திங்கள், 19 ஜனவரி, 2015

No Indian American, Just American please

Asserting that he didn’t believe in hyphenated identities, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has said that his parents came to the U.S. from India four decades ago to become Americans and not Indian-Americans.
He invoked his ethnic heritage to make a call for immigrant assimilation and called people who talked about skin pigmentation as the “most dim-witted lot” around.
“My parents came in search of the American Dream, and they caught it. To them, America was not so much a place, it was an idea. My dad and mom told my brother and me that we came to America to be Americans. Not Indian-Americans, simply Americans,” Mr. Jindal said in a prepared remarks that he is scheduled to deliver next week.
Mr. Jindal, the first Indian-American Governor of any American state, is scheduled to address the Henry Jackson Society on Monday in London.
Releasing the prepared remarks of Mr. Jindal’s speech, his office said the Louisiana Governor will call for immigrant assimilation to strengthen countries and protect freedom.
“If we wanted to be Indians, we would have stayed in India. It’s not that they are embarrassed to be from India, they love India. But they came to America because they were looking for greater opportunity and freedom,” Mr. Jindal said, explaining the reason why he does not like to be called or described as an Indian-American.
“I do not believe in hyphenated Americans. This view gets me into some trouble with the media back home. They like to refer to Indian-Americans, Irish-Americans, African-Americans, Italian-Americans, Mexican-Americans, and all the rest. To be clear — I am not suggesting for one second that people should be shy or embarrassed about their ethnic heritage,” he said.
“I am explicitly saying that it is completely reasonable for nations to discriminate between allowing people into their country who want to embrace their culture, or allowing people into their country who want to destroy their culture, or establish a separate culture within,” he said.
“It is completely reasonable and even necessary for a sovereign nation to discriminate between people who want to join them and people who want to divide them. And immigration policy should have nothing at all to do with the colour of anyone’s skin. I find people who care about skin pigmentation to be the most dim-witted lot around. I want nothing to do with that,” he said.
Mr. Jindal said his objective in this speech is to speak clearly about what he believes to be America’s proper role in international affairs; to speak bluntly about the nature of the threats being faced and the recent tragic events in France; and to suggest what he think is the way forward.
“The first step for America, and for any nation that wants to protect its own freedom and encourage it everywhere is to have a strong economy. When the United States became a major economic power at the end of the 19th century, it had the means to become a major military power and to become a leader in the free world,” Mr. Jindal said.
The Governor said the first tenet of American foreign policy must always be freedom, and the relentless pursuit of freedom for our people, and for all people, regardless of race, creed, religion, ethnicity, or any other artificial divisions, which humans use to divide one from another.
“America must always be a beacon of freedom throughout the world. I’m not naive enough to suggest that the entire world will ever be free, but I’m also completely opposed to ever giving up on the notion that all people everywhere in the world deserve and desire to be free,” he said.
“The next principle is of course security. America must and will pay any price to defend itself and to defend its allies. No two countries are the same, but those countries that value freedom and democracy and civility and decency must band together, and must defend each other,” he said.
“Those countries that desire security and harbour no ill—will toward their neighbours must stick together in an increasingly dangerous world. The third principle that is crucial is truth. We must speak the truth, to each other, and to our own countrymen,” he said.
“When a country or a movement is behaving badly on the international stage, we must not pretend otherwise. You cannot remedy a problem if you will not name it and define it. One of the most prominent examples in our day is ISIS and all forms of radical Islam. These people have no legitimate claim, they have no justification for their cowardly, barbaric, and inhuman behaviour, and we must not pretend otherwise,” Mr. Jindal said.

உண்பதற் கொன்று மிலாதவர்

உண்பதற் கொன்று மிலாதவர் தம்மை நினைந்துவிட்டால்
நண்பரும் நாட்டினிற் பல்லோர் தமரும்  எறியுணவைக்
கண்ணுறுங் காலை கழறவும் நாவிற் கெதுவுமுண்டோ
புண்படு நெஞ்சிற் புதைந்தது மேலெழப் போக்கிலையே

Srisena, Rajapakse, the Pope (excerpts)


When he took the oath of office as president on Jan. 9, Sirisena announced an ambitious plan for his first 100 days, including constitutional reforms to re-impose term limits on the presidency and restore some powers to parliament. Parliamentary elections are expected after that, and Rajapaksa may yet be a force to reckon with. He maintains a strong base of support in the rural southern heartland, and they will quickly latch on to any kind of split in Sirisena’s ranks.

Rajapaksa has already thrown down the gauntlet. Soon after his election defeat, he returned to his ancestral home in Hambantota in the deep south and was welcomed by a rowdy, vocal group of loyalists. He blamed his unexpected setback on minority votes, appealing directly to his hardline Sinhala base. One of them asked Rajapaksa why he didn’t simply keep the presidency by killing his rivals. “No, you can’t do that,” he said. But he is not going quietly. “I will go from one village to another,” Rajapaksa promised, “meeting my supporters and glvanizing them.” On the long road to reconciliation, the last mile.........................

-------------amantha pereira

Full story:
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/1/17/pope-francis-in-srilanka.htmlhttp://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/1/17/pope-francis-in-srilanka.html