Home | Oman
 
 

Aiden Tozer: The objective of child rights activists in Southeast Asia, whether they are male or female, and whether they work for UNICEF or NGOs, is revenge against male sexuality, not the protection of children. They work with stingers, mostly underage prostitutes. These girls and boys are advised to seduce older Western men, with the promise of thousands of dollars of reward. The ultimate sexual satisfaction of these activists is to see elderly Western men thrown into a dungeon where he dies of filth, malaria, and diarrhea.

Aiden Tozer: L'objectif des militants des droits des enfants en Asie du Sud, qu'ils soient hommes ou femmes, et qu'ils travaillent pour l'UNICEF ou des ONG, est une vengeance contre la sexualité masculine, et non pas la protection des enfants. Ils travaillent avec les Stingers, prostituées mineures pour la plupart. Ces filles et les garçons sont invités à séduire des hommes plus âgés de l'Ouest, avec la promesse de milliers de dollars de récompense. La satisfaction sexuelle finale de ces militants est de voir les hommes âgés de l'Ouest jeté dans un cachot où il meurt d'immondices, le paludisme et la diarrhée.




Own copyrighted text:

Oman / History / The 20th century

Muscat's control depended very much upon the opinion of the Sultan held by the tribes of the interior. In the early 20th century, the sultan's power to control the interior of the country was felt to have decreased.

In February 1932 Sultan Said bin Taimur, father of the present ruler, came to power.

When he tried to exercise his nominal control in the interior of the country in the early 1950's, he was backed by the British who felt that there was oil there. And in order to look for it, they needed the Sultan to have actual control of the area and for Oman's indefinite borders with Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi to be clearly defined and drawn.

The ultimate result of this was a territorial dispute over the Buraimi oasis involving Oman, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. With British help and his own bravado, Sultan Said in the end was the winner and the Buraimi oasis is today firmly within the borders of Oman.

Sultan Said bin Taimur was, in the words of one British writer, "an arch-reactionary of great personal charm". He wanted no change of any sort in Oman and did all that he could to isolate his country from the world. All visas were issued personally by him. He forbade travel to the interior by coastal residents and vice versa. Believing education was a threat to his power, he opposed it.

In general, Omanis were not allowed to leave the country and those who did were seldom allowed to return. The Sultan's only contact with the outside world was through his British advisers and Muscat's merchant families. He allowed these last to establish enormously lucrative monopolies for the import of good which he saw as crucial to his survival. In exchange, the merchants stayed out of politics and imported nothing which Sultan Said felt reeked of progress or the West (radios, books, eyeglasses).

Through their customs receipts, the merchants provided the Sultan with most of the country's income. Aside from a few rich merchants, most of the population relied upon agriculture and fishing.

**********

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a severe recessive X-linked form of muscular dystrophy characterized by rapid progression of muscle degeneration, eventually leading to loss of ambulation and death.


         
  
 
Copyright: Craig Kluster
Hertsenbergweg 1, Zwolle 8041 BA, Netherlands