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Child Abuse and California Computer Coolie Cabal

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May 22, 2000, 3:00:00 AM5/22/00
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Strange as it sounds, it is true that Hindu criminal conspiracy and acts
of vandalism, terrorism, lawless attitudes and desperate deeds, make them
misdeeds are being conducted in America, right from the fake, front Hindu
organizations one one or other kind under the protection of anonymity, even
as we speak.

As much as Nitin Batra is right in bringing this issue to the fore as to
whether putting all computer professionals in one basket is a good or bad
idea as few of them may be closely or remotely connected with criminal acts,
I feel it is incumbent upon us to find who they are and how they operate.

The leaders like Dr. Jai Maharaj do scoping, initial research and leg work
and provide pointers, schemes, diagrams and detailed plans to commit crime.
A group of RSS volunteers carry out the instructions according to their own
discretion.

The fact that Dr. Jai Maharaj's orders are obeyed and actions pursuant to
the directions are carried out is a proof enough of this Hindu, Brahmin
Mafia, RSS conspiracy to commit crimes.

Child abuse is neither new nor it is practiced only in India. These
newsgroup discussions never take global positions unless Brahmin boys want
to globalize an issue which happens to relate only to India.

One responsible UN dignitary has this to say about child abuse in Hindu
India.

"Child prostitution is the ultimate denial of the rights of the child."

(Dr Jon E Rhode, UNICEF representative in India).

Naz provided this information when she posted following article.

Date: Thursday, February 17, 2000

naz...@my-deja.com posted following interesting information. Thanks Naz.
INDIA SHOULD GIVE DIGNITY TO ITS PEOPLE NOT THE NUKES !!!!!!

CHILD PROSTITUTION IN INDIA (February 1999)

India's 944 580 000 inhabitants live in an area of 3 287 590 km². Almost a
quarter of this total are under eighteen years of age. 25% of the population
live in urban areas and this is estimated to be growing annually at just
over 1%. Over population and lack of education in nutrition and health
contribute to

the deaths of around 11 000 children each day. In 1951, 164 million Indians
were living in poverty compared to 312 million in 1993-94.

70 000 to 100 000 children are estimated to work as prostitutes in India.
Recent reports estimate that the number of children involved in prostitution
is

increasing at 8 to10% per annum.

About 15% of the prostitutes in Mumbai (Bombay), Delhi, Madras, Calcutta,
Hyderabad and Bangalore are children. It is estimated that 30% of the
prostitutes in these six cities are under 20 years of age. Nearly half of
them became commercial sex workers when they were minors. Conservative
estimates state that around 300 000 children in India are suffering
commercial sexual abuse, which includes working in pornography.

Here is another source of valid, scientific proof, a scientific study of
child abuse in all the countries of the world, including India.

http://www.focalpointngo.org/DOCS/98_0013_uk.html

J. Warburton and M. T. Camacho de la Cruz state in their long report that
India's prostitution trade willfully and knowingly engage children in
prostitution. The Naz numbers are vindicated by this scientific report.

"Nepal, (1996) 100,000 - 200,00 girls trafficked, CWIN, Nepal"
"India, 25% of the estimated 2 million prostitutes thought to be minors -
Government statistic."

Both Nepal and India are Hindu majority countries.

Hindu hoodlums, against this massive evidence are doing what about this
carcinogenic problem?

Nothing, period.

Who are these bastards who are denying the reality? I have said many times
how bad they are. Let us take a third party view.

Robert Marquand

Staff writer The Christian Science Monitor

NEW DELHI

As President Clinton flies to South Asia on Sunday for the first official
visit by a US president to the region in 22 years, he is coming to a
troubled part of the world that is searching for new identities.

It is a world struggling mightily between 14th-century feudalism and
21st-century culture. Nor is it clear which is winning.

Powerful new strains of fundamentalism are rising in South Asia. Every
morning in India, for example, in some 45,000 shakhas, or outdoor
gatherings, rows of young, khaki-clad Hindu cadres exercise in tandem to a
song that goes, "Hindu tan-man, Hindu jeevan," which means "Hindu body and
mind, Hindu life." It's lyricist: Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee.

Across the border in Pakistan, similar cultural dynamics are at play. The
Supreme Court ruled in January that Pakistan must "Islamize" its economy and
end in one year the practice of riba, or interest-based financing, which the
Koran prohibits.

Much of the White House trip to India, Bangladesh, and in a brief stopover
in Pakistan, will focus on how South Asia is "globalizing," and creating new
markets. President Clinton will visit the gleaming, wired HiTech City in
Hyderabad where Microsoft founder Bill Gates opened his company's first
offshore development office. Mr. Clinton will also visit villages in
Bangladesh and Rajasthan state in India, where an increasing number of women
are taking up leadership roles.

Rising fundamentalism

Yet in India, and more acutely in Pakistan, the dominant cultural trend -
and the main story, in recent years - is not the ascendency of Western
liberalism, or secular niceties.

After the cold war, and partly due to a vacuum created by the end of
competing ideologies, the Indian subcontinent is witnessing a powerful rise
in popular fundamentalist identity movements, analysts say. Indicator after
indicator - from school curricula, to middle class attitudes, to local laws
on religious freedom, to artistic expression and political rhetoric - shows
a more authoritarian and less-tolerant tenor.

India, last visited by President Jimmy Carter, is no longer the pacifist,
nonaligned state fathered by Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, the first
prime minister. It's BJP-led government is a proud offshoot of the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a Hindu nationalist group that regards India as a
holy land that has been victimized by outsiders and must reassert its
greatness.

For the first time, orange-clad Hindu sadhus or holy men, can be seen in
Parliament. Reports last week noted that a new book by Dara Singh, the
recently arrested extremist who killed an Australian Christian missionary in
Orissa last year, is selling briskly. Mr. Singh is seen as a hero to many
young Hindu villagers in the eastern India.

Pakistan, last visited by President Richard Nixon, is no longer a moderate
military regime. The current regime boosted the orthodox Taliban movement in
Afghanistan; the No. 2 in Pakistan's military regime, Gen. Mohammad Aziz, is
regarded as an Islamic visionary. Spiritual leaders like Mufti Sham Zai, the
leader of the Benari Mosque in Karachi and the teacher of Taliban leader
Mullah Mohammed Omar, are known to have far more grass-roots power in
setting the agenda in Pakistan than a host of civil ministers.

Experts point out that no region as vibrant and diverse as South Asia can be
reduced to the intensities of its more-extreme politics. Inventive Indians
make up 30 percent of the software engineers on the planet. Bombay is a city
of fashion designers and financiers. Next month, the American cable network
HBO will make its debut in South Asia; Rupert Murdoch, who has been
traveling through India for the past week, described to local press of the
"burst of energy" he feels in India since his last trip eight years ago.

Commenting about White House statements on the enormous talents of Indians,
but the devastating tensions in the region, Rajiv Desai, author of a new
book on Indian business culture, says the US will "play an active role in
the subcontinent where governments, egged on by religious fundamentalists on
both sides, have upped the ante by resorting to tit-for-tat nuclear
explosions."

Indeed, in a country of a billion people, most Indians are more worried
about pollution, dirty water, corruption, and making enough money to buy
bread - than they are about "cultural nationalism," as the recent trend is
sometimes called.

Still, many more lower- and middle-class Indians are sending their children,
for example, to RSS schools. In one RSS school visited recently in Delhi, a
fifth-grade text argues that Indian Vedic heritage thrived until the Muslims
arrived in AD 1200. However, prize-winning scholars here rebut such notions.
The Vedic glory period faded by 200 BC, more than a thousand years earlier,
they state. Yet in the growing network of "saffron schools" in India today,
such ideas are gospel.

More significant in the past month has been the attempt of two influential
state governments to lift a ban that forbids government employees from being
members of the RSS. For years, government servants in India have not been
allowed to join either the Muslim Jamait-e-Islami or the Hindu RSS, on
grounds that the groups create communal hatred and problems of bias among
members.

Laws withdrawn

Yet in January and February, the federal government in Delhi nearly came to
a standstill when the states of Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh, for the first
time ever, passed laws allowing RSS membership for government employees.
When Prime Minister Vajpayee attempted to define the RSS as a cultural
organization, not a religious one, his ruling coalition members threatened
to create trouble. The laws were eventually withdrawn.

Not to be fundamentally outdone, Pakistan's chief executive, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, has been publicly legitimizing the Islamic view of jihad in the
disputed region of Kashmir.

Given that both India and Pakistan now have nuclear weapons, some
commentators argue that the United States must play a greater role in
cooling tensions, and bringing out the best in both states.

Sid Harth..."Criminal acts of vandalism, hatred, campaigns of denial,
misinformation, propaganda, vilification are all noted, marked and archived,
where are these nasty Hindu hoodlums are going to hide?"

http://www.allindiaserver.com/

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