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#61
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"Aardvark J. Bandersnatch, MP" wrote in message news:OWHsc.111526$536.20269032@attbi_s03... I think Arabs should be pressed up aginst the Red Sea... It their Allah Splits it they live, if he dosn't well it is Ahllah's will and the arabs take a long swim... After all the Arabs have done so much harm and terror to the world in the last 600 years (invasions, bombs, biological weapons, ethnic cleansing, fratricide, regicide, matricide, suicide, genocide, etc.) that you really cannot expect arabs to live in peace with anyone ever. so might as well just get rid of the verman. |
#62
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"George Z. Bush" wrote in message ...
Jack Linthicum wrote: Alan Lothian wrote in message ... In article , Presidente Alcazar wrote: On Tue, 25 May 2004 21:44:59 +0100, Alan Lothian wrote: (Snip) competing agencies, the US Department of Justice has opened up a potential battleground with the Department of Homeland Security by means of the weapon of choice, Television. Yesterday the Attorney General flanked by one tall and one short bozo proceeded to announce the need to find seven people who have been known as al Qaeda members since at least 1998. They may or may not be in the US, one commentator on this morning's TV said he saw at least 12 of them while coming to work in New York. "Nation in peril" is a a good rallying cry if you have nothing more to offer, warmed over stale news fills the 24-7 schedule as well anything of value. The short bozo was the Director of the FBI. I couldn't identify the tall bozo....could you? (^-^))) No, and neither does the FBI site. I would presume it is either Karl Rove's watchdog to make certain that the new offensive on terror, as opposed to the mess in potamia, gets its creds or, possibly, the center for the Director's Office basketball team being shown as an actual employee and not some ringer brought in to play. |
#63
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Jack Linthicum wrote:
"George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... Jack Linthicum wrote: Alan Lothian wrote in message ... In article , Presidente Alcazar wrote: On Tue, 25 May 2004 21:44:59 +0100, Alan Lothian wrote: (Snip) competing agencies, the US Department of Justice has opened up a potential battleground with the Department of Homeland Security by means of the weapon of choice, Television. Yesterday the Attorney General flanked by one tall and one short bozo proceeded to announce the need to find seven people who have been known as al Qaeda members since at least 1998. They may or may not be in the US, one commentator on this morning's TV said he saw at least 12 of them while coming to work in New York. "Nation in peril" is a a good rallying cry if you have nothing more to offer, warmed over stale news fills the 24-7 schedule as well anything of value. The short bozo was the Director of the FBI. I couldn't identify the tall bozo....could you? (^-^))) No, and neither does the FBI site. I would presume it is either Karl Rove's watchdog to make certain that the new offensive on terror, as opposed to the mess in potamia, gets its creds or, possibly, the center for the Director's Office basketball team being shown as an actual employee and not some ringer brought in to play. You know, you'd have thought that he might have recognized that, for all of his warnings about us being a target of AQ again, some of us would conclude that he was admitting that his leadership hadn't accomplished much of anything in their war against terrorism by squandering our assets in Iraq. George Z. |
#64
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"Steven James Forsberg" wrote in message
... : I work worldwide and have to deal with such frequently. One guide I have : used for years is "Kiss, Bow or Shake Hands: How to do Business in 60 : Countries". Aside from providing useful info on business and personal : customs, it also discusses cultural orientation such as cognitive : styles. Let me quote from their section on Saudi Arabia (since they : don't have an 'Iraq' section): : "Saudis find it difficult to accept any outside information that does : not reflect Islamic values... Generally, a Saudi's faith in Islamic : ideologies shapes the truth, but it is also affected by the immediate : feelings of the participants. Objective facts seldom overrule one's : thinking." Of course the term "cognitive dissonance" was originally used to describe behaviors manifested by "modern/western" people, but it certainly has its place in many if not all cultures. The above says that "objective facts" are overruled by the Saudis "faith" and that "truth" is subjective. Funny, I'd swear that there are a lot of fervent Christains out there who are just the same way... Exactly. Current events must surely underline this if anyone was ever in any doubt! John |
#65
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In message , Michael P.
Reed writes In message , "Paul J. Adam" wrote: So a virgin could walk the length and breadth of Iraq with her bosom full of gold, and none might raise a hand to her? You need to build brick houses if you do not want the Big Bad Wolf to blow it down. It's complicated when you're fighting the Big Bad Wolf and building houses for the Friendly Wolf - and trying to tell one from the other. (Separating sheep and goats is simple by comparison) I'm not the one trying to claim that Iraq is a peaceful haven of tranquility with just the last handful of insurgents to be winkled out... Who has tried to claim that? Not anyone that I have read. Victory has been imminent for quite some time, apparently... Insurgent activity ebbs and flows. After their conventional defeat, it took time to reorganize and reconstitute and after a couple of months insurgent attacks rose, then after suffering casualties and captures, it fell (as after Sadaam's capture). It rose in Falujah, and fell again, and will probably fall through the summer only to rebound prior to the elections (in this, it is eerily similar to the Philippines in 1900). In the end, however, the crescendos of violence will lessen as time passes (that is, of course, if the "occupying power" is winning). We'll have to wait and see. I agree with all of the above, actually. I'm concerned about excessive and premature triumphalism - not convinced of doom. (Failure remains thoroughly possible, but so is a successful outcome. As you say, time will tell) Personally, I think the guerrilla/terrorists blew it big time in Falujah, Al Sadr is doing now, by concentrating too much, and so allowing them to be much more easily (and conveniently) killed. An embarrassment to the U.S. and Coalition, yes, but I'd rather be embarrassed than dead. One thing about guerrilla wars is that one does not always know one is winning until the fighting is over. It is too gradual. One may argue that McKinley's victory in the 1900 election was the straw that broke the camel's back during the Philippine Insurrection (Because Aguinaldo and the insurrectionists were depending heavily on the "anti-war" William Jennings Bryan's victory, but the nastiest fighting (Samar and Batangas) still lay ahead, and the war wouldn't end for another year and a half. I've left the above unsnipped because, again, it's a valid point. Why? I'm just asking for some consistency. One minute it's a successful and mostly peaceful occupation: the next, it's a furious insurgency with guerillas behind every rock. I have not seen those claims made. I have. (Remember, this is Usenet: cynically, you can find anything claimed if you read long enough) I'm willing to believe one, or the other, but not both at the same time. Then you need to enlarge your imagination. g It is indeed both only not everywhere. That's true enough. I gather the Kurdish north is going pretty well: the south was doing fairly well but has recently started slipping: and the US had some of the hotbeds which have not gone as well as desired. (Because the US mishandled them? Or because the US had many of the hard cases to deal with?) Perhaps I just prefer to be cautiously pessimistic - and to express doubts about some parts of the plan. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#66
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"news" wrote in message ... "Aardvark J. Bandersnatch, MP" wrote in message news:OWHsc.111526$536.20269032@attbi_s03... I think Arabs should be pressed up aginst the Red Sea... It their Allah Splits it they live, if he dosn't well it is Ahllah's will and the arabs take a long swim... Just so everyone understands, *I* did NOT write the above. After all the Arabs have done so much harm and terror to the world in the last 600 years (invasions, bombs, biological weapons, ethnic cleansing, fratricide, regicide, matricide, suicide, genocide, etc.) that you really cannot expect arabs to live in peace with anyone ever. The immediate above is also part of my original post. What follows was NOT part of my post. At least I do know how to spell vermin. so might as well just get rid of the verman. |
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