http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFd31vWO920&feature=related
Sunday, 18 March 2012
class on 19th march, 2012
article-
http://ibtokwithrajashree.wikispaces.com/19th+March+2012
article-
http://ibtokwithrajashree.wikispaces.com/19th+March+2012
Do you think the decisions taken by a person are governed by the rules of the country to which we belong? How would you compare such a situation in your country?
Freedom for different people means different things. We humans are identical in the properties we posses, but what our brains thinks makes us different.
For me freedom is is the basic condition for you to touch life, to touch the blue sky, the trees, the birds, the tea, and the other person. But what if it is taken away from you? Spending the years of life would become impossible. But Iranians have accepted the things and now live their lives as slaves of government.
In our today’s TOK class we came across a very shocking but true news. We belong to a country where there in so restrictions to what you wear, where you go, with whom you go, irrespective of your gender. Having restrictions on these things was alright if it was 18th century. But today the scenario is different, everybody wants his/her own space. Today parent’s restrictions are a burden, how can you bare them on you when they come from government? Who are they to decide whom to go with, what to wear? It was alright if it was same for the whole world, but when it is about a single country, and only some people have to bare them, their life becomes more difficult.
All the citizens are frustrated, but keep their voices inside their hearts, which is the only reason of their suffering. Iran is country which is highly disregarded due to its strict rules and regulations. “Since 1999, Iran has been listed by the U.S. State Department as a country of particular concern because of its disregard for religious freedom. Although the Iranian constitution lists Christianity as a “protected religion” that is due respect, Christians—along with other religious minorities—experience quite the opposite. Religious minorities in Iran report “government imprisonment, harassment, intimidation and discrimination based on their religious beliefs,” according to State’s International Religious Freedom Report, released in September. Since June 2010, “more than 250 Christians have been arbitrarily arrested,” USCIRF adds….
Religious freedom is the birthright of every man and woman. Yet more than 60 years after nations around the world affirmed this truth, too few governments around the world acknowledge it. And far too many people never have enjoyed it.”
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