In this mailing:
- Denis MacEoin: Britain's
Grooming Gangs: Part 2
- Debalina Ghoshal: North Korea's
Toxic Space Program
by Denis MacEoin • October 22,
2018 at 5:00 am
- As often cruelty to
women happens not only behind closed doors, but in the public
square, we can only guess how this display affects both women
and men. Sons see how their mothers are treated; this too
doubtless informs their behaviour.
- It is important not
to assume that the members of British grooming gangs consider
themselves jihadis entitled to capture non-Muslim girls. They
do not even appear at all pious. But knowledge of such
practices is likely to have some impact on Muslims coming from
countries where some form of slavery or indentured servitude
still exists.
- Sadly, in the case
of Britain's grooming gangs, religious ideology does not play
a role in forbidding child sexual grooming. It is important to
examine just how crucial a factor this seems to have been in
community silence about them.
In the
West, women's dress, behaviour, and rights to autonomy have been
freed from religious control only in the 20th and 21st centuries,
with the rise of the suffragettes, feminism and the availability of
safe contraception. Pictured: Suffragettes on way to Boston, sometime
between 1910 and 1915. (Image source: George Grantham Bain
Collection, Library of Congress)
Men, after a certain age -- as nature seems to have
intended to preserve the human race -- are often sexually attracted
to women. Women, similarly, are often sexually attracted to men,
even if many cultures try to keep that proclivity a closely-guarded
secret.
Different cultures handle human sexuality in
different ways, presumably to avoid the potential social disruption
it could create. This control has traditionally been affected by
religious doctrines, laws, and patriarchal priests, ministers,
rabbis, muftis and other clergy. In the West, women's dress,
behaviour, and rights to autonomy have been freed from religious
control only in the 20th and 21st centuries,
with the rise of the suffragettes, feminism and the availability of
safe contraception.
by Debalina Ghoshal • October 22,
2018 at 4:00 am
- "Even though
the US and its allies try to block our space development, our
aerospace scientists will conquer space." — Hyon
Kwang-il, director of the scientific research department of
North Korea's National Aerospace Development Administration.
- Such statements made
all the more chilling North Korea's 2016 launch of the Unha-3
rocket, with the capability of carrying satellites into space,
its July 4 and July 28, 2017 test-launches of the Hwasong-14
ICBM and its November 28, 2017 test-launch of the Hwasong-15
ICBM, which reportedly has a maximum range that would allow it
to hit anywhere in the United States.
- If North Korea were
able to develop the capability to damage or destroy US
satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), it would be a major
achievement for the country and pose a debilitating threat to
space security.
The
November 28, 2017 test-launch of North Korea's Hwasong-15
intercontinental ballistic missile. (Image source: Korean Central
News Agency)
Although North Korea, like other countries, claims
that its space program is for civilian, rather than military,
purposes, there is good reason to suspect that this is not quite
what is going on, and that its government will simply use these
capabilities to continue developing intercontinental ballistic
missiles (ICBMs) capable of carrying nuclear warheads, to continue
threatening global security. North Korea, like other countries, is
probably planning to use its space program to militarize and
weaponize the realm of space itself.
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