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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Assad: Media, tech crushing Arabs
2005-06-06
DAMASCUS, Syria (CNN) -- Syrian President Bashar Assad has said the media and technological revolution sweeping the region and the world is helping his country's foes to undermine and crush the Arab identity. Assad told the congress of Syria's ruling Baath Party on Monday that a media influx had left Arabs "swamped by disinformation" about themselves.
"These many inputs, especially with the evolution of communication and information technology, made the society open, and this opened the door for some confusion and suspicion in the minds of Arab youth."
Sucks when they have access to more than the party-controlled media, don't it?
"The ultimate objective of all this is the destruction of Arab identity; for the enemies of the Arab nation are opposed to our possessing any identity or upholding any creed that could protect our existence and cohesion, guide our vision and direction, or on which we can rely in our steadfastness," Assad said Monday. "We must face this situation with great awareness, responsibility and defiance."
Focusing on the swirl of modern information and the huge influx of ideas to the region, Assad said that development was being exploited by what he said were the region's enemies.
"Ideas are just a western plot to bring progress! We don't need either of them."
Delivering the opening address of his party's congress, the first in five years, Assad also urged its members to make reform of the economy and fighting corruption their priorities. "We have to reorder our priorities and tackle the most important and go from there. The economic situation is a priority for all of us," he told the gathering. "We need mechanisms to fight corruption that are more effective," he added.
The Syrian leader -- who has been under immense pressure by Washington and the West for its former presence in Lebanon and for its suspected role in helping the insurgency in Iraq -- used rhetoric that is customarily used to describe the United States and Israel. He referred to "forces behind" the modern trends that would exploit and generate societal upheaval in the Arab world, leading "to the cultural, political and moral collapse of the Arab individual and his ultimate defeat without a fight." "They simply aim at transforming us into a negative, reactive mass, which absorbs everything that is thrown at it without the will or even the possibility of thinking or rejecting or accepting it."
"If we want the people to have thoughts, we'll give them one."
The information revolution has had a wide-ranging effect on the Arab world, with the Internet and Arabic-language TV transforming attitudes from Mauritania to Iraq.
How ya gonna keep them down in the madrass, after they've seen MTV?
Posted by:Steve

#24  Of course if you use a modern shell in a damascus steel shotgun, the barrel will explode; quite the metaphor, eh?
Posted by: regular joe   2005-06-07 00:00  

#23  I wouldn't say that the art of Damascene steel has been lost---rather that the art as practiced by the Syrians has been made archiac and obsolete. Quaint, even.
Modern "Damascene" blades made by Hungarian and Dutch smiths incorporate metallurgy of braided steel and powdered bi-metal infill that greatly exceed traditional Syrian blades in the consistency of the edge, the tensile strength of the blade, and corrosion resistance throughout.

And the ladder-lock pattern of cable twisted thirteen times per foot before stamping is shore purty. :)
Posted by: Asedwich   2005-06-06 23:22  

#22  Let me clarify. The Mona Lisa is very simple, really. Just canvas and paint. Anyone could reproduce it with a pain-by-numbers kit. Or even easier, they could just make a digitized copy of it as good as the original. "Damascus steel" at its height was not the shotgun barrel product, it was works of art in steel. While metallurgically, one can reproduce a DS blade even at a microscopic level, the artistry of its production has been lost. Compare that to a hand made samurai sword compared to a high-quality knockoff, which is equally accurate, even at the microscopic level. Japan honors its sword craftsmen at the national level, whereas Syria ignored them and they died out. The Japanese understand and appreciate the high art involved, whereas the Baathist Syrians did not.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-06-06 18:09  

#21  yeah the 'Damascuc steel' can be found centuries before it was common in the middle east in Northern Europe and in Asia. The Indian's had something similar and better which they called wootz steel
Posted by: robi   2005-06-06 16:01  

#20  
Damascus Steel was of Indian origin

The Key Role of Impurities in Ancient Damascus Steel Blades

Posted by: john   2005-06-06 15:27  

#19  From the 1771 article found by Steve:

If men did not seek so often to pinch pennies on that which is useful, all the while making huge expenditures on useless ornamentation, then instead of having a sheath knife worn at one's side whose blade cost not even (2 pounds), but whose mounts cost 60 (pounds); one might instead have a blade which cost 60 (pounds), in mounts which cost (2 pounds).

Hey, sounds like my father wrote this !
Posted by: Carl in N.H.   2005-06-06 14:39  

#18  Mine is a very old black powder antique, no way I'd fire it.
Posted by: Steve   2005-06-06 14:34  

#17  DB taker a picture of it, maybe for other blog. I'd like to see that. What goes into the cartridge? Same question for Steve. Can the shot nbe varied much?
Posted by: Shipman   2005-06-06 13:56  

#16  Crushed by technology. Man, that's gotta hurt worse than being blinded by science.
Posted by: BH   2005-06-06 13:32  

#15  Syrian President Bashar Assad has said ... technological revolution sweeping the region and the world is helping ... to undermine and crush the Arab identity.

Adapt or die.
Posted by: gromgoru   2005-06-06 13:25  

#14  Got me a 10 gauge Ithaca double, breech loader. It has Damascus barrels as well, a beautiful gun.
Posted by: Steve   2005-06-06 12:42  

#13  I have a double barrel 14 ga. shotgun made in Belgium in 1842 that has Damascus steel barrels. Yes, Ship, it is a muzzle loader.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2005-06-06 12:25  

#12  "Damascuc steel" was called that because it was sold to the west from there. It was made further east.

Like silk.
Posted by: mojo   2005-06-06 12:23  

#11  the secret of the world famous 'Damascus steel'
You mean this secret?
Method of making Steel in the style of Damascus
Start out by forging six thin plates of iron, exactly identical in all respects. Let us suppose that they are each a pouce (an inch) wide, a ligne (1/12 inch) thick, and 12 inches long. Then forge five thin plates of steel, identical in form to those of iron, making in total eleven thin plates. The more plates one uses, the finer the material will be. Stack these plates one atop another, but be sure to put each steel plate between two of iron, which means starting and finishing with an iron plate. This is how it must be done, no matter how many plates one uses. This should become clear from Figure 1.[In the figure] each thin plate is numbered from 1 to 11, and under each number one sees a letter that designates the material: A for Acier (steel) and f for fer (iron).
Once all this is properly arranged, grasp all the plates with a tongs. Clamp the handles of the tongs with an "S" as shown in Chapter 12. Place this stack in a moderate fire. Raise the temperature so that all the plates heat uniformly through and through, but do not allow any of them to burn. To this end, turn the packet often in the fire, without removing it, and then let it rest in the fire a little while. The plates that are in the center will not heat up as fast as those on the outside, mainly because the latter receive heat directly from the coals, while those in the center receive none except from their neighbors. Finally, when the whole thing is uniformly hot, moderate the pumping of your bellows, "sand" [i.e. dust with flux] the material at least twice after each heat, and forge it squarely, working it down to a thickness of 8 or 9 lignes (2/3 to 3/4 inch) on a side. After this is done, heat the material up to a bright red, but not quite white, and clamp one end in the vice, as shown in Figure 2.
With stout tongs twist the material from one end to the other, as evenly as possible, so that it resembles a screw, as shown in Figure 3.
Now it is necessary to flatten and forge it out to a width of 9 lignes (3/4 inch) and a thickness of 3 lignes (1/4 inch). After this fold it in two [the long way], in the manner shown in Figure 4.
All this work, up until now, is for nothing other than to form a strong tenacious covering, such that no effort or power can break it apart. The plates of soft iron are thoroughly welded, married, and entwined with the ones of steel, forming together an extremely tough material, more tough than either component. The iron and steel are well bonded together, and the individual particles of each are very small. However, it is not possible for this material to be given a really fine cutting edge. The "veins" of iron that wind throughout prevent it. Make, therefore, a thin plate of good German steel 9 lignes wide, Figure 5, (that is, the same width as the covering), and at the very most 2-1/2 lignes thick; its length must be equal to that of the covering which has been folded in half.
Put this steel plate between the two sides of the covering. Then forge weld the whole assembly. Do not overheat the billet. Avoid striking it too hard. Use only the face of the hammer. Shape the surfaces squarely, so that the steel remains always in the center of the billet, because upon this depends the quality of the cutting edge. Then draw out the billet to the length and width which you require.

A blade made from damascus material can never break, save only by forcefully bending it back and forth many times. Therefore it makes a strong knife. And if one tempers this knife to the color of red copper, after having hardened it at a cherry color, one would be able to cut iron very readily with it, without the edge chipping, provided however that one made the edge a bit thick and rounded. But if one is making this knife to cut food at the table, and one does not wish to show off with it, one should give it a little finer cutting edge, which requires no more than tempering it to a gold color, instead of red copper color. Then one will have a good tool which will cut well, and which will keep a good edge for a long time.



Must be a real secret, I only find 213,000 hits on Google.
Posted by: Steve   2005-06-06 11:53  

#10  What about Lebannon Baloney?



/yes I know.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-06-06 11:49  

#9  It's self-destructing. When your identity incorporates mindless intolerance, repression, graft, and pointless violence against itself and the outside world without having a productive, creative output, there is no future. No need to lift a finger to finish off the identity since it's been set on self-destruct or, at the least, self-mutilate, for a long time.
Posted by: Tkat   2005-06-06 11:45  

#8  "Arab identity"

You mean like herding camels and goats in the desert?

Go for it, Assad-baby. You first.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-06-06 11:43  

#7  "Arab identity", even as a basic concept, dates to around the First World War.

Hardly a "tradition"...
Posted by: mojo   2005-06-06 11:34  

#6  The ultimate objective of all this is the destruction of Arab identity

Yup, your identity is so powerful we must take action against it!!

Not.
Posted by: anon   2005-06-06 11:21  

#5  he allowed the secret of the world famous 'Damascus steel' to be lost

ummm ... that's pretty well been known to the West for several hundred years ....
Posted by: anon   2005-06-06 11:20  

#4  Sounds like news of the outside world is becoming an irritant to Assad,Kim Jong,and pretty much all the Ayatollahs, try as they might to keep their people like mushrooms.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2005-06-06 10:59  

#3  This from a guy so concerned about the "Arab Identity" that he allowed the secret of the world famous 'Damascus steel' to be lost. All the families that made it died out without passing the secret along, and his daddies' government just shrugged. If there was anything uniquely Syrian in the world, it was that.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-06-06 10:53  

#2  Sounds like there wont be a reign of Assad III.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-06-06 10:45  

#1  Transform the arab identity to what? Assad needs to get out more and talk to people, including his own! Somebody should tell Assad that in the eyes of many, the Arab identity is just that - a negative reactive mass that acts, often in violent, cruel, and unthinking ways! I heard that critique from none other than a Syrian friend!
Posted by: Tkat   2005-06-06 10:33  

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