jojzii:

indians-vs-cowboys:

On Friday, June 3rd, 2011, in the northern village of Duraz, Bahrain, people gathered to listen to Sheikh Issa Qassem, Bahrain’s senior Shiite cleric. Qassem, who called for the U.S.-backed Bahraini monarchy to free political prisoners, said state repression will only deepen differences that will become more complicated every day. The majority of Bahrain’s population are Shia Muslims but the ruling monarchy is Sunni and closely aligned with the United States. The U.S.-allied Bahraini government has brutally suppressed (1, 2) the popular movements of February and March 2011, as predicted by activists in an Al Jazeera video report at that time. Servants of U.S. power are “fearful that a victorious Shia majority in Bahrain could embolden Saudi Arabia’s own Shiite minority in nearby oil-rich Eastern Province.” (Michael Birnbaum / Washington Post)  (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

LOL! Most of Bahrainis are Sunni Muslims. Get your facts straight. 

This person - http://jojzii.tumblr.com - is spreading misinformation. The majority of Bahrain is Shia Muslim, exactly as stated in the original post. This is not a controversial fact. Just put the words ‘Bahrain’ and ‘majority’ and ‘Shia’ in google and anyone can see numerous mainstream sources noting the simple fact that Bahrain’s majority is Shia Muslim. Then put the words ‘Bahrain’ and ‘majority’ and ‘Sunni’ in google and you will see again from numerous mainstream sources the simple fact that Sunni Muslims are NOT the majority.

jojzii:

indians-vs-cowboys:

On Friday, June 3rd, 2011, in the northern village of Duraz, Bahrain, people gathered to listen to Sheikh Issa Qassem, Bahrain’s senior Shiite cleric. Qassem, who called for the U.S.-backed Bahraini monarchy to free political prisoners, said state repression will only deepen differences that will become more complicated every day. The majority of Bahrain’s population are Shia Muslims but the ruling monarchy is Sunni and closely aligned with the United States. The U.S.-allied Bahraini government has brutally suppressed (1, 2) the popular movements of February and March 2011, as predicted by activists in an Al Jazeera video report at that time. Servants of U.S. power are “fearful that a victorious Shia majority in Bahrain could embolden Saudi Arabia’s own Shiite minority in nearby oil-rich Eastern Province.” (Michael Birnbaum / Washington Post)
(AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

LOL! Most of Bahrainis are Sunni Muslims. Get your facts straight. 

This person - http://jojzii.tumblr.com - is spreading misinformation. The majority of Bahrain is Shia Muslim, exactly as stated in the original post. This is not a controversial fact. Just put the words ‘Bahrain’ and ‘majority’ and ‘Shia’ in google and anyone can see numerous mainstream sources noting the simple fact that Bahrain’s majority is Shia Muslim. Then put the words ‘Bahrain’ and ‘majority’ and ‘Sunni’ in google and you will see again from numerous mainstream sources the simple fact that Sunni Muslims are NOT the majority.

(via jojzii-deactivated20110729-deac)

August 2008: “the king [Bahrain’s King Hamad] describes his time at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College as ‘the most personally and professionally rewarding of his life.’” (link)

December 2009: “Crown Prince Salman received his high school education at the DOD school in Bahrain and earned a BA from American University in 1985. He is very Western in his approach…” (link)

US embassy cables released by wikileaks

politicaldove asked: I find it incomprehensible how the world is sat doing nothing. Everyone's so caught up in bureaucracy that the Middle East and North Africa situation is completely ignored.

Japan's calls were answered in an instant and rightly-so but this is evidence of the Western double standards we have. It's sickening. Heart goes out to not only the Bahrainis, Yemenis, Japanese and Libyans but also the Palestinians who get roughed about every single day of their lives.

U.S. citizens are largely responsible for the situation of Bahrainis, Yemenis, and Palestinians, because the U.S. provides the decisive support for their oppression. U.S. responsibility in Libya is more limited and obviously the U.S. is not responsible for earthquakes or tsunamis. So it makes sense that the current Japanese situation gets the most attention, followed by Libya, while Bahrainis, Yemenis, and Palestinians are ignored. This distribution of attention follows logically from a strict policy of ignoring one’s responsibilities.

Insults to your intelligence

Ethan Bronner (New York Times): version 1 / version 2
Michael Birnbaum (Washington Post): version 1 / version 2
Foreignpolicy.com: story 1 / story 2

rafastarisativa: indians-vs-cowboys:

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates meets with Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa at Sakhir Palace in Manama, Bahrain, on March 12th, 2011, as protests against the king continue.  (Photo AFP/Mandel Ngan)  See also: 1, 2.

rafastarisativa: indians-vs-cowboys:

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates meets with Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa at Sakhir Palace in Manama, Bahrain, on March 12th, 2011, as protests against the king continue.
(Photo AFP/Mandel Ngan)
See also: 1, 2.