cnn shows video of sniper killing our troops

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jackmazzotti
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Re: cnn shows video of sniper killing our troops

Post by jackmazzotti » Fri Oct 20, 2006 2:45 pm

muscleandhate wrote:
jackmazzotti wrote:search for it yourself

cnn
communist news network
It's ok Jack, don't worry yourself about things. CNN are lying to you and so is everyone else. American troops and the Iraqi people have actually built an exceptional friendship out there. US Marines drink tea in the backstreet cafes whilst talking nostalgically with the locals about the Cold War. US Generals can be frequently seen building playgrounds estatically and helping frail old women across roads with deep and emphatic love for their fellow human being. It's not really a 'war' out there, everyones just making new friends.

you are missing the point entirely
it is the far left media (people without a country)trying to bring America down
there is absolutely no news value in showing anyone getting shot but I expect in my own country not to see enemey propaganda videos on the evening news
cnn hates this country and its values and will do anything they can to ruin it

jackmazzotti
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Post by jackmazzotti » Fri Oct 20, 2006 2:59 pm

D DAS wrote:well that's war for ya.

if the tables were turned there jackmazotti, if iraq invaded the states and occupied it with extreme aggression wouldn't you be a little pissed after over 3 years of occupation. not saying snipering is justifed cause it is not, but just what the fuck are we doing there in the first place.

you want to see some messed up shit, here ya go, here is war for you
http://www.ogrish.com/beheading_videos.html
occupiers?

did you know that far more Iraqis voted with the risk of losing their very lives then we Americans did during Bush vs Kerry

doesn't that tell you something

if you even did vote would you have done so if you had a very good chance of getting suicide bombed at the voting booth?

Islamic terrorists funded by Iran and Al Queda are the ones we are fighting over there not the normal people of Iraq who want freedom like everyone else in the world

jackmazzotti
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Post by jackmazzotti » Fri Oct 20, 2006 3:00 pm

pepezabala wrote:
Voodu wrote:Or they could show the way your entire country folded after the Madrid train bombings.
They also could show you how civilians get killed there violently everyday since your government had the fantastic idea to invade this country.
Look, this is not "my" country, and it wasn't "my" government who decided to walk into iraq and there would not have been any madrid-bombings if the spanish would not have gone into iraq.

And there probably would be a couple of thousands more iraquis being alive
Nearly 100,000 more Iraqis have died during the American-led occupation than would have been expected otherwise, a study posted on The Lancet medical journal's website Thursday estimates.
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2004/10/2 ... 41028.html
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robtronik
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Post by robtronik » Fri Oct 20, 2006 3:38 pm

That 650k number of Iraqi's killed since the invasion is BS, Deva. Don't be so sucked in by anti war propaganda that you can't be analytical enough to parse those numbers realistically.

Its been sliced and diced and analyzed by many groups who are anti-war and even they say the study is flawed. To put it in perspective, the 650k number would mean the following:

* It is larger than the total number of Americans killed during combat in every major conflict, from the Revolutionary War to the first Gulf War.

* It is more than double the combined number of civilians killed in the bombings of Dresden, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki.

* It is a larger number than were killed in Germany during five years (and 955,044 tons) of WWII bombing.

And of course, they actually identified 547 deaths in their survey to extrapolate these numbers. In otherwords, its BS.

I won't critique your point on whether they (U.S. soldiers) are justified to be killed by snipers or not, but ask yourself this: Would we leave if there wasn't violence in the country that threatened to destablize it (all accomplished by those who don't want to see democracy?) OF COURSE.

The real question is: What role does our occupation play in aggravating the violence? My guess: It is an excuse by those who are anti-democratic to attack their own people. If (and when) we leave, the attacks will continue by those who want to re-instate a terrorist friendly government (i.e. fascist, like the taliban) so they can have a base of operations.

Its a fight. It will be ugly, and it is necessary. They either show up there, or in the U.K. or in the U.S. - And for what it is worth, Saddam needed to be removed for all the reasons we've discussed ad nasuem to date.

Those who don't think it was necessary probably also support non-action in darfur, or Iran, or even N. Korea as well (for instance). If there is to be the rule of law and it is respected in the international community, then action must be taken against those that would defy the international body for over 14 years directly, not support WMD inspections, etc.

To believe otherwise is foolish and dangerous to this thing we call the U.N. - which is already well on its way to obscurity and influence due to the way it has been ineffectual in dealing with real crises.

In the end, post removal of Saddam and the restablization of Iraq is important. Lots of mistakes have been made. Things that we can fix, we have to (this is what is referred to as "completing the mission") and the things that the Iraqi's can do, they will have to. We won't be there forever - withdrawl has ALWAYS been on the table (the U.S. has never intended to create an Iraqi colony), but the question is: under what circumstances?

Those circumstances are constantly under evaluation (and this is a criticism of the Bush administration that he deserves) and yet, this is the reality of situation - ground situations change, politics change, causing strategies to change. This is an inevitable part of being an occupying force with the challenge of rebuilding an infrastructure of a country.

We are also legally obligated, under the Geneva convention to be there until the Iraqi's can self govern and sustain themselves.

You all who don't agree with this point of view, that's your right.

But it doesn't mean you are right, if you know what I mean. ;)

On a personal note, I think it is funny and quite ironic that those who consider themselves liberal (i.e. probably against the removal of Saddam, against Bush, etc.) are "Liberal" enough to let someone like Saddam stay in power and viloate international law rather than "change" the status quo.

Sounds kinda conservative to me, actually.

:)

rob.
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sqook
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Re: cnn shows video of sniper killing our troops

Post by sqook » Fri Oct 20, 2006 3:59 pm

jackmazzotti wrote:
muscleandhate wrote:
jackmazzotti wrote:search for it yourself

cnn
communist news network
It's ok Jack, don't worry yourself about things. CNN are lying to you and so is everyone else. American troops and the Iraqi people have actually built an exceptional friendship out there. US Marines drink tea in the backstreet cafes whilst talking nostalgically with the locals about the Cold War. US Generals can be frequently seen building playgrounds estatically and helping frail old women across roads with deep and emphatic love for their fellow human being. It's not really a 'war' out there, everyones just making new friends.

you are missing the point entirely
it is the far left media (people without a country)trying to bring America down
there is absolutely no news value in showing anyone getting shot but I expect in my own country not to see enemey propaganda videos on the evening news
cnn hates this country and its values and will do anything they can to ruin it
Which news networks aren't trying to destroy america, just out of curiosity? You get bonus points if you can name more than one...

Chris J
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Post by Chris J » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:03 pm

jackmazzotti wrote:my brother is over there right now as a matter of fact
put your money where your mouth is, join him, join your troops and stfu
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ocp
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Post by ocp » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:03 pm

robtronik wrote:Those who don't think it was necessary probably also support non-action in darfur, or Iran, or even N. Korea as well (for instance).
So... why don't you?

:roll:
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robtronik
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Post by robtronik » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:08 pm

ocp wrote:
robtronik wrote:Those who don't think it was necessary probably also support non-action in darfur, or Iran, or even N. Korea as well (for instance).
So... why don't you?

:roll:
why don't I what?

rob
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muscleandhate
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Post by muscleandhate » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:24 pm

robtronik wrote: I won't critique your point on whether they (U.S. soldiers) are justified to be killed by snipers or not, but ask yourself this: Would we leave if there wasn't violence in the country that threatened to destablize it (all accomplished by those who don't want to see democracy?) OF COURSE.
I wonder, what you think about this scenario? China invades the United States on the grounds that it has W.M.D, that it frequently breaks the Geneva convention and that it finances and maintains an international system of torture. How would this make you feel? China invades to impose their style of control and government that they see is paramount. Can you understand what I'm saying? America seems to exhibit this gross ignorance that somehow the rest of the World wants an American Democracy and unregulated, above all else capitalism. Have you ever considered that when American politicians talk about implimenting 'democracy' on a global platform, they are really just talking about expanding free-market capitalism and American hemogony?
robtronik wrote: The real question is: What role does our occupation play in aggravating the violence? My guess: It is an excuse by those who are anti-democratic to attack their own people. If (and when) we leave, the attacks will continue by those who want to re-instate a terrorist friendly government (i.e. fascist, like the taliban) so they can have a base of operations.
They are not making an 'anti-democratic attack', they are fighting because the removal of Saddam created a vast power vaccum. You're also wrong about them attacking 'their own people'. Whilst I personally feel all violence against any people should be looked up with equal inhumanity, most of the voilence that is happening in Iraq exists within the convictions of ethnity and religion, as much as power and control. You talk about a 'terrorist-friendly' government, what I presume you mean is a government opposed to US interests. See where I'm going with this? Lastly, you should realise that the Saddam regime was not a 'terrorist friendly' government by any standard despite what the US media propaganda pointed towards. In many ways, America have shot themselves in the foot with the Middle-East. They had a plan for the it, attempted to execute it and are now paying for lack of research and other structural and political mistakes.
robtronik wrote: Its a fight. It will be ugly, and it is necessary. They either show up there, or in the U.K. or in the U.S. - And for what it is worth, Saddam needed to be removed for all the reasons we've discussed ad nasuem to date.
Tell me, why did Saddam have to be removed? The official line was orginally that he had W.M.D, which of couse was surely of the greatest lies of this century so far. Then the Whitehouse ingeniously changes direction towards the plight of the Iraqi people and that Saddam was a bad man and sugar coat the whole thing with the newspeak 'War on Terrorism', despite Iraq having nothing to do with Terrorism in the first place. Why do you believe Iraq was invaded, because no else has a fucking clue.
Last edited by muscleandhate on Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

muscleandhate
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Re: cnn shows video of sniper killing our troops

Post by muscleandhate » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:25 pm

jackmazzotti wrote:
muscleandhate wrote:
jackmazzotti wrote:search for it yourself

cnn
communist news network
It's ok Jack, don't worry yourself about things. CNN are lying to you and so is everyone else. American troops and the Iraqi people have actually built an exceptional friendship out there. US Marines drink tea in the backstreet cafes whilst talking nostalgically with the locals about the Cold War. US Generals can be frequently seen building playgrounds estatically and helping frail old women across roads with deep and emphatic love for their fellow human being. It's not really a 'war' out there, everyones just making new friends.

you are missing the point entirely
it is the far left media (people without a country)trying to bring America down
there is absolutely no news value in showing anyone getting shot but I expect in my own country not to see enemey propaganda videos on the evening news
cnn hates this country and its values and will do anything they can to ruin it
Jesus, if you think CNN is bad I'd be interested to hear what you thought of the BBC!

pixelbox
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Post by pixelbox » Fri Oct 20, 2006 4:27 pm

[quote="robtronik"]That 650k number of Iraqi's killed since the invasion is BS, Deva. Don't be so sucked in by anti war propaganda that you can't be analytical enough to parse those numbers realistically.

Its been sliced and diced and analyzed by many groups who are anti-war and even they say the study is flawed. To put it in perspective, the 650k number would mean the following:

* It is larger than the total number of Americans killed during combat in every major conflict, from the Revolutionary War to the first Gulf War.

* It is more than double the combined number of civilians killed in the bombings of Dresden, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki.

* It is a larger number than were killed in Germany during five years (and 955,044 tons) of WWII bombing.

And of course, they actually identified 547 deaths in their survey to extrapolate these numbers. In otherwords, its BS.

I won't critique your point on whether they (U.S. soldiers) are justified to be killed by snipers or not, but ask yourself this: Would we leave if there wasn't violence in the country that threatened to destablize it (all accomplished by those who don't want to see democracy?) OF COURSE.

The real question is: What role does our occupation play in aggravating the violence? My guess: It is an excuse by those who are anti-democratic to attack [i]their own people[/i]. If (and when) we leave, the attacks will continue by those who want to re-instate a terrorist friendly government (i.e. fascist, like the taliban) so they can have a base of operations.

Its a fight. It will be ugly, and it is necessary. They either show up there, or in the U.K. or in the U.S. - And for what it is worth, Saddam needed to be removed for all the reasons we've discussed ad nasuem to date.

Those who don't think it was necessary probably also support non-action in darfur, or Iran, or even N. Korea as well (for instance). If there is to be the rule of law and it is respected in the international community, then action must be taken against those that would defy the international body for over 14 years directly, not support WMD inspections, etc.

To believe otherwise is foolish and dangerous to this thing we call the U.N. - which is already well on its way to obscurity and influence due to the way it has been ineffectual in dealing with real crises.

In the end, post removal of Saddam and the restablization of Iraq is important. Lots of mistakes have been made. Things that we can fix, we have to (this is what is referred to as "completing the mission") and the things that the Iraqi's can do, they will have to. We won't be there forever - withdrawl has ALWAYS been on the table (the U.S. has never intended to create an Iraqi colony), but the question is: under what circumstances?

Those circumstances are constantly under evaluation (and this is a criticism of the Bush administration that he deserves) and yet, this is the reality of situation - ground situations change, politics change, causing strategies to change. This is an inevitable part of being an occupying force with the challenge of rebuilding an infrastructure of a country.

We are also legally obligated, under the Geneva convention to be there until the Iraqi's can self govern and sustain themselves.

You all who don't agree with this point of view, that's your right.

But it doesn't mean you are [i]right[/i], if you know what I mean. ;)

On a personal note, I think it is funny and quite ironic that those who consider themselves liberal (i.e. probably against the removal of Saddam, against Bush, etc.) are "Liberal" enough to let someone like Saddam stay in power and viloate international law rather than "change" the status quo.

Sounds kinda conservative to me, actually.

:)

rob.[/quote]

Elequently put, Rob. Good on ya.

Chris J
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Post by Chris J » Fri Oct 20, 2006 5:10 pm

this is scary. I used to think, a long time ago, that musicians had a brain oriented towards peace.

But it seems some have no brain at all, or dysfunctionning brains.
American government is not into bringing down any dictatorship, they're in business, the killing business, and they count on motherfucking idiots like mazotti or robtronik (who forgets that the US invaded Iraq despite the UN veto) to support them and digest any shit they're given.

poor fuckers.

The best joke of the day is certainly that CNN hates america and is communist.
:lol:

don't miss tomorrow's episode:
bush is a communist that hates america. Mind you at the speed at which he ruins the USA , could be true.

A question : why do the mazotti and friends spend their time on forum saying "WE" "our troops", instead or going over there and shut the fuck up?
Are they physically disabled on top of mentally ill ?
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Meef Chaloin
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Post by Meef Chaloin » Fri Oct 20, 2006 5:14 pm

why shouldnt they shoot at 'your' troops, 'you' are in their country killing civillians :roll:

leisuremuffin
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Post by leisuremuffin » Fri Oct 20, 2006 5:33 pm

i'm still waiting to find out how a "hippie" or a "christian" can support this kind of war.


hmmm, i guess somebody isn't really either.



.lm.
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FreeTechniques
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Post by FreeTechniques » Fri Oct 20, 2006 5:35 pm

These types of videos are shown to us in order to lovingly :) provide us with the necessary deep-seeded fear to rally up even more hatred of "terrorists" so that you will accept (and even defend!) your rights being violated, the torture of detainees, and your immediate family being sent off to war to quite possibly die.

What is a terrorist? I'd say it's a term that is getting more generic by the minute, at this point half of the people in these forums could be defined as terrorists (possibly legally defined as such) because they disagree with and are enraged by the government and it's unruly actions, are calling for its overthrow, and oppose the current war, just like a lot of the men, women, and children in the middle east and abroad feel in these so called "terror harbors" (ableit with a lot less fervor).

One interesting thing about "patriotism" is it has something VERY much in common with "Islamic extremism".
In both states of mind, the highest honor goes to those who die in the name of "their" Country, and the Country normally has equal or more value than religion, the soldier's personal beliefs, and obviously more value than the soldier's life. Why is this? What have the millions of men and women who have died throughout history due to war, both as soldiers and civilians, what did they really die for? Your security?

If you believe the "official" story of 9/11 (I do not), why did our top notch security fail us so miserably? What, in reality, has changed/will change so dramatically in the past five years to stop things like this from happening again?
NOTHING.
Nothing at all.
There is nothing (again, in reality) that can possibly win the war on terror. You cannot actually have a battle with an abstract entity. Sorry, it's just not possible.

The terror is in your motherfucking head, it's up to you to "beat" it.

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