Happy Birthday Mr.President

Discussion in 'General Mayhem' started by Icare, Mar 24, 2001.

  1. Cheezedawg

    Cheezedawg Guest

    I know who Queen of the Blacks is. She tried to fuck Redneck X once before. Until he spilled beer on his laptop and fried it.
     
  2. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
    Zionazi (Adj.) Zionaziism (noun):
    To target Palestinians with merciless crimes and try to legitimize them so not to be seen as a bully and be punished for them.
    In the realm of Zionaziism, it is legitimate and appropriate for any Israeli to enter Palestinian territories illegally and use Terrorism to force Palestinian landowners and homeowners out of their properties.

    Zionazis want the rest of the world to accept their holy book as a legal real-estate registry and throw away any civil laws even if they have existed continuously for 2000 years and longer. The Zionazis also think that killing a Palestinian child like Mohamed alDorra in cold-blood is an act of self-defense.

    Zionazis will not discuss evidence such as videotapes showing Zionazis committing murder. They do not acknowledge Palestinians as equally human beings and they do not acknowledge any UN Resolutions or any International laws which give the Palestinian people any legal protection whatsoever.

    On the basis that Zionazi rules supercede all laws, Zionazis do not even respect the Palestinian right for self-defense and Resistance against Israeli military occupation.
    To be a Zionazi means to be a Hijacker, a Terrorist, a Thief, a Murderer, an Assassin, a war criminal, or a combination of all or some.
     
  3. Guest

    Guest Guest

    Give me a break.. troll.. Saddam is a fag... someone shoud shoot him in the head and roll him into a hole.
     
  4. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
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    bristol, you really are a dumbfuck faggoty dickwad (your forum bears witness to this fact) brainwashed idiot with no thoughts of your own...

    <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="verdana">quote
    troll??.. you really think so?.. no not at all.. saddam may or may not be evil (my vote is not)... but he was put in power in the first place by america to be their little dictator... then when he wouldn't play ball they wanted him out...
     
  5. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
    Dear Friend:

    Here comes the promised article "Iraq's children paying Washington's price with their lives". I don't know (yet) where it was originally the published, but it should be reprinted and widely circulated everywhere.
    For the best information on the predicament of the Iraqi people and U.S. aggression. (supported so far strongly only by Britain's Tony Blair) toward their country can be found on the website of the International Action Center (New York), which is the organization founded by former US. Attorney
    General Ramsey Clark. The website is: http://www.iacente.org. Marjaleena Repo, national organizer.

    To reflect on seven years of visits to Iraq since the Gulf War, is to reflect on decline from the impossible to the apocalyptic.

    When Martti Antisaari, then special reporter to the United Nations, visited the country just after the Gulf War, he wrote that: "Nothing we have seen or read could have prepared us for this particular devastation, a country reduced to a preindustrial age for some considerable time to come.

    In the forty-five days of the Gulf War 56,133.32 tons of ordinance was dropped on Iraq—exceeding the 47,777.78 tons dropped in the forty-five months of the Second World War.

    Unknown to the public or the allied troops at the time, much of the ordinance was COATED WITH DEPLETED URANIUM (DU) comprising a new and deadly generation of weapons whose effects linger long after the bombs and the
    guns are silent. DU, waste from the nuclear industry, has replaced titanium as armor-piercing coating. When a bullet or missile makes contact with a target, it burns and produces a fine dust. It is both toxic and
    radioactive.

    Inhaled, according to experts it can cause cancers and can settle in the kidneys and lead to nephritis (kidney death).

    In 1990, the UK Atomic Energy Authority sent a report to the government estimating that if 50 tons of residual dust was left at the area as a result of hostilities, there could be half a million extra cancer deaths by
    the end of the century. Some experts now estimate that up to 700 tons remains. DU remains radioactive for four thousand five hundred million years.

    While the Pentagon and Whitehall state that it is "only very very mildly radioactive," when Professor Siegwart-Horst Guenther, founder of the Austrian Yellow Cross, took a DU bullet— correctly encased in a lead-lined
    box-—back to Germany from Iraq for analysis in 1993, he was arrested at Berlin airport,
    the bullet had activated all the radiation sensors.

    [Now you see the "other" reasons for building a war to the point of using nuclear weapons? THE CULPRITS HAVE TO COVER UP THEIR OWN IRRATIONAL ACTIONS FROM THE LAST ENCOUNTER—THAT THEY THOUGHT WOULD NEVER HAVE TO BE CONFRONTED AGAIN.]

    When I went to Iraq in early 1992, doctors were already remarking in bewilderment on the increase in birth deformities—some so grotesque and unusual that they expected to see them only in text books, or perhaps once
    or twice in a! lifetime. They were, ironically, comparing them to the birth defects seen in Bikini and the Pacific islands after nuclear testing, yet it was not until the following year that it was realized that radioactive weapons had been used.

    They were also noting a dramatic rise in cancers, especially in children. Not with a bang, but with a whimper indeed.

    Ironically treatments for cancers are vetoed by the Sanctions Committee, since they contain minute-traces of radiation, so little that Iraqis, in their irradiated land, cannot avail themselves of the therapeutic value of radiation, only suffer its most deadly consequences.

    According to a Army study: "if DU enters the body, it has the potential to generate significant medical consequences. The risks associated with DU in the body are both chemical and radiological." (US Army Environment Policy Institute: Health and Environment Consequences of Depleted Uranium Use in the US Army, June 1995).

    Almost any household one enters in Iraq has a sort of "black souvenir" of the Gulf War—sitting on a shelf somewhere is a piece of a missile or a spent bullet, silently emitting radiation. On a visit to a center set up to counsel severely psychologically damaged children—in what psychologists refer to as one of the "MOST TRAUMATIZED CHILD POPULATIONS ON EARTH" as a result of the Gulf War—I saw a chilling sight. - The center was a far cry from the schools, devoid of the most basic of items—EVEN PENCILS AND EXERCISE BOOKS HAVE BEEN VETOED BY THE SANCTIONS COMMITTEE—light, bright and airy, it was normality in a land reduced to absolute abnormality.

    Toy and book companies in Scandinavia had donated colorful building blocks, mobiles which hung gaily from the ceiling, doves of peace decorated pastel walls. Fluffy toys sat on rows of shelves—and between them, small pieces of cold, hard metal—pieces of radioactive missiles. [From America with "love."]

    "The children pick them up and bring them in," a psychotherapist remarked, "It is their way of coming to terms with their fear, their way of healing themselves...". The irony and tragedy left me, unusually, lost for words. When, later, I expressed my concern to an eminent physician who had worked in Britain and saved many British lives, he fell silent, then looked at me and said very quietly: "we are afraid, we are all very afraid..."

    In the hospital ward there was the manifestation of this fear. Two children, one aged three, Ali Lazam (his name translated as "the vital one") and the other aged five, lay, in terrible pain, bleeding internally, covered in bruises from leaking capillaries, bloated with edema, damp with perspiration.

    Ali Lazam was making tiny "mewing" noises, his eyes full of unshed tears. He had learned not to cry, sobs wracking his small frame further, intensifying his agony. The older one was in the same condition, but when I bent to stroke his puffy little face, his small hand came up and grabbed mine and squeezed it with all his might, a gesture of trust, pleading and spontaneity.

    left the ward, leaned against a wall and prayed for the ground to open and swallow me up. FOR THE PEOPLE OF IRAQ, FOR THE CHILDREN OF IRAQ, FROM THE RADIATION TO THE EMBARGO, THE WAR HAS NEVER ENDED.

    There is no escape into normality and as we threaten to bomb again, there is no hiding place. [Remember—the government can "surgically bomb" directly into a bomb shelter air vent and BRAG ABOUT IT WHILE SHOWING OFF YOUR PICTURES TO A SICK WORLD. You know no remorse, for after all—IT IS SADDAM'S FAULT!]

    "This is worse than the war," a doctor told me in 1992, "we knew that the war must end, but we do not know whether this will ever end." He had spent the war treating patients and operating on them, by candle-light, often without anesthetic, often without sleep for three or more nights.

    He recounted undertaking a painful peritoneal dialysis operation, in the dark, in an operating heater whose windows had been broken in the blast from a missile which had hit an adjoining building. "When I move forward, the hot wax drips into the patient's stomach, when I stand back, you can't see," his colleague, who was holding the candle, remarked. Yet the embargo "was worse...".

    In late 1993, psychologists whose concern is for children in war zones, were reporting what they described as a unique phenomenon. Many Children in Iraq no longer played games—they reminded them of the dead friends that used to play with them.

    "Children are surprisingly resilient," Professor Magne Raundalen, who heads the Center for Crisis Studies in Bergen, Norway, told me. "But the children of Iraq are not progressing as I would expect, they are regressing." But they had heard the bombs fall again in 1993—and in some psychological surveys up to 80 percent of children thought they would not live to grow up. [It seems they were and are correct, if our "humanitarian" government has its way!]

    I went back to the trauma center that year and met a small boy who became physically sick at the sight of blue jeans. He had been wearing a precious pair his uncle had sent him from America when the bombs fell. His best friend was killed.

    I met little Naira who could not drink—in the searing heat of Baghdad. She used to offer her special fiend from whom she was inseparable, water from her little container before she drank herself—a traditional Iraqi gesture. Her friend was killed in the bombing.

    On a later visit I met Ali, whose father was killed in the Gulf War. His body was returned unlike many in General Norman Schwarzkopf's "turkey shoot" went to the funeral; he was three years old. The graveyard was near his home.
    Every day for three years, Ali ran repeatedly to the grave and dug at it with his small hands saying: "It's alright Daddy, you can come out now, the men who put you there have gone away. . ."

    While trauma at this level was there for anyone who cared to see, UN personnel could frequently be observed, in their leisure time, sporting T-shirts with "Air Power" emblazoned on the front.

    By 1994 Dieter Hannusch of the Rome based World Food Program was writing that this formerly largely developed country—with, prior to the Gulf War, 92 percent access to clean water and 93 percent access to high quality, free health care and similar education and nutrition had, for the most part, a lower caloric intake than Mali.

    In 1995 Hannusch wrote that: "time is running out for the children of Iraq." Time ran out for seven-year-old Yasmin that year. Named after the sweet scented yellow flowers, she had developed a minor heart defect just after the Gulf War. When the embargo is over, we will operate and her health should be perfect,"' her parents were told. In five years a minor defect became a major one and her damaged little heart could no longer sustain her frail body.

    I was in the ward at the El Baladi Hospital, formerly a flagship institution, as her fledgling life flickered and went out. I can still hear the screams of her mother and grandmother* as they rushed from the front of the-ward and across a busy road, oblivious to all—but their agony. "Yasmin, Yasmin, Yasmin. . . they cried—and her name floated back through the open windows and over her small, cooling body. [* But war mongering GRANDMA ALBRIGHT says "It's worth it."]

    In 1996 one third of surviving children is under 15—were estimated: to be suffering stunted growth or impaired intelligence resulting from malnutrition.

    The inexcusable and draconian nature of the embargo was reinforced for me in December 1997. Although the temperature was relatively cool, there was an epidemic of flies. Stagnant water or sewage lay in many streets due to a lack of parts for pipes which were fractured or bombed seven years ago this month. Water is still unsafe in many areas, thus fly- and water-borne disease are endemic. [Amazing how the media only shows us pictures of Saddam and "happy" children, never of the suffering these children are enduring.]

    Invited to homes for a meal to which everyone in the neighborhood has contributed something, in dire straits but still extending the overwhelming Iraqi hospitality, one person stands on "fly drill." Literally standing over the table waving hands or fly swatters. Not one to be enthusiastic about chemicals in the home, even I was driven to suggest that this was desperate and fly spray was essential.

    Fly spray, it transpired, had been vetoed by the Sanctions Committee. Ironically, Iraq is being accused of having the capability for biological and chemical warfare.

    [The last sentence is missing from the article, but following the gist of it I would venture to say that it probably wondered, "IF IRAQ CAN MAKE ALL THOSE BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS, WHY CAN'T IT MAKE FLY SPRAY FOR ITS PEOPLE?" BECAUSE IT DOESN'T HAVE THE CAPABILITY!!!]

    [As bad as the US government and media try to make out Saddam, this shows that the US government is worse. WHAT HAPPENED TO CLINTON'S "DO IT FOR THE CHILDREN." . . . WHAT IF THESE WERE YOUR CHILDREN???] No wonder the Arab nations call us -- the US --

    the Great White Satan!!!
     
  6. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
  7. canine_STD

    canine_STD New Member

    Messages:
    1,386
    Oh GOD! OK, Hail Saddam, he's the best thing since sliced bread. I only mean that he's of no use now! He may have done a good job when he first took iraq, but not now. Pinochet did wonderful things for chile when he first took over. I'm sure thay all love him for it.
     
  8. fungus

    fungus New Member

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    13
    i think maybe you people might have forgotten about kuwait in this discussion. iraq invaded that country, looting it dry, killing and rapping thousands upon thousands of innocent people and then sabotaging the oil wells and leaving millions of land mines when they left.

    i remember seeing footage of hundreds of iraqis surrendering to news crews because they were so poorly underfed and even ate the lip balm that was provided to them by the u.s.

    saddam sent scuds into israel, hoping they would retaliate and draw the rest of the arab world into the conflict which might have led us into another world war. i remember reading in my history class what happened when the united states stood by and let germany and japan start invading countries at random.

    during the iraq/iran war, iraq sent shells with mustard gas and other poisonous chemicals into cities that didn't weren't even occupied by opposing forces killing hundreds of thousands of citizens.

    saddam is a fucking piece of shit and anyone here that thinks he wouldn't cut your throat in a heart beat needs to get in touch with reality. now i know israel and the u.s. has done some fucked up shit but to sit there and try to defend saddam hussien and say he isn't an evil person is fucking insane.

    the whole human race is retarded but defending the head retard of a retarded country is just plain retarded.

    i said retard 4 times in that sentence. go me.
     
  9. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
    so who would you replace him with??..
    emperor dubya the illiterate?
     
  10. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

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    7,211
    fungus.. the kuwaiti government has told america they want them to leave iraq alone.. this only warranted an inch or two of a column in the newspaper.
     
  11. fungus

    fungus New Member

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    13
    <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="verdana">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by PimpDaddy:
    so who would you replace him with??..
    emperor dubya the illiterate?
    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    uh, last i checked, he wasn't trying to invade canada and loot it dry.


     
  12. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
    no he's busy invading the middle east to suck that dry.. the canadians already know who their master is
     
  13. fungus

    fungus New Member

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    <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="verdana">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by PimpDaddy:
    no he's busy invading the middle east to suck that dry<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    i guess you're right. we should just leave people like osama and saddam alone and let them build weapons of mass destruction to use on us.

     
  14. pimpchichi

    pimpchichi Active Member

    Messages:
    7,211
    why would they want to do that?
     

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