- The Joint General & Special Election is November 4th;
- Become a Volunteer Deputy Voter Registrar;
- Charlie Kirk;
- Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District sent out this press release addressed to the CEOs;
- Ted Cruz compares FCC Chair [Brendan] Carr to Mafia boss in Jimmy Kimmel warnings;
- Harris County Flood Control District advances $3.5B in approved projects stemming from 2018 flood bond;
- Texas A&M President Mark A. Welsh III to step down after a week of turmoil over viral classroom video;
- Trump’s new detention policy targets millions of immigrants. Judges keep saying it’s illegal.;
Tag Archives: nazi germany
“The Real Turkish Heroes of 1915”, By Raffi Bedrosyan (The Armenian Weekly)
Genocide definitions, From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genocide is a word which I feel is much overused and, through overuse, is devalued. Yet there are real attempts at real Genocides.
Victims of historic wrongs are taught to remember those wrongs through the generations. That’s why learning real history, as objectively as possible, is important.
Jews are raised to be very aware of the Jewish genocide — the Holocaust — perpetrated by the Germans and others during World War 2. The word itself, “Genocide”, was invented in 1944 to describe the mass killings performed by the Nazis and their allies, but acts of genocide have long preceded the creation of the word.
Perhaps the earliest genocide of the 20th century occurred in the Ottoman Empire in 1915, during the First World War, and its victims were the Armenian people. Thus, it is now the 100th anniversary of this man-made tragedy and harbinger of things to come in our times.
The Armenians were not the first people to suffer a genocide, and the Jews were not the last. In fact, the genocides and attempts at genocide within the past hundred years are so numerous as to make us despair for the allegedly ‘civilized’ nature of humankind.
And yet, just as we try to remember the victims of genocides and the perpetrators, we should also remember those who attempted to resist the local insanity of their nation or region. In Nazi Germany and its occupied territories, they became known as “The Righteous Gentiles”, and later remembered more generally as “The Righteous Among Nations” in order to credit the many national, ethnic, political and religious groups to which they and those like them, before and since, belonged.
Below is an article I found from 2013 which recalls that there were Ottomans — Turks and Muslims, officials and private citizens — who attempted to resist the tide of murder and mayhem all around them at the risk of everything, including their own lives.
They are the few, if not enough, who remind us that some men and women are courageous and selfless enough ‘in the moment’ to do what most of us would not … but wish and hope we would.
OTHER SOURCES OF INFORMATION:
- Armenian Genocide – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- “Righteous Among the Nations”: History & Overview (The Jewish Virtual Library)
- Armenians’ Schindler (in Turkish): Ermenileri kurtaran Kürt Schindler: Halep doğumlu Kürt bir Osmanlı subayı olan Cemil Könne, 1915’te görev yaptığı Birecik’te yüzlerce Ermeni sürgününü tersanesine işçi, usta olarak kaydederek ölümden kurtardı.
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The Real Turkish Heroes of 1915
By on July 29, 2013 Continue reading
New Show, Jan. 11: Is it time for a New World Order for making War and Peace?
I am excited to announce that I have been in contact with KPFT in Houston (90.1 FM), and I am currently scheduled to do a 25 minute show on Wednesday, January 11 (from 9:30-9:55 am CST) in their “Open Journal” slot.
The tentative subject of this interview will be, “The Brave New World of War & Peace: Is it time to agree on new rules?”
To my knowledge, the last time any nation declared war on any other was when the United States reciprocated Nazi Germany’s declaration of war on the U.S. (The Germans had declared war on the U.S. under their mutual defense treaty with Japan, following the U.S.’s declaration of war on Japan after Pearl Harbor.)
Since 1942, then, there have been plenty of wars and invasions, but no declarations of war between nations. Now the United States (and presumably others, now or in the future) are using covert ‘boots on the ground’ (e.g., Seal Team 6) or unmanned drones to attack and/or surveille opponents and potential adversaries.
What is the logical direction for this type of warfare to follow, what are its long-term implications for international relations, and what can or should be done to pro-actively control directions of this new future of war, peace, and the twilight in-between?
My scheduled guest is D.B. (David) Grady. David is an essayist, novelist, and a Correspondent for The Atlantic. He is a former paratrooper with U.S. Army Special Operations Command and a veteran of Afghanistan. He is currently co-authoring an examination of the secrecy apparatus of the United States, with Marc Ambinder. (John Wiley & Sons, 2012). The duo recently completed an e-book single for release next year. (John Wiley & Sons, 2012).
This should be an exciting show, about a topic which has rarely if ever been discussed. We will probably barely have time to scratch the surface of this subject, which we will no doubt re-visit.

