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To whom it may confuse! (Correction



Subject: Re: To whom it may confuse! (Correction)

Dear Nyi Nyi Lwin,
Thanks for being so personal in you response.  Much appreciated.
te

Nyi LWin wrote:

> ---  Okkar   <okkar66129@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > What I saw you in Burma was you were the son of
> > Major Aung Lwin who was the Commanding Officer of
> > Defence Services Intelligent Supporting Unit. You
> > were enjoying the fruits of BSPP all your childhood.
> > Now only you are pretending to be the activist.
> > Right?
> >
> > ok
> > --
> >
>
> This kind of prejudice, an attitude in a negative way,
> turns up by an illegitimate authority, a blind
> loyalist to dictators to whom he sees as superior, is
> quite natural. The fact is the authoritarian regime
> does not tolerate any criticism. Because what they
> perceive the state violence and state restriction over
> the majority people is "privilege," believing in
> ordinary citizens as subhuman and born to obey. But
> the majority people who are under the repression
> always seek for their freedom. As a result, millions
> of people came out to the streets and called for
> democracy in 1988. And again, million of people voted
> for the NLD in 1990 election because they were not
> happy with the military rule at all.
>
> Among those people who supported democracy I was all
> for one and one for all. That's why I have joined the
> students led democracy movements since 1988. What I
> believe are 'pluralistic opinion, legitimate power,
> freedom of expression, freedom of speech, and freedom
> from wants, and equal justice and tranquillity.' I am
> still struggling for it, and I will do it until I
> reach it to the people and for the people.
>
> I do not wonder why a low ranking military spy
> misperceives "Cronyism and Nepotism" as "Fruit",
> according to his term.  But what I perceive the
> "Fruit" is "crime" and "bribery."
>
> There was no fruit that my people in Burma, including
> our family, enjoyed under the BSPP regime. What I saw
> my Dad doing was an "Earning." He got what he was
> working for. In return, the BSPP provided an old car,
> a house, a small amount of salary, and a small amount
> of ration. The BSPP sometime openly told us, "Ning
> Ngan Dow Ka Chen Myint Dar," (The State's Special
> Distribution). After he retired, the regime took back
> the car and the house but provided 800 Kyat for a
> month, about 2 dollars in U.S.. It was never enough to
> feed a family.
>
> It was quick simple that the totalitarian regime
> (BSPP-SLORC_SPDC), almost total control of a people by
> a group of illegitimate officers, controlled the
> education, business, religion, politics, support, and
> etc. in order to prolong their power. Thus, no
> independence car dealers, real estates realtors, and
> financing banks were existed at that time. So there
> was no channel out, and almost all the regime's
> servants had to accept so-called "State Special
> Distribution".
>
> But if there were a democratic government, a
> free-market economy, and an equal justice, every
> citizen would enjoy and got what they earned for.
>
> I am as I am, a democracy activist, human rights
> activist, justice activist, woman rights activist,
> student activist, and anti-BSPP-SLORC-SPDC activist.
> My mission in the U.S is to bring the SPDC down from
> the power. It will be.
>
> =====
>
> __________________________________________________
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