so long as Vietnam continues to occupy Cambodia in violation of 10 UN 
resolutions 










AMERICAN PEOPLE ARE GOOD 
PEOPLE.
PRESIDENT NIXON IS A GOOD AMERICAN .
HOW ABOUT HENRY 
KISSINGER HIS ADVISOR ? A ZIONIST JEW FROM GERMANY ?

A ZIONIST JEW ?
A 
JEW ?
AN ORTHODOX JEW ?
A CHRISTIAN JEW ?

DATA ANALYSIS REVEALS 

BUT THIS ZIONIST JEW COMING FROM GERMANY IS A THIEF, A ROBBER, A 
DESTROYER OF THE KHMER PEOPLE, CAMBODIA.
HE IS ALSO THE ENEMY OF AMERICA AND 
THE ENEMY OF ALL CHRISTIAN JEWS AROUND THE WORLD. 
HIS NAME IS HENRY 
KISSINGER .

HE USED PRESIDENT NIXON AN AMERICAN PRESIDENT, THE AMERICAN 
PEOPLE 'S LOVE AND COMPASSION AS TOOL TO DESTROY THE KHMER RACE AND CAMBODIA
  

Cambodia had the B-52 carpet bombing oRDERED 
BY Henry Kissinger the devil from 1969-1975 FOR 14 
MONTHS.

 THE US 
B-52 BOMBERS RAINed  BOMBS FOR 14 MONTHS ON CAMBODIA A 
NEUTRAL COUNTRY, A UNITED NATIONS MEMBER COUNTRY 
 1969-1975 AND MURDER  600 
000  CAMBODIAN CIVILIANS.   
Kissinger, A ZIONIST 
JEW, HAPPY HERE (AFTER  he had ordered the bombing of cambodia with 600 
000 civilians dead ) 




REMEMBER 
THIS .?
Kissinger 
 THE FACE OF A DEMON.A 
ZIONIST JEW.  




SIDESHOW: KISSINGER, NIXON AND THE DESTRUCTION OF 
CAMBODIA .
SATAN Kissinger, in His Own Words "Military men are just dumb stupid animals to 
be used as pawns in 
foreign policy." - Henry Kissinger, quoted in 
"Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed Its Own POW's in 
Vietnam"





The US sellout of the KHMER PEOPLE IN CAMBODIA in 
1975, THROUGH SATAN HENRY KISSINGER.(CFR 
AGENT)  













Sideshow, Revised Edition: Kissinger, Nixon, and the 
Destruction of Cambodia. IT WAS KISSINGER WHO RUNS THE 
SHOW 







 
Date: Tue, 5 Apr 2011 13:26:17 -0700
Subject: Cambodian future seems bleak
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]





---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>

Date: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 10:53 AM
Subject: Cambodian future seems bleak
To: 







PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
April 6, 2011

Cambodian future seems bleak

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

I had begun writing on a different topic for today's column. On Jan. 21, the

U.S.-based International Republican Institute released the results of a survey
that said 76 percent of Cambodians are satisfied with the direction of the
country, citing infrastructure improvements such as roads, bridges, buildings

and schools, and 23 percent say it is headed in the wrong direction, citing
corruption, unemployment, poverty and inflation.

Statistics are awesome. They can be made to say many things. They are numbers
with no feeling. Only real people laugh and cry. Elite kids spend $2,000

drinking at a nightclub, others scavenge city dumps for food. Functionaries
write checks for $50,000 like it's nothing while some citizens, evicted from
their only homes, are beaten by police.
 
During a coffee break, I read the March 28 New York Times "Tools for Thinking"

by David Brooks. A day after, Brooks' "More Tools for Thinking" appeared.
Then, an email arrived from Phnom Penh. The writer read my column, "Young Khmers
key to the future," and said I hit the nail on the head. He described the

country's "visible hardware" -- buildings -- everywhere, bemoaned its lack of
the much needed "software" -- informed critical thinkers. A strong culture of
suspicion and mistrust will "cripple society even deeper into a passive coma,"

he said.
 
"Even many of the young are now in this unfortunate trend," he wrote.
 
His hypothesis about Cambodia's future parallels my own. Cambodia is a nation of
youth. More than half of the populace is under the age of 21. The median age is

22.9 years, but Cambodia spends only 1.6 percent of itsGDP on education.
 
An uneducated populace is consigned to low-skill, low-wage jobs -- 4 million
live below the poverty line. As significant is the reality that those who lack

education also lack the tangible and intangible resources that catalyze change,
a likely calculation of a regime that breeds fear and corruption and disdains
its people's rights.


I scrapped my column on the survey. That email redirected me.

Symposium

As regular readers may have surmised, I don't write this column to win
popularity. I am trying, in my way, to spark some action from Cambodians, many
of whom seem to have their heads in the sand, so to speak. Cambodia's future

depends on how its people think. In furtherance of my mission, I came across
Brooks' columns referencing a symposium on the mind and society sponsored by the
Edge World Question Center.
 
Columbia University's John McWhorter's "path dependence" got me under way.

"Somethingthat seems normal or inevitable today began with a choice that made
sense at a particular time in the past, but survived despite the eclipse of the
justification of that choice," he wrote.
 

Creatures of habit, men do what they have always done. When typewriters jammed
as people typed too fast, manufacturers designed a keyboard to slow typists
down. We don't use typewriters anymore, but with our state-of-the-art computers,

Brooks noted we still use "the letter arrangements of the qwerty keyboard."
 
Evgeny Morozov's "The Net Delusion" says man often tries to solve problems by
using solutions that worked in the past, rather than looking at each situation

on its own terms. New conflicts are still seen through the prism of Vietnam, the
Cold War or Iraq.
 
Brooks, who noted that many contributors to the Edge symposium discussed the
concept of "emergence," wrote that "public life would be vastly improved" if we

relied more on this concept.
 
"Emergent systems," he explained, "are ones in which many different elements
interact. The pattern of interaction then produces a new element that is greater
than the sum of the parts, which then exercises a top-down influence on the

constituent elements."
 
Culture is an emergent system, Brooks wrote. "A group of people establishes a
pattern of interaction. And once that culture exists, it influences how
individuals in it behave."

 
Emergent systems must be studied differently, "as wholes and as nested networks
of relationships," Brooks said. He suggested we think "emergently" rather than
try to address a problem like poverty through teasing out individual causes.


Fast facts

I have written about the impact of Cambodia's traditional hierarchical culture.
Brooks' comments align with my long-held view that culture influences how people
behave.
 
What is supported by the theory of emergent systems is the idea that culture is

susceptible to change.
 
Unfortunately for Cambodians, education and the intellectual capacity that is
its outcome, are essential elements to cultural change.
 
A reminder about how a high-quality education is essential to a meaningful life

is found in some fast facts on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's website.

The Foundation notes that a college degree or professional certificate is
critical for most young people to achieve success and security in today's labor
market. By 2018, 63 percent of U.S. job openings will require college education,

and employers will need some 22 million new workers with college degrees, but
colleges will fall short by 3 million graduates. U.S. adults ages 55 to 64 are
tied for first in the industrialized world in college degree attainment, but

young Americans ages 25 to 34 are tied for 10th.
 
Cambodia's future seems bleak. The generation of Cambodians, my generation, that
profited from at least a basic education, will fade away. The young who are left

to carry on must grasp the importance of education and find a way to pursue
learning. What they think and do now will determine their nation's future.
 
A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write him

at [email protected].
 
http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201104060300/OPINION02/104060322





 






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