‘No matter what we call it, poison is still poison, death is still death, and industrial civilization is still causing the greatest mass extinction in the history of the planet.’
~ Derrick Jensen
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Posted by Sjur Cappelen Papazian on August 11, 2014
‘No matter what we call it, poison is still poison, death is still death, and industrial civilization is still causing the greatest mass extinction in the history of the planet.’
~ Derrick Jensen
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Posted by Sjur Cappelen Papazian on August 11, 2014
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Valeri Tolstov is a multi-instrumetnalist and composer that not only masters the flute and the organ but also plays keyboards, guitars and various ethnic wind instruments. His repertoire and performances differ in numerous mainstream projects and bands playing traditional classical music, contemporary music, folk, rock, fusion and jazz.
During his musical career Valeri has produced and participated in CD productions and cooperated with musicians like Serj Tankian, Tigran Hamasyan and many more. Valeri’s numerous performances on international musical festivals were transmitted on Radio and Television.
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Posted by Sjur Cappelen Papazian on August 11, 2014
Assyrian Priests (third and fourth from the left) pictured with some of the ANCA Eastern Region activists in attendance
Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region (ANCA ER) activists joined with leaders of the Assyrian, Chaldean, and Syriac communities to rally international support for ending targeted attacks against their brethren in Iraq and Syria during a peaceful protest held in front of the United Nations Headquarters in New York City.
Protest at United Nations calls on international community to stop violence in Syria and Iraq
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Posted by Sjur Cappelen Papazian on August 11, 2014
This week world leaders gathered in Europe to mark the centennial of the beginning of World War I. On this occasion, The New York Times has launched an interactive digital platform on its website chronicling the war, its aftermath and its ramifications on the world today.
In introducing “The Great War: A 100-Year Legacy of World War I,” The New York Times has not only tarnished its own legacy as our nation’s newspaper of record, it has also revised history—including its own—by omitting the Armenian Genocide from its historical timeline.
The New York Times’s World War I digital platform also features a map of the world after 1924. Interestingly, the map, which clearly shows the Soviet Union, also includes Georgia and Azerbaijan as countries in the Caucasus (no Armenia), despite the fact that the two countries were Sovietized in 1921 and 1920 respectively.
The New York Times Revises Its Own History by Omitting Genocide
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