Religious-freedom ambassador will face challenges from his own department

The Harper governments new watchdog for international religious persecution is a scholar of Scottish nationalism who, until a few weeks ago, was a mid-level bureaucrat at the federal Department of Natural Resources.

If the experience of his U.S. counterpart is any indication, Andrew Bennett, appointed Canadas first ambassador of religious freedom this week, should study up on the hard-knuckle office politics of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.

The Conservatives are installing the Office of Religious Freedom within the secular confines of Foreign Affairs, just as Bill Clinton located a similar office inside the U.S. State Department 14 years ago. The Canadian office, like the U.S. one, will criticize mistreatment of religious minorities in other countries.

A U.S.-based expert on religious persecution said on Wednesday that successive appointees to the post in the United States have found themselves sidelined by Washingtons State Department as diplomats rebuffed attempts to introduce a new player into the countrys foreign policy.

These ambassadors at large for international religious freedom in the State Department, theres been three of them. Its fair to say all three, they have been marginalized. That didnt mean they did nothing, but the State Department didnt want them in the main line of stuff, said Paul Marshall, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institutes Center for Religious Freedom.

Mr. Marshall holds dual Canadian-American citizenship and was approached about a year ago to see if he was interested in the post of ambassador with the Harper governments religious freedom watchdog but was not formally offered the job.

He applauded the creation of the office, saying many in the West underestimate the influence of religion in politics around the world. The focus will be not so much on religious freedom itself but on violations of human rights in general on the grounds of religion.

Dr. Bennett, 40, has been described as the dean of a private Christian liberal arts college in Ottawa, but associates said the endeavour is really a part-time role. The Ukrainian Catholic sub-deacons full-time job was as a manager at the Department of Natural Resources, and his expertise lies in history and political science.

His 2002 doctoral thesis in political science at the University of Edinburgh was titled Nations of Distinction: An Analysis of Nationalist Perspectives on Constitutional Change in Quebec, Catalonia and Scotland. His McGill masters thesis was 20th Century Bannockburn: Scottish Nationalism and the Challenge Posed to British Identity 1970-1980. The battle of Bannockburn was a victory for the Scots in their 14th- and 15th-century wars of independence.

Mr. Marshall said U.S. State Department officials have often resented the intrusion of their ambassador for international religious freedom. Generally, the State Department does not like ambassadors at large for religious freedom. One thing they are usually doing is criticizing and raising issues with other governments and [U.S.] ambassadors to those countries dont like what they think of as crossed lines, he said.

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Religious-freedom ambassador will face challenges from his own department

Freedom From Religion Leads to No Freedom

February 21, 2013|5:24 am

It's interesting that much of the focus today on the First Amendment has to do with the so-called "separation of church and state." Yet, following the first two clauses concerning the freedom of religion there are additional sections about freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom to peaceably assemble and petition for a redress of grievances. Many today, who would quickly proclaim there is an absolute, two-way, impregnable wall between church and state, somehow also assert that for some reason it stops there, and this same impregnable, two-way wall is considered anathema when it comes to other freedoms mentioned in the same amendment. In other words, there is no "separation of speech and state," no "separation of press and state," and no "separation of public protests and state".

Can you imagine someone seriously arguing the government cannot interfere with free speech, while simultaneously contending neither should citizens be allowed to speak whatever they choose with regard to issues of state? What if the government were to say, speak whatever you will, but when it comes to politics you should remain silent? You have no right to bring your opinions to bear on the political process.

Can you imagine someone seriously arguing the government cannot interfere with a free press, while at the same time advocating that neither can the press use its influence to affect matters of state? That would be a violation of the "separation of press and state."

Can you imagine someone seriously arguing the government cannot interfere with public protests, while also saying public protests are allowed except for those against the government? But then again, if that were the case, there wouldn't be much reason to ever protest.

The point here is such assertions with regard to free speech, freedom of the press, and freedom to peaceably assemble and redress grievances, would be ridiculous and gut the very purpose of the First Amendment. Nevertheless, with respect to America's first freedom, the freedom of religion, this notion of a two-way impregnable wall of separation between religion and its moral influences on the state is erroneously accepted. And God help the supposed religious fools that hope to correct it.

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Nothing in the First Amendment was ever meant to suggest our nation's Founders were trying to protect the state from the church, the government from the press, etc. The purpose of the first ten amendments to the Constitution was to create a one-way wall to protect the citizenry from the government, not the other way around. They were setting up a barrier to safeguard the public from abuses of power, not to save the state from the church or any other function of the people.

The concept of the "separation of church and state," as it's largely understood today, was first introduced by Chief Justice Hugo Black in Everson v. Board of Educationin 1947. Black drew the alien view from a brief written by ACLU lawyer, Leo Pfeffer. The ruling turned Thomas Jefferson's phrase "separation of church and state" in a letter to Danbury Baptists of Connecticut in 1802 on its head. Afterward, the ACLU would use it via the courts to force Christianity out of the public arena for decades.

What's even sadder is many Christians have been poisoned by it and either forgotten or were unaware that the moral ethic of civil liberty and the Christian reality of spiritual liberty are interlocked. Actually, the great principles advocated for a free Republic were originally made by those who knew the internal liberty that comes through Christ alone and is proclaimed on the sacred pages of the Bible.

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4 questions about Canada’s new Office of Religious Freedom

It has been almost two years since Stephen Harper announced his government would establish an Office of Religious Freedom to monitor the safety of religious minorities around the world.

It was during the spring 2011 election campaign that the Conservatives promised that this new office would become a key pillar of Canadian foreign policy.

Since then, however, progress has been halting. There were reports that two people who had been approached to head up the new agency had turned down the post.

So the announcement Tuesday of the federal government's first ambassador of religious freedom put a face and public profile to an organization that has long been in the planning stages and is now operational.

The first head of the new Office is Andrew Bennett, a 40-year-old Catholic and academic. He has been the dean of Augustine College, a small, private Christian liberal arts college in Ottawa, since February 2011. He teaches the history of Christianity there and is completing a part-time degree in theology.

He has a Ph.D. in politics from the University of Edinburgh, an M.A. in history from McGill University and a B.A. from Dalhousie University.

Bennett is also a former federal public servant. He worked for several years as a political risk analyst for Export Development Canada, and as a policy analyst in the Privy Council Office in Ottawa.

"Dr. Bennett is a man of principle and deep convictions and he will encourage the protection of religious minorities around the world so all can practice their faith without fear of violence and repression," the prime minister said in announcing his appointment on Tuesday.

Augustine College administrator Harold Visser said Bennett would reach out to all those persecuted on religious grounds. "What Andrew brings is a familiarity with a diversity of faith, and a sensitivity to the validity of those various faith traditions," he said.

Its mandate is to promote freedom of religion or belief. The government says this promotion will be a Canadian "foreign policy priority."

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Freedom Drug Rehab Announces Upcoming State by State Addiction Treatment Survey

Freedom Treatment Center is a drug and alcohol addiction center in Southern Michigan that has helped many individuals from all areas of the U.S. begin a new life of recovery. The center's Freedom Drug Rehab has collected 10 years' worth of data on drug addiction patients, treatments, regions and drug types and is putting together a comprehensive study that will be useful for helping many more individuals and treatment centers going forward.

Albion, MI (PRWEB) February 21, 2013

Study information came from a survey of nearly 1,000 individuals recovering from drug addiction, inclusive of the drugs to which they were addicted, the treatment plans they followed, and data from Freedom Drug Rehabs records of aftercare follow-ups. The comprehensive study of results is categorized by type of addiction, state and other factors.

We are really excited about this study, as it will give us great insight into addiction trends and treatment outcomes across a huge section of the population, said Nick Thiel, Chief Operations Officer of Michigan's Freedom Treatment Center.

The state-by-state survey has the potential to provide valuable insight to addiction treatment professionals who can use the information to most effectively treat their patients. Due to the multiple categories, addiction specialists will be able to review addiction trends in any given region, the types of treatments that have been most effective, and the types of drugs that have resulted in the highest numbers of addiction in any given area.

Our facility is not the only center and Michigan not the only state that can benefit greatly from this comprehensive study, said Freedom Treatment Center Senior Director Dominick Assante. We are hoping this data can help many centers across the nation implement the most effective programs to help patients in their areas obtain and sustain successful, drug-free lives.

Freedom Drug Rehab plans to announce and summarize survey results, making them readily available to treatment facilities, addiction professionals, program directors and individuals upon request.

Located in a semi-residential pocket of Southern Michigan, Freedom Treatment Center provides the soothing and safe environment and assistance so vital for helping people overcome drug and alcohol addiction. Treatment begins with a natural detoxification and continues with counseling, education and lifestyle changes that help ensure an ongoing and successful recovery.

Nick Thiel Freedom Drug Rehab 1 (866) 513-0725 Email Information

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Freedom's NCS run ends against De La Salle

Freedom goalkeeper Chris Contreras stops a shot during the Falcons recent 2-0 victory over Pittsburg. Photo by Angelo Garcia Jr.

BOYS

No. 12 Freedom 3, No. 5 Berkeley 0

Freedom 2, No. 4 Pittsburg 0

No. 1 De La Salle 4, Freedom 0

The Freedom boys soccer team entered Tuesdays North Coast Section semifinal against De La Salle on a cloud.

But the Spartans brought them back to earth.

Freedoms first-ever appearance in the NCS ended last night in a 4-0 loss to top-seeded De La Salle in Concord. No matter how this game went, and we are all hurt and suffering inside, nothing can take away the fantastic season that we had, said Freedom head coach Sal Acevedo. We made history, and the boys fought as hard as they could. I couldnt ask for anything more from these guys. They finished with dignity.

Riding a six-game consecutive shutout streak, Freedom goalkeeper Chris Contreras fought off several early scoring attempts by the Spartans, but De La Salle finally broke through in the 20th minute on a header by senior Jack Karlesking.

From there, things only got worse for No. 12 Freedom, which entered the game after upsetting No. 5 Berkeley and No. 4 Pittsburg.

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Freedom's NCS run ends against De La Salle

Freedom High class teaches merits of community service

By KENNETH KNIGHT | The Tampa Tribune Published: February 21, 2013 Updated: February 21, 2013 - 3:28 PM

TAMPA PALMS

It is 7:45 a.m. at Freedom High and students in Andrew Tillman's first period class are busy folding paper "Cat in the Hat" head gear for an upcoming reading festival.

The activity may look like fun, but there's a lesson in it.

It demonstrates the students' willingness to perform a seemingly mundane task to help accomplish a bigger goal. In this case, Freedom students are preparing to host second-graders from four area Title 1 schools for the annual I Feel the Need to Read Family Literacy Festival on March 1.

The students in Tillman's class are offered a unique opportunity to learn basic skills and explore ideas on how to successfully conduct community service projects.

"This is the only class like this in the district -- I am pretty sure the state," Tillman said. "We are trying to make this campus more community-service oriented."

It's the second semester Freedom has offered Engaged Citizenship, an elective class for all high school students. The course is designed to appeal to teenagers who are already active in community service or eager to get involved.

Most of the 18 students in the course are members of student service organizations such as Caf Freedom and Key Club.

Alexis Weinberg, a 17-year-old senior, was encouraged by school counselor Amber Wright to sign up for the class.

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Scholar Andrew Bennett to lead Canada's Office of Religious Freedom

CTVNews.ca Staff Published Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013 6:51AM EST Last Updated Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013 2:36PM EST

Andrew Bennett has been named ambassador for Canada's Office of Religious Freedom, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced today.

Bennett, a Catholic, is dean of Augustine College, a Christian liberal arts college in Ottawa. He has a PhD in politics from the University of Edinburgh and a master of arts in history from Montreals McGill University.

During an announcement at the Ahmadiyya Muslim community centre and mosque in Vaughan, Ont., on Tuesday afternoon, Harper described Bennett as a scholar, a man of principle and deep conviction.

His role at the newly-established office will be to monitor religious freedom around the world.

He will promote it as a key objective to Canadian foreign policy. And Dr. Bennett will help ensure the protection of religious freedom informs the policy and programs of the Government of Canada.

The office will focus on advocacy, policy development and programming that aims to protect and advocating on behalf of religious minorities that are under threat.

Harper said the office will also promote Canadian values of pluralism and tolerance in countries where there is evidence of extreme violations of the right to freedom of religion.

Human rights groups and opposition critics have said the office is a misguided attempt to inject religion into foreign policy.

They also questioned what exactly it can accomplish with a modest $5-million budget.

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Scholar Andrew Bennett to lead Canada's Office of Religious Freedom

Christian college dean named to head religious freedom office

Andrew Bennett has been named ambassador for Canada's Office of Religious Freedom, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced today.

"Around the world, violations of religious freedom are widespread and they are increasing," Harper said In a speech at the Ahmadiyya Muslim community centre and mosque in Vaughan, Ont.

"Dr. Bennett is a man of principle and deep convictions and he will encourage the protection of religious minorities around the world so all can practise their faith without fear of violence and repression."

Bennett, a Catholic, is dean of Augustine College, a Christian liberal arts college in Ottawa. He has a PhD in politics from the University of Edinburgh and a master of arts in history from McGill University in Montreal.

Bennett wrote his doctoral thesis on comparing separatists and nationalist movements in Quebec, Scotland and Catalonia.

After graduating, he went to work for the deputy minister of intergovernmental affairs. He later worked at the Export Development Corporation, and at the Privy Council Office.

Harper first promised the new branch of the Foreign Affairs Department during the last federal election campaign.

"This was a platform commitment, to create an office of religious freedom, to make the protection of religious freedom of vulnerable religious minorities a key pillar of Canadian foreign policy," Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, who attended the announcement, told reporters on Monday.

Harper told the story of meeting Shahbaz Bhatti, a Christian cabinet minister from Pakistan whom the prime minister described as someone who took great risks to defend persecuted religious minorities in his country, including his fellow Christians. Three weeks after that meeting, Bhatti was assassinated in Islamabad, Harper said. A militant Islamist group took responsibility for his killing.

It has been said that Bhatti was the inspiration for the founding of the Office of Religious Freedom.

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Freedom Credit Union Announces New Facebook Contest

(PRWEB) February 19, 2013

Every week in February, Freedom Credit Union, a provider of auto loans in Philadelphia, will award $50 to one lucky Facebook user who likes their page for that particular week in February. To enter, individuals should go to Freedoms Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/FreedomCUinPA, and click the Like button on their page. Those who enter can increase their chances of winning by liking and sharing Freedoms status updates throughout the week.

As one of the most trusted and oldest credit unions in PA, Freedom Credit Union is committed to their clients and their individual needs. It doesnt matter whether a person is planning a minor or major life event, helping their children obtain a higher education, seeking a loan or insurance, Freedom Credit Union will offer the best rates, lowest fees, and helpful advice and services over anyone else within their industry. Memberships with Freedom Credit Union are available for businesses and individuals throughout the Philadelphia area. Additionally, Freedom also offers personal Memberships for those who live, work, or worship in Montgomery County, Bucks County, Philadelphia County, Delaware County, and Chester County.

Freedom Credit Union currently has over $585 million in assets and more than 59,000 members to date. As a not-for-profit cooperative institution, Freedom Credit Union returns their earnings to members in the form of higher interest on deposits, lower loan rates, and fewer fees. To hear more about the company, as well as their new Facebook contest, please visit https://www.freedomcu.org

About Freedom Credit Union:

Freedom Credit Union has been a trusted financial partner in the Philadelphia area since 1934. They are a not-for-profit organization offering better rates, lower fees, helpful service accompanied with expert advice. As a respected Philadelphia based financial institution, they proudly offer a wide variety of financial programs to meet a clients needs.

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Freedom Credit Union Announces New Facebook Contest

Freedom Frolics is alive, well in Sun City Center

By TBO.COM | Staff Published: February 19, 2013 Updated: February 20, 2013 - 12:30 PM

Last April when the final bow was taken and the curtains closed on Freedom Frolics XX, "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Atrium," emotions ran high, which was normal for the end of any stage show.

Mixed with the elation of having enjoyed or been a part of that successful production, there was, however, a note of sadness. That show was to be the very last Freedom Frolics.

It had been decided that perhaps after 20 years and 20 shows, the Frolics had run its course and it might be time for something different.

The decision accepted, although with regret, residents went on to other pleasurable pursuits. There was a Caribbean cruise, a tour of Florida wineries, Oktoberfest, myriad special events and several major stage entertainments, not to mention all the festivities connected to Freedom Plaza's grand 20th anniversary celebration.

Then the holiday season arrived with its wealth of delightful diversions, and the demise of Freedom Frolics was no longer a prime topic of conversation.

Suddenly it was January, the month when, always before, an invitation went out to all residents who wanted to be a part of the upcoming Freedom Frolics to attend the initial meeting. The title of the show would be announced and interest would begin to build.

The woodworkers and artists would accept, with excitement, the challenge of creating a set; the seamstresses would start saving coupons to buy fabric for costumes. In February the cast would be selected and scripts distributed. By March, nightly rehearsals would be under way for 30 to 40 enthusiastic frolickers. An equal number of residents would be deeply, and happily, involved in various support projects.

But that was before. This year, without a Freedom Frolics on the horizon, without all the hustle and bustle associated with the show, things just didn't seem right. Residents, in numbers, began to request that the end of the Frolics be reconsidered, at least for one more show. Always sensitive to resident satisfaction issues, management listened.

Two weeks ago, after much deliberation, the announcement was made: Freedom Frolics XI will be staged in September to correspond with Freedom Plaza's 21st anniversary.

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Freedom Frolics is alive, well in Sun City Center

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Fox Friends Questions Threat To #39;Freedom, #39; Asks #39;Are The Days Of Constitutional Gov #39;t Over #39;
2/18/13 - "Are the days of constitutional government over?" asked Peter Johnson, Jr. on this morning #39;s Fox Friends. Segueing into the segment, he cited a Pew poll that showed majority of Americans said the federal government threatens "personal rights and freedoms." The Democrats argue otherwise, "but the American people aren #39;t buying it," Johnson said. With that, he turned to Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, asking, "Is the federal government overreaching every day in every way?" No, Cuccinelli replied. "It #39;s not overreaching every day in every way, but right now it #39;s overreaching on more days in more ways than probably ever has before in yours and my lifetime." He particularly pointed to the EPA (the "Employment Prevention Agency") and to President Obama #39;s appointments to the National Labor Relations Board. Asked about the response, Cuccinelli said people ask if they can sue, but usually the answer is no. "You don #39;t like what they #39;re doing, vote differently and show up and vote. And not everybody does, of course," he said. Our system is designed "so that the states would be the last line of defense pushing back when the federal government overreached."

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Freedom Treatment Center Sees an Increase In Heroin Abuse in Michigan

Freedom Treatment Center is a Michigan drug and alcohol addiction facility that harbors acute awareness of drug trends throughout the state. One recent trend the center has noted is the increase in heroin abuse, with a recent law enforcement bust netting 15 grams of the drug from a key Michigan supplier.

Albion, MI (PRWEB) February 17, 2013

Heroin is an opiate that can lead to rapid addiction, said Freedom Treatment Center Executive Director John Walser. Our facility can help people overcome their addiction to heroin using all-natural methods that fortify and cleanse the body, which are much-needed steps to eradicate all traces of such a dangerous and potentially lethal drug.

Part of the danger of heroin comes from its current level of high availability. The center has seen heroins abuse increase as larger quantities of the drug are filtered into the state, taking the place of the previously high levels of prescription drugs that used to be on the market. Types of commonly abused prescription drugs were those in the opiate category. Law enforcement and community efforts against prescription drug abuse helped bring those numbers down by bringing down the levels of availability, but those who abused opiates are now readily able to turn to heroin to fill the gap.

Law enforcement is taking care of the legal end of the spectrum when it comes to getting heroin off the streets, said Freedom Treatment Center Senior Director Dominick Assante. Our recovery program can help people overcome the addiction end of the spectrum by providing help that can ultimately result in a lifelong recovery from heroin or other drugs.

In addition to an increase in heroin abuse, the center has also recognized an increase in the use and abuse of methamphetamine throughout Michigan. This drug, too, is becoming more widely available, especially throughout rural areas of the state. The meth trend has been moving out of urban areas and filtering into more rural zones, also filling the gap left by the paucity of prescription drugs.

Heroin abuse and the drug trade may keep hitting Michigan pretty hard, Walser said, but our addiction recovery programs can hit even harder when people are willing to embrace the new way of life we offer them.

Located in a semi-residential pocket of Southern Michigan, Freedom Treatment Center provides the soothing and safe environment and assistance so vital for helping people overcome drug and alcohol addiction. Treatment begins with a natural detoxification and continues with counseling, education and lifestyle changes that help ensure an ongoing and successful recovery.

Nick Thiel Freedom Drug Rehab 1 (866) 738-9348 Email Information

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Turkey rules out freedom for PKK leader

Published: Feb. 18, 2013 at 12:24 PM

ANKARA, Turkey, Feb. 18 (UPI) -- There's no chance the Turkish government will pardon jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, said Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag.

A pro-Kurdish group took out an advertisement in British newspaper The Guardian advocating freedom for Ocalan, the leader of the Kurdistan Workers' Party jailed since 1999.

Bozdag said the ad undermined renewed efforts to find a solution to the Kurdish issue. The separatist group, known by its Kurdish initials PKK, has fought the Turkish government to gain more recognition for Kurdish rights.

The deputy prime minister said Ocalan's freedom "will not and cannot happen," reports Turkish daily Today's Zaman.

Turkey recently reached out to Ocalan to find a solution to a crisis brewing since the 1980s. The peace process comes after the killing of three high-ranking members of the separatist movement in early January in Paris.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said there is no justification for terrorism in Turkey but the government was committed to peace initiatives with the PKK.

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Turkey rules out freedom for PKK leader

Frustration in the Environment of Freedom

In the past decade and a half, demands for freedom in the Arab Middle East underwent several stages and headlines, with varying degrees of importance and scope: From the Damascus Spring to the ouster of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, and from the Qamishli uprising to March 14 in Lebanon, leading to the epic culmination that is the Syrian revolution.

Among its many attributes, this trend was opening a new path in both visions and perceptions: For it appeared that freedom was a necessary pre-condition for all policies, and that every other goal, be it leftwing, rightwing, socialist, or liberal came second.

Yet there is no doubt that the environment of freedom, which celebrated those transformations, is suffering from some frustration these days. In Iraq, the demand for freedom was infected with sectarian and ethnic splits whose early signs were not at all invisible. In Lebanon, on a smaller and less dramatic scale, it has been revealed that March 14 was nothing but a federacy of sects that, in exceptional circumstances, took upon itself a nationwide rallying mission. In Syria, the revolution has intersected with civil strife and a regional crisis that have weakened the glow of freedom as a question that transcends sects and ethnicities.

Many things can be said about each one of those cases, when taken separately. But what is common among them all, and which explains much of the present frustration, is the fact that the peoples of our region were not prepared to recognize themselves as projects for the future projects that may succeed or may fail, but which definitely did not materialize as peoples and homelands.

If freedom is the first fundamental condition for politics, then national identity is the second one. Indeed it, among other things, gives freedom its direction and prevents it from turning into civil conflict.

This lack of preparation is the result of collusion among different ideological and political schools, some in contradiction with one another, but which all presented us in a false guise. The ideological lines of the traditional regimes, which stood before the era of military coups, told us that we were homelands and peoples with flags, national anthems and seats at the United Nations. Then came the military ideologies, which dealt with those givens as though they were axiomatic, and took us towards calls for unity within broader frameworks.

Liberal and socialist factions did not deviate from the hypothesis that they were dealing with true homelands-peoples, so it was sufficient for them to topple a tyrannical clique (in the view of the liberals) or a greedy one (in the view of the socialists) to propel to the surface what is best in the homeland and the people.

They were all in agreement over denying divisions and attributing them either to the colonial powers, or to a lack of education and consciousness and so on. They maintained that examining the roots of these divisions and their manifestations bordered on treason, or in the most polite of terms, orientalism. The logical conclusion was that each ideology proposed itself as the last savior with which the homeland and the people may finally fulfill themselves.

This is while bearing in mind that the history of our region, since it came into contact with modern ideologies, reveals that these ideologies only reflect and modernize deeper civil divisions, leaving some individuals to express their moods and tastes through them.

Today, more than ever, it is clear that without settling the two issues of freedom and the formation of the nation-state, politics remain a verbal game played in the stoppage time between two bloody times. If this is correct, then the demand for freedom must be coupled with the demand for a national identity to depart from a negative outcome that no longer affords cosmetic or fraudulent treatments. This may ease the feeling of frustration with freedom when its path stumbles, and may help it in the future to avoid deviating from its desired destination.

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Frustration in the Environment of Freedom

Unbridled freedom of alternative media harmful – Mahathir

KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 17 (Bernama) -- The freedom offered by the alternative media via the internet has given rise to situations where lies can be made to seem like the truth and vice versa.

Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said just about anyone can post anything they like to say on the internet directly with no managers, editors or sub-editors changing any of the contents.

"Abusive language and racist remarks have also caused increased tension within society. Allegations of all kinds are made without any bases. Now, we're seeing doctored video clips being put out on YouTube," he said on his blog.

He alluded to the one showing Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak asking the audience in Penang recently whether they were ready for Barisan Nasional (BN), drawing what appeared to be cries of "No" from the crowd.

"It has been found that this was engineered by bringing a group into the crowd, equipping them with video cameras and microphones. When the PM asked 'Are you ready for BN', this group shouted 'No' in response.

"It seems that the whole audience shouted 'No'. Actually only one group shouted 'No' into their microphones. The 'Yes' from the big crowd was not recorded and not included in the video on YouTube," Dr Mahathir said.

"Immediately this particular recording was put on YouTube and it went viral. Eventhough the video by others showing the crowd raising their hands and saying 'Yes' was later put on YouTube, many do not bother to see it. They continue to believe in the fake video clips."

Noting that this was the direct result of the freedom offered by the alternative media, he said: "The freedom is almost total."

Dr Mahathir said the first people to exercise this freedom were purveyors of pornography who completely undermined the moral of children and young people.

"There can be no doubt that the increase in sex crimes such as rape, child abuse, extramarital sex among young people, pregnancies, illegal abortions, dumping of unwanted babies in rubbish heaps are partly due to access to pornography."

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New Freedom Party aims to usher in first woman president of South Africa

THE National Freedom Party (NFP), which will hold its second-year celebration in Durban this month, wants its president Zanele kaMagwaza-Msibi to be the first female president of South Africa next year, secretary-general Nhlanhla Khubisa said on Monday.

The NFP, started by Ms kaMagwaza-Msibi after she walked out of the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) as its national chairperson, startled political analysts in 2011 by becoming South Africas fourth-biggest party.

Some analysts have again predicted the end of the NFP after a poor showing at recent by-elections suggested that rumoured political infighting and lack of funds may be affecting its operations.

"Contrary to what the prophets of doom have predicted, the NFP grows stronger every day," Mr Khubisa said on Monday.

Ms kaMagwaza-Msibi said they applauded academic Mamphela Rampheles initiative to form a new party, but the NFP was not threatened by the move.

Ms kaMagwaza-Msibi said Dr Ramphele might attract support from academic circles and middle and higher income earners, but she did not have grass-roots support.

Ms kaMagwaza-Msibi said Dr Rampheles party and the NFP would pick up new support from people outside the African National Congress (ANC) who did not want to be part of the political coalitions that the other opposition parties were involved with.

Ms kaMagwaza-Msibi said they no longer relied on the outcome of by-elections as an indicator of support due to "shenanigans" that took place during local elections such as the paying and bussing in of voters.

"We will be judged by the national and provincial election in 2014. We are growing in all areas," she said.

Mr Khubisa said the recent defection to the NFP of former IFP deputy chairman Stanley Dladla was an example of how the party was growing. He had brought with him 2,500 new NFP members from uThukela District, KwaZulu-Natal.

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New Freedom Party aims to usher in first woman president of South Africa