Posted on 05/18/2008 2:38:06 PM PDT by forkinsocket
I prefer my culture, but I do appreciate that there is one place in the world that has not utterly succomed to modernist politically correct situational ethics. You know these people are Hindu fundamentalists, and while it does offend my Western sensibilities to kill the unborn child and the two lovers, they are maintaining their ethical code. A code which is thousands of years old and has allowed their culture to flourish for most of that period.
Here NOTHING is forbidden. Nothing is even shameful. I went to read the synopsis of the Tia Tequila reality show. The plot line is basically she is a bi-sexual slut and uses little contests to pick who she is going to bestow her sexual favors on next. This is a cable show, apparently.
Look where we’ve come. I’m not quite 50. This was unimaginable to be ON TV when I was a kid. Can this possibly continue. What next, hardcore sex in commercials? A beastiality reality TV show?
No one stands up for any social norms in the USA. A wee bit more real outrage might not be a bad thing.
I’m certainly not going to tell Indian peasants how to respond to incest in their midst.
I see many people on FR suggesting a quick hanging for child molesters and rapists. Essentially these people have done what the blow-hards here always say shoudl be done: are they really now savages?
This makes me realize even moreso how blessed I was to have the parents I had. I miss them both very much.
is this one of those “guess the religion” articles? like the youths in France...
they’re similar to those “guess the political party” articles when a democrat is caught...
BLOODY SAVAGES!!
):^(
I don’t believe these people are Muslims because of the last name of one of them: Singh. They are Sikhs I guess.
I suppose it means that I guessed incorrectly then...why did I have to guess in the first place?
It was at the Karnal Flying Club that Kalpana Chawla, a native of the city, first became interested in flying. Ms Chawla went on to complete her engineering degree at Punjab Engineering College and later become the first Indian origin woman to fly in space. She died in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster of 2003.
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