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FREEDOM FROM FEAR
Today
In Myanmar 🇲🇲
The military and police shot protesters,who are protesting peacefully in streets with fire hoses.
A few of them got injuries.
Please,don’t turn a blind eye to Myanmar people who want Democracy and freedom like you, me, and all of us.
#WhathappeninginMyanmar
#Feb8Coup

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#DearWorld,
There is no differences between 1988 & 2021. Myanmar turned dark again.
People are still protest the military dictatorship and coup in Myanmar.
We were not talking about Party politic.
We are protesting as a Myanmar citizen to release coup and return back our freedom and democracy.
#FailDictatorship
#AgainstCoup
#FreedomDemocracy
#HearOurVoicesOfMyanmar

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Dear World,
Myanmar has gone dark.
Just 6 days after Myanmar military has seized control of the country in a coup and detaining the country's leader Aung San Suu Kyi and the democratically-elected leaders while making up charges to hold them, Myanmar has now gone dark. First, the military stopped the use of Facebook where Myanmar civilians have been sharing news and Civil Disobediemce Campaigns. Now, the military has completely shut down the internet, cutting off the country from the rest of the world.
Civil disobedience campaigns have spreaded across the country, with health professionals being at the forefront of it. Myanmar civilians are fighting peacefully for the end to military dictatorship once and for all. We are all fighting peacefully for democracy.
The pans and pots bearing campaign is still going on every night at 8 pm to show rejection to the coup. In Myanmar tradition, pots and pans are banged to drive evil from your home.
May the World know that we are resisting the coup and fighting back peacefully.
Please help Myanmar by calling your Govenrment and your representatives to take immediate and swift actions toward these military junta.
#crd
#savemyanamar
#rejectmilitarycoupmyanmar
#HearTheVoiceOfMyanmar
Crd:
#HearTheVoiceOfMyanmar
#FightForDemocracy
#WhatsHappeningInMyanmar
#revolution
#CivilDisobedienceMyanmarChallenge
#FreeOurLeaders
#saynotomyanmarmilitarycoup
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Dear friends from abroad, we might lose our internet connection completely in the next few hours. Please speak louder for us. Please Raise you voices. We will continue to do the civil disobedience with or without the internet connection. May the dictatorship be fallen.
#HerethevoiceofMyanmar
#WeneedDemocracy










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If you do not hear from us in the next few hours or the next day, please know that the military has cut off the internet connectivity and taken our freedom of speech away as well.
We as a citizen of Myanmar not agree with the current move and would like to request the world leaders. UN and the world media help our country- our leaders- our people - from this bitter acts. We want democracy and want our country to develop as our neighbouring countries.







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I apologize for the unrelated tags but I’m trying to get as much exposure out there as possible
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Please Hear us , All social Media Apps (Facebook , Twitter , Instagram and Messenger) got banned in Myanmar. They blocked all our ways to speak out our voices . please hear us FREEDOM FROM FEAR
#HearTheVoiceOfMyanmar
#WeNeedDemocracy



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just the fact that the myanmar military is doing such a thing in such a critical time of covid-19 just goes to show how little they care about the civilians.
social media is powerful instrument in our fight for our country and for our rights. please share and spread awareness !! every reblog counts.
if you would like to know more about what’s been happening in myanmar, please visit this link: it also includes petitions (although i am unsure about their effectiveness but every little help is so so appreciated).
also please watch this video and this video to gain more insights about the situation and as to why we cannot let the military rule our country. again.
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I’m so sorry it’s disorganised but this is the best I can do before they take away our WiFi
Edit: Alright so slight connection and update. The military’s gonna be in power for one year now? And I don’t know that’s just disgusting honestly. Also by the way the pictures I have posted in this post are from Twitter written by someone not me. By disorganised I meant I didn’t have the time to arrange the pictures in order because my WiFi got taken away. Unfortunately, I do not know the name of the account who wrote this as I was in a hurry to post this so yes 😔
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Celebrities Who Support Civil Disobedience Movement in Myanmar
🇲🇲♥️👏
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If the coup provokes some surprise given how much power the military already held, it is also unsurprising for precisely that reason: it was already clear that in the last instance, it is the military that holds sway. The coup simply codifies, as it entrenches, existing power relations. This position might be most obvious from the perspective of Myanmar’s borderlands, where ethnic minority groups have been subject to ruthless counterinsurgency campaigns for decades. Saw Kwe Htoo Win, vice chairperson of the Karen National Union, had this to say: “No matter if the military stages a coup or not, the power is already in their hands. For us ethnic nationalities, whether the National League for Democracy is in power or the military takes power, we are still not part of it. Our people are the ones who will continue to suffer from this chauvinism.”
This perspective has another angle. The assumed relay between political and economic openness—the favored subject of think-tank transitologists—no longer looks so clear. Instead, we see a decades-long capitalist transition intertwined with a variety of political forms, from dictatorship to dyarchy to dictatorship again. Even a brief glance at Myanmar’s neighbors—China, Thailand, Singapore—underlines the reality that capitalism hardly guarantees democratization.
A certain configuration of bourgeois power stands out here. In both Myanmar and Greater China, for instance, a centralized state apparatus—the military on one hand, a party-state bureaucracy on the other—has navigated a tense relationship with separate bourgeois fractions, some of which are politically liberal and more connected to Western capital. What does it mean to break this alignment? In Myanmar, the military will no longer have the same access to Western capital. Still, Myanmar’s long capitalist transition was always fueled far more by capital from East and Southeast Asia, ranging from its flickering garment sector to its growing agro-industries and major forms of resource extraction (namely oil and gas, especially offshore gas reserves now flowing to Thailand and Malaysia—and dual oil and gas pipelines flowing to Yunnan). Thus, in many ways, the core conditions of capital accumulation remain in place, even if the domestic liberal bourgeoisie faces greater exclusion from its spoils. Semi-subsistence agriculture will continue to erode in Myanmar’s vast rural areas and mountainous borderlands as low-wage, precarious labor expands in urban centers.
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I'm from Myanmar(Bumar).We need for your help and support.
#HerethevoiceofMyanmar
#WeneedDemocracy




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