new4now ago

haven't had chance to go through all of this, give me some time :)

argosciv ago

Extra source regarding the arrest of Sadat Amin: Just posting this so I can close the tab I have open on it

[https://tribune.com.pk/story/1696240/1-child-porn-convict-handed-seven-year-term/ | https://archive.is/FeJTc]

argosciv ago

@Gothamgirl @migratorypatterns @marked2476 @darkknight111 @dooob

Abstract; hard to explain, curiosities regarding the Amins, global corruption/terrorism/sex-abuse/slavery/human-trafficking, cults, etc. Only 1 extra comment.

argosciv ago

@The_Savant @LightlyToasted @dundundunnnnn @new4now @AviciiKnewTooMuch

Abstract; hard to explain, curiosities regarding the Amins, global corruption/terrorism/sex-abuse/slavery/human-trafficking, cults, etc. Only 1 extra comment.

new4now ago

will be there as soon as I can

mailbox was full this afternoon

argosciv ago

@Crensch @Vindicator @srayzie @think- @ErickKaliberhall

Abstract; hard to explain, curiosities regarding the amins, global corruption/terrorism/sex-abuse/slavery/human-trafficking, cults, etc. Only 1 extra comment.

argosciv ago

(1/1)

So what have we got so far?

  • Iranian-American Mark Amin links via Lionsgate to Harvey Weinstein, who can be linked to Scientology, Sep 11 & Chuck Schumer via Danny Masterson, thereby linking to sex abuse/pedophilia and corruption in the filming industry/Hollywood.
  • Pakistani(?) Sadat Amin has been jailed for seven years for child porn - part of network that spread across Europe and US, investigators say.
  • Palestinians allegedly perpetrated the 1972 Munich Massacre, on behalf of the Black September Org, inspired by Black September, during which Pakistani Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq was on the Jordanian side;

[9. [8]: wiki: Black September Organization]

[10. [8]: wiki: Black September]:


Date 6 September 1970 – 17 July 1971

(main phase 16–27 September 1970)

Location Jordan

Result Jordanian military victory:

  • Syrian raid repelled
  • PLO driven out to Lebanon
  • Formation of Black September Organization

~~


Black September

~~

Pakistani role

The head of a Pakistani training mission to Jordan, Brigadier Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq (later Chief of Army Staff and President of Pakistan), was involved on the Jordanian side.[63]

Iranian leftists' role

Two Iranian leftist guerilla organizations, the Organization of Iranian People's Fedai Guerrillas (OIPFG) and the People's Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI), were involved in the conflict against Jordan.[64] Their "collaboration with the PLO was particularly close, and members of both movements even fought side by side in Jordan during the events of Black September and trained together in Fatah camps in Lebanon".[64] On 3 August 1972, PMOI operatives bombed the Jordanian embassy in Tehran during King Hussein's state visit as an act of "revenge" for the events of Black September.[65]

~~

[11. [8]: wiki: Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq]:

Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq (Urdu: محمد ضياء الحق‬‎; 12 August 1924 – 17 August 1988) was a Pakistani military dictator and four-star general who served as the 6th President of Pakistan after declaring martial law in 1977. He ruled from 1978 until his death in 1988 and remains country’s longest-serving head of state after Ayub Khan.

Educated at Delhi University, Zia saw action in World War II as a British Indian Army officer, before opting for Pakistan in 1947 and fighting in the war against India in 1965. In 1970, he led the Pakistan military's training mission in Jordan, proving instrumental to putting down the Black September insurgency against King Hussein.[2] In recognition, Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto approved Zia's four-star appointment and elevated him as the Chief of Army Staff in 1976.[3] Following civil disorder, Zia deposed Bhutto in a military coup and declared martial law on 5 July 1977.[4] Bhutto was controversially tried by the Supreme Court and executed less than two years later, for authorising the murder of a political opponent.[5]

Assuming the presidency in 1978, Zia played a major role in the Soviet war in Afghanistan. Aided by the United States and Saudi Arabia, Zia systematically coordinated the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet occupation throughout the 1980s.[6][7] This culminated in the Soviet Union's withdrawal in 1989, but also led to the proliferation of millions of refugees, with heroin and weaponry into Pakistan's frontier province. On the foreign front, Zia also bolstered ties with China, the European Economic Community, the United States, and emphasised Pakistan's role in the Islamic world, while relations with India worsened amid the Siachen conflict and accusations that Pakistan was aiding the Khalistan movement. Domestically, Zia passed broad-ranging legislation as part of Pakistan's Islamization, acts criticised for fomenting religious intolerance.[8] He also escalated Pakistan's atomic bomb project, and instituted industrialisation and deregulation, helping Pakistan's economy become the fastest-growing in South Asia.[9] Averaged over Zia's rule, GDP growth was the highest in the country's history.[10]

After lifting martial law and holding non-partisan elections in 1985, Zia appointed Muhammad Khan Junejo as the Prime Minister but accumulated more presidential powers via the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution.[11] After Junejo signed the Geneva Accords in 1988 against Zia's wishes, and called for an inquiry into the Ojhri Camp disaster, Zia dismissed Junejo's government and announced fresh elections in November 1988. He was killed along with several of his top military officials and two American diplomats in a mysterious plane crash near Bahawalpur on 17 August 1988. To this day, Zia remains a polarising figure in Pakistan's history, credited for preventing wider Soviet incursions into the region as well as economic prosperity, but decried for weakening democratic institutions and passing laws encouraging religious intolerance.[12][13]

Call me nuts, but, despite no apparent familial links, between Mark Amin & Sadat Amin and their respective Iranian & Pakistani(?) roots and common ground with sex/human-rights abuse nextworks and this situation regarding "Black September" and a Pakistani playing a starring role in dispersing 'rebels' aligned with Palestine and Syria then himself being elevated into power by the 1970's US Administration... I'm thinking that Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq played both sides in order to gain power in the region so that he could shuffle 'terrorists' and other nefarious parties around, in preparation for what would become not only the 1972 Munich massacre, but, other 'terrorist' events including but not limited to: Sep 11, 2001 & the Libyan Civil War a decade later...

Keeping in mind recently discussed cult-relations to Sep 11/Libya/Benghazi...

[10]:

Aftermath

Jordan

The events proved to be a decisive landmark in the history of Jordan; it witnessed the emergence of a distinct Jordanian identity.[70] The courage that Hussein displayed against the joint Palestinian-Syrian challenge impressed both the West and Israel.[71] Nixon ordered $10 million in aid to be delivered to Jordan, and another $30 million requested from Congress.[71]

~~

Lebanon

In the September fighting, the PLO lost its main base of operations.[72] Fighters were driven to Southern Lebanon where they regrouped.[72] The enlarged PLO presence in Lebanon and the intensification of fighting on the Israeli–Lebanese border stirred up internal unrest in Lebanon, where the PLO fighters added dramatically to the weight of the Lebanese National Movement, a coalition of Muslims, Arab nationalists and leftists who opposed the rightist, Maronite-dominated government.[72] These developments helped precipitate the Lebanon Civil War, in which the PLO would ultimately be expelled to Tunisia.[72]

^ Note: LOL! the number for the corresponding reference in the wiki entry...

These developments helped precipitate the Lebanon Civil War, in which the PLO would ultimately be expelled to Tunisia.[72]

Tunisia...

[12. [10]: wiki: Lebanese Civil War]:


Date 13 April 1975 – 13 October 1990

(15 years and 6 months)

(Syrian occupation ended on 30 April 2005)

Location Lebanon

Result

  • Taif Agreement
  • ^ Christian 55:45 ascendancy replaced by 50 Christian:50 Muslim representation[2]
  • ^ Muslim prime-ministerial powers strengthened.
  • ^ Disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias (excluding Hezbollah[3])

  • PLO expulsion from Lebanon

  • Syrian occupation of most of Lebanon until April 30, 2005
  • Increased Syrian influence in Lebanon

  • Conflict in South Lebanon

  • ^ Israeli-backed Free Lebanon State (1979–1983) fails and replaced by Israeli Security Zone (referred as occupation)
  • ^ Emergence of Hezbollah


Oh, one last thing from Ashton Kutcher's wiki, before I wrap this up: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashton_Kutcher

Brownface controversy

Ashton Kutcher received widespread criticism for his appearance in a Popchips ad campaign in May 2012.[45] The campaign featured Kutcher as an Indian man "looking for love" in a dating ad-style spoof. Kutcher's use of brown face paint and a stereotypical Indian accent was deemed racially insensitive and offensive and received backlash from online viewers and members of the Indian-American community.[46]

Emmy-award winning comedian Aziz Ansari featured the commercial in his 2015 Netflix comedy-drama Master of None, to make a point that South Asian discrimination is taken less seriously than Black discrimination although they are both forms of racism. “Asians and Indians are the new clownable minority,” comedian Hasan Minhaj, now a correspondent on The Daily Show, lamented in a YouTube response to Popchips. “You have a s—ty accent and you’re not even being racist correctly. If you’re gonna be racist, come correct with your racism.”

Ravi Patel gave his argument in a 2015 interview, “I don’t find stereotypical roles to always be offensive. I think stereotypes are there for a reason and are a very big part of comedy. It’s interesting, [Aziz’s] issue is specifically with Indian stereotypes, but you don’t see him walking away from other [racial] stereotypes,” Patel said. “You need to look at it on a case-by-case basis. Like in Transformers, Michael Bay wanted me to wear a turban. I was like ‘Why do you want me to wear a turban?’ And he said, ‘Because it’s funny,’ and I said ‘Well, that’s not a good enough reason to wear a turban.’ I’ve stood up for stuff that’s offensive every time.”[47]


Skazi - Hit and Run

/micdrop