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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum
    [align=left]Kurt Nimmo
    Monday, November 20, 2006
    As it turns out, predictably so, the tussle between neocon Republicans and their kissing cousin neoliberal Democrat relatives is not about ending the ??war? in Iraq but rather over how many brainwashed kids will be sent there to be shot up, killed and maimed, afflicted with ??mysterious diseases? that translate into a ??debilitating death sentence,? thanks to depleted uranium (see Soldiers Face Debilitating Diseases).
    ??[Incoming House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer] said Democrats would continue funding the existing troop levels,? reports the Associated Press. ??Our objective was to remove Saddam Hussein and create an environment in which a democracy could be established. That has been done.?
    In Bushzarro world, a realm populated equally by Republicans and Democrats, in order for democracy to arise, a nation must be reduced from first to third world status. ??Daily living conditions in Iraq are dismal, with families suffering from intermittent water and electricity supply, chronic malnutrition among children and more illiterate young than ever before, a new report by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Iraqi Government shows,? reported the UN News Center last year. ??Almost a quarter of the children between 6 months and 5 years suffer from chronic malnutrition. In a country where 39 per cent of the people are younger than 15, the young today are more illiterate than preceding generations. Young men with a high school education or better are suffering from 37 per cent unemployment.?
    ??Iraq boasted a modern social infrastructure with a first-class range of health-care facilities, and the Iraqi people enjoyed one of the highest standards of living in the Middle East,? Ghali Hassan wrote a few weeks later. ??In 1991, there were 1,800 health-care centers in Iraq. More than a decade later, that number is almost half, and almost a third of them require major rehabilitation. Iraq had used its oil revenues, which accounted for 60% of its gross domestic product (GDP), to build a modern health-care system with large Western-style hospitals and modern technology. Iraqi medical and nursing schools attracted students from throughout the Middle East, and many Iraqi doctors were trained in Europe or the U.S.A. Primary health-care services reached about 97% of the urban population and 78% of the rural population in 1990. But the Gulf war of 1991 and more than 13 years of U.S-Britain sponsored genocidal sanctions have left the country??s economy and infrastructure in ruins.?
    In order for the Bushzarro version of democracy to work, not only are hospitals to be destroyed, but the decline in health must be irreversible. ??The 2003 war not only created the conditions for further health decline, but also damaged the ability of Iraqi society to reverse it,? explains Gill Reeve, deputy director of Medact, the British-based charity organization. In order to realize freedom, large numbers of Iraqis must suffer from entirely preventable diarrhea and hepatitis. ??Diarrhea killed two out of every 10 children before the 1991 Gulf War and four in 10 after the war,? Hassan continues. ??The study indicates that only 54 per cent of households nationwide have access to a ??safe and stable?? supply of drinking water. An estimated 722,000 Iraqis, the report also notes, rely on sources that are both unreliable and unsafe.?
    Democracy also requires insufficient electricity. ??Although 98 per cent of Iraqi households are connected to the electrical grid, 78 per cent of them experience ??severe instability? and low quality in the service, according to the survey. One in three Iraqi families now relies on electricity generators, most of which are shared between households. In all, daily living conditions under the Occupation have deteriorated markedly.?
    According to Henry Kissinger, the mission was accomplished and, really, it is silly to stick around and attempt to achieve victory, whatever that is. ??I think we have to redefine the course, but I don??t believe the alternative is between military victory, as it has been defined previously, and total withdrawal,? said Heinz. ??If you mean by ??military victory?? an Iraqi government that can be established and whose writ runs across the whole country, that gets the civil war under control and sectarian violence under control in a time period that the political processes of the democracies will support, I don??t believe that is possible.?
    Kissinger wants a conference, of sorts, to hammer out a solution to the problems in the Middle East. ??He called for an international conference bringing together the permanent members of the UN Security Council, Iraq??s neighbors??including Iran??and regional powers like India and Pakistan to work out a way forward for the region,? reports the Toronto Star.
    Of course, merely chatting about ??a way forward for the region? will accomplish nothing if the central issue is not addressed. And what is the central issue? It??s not Bushzarro democracy. It??s the Palestinian issue, left unresolved and festering for almost sixty years. ??As a Lebanese-American, I know that Lebanon can never be free until Palestine is free. The same can be said of all the countries and nationalities in the region. So the Palestinian struggle is held important not only by Arabs, but by other Middle Eastern peoples as well,? notes Joyce Chediac. Even King Abdullah of Jordan, not exactly an advocate for the Palestinians, believes ??that the Palestinian problem will remain Jordan??s central issue, adding that if it remains unsolved, the region will witness more violence and tension.?
    Naturally, the Jabotinsky fanatics in Israel, that is to say nearly the entire political structure of the tiny outlaw nation, and their blood brothers infesting the White House and the Pentagon, will not address the central issue of the problem, not in a month of Sundays. Ditto the Democrats, beholden to AIPAC. For as David R. Obey, ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, has noted AIPAC has ??pushed the Likud Party line and in the process has crowded out other voices in the Jewish community.? Indeed, it has pushed the process out of Congress entirely.[/align]
    pisshead Reviewed by pisshead on . Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum Kurt Nimmo Monday, November 20, 2006 As it turns out, predictably so, the tussle between neocon Republicans and their kissing cousin neoliberal Democrat relatives is not about ending the ??war? in Iraq but rather over how many brainwashed kids will be sent there to be shot up, killed and maimed, afflicted with ??mysterious diseases? that translate into a ??debilitating death sentence,? thanks to depleted Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum

    Top Neo-Con LA Times Editorial: We Must Bomb Iran
    Diplomacy is doing nothing to stop the Iranian nuclear threat; a show of force is the only answer.
    [align=left]Joshua Muravchik
    LA Times
    Monday, November 20, 2006
    WE MUST bomb Iran.
    It has been four years since that country's secret nuclear program was brought to light, and the path of diplomacy and sanctions has led nowhere.
    First, we agreed to our allies' requests that we offer Tehran a string of concessions, which it spurned. Then, Britain, France and Germany wanted to impose a batch of extremely weak sanctions. For instance, Iranians known to be involved in nuclear activities would have been barred from foreign travel ?? except for humanitarian or religious reasons ?? and outside countries would have been required to refrain from aiding some, but not all, Iranian nuclear projects.
    Full Story Here [/align]

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum

    The Dems and Repubs remind me of incest between siblings. They need to be tarred and feathered. Let it be a lesson to them.

    Hell, we're probably worse off now than when Republicans were in control.

    Don't think our repressive fascist laws will be repealed because the Dems got in. Anyone who believes that should be bitch slapped! There is only one political party and that is the US Corporate Party.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum

    Quote Originally Posted by pisshead
    Top Neo-Con LA Times Editorial: We Must Bomb Iran
    Diplomacy is doing nothing to stop the Iranian nuclear threat; a show of force is the only answer.
    [align=left]Joshua Muravchik
    LA Times
    Monday, November 20, 2006
    WE MUST bomb Iran.
    It has been four years since that country's secret nuclear program was brought to light, and the path of diplomacy and sanctions has led nowhere.
    First, we agreed to our allies' requests that we offer Tehran a string of concessions, which it spurned. Then, Britain, France and Germany wanted to impose a batch of extremely weak sanctions. For instance, Iranians known to be involved in nuclear activities would have been barred from foreign travel ?? except for humanitarian or religious reasons ?? and outside countries would have been required to refrain from aiding some, but not all, Iranian nuclear projects.
    Full Story Here [/align]
    Even though there is no evidence of Iranian building nuclear weapons, they will still go after Iran and not North Korea who has TESTED a nuclear weapon!

    The neo-cons....what are we going to do with them.

    Can ya say oil? lol

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Democrats and Republicans Agree: Iraq Shall Suffer Occupation in Perpetuum

    no shit, our whole governmental system is so fucked up right now. all politicians suck. what needs to happen is this: get the old fuckers out of office, out with the old, in with the new. i think a lot of people have forgotten what the whole concept of "balance of power" means. but i think you guys a little confused. there is no way the citizens of America would let us go to war with n. korea and/or iran without UN backing. the majority of us feel this way. people are finally beginning to realize that we need to stay out of violent conflicts, especially long term ones. which is exactly why i say out with the old, in with the new. most of the politicians in control right now are still in the mentality that we must do what is in our economy's best interests. trust me, we the people, know something is wrong with our country right now. please dont hate us, hate our government, like we do

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