Can we build a new country

@shemb1 (464)
Sri Lanka
May 30, 2009 8:05am CST
This is about my country sri lanka. I am proud to be a Sri Lankan, in every time of my life. it is not because of we beaten the terroist. But as a real human , can we build a new country that forget our past incidents. unfortunatly people believe things can starts really quickly rather than keep on in it mind. but the suspesions that our country gain from the terroist , we can forget that feeling in our lives. let me clear to you mates, think you have a country as you do now. some people came to your country and ask one part of your country....first you think , ok they must be crasy asking one part for one nations... then one happend the things getting worest they start make their own community confused and againsit the majority and start battle and the battle stands for the stupid reasons... then they become terroist..... so what do you think...after they did to your country such damaged can we trust the those uneducated people as reasonable humans on this earth. can you able to start to trust them....hard.. hard....# but sake of humanity we got to start do some things, because we are educated than them... but keep in mind...Uneducated people can do more effect than knowledgeable people because they dont know anything....but nature wont let them to go further...they will distroy by nature...
1 response
@RamJey (89)
• Singapore
7 Jul 09
shemb1, firstly get your english right. To claim to be educated and then to post in such a language is a disgrace not only to yourself, your country, but also to the woman who gave birth, nurtured, and educated you. Your hard to read article seem to starkly declare that you are a racist. The tamils as you seem to imply are not uneducated as you simply put it. The very root of the problem was education itself. It was the presence of the educated Tamils in post-independence Sri Lanka that posed the biggest irritant for the government of the day. The sight of highly educated Tamils in the government ministries that triggered the racist policies of the Sinhala government and that evolved eventually into an open demand for a seperate state, a legitimate want