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Give Peace a Chance
Support Burma - Don't Watch the Olympics
China is under pressure from Tibetan protestors, now the Campaign For Burma has launched its own attack. China is Burma's major supporter and this video shows why people should not support the Beijing Olympics and its corporate sponsors.

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Tibet - Cultural Murder
15 mar  |  RENATE OGILVIE on the ongoing tragedy of Tibet under Chinese rule. . . read more
The Olympics of the Dispossessed
9 aug  |  From Bernadette Ludwig in Dharamsala, home to many exiled Tibetans. . . read more
Burma: It Can't Wait - Sarah Silverman
5 may  |  Sarah Silverman joins a month-long campaign highlighting the Burmese struggle for liberty, democracy and human rights.  . . read more
Protests Follow Olympic Torch Through Europe
7 apr  |  The Beijing Olympic torch relay through London was disrupted several times by protests, which continued as the torch made its way through Paris. In Paris, the torch had to be extinguished and carried on a bus.  . . read more
Avaaz Burma Petition
1 oct  |  The Burmese struggle continues . . read more
Stand With Tibet - Support the Dalai Lama
19 mar  |  After decades of repression under Chinese rule, the Tibetan people's frustrations have burst onto the streets in protests and riots. With the spotlight of the upcoming Olympic Games now on China, Tibetans are crying out to the world. . . read more
Australians Standing Up For Tibet
20 mar  |  Tell Kevin Rudd what to say (in Mandarin if he chooses) to the Chinese leadership when he visits China.  . . read more
Burma - Shoot on Sight
30 sep  |  The protests and subsequent military crackdown in the big cities of Burma have got a lot of coverage in the international media. However there are many hidden emergencies in Burma (Myanmar) and video activists traveled deep into the jungles of eastern Burma to document one of the world's most urgent and most forgotten humanitarian problems. In 2007, the Burmese military embarked on one of the worst offensives in its 30 year campaign to destabilize the lives of rural ethnic minorities, with half a million people driven from their homes.  . . read more
Tibet Online
17 jul  |  Community space providing info on Tibet . . read more
Jim Carrey - A Call For Action on Burma
30 aug  |  Hollywood funnyman Jim Carrey gets serious, calling for action on the world's only imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize recipient Aung San Suu Kyi. He also decries Burma's military regime for recruiting child soldiers, destroying 3,000 villages and forcing 1.5 million refugees to flee.  . . read more
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by Jack Freeman

As four months of travel in India is coming to an end I am finding
it continually confusing that many of the cultural atrocities that
come with this society of 1 billion strong are deemed "interesting"
and "profound".

Sitting in social circles from hostel to hostel, I have met forceful disagreement with my criticisms of the oppressive nature of India's cast system and their large Islamic community. The smug, "oh, you just don't get it" attitude you receive for owning such opinions is both condescending and misguided.

This is an enraging example of the pseudo, naive belief that this "exotic"society is unintelligible to (most of) us westerners. In this beautiful, richly diverse and all round fun country where, by the same token, you will be greeted by zero empathy of female lib, homosexual equality or my own personal faithlessness, I wish that travelers would not deny their education and morals on arrival. Is it not possible to balance both romance and a sense of rationality?