Morocco is a nation that sits below Ghana and Namibia in the United Nation’s human poverty index, while it joins the milieu of arrogance in this world with its theme of “change.” A whoremonger king is pressing for modernizing the nation, with lots of expensive construction, while the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. He has taught the nation, alongside the false prophets of that land, to be strumpets and hashish-flingers. They are shuffling chairs in this impoverished land while the Playboy King pretends it’s a big party, and the fags and wild youth take over the country. Tourists flock to the place so they can partake of their prostitutes, male and female, a trade that flourishes because of widespread poverty and a lust by the young people for money so they can live the party life.
The Kingdom of Morocco is situated in northwestern Africa with coasts on the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. It is bordered by Algeria to the east and Mauritania to the south. The 31.6 million people living in Morocco today are three-quarters of Berber descent. Berbers are an ancient indigenous people of North Africa west of the Nile Valley, heavily influenced by the Greek, with Afro-Asiatic languages, defined as Mediterraneans with moderate Alpinid and Nordic admixture closer to Europeans than to Africans. Arabs are the second largest ethnic group in Morocco. Considerable intermarriage among Arabs, Berbers, and the country’s small number of black Africans has broken down differences among ethnic groups.
The people who settled in North Africa were probably natives of Europe and Asia, and were the ancestors of the Berbers. In the seventh century the Phoenicians laid the foundations of commerce on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa including in the ports of Tingi, Melilia and Casablanca. The conquest of Carthage by the Roman Empire gave Romans dominance in the entire African Mediterranean coastline to the Straits of Gibraltar. From 25 to 23 B.C., Juba II, a Berber sovereign, administered the Berber kingdom of Mauritania (Algeria, Morocco, and part of Mauritania). Around 42 B.C., the emperor Claudius I annexed the whole empire of Mauritania to the Roman Empire. In 429 Morocco underwent the invasion of the Vandals. The Byzantine general Belisaire regained the region in 533. Islamic troops conquered the area between 705 and 707, with many Muslim dynasties ruling in various areas of the country from there. In 788 Idriss I, descendant of Ali, son-in-law of the pervert Mohammad, founded the dynasty of the Idrissides, and in this age the city of Fes, an important religious and cultural center of the Islamic world, was established. In 1269, Arabic Berbers, took over the throne, but could not maintain unity of the North African empire of the Almohades. During the reconquest of Spain, which exiled the Arabs and the Jews, the great majority of Spanish Muslims found refuge in Morocco. Eventually Moroccan Saadiens, aided by Moorish and Jewish refugees from Spain, created a prosperous and unified country. In 1664, Maulay Rachid founded the Alaouite dynasty, which still reigns today in Morocco. By the end of the eighteenth century, only the northern third of Morocco remained under the administration of the sultan. On March 30, 1912, the sultan recognized the French protectorate. Spain assumed control of the north of Morocco from the enclave of Ifni (southwest) and from the Moroccan Sahara (west). After World War II, the Moroccan nationalist resistance forced independence in 1956, opening the era of the constitutional monarchy in Morocco. Ifni was returned to Morocco in 1964, and Morocco occupied the Sahara in 1976. Two other enclaves, small ports on the Mediterranean coast west of Tangier, Ceuta and Melilia, are still occupied by Spain.
The Capital of Morocco is Rabat, and the largest city is Casablanca. The official language is Arabic, but French is a dominant business language and is spoken in many parts of the country. Berber and Spanish are also spoken in Morocco. From 1912 to 1956 Morocco was divided into French and Spanish protectorates. Morocco declared independence from France on March 2, 1956, and the main national holiday is Throne Day, when King Mohammed VI ascended to the throne, July 30, 1999.
Morocco is made up of 15 regions, and since 1979 Morocco has also occupied the adjacent region known as Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara). The status of the Western Sahara remains unresolved. Morocco annexed the territory in 1975 and a guerrilla war with Algerian-backed pro-independence forces ended in 1991. The United Nations has been unable to break the deadlock between these groups. In early 2009 UN-mediated talks about an independent state in Western Saraha ended in stalemate. Morocco insisted on an autonomy plan for the territory while the Polisario Front called for a referendum on self-determination.
The legal system is based on Islamic law and French and Spanish civil law. The form of government is constitutional monarchy, with King Mohammed VI serving as chief of state, and Prime Minister Abbas El Fassi serving as the head of government (since September 19, 2007). The monarch is hereditary and the prime minister is appointed by the monarch after legislative elections. The legislative branch is a bicameral parliament consisting of an upper house of 270 seats, the Chamber of Counselors, and a lower house of 325 seats, the Chamber of Representatives. The Supreme Court is presided over by the monarch, and the judges are appointed. The flag is made of the traditional red and green of Arab flags, with a green pentacle (five-pointed, linear star) known as Salayman’s (Solomon’s) seal.
In 1956, when Morocco declared independence, Sultan Mohammed became king. He was succeeded in 1961 by his son, Hassan II, who ruled for 38 years. Hassan played a prominent role in the pretend-peace-process in the Middle East because of the large number of Israelis of Moroccan origin. He was criticized for human rights violations, and a “truth commission” reported nearly 10,000 cases ranging from death in detention to forced exile during his rule. In 1999 Hassan was succeeded by his son. King Mohammed VI claims to be new, open and modern. He married a 24-year-old computer engineer in 2002, and broke with tradition by publicizing the wedding (which historically was secret). He says the fight against poverty is his priority, so he is called “guardian of the poor.” Another of his key reforms has been the Mudawana, a law which grants more rights to women. He has also given permission to the private press to cover many previously-taboo issues, including social problems. The government owns or has a stake in Morocco’s main TV networks.
A 2009 Amnesty International Report on Morocco and “Occupied Western Sahara” said rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly continue to be restricted, and any criticism of views contradicting the official position are penalized. The report also criticized excessive force used to break up antigovernment protests, and the fact that allegations of torture were not investigated, and victims of alleged human rights violations had no access to justice. The report said authorities arrest, detail and deport thousands, four people had been sentenced to death, and criticism of the monarchy continues to be taboo. Of course this same report complained about any suggestion in Moroccan law that homosexuality is wrong or illegal, acting as though this filth should be put on the same playing field as speech, assembly and association. You can see the report here: http://thereport.amnesty.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/morocco.
In June 2009 elections were held in Morocco, which was the first test for a new party founded by Fouad Ali Himma (a close friend of the king), called the Modernity and Authenticity Party (PAM). Over 7 million out of over 13 million eligible voters turned out, the PAM party took 21.7% of the 27,795 seats up for bid. A total of 3,406 women were elected, compared to 127 in 2003 (up by over 2,500%). So now the media is trumpeting this great victory; the politicians claim they will put more pressure on the government to do right; and everyone is cooing over how modern the nation has become. In all likelihood this is just a chair shuffle, because this generation is cursed, the people are not righteous, and the nation is overtaken by a filthy manner of life and false religious system.