#mayanmar
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sergeant-macho-nacho · 1 month ago
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She's literally wearing Neon Dayglo.
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adelbertvegyszerek · 2 years ago
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toaverse · 2 years ago
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debasishsinha · 2 years ago
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#DRDO has successfully conducted a night firing of an intercontinental nuclear capable ballistic missile #Agni5 tested for the first time at full operational range of 5,500km from #Odisha Reportedly this was visible from almost entire northeast part of India & #Bangladesh and #Mayanmar https://www.instagram.com/p/CmMytNdPbDG/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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world-of-wales · 1 year ago
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“…you lot just write whatever you feel like without any idea, context or effing knowledge.”
To be fair, you and your friends do the same. You often write things that aren’t factual, but rather your opinion which lacks context. I get your opposition to the use of the “police state” term, but anon isn’t wrong is saying that the protestors weren’t allowed to express themselves without restriction in England.
See as someone who studied all these things for the past 3 years and did my graduation dissertation on virtually the pretty same thing, about Military and Police Action and its affect on human rights around the world with a special focus on South Asia. Reading all these things do make me angry because people go and use such heavy terms to describe stuff which isn't at that level. This is my field of study and you better bet that I'm gonna go and criticize people for making statements which aren't true.
If you think that England is actually a police state then please go and spend some time in places like Afghanistan, go to mayanmar, heck go to parts of India even like Manipur which has been embroiled in a civil war between ethnic groups since the past two months. Those people live in police states, not someone living in Engalnd or the UK in general.
I never did say that I was happy with what happened to the protesters or the way new protest laws have been enacted in England. Still does not make it a 'Police State'. Maybe I should have added this part in my reblog yesterday and I was thinking about adding it in too.
Stuff happening in the UK affects me too since that's where my dad is from, where half of my family lives, where we spend our holidays, where I plan to setting down after everything.
I never have an issue with people expressing their opinions but I do have an issue with the way social media has made people start using these words like a way for people to make their opinion sound better. If you want to chat you can come off anon but I do stand by my official statement.
ALSO If you wanna chat, talk about me, with me. Don't drag my friends into this. Also would love to see where we were just spouting 'unfactual' things. Those are amazing amazing people and dont deserve to be dragged into a situation that they have no relation or concern with. So keep their name out of ur effing mouth.
THANK YOU NEXT!
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tummy-hurts · 5 months ago
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I just found out recently that Mayanmar's democracy was short lived and that there was a military coup three years ago, though there's been a resistance movement going on since then but they have no international support. I haven't seen any avenues for humanitarian aid donations I think
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buzz-london · 1 year ago
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Conflict Resolution through the Mahabharata!
War may be fought by men, but its victims are always women and children.
With all the advances we have made in science, technology, psychology, economics, architecture, art, literature, politics, we are still unable to live in peace. Sadly, in 2023, peace seems such a long way away in so many places on Earth.
Mahabharata, often associated with war, is actually an epic that advocates peace and gives different ways to resolve conflicts.
The epic starts with king Janmanjay initiating a yagna to perpetrate a genocide to wipe out snakes of all species. He was furious because his father was killed by a snake who wanted to exact a revenge for the death of his family and a massacre of snakes perpetrated by the king's great grandfather.
At the yagna, sage Vaishampayan recites the family history of Kurus to enlighten the king about the past and reveal that the harvest of hate is bitter.  Very bitter.  All those who wanted revenge, got what they wanted in some measure.  BUT, they had to pay a heavy price for their vengeance.  Most lost their lives, or someone they could not live without, to exact the revenge they so desperately craved.  So if anything, the epic tale teaches us that revenge is a poison not worth taking.
Killing only begets killing.
How many generations will this cycle of blood-feud continue?
How much generational trauma will it inflict?
How much pain will everyone suffer?
How many lives will be lost?
To what end?
Realising this, the epic ends with King Janmanjay stopping the genocidal yagna of snakes. At some point, someone has to end the cycle of hate. Someone has to get off their high horse and withdraw, making space for the other side to re-evaluate the situation and also stand down.
At some point, both sides will have to realise the cost of perpetuating this war is too high to pay. If that is inevitable, why not stop the war now? Why not bring it to an end and declare peace NOW?
The epic discusses many different types of peace treaties, including 'land for peace'. Mahabharat showcases treaties disguised as truce in a war, unequal treaties, unjust treaties, fair and equitable treaties too. Peace at any cost and peace that perpetuates prosperity for both sides are discussed in the epic.
How to resolve conflicts. Who to talk to. How to talk to 'who' to, to get the work done. How to effect change. How to make subtly make an impactful statement. When to speak and when to be silent. When to act and when to stand back - are all discussed in the Mahabharata in wonderful detail.
Within our lifetime, we have seen how Germans and Europeans who were at each other's throats made peace. They are both now prosperous.
Japanese and the west made peace. Both benefiting from it and both prospering as a result.
Closer to home, IRA and UK made peace. After 90 years of terrorising each other, the Queen herself, whose uncle was killed by the IRA, shook hands with them in 2012.
Let us hope the fighters in Mayanmar, Yemen, Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger Sudan, Ethiopia, DR Congo, Ukraine, Russia, Israel and Hamas realise this and stop their wars. For example, returning 200 hostages for the safety of 2 million is surely good maths!
Burying the hatchet is easier than burying your sons.
Notes -
Let us learn from the Mahabharata the futility of war and its terrible cost to us all - combatants and non-combatants. Mahabharata teaches this lesson by weaving a fantastic tapestry of many royal family histories, spread over many generations, across several cities across the Indian subcontinent, with numerous wars, marriage alliances, political intrigues and sprinkled with philosophical insights.
I have studied the Mahabharata epic in great detail, written over 40 articles on my website, published an e-book and conducted a 7 day katha to talk about its wonderful lessons. Here are links to these -
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0j1SRCBjx59RBamsd4_MhzwiXs7a00Jq (speech in Gujarati and English)
Current wars in 2023
10 Conflicts to Watch in 2023 | Crisis Group
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naturewingsholidaysltd · 1 year ago
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Amazing North East Package Tour with Manipur, Assam and Meghalaya
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Day Wise Assam Meghalaya Manipur Tour Package Itinerary :
Day 1 : Welcome to Manipur - Imphal Local Sightseeing Day 2 : Day Excursion to Loktak Lake, Ina Museum [45 Km / 2 Hrs / One Way] Day 3 : Day Excursion to Mayanmar via Moreh [110 Kms / 4 Hrs / Oneway] Day 4 : Fly to Guwahati and Proceed for Kaziranga Tour [190 Km / 5 Hrs] Day 5 : Kaziranga Elephant Safari + Jeep Safari [In Western Range and Central Range] Day 6 : Kaziranga to Shilong [250 Km / 6 Hrs] Day 7 : Full Day Shillong Local Sightseeing Day 8 : Day Trip to Mawlynnong and Dawki [5 Hrs] Day 9 : Shillong to Cherapunjee Tour [2 Hrs] Day 10 : Cherish Your Memories
North East Tour Package from Guwahati Inclusions :
All transfers in an exclusive non-ac vehicle Accommodation in best properties in mention places Breakfast only All permits and applicable taxes
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grahamstravelagency · 2 years ago
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Unprecedented, extraordinary. You’ll experience so much in Mayanmar, including Mt. Popa, just 50 km from Bagan. https://www.instagram.com/p/CpxpDgVOHag/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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kaalbela · 3 years ago
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Mayanmar, 1971.
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morbidmusingsblog · 4 years ago
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Irrawaddy delta in monsoon of 1980 ,Mayanmar
Photography -Hiroji Kubota
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adelbertvegyszerek · 2 years ago
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shivammisra · 6 years ago
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As the sun’s warmth caressed the land below, the stupa at the top of the mountain reminded me of that childhood fantasy of running up a mountain to reach the top and climb the lone tree that had a gigantic swing. All day long play with friends there and comeback at dusk. Stories from Bagan continue ......
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munsiaraf · 2 years ago
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Happy #worldchildrensday #munsiaraf #photography #JustBelieve #rohingyachildren #mayanmar #Bangladesh #children (at Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh) https://www.instagram.com/p/ClLVNA6vsdd/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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renugihar-globalpublisher · 2 years ago
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#oldbaganmyanmar #mayanmar https://www.instagram.com/p/CgqUma0sPMk/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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yotsubaandtheworld · 6 years ago
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There is a squirrel on the second picture, but... Idk where is it !!! (@_@)
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