The 3 bloggers appeared in court today.
I am reluctant to post any details for fear of suffering the same fate.
The local press has been banned from reporting on it.
the message board for Dubai English speaking community
Chocoholic wrote:It's a bit scary really to see people hauled up, just for writing about what they believe in. Another thing that sets this region back a gazillion years.
As the saying goes, 'I may not agree with what you say, but I will fight to the death for your right to say it!'.
herve wrote:Chocoholic wrote:It's a bit scary really to see people hauled up, just for writing about what they believe in. Another thing that sets this region back a gazillion years.
As the saying goes, 'I may not agree with what you say, but I will fight to the death for your right to say it!'.
no need to set it "back" a gazillion years, it was there already, never moved forward.
general_A wrote:they asked for it, did they honestly think that they could lead a protest against the government like what was going in some other nations nearby?
besides you dont go out calling the leaders names and describe them as thiefs and bribes after everything they have done for us and the da#N country they built and are running sleepless nights to make sure it runs as the best way they can. not here.
besides, every tribe of the UAE has filed a case against them for treason and plotting an anti gov. demonstration or something like that, which could only mean that we are not having that kind of crap over here. most of you wouldnt understand this from a cultural point of view because of the cultural differences.
Chocoholic wrote:general_A wrote:they asked for it, did they honestly think that they could lead a protest against the government like what was going in some other nations nearby?
besides you dont go out calling the leaders names and describe them as thiefs and bribes after everything they have done for us and the da#N country they built and are running sleepless nights to make sure it runs as the best way they can. not here.
besides, every tribe of the UAE has filed a case against them for treason and plotting an anti gov. demonstration or something like that, which could only mean that we are not having that kind of crap over here. most of you wouldnt understand this from a cultural point of view because of the cultural differences.
erm I'm sorry WHO has built this country? I think that would be the millions of expats! And yes some of us do understand, the authorities have been pretty smart in keeping their people happy for the most part, basically to ensure that what has happened elsewhere doesn't happen here. I think they do a pretty good job of it to be honest.
our rulers have been good to us even in the days when there was nothing but sand here, long before any of what has happend today in some countries, what you say is offending, disrespectful and ungreatful miss.
Chocoholic wrote:Sad, but true. What about all the people who were 'tricked' with the promise of good office jobs and ended up as construction workers, with their passports taken away etc? Yes, the fault of the ruthless companies that would abuse people like that, but true non-the-less. Did you forget that the workers used to be carted about in cattle trucks, until the King of Jordan said it was completely inhumane? Hmmm
Oh you're another one of those with the rose tinted glasses, who never sees the bad side
Sorry to break it to you, but people aren't all sweetness and light, and there has been the fair share of controversy, court cases and nasty stuff to come out of this place. No different to anywhere else, but please don't be so naive to think that's it's all good.
BM, stop sticking your oar in as usual - you're just a 'visitor'. Oh let's watch now as you suck up to this guy as well - predictable as ever!
Bethsmum wrote:our rulers have been good to us even in the days when there was nothing but sand here, long before any of what has happend today in some countries, what you say is offending, disrespectful and ungreatful miss.
I agree! How rude is that?
I hate it when immigrants come to a country and totally disrespect it. Like I say to those in my country, if you don't like it, go home.
Chocoholic wrote:You're a suck up is what you are! Don't play the whole pious thing either. You have zero and I mean zero idea of what it's like really in the UAE, you come once in a blue moon to your 'holiday' home. Well some of us have lived and worked our socks off for years.
general_A wrote:Chocoholic wrote:You're a suck up is what you are! Don't play the whole pious thing either. You have zero and I mean zero idea of what it's like really in the UAE, you come once in a blue moon to your 'holiday' home. Well some of us have lived and worked our socks off for years.
errrm, I AM emiraty
general_A wrote:bad news travel quick, i wouldnt go to a place were i have heard all those negativities about it, and risk being stuck there for life with a sh1tty job, but hey, they still keep commoing, so i would only assume that there must be something good here for them, you, and everybody else whop came here to make a BETTER living.
Chocoholic wrote:general_A wrote:bad news travel quick, i wouldnt go to a place were i have heard all those negativities about it, and risk being stuck there for life with a sh1tty job, but hey, they still keep commoing, so i would only assume that there must be something good here for them, you, and everybody else whop came here to make a BETTER living.
The weather lol But in all seriousness, a place is what you make it. My parents were here for many years before me. Some people do well, others totally mess it up. But others don't get the chance to even see the place.
Chocoholic wrote:You're a suck up is what you are! Don't play the whole pious thing either. You have zero and I mean zero idea of what it's like really in the UAE, you come once in a blue moon to your 'holiday' home. Well some of us have lived and worked our socks off for years.
Bethsmum wrote:Chocoholic wrote:You're a suck up is what you are! Don't play the whole pious thing either. You have zero and I mean zero idea of what it's like really in the UAE, you come once in a blue moon to your 'holiday' home. Well some of us have lived and worked our socks off for years.
Keep your hair on Chocs! You'll be giving yourself a coronary at this rate
I have been coming to Dubai for years and your claim that I know zero about what is going on is wearing a little bit thin now.
You slagging off the UAE is nothing better than the Pakistanis who come to England and bad mouth the British. I say to you what I say to them, if you don't like it, sod off back to where you came from. Just because you've been here a while doesn't give you any special rights. It's not your country and never will be. You are a visitor here and no better than me. I just don't bad mouth the place at every opportunity and it that's being a suck up, well I'm a suck up, I can live with that. I'll just add it to the long list of names you have called me, It's a slight improvement on Nazi.
Chocoholic wrote:This is true. Te thing that I feel sad mostly about, is the people that came here with the aim of making a fast buck, took it for all it was worth then disappeared. Like all the ruthless developers, who took honest investors cash and then ran, after all that only now are regulations put in place to stop it. But it's a learning curve on both sides really.
I would say the positives far outweigh the negatives or many people would have left along time ago.
I do feel sorry for many of you locals though and here's a question for you, are you happy with the way things are going and have progressed? I know many aren't and feel that the culture is gradually being eroded away. I always remember the 60 minutes program with interviews with the likes of Sheikh Mohd and other high people who came across extremely well, but the one segment that stuck in my mind, was an interview with a well respected Emirati female professor who was a little upset that 'they' had never asked for what was happening to the country. She put her point across very well and it did make people stop and think - where does it all end?
Just asking.
Chocoholic wrote:Bethsmum wrote:Chocoholic wrote:You're a suck up is what you are! Don't play the whole pious thing either. You have zero and I mean zero idea of what it's like really in the UAE, you come once in a blue moon to your 'holiday' home. Well some of us have lived and worked our socks off for years.
Keep your hair on Chocs! You'll be giving yourself a coronary at this rate
I have been coming to Dubai for years and your claim that I know zero about what is going on is wearing a little bit thin now.
You slagging off the UAE is nothing better than the Pakistanis who come to England and bad mouth the British. I say to you what I say to them, if you don't like it, sod off back to where you came from. Just because you've been here a while doesn't give you any special rights. It's not your country and never will be. You are a visitor here and no better than me. I just don't bad mouth the place at every opportunity and it that's being a suck up, well I'm a suck up, I can live with that. I'll just add it to the long list of names you have called me, It's a slight improvement on Nazi.
erm I didn't make that comment to you! Bora did, so please don't take THAT out on me! BM, you're the one constantly throwing your toys out the pram. FYI, if I was living in the UK, I be pulling all the issues I have with that place, which I hasten to add I am never EVER going back to!
general_A wrote:those millions of expats where paid, PAID to do task assigned to them, they didnt come here to build all they built as in form of charity, expats she said. why didnt they build there own countries then. there is more to building a country than just your lame excuses like: the builders who came from india and pakistan built it, yes they did, coz the were paid to do so, with our money and the help of foriegn engineers, who also were paid to do a job.
our rulers have been good to us even in the days when there was nothing but sand here, long before any of what has happend today in some countries, what you say is offending, disrespectful and ungreatful miss.
Bora Bora wrote:
General there is not argument that expats came here and got paid to build Dubai, in particular. But isn't that you do when you hire someone to do a job - pay them?? Let's be honest here, expats - on all levels - did the job that Emiratis couldn't or wouldn't do. How many Emiratis drive taxis, are in construction - the labor end? I see alot of locals working in sales positions, and I give them alot of credit. I also know quite a few that are highly intelligent and know how to run a business and do business, but they are the minority, not the majority.
Money, housing, etc. was given to the first generation during the process of modernization, but then wealth that was gained by them was handed over to the second generation without any lessons for value. There are many locals who weren't the beneficiaries of what was provided and who are so deep in debt because they had to "keep up". People learn from their mistakes and I'm sure if the powers that be could do it all over again, they would definitely do it differently. What is more important here is money, not knowledge. When you have knowledge, you are rich because you can't put a price on it. You can also take pride in knowing that you made a contribution to your country. Paying people to build your country is not a contribution.
I know there is a tribal/cultural mentality of taking care of your own, which is a good thing. That's tribal "politics". It's no different that any democratic country where politicians try to please their contingency to buy loyalty.
Even if all the Emiratis were employed there would still be a dependency on expats.
I watched the University of Sharjah graduation and noticed that there were more female locals than male locals who obtained degrees - including Master Degrees. On the whole the majority of graduates were expats. Why are the young girls more ambitious that the young men in this country? These educated women are not going to settle for marrying some guy who thinks playing games, riding around in his 4X4, hanging with his buddies - who basically are stunted where maturity and development are concerned and have no ambition. And I'm sure the parents of these girls want more for them. Young educated women are going to have a very hard time finding, at the very least, their equal.
patience wrote:Here here Bora
General I mean no disrespect to you or your country but I do feel that people should be able to speak out if they are not happy with the way things run. Maybe it is because I was brought up in the West that I feel this way, maybe if I was an Emirati I would feel differently, but there are obviously Emiratis who feel the same and feel the need to speak out. Surely talking about things should not be a crime. Pointing out flaws should not be a crime, asking for change should not be a crime. After all it is only by standing up for what you believe in that brings about change and clearly these people feel that change is needed. The saying is that you cannot please all the people all the time and maybe the government are doing a great job of pleasing most of the people most of the time but unless the fear of speaking out is taken away we will never really know the truth. If as you say the majority of Emirati's are satisfied that things are running fine there should be nothing to fear from a small minority asking for change. But maybe, just maybe if you did have a situation where people were allowed to choose you would find that people would welcome change. The trouble is under a dictatorship you do not get the chance to choose and as long as people are scared of the consequences you never will. As for the treatment of certain sectors of the expat community, well the conditions that some of them live in are appalling and the argument that they live in worse conditions back home maybe true but these people are leaving their countries for a better life, to try and improve their situations after all nobody would want to live in these conditions and as a fellow human being I fail to see how making such an argument allows those in power to sleep at night.
if they werent "paid" then how come more and more kept comming? besides isn't it the construction's company's role to do that? doesnt the government put laws for that? a high percentage of construction company owners tend to take off once they grab the money of building a project, and you all know that, also dont forget that the UAE is a young country, so day by day or year by year new laws are being enforced, to best fit the workers in harsh conditions.
and hear this, my grandfather slaughterd cattle for a living after before he worked on a farm and then worked as a store keeper, my friend's father used to be a taxi driver and a construction worker (kooly), my other friend's uncle was a worker for an american oil company in abu dhabi and then as a fisherman, even i used to work in sales and worked as an aircraft fueling operator, so get the idea of locals not being able to do that kind of work, we are men after all. they worked hard before the emirates were united.
most of you dont know how many of our people gave thier lifes fighting for dubai in the days were no one heard of the place, that you didnt know i bet.
and just because someone is a good buisnessman, it doesnt mean that he or they are more intelligent than other people, they are intelligent in what they know best which is how to do good buisness, someone else will be more intelligent in another line of work or career.
so why would i do a much more physical job now with minimum pay when i can do better? right? i and others like me just happen to be so fortunate. correct?
i also never deny the fact the the UAE will still rely on foriegn labor, just like many many other countries.
if there were more female graduates than males then thats just because that statistics has shown that there are more females than males ALL AROUND THE WORLD and not just the UAE, i guess why there are more EXPAT gradutes overall? because in a country of a population of over 5 million, we are only about 800,000. to make it more simple, there are way more expats here than us, and the numbers keep rising, and the local guys that you protrait as being unambitious, have you sat with some of them to actualy know what was going on with thier lifes? or is it just an assumption? i will take that as a stereotypical assumption, i happen to know guys who look and act just the same, but are doctors, lawyers, law inforcing officers and take thier jobs very seriously. if some happen to take thier valuable time for granted, then thats thier problem, isnt it, nothing youn nor i should worry about, reality will slap them in the face and will might just reilize it a bit too late or just in time, right?
if life was bad here, how come there are millions and millions of expats work and live here? everyone can go back if they wanted to, but would they?
patience wrote:Here here Bora
General I mean no disrespect to you or your country but I do feel that people should be able to speak out if they are not happy with the way things run. Maybe it is because I was brought up in the West that I feel this way, maybe if I was an Emirati I would feel differently, but there are obviously Emiratis who feel the same and feel the need to speak out. Surely talking about things should not be a crime. Pointing out flaws should not be a crime, asking for change should not be a crime. After all it is only by standing up for what you believe in that brings about change and clearly these people feel that change is needed. The saying is that you cannot please all the people all the time and maybe the government are doing a great job of pleasing most of the people most of the time but unless the fear of speaking out is taken away we will never really know the truth. If as you say the majority of Emirati's are satisfied that things are running fine there should be nothing to fear from a small minority asking for change. But maybe, just maybe if you did have a situation where people were allowed to choose you would find that people would welcome change. The trouble is under a dictatorship you do not get the chance to choose and as long as people are scared of the consequences you never will. As for the treatment of certain sectors of the expat community, well the conditions that some of them live in are appalling and the argument that they live in worse conditions back home maybe true but these people are leaving their countries for a better life, to try and improve their situations after all nobody would want to live in these conditions and as a fellow human being I fail to see how making such an argument allows those in power to sleep at night.
like you said, the majorty of people here are more than happy with how things are going, it was only these 3 guys who are demanding changes, with out the right of representing the whole country, and if you want to express how unhappy you are about how many things are going do so without having to insult the royal family and call them names.