mercredi 23 novembre 2016

Together We Stand, Divided We Fall

created and published by Sara SALHI



   I have always believed that people are different and are no way to be judged on the basis of a preconceived image. Every person holds a set of beliefs, dreams, visions and expectations that exhibit a unique character, not similar to any member of any given society.
It’s obvious that everybody possesses a ‘GIFT’ deep down in her/his soul. Some are successful in awaking their ‘GIFTS’ due to the fact that they believe in themselves and never comply with a preconceived image of an “ORDINARY” person, while others are forced to leave their ‘GIFT’ in a state of INERTIA and abide by social norms that kill their gift and leaves them without dreams or hopes to fulfill.
Living to the expectations of people, and comparing yourself to others, handcuffs your soul and makes you another copy of a given model in society, that is, it turns you to be a person stripped of a unique identity, sometimes lost. Identifying such kind of people is easy as it is just like searching for a coin in a lot of similar, yet scattered coins.
Difference is not meant to divide people as much as it binds them to create a social fabric composed of various cultures and beliefs.


Morocco: Politicians, the Media, and the people.

created and written by SARA SALHI


        It is taken for granted by many people that politicians, media and the people are three important pillars that every nation is built upon. In my view, the aforementioned three should be scrutinized meticulously in order to know whether a country is well governed or just left to a mere chaos and excessive use of power. The mass media is key here as it is the bridge between politicians and the people. Theoretically, people are supposed to know the nitty-gritty about what politicians do, provided that the mass media diffuses and broadcasts true information about what politicians do. The mass media plays the role of a vigilant “watch dog” that keeps an eye on politicians and reminds them constantly that people are watching over.
The aforementioned is deemed the perfect picture, but things differ when mass media is reversibly owned and funded by the government. In this view, the banning of whatsApp, Skype, Viber and other VoIP technology software in Morocco, for almost one year, was a serious mistake made by the government to exert its super power over people, an excessive use of power on the liberties of people. The banning was done without even announcing anything to the people. The three major telecommunication companies (INWI, MEDITEL and MAROC TELECOM) in Morocco made a deal under the table with the Morocco’s High Authority for Audiovisual Communication (HACA) to block VoIP calls. That decision was like stabbing many families from behind as they relied on such calls to call their family members who live abroad. At the time of the blocking, the official mainstream media did little to cover this event and explain the policies that Morocco’s telecommunication agency, in collaboration with the aforementioned major companies, have taken against them.
Mass media is now used as a weapon against people; a tool to distort reality and replace facts with lies. As a result, the bridge between the government and the people is broken.
Stability and trust are gained only when the media is independent and funded by the people, to serve the people.