ethnic background is no longer an issue in modern Britain when > > compared to other countries. > > > > The
Commission say his comments followed two Mori polls which, it claimed, > > showed the majority of British people to be increasingly at ease with racial > > diversity. > > > > Before this assignment, even though I had not faced direct racism, some of > > my friends had and I had begun to notice subtle racism towards others. > > > > The opportunity to see first-hand if the problem was really as bad as many > > friends had indicated, or if they were just isolated incidents, was one I > > felt I had to take when approached by the BBC to take part. > > > > *Rocks thrown* > > > > From the moment that my colleague Amil Khan and I drove onto the road that > > would become our home for the coming months, we were subjected to the > > coldest glare I have ever experienced. > > > > Alone, it might not seem like a
big deal - my skin is thick enough to > > handle a frosty look. > > > > But it turned out to be a sign of things to come. > > [image: Tamanna Rahman] > > Even at home in Manchester, Tamanna is now wary of attacks > > > > Pretty much every time I left the house, and from many people I met, I > > would get frowns and generally be made to feel unwelcome - whether they were > > on the street, in their gardens, looking out of their bedroom windows or in > > their cars. > > > > We were new in town, and nobody came to say hello. It took an entire week > > to be on the receiving end of a single smile and that came from a > > middle-aged woman I passed in the street. > > > > On my second day on the estate I had a rock thrown towards me as I returned > > from a shopping trip. I was called "Paki" and
had obscenities muttered at me > > as I walked by. > > > > This from people who knew nothing about me. > > > > Over the course of our investigation I would have glass, a can, a bottle > > and stones thrown at me. > > > > In what was perhaps the most shocking incident of our time on the Southmead > > estate, Amil was told not to walk on the pavement before being punched in > > the head by a man who said, "Bye, bye Paki". > > > > I was almost mugged three times and threatened with a brick. > > > > I was mooned twice, called smelly Paki, and told to take a shower. The > > abuse, including some of the worst obscenities imaginable, came from > > children, teenagers and adults. > > > > *On guard* > > > > I have been back in Manchester for a few months now, but I still brace >
> myself for trouble whenever I see groups of boys on bikes or teenagers on > > street corners. Even though the children of Manchester have never had a > > problem with me, it has now become instinctive. > > [image: Amil Khan, Panorama reporter] > > Amil Khan was punched in the head while walking down the road > > > > One of the worst effects was the lack of trust I felt towards anybody and > > the sense that I must always be on my guard - even if it was just popping to > > the shops. > > > > There is little sense of a mixed community in Southmead and the longer I > > stayed the more I realised why. The more abuse I received, the less I wanted > > to go out. The more racism I faced, the less I wanted to talk to anybody. I > > do not think that I was alone in my feelings. > > > > Before we began filming,
Southmead was identified to us by the group > > Support Against Racist Incidents (SARI) as an area where recent racially > > motivated attacks had occurred. Other estates and areas around the country > > were also highlighted by race campaign groups. > > > > The Southmead estate is mainly white and working class but in recent years > > more black and minority ethnic people have moved in. Before we moved there > > to live undercover we spoke to others who had had similar experiences to > > ours. > > > > I feel strongly that neighbourliness is a two-way street, but why would > > anybody attempt to go out of their way to get to know the community they > > have moved into, if that community has made you feel unwelcome for no reason > > but the colour of your skin? > > > > If you are a non-English speaker, what incentive
would you have to learn > > the language if the vast majority of communication you are likely to > > experience is abusive? > > > > It must be said that some people were lovely and in an estate like > > Southmead, many have their own issues to deal with, especially during tough > > economic times. > > > > But I was not looking for special treatment in Southmead, I was looking to > > be treated like everyone else - not to be reduced to a four letter word that > > starts with 'P'. > > > > *Panorama - Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep, BBC One, Monday, 19 October > > at 2030BST.* > > > > > > *http://news.bbc.co.uk/panorama/hi/front_page/newsid_8303000/8303229.stm
In America and in the West, the public is conditioned to believe that modern (allopathic) medicine is the supreme healing modality. Propaganda machines that rely on media in need of content and not necessarily truth eagerly spread this notion. Scientific journal articles promoting drugs are little more than press releases by pharmaceutical companies signed by doctors for hire.
In the midst of the recent “outing” of unsafe drugs by whistleblowers; the thousands of law suits against drug companies for drug damage; and a plethora of books and articles enumerating the side effects of drugs and the hundreds of thousands of lives lost because of it, we see drug companies and the World Trade Organization determined to control dietary supplements through Codex and international trade agreements in their global quest for power.
Why is this happening? Simply because most of the world does not use modern medicine and the ‘powers that be’ want to control those other forms of medicine to make way for a seamless, worldwide assembly-line style of health delivery by government decree favoring the highly-profitable, patented products and services of modern (allopathic) medicine.
One of the forms of medicine that is being targeted for control is homeopathy. Both Elissa and I have a deep and abiding love of homeopathy and we speak up for it whenever we can.
Homeopathy is one of those systems of medicine that is all encompassing and could be a life-long project of study. I wanted to make it my prime modality after medical school and began learning it during my naturopathic training. That might have had something to do with genes because my grandmother was a nurse and a homeopath. My father, while still in high school, was on the lists to enter Boston University School of Medicine, which, at the time, was a homeopathic medical school. I found, however, that I’m much too eclectic to stay in one place for too long, but I stayed long enough to see some miraculous cures take place. In the hands of a skilled homeopath, it is one of the best existing modalities for all conditions. I recommend it to parents as the best form of medicine for children, the
best for most acute conditions and I advise people to have a homeopathic kit on hand to treat emergencies.
Elissa’s reasons are even more personal. After a lifetime of ill health due to a missed diagnosis of mercury poisoning from her dental fillings (a disease that is not recognized by either the American dental community or modern [allopathic] medicine), Elissa was diagnosed by a homeopath and from the first dose of a homeopathic remedy, she found her salvation. Up until then, she had experienced not just debilitating symptoms of serious chronic illness, but numerous extreme adverse reactions from such things as penicillin and Tylenol. To find out why she was misdiagnosed all those years and why she was never referred to homeopathy, a medical philosophy that has specialized in the diagnosis and treatment of medically-induced mercury poisoning for 200 years prompted Elissa to become the health
policy expert she is today. She earned her expertise by delving into the depth and breadth of the history of American medicine and how politics and the clever actions of several self-interest groups, over time, created today’s modern medical monopoly folly.
The story of how homeopathy first came to America, became the second most practiced healing art by public demand and then was virtually destroyed by Big Pharma and its allies, the AMA and the practitioners of modern (allopathic) medicine, is why we have called our article “The Worst Crime of the 20th Century.” This history bears witness to how the self-interest of just a handful of people, by creating an allopathic medical monopoly, continues to cause the needless deaths of millions of people and the ongoing suffering of millions more.
As the story goes, back in the mid-1800s, homeopathy had arrived on our shores from its homeland, Germany, and the public eagerly flocked to homeopathic physicians. No wonder! The “modern (allopathic) medicine” of the day included draining people of up to 32 ounces of blood and dosing them with lethal amounts of mercury in a product called “calomel.” Calomel caused profuse salivation and doctors measured the amount of saliva by the pint as a means of determining the success of the treatment. Calomel was considered the all-purpose elixir for most ailments along with the bleeding, so you can see why homeopathy spread rapidly. Homeopaths found allopathic treatment barbaric.
What confounded the practitioners of “modern (allopathic) medicine” of that era was that homeopaths were well-educated and had quickly fallen into favor with the educated, politically powerful and wealthier clientele, as well as the masses. Worse yet, while their medical philosophy confounded the average practitioner of “modern (allopathic) medicine,” every time an allopath actually took an honest look at how homeopathy was practiced, another convert to homeopathy was born. In fact, in many cases, practicing homeopaths were actually converts from “modern (allopathic) medicine.”
Proof that homeopathy worked was widespread. Every epidemic in Europe and America starting with the cholera epidemics in the 1840s became an advertisement for the virtues of homeopathy. Homeopaths saved lives in large numbers and compared to the competition it was obvious that allopathic methods were a complete failure. In rapid order, the practice of homeopathy became widespread in New England, the Middle Atlantic States, and the Midwest. True to form, while the South had been slow to catch on, the 1878 yellow fever epidemic converted many patients and doctors there, too.
The formation of the American Medical Association in the 1840s was in direct response to the onslaught of a superior medical system. From the beginning, the AMA stood firm with a hostile “them or us” attitude about members consorting with the competition. Well-educated homeopaths, often graduates of Harvard, Yale and other such schools, were banned from joining the AMA. In AMA meetings, any discussion about homeopathy was banned. If any member of the AMA, or its state chapters, were seen consorting with a homeopath, that doctor was expelled.
Voluminous and vicious literature was written and circulated about the worthlessness of homeopathy. When the drug industry emerged as an economic force in the 1870s, flush with its profits from selling mercury medicinals to the Union Army, the AMA found the sugar daddy of its dreams that could fuel and finance an all out war against its most serious competition. This polemic propaganda continues today because the 1500 or so effective homeopathic remedies that have been developed over 200 years represent serious competition for Big Pharma. Furthermore, homeopathic remedies have proven to have no dangerous side effects, are not patentable, can be manufactured and sold for pennies and have a very long shelf life.
Those who practice medicine in the allopathic tradition, then as now, know instinctively that homeopathy, by its very principles, is a rejection of the assumptions held near and dear to modern medicine. In fact, it is important to know that homeopathy is actually the invention of a German medical genius named Samuel Hahnemann. It comes from Hahnemann’s rejection of what he was taught as an allopathic physician in his days, 200 years ago.
What Hahnemann saw was a failure to truly heal people. As a linguist with knowledge of many ancient and modern languages, including several from the Arab world, Hahnemann made a good deal of his living translating scientific and medical texts. This gave him access to some of the greatest minds in the world’s medical traditions and it was when he was questioning the conclusions of British doctor, William Cullen, regarding the use of Peruvian bark to treat malaria, that Hahnemann experienced a flash of insight that fostered homeopathy.
At the height of its popularity in America, homeopathy was second only to allopathy in the number of practitioners. It had its own schools, its own pharmacies and even had a monument erected to honor Hahnemann in Washington, D.C., considered by many to be one of the great geniuses in the history of medicine.
At the time this monument to Hahnemann was unveiled, there were 22 homeopathic medical schools in America. One of the more interesting ones was The New England Female College founded in 1850 as the world’s first women’s medical school. During its time, it graduated the first black woman doctor and after it was absorbed into Boston University to become Boston University Medical School in 1873, it became America’s first coed medical school. In 1897, the new school graduated its first black doctor, who went on to become America’s first black psychiatrist.
Ironically, four years after the monument was erected, and 10 years before the publication of the Flexner Report, the blueprint of the allopathic medical monopoly, the trustees of Boston University were told by AMA officials that if they didn’t convert the medical school curricula to all-allopathic, their graduates would have difficulty taking and passing state medical licensing examinations. At the time, there were 645 practicing homeopaths in Boston alone.
So, what allopathic assumptions does homeopathy reject? At its core, homeopathy is based, not on a biochemical or mechanistic model like allopathy, but on the idea that each person has a vital force, a resonating frequency, if you will. This vital force, called Qi or Chi in Asian healing arts, is basically the energy or essence of the person that can be observed and measured. In the simplest terms, when you are ill, according to homeopathic philosophy, your frequency changes and symptoms occur as a result of your body trying to restore you to a healthy frequency. The symptoms serve as the means by which restoration of health can be achieved. The very symptoms that allopaths suppress are the ones the body uses to get well and that a homeopath surveys to find the appropriate remedy to help the
body heal.
To a homeopath, an office call is basically devoted to systematically interviewing the patient to determine what makes them tick as well as gathering as much information about each of their symptoms as possible. Then, after analyzing this information, the homeopath has available 1500 or so catalogued remedies that are inventoried according to symptoms and constitution.
The information in these reference manuals is drawn from data on literally thousands of patients who have been treated successfully. Homeopathic remedies themselves are developed by a process called “potentization” which renders them not only non-toxic but leaves only a minute vibration in the water of the original substance. These potentized remedies, when they enter the person’s body as a frequency, not a chemical substance, basically help revitalize the person’s own harmonious frequency.
To modern (allopathic) medical practitioners, a symptom is a bad outcome of an illness and suppressing the symptom is the first thing a doctor tries to do to make the patient feel better. Suppression of symptoms is not the same as healing the person.
Each homeopathic remedy is developed by first testing it on healthy people based on an idea called “the law of similars.” The law of similars comes from an old idea that a substance that can create a symptom in a healthy person can cure a sick person suffering the same symptom. The law of similars confounds the scientific assumptions of the biochemically-based allopathic medical community and until you experience the healing process yourself, you will probably scratch your head, wondering what these homeopaths are talking about. Hahnemann came to name his new school of thought homeo (Greek for “similar”), pathy (Greek for “suffering). He then named the old school of thought allo (Greek for “other”), pathy.
These opposing views on the meaning of symptoms and what a doctor does about them is the sharpest of many ideological divisions between homeopathy and allopathy.
For most of the 1800s, allopaths were called allopaths but when the AMA orchestrated the publication of the Flexner Report in 1910, to outline their new medical monopoly, the first order of business was to make sure the word “allopathy” no longer defined them. They wanted ALL practitioners of all “cults” or “dogmas” as they insultingly referred to their competition, to give up their differing medical ideas and “surrender” to modern science.
The Flexner Report was used to convince the financial backers of non-allopathic medical schools, particularly homeopathy, to cease providing funding. Within 20 years, all but one homeopathic school had been closed or forced to convert to allopathic teaching only.
It came to our attention that Citizens for Health, one of the major national health freedom groups, in conjunction with the National Center for Homeopathy, had organized a writing campaign to the Center For Disease Control to include homeopathic research as part of its agenda for the next decade.
This campaign, with the deadline of January 15, 2006, is now over. However, we have mixed feelings about how the modern medicine dominated CDC, or the National Institute for Health or any other of the usual research organizations could possibly conduct honest and relevant research on homeopathy, given the fact that modern medicine is based on such vastly different assumptions.
We also have concerns because of recent revelations about the corruption in science in all venues as well as the faking of scientific papers being published in prestigious medical journals. We have concerns about the political and economic agendas of those in control of directing what research shall be done and that, somehow, homeopathy will be tainted keeping it in the same false and negative light it has been held for most of the 20th century.
We suggest that there are ample books written by practicing homeopaths about the success of homeopathy for any open-minded person to see its worth. In any case, we are foursquare behind restoring homeopathy to its former position as the second largest medical system in America and give you practical resources at the end to pursue your own investigation of homeopathy.
To sum up the worldview on homeopathy we recently read an article in the New India Press, dated December 24, 2005, titled, “WHO Recognition for Homeopathy.” We thought you might like to read some excerpts from this article to give you a flavor of how homeopathy is discussed in a country where it is widely accepted and used.
“Deviating from the trend of rejecting homeopathy treatment and medicine as mere placebos, the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared that homeopathy is the second-most used medical system internationally.
Clinical trials have proved that this method of treatment has been successful if the practitioners have taken into account the individual holistic nature of the patient before opting for homeopathy.’ Says Dr. T N Sreedhara Kurup, Assistant Director In-Charge of the Central Research Institute for Homeopathy.
‘Different patients will receive different treatments for the same disease making it difficult to conduct randomised control trials,’ he said. ‘Homeopathy is that stream of medicine, which prescribes medicines suitable to the individual and the cost of treatment is affordable when compared to Allopathy. Besides, it is claimed that homeopathic medicines are devoid of any harmful side-effects,’ says Dr. Ravi M Nair, a homeopathy specialist.”
In all, the New India Press estimates that “about 500 million people rely on homeopathy treatment in the world. As a system of medicine, it draws support from hundreds of thousands of doctors, teaching institutions and universities where homeopathy is taught.”
We conclude that as allopathic medicine is relegated to its proper place –surgery and emergency medicine, homeopathy and other natural healing arts will once again flourish and inspire.
ACT FOR HEALTH FREEDOM NOW: Go to www.friendsoffreedominternational.org view and purchase the new movie on Codex and Free Trade called "We Become Silent" by Kevin Miller
Also purchase " Death by Modern Medicine." Proceeds from the sale of these products are crucial to help us fund our health freedom action. For state action go to: www.nationalhealthfreedom.org.
Dr. Carolyn Dean is a medical doctor, naturopathic doctor, herbalist, acupuncturist, nutritionist, as well as a powerful health activist fighting for health freedom as president of Friends of Freedom International. Dr. Dean is the author of over a dozen health books, the latest of which is "Death By Modern Medicine".
Elissa Meininger, is Vice President of Friends of Freedom International and co-founder of the Health Freedom Action Network, a grassroots citizens' political action group. She is also a health freedom political analyst and can be heard on the natural health radio show SuperHealth, broadcast weekly on station WKY (SuperTalk AM 930) in Oklahoma City.
Right, right. Like we have no Racism in our Moslim Countries. We permit Non Moslims to immigrate in our countries legally or illegally and give them equal rights just like British give to us. Who the hell are you fooling by spreading this hate?
How you people dare to talk like this?
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Faruque Alamgir <faruquealamgir@...> wrote: > > Friends > > This is nothing new that the father of the hated *"Racism n Colonilism n > Violator of HR"* *the British* can not forget their past so easily. > After losing the empire of the majority territory of the globe they are > simmering n now resorted to such inhuman,indecent, obnoxous and uncivilized > ways to express their frustration. > Unless the blood of their ancestors, the stuch Racist are purified it will > remain for ages to come. > > On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 2:51 AM, Mahmudul Hasan <mahmudwp2000@...>wrote: > > > > > > > BBC, Monday, 19 October 2009 06:02 UK > > > > Reduced to a four-letter word > > > > *Cannot play media.*You do not have the correct version of the
flash > > player. Download the correct version<http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash> > > > > Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep > > > > *Tamanna Rahman spent two months living on a Bristol housing estate for > > the BBC's Panorama programme Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep.* > > > > *Here she explains her reasons for agreeing to take part in the programme > > and describes how it felt to be a daily target of racist abuse, both > > physical and verbal. Her report contains details of racial abuse.* > > ------------------------------ > > > > In 2000, as a 16-year-old at my culturally and racially diverse Manchester > > secondary school, I was asked by a local television news team
examining the > > hopes and aspirations of the first class of the new millennium if I felt > > that racism in Britain was a thing of the past. > > > > Fresh-faced, nave and optimistic, I answered yes; racism is dead. > > > > Fast-forward to the summer of 2009 and my answer is very different. > > > > What changed? As part of a Panorama programme, I spent two months working > > undercover on a Bristol housing estate. > > *Over the course of our investigation I would have glass, a can, a > > bottle and stones thrown at me* > > > > The assignment came just months after Trevor Phillips, head of the Equality > > and Human Rights Commission, said in an interview that having neighbours of > > a different ethnic background is no longer an issue in modern Britain when > > compared to other
countries. > > > > The Commission say his comments followed two Mori polls which, it claimed, > > showed the majority of British people to be increasingly at ease with racial > > diversity. > > > > Before this assignment, even though I had not faced direct racism, some of > > my friends had and I had begun to notice subtle racism towards others. > > > > The opportunity to see first-hand if the problem was really as bad as many > > friends had indicated, or if they were just isolated incidents, was one I > > felt I had to take when approached by the BBC to take part. > > > > *Rocks thrown* > > > > From the moment that my colleague Amil Khan and I drove onto the road that > > would become our home for the coming months, we were subjected to the > > coldest glare I have ever experienced. >
> > > Alone, it might not seem like a big deal - my skin is thick enough to > > handle a frosty look. > > > > But it turned out to be a sign of things to come. > > [image: Tamanna Rahman] > > Even at home in Manchester, Tamanna is now wary of attacks > > > > Pretty much every time I left the house, and from many people I met, I > > would get frowns and generally be made to feel unwelcome - whether they were > > on the street, in their gardens, looking out of their bedroom windows or in > > their cars. > > > > We were new in town, and nobody came to say hello. It took an entire week > > to be on the receiving end of a single smile and that came from a > > middle-aged woman I passed in the street. > > > > On my second day on the estate I had a rock thrown towards me as I returned >
> from a shopping trip. I was called "Paki" and had obscenities muttered at me > > as I walked by. > > > > This from people who knew nothing about me. > > > > Over the course of our investigation I would have glass, a can, a bottle > > and stones thrown at me. > > > > In what was perhaps the most shocking incident of our time on the Southmead > > estate, Amil was told not to walk on the pavement before being punched in > > the head by a man who said, "Bye, bye Paki". > > > > I was almost mugged three times and threatened with a brick. > > > > I was mooned twice, called smelly Paki, and told to take a shower. The > > abuse, including some of the worst obscenities imaginable, came from > > children, teenagers and adults. > > > > *On guard* > > > > I have been back in
Manchester for a few months now, but I still brace > > myself for trouble whenever I see groups of boys on bikes or teenagers on > > street corners. Even though the children of Manchester have never had a > > problem with me, it has now become instinctive. > > [image: Amil Khan, Panorama reporter] > > Amil Khan was punched in the head while walking down the road > > > > One of the worst effects was the lack of trust I felt towards anybody and > > the sense that I must always be on my guard - even if it was just popping to > > the shops. > > > > There is little sense of a mixed community in Southmead and the longer I > > stayed the more I realised why. The more abuse I received, the less I wanted > > to go out. The more racism I faced, the less I wanted to talk to anybody. I > > do not think that I was alone in my
feelings. > > > > Before we began filming, Southmead was identified to us by the group > > Support Against Racist Incidents (SARI) as an area where recent racially > > motivated attacks had occurred. Other estates and areas around the country > > were also highlighted by race campaign groups. > > > > The Southmead estate is mainly white and working class but in recent years > > more black and minority ethnic people have moved in. Before we moved there > > to live undercover we spoke to others who had had similar experiences to > > ours. > > > > I feel strongly that neighbourliness is a two-way street, but why would > > anybody attempt to go out of their way to get to know the community they > > have moved into, if that community has made you feel unwelcome for no reason > > but the colour of your skin? >
> > > If you are a non-English speaker, what incentive would you have to learn > > the language if the vast majority of communication you are likely to > > experience is abusive? > > > > It must be said that some people were lovely and in an estate like > > Southmead, many have their own issues to deal with, especially during tough > > economic times. > > > > But I was not looking for special treatment in Southmead, I was looking to > > be treated like everyone else - not to be reduced to a four letter word that > > starts with 'P'. > > > > *Panorama - Undercover: Hate on the Doorstep, BBC One, Monday, 19 October > > at 2030BST.* > > > > > > *http://news.bbc.co.uk/panorama/hi/front_page/newsid_8303000/8303229.stm
সমপ্রতি বাংলাদেশে কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়াসহ অন্যান্য মারাত্মক কিডনী রোগ বৃদ্ধির যে পিলে চমকানো খবর বেরিয়েছে, তাতে যে-কোন সচেতন ব্যক্তিমাত্র মর্মাহত হবেন। রিপোর্টে বলা হয়েছে যে, এসব প্রাণনাশী কিডনী রোগের সংখ্যা কল্পনাতীত হারে বৃদ্ধির মুল কারণ হলো ভেজাল খাবার (Contaminatedfood), ডায়াবেটিস (Diabetes mellitus) এবং উচ্চ রক্তচাপ (Hypertension)। এই তিনটি কারণকে এলোপ্যাথিক কিডনী বিশেষজ্ঞরা প্রকৃত কারণ বললেও আসলে হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসা
বিজ্ঞানের দৃষ্টিতেবরংবেশী বেশী এলোপ্যাথিক ঔষধ খাওয়াকেই কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়ারমূল কারণ বলতে হবে।কেননাআমরা অনেকেই জানি নাযে, আমরা যতো ঔষধ খাই তার অধিকাংশই রক্তে প্রবেশ করে তাদের কাজ-কর্ম পরিচালনা করে থাকে। পরবর্তীতে তাদেরকে রক্ত থেকে সংগ্রহ করে ছেকে ছেকে শরীর থেকে বের করার দ্বায়িত্ব পালন করতে হয় এই কিডনী দুটিকে। ফলে আমরা যতো বেশী ঔষধ খাই, আমাদের কিডনীকে তত বেশী পরিশ্রম করতে হয় এবং ফলস্রুতিতে কিডনী দুটি তত বেশী দুর্বল-ক্লান্ত-শ্রান্ত-অসুস্থহয়ে পড়ে। তাছাড়া বেশী বেশী ঔষধ খেলে তাদেরকে শরীর থেকে বের করে দেওয়ার জন্য প্রচুর পরিমাণে পানি খেতে হয়।
কিন্তুআমাদের অনেকেই বেশী বেশী পানি খাওয়ার বিষয়টি মেনে চলি না। কিডনী ড্যামেজ হওয়ার মূল কারণ হিসেবে যে রোগকে বিবেচনা করা হয় তার নাম নেফ্রাইটিস (Nephritis/ Bright's disease) এবং নেফ্রাইটিস হওয়ার মুল কারণও এই ঔষধ। কিডনী যদিও নিয়মিত আমাদের খাওয়া সকল ঔষধসমুহ নিষ্কাশন করে কিন্তু তার
মাঝেও ঔষধের দুয়েকটা কণা কিডনীর অজান্তেই কিডনীর গায়ে লেগে থাকে। পরবর্তীতে সেই কণাটির ওপর নানারকমের জীবাণু, ক্যামিকেল, মৃতকোষ ইত্যাদি জমতে জমতে সেটির গঠন বদলে যায়। ফলে কিডনী আর সেই কণাটিকে চিনতে পারে না। এক সময় কণাটি নিজে কিডনীর একটি অংশ হওয়ার চেষ্টা করে। কিন্তুকিডনী সেই কণাটিকে গ্রহন করতে রাজী হয় না। শেষ পরযন্ত কিডনীর ভিতরে গৃহযুদ্ধ শুরু হয় যাকে ডাক্তারী ভাষায় বলে অটোইমিউন রিয়েকশান (Autoimmunereaction)।এভাবেকিডনীরএকঅংশঅন্যঅংশকেচিনতেনাপেরেশত্রুহিসেবেগণ্যকরেএবং তাকেধ্বংসকরারজন্যউঠেপড়েলেগেযায়।ফলেকিডনীনিজেই নিজেরধ্বংসডেকেআনেএবংআমরা কবরেরবাসিন্দাহয়ে যাই। সাথে সাথে আমাদেরসনতান-সনততিদের করে যাই পথের ভিখারী।কেননাএলোপ্যাথিকচিকিৎসায়কিডনীরোগেরযেচিকিৎসাখরচ,তাতেযে-কোনকিডনীরোগীরপরিবারকেপথেনামতেছয়মাসেরবেশীলাগেনা।কাজেই বলা যায় যে, উচ্চরক্তচাপ এবং ডায়াবেটিস আমাদের কিডনীর যতটা ক্ষতি না করে, তারচেয়ে অনেক
বেশী ক্ষতি করে এসব রোগ চিকিৎসার নামে যুগের পর যুগ খাওয়া মারাত্মক ক্ষতিকর এলোপ্যাথিক কেমিক্যাল ঔষধগুলি।
বিশেষ করে যে-সবএলোপ্যাথিকঔষধ মানুষ বেশী বেশী খায়(যেমন-এন্টিবায়োটিক, ব্যথার ঔষধ, বাতেরঔষধ, ঘুমের ঔষধ, ব্লাড প্রেসারের ঔষধ, মানসিক রোগের ঔষধ ইত্যাদি), এগুলো কিডনীর এতই ক্ষতি করে যে, এদেরকে কিডনীর যম বলাই উচিত। একটি বাস-ব সত্য কথা হলো, প্রচলিত অন্যান্য
চিকিৎসা পদ্ধতিতে ডায়াবেটিস এবং উচ্চ রক্তচাপ কখনও সারে না ; বলা হয় এগুলো “নিয়ন্ত্রণে থাকে”। আসল কথা হলো, কোন ঔষধ যখন বছরের পর বছর, যুগের পর যুগ খাওয়া হয়, তখন সেই ঔষধ আর রোগকে নিয়ন্ত্রণ করতে পারে
না বরং রোগই সেই ঔষধকে নিয়ন্ত্রণ করে ফেলে। ফলে এসব কুচিকিৎসায় ডায়াবেটিস এবং উচ্চ রক্তচাপ তো সারেই না বরং দিন দিন আরো নিয়ন্ত্রণের বাইরে চলে যায়। মাঝখানে মারাত্মক মারাত্মক ঔষধের ধাক্কায় কিডনীর বারোটা
বেজে যায়। অথচ একজন বিশেষজ্ঞ হোমিও ডাক্তারের অধীনে চিকিৎসা নিলে ডায়াবেটিস, উচ রক্তচাপ এবং নেফ্রাইটিস দুয়েক বছরের মধ্যেই কেবল নিয়নত্রণ (control) নয় বরং একেবারে নির্মুল (cure) হয়ে যায়। এমনকি যদি এসব রোগ নিরাময়ের জন্য যুগের পর যুগও হোমিও ঔষধ খেতে হয়, তথাপি হোমিও চিকিৎসা করা বুদ্ধিমত্তার পরিচায়ক হবে। কেননা হোমিও ঔষধে যেহেতু ঔষধের পরিমাণ থাকে খুবই কম, সেহেতু এগুলো কয়েক যুগ খেলেও কিডনীতে জমে কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়ার সম্ভাবণা নাই। হ্যাঁ, অন্যান্য রোগের মতো কিডনী রোগের চিকিৎসাতেও হোমিও ঔষধ শ্রেষ্টত্বের দাবীদার। কারণ প্রচলিত অন্যান্য চিকিৎসা পদ্ধতিতে কিডনী রোগের
কষ্টগুলো নিয়ন্ত্রণ করা গেলেও কিডনী রোগের পেছনের মূল কারণসমূহ (Link) দূর করা যায় না। একমাত্র হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসার মাধ্যমেই কেবল কিডনী রোগের পেছনের মূল কারণসমূহ দূর করা সম্ভব হয় এবং এভাবে একই রোগ কয়েক বছর
পরপর ঘুরে ফিরে বার বার ফিরে আসা ঠেকানো যায়।
কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়ার কারণে যারা ডায়ালাইসিস (haemodialysis) করে বেঁচে আছেন, তারাও
ডায়ালাইসিসের পাশাপাশি হোমিও চিকিৎসা গ্রহন করে তাদের বিকল কিডনীকে ধীরে ধীরে সচল করে তুলতে পারেন। হ্যাঁ,হোমিওপ্যাথিতে বংশগত রোগ প্রবনতার (Chronicmiasm) ইতিহাস এবং শারীরিক-মানসিক গঠনগত (Constitutionaltraits) বৈশিষ্ট্য অনুযায়ী ঔষধ প্রয়োগ করলে মানুষের রোগ প্রতিরোধ ব্যবস'া (immunesystem) উজ্জীবিত হয় এবং ফলস্রুতিতে দেখা যায় অধিকাংশ ক্ষেত্রে নষ্ট কিডনী আবার ভালোভাবে কাজ করতে শুরু করে। কিছু কিছু ক্ষেত্রে কিডনী পুরোপুরি ভালো না হলেও যথেষ্ট উন্নতি হওয়ার ফলে ডায়ালাইসিসের সংখ্যা কমানো যায়। যেমন- দেখা যায় যেই রোগীর প্রতি সপ্তাহে দুইবার ডায়ালাইসিস করতে হতো, তার হয়ত এখন পনের দিনে বা মাসে একবার ডায়ালাইসিস করলেই চলে। আর কিডনী পুরোপুরি
ভালো হয়ে গেলে ডায়ালাইসিস পুরোপুরি বন্ধ করে দেওয়া যায়। অথচ প্রচলিত অন্যান্য চিকিৎসায় একবার ডায়ালাইসিস শুরু করলে কিডনী না পাল্টানো (kidneytransplantation) পর্যনত আর সেটি বন্ধ করা যায় না। বরং যত দিন যায় ডায়ালাইসিস তত বেশী ঘন ঘন করতে হয়। আমাদেরকে বুঝতে হবে যে, ডায়ালাইসিসের মাধ্যমে নষ্ট কিডনী (CRF) কখনও ভালো করা যায় না বরং ইহার মাধ্যমে কেবল কিডনীর কাজ বিকল্প উপায়ে সমপন্ন করে রোগীকে বাঁচিয়ে রাখা হয়। হ্যাঁ, একথা সত্য যে, শতকরা নব্বইভাগ রোগ বিনা চিকিৎসাতেই ভালো হয়ে যায় (আমাদের শরীরের নিজস্ব রোগ প্রতিরোধ ক্ষমতার বদৌলতে)। এতে সময় বেশী লাগে কিন্তুউপযুক্ত চিকিৎসা
গ্রহন করলে অনেক কম সময়ে রোগের হাত থেকে মুক্তি পাওয়া যায়। সেহেতু অনেকের সাময়িকভাবে নষ্ট কিডনীও বিনা চিকিৎসায় ভালো হয়ে যেতে পারে।
সাধারণত কিডনী রোগের হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসা রোগের ভয়াবহতার মাত্রা এবং রোগের পেছনের অনর্তনিহিত কারণ অনুযায়ী দুই থেকে পাঁচ বছরের মধ্যে শেষ করা যায়। কিন্তুপ্রচলিত অন্যান্য চিকিৎসা পদ্ধতিতে কিডনী রোগের চিকিৎসা প্রায় সারাজীবনই চালিয়ে যেতে হয়। নষ্ট কিডনী প্রচলিত অন্যান্য চিকিৎসায় কখনও ভালো হয় না।
কারণ তাদের টার্গেট হলো কিডনীকে ভালো করা নয় বরং কৃত্রিম উপায়ে কিডনীর কাজ অন্যভাবে চালিয়ে নেওয়া (যেমন- ডায়ালাইসিস করা এবং কিডনী পাল্টানো)। হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসা বিজ্ঞানের মায়াজমেটিক দৃষ্টিভঙ্গির কারণে এতে অনেক বিস্ময়কর ঘটনা ঘটতে দেখা
যায়, যা অন্যান্য চিকিৎসা পদ্ধতিতে অকল্পনীয়। যেমন- হোমিও চিকিৎসায় কিডনীর ধ্বংস হওয়া কোষন্তুর (tissue) জায়গায় ভালো টিস্যু
গজাতে দেখা যায়। সাধারণত কিডনী পাল্টানোর পরে অনেক ক্ষেত্রে কিডনী গ্রহীতার শরীর এই নতুন কিডনীকে গ্রহন করতে চায় না (immunereaction), নতুন কিডনীকে সে প্রত্যাখান করে (rejectionofnewkidney)। নতুন কিডনীকে প্রত্যাখ্যানের এই হার বেশ উচ্চ। রক্ত সমপর্কের আত্মীয় ছাড়া অন্যদের কিডনী গ্রহন করলে এসব বিদ্রোহের ঘটনা ঘটে থাকে। প্রচলিত চিকিৎসা পদ্ধতিতে নতুন কিডনীর বিরুদ্ধে শরীরের এই বিদ্রোহকে সামাল দিতে লক্ষ লক্ষ টাকা ব্যয় করতে হয় ; অথচ এসব
ক্ষেত্রে অপারেশনের পূর্ব থেকেই (অথবা অপারেশনের পরেও) যদি হোমিও চিকিৎসা অবলম্বন করা হয় তবে অন্তত একশগুণ কম খরচে বিদ্রোহ সামাল দেওয়া সম্ভব।
নতুন কিডনী সংযোজনের পরে অনেক সময় দেখা যায় কিডনীর সাথে সম্পর্কিত রোগের (যেমন-ডায়াবেটিস, উচ্চ রক্তচাপ ইত্যাদির) মাত্রা বেড়ে গিয়ে এমন পর্যায়ে পৌঁছে
যে, তাকে আর নিয়ন্ত্রণ করা যায় না। ডায়াবেটিস এবং উচ্চ রক্তচাপের মতো কিডনীর সাথে সমপর্কিত রোগসমুহ হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসায় যে কত সহজে দমন করা যায়, তা পুর্বেই বলেছি। কিডনী রোগীদের পাশাপাশি যাদের কিডনী রোগ নাই কিন্তুফ্যামিলিতে কিডনী রোগের ইতিহাস আছে, তাদের উচিত প্রতিরোধমুলক (Preventive) হোমিওপ্যাথিক চিকিৎসা নিয়ে কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়ার ঝুঁকি থেকে মুক্ত থাকা। কারণ একজন দক্ষ হোমিও ডাক্তার যে-কোন মানুষের সামগ্রিক ইতিহাস শুনলে অদুর অথবা দুর
ভবিষ্যতে তার কি কি রোগ হওয়ার সম্ভাবনা আছে, তা বুঝতে পারেন এবং সেই অনুযায়ী ঔষধ প্রয়োগ করে তাকে সে রোগে আক্রান্ত হওয়ার ঝুঁকি থেকে রক্ষা করতে পারেন। যারাজন্মেরপরথেকেইএকজনহোমিওবিশেষজ্ঞডাক্তারেরচিকিৎসারঅধীনেথাকেন,তাদেরকিডনীনষ্টহওয়ারকোনইসম্ভাবনানাই।আবার যে-সব ডায়াবেটিস রোগী একই সাথে উচ্চ রক্তচাপেও ভোগছেন, তাদের কিডনী নষ্ট হওয়ার হাত
থেকে বাঁচার জন্য হোমিও চিকিৎসা গ্রহন করা একেবারে ফরজ। যে-সব কিডনী রোগীর রোগের কারণ অজ্ঞাত বলে ডাক্তাররা মতামত দেন, তাদের জন্যও হোমিও চিকিৎসা অবলম্বন করা ফরজ।
আপনার কিডনী রোগ হালকা, মাঝারি, মারাত্মক বা চরম মারাত্মক যে পর্যায়েই
থাকুক না কেন, (কিডনী একশভাগ নষ্ট হওয়ার পুবেই) যত তাড়াতাড়ি সম্ভব আপনার হোমিও চিকিৎসা অবলম্বন করা উচিত। কারণ হোমিওপ্যাথিতে “অনেক দেরি হয়েছে গেছে” বলে কোন কথা নাই। যে-সব কিডনী রোগী জরুরি ভিত্তিতে কিডনী পাল্টানোর চেষ্টা করছেন, তারাও হোমিও
চিকিৎসার মাধ্যমে কিডনী পাল্টানোর জন্য বেশী সময় পেতে পারেন। আরেকটি কথা হলো, অন্য যে-কোন পদ্ধতির চিকিৎসার পাশাপাশিও আপনি হোমিও চিকিৎসা গ্রহন করতে পারেন ;
এতে কোন সমস্যা হয় না। পরিশেষে কিডনীরোগ বিশেষজ্ঞসহ সেবার মানসিকতা সমপন্ন সকল মেধাবী ডাক্তারদের প্রতি আমাদের আহ্বান, আপনারা সামান্য কষ্ট শিকার করে
হোমিওপ্যাথি আয়ত্ত করে নিন এবং হোমিও ঔষধ প্রেসক্রাইব করুন যাতে কিডনী রোগীরা বহুগুণ কম খরচে, কম সময়ে এবং কম ভোগান্তির মাধ্যমে রোগমুক্ত হতে পারেন।
For men and women who have surrendered believing men and women; obedient men and women; truthful men and women, patient men and women, humble men and women, men and women who give charity, men and women who fast, men and women who guard their privates, men and women who remember Allah in abundance, for them Allah has prepared forgiveness and a mighty wage. [Al Quran : 33.35]
For your information and record please.
Free assessment Evaluation form (Last Date: Nov 20, 2009 for free assesment)
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Living Cost:
Average living cost in finland is about 300 euro/month if the student
live in single room. (Room rent = 200Euro + Food =100 euro). But if
two students live together expenses will be 200euro/month.
Job Opportunities for upcoming students
For students, job always depends on luck. Nobody can give guarantee
you that you will get a job within certain time. Probability to get a
job in Stockholm, Oslo, Helsinki, Copenhagen are better than other
cities. I know some Bangladeshi students who got job after 1 week
arriving in Turku & some students didn't get any job yet. If the
students come in July or beginning of August in Finland, it's very
easy to get a job. But from mid August all students arrived in Finland
& applicants for job increases but number of job decreases because
summer time they need more workers. But in Finland if a student goes
to 50 places for job he will definitely get a job. But for in UK, if
the student goes to 500 places for job, nobody can guarantee him that
he will get a job in UK. So, UK is the most tought palce to get a job
now. Denmark is easiest country to get a job in the world. Sweden
situation is worse than Finland because of too many international
students. Norway & Netherlands' situation is bettter than Finland.
Belgium & Germany's situation is like Finland.
So, its better that if the student have the money for 10 months to
survive about 3.5 lakh taka then he don't need to work during term.
From 15th May to end of August is the summer time & Universities are
closed. Students can earn about 5000 euros within these periods & its
very easy to get a job that period. Students who worked for strwaberry
pick-up that time could earn 6000-7000 euros in 3-3.5 months in
Finland.
Most of the students get paid research project from 2nd year in
Finland which is atleast 900 euros/month. So, actually money is needed
for only 1st year.
Sweden : Students are allowed to do full time job at any time.
Finland : 25 hours/week during term but full time during vacation.
Norway : 20 hours/week during term but full time during vacation.
Denmark : 15 hours/week during term but full time during vacation.
Germany : 90 full days or 180 half days per year.
Netherlands/Holland: 10 hours per week (maximum) averaged over the
year or full-time during the summer months (June, July, August).
Belgium : 20 hours/week during term but full time during vacation.
UK : 20 hours/week during term but full time during vacation.
In Stockholm & Helsinki , it’s easy to get a part time job for
students. But it’s very difficult to get jobs in other cities in
Sweden & Finland . Mainly students do cleaning jobs in Sweden &
Finland . But after finishing the study, students can start their
career in big companies in Sweden & Finland . In Denmark , students
get job easily in anywhere in Denmark . After finishing study they get
green card visa & very easy to get a good job in Denmark .
Day-Long Alumni Mahamilon (Grand-Mega Re-union)
On the occasion of 60th FOUNDATION YEAR of
Dhaka University Alumni Association
Date: 16 JANUARY (SATURDAY)-2010 Time: 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Venue : DHAKA UNIVERSITY PLAY GROUND (In front of DMC)
Last Date of Registration Extended up to 22 November 2009
Time: From 12 am to 7 pm everyday & Friday between 4 pm to
7 pm at "Alumni Floor", Senate Bhabon, Dhaka University
Registration Fees: TK. 600 (Single), TK. 1000 (with spouse) TK. 300 for Driver, Children Not Allowed. Ailing or old or otherwise incapacitated Life Members can Register one adult aid. Eligible to participate: Certificate holders of any discipline from Dhaka University and Affiliated Medical Colleges including erstwhile Home Economics College only. The alumni who are graduated from other affiliated colleges can also become a life member if his/her spouse is graduated from Dhaka University directly and already a life member . Only life members can participate at the function.
Day-long joyful occasion includes among others fellowship, sharing reminiscence of university life, lunch, tea with snacks besides three cultural functions during morning, afternoon & evening.
Reminder: All Life Members are requested to update their mailing address including other particulars by Logging on duaa website [alumni.univdhaka.edu] or inform on email ruaduaa@gmail.com