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Living a Trans Life in Kashmir's conservative society

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Manne , a transgender who lives in Srinagar's Downtown, says she suffers various challenges in the Kashmiri society, including physical assault recently that resulted in her leg being broken. It is the month of June. The long stretch of Pride. Large organizations all throughout the planet are adding pride banners to their Social Media Profiles. Activists are fighting for LGBTQ Rights. NGO's are helping the LGTBQ people group every which way. People are taking out pride rallies around the globe in solidarity with the LGBT community. Pride banners are seen everywhere. In any case, in Kashmir, things appear to be the exceptionally inverse.  She goes by the nickname Manne , however Manzoor Ahmad is the name given to him when she was born. She is 38 as of today. For as far back as 19 years, she has been matchmaking, dancing and singing at Weddings.  Manzoor wears a Lehanga as a camouflage, however says these don't help in numerous cases since she has masculine lookup, facial hai

India's Theft Business against Kashmiris is as thriving as ever

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By Hasnain Riza Originally published in  The Odyssey. India's Burglary Business against Kashmiris is as flourishing as could be expected.  More funding and land is being allocated for colonial settlements and outposts. The police isn't investigating while the Army is hunting for parrots it says were stolen. The colonialism is exactly what it used to be, except it is more sophisticated.  In contrast, the expellers and land thieves know that nothing bad will happen to them. They’re the privatized arm of a successful state-owned robbery business and a full partner in it. In short, Hindutva, to use their term for it. The symbiosis between the “unknowns” who have beeb attacking Kashmiri's on their own land, the police who won’t bother to find the assailants and the army that protects them is clear on the ground at any given moment.  This is savagery without trying to hide, not stealthily. What's more, this brutality is completing approach while proceeding to shape and direct

Why Socialism won't work?

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By  Hāsnain Riza With increasingly ubiquitous iPhones, Internet, Central Air Conditioning, Flat-screen TVs, and Indoor plumbing, few in the developed world would want to go back to life 100, 30, or even 10 years ago. Indeed, around the world, the last two centuries have brought vast improvements in material living standards; billions of people have been lifted from poverty, and life expectancy across income levels has broadly risen. Most of that progress came from capitalist economies. Yet those economies are not without their problems. In the United States and the United Kingdom, the gap between the rich and poor has become intolerably large as business owners and highly educated workers in urban areas have become richer while workers’ wages in rural areas have stagnated. In most rich countries, more trade has brought a bigger, better variety of goods, but it has also displaced many jobs. With social instability in the form of mass protests, Brexit, the rise of populism, a

Marxism in 2021 - Is it still relevant?

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by  Hāsnain Riza It’s one of history’s great ironies that the most influential writer of the 20th century lived his entire life in the 19th. But if there was anyone who could appreciate a good historical contradiction, it was Karl Marx. His ideas defined the political and economic landscape of the previous century. The day affords the opportunity to ask to what extent, if any, those ideas are relevant today, in 2021. Marxism has always been polarizing, but perhaps the political anomie of 2021 leaves the debate over its relevance less ideologically encumbered than previous milestones. Soviet-style communism has settled into the ash heap of history, and yet, for many, capitalism’s victory has been less than decisive, particularly following the economic crash of 2007, an event that has driven a small but growing number of citizens in advanced industrial nations to question the very foundations of our economic system. “Marx was the first great critic of capitalism,” says Richar

Debunking Myths about Shias & Muharram

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by  Hāsnain Riza With the start of Muharram, an ordinary discussion over each other’s faith suddenly converts into a disagreement and then comes the blame game. A social media user shares his two cents about all the ignorant things Shias hear during Muharram. Soon after posting it, the post went viral and people supported his stance.  Here is what he wrote in his post : "Whether you are a Shia, Sunni or belong to any other house of beliefs, as a human being, one cannot deny the massacre that took place in Karbala".   Over the years, the tension between the Shia and Sunni community has increased, creating a distorted image of my faith. As a practicing Shia, I felt it is necessary that I dispel these ideas. Here are some of the common misconceptions Shiite Muslims have heard about Muharram practices. Yes, these are the actual transcripts! 1. It was a war, people die, so what? Fact:  The battle wasn’t planned. Yazeed wanted 'Baiyyat' or acceptance from Imam H