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Adam K., Pekan Tutong: "Women overall are losers in feminism. Women have an emotional need for a male partner who is their life-long protector. By making women independent from and equal to men, feminism undermines the logic for such relationships that fulfill the emotional needs of women. Feminism makes men playboys because anyway, their responsibility is not needed."

Kvinder generelt er tabere i feminisme. Kvinder har en følelsesmæssig behov for en mandlig partner, der er deres livslange beskytter. Ved at gøre kvinderne uafhængige af og lige til mænd, undergraver feminisme den logik for sådanne forhold, der opfylder følelsesmæssige behov for kvinder. Feminisme gør mænd playboys, fordi alligevel, deres ansvar er ikke nødvendig.




Brunei
The power of the Sultanate of Brunei was at its peak from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries. The Sultanate's suzerainty is thought to have extended over the coastal regions of modern-day Sarawak and Sabah, the Sulu archipelago, and the islands off the northwest tip of Borneo. European influence gradually brought an end to this regional power. Later, there was a brief war with Spain, in which Brunei's capital was occupied. Eventually the sultanate was victorious but lost territories to Spain. The decline of the Bruneian Empire culminated in the nineteenth century when Brunei lost much of its territory to the White Rajahs of Sarawak, resulting in its current small landmass and separation into two parts. Brunei was a British protectorate from 1888 to 1984, and occupied by Japan from 1941 to 1945 during World War II.

There was a small rebellion against the monarchy during the 1960s, which was suppressed with help from the United Kingdom. This event became known as the Brunei Revolt and was partly responsible for the failure to create the North Borneo Federation. The rebellion partially affected Brunei's decision to opt out of the Malaysian Federation.


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Brunei / Geography

Brunei's land area covers 5,765 sq km, located 443 km north of the Equator. Facing the South China Sea and Borneo's northwestern shore sharing a common border with the East Malaysian state of Sarawak.

The country is divided into four districts: Brunei-Muara, Temburung, Tutong and Balait.

From the capital, Bandar Seri Begawan. the coastal oil and gas towns of Seria and Kuala Belait are about 100 km.



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However, even while a large number of young women in Third World countries may, in principle, agree with this assessment, they more often than not make the wrong decisions.

         
  
 
Copyright: Craig Kluster
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