Sadam Hussain March for Peace....

tulip2lipservice

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I am sitting here reading about marches for peace throughout the world. The mass number of people that are expected to show. It made me wonder. Are the people that live in the countries that are so against us organizing the same sort of thing? I mean are they out there demonstrating for peaceful solutions? or Are they out there demonstrating more hatred towards the U.S.? What is your take on this?

Peace,
Tulip
 
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Show up in Amsterdam on Saturday and you will have the answer to all your questions.
 
I would love to show up

to Amsterdam on Saturday. Very nice country, however that is not my point. It seems like U.S., Canada, European countries are having demonstrations for peace but what about Afganastan, Iraq and supporting countries to them? Are they marching for peace on their soil?

Peace,
Tulip
 
I know neither do I.

I truly wonder if they seek peace. Call it propaganda or the truth but what I see is their protest for hatred. They seem to have a lot of hatred for our life style and what not.

So would all the efforts of peace rallies be a waste if the other parties are having hatred rallies? It would not stop their minds from suicide bombings, terrorist attacks, chemical warfare, biological warefare, nuclear bombing, etc. Thinking about it we are not officially at war but yet threats and interceptions of terrorist attack on my home soil are being intercepted. So what next if "our" side chooses not to fight but for peace. Would that honestly stop the "other" side? or Would it just make them feel they can continue doing what they have been doing? In a way that they have "won".

Peace,
Tulip
 
Re: I know neither do I.

tulip2lipservice said:
I truly wonder if they seek peace.


If you lived in Iraq and there were 200,000 US troops massing along your borders to kill your President...would you be marching or quietly looking for bottled water and food to store in your dirt basement for the coming invasion?

Lots of people in the Middle East hate the USA. The USA are the only people that have ever bombed most of them.

Peace? I'm sure they'd love to be left alone...wouldn't you?
 
Re: Re: I know neither do I.

Lancecastor said:
If you lived in Iraq and there were 200,000 US troops massing along your borders to kill your President...would you be marching or quietly looking for bottled water and food to store in your dirt basement for the coming invasion?

Lots of people in the Middle East hate the USA. The USA are the only people that have ever bombed most of them.

Peace? I'm sure they'd love to be left alone...wouldn't you?

I attempt to ignore you by not posting in threads you start about NYC and such and you come looking for me? Hence your post here and dig. Are you seriously that bored? Jeez lance YOU ARE FULL OF SHIT! You know it and most of the posters here know it.

To reply to your "idea" you stated here there are terrorists within my country and people are still protesting. There are threats of terrorism and chemical warfare world wide and yet people are still marching in demonstration of peace. So if they truly wanted peace don't you think they would be demonstrating. Are they afraid of the U.S. armies about their country or is it the internal army they are afraid of? Rumor has it they are a supressed society. Look at how they treat their women.

My basement unlike yours is not a dirt one. Thanks for reminding me that I have to stock up on my supplies. I guess I'll do that this weekend. :)

Anticipating your return........ Just a game lancie pancie.... then you will say I sought you out.... pffffttttt.

T
 
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While you're at it...

Check out all the communist/socialist banners, and the types of people that are marching, for their version of "peace".
It's a hate Bush/America funfest, funny that they did not mobilize when their "comrade" Clinton bombed the fuck out of 2000 Serb civilians in an non-UN sanctioned, undeclared regime change in Yugoslavia!
Where were they when we deposed the regime in Haiti?
Where were they when we went into Somalia?
Their agenda is so transparent it's sickening, you're seeing the death rattle of the last bastions of communism, and the terminal illness of socialism on parade this weekend.
BTW- The Communist definition of "peace" is when they are no longer opposed in the world.

www.internationalanswer.org
 
There are many reasons

why people will attend these rallies. I like so many others want peace in the world. It cannot be possible if it is not two sided. Spinaroonie I had to turn my sign line thing on again and read briefly where these rallies will be held. Yes, it looks like it will be a great turn out but again what about the "opposition to the US"? I saw no mention of their peace rallies. I heard no responses to their peaceful solutions to this situation. I have heard about them being ready for war and willing to die.

My local news tonight and this week has been about fear of terror attacks. Do you think the people involved would look at such a rally as an opportunity? or Will they say hey cool they want peace let's leave them alone?

Nothing is ever one sided.

Peace,
Tulip
 
Re: While you're at it...

Lost Cause said:
Check out all the communist/socialist banners, and the types of people that are marching, for their version of "peace".
It's a hate Bush/America funfest, funny that they did not mobilize when their "comrade" Clinton bombed the fuck out of 2000 Serb civilians in an non-UN sanctioned, undeclared regime change in Yugoslavia!
Where were they when we deposed the regime in Haiti?
Where were they when we went into Somalia?
Their agenda is so transparent it's sickening, you're seeing the death rattle of the last bastions of communism, and the terminal illness of socialism on parade this weekend.
BTW- The Communist definition of "peace" is when they are no longer opposed in the world.

www.internationalanswer.org

Once again, your posts defy sense and degenerate into rambling! I applaud you for being such a consistant poster! A Libertarian saying people shouldn't be protesting. Just grand.
 
" I stopped on the way to visit Saad Khadim, who is my closest Iraqi friend. When I heard what he had to say, I never got around to buying my tape.

Saad used to run the city’s best — OK, its only — Iraqi restaurant, which was on Tiemann Place up by Columbia University. These days, he works in a doctor’s office across the street from INS and tries to imagine how his large family back home can possibly get through the coming war.

He did not sound too cheery Thursday.

“Tell me,” he pleaded. “What can we do to stop this? It’s like the whole nation of Iraq is on death row. The people are waiting for their execution date.”

Not just Saddam Hussein. Not just his Republican Guard. Normal Iraqi people who want nothing more than to live with their families in peace. People like the Khadims of Samawa.

As so often happens in war, they are the ones who will pay with their blood. “Iraqi mothers are no different from American mothers in the love they have for their children,” Saad said. “It is horrible to think how many Iraqi civilians will die. Americans too. Will 150,000 American troops come home safely? Or just 120,000?”

His own family has been decimated by two decades of on-and-off war. “When I go home, I ask, ‘What happened to this one?’” he said. “They say, ‘Oh, he’s been gone a long time.’ I’ve probably lost half my family in all the fighting of the past 20 years.”

The invasion of Iraq may not go as smoothly as American politicians are promising, Saad said. The Iraqi Army is already dispersing across the country, moving into civilian homes. This war can’t be won by air power alone. House-to-house combat is a frightening thought for both sides.

“This won’t be a six-day war,” he said. “Six months? A militia war inside each village for years to come? An Iraq divided into three nations? And years of occupation. Almost any scenario means genocide for the Iraqis people.”

The last time American bombs fell, Saad said, “My father took the family to a village 70 miles away. They were gone when a missile hit the house. Now, my father is dead and there is no money to take the family anywhere.”

And not so much as a roll of duct tape to protect them.

“They don’t have 22 millions gas masks,” Saad said. “After all these years of sanctions, they hardly know what duct tape is anymore.

“These are not your enemies,” Saad Kahdim told me Thursday, as war grew closer to him and to us. “It is important for Americans to know that.”

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationw...,0,7293128.column?coll=ny-homepage-right-area
 
I do not think he was saying that

he was against people protesting. I think he was saying that there is a large number of communist left overs that are partaking.

I do applaud people for taking the right to say they want peace. I think the norm of man kind seeks it.

To me I wonder about what is in the minds of the people living in countries runned by Sadam Hussain and support Bin Ladin? Do they want peace? Do they want peace but are prisoners within their own surrondings to do so? or Does the hatred of the U.S. take over their every being that they are willing to die for their cause? Jeez what truly is the cause for some extremist to bomb the World Trade Center? I have yet to understand it all.

I can only assume that some of the blame for their hatred is what has been taught to them from their forefathers. Is it truly about the land that was taken? The society and life style that most U.S. people live? Where is the hatred coming from? In all honesty has that side come out and said these are our demands. As of now it just seems they want to hurt us physically or at least through fear. Again I do not think there is one specific reason I can truly understand.

Peace,
Tulip
 
Re: There are many reasons

tulip2lipservice said:
Yes, it looks like it will be a great turn out but again what about the "opposition to the US"? I saw no mention of their peace rallies. I heard no responses to their peaceful solutions to this situation. I have heard about them being ready for war and willing to die.

My local news tonight and this week has been about fear of terror attacks. Do you think the people involved would look at such a rally as an opportunity? or Will they say hey cool they want peace let's leave them alone?

Nothing is ever one sided.

Peace,
Tulip

Depends what you mean by opposition? Countries like Germany will be having protests. I'm pretty sure that Iraq doesn't need to have protests since the published war plans says they're going to kill the innocents to protect them from Saddam.

As for terror attacks... I'm really not concerned. It'd be counter-productive for an attack on these rallies.
 
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