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Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Saturday, June 23, 2007 2:10 PM on j-body.org
The greatest french infantry regiment of soldiers in the world. Quebec's Royald 22e publicly marched the other day, and as usual a few people got all insulted.

Some protesters showed up saying they disagreed with the march because it supported the illegal and illegitamite occupation of Afghanistan...

Uh? Whu?

Didn't the UN approve that? Didn't the Taliban do everything except yell "INVADE US OR WE'LL KILL THIS DOG!!!!!"? Last time I checked Iraq was the war everyone didn't agree on. Afghanistan was okey dorey.

So now apparently the troubles in Afghanistan are our fault.

You know what bugs me the most about this line of thinking? The fact that it's so racist. These supposed enlightened liberals are basically saying that Afghanistan's people are so weak and backward and primitive and savage that they can't cope with our big white presence there. That we're influencing them to kill each other simply by our interference. As if they're a bunch of Hamsters and when they get upset they start eating each other.

WHAT THE HELL KIND OF THINKING IS THAT??????

I was sure that the whole Noble Savage idea dead out with the British Colonialists. Seems it's been adopted by the anti-war left wing socialists of all people.

Oh, and speaking of just "staying out of other people's country's" how's that worked out exactly? That whole "not bothering them" thing? I'm sure that the people in Darfur might have a few words to say about it, if they weren't all starving and unable to find the strenght to speak. I'm also sure that the Cambodians appreciate the fact that we stayed out of their country, despite the fact that the genocide there killed one quarter of their population. Or how about our great Communist friends China? Tiananmen Square? F**k em right?

Ghandi once said that one should never use pacifism as a means to hide their cowardice. That true pacifism required great bravery and sacrifice. I agree with that. And today's anti-war people are cowards, plain and simple. They don't give a damn about anyone else but themselves and they don't care how many people die, as long as they don't have to know about it. These are the same type of brave people that closed their eyes to the screams and smell of burning coming from concentration camps in the 40's. It's not war that they're against, it's the knowledge of it. They just can't stomach the idea that violence exists that only violence can stop it.

I agree, it's an endless cycle, but that's life. All living creatures kill others, we're no exception. To ignore pain and suffering in order to wall ourselves againts the big bad world isn't going to fix a damn thing. We never created any of the injustice in the world. It was already there when we arrived. Did we profit from tyrants? Of course. But we didn't invent tyranny.

Now these guys are saying "Let's just stop doing ANYTHING!" as if that's going to help. I'm sure it will. Just like ignoring street crime makes it go away, right?

Right?




Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Saturday, June 23, 2007 4:34 PM on j-body.org
I don't support the idea, but I can see what they're talking about...

Afghanistan, by simple and pure fact that it's a US led operation is turning into a cluster-f*ck. There's a word that troops, critics and reporters use to describe the type of country that Afghanistan has become: NARCO-STATE.

2/3 of the worlds' heroin comes from Afghanistan, about 10% of the Hashish and Marijuana come from Afghanistan. Seriously, there was a plan to use RID-X (a commercial pesticide) on the opium and marijuana fields, and bomb the smeg out of Drug processing plants and such, with a simple strike.

Why hasn't this happened? Gilligan and company (I'm calling Dubya Gilligan, Cheney Skipper, and Rumsfeld the Professor) decided it wasn't important, but then again why would you listen to the DEA, the Defence Dept's intel service and the CIA? Why on earth would you do that?

If (it's a Gigantic IF) the UN mission n Afghanistan was actually handed to Canadian, British, German or French commanders, they'd actually have dispatched troops to mark and destroy the narcotic grow fields. At this point, everyone is just doing token work, nothing substantial is being done.

That's not "Liberal" politics... that's opting out of the idiocy.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 5:11 AM on j-body.org
The Afghan Gov't should be taking care of the fields, the troops should be targeting AQ and Taliban members. NATO, NOT THE US, is running things in Afghanstan.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 7:25 AM on j-body.org
So all anti-war people piss you off because of a few far-left idiots?


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Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 9:09 AM on j-body.org
i love protesters/activists..they are always so far off the deep end they end up hurting thier cause more than helping it. They make for great entertainment, watching someone argue with all thier strength either for or against a situation/cause/whatever that they really dont know the full story behind...its great.


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Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 9:32 AM on j-body.org
^^^Cuts both ways, Ronin.


Goodbye Callisto & Skaši, Hello Ishara:
2022 Kia Stinger GT2 AWD
The only thing every single person from every single walk of life on earth can truly say
they have in common is that their country is run by a bunch of fargin iceholes.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 9:46 AM on j-body.org
Ronin J wrote:i love protesters/activists..they are always so far off the deep end they end up hurting thier cause more than helping it. They make for great entertainment, watching someone argue with all thier strength either for or against a situation/cause/whatever that they really dont know the full story behind...its great.


That's awfully. presumptuous


---


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 2:22 PM on j-body.org
mrgto wrote:The Afghan Gov't should be taking care of the fields, the troops should be targeting AQ and Taliban members. NATO, NOT THE US, is running things in Afghanstan.


Good to see you back

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-06-26-voa62.cfm

US is in command of NATO forces in Afghanistan and has been since the invasion, and as much as the Afghani's oughtta be in charge of destroying the drug crops, it ain't happening. Dubya hasn't been making an issue of it, and nothing's happening despite International pressure.

BTW, NATO is in charge of ISAF, not the UN mission at large... ISAF is about 8000 troops, Provincial reconstruction teams and other support personnel. There's still about 30,000 more (about 10,000 US, 5000 each: UK, German and Canadian) under US Command in support of UN resolutions.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 5:40 PM on j-body.org
GAM (The Kilted One) wrote:
mrgto wrote:The Afghan Gov't should be taking care of the fields, the troops should be targeting AQ and Taliban members. NATO, NOT THE US, is running things in Afghanstan.


Good to see you back

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-06-26-voa62.cfm

US is in command of NATO forces in Afghanistan and has been since the invasion, and as much as the Afghani's oughtta be in charge of destroying the drug crops, it ain't happening. Dubya hasn't been making an issue of it, and nothing's happening despite International pressure.

BTW, NATO is in charge of ISAF, not the UN mission at large... ISAF is about 8000 troops, Provincial reconstruction teams and other support personnel. There's still about 30,000 more (about 10,000 US, 5000 each: UK, German and Canadian) under US Command in support of UN resolutions.


I hang out on www.ls2.com
If you like the war forum here, you'll love the forum over there.

Well then the Afghan Gov't better step the @!#$ up and destroy the crops...but we all know why they won't. It's the total failure of the Iraq security forces to step the the F up but they're totaly F'up's over there. F'ing religious idiots.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, June 26, 2007 5:48 PM on j-body.org
The failure starts from the top down: Appointing a former Arbusto Energy employee to be the president... hrmm...

It's less about drugs, and more about securing the TAPI pipeline from Turkmenistan to India.


Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Monday, August 20, 2007 11:01 AM on j-body.org
Technically speaking everyone should be anti-war.

Knoxfire: the moment you said "liberal" I stopped reading. If your going to make an argument in a public forum you should stay away from stereotyping, it doesn't provide any support to your argument and gives you less credibility.

I believe we should be in Afghanistan, but I want to know why we haven't found a certain terrorist yet. Iraq is a whole different story.


-Chris


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 21, 2007 12:11 PM on j-body.org
I think we oughtta finish what we're doing in Afghanistan... And I consider myself a Liberal (if not in party but ideology).


Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 21, 2007 12:18 PM on j-body.org
Ya know, a thought just occured to me...

Life often imitates art. Since art can inviolve paining, and old-syle animation used ink and paint, we can say animation is art. Thus, old Warner Brother's cartoons are art (Definitly are in my opinion).

The Uber-bunny, it seems, usually always fare well, UNLESS he's the instigator.

Thus, let's take a look at America's war record. It seems to me whenever we have been attacked, or have defended someone being attacked, we've done quite well. Whenever we've instigated (Vietnam, current Iraq war), we've not done too well.

Somehow, i think this snippet of information (don't instigate or else your ass will be handed to you with a side of parsley) seems to escape many of the world leaders.

Food for thought. Mind your own business.


Goodbye Callisto & Skaši, Hello Ishara:
2022 Kia Stinger GT2 AWD
The only thing every single person from every single walk of life on earth can truly say
they have in common is that their country is run by a bunch of fargin iceholes.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 21, 2007 2:12 PM on j-body.org
Instigated? The US's track record is.. ummm abysmal?
- War of 1812
- Iran
- Indian Wars

... defensively, the US has done well... personally I think that Americans have no appetite nor interest for Empire (No, that's not mine. Colin Powell said that in 2003, and I think he's dead on). Waging a war of aggression isn't an easy thing. In Germany 1939-1944, the German people didn't WANT war, but they got it because of one man's ambitions. Seems to me, that you'll have the same thing on your hands.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 21, 2007 4:01 PM on j-body.org
You forgot Vietnam, Korea (which got us all of nowhere), and let's not forget the wars on terror and drugs (both about as winnable as a land war in asia)

Unfortunately, in this case, you're right. the only good thing is we only have to deal with Donkey Kong for about a year and a half--after that maybe we can get out of this mess.




Goodbye Callisto & Skaši, Hello Ishara:
2022 Kia Stinger GT2 AWD
The only thing every single person from every single walk of life on earth can truly say
they have in common is that their country is run by a bunch of fargin iceholes.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Wednesday, August 22, 2007 10:35 AM on j-body.org
I didn't add Vietnam because you had already mentioned it...

Korea wasn't a war of Agression... and it's technically still on going.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Wednesday, August 22, 2007 11:18 AM on j-body.org
No, but still a dumb war...but i don't need to say it twice.


Goodbye Callisto & Skaši, Hello Ishara:
2022 Kia Stinger GT2 AWD
The only thing every single person from every single walk of life on earth can truly say
they have in common is that their country is run by a bunch of fargin iceholes.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Wednesday, August 22, 2007 3:01 PM on j-body.org
The reprisals against non-communists were severe, and still are.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Friday, August 24, 2007 7:41 AM on j-body.org
^^^as were the reprisals here against communists.


Goodbye Callisto & Skaši, Hello Ishara:
2022 Kia Stinger GT2 AWD
The only thing every single person from every single walk of life on earth can truly say
they have in common is that their country is run by a bunch of fargin iceholes.
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Friday, August 24, 2007 6:10 PM on j-body.org
I must say... I will most likely be the only one that agrees with knoxfire but here it is! I do believe that Iraq had WMD's, yes this has been thrown around a lot BUT with the knowledge that we had, and it must have been damn good knowledge they had them and were capable of using them. Oh and I'm sorry, but I do NOT see the point of blaming George Bush... what is the point? Everyone says omg... omg i can't believe that he is so stupid *sigh* lets think, hmmmm he has all of his advisors, his military commanders... hmmm, ok how many decisions is he making on his own?? NONE! at all, ever... So lets take a step back and look at this, wow! we have some of the smartest minds in America stating that Iraq is a real threat, lets sit back and wait for them to try and blow up half of the U.S. before we decide to stand up and stop them. Now, we did make some REAL mistakes, was going to Iraq one of them? hell no! George Bush was not in the military, neither was rumsfeld, they didn't know what they were asking the Military to do when they sent them into Iraq and made them run to Baghdad, obviously someone didn't say... this is not the way to fight this kind of war, we need to slowly move through the city removing (terrorists/hajis/iraqi's/insurgents) <you pick. Also, most of the Iraqi Military would have gladly taken up arms against Saddam after we had "liberated" the country, but our commanders stated that there wasn't enough room on the playing field for two armies so they simply disbanded the army, ok... not the best decision, you just made about 5 thousand trained soldiers lose their job. So what are they going to do? TAKE SOME POT SHOTS AT THE ****** THE TOOK THEIR JOB! and now to a completely different point in the topic, people absolutely hate the war because the way that the media is portraying it. I actually have a really good video, well two actually... heres the links, one is what the Normandy invasion would be televised like today and one is what I personally think Patton would say although this video definitely is a lot nicer than what is actual language would be. There is also another one that I threw in that is great. Oh and I'm not sure if you have seen the Sgt. Freedom campaign or not, but he states what everyone thinks and doesn't say! Today it is harder to be on the Right (wing) than it is to be emo/punk/whatever other fad maybe?? WELL! i'm done hopefully someone somewhere understand what I am trying to say, yeah i do know that it's written kind of funny but it still gets my point across... thanks for reading!

http://shock.military.com/Shock/videos.do?displayContent=146997&page=1

http://shock.military.com/Shock/videos.do?displayContent=144017&page=10

http://shock.military.com/Shock/videos.do?displayContent=138217&page=25

http://www.dmpvideos.com/freedom.html

Thanks,
Shane Belanger
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Monday, August 27, 2007 3:30 PM on j-body.org
Shane, I have to do this because part of your reasoning is faulty, and part of it is uninformed.

Shane Belanger wrote:I must say... I will most likely be the only one that agrees with knoxfire but here it is! I do believe that Iraq had WMD's, yes this has been thrown around a lot BUT with the knowledge that we had, and it must have been damn good knowledge they had them and were capable of using them.
This is incorrect, mainly because the sole source that said that Hussein had WMD's was not in a position to know that first or second hand, he was also known to be a liar and a profiteer. This was born out in the Iraq Survey Group final report delivered in 2004. Basically the Whitehouse, Britain's MI-5 (Her Majesty's Intelligence Service), and Russia's FSB (basically the remade KGB) all knew the data was false. German and French intel (Who actually had sources inside Iraq) was able to verify that it wasn't credible either, almost immediately. Right after Operation: Desert Storm, US Army Corps of Engineers and USAMRIID helped to destroy 100% of all known Iraqi Bio/Chem weapons, and all remaining nuclear war-making materials (Israel had been responsible for destroying the Nuclear Test Facility in Northern Iraq in 1988 if memory serves me). If Iraq had been able to smuggle in any Bio/Chem materials, it would mean that someone in the UN mandated blockade wasn't doing their job, that someone would be UN/US military coalitions.

Quote:

Oh and I'm sorry, but I do NOT see the point of blaming George Bush... what is the point? Everyone says omg... omg i can't believe that he is so stupid *sigh* lets think, hmmmm he has all of his advisors, his military commanders... hmmm, ok how many decisions is he making on his own?? NONE! at all, ever...
So, where exactly does the buck stop? Harry Truman had a placard on his desk that said, in large friendly letters: "THE BUCK STOPS HERE." Basically, you elect a President in Chief, you hold HIM accountable for his actions. He was the one to spear-head the move on Iraq, he was the one that signed the orders to move on Iraq, and he was the one to lobby to get Congress to give him the extraordinary powers to move the full might of the military against Iraq without a declaration of war.

When are you going to hold the man responsible? I'm sorry, but if you don't hold the Chief Executive Officer of the country responsible for his own actions, his comments/statements, and his uses and clear abuses of power, you might as well just pop a crown on his head... he's doing wrong, and there are articles of impeachment and redress for this. He's overstepped his boundaries numerous times, and Iraq (sadly) is just one of the reasons. I cannot for a moment understand how you can say what you said with any type of conviction, and consider yourself an informed or concerned American. And yes, before you say it, this is coming from a CANADIAN.

If you're not outraged, you haven't been paying attention.

Quote:

So lets take a step back and look at this, wow! we have some of the smartest minds in America stating that Iraq is a real threat, lets sit back and wait for them to try and blow up half of the U.S. before we decide to stand up and stop them.
You have interested parties as well. Don't forget: Cheney is still a board member of Haliburton, Bush is still a board member of the Carlyle group, Rumsfeld and Rice both have major interests in Oil companies... and most, if not all of the Whitehouse Chiefs have signed on or expressed agreement with PNAC which espouses a thinly veiled policy of American Empire.

Finally, you have a lot of people doing a lot of talking, but there wasn't much of any type of substance behind the decision to invade Iraq without multi-national support.

Quote:

Now, we did make some REAL mistakes, was going to Iraq one of them? hell no!
I really want to hear your reasoning behind this, over 3 trillion dollars wasted on a war that really has no grounding, no purpose and no direction? Hell, its looking like the war in Iraq will continue for another decade at least. Going into Iraq was a mistake: No Terrorism, No WMD... No reason to go in.

(Before you say that Saddam said that he had WMD: No, he didn't, he was cagey about it because he still had Iran on his doorstep wanting to inflict reprisals for the war that was started 20 years ago (the one that made Hussein buddy-buddy with Reagan), and he wanted to keep them back because they were the more immediate threat)

Quote:

George Bush was not in the military, neither was rumsfeld, they didn't know what they were asking the Military to do when they sent them into Iraq and made them run to Baghdad, obviously someone didn't say... this is not the way to fight this kind of war, we need to slowly move through the city removing (terrorists/hajis/iraqi's/insurgents)

Rumsfeld was in the US Navy, and USN Reserve from 1954 to 1989. Dubya, on the other foot was valliantly protecting the skies of Houston from Viet Cong during the Vietnam War. Rumsfeld knew PRECISELY what he was asking the Military to do. You'd know this if you read American Soldier (by USM Gen Tommy Franks (retired)), or Cobra II. Rumsfeld was no first timer when it came to being a Sec. Def, He had time in Ford's administration, and he constantly needled USM Gen. Tony Zinni (ret) for a battleplan, and Gen Franks to make a stream lined (read whittled down) battleplan. Dubya should have made it his business to know what was happening in Iraq before ever consenting to do what he did... IE: he should have mobilized the Nat'l Security Agency, Central Intelligence Agency and Military Intelligence Service (otherwise known as the Intelligence Services or "Foggy Bottom Boys") to gather and procure good solid intelligence on what was actually happening in Iraq, or if worse came to worst get info from other friendly intel services. Point of fact: he didn't. He basically took information from Rumsfeld & Cheney and basically everyone else involved in the Intelligence services that wanted to continue eating toed the same line.


I'm not trying to be harsh, but if you informed yourself and concerned yourself with what the Executive Branch is doing in YOUR NAME, you'd be absolutely astounded. I know that it's vogue to just "HATE BUSH," but there's definitely a reason for that. He's done nothing at all to help you, and has only guaranteed that you're going to be paying for his mistakes for a long, long, long time... and it will not be cheap.


Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.



Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Monday, August 27, 2007 7:48 PM on j-body.org
Well I would just like to say very very well put. Obviously I should have done a smidge more research, ok... a lot hehe :-). Oh and have you read Saddams Secrets by Georges Sada? That is a very good read and takes the same position that I took in the above post ^^. I am glad that someone finally posted to my post and was backed up by facts. You were not mean in any sense of the word, you wrote a well informed, well written summary of your thoughts and opinions and backed them up with facts. I actually really enjoyed reading it to be honest with you! As I'm sure you can tell I am very far to the right, yes I know that this isn't always good and that sometime I can be blind to some things. I guess that I was just so fed up with everyone bashing him that I simply took the believe what I would like to stance. I do have a few emails that my cousin an army blackhawk pilot sent me, i'll post them below. Did you watch any of the vids that i attached? Those are very good! Yes I do know that these emails are old and that the numbers in the second email should be different today. I am not sure when it was written but I am pretty sure that it was back in 04 or 05. Thanks for posting and I will make sure to make a better post about this in a few days when I am not so busy, I'll try to write a comprehensive essay taking no sides and backing everything up with facts(if i can do that)... it's going to be like ap us history all over again! haha, look forward to reading it! I'm just curious but what is your education level, like where did you go to college? That was well written and you made your point clear and concise. (not dissin, if anything praising here)

**EMAIL ONE!**

This serious.



Please take the time to read the attached essay by Dr. Chong. It is without a doubt the most articulate and convincing writing I have read regarding the War in Iraq. If you have any doubts please open your mind to his essay and give it a fair evaluation.

I had no idea who Dr. Chong is or the source of these thoughts... so when I received them, I almost deleted them - as well-written as they are. But then I did a "Google search" on the Doctor and found him to be a retired Air Force Surgeon of all things and past Commander of Wilford Hall Medical Center in San Antonio. So he is real, is connected to Veterans affairs in California, and these are his thoughts. They are worth reading and thinking about! (the same Google search will direct you to some of his other thought-provoking writings.)

Subject: Muslims, terrorists and the USA...A different spin on Iraq war.

This WAR is for REAL! Dr. Vernon Chong, Major General, USAF, Retired

Tuesday, July 12, 2005
To get out of a difficulty, one usually must go through it. Our country is now facing the most serious threat to its existence, as we know it, that we have faced in your lifetime and mine (which includes WWII).

The deadly seriousness is greatly compounded by the fact that there are very few of us who think we can possibly lose this war and even fewer who realize what losing really means.

First, let's examine a few basics:

1. When did the threat to us start?
Many will say September 11, 2001. The answer as far as the United State is concerned is 1979, 22 years prior to September 2001, with the following attacks on us:

* Iran Embassy Hostages, 1979;
* Beirut, Lebanon Embassy 1983;
* Beirut, Lebanon Marine Barracks 1983;
* Lockerbie, Scotland Pan-Am flight to New York 1988;
* First New York World Trade Center attack 1993;
* Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Khobar Towers Military complex 1996;
* Nairobi, Kenya US Embassy 1998;
* Dares Salaam, Tanzania US Embassy 1998;
* Aden, Yemen U SS Cole 2000;
* New York World Trade Center 2001;
* Pentagon 2001.

(Note that during the period from 1981 to 2001 there were 7,581 terrorist attacks worldwide).

2. Why were we attacked?

Envy of our position, our success, and our freedoms. The attacks happened during the administrations of Presidents Carter, Reagan, Bush 1, Clinton and Bush 2. We cannot fault either the Republicans or Democrats as there were no provocations by any of the presidents or their immediate predecessors, Presidents Ford or Carter.

3 Who were the attackers?
In each case, the attacks on the US were carried out by Muslims.

4. What is the Muslim population of the World? 25%.

5. Isn't the Muslim Religion peaceful?
Hopefully, but that is really not material. There is no doubt that the predominately Christian population of Germany was peaceful, but under the dictatorial leadership of Hitler (who was also Christian), that made no difference. You either went along with the administration or you were eliminated. There were 5 to 6 million Christians killed by the Nazis for political reasons (including 7,000 Polish priests).
(see http://www.nazis.testimony.co.uk/7-a.htm http://www.nazis.testimonyco.uk/7-a.htm )

Thus, almost the same number of Christians were killed by the Nazis, as the six million holocaust Jews who were killed by them, and we seldom heard of anything other than the Jewish atrocities. Although Hitler kept the world focused on the Jews, he had no hesitancy about killing anyone who got in his way of exterminating the Jews or of taking over the world - German, Christian or any others.

Same with the Muslim terrorists. They focus the world on the US, but kill all in the way -- their own people or the Spanish, French or anyone else. The point here is that just like the peaceful Germans were of no protection to anyone from the Nazis, no matter how many peaceful Muslims there may be, they are no protection for us from the terrorist Muslim leaders and what they are fanatically bent on doing -- by their own pronouncements -- killing all of us "infidels." I don't blame the peaceful Muslims. What would you do
if the choice was shut up or die?

6. So who are we at war with?

There is no way we can honestly respond that it is anyone other than the Muslim terrorists. Trying to be politically correct and avoid verbalizing this conclusion can well be fatal. There is no way to win if you don't clearly recognize and articulate who you are fighting.

So with that background, now to the two major questions:

1. Can we lose this war?

2. What does losing really mean?

If we are to win, we must clearly answer these two pivotal questions

We can definitely lose this war, and as anomalous as it may sound,
the major reason we can lose is that so many of us simply do not
fathom the answer to the second question - What does losing mean?

It would appear that a great many of us think that losing the war means hanging our heads, bringing the troops home and going on about our business, like post Vietnam! This is as far from the truth as one can get.

What losing really means is:

We would no longer be the premier country in the world. The attacks will not subside, but rather will steadily increase. Remember, they want us dead, not just quiet. If they had just wanted us quiet, they would not have produced an increasing series of attacks against us, over the past 18 years. The plan was clearly, for terrorist to attack us, until we were neutered and submissive to them.

We would of course have no future support from other nations, for fear of reprisals and for the reason that they would see, we are impotent and cannot help them.

They will pick off the other non-Muslim nations, one at a time. It will be increasingly easier for them. They already hold Spain hostage. It doesn't matter whether it was right or wrong for Spain to withdraw its troops from Iraq. Spain did it because the Muslim terrorists bombed their train and told them to withdraw the troops. Anything else they want Spain to do will be done. Spain is finished.

The next will probably be France. Our one hope on France is that they might see the light and realize that if we don't win, they are finished too, in that they can't resist the Muslim terrorists without us. However, it may already be too late for France. France is already 20% Muslim and fading fast!

If we lose the war, our production, income, exports and way of life will all vanish as we know it. After losing, who would trade or deal with us, if they were threatened by the Muslims. If we can't stop the Muslims, how could anyone else?

The Muslims fully know what is riding on this war, and therefore are completely committed to winning, at any cost. We better know it too and be likewise committed to winning at any cost.

Why do I go on at such lengths about the results of losing? Simple. Until we recognize the costs of losing, we cannot unite and really put 100% of our thoughts and efforts into winning. And it is going to take that 100% effort to win.

So, how can we lose the war?

Again, the answer is simple. We can lose the war by "imploding." That is, defeating ourselves by refusing to recognize the enemy and their purpose, and really digging in and lending full support to the war effort if we are united, there is no way that we can lose. If we continue to be divided, there is no way that we can win!

Let me give you a few examples of how we simply don't comprehend the life and death seriousness of this situation.

President Bush selects Norman Mineta as Secretary of Transportation. Although all of the terrorist attacks were committed by Muslim men between 17 and 40 years of age, Secretary Mineta refuses to allow profiling. Does that sound like we are taking this thing seriously? This is war! For the duration, we are going to have to give up some of the civil rights we have become accustomed to. We had better be prepared to lose some of our civil rights temporarily or we will most certainly lose all of them permanently.

And don't worry that it is a slippery slope. We gave up plenty of civil rights during WWII, and immediately restored them after the victory and in fact added many more since then.

Do I blame President Bush or President Clinton before him?

No, I blame us for blithely assuming we can maintain all of our Political Correctness, and all of our civil rights during this conflict and have a clean, lawful, honorable war. None of those words apply to war. Get them out of your head.

Some have gone so far in their criticism of the war and/or the Administration that it almost seems they would literally like to see us lose. I hasten to add that this isn't because they are disloyal. It is because they just don't recognize what losing means. Nevertheless, that conduct gives the impression to the enemy that we are divided and weakening. It concerns our friends, and it does great damage to our cause.

Of more recent vintage, the uproar fueled by the politicians and media regarding the treatment of some prisoners of war, perhaps exemplifies best what I am saying. We have recently had an issue, involving the treatment of a few Muslim prisoners of war, by a small group of our military police. These are the type prisoners who just a few months ago were throwing their own people off buildings, cutting off their hands, cutting out their tongues and otherwise murdering their own people just for disagreeing with Saddam Hussein.

And just a few years ago these same type prisoners chemically killed 400,000 of their own people for the same reason. They are also the same type of enemy fighters, who recently were burning Americans, and dragging their charred corpses through the streets of Iraq.

And still more recently, the same type of enemy that was and is providing videos to all news sources internationally, of the beheading of American prisoners they held.

Compare this with some of our press and politicians, who for several days have thought and talked about nothing else but the "humiliating" of some Muslim prisoners -- not burning them, not dragging their charred corpses through the streets, not beheading them, but "humiliating" them.

Can this be for real?

The politicians and pundits have even talked of impeachment of the Secretary of Defense. If this doesn't show the complete lack of comprehension and understanding of the seriousness of the enemy we are fighting, the life and death struggle we are in and the disastrous results of losing this war, nothing can.

To bring our country to a virtual political standstill over this prisoner issue makes us look like Nero playing his fiddle as Rome burned -- totally oblivious to what is going on in the real world. Neither we, nor any other country, can survive this internal strife. Again I say, this does not mean that some of our politicians or media people are disloyal. It simply means that they are absolutely oblivious to the magnitude, of the situation we are in and into which the Muslim terrorists have been pushing us, for many years.

Remember, the Muslim terrorists stated goal is to kill all infidels! That translates into ALL non-Muslims -- not just in the United State, but throughout the world.

We are the last bastion of defense.

We have been criticized for many years as being 'arrogant.' That charge is valid in at least one respect. We are arrogant in that we believe that we are so good, powerful and smart, that we can win the hearts and minds of all those who attack us, and that with both hands tied behind our back, we can defeat anything bad in the world!

We can't!

If we don't recognize this, our nation as we know it will not survive, and no other free country in the world will survive if we are defeated.

And finally, name any Muslim countries throughout the world that allow freedom of speech, freedom of thought, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, equal rights for anyone -- let alone everyone, equal status or any status for women, or that have been productive in one single way that contributes to the good of the world.

This has been a long way of saying that we must be united on this war or we will be equated in the history books to the self-inflicted fall of the Roman Empire . If, that is, the Muslim leaders will allow history books to be written or read.

If we don't win this war right now, keep a close eye on how the Muslims take over France in the next 5 years or less. They will continue to increase the Muslim population of France and continue to encroach little by little, on the established French traditions. The French will be fighting among themselves, over what should or should not be done, which will continue to weaken them and keep them from any united resolve. Doesn't that sound eerily familiar?

Democracies don't have their freedoms taken away from them by some external military force Instead, they give their freedoms away, politically correct piece by politically correct piece.

And they are giving those freedoms away to! those w ho have shown, worldwide that they abhor freedom and will not apply it to you or even to themselves, once they are in power.

They have universally shown that when they have taken over, they then start brutally killing each other over who will be the few who control the masses Will we ever stop hearing from the politically correct, about the "peaceful Muslims"?

I close on a hopeful note, by repeating what I said above. If we are united, there is no way that we can lose. I hope now after the election, the factions in our country will begin to focus on the critical situation we are in, and will unite to save our country. It is your future we are talking about! Do whatever you can to preserve it.

After reading the above, we all must do this not only for ourselves, but our children, our grandchildren, our country and the world.
Whether Democrat or Republican, conservative or liberal and that include the Politicians and media of our country and the free world!

Please forward this to any you feel may want, or NEED to read it. Our "leaders" in Congress ought to read it, too. There are those that find fault with our country, but it is obvious to anyone who truly thinks through this, that we must UNITE!

Do you know?

I didn't know!

How could we?

Did you know that 47 countries' have reestablished their embassies in Iraq?

Did you know that the Iraqi government currently employs 1.2 million Iraqi people?

Did you know that 3100 schools have been renovated,

364 schools are under rehabilitation,

263 new schools are now under construction

and 38 new schools have been completed in Iraq?

Did you know that Iraq's higher educational structure consists of 20 Universities,

46 Institutes or colleges and 4 research centers,
all currently operating?

Did you know that 25 Iraq students departed for the United States in January 2005
for the re-established Fulbright program?

Did you know that the Iraqi Navy is operational?

They have 5 - 100-foot patrol craft, 34 smaller vessels and a naval infantry regiment.

Did you know that Iraq's Air Force consists of three operational squadrons,
which includes 9 reconnaissance and 3 US C-130 transport aircraft
(under Iraqi operational control)
which operate day and night, and will soon add 16 UH-1 helicopters and 4 Bell Jet Rangers?

Did you know that Iraq has a counter-terrorist unit and a Commando Battalion?

Did you know that the Iraqi Police Service has over 55,000
fully trained and equipped police officers?

Did you know that there are 5 Police Academies in Iraq
that produce over 3500 new officers each 8 weeks?

Did you know there are more than 1100 building projects going on in Iraq?

They include 364 schools, 67 public clinics, 15 hospitals, 83 railroad stations,
22 oil facilities, 93 water facilities and 69 electrical facilities.

Did you know that 96% of Iraqi children under the age of 5
have received the first 2 series of polio vaccinations?

Did you know that 4.3 million Iraqi children were enrolled in primary school by mid October?

Did you know that there are 1,192,000 cell phone subscribers in Iraq
and phone use has gone up 158%?

Did you know that Iraq has an independent media that consists of 75 radio stations,
180 newspapers and 10 television stations?

Did you know that the Baghdad Stock Exchange opened in June of 2004?

Did you know that 2 candidates in the Iraqi presidential election had a televised debate recently?

OF COURSE WE DIDN'T KNOW!

WHY DIDN'T WE KNOW?

OUR MEDIA WOULDN'T TELL US!

Instead of reflecting our love for our country,
we get photos of flag burning incidents at Abu Ghraib
and people throwing snowballs at the presidential motorcades.

Tragically, the lack of accentuating the positive in Iraq serves two purposes:

It is intended to undermine the world's perception of the United States
thus minimizing consequent support,
and it is intended to discourage American citizens.

---- Above facts are verifiable on the Department of Defense web site.

.......Pass it on! Give it a Wide Dissemination!
Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 28, 2007 7:54 PM on j-body.org
Shane Belanger wrote:Well I would just like to say very very well put. Obviously I should have done a smidge more research, ok... a lot hehe :-). Oh and have you read Saddams Secrets by Georges Sada? That is a very good read and takes the same position that I took in the above post ^^. I am glad that someone finally posted to my post and was backed up by facts. You were not mean in any sense of the word, you wrote a well informed, well written summary of your thoughts and opinions and backed them up with facts. I actually really enjoyed reading it to be honest with you! As I'm sure you can tell I am very far to the right, yes I know that this isn't always good and that sometime I can be blind to some things. I guess that I was just so fed up with everyone bashing him that I simply took the believe what I would like to stance. I do have a few emails that my cousin an army blackhawk pilot sent me, i'll post them below. Did you watch any of the vids that i attached? Those are very good! Yes I do know that these emails are old and that the numbers in the second email should be different today. I am not sure when it was written but I am pretty sure that it was back in 04 or 05. Thanks for posting and I will make sure to make a better post about this in a few days when I am not so busy, I'll try to write a comprehensive essay taking no sides and backing everything up with facts(if i can do that)... it's going to be like ap us history all over again! haha, look forward to reading it! I'm just curious but what is your education level, like where did you go to college? That was well written and you made your point clear and concise. (not dissin, if anything praising here)


Thanks, First and foremost for not flipping out for having a different point of view than I do. I realize most have different views, and that's fine. My only major problem is when people who express those views do so with little tangible or verifiable knowledge on their part. Just picking a side without really knowing what they stand for is... hazardous, at best hazardous. I also tend to chafe at people that are rabidly anti-Bush without really knowing why too... They're on my side of the issue (I'm not a Fan of Dubya, if you read back in other posts I tend to call him Gilligan... I think it's fitting ) but if they don't inform themselves, they're really not going to be equipped to deal with the fall-out of their decisions. I can deal with supporters of the Iraq war, because there has been some good come out of it (much to my dismay, its really a testament to what the troops can accomplish without a lot of support on their own), my problem is that there is so much more to do, and the realistic approach to doing it (ie. Nation building, something that's been done with great success over the last 60 years, but has fallen out of fashion with the current administration) was shunned for a more seemingly pragmatic approach that would not only save time but money, and really didn't accomplish those goals. The other thing was that the Shock and Awe campaign had 2 major ramifications: The effect of projection of power on foreign lands, and the effect on the American People.

I didn't get a chance to watch the vids you linked, but I will make a point of watching them.

As for my education, I'm a Computer Engineer (Algonquin College in Ottawa), and currently am working at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as a Forensic Identification Tech. Most of my work is visual and requires sustained concentration, so I listen to audio books almost constantly. I listen to (I call it reading, however when I do it, my eyes are busy at the time ) a lot of fiction, but when I read non-fiction, it's usually about Iraq, and it's on both sides of the issue.... Except for blowhards like Anne Coulter, Sean Hannity, or Rush Limbaugh... They're so misleading and rabid (pointedly used... they don't articulate their thoughts or use diverse information catalogues to prove their point, and in some cases use uncorroborated statements from each other which makes for a weak argument)... I'll admit I listen to Al Franken's books because they're entertaining, and actually make points worth listening to and thinking about, the other nice thing is that he actually uses real evidence to back up most of his points (in the case of calling Rush Limbaugh a big, fat idiot... I've listened to his schtik about Michael J Fox, and it pretty much speaks for itself).

Either way:
**EMAIL ONE!**

This serious.



Please take the time to read the attached essay by Dr. Chong. It is without a doubt the most articulate and convincing writing I have read regarding the War in Iraq. If you have any doubts please open your mind to his essay and give it a fair evaluation.

I had no idea who Dr. Chong is or the source of these thoughts... so when I received them, I almost deleted them - as well-written as they are. But then I did a "Google search" on the Doctor and found him to be a retired Air Force Surgeon of all things and past Commander of Wilford Hall Medical Center in San Antonio. So he is real, is connected to Veterans affairs in California, and these are his thoughts. They are worth reading and thinking about! (the same Google search will direct you to some of his other thought-provoking writings.)I've read this before, it was posted as I remember...

Either way...
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Subject: Muslims, terrorists and the USA...A different spin on Iraq war.

This WAR is for REAL! Dr. Vernon Chong, Major General, USAF, Retired

Tuesday, July 12, 2005
To get out of a difficulty, one usually must go through it. Our country is now facing the most serious threat to its existence, as we know it, that we have faced in your lifetime and mine (which includes WWII).

The deadly seriousness is greatly compounded by the fact that there are very few of us who think we can possibly lose this war and even fewer who realize what losing really means.
I'll get into this in a bit... But he does raise a good point right off the bat.

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First, let's examine a few basics:

1. When did the threat to us start?
Many will say September 11, 2001. The answer as far as the United State is concerned is 1979, 22 years prior to September 2001, with the following attacks on us:

* Iran Embassy Hostages, 1979;
* Beirut, Lebanon Embassy 1983;
* Beirut, Lebanon Marine Barracks 1983;
* Lockerbie, Scotland Pan-Am flight to New York 1988;
* First New York World Trade Center attack 1993;
* Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Khobar Towers Military complex 1996;
* Nairobi, Kenya US Embassy 1998;
* Dares Salaam, Tanzania US Embassy 1998;
* Aden, Yemen U SS Cole 2000;
* New York World Trade Center 2001;
* Pentagon 2001.

(Note that during the period from 1981 to 2001 there were 7,581 terrorist attacks worldwide).

I think he's coming at it from the point of view that Americans were attacked first, when really it's a little more complicated.

If you figure the US/Britain-backed Shah of Iran being deposed by political uprising and then re-instated in 1953... All over the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company... The US didn't strike first, but it didn't help a nationalist party. The let-down is as good as a slap in the face, especially when you consider that the Shah was pro-US, Pro-Israel, and wanted to westernize the country in the face of the Shi'a clerics that opposed.

There's going to be more about this, promise.

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2. Why were we attacked?

Envy of our position, our success, and our freedoms. The attacks happened during the administrations of Presidents Carter, Reagan, Bush 1, Clinton and Bush 2. We cannot fault either the Republicans or Democrats as there were no provocations by any of the presidents or their immediate predecessors, Presidents Ford or Carter.

True, if you look at it from the individual bombers' perspectives... however, the reason for the attacks are pretty simple, it's not them envying us: its the Al-qaeda leadership looking to feather their own nests. Some people may not have noticed in the initial aftermath of 9/11: The NYSE had closed, but, London, Toronto/Montreal, Hong Kong, Frankfurt, and Madrid Stock Exchanges and commodity markets (ie, ones that trade heavily in US/UK/Canada based companies and goods/futures) were all hit by a slough of "put options." These are usually placed by companies as a way to secure themselves as a creditor should any thing negative happen to the company, so that the buyer of the option gets first cut of any cash by agreeing to sell at an arranged price.

Al-qaeda made, quite literally BILLIONS of dollars. Their average operation cost is under $1 million US. They are either setting themselves up as economic terrorists (trust me, it can happen: Look at Michael Milken, or Bre-X at the end of the company) or are planning a LOT more operations. I'd think the former rather than the latter is more likely... and it's going to play out in Afghanistan (Narco-state supreme) and Pakistan (grass-roots populace support and an oppressive regime).

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3 Who were the attackers?
In each case, the attacks on the US were carried out by Muslims.

True. They were also predominantly Saudi and Middle class in the case of 9/11, Iranian University students in the case of the Embassy attack in 1982, more University students in the case of Beiruit, committed mujahadeenis in the case of the rest, but they started out as University students more or less otherwise. Personally, I think the fact that they are Muslim is incidental, the fact that they almost universally come from an impoverished area (Saudi Arabia's median income is less than $12,000 USD, they pay over $4 a litre for water, and thats when you can actually get it), and they are taught that the reason they are impoverished is because of the "great Satan," well, there is some truth in that, but it's more a cultural thing than anything. The Saudi Royal family has grown by leaps and bounds and now there are some Princes that receive stipends of over $1 million USD a month because of oil revenues. Previous to the ballooning of the royal family, those stipends were distributed to the people, and let the average Saudi in the 60's to have an income of over $30,000 USD (in 1969 dollars, they were rolling in it), but as the royal family grew, those stipends were clawed back.

The problem is not so much the Religion of Islam, it's the Culture of Royal entitlement.
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4. What is the Muslim population of the World? 25%.

About right, I seem to remember it being about 14%, but that's assuming you count India's Billion people as mostly Hindu/Buddhist.

Quote:

5. Isn't the Muslim Religion peaceful?
Hopefully, but that is really not material. There is no doubt that the predominately Christian population of Germany was peaceful, but under the dictatorial leadership of Hitler (who was also Christian), that made no difference. You either went along with the administration or you were eliminated. There were 5 to 6 million Christians killed by the Nazis for political reasons (including 7,000 Polish priests).
(see http://www.nazis.testimony.co.uk/7-a.htm )

Thus, almost the same number of Christians were killed by the Nazis, as the six million holocaust Jews who were killed by them, and we seldom heard of anything other than the Jewish atrocities. Although Hitler kept the world focused on the Jews, he had no hesitancy about killing anyone who got in his way of exterminating the Jews or of taking over the world - German, Christian or any others.

Same with the Muslim terrorists. They focus the world on the US, but kill all in the way -- their own people or the Spanish, French or anyone else. The point here is that just like the peaceful Germans were of no protection to anyone from the Nazis, no matter how many peaceful Muslims there may be, they are no protection for us from the terrorist Muslim leaders and what they are fanatically bent on doing -- by their own pronouncements -- killing all of us "infidels." I don't blame the peaceful Muslims. What would you do
if the choice was shut up or die?

Again, this is what I was getting at: The religion or political bent itself isn't the prime culprit, it's Greed. It's easier to focus on the religion because people like to pigeon-hole themselves: most people don't want to believe that their leaders are just as greedy and money/power hungry as they are themselves or their professed enemies are. Not pointing fingers here, but it's a lot harder to get greed out of the breed than it is religion or politics.

It's part of the reason I wish decisions were made with bar rules:
- No Politics,
- No Religion,
- If you leave your bar seat and part-empty beer, you lost your seat.

eh... it sounded better with a pint of Guinness in hand.
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6. So who are we at war with?

There is no way we can honestly respond that it is anyone other than the Muslim terrorists. Trying to be politically correct and avoid verbalizing this conclusion can well be fatal. There is no way to win if you don't clearly recognize and articulate who you are fighting.
Again, the Muslim part is incidental. There are extreme right-wing Christians, Aetheists (remember the Bolsheviks?), Democrats/Republicans/Libertarians, Librarians... you name it. There's a ton of people with an axe to grind, a lot of spare cash and guns.

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So with that background, now to the two major questions:

1. Can we lose this war?

2. What does losing really mean?

If we are to win, we must clearly answer these two pivotal questions

We can definitely lose this war, and as anomalous as it may sound,
the major reason we can lose is that so many of us simply do not
fathom the answer to the second question - What does losing mean?

It would appear that a great many of us think that losing the war means hanging our heads, bringing the troops home and going on about our business, like post Vietnam! This is as far from the truth as one can get.

1: Of course. If you commit to attacking someone, you can lose.
2: In a minute

Quote:


What losing really means is:

We would no longer be the premier country in the world. The attacks will not subside, but rather will steadily increase. Remember, they want us dead, not just quiet. If they had just wanted us quiet, they would not have produced an increasing series of attacks against us, over the past 18 years. The plan was clearly, for terrorist to attack us, until we were neutered and submissive to them.

We would of course have no future support from other nations, for fear of reprisals and for the reason that they would see, we are impotent and cannot help them.
Depends on what you're talking about, and you also have to remember that he's got to tread very, VERY lightly here. These attacks are not steadily increasing, but they're more opportunistic in reality. You leave your guard down (as in 9/11, there are several instances of related proof that there was going to be little if any possibility of a counter offensive after the first aircraft struck the towers.. This opening was also fairly well known inside military and aviation circles), you're going to get popped if you don't know your opponent and aren't fast enough to do anything about it.

Quote:


They will pick off the other non-Muslim nations, one at a time. It will be increasingly easier for them. They already hold Spain hostage. It doesn't matter whether it was right or wrong for Spain to withdraw its troops from Iraq. Spain did it because the Muslim terrorists bombed their train and told them to withdraw the troops. Anything else they want Spain to do will be done. Spain is finished.

The next will probably be France. Our one hope on France is that they might see the light and realize that if we don't win, they are finished too, in that they can't resist the Muslim terrorists without us. However, it may already be too late for France. France is already 20% Muslim and fading fast!
France is NOT IN IRAQ. They've been in Afghanistan, however... and they're not willing to move from the south of Afghanistan (much to Canadians' chagrin). Spain backed off because their involvement was utterly peripheral. Malta actually had equal force in Iraq at the time. Spain had little interest in the area, and Al-Qaeda had leveraged Basque separatists to do what they had already been planning to do. You lost an ally, but you didn't lose much in the offing.

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If we lose the war, our production, income, exports and way of life will all vanish as we know it. After losing, who would trade or deal with us, if they were threatened by the Muslims. If we can't stop the Muslims, how could anyone else?
At this point, George W. Bush is as responsible for killing the US's economy as anyone in the rest of the world is. Allowing and encouraging the following:
- Substandard goods from mass-production nations with shaky quality control (China, India)
- Exporting jobs to Nations with far lower pay
- Importation of goods at higher than market prices
- Lowering taxation in disproportionate amounts for income strata.. in a time of war.
- Committing more funds to a war-effort that has no viable outcome....

is doing more to sink your economy than anything. I'll give you an outside-looking-in perspective: Canada has committed troops to Afghanistan through 2009, we are in the same fight (just not in Iraq, it's complicated), but we're not doing anything significantly differently from what we were doing before the invasion, yet our dollar which was significantly depressed compared to the USD is now nearly at parity, and forecast to exceed the USD within 5 years.

Within 8 years, our dollar has gone from being worth less than 60cents against the USD, to almost 94 cents. Why is that? We haven't begun exploiting our oil reserves, we're still taxed oppressively (although that's supposed to change), we still have to pay about 20% more for consumer goods, cars, and homes.

If we're not doing anything differently (and neither is most of the rest of the western hemisphere, then it's probably your Executive that's pushing things down.

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The Muslims fully know what is riding on this war, and therefore are completely committed to winning, at any cost. We better know it too and be likewise committed to winning at any cost.
Making it a religious war is not a good idea... it's not about religion, and making it so will be the first mistake in a long line of losing mistakes. Islam is not the enemy, lust for money and power (on both sides of the equation) is.

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Why do I go on at such lengths about the results of losing? Simple. Until we recognize the costs of losing, we cannot unite and really put 100% of our thoughts and efforts into winning. And it is going to take that 100% effort to win.
Win what? International pissing contest? Really... Again, outside-looking-in: Canada is at the bottom of the G8... and we have a pretty damned good standard of living (equal to the US), and most of the rest of the remaining 7 have an equally good standard of living. Being cream of the crop is one thing, but look at it like this: The US GDP is $10 TRILLION. Afghanistan's Narcotics based economy isn't hitting 10 Billion. When they manage to hit 1000 times their current average (legally), they'll be in contention.

Quote:

So, how can we lose the war?
Ahh.. the 64 thousand dollar question.

Quote:

Again, the answer is simple. We can lose the war by "imploding." That is, defeating ourselves by refusing to recognize the enemy and their purpose, and really digging in and lending full support to the war effort if we are united, there is no way that we can lose. If we continue to be divided, there is no way that we can win!
This is where things get dicey. The author sounds like they're assuming all muslims are in on the ploy. I don't think that's entirely plausible.

Quote:

Let me give you a few examples of how we simply don't comprehend the life and death seriousness of this situation.

President Bush selects Norman Mineta as Secretary of Transportation. Although all of the terrorist attacks were committed by Muslim men between 17 and 40 years of age, Secretary Mineta refuses to allow profiling. Does that sound like we are taking this thing seriously? This is war! For the duration, we are going to have to give up some of the civil rights we have become accustomed to. We had better be prepared to lose some of our civil rights temporarily or we will most certainly lose all of them permanently.
Here's where the argument breaks down, for me at least. Suspension of Rights is very simply the wrong way to beat an enemy. Let's entirely forget that you're fighting a noun.

In WWII, hundreds of thousands of Japanese-descented Americans and Canadians (many with little or no ties to Japan), were put in virtual prison-camp situations, all for naught. You basically saw a whole group of people treated like Germans treated Jews... all to stop them from doing something that didn't happen, and wouldn't have.

One of the great things about the recorded history is that you can learn from it. The USA had to pay reparations to the people that were displaced... The State department apologized officially to the people who were treated as suspects when all they were was loyal Americans, most born there... Canada had the same kind of reparations. I'd like to hope that we've grown away from this kind of petulant and myopic policy. Colour of skin, Creed, Religion, Faith, Income bracket, Sex and Age are not useful descriminators, and profiling on the basis of those alone is not legal. What you do to the least of the people in your country says more about the state of your country than anything. You don't win a war of conscience by giving up what defines you. For proof: look at the US Civil war. Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus, and what happened: widespread abuses in contested territories until it was returned in 1865, even though the supreme court deemed the action illegal.

What is gained from the suspension of essential rights? What alters those rights during a time of war? Nothing is the answer, at least in my mind.

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And don't worry that it is a slippery slope. We gave up plenty of civil rights during WWII, and immediately restored them after the victory and in fact added many more since then.
True, but there was a definite end to hostilities in WWII, after Germany and Japan capitulated, you saw the return of the civil rights that were suspended and reparation since then. Only once since the Civil war and before 2001/09/11 have your rights been infringed upon: in the immediate aftermath of the Oklahoma City Bombing. And even then, it was only for the individuals accused of conspiring to commit the bombing. That was not to infringe on the rights of the individual accused, that was to ensure the states effectively prosecuted individuals responsible for acts of terrorism.

What's happened since... its unprecedented. It's actually eerily similar to the Communist purges after the Bolshevik revolution.

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Do I blame President Bush or President Clinton before him?

No, I blame us for blithely assuming we can maintain all of our Political Correctness, and all of our civil rights during this conflict and have a clean, lawful, honorable war. None of those words apply to war. Get them out of your head.
Lawful? Honourable? Clean? No... War is hell, no matter how you slice it. The difference between winning the war with honour, Fighting for who you are, is not giving up what defines you. Americans have had basic rights that were considered unthinkable... and you've had them for ages. Now you just want to trash it until you're out of a supposed forest?

Codswallop.

You fight for rights and freedoms of others, you don't abandon them at home, that's called hypocrisy or at best hollow victory.

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Some have gone so far in their criticism of the war and/or the Administration that it almost seems they would literally like to see us lose. I hasten to add that this isn't because they are disloyal. It is because they just don't recognize what losing means. Nevertheless, that conduct gives the impression to the enemy that we are divided and weakening. It concerns our friends, and it does great damage to our cause.
Losing? Don't let a tick in the "L" column define the conflict.

The author is making it seem as though the right decision was to go into Iraq in the first place. It's not... it was a bad idea to go in, that's plainly evident. More on that at the end of the post though...

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Of more recent vintage, the uproar fueled by the politicians and media regarding the treatment of some prisoners of war, perhaps exemplifies best what I am saying. We have recently had an issue, involving the treatment of a few Muslim prisoners of war, by a small group of our military police. These are the type prisoners who just a few months ago were throwing their own people off buildings, cutting off their hands, cutting out their tongues and otherwise murdering their own people just for disagreeing with Saddam Hussein.
I seem to remember that the same thing was said in 1943. The problem is, it was in German.

The other thing: why hand your enemies Martyrs?

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And just a few years ago these same type prisoners chemically killed 400,000 of their own people for the same reason. They are also the same type of enemy fighters, who recently were burning Americans, and dragging their charred corpses through the streets of Iraq.
And that justifies visiting the same kinds of horrors on them? Seriously?

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And still more recently, the same type of enemy that was and is providing videos to all news sources internationally, of the beheading of American prisoners they held.
There's a difference, and I suspect the author is getting things muddled: There's more than just Al-qaeda in Iraq.. There's:
- Al-qaeda
- Fedayeen Hussein (former ultra elite Republican Guard, guerilla warfare)
- Shi'a Terrorists
- Sunni Terrorists
- Kurdish Resistance.

It's a real fucking mess... to quote a friend that was training Iraqi police in Jordan.

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Compare this with some of our press and politicians, who for several days have thought and talked about nothing else but the "humiliating" of some Muslim prisoners -- not burning them, not dragging their charred corpses through the streets, not beheading them, but "humiliating" them.

Can this be for real?
Definitely. It's defilement of ones' self, and ones' body.

You expect your own people to be treated humanely, as in what you want those POW's to be treated in accordance with the Geneva Convention. Why on earth would you not do that and lead by example? You want the cause to be riteous? Follow the riteous path. You know why Machiavelli is a lesson to be learned? He found out that the ends don't always justify the means.

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The politicians and pundits have even talked of impeachment of the Secretary of Defense. If this doesn't show the complete lack of comprehension and understanding of the seriousness of the enemy we are fighting, the life and death struggle we are in and the disastrous results of losing this war, nothing can.
Pardon me? I fully comprehend the nature of the beast, and the genie that got let out of the bottle in Iraq could have very well been contained, had proper planning and troop commitment been followed on.

Again, this letter was written well, well before the full extent of the debacle was realized. The Defence department had attempted to formulate a plan that would bring reasonable security for the border and interior of the country... now, we know that Rumsfeld and Cheney had attempted for over 5 months prior to invasion to lessen and lessen the troop commitment for Iraq. I'm going to point again to Tony Zinni's book Battle Ready, where he said that Rumsfeld had tried numerous times to get CentCom to ratchet down the numbers to fit what Rumsfeld wanted (if you can believe it: it was 18,000 troops... The words "they oughtta be prepared to fight as hard on the way out as they did on the way in" were used to describe the process of battle.. the hit and hold idea wasn't even on the table).

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To bring our country to a virtual political standstill over this prisoner issue makes us look like Nero playing his fiddle as Rome burned -- totally oblivious to what is going on in the real world. Neither we, nor any other country, can survive this internal strife. Again I say, this does not mean that some of our politicians or media people are disloyal. It simply means that they are absolutely oblivious to the magnitude, of the situation we are in and into which the Muslim terrorists have been pushing us, for many years.
Actually, to bring it to a stand-still would have been the better thing: it would have halted Presidential prerogative on tax relief that didn't need to be passed.

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Remember, the Muslim terrorists stated goal is to kill all infidels! That translates into ALL non-Muslims -- not just in the United State, but throughout the world.
Hrmm... not really... it also includes all those that don't agree with their take on Islam.

By this same logic, all Presbyterians are planning to take over the world.

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We are the last bastion of defense.
Not really, there's more than just the USA on watch... more in a second though

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We have been criticized for many years as being 'arrogant.' That charge is valid in at least one respect. We are arrogant in that we believe that we are so good, powerful and smart, that we can win the hearts and minds of all those who attack us, and that with both hands tied behind our back, we can defeat anything bad in the world!

We can't!
Winning hearts and minds means that you have to follow your own rhetoric. Being "arrogant" means that you think that you're the only ones that can do it, and if you won't no one else will... If the author would drop the self-flagellation, he'd realize that there's a lot of countries that are in this too... but the rest of us want to see us all do the right thing, the right way, for the right reasons at the right time. Iraq was the right idea, but the follow through has been seriously, painfully lacking. The reason Iraq is still a failed state is that the borders are still swiss cheese, the military is not up to standing on its own 2 feet, and the police force is in worse shape, and internal problems with all those different groups... well... anyhow, the troop surge helped, but you need to sustain that and actually double the presence.

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If we don't recognize this, our nation as we know it will not survive, and no other free country in the world will survive if we are defeated.
This is where arrogance comes in. There are a LOT more people that are invested in this problem than just the USA. Thinking so isn't just arrogant, it's asinine, self-aggrandizing and self-defeating. I show 10yr old kids that you have to work together to get a tough problem solved.

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And finally, name any Muslim countries throughout the world that allow freedom of speech, freedom of thought, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, equal rights for anyone -- let alone everyone, equal status or any status for women, or that have been productive in one single way that contributes to the good of the world.

This has been a long way of saying that we must be united on this war or we will be equated in the history books to the self-inflicted fall of the Roman Empire . If, that is, the Muslim leaders will allow history books to be written or read.
Rome fell because Caesar Augustus abandoned the principles he swore to uphold. Abandoning your essential and inalienable rights and freedoms is basically the same thing.

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If we don't win this war right now, keep a close eye on how the Muslims take over France in the next 5 years or less. They will continue to increase the Muslim population of France and continue to encroach little by little, on the established French traditions. The French will be fighting among themselves, over what should or should not be done, which will continue to weaken them and keep them from any united resolve. Doesn't that sound eerily familiar?
I'd like to know where he got the crystal ball.

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Democracies don't have their freedoms taken away from them by some external military force Instead, they give their freedoms away, politically correct piece by politically correct piece.
And some, give it over willingly for the illusion of security.

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And they are giving those freedoms away to! those w ho have shown, worldwide that they abhor freedom and will not apply it to you or even to themselves, once they are in power.

They have universally shown that when they have taken over, they then start brutally killing each other over who will be the few who control the masses Will we ever stop hearing from the politically correct, about the "peaceful Muslims"?
No, because assuming that all muslims are domineering and power hungry murderers is prejudicial, and again, myopic. That means that ALL whites are corrupt thieves, all blacks are drugged out thieves, and ALL Latinos are greasy thugs.

It doesn't shake out.

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I close on a hopeful note, by repeating what I said above. If we are united, there is no way that we can lose. I hope now after the election, the factions in our country will begin to focus on the critical situation we are in, and will unite to save our country. It is your future we are talking about! Do whatever you can to preserve it.
Waking up from a bad dream... aye there's the rub. Iraq is a quagmire, and all that Americans need to do is not cut and run, not blindly follow what the Executive says, but... Think about what you stand for, and communicate that to your elected officials now, and use your vote and rally support for others that support what you want.

My thoughts are at the bottom of the book... err... page.

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After reading the above, we all must do this not only for ourselves, but our children, our grandchildren, our country and the world.
Whether Democrat or Republican, conservative or liberal and that include the Politicians and media of our country and the free world!

Please forward this to any you feel may want, or NEED to read it. Our "leaders" in Congress ought to read it, too. There are those that find fault with our country, but it is obvious to anyone who truly thinks through this, that we must UNITE!
I've said this before, I'll keep saying it until it's understood and accepted.

YOU CANNOT HAVE ONLY THE GOOD WITHOUT THE BAD.

You have to acknowledge both, the good with adulation, and bad with concern. Fix the bad, make the good better... Move toward the positive.

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Do you know?

I didn't know!

How could we?

Did you know that 47 countries' have reestablished their embassies in Iraq?
True, and of those 47, 43 no longer have their embassy open, but merely a consular office, and all in the same 4-5 block radius in the Green Zone.

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Did you know that the Iraqi government currently employs 1.2 million Iraqi people?
Yep, did you also know that the reconstruction effort employs less than 20% Iraqis, to this day?

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Did you know that 3100 schools have been renovated,
Didn't know that, but I wonder which are teaching Shariya under the strict Shi'a definition?

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364 schools are under rehabilitation, 263 new schools are now under construction and 38 new schools have been completed in Iraq?

So, roughly... 2900 kids per school? If you use CIA's Factbook on Iraq?

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Did you know that Iraq's higher educational structure consists of 20 Universities, 46 Institutes or colleges and 4 research centers, all currently operating?
Operating at what levels though? If you have 15 people in a research centre that should have 400, do you call it operational?

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Did you know that 25 Iraq students departed for the United States in January 2005
for the re-established Fulbright program?
Interesting. Hope it works out for them.

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Did you know that the Iraqi Navy is operational?

They have 5 - 100-foot patrol craft, 34 smaller vessels and a naval infantry regiment.

Did you know that Iraq's Air Force consists of three operational squadrons, which includes 9 reconnaissance and 3 US C-130 transport aircraft (under Iraqi operational control) which operate day and night, and will soon add 16 UH-1 helicopters and 4 Bell Jet Rangers?

Didn't know about the navy, but right now, it needs support from other Nations in support of the UN Mandate that's still ongoing.

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Did you know that Iraq has a counter-terrorist unit and a Commando Battalion?

Did you know that the Iraqi Police Service has over 55,000 fully trained and equipped police officers?
Yes, and yes. The other thing is that the police and CT units are not ready to perform their duties... almost 4 years after the state dept started training recruits. This is part of the reason that the Jordan mission is still happening. More on this...

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Did you know that there are 5 Police Academies in Iraq that produce over 3500 new officers each 8 weeks?
He doesn't say this, but these are NOT full police officers, they're auxiliary. From there, there's a recruitment of full-time patrolmen, officers, and commanders. With the fall out of L. Paul Bremmer banning all Ba'ath party members from serving in any police or military service, they're absurdly short-handed on qualified troops.

I know this because there was a possibility for RCMP Officers, Regular Members, and Civilian Members to go to Jordan and help train recruits and conduct investigations in support of the Iraqi Police. I'm not senior enough to do this, but if I had the option, I'd likely do it.

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Did you know there are more than 1100 building projects going on in Iraq? They include 364 schools, 67 public clinics, 15 hospitals, 83 railroad stations, 22 oil facilities, 93 water facilities and 69 electrical facilities.
Yes, I had heard of this, but the thing that troubles me greatly, is that the majority of those doing the work on these projects are Americans... using resources and facilities from outside Iraq. In some cases, this is understandable... but... There are 3 major concrete plants, 2 steel mills and sulphur plants that aren't operating. Major employers shuttered. Does this make sense?

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Did you know that 96% of Iraqi children under the age of 5 have received the first 2 series of polio vaccinations?
Good start, no doubt... Getting them the rest of their vaccination series, and then making sure they get fed regularly... that's the next step. You can feed a hungry kid ideology.

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Did you know that 4.3 million Iraqi children were enrolled in primary school by mid October?
No, and I hope they're not going to Shariya schools, one good thing about Iraq is that other than the Saddam curriculum, it managed to stay remarkably simple and secular.

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Did you know that there are 1,192,000 cell phone subscribers in Iraq and phone use has gone up 158%?

Is this how you measure democracy?

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Did you know that Iraq has an independent media that consists of 75 radio stations, 180 newspapers and 10 television stations?

Now if only the US was so diverse!
(Sorry, had to say it)

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Did you know that the Baghdad Stock Exchange opened in June of 2004?
Yes, but what's more interesting is that they really don't trade grains, and their oil commodity exchange isn't in Dinars, it's in Euros.

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Did you know that 2 candidates in the Iraqi presidential election had a televised debate recently?
Yes, and it was well conducted, thoughtful, passionate, and more candid than anything you'll see in the US. It had serious grit, while it wasn't as slick or polished as western elections, it was at least real. I'm not going to lie, it would be REALLY useful for the Iraqi parliament to actually pass and ratify a constitution.

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OF COURSE WE DIDN'T KNOW!

WHY DIDN'T WE KNOW?

OUR MEDIA WOULDN'T TELL US!

Instead of reflecting our love for our country,
we get photos of flag burning incidents at Abu Ghraib
and people throwing snowballs at the presidential motorcades.

1: the "Media" (which is a Nixonian cop-out... Mass media helps get Presidents elected and impeached, it's not the villain) has no shortage of bad stuff to sell you. You need to change your viewing habits.
2: Gilligan ought count himself lucky it isn't grenades, or worse: ribbons from service medals.

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Tragically, the lack of accentuating the positive in Iraq serves two purposes:

It is intended to undermine the world's perception of the United States thus minimizing consequent support, and it is intended to discourage American citizens.

Codswallop.

CNN, Fox, NBC, ABC, CBS.. all major news carriers are SELLING you news. Don't piss up their rope for selling you what you want to watch. There's an old slogan in the News business: "If it bleeds, it leads." Don't blame a free press.

As far as undermining populace support, if you remember, there wasn't quite 50% support for the war in the beginning... there's even less now because of major @!#$ ups like Abu Ghraib, soldiers raping and murdering civilians, unending insurgent/terrorist attacks... This isn't the fault of the media... it's the fault of the Executive branch for not having a coherent plan for the occupation of Iraq after the Hussein regime was toppled. Hold the architects of the failure to secure the country responsible for their part. For what the troops are doing, they're truly qualified to anything with nothing (its a joke now, sadly).

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---- Above facts are verifiable on the Department of Defense web site.

.......Pass it on! Give it a Wide Dissemination!
The DOD website doesn't have stances on the discouragement of American citizens methinks.

At this point, it's my thought that the decision to go into Iraq is moot. You're in, you're fully engaged, you're not going to get out easily or quickly, even if you pull up stakes.

So: Finish the job you started. Make your zeal and your intentions worth the effort and the cost. Soldiers are paying for this action in blood, sweat and tears... your future is mortgaged almost indefinitely on this war... Make the cost worth it. Stand up for your convictions. Anything less is an insult to the war dead, and a blight on the face of every American.



(Sorry for the book)


Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Tuesday, August 28, 2007 8:02 PM on j-body.org
Oh for Georges Sada: He's been found to have given false and misleading statements to CIA and UN Inspectors well after Saddam was deposed. He had no reason to lie to them except to try and secure his future in Iraq...

Now, he's made a whack more money selling his book.

I'm just waiting for Ahmed Chalabi to finish his time in Iraq and write his book. Maybe he'll try and convince people that he's not a climber.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Anti-War jagoffs tick me off
Thursday, August 30, 2007 12:15 PM on j-body.org
Holy Jesus this is a quote heavy post.
I will say we didn't have enough people when we went into Iraq, thank you clinton #1.
We misjudged the impact of secretarian violence *this from Gen Peter Pace who i personally talked to out here in africa 3 or so weeks ago.
Iraq has saved us from an attack at home. No matter how it is going there it is over there. I hate everytime a Marine or soldier dies, *saint* and wish it didnt happen, but I have seen the torture chambers and heard the mortars and ied's.
What we are doing overthere is amazing, only to be ruined by bad media sensationalism, and corrupt and dishonest third world politicians.
We are in this war for the next 30 years, maybe not in iraq, but we will be fighting till teh next generation of muslims grows up outside of schools based on sharia and clerical teachings.
We should have gotten afghanistan off poppy in 2002, and dropped teh ball, but its is their only income and we have to teach them a new way, it takes time.
I personally think that anyone who believes this wil be fixed when g dubya leaves is uninformed. dont think clinton or obama or the great pumpkin will get us out feb of 09, it wont happen just like that.
if we leave we lose and the problem is already bigger than the military can handle without the support of the people.
I appreciate what you all do for us out here, we get packages and mail from people we never met, and we pass that on to the local people.
the war is gettign better, we will succeed, it is just a matter of holding the course.
Believe in whoever you want and the monday QB'ing, but we are on the right course to getting this done the right way.
Sgt M P Demo USMC
Djibouti Africa Currenty
Ramadi Iraq 2004-2005


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