What...? You mean the Saudi's are looking out for number 1? How dare they? Were they looking for the insurgents finances here in the states, do you really think our government would just seize our citizens finances, just like that? A couple of meetings in the state department, and bing bang boom...cash in hand. Negotiations take time.
I'm guessing it doesn't matter that Osama Bin Laden is a member of a rich Saudi family (wealth from construction) and that Osama has been trying for decades to take down the Saudi Royal Family? Granted, some of the royal Saudi family are supporters of the insurgencies, but the policy makers there are scrambling to defeat the insurgents, just the same. In their culture, in their society, making agreements with the enemy is often part of the game.

Hack-jobs like this are so boring. Pick a half-truth here, a semi-lie there...throw in some half-baked quotes, and omitted facts...and walla...another post, in the long line of Fishman's Daily Diatribes.

Fishman...I'll say it again. Likely, if this was you making these remarks, associations, connections...I'd continue the discussions in a wholehearted, deliberative manner. But these are not your original thoughts, and you obviously never have anything to add to the posts. Nor do you leave the post with more information backing these hack-jobs 'opinions'. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Quite frankly...I would much rather hear what you think about what you post, than to just assume you can't read and understand the content, well enough to form your own opinions.

But maybe that's just me. :jointsmile:

Cool... Barack Osama is making a speach on Martin Luther King's deathday. If you look closely, you can see his forked tongue. :thumbsup:
Rusty Trichome Reviewed by Rusty Trichome on . Saudi Arabia is prime source of terror funds, U.S. says WASHINGTON â?? Saudi Arabia remains the world's leading source of money for Al Qaeda and other extremist networks and has failed to take key steps requested by U.S. officials to stem the flow, the Bush administration's top financial counter-terrorism official said Tuesday. Stuart A. Levey, a Treasury undersecretary, told a Senate committee that the Saudi government had not taken important steps to go after those who finance terrorist organizations or to prevent wealthy donors from Rating: 5