Kwkwk ... Rakyatnya Paus ya termasuk nT pada. Nah mulai mbalelo kan?
Baikan luh jadi pengopas, ga usah nyoba ganti profesi.

Sekarang sejak adanya crude oil dipompa di KSA maka tanah suci rame-rame
didiami banyak kafirin, bule maupun ga. Mosok sih nT dkk bencong ga tau?

--- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
> Pengetahuanmu terlalu miskin, di tempat Paus tidak ada rakyat!
>
> Tanah neraka yang disebut suci tempat memperkosa TKW  atau lazim
dikenal Arab Saudia adalah target  mendatang, dan Allah tak akan bisa
menolong malapetaka akan dialami
>
>
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>   From: ndeboost
>   To: [email protected]
>   Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2011 11:26 PM
>   Subject: [proletar] Re: After the revolution, establishing democracy
>
>
>
>   Yah, tinggal nunggu menjalar ke kerajaan para Paus.
>
>   --- In [email protected], "sunny" ambon@ wrote:
>   >
>   >
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/07/AR201103\
0703899.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions
>   >
>   > After the revolution, establishing democracy
>   >
>   > By Roza Otunbayeva
>   > Tuesday, March 8, 2011
>   >
>   > BISHKEK, KYRGYZSTAN
>   >
>   > In the heart of Central Asia we are watching with solidarity as
events unfold in the Middle East. The "people power" that the world
witnessed in Tunisia and Egypt reminds us in Kyrgyzstan of our own
victory last year against a corrupt dictator. Nothing can be more moving
than to see humans celebrate their freedom. There are many skeptics and
cynics who warn against popular revolutions, citing the violence and
instability that they unleash, and the unpredictable consequences. There
are those who dismiss national uprisings as shows set up by foreign
governments, international media and terrorist groups - claiming that
millions of people are all on hallucinogenic drugs.
>   >
>   > To these critics, our response is clear: We are humans.
Irrationality may be simply part of our nature. Muslim or Christian,
black or white, we are wired that way: The Almighty provided us with
such a powerful sense of dignity that we cannot tolerate the denial of
our unalienable rights and freedoms, no matter what real or supposed
benefits are provided by "stable" authoritarian regimes. It is the magic
of people, young and old, men and women of different religions and
political beliefs, who come together in city squares and announce that
enough is enough. During such times we discover that the youth we had
always grumbled about as uninterested and apathetic are also patriotic,
brave and so selflessly heroic that they choose liberty even at the cost
of their lives.
>   >
>   > Having paid such a high price, we cannot squander the historic
opportunity we have to right past wrongs and to build a better state and
a more just society. Our experience, however, tells us that there is no
highway to democracy. In fact, toppling the dictator may well be the
easiest part.
>   >
>   > Each country faces a unique set of challenges. After years of
totalitarian leadership, most countries must first untangle the
suffocating net of draconian rules that had been dictated into
legislation by the ruling few, who acted in their own interest. In
Kyrgyzstan, we brought together all political parties and a wide array
of civil society leaders to draft the new constitution. After several
weeks of frequent televised debates and a thorough search for a national
compromise, the Constitutional Council agreed to transform our country
from a strong presidential system into a parliamentary republic. Within
three months of the fall of the Bakiyev regime, the new constitution was
put to a national referendum.
>   >
>   > Whatever good intentions people have to build a democracy, no one
should be tricked into holding elections overnight. After years of
one-person rule it is important to first ensure that political parties
are able to compete around the country and have access to voters, that
there is a free press to provide for national dialogue, and that civic
associations have space and the opportunity to advocate their interests.
Most important, the rule of law must be provided for. This is the
hardest part. For years our societies have been repressed. Newly found
freedoms can be too intoxicating. Shortly after revolutions, law
enforcement bodies are mostly discredited and too weakened to provide
for the public order. This is where we most tragically stumbled:
Interethnic conflict between the Kyrgyz and Uzbeks took many lives last
year and almost tore apart our country.
>   >
>   > Support from the international community is vital. Sympathy and
understanding from immediate neighbors are even more crucial. The people
of Kyrgyzstan are forever indebted to the friends, near and far, who
helped us through our challenging times.
>   >
>   > The new country we are building is inclusive and grounded in the
rule of law. We choose to celebrate our differences and to resolve them
not in the streets but in parliament, via democratic channels. Through
all of this, the Kyrgyz people have persevered, as will our brothers and
sisters in the Middle East. The path to democracy is not easy, but it is
the only way forward.
>   >
>   > The writer is president of Kyrgyzstan and a recipient of the U.S.
secretary of state's 2011 International Woman of Courage award.
>   >
>   >
>   > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>   >
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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