Sunday, October 28, 2012
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Oh wait, i think I've seen this one before
It is
sad to see an image of your country deteriorating in front of you. It is also
sad when you know that it is coming. Since the Syrian crisis, Lebanon has had
stages of ruckus as well. What is happening in Syria is a very disturbing image
placed in our minds because of what the media throws at us. This leaves us
people who are not following any sides in a state of total confusion. It undoubtedly
leaves many people wondering when this needless fighting and killing will end.
On Friday,
October 19th was a day that put a hole in the thin cover
that was keeping Lebanon somewhat together. The bombing of Achrafieh was a
random attack on a man who believed in keeping Lebanon a land for the Lebanese
people, and believed in unity of a nation. It is very apparent what kind of
society we live in.
You can
take my generation as an excellent example. There are thousands of young
adults, who should be smarter about knowing their politics. They should know
that as long as there is a political system that is more or less religion
based, Lebanon will never see peace. There are too many political parties with
their own ideologies, and almost have this blood-thirsty mind set, as in “we
are right, any opposition is invalid”.
This
country has way too many “political” sects for its own good. And the phrase “wake
up, and stop being sheep” has been uncomfortably repeated on thousands of
occasions. But how come it doesn't sink in? How brainwashed can people in our
generation really be? The answer is that our modern day Lebanon is simply
developed by intense propaganda, meaningless political parties only fighting
for their own greed, and a pretentiously super squad of followers and their
ideologically correct leaders.
This
country was, and still is one of the most beautiful countries in the Middle
East, and I don’t want to be here anymore. I want to live in a country where
walking down the street you aren't being stared at or hassled. I want to live
somewhere where I can go out and be proud of the organization and maintenance that
are put into effect on the country. I want to live somewhere I can drive into
the city and not smell the unbearable stench of waste and slaughterhouses.
Why can’t
this somewhere be Lebanon? Why are we forced to live in this country that
thrives off of immature politics? There is so much hate and greed in this
country that in the end we are all becoming greedy and hateful.
We need
our people to come together, and throw away all this political and religious
BULLSHIT. Then again, this is just another blog of thousands who all believe in
the same idea of a shared and cared Lebanon. Let's be free, and believe in our country, and ourselves.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
First post
I was asked to make a blog for one of my mass communications courses. So I am guessing that this is counted as our first assignment. I have had this blog for almost a year now, but never got around to posting anything. This will obviously be changed now due to my professor’s enthusiastic love for blogging. So now that I have this opportunity, I plan to keep a steady flow of blogs along with new music I hear or find out about.
My name is Mike Nammour and I was born in hick town Southern Ontario, to parents Cheryl and John Nammour, June 3rd, 1991. I lived there until I was four years old when my dad got a job offer in paradise, also known as Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. To be honest I had the time of my life goring up in the desert. Although being kind of enclosed to everyday Saudi life, I had always managed to make the most of it. Growing up there was really a stage in my life where I could never regret. And because you have such a close knit society in which you could live in (compound life), you tend you make really good friends.
I basically did my k-12 in Saudi other than those 2 years I spent in Lebanon due to the bombings that were happening in Riyadh. Eventually we went back and I stayed there until I graduated high school. I graduated from the American International School of Riyadh in 2009.
After graduation I travelled back to Canada where I was accepted into Carleton University in the capital city of Ottawa, Ontario. I applied and started off as an economics major, but shortly after realized that all those numbers and graphs were nothing of what I wanted to be. Although that took me 3 semesters to realize, I decided to change my educational path and be involved in something that I could use my love for music, filmography, and marketing all in one field. I then decided that I would give mass communications a try.
I have always had an interest for media, and how companies can manipulate what they are previewing, and somewhat convince people of the most outrageous things. So getting involved in this field I feel will enable me to have an understanding of how the media actually works, and maybe one day use its magic.
This is actually my first ever, so I’m still trying to find what kind of voice I want to put out through here. But that’s why I’m here. I'll leave you with a song by a band that was a constant soundtrack to growing up in the Middle East.
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