GuestFellow
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I don't remember saying, or anyone else for that matter, that an Islamic state would cause instability.
Sorry I got confused.
I don't remember saying, or anyone else for that matter, that an Islamic state would cause instability.
τhε ṿαlε'ṡ lïlÿ;1398277 said:
Your writing/garbage is telling of your person!
Then why all this advocacy for the good the 'yanks' have brought to Iraq or elsewhere?
You seem desperate to rectify all the crap you spew on various threads by extricating yourself from it.. we call that hypocrisy!
Muslims can do as they please in their sovereign nations. You need to busy yourself with your own affairs!
What issues you twit?
have a good one!
You don't even know me, to be able to make such wild claims!
I don not support any government of the world!
I do not support any army of the world!
I do not support any war of the world!
Nothing in this world or this life represents me!
And I do not watch fox!
So muslims can be 'despots' and mistreat other muslims can they?Muslims can do as they please in their sovereign nations. You need to busy yourself with your own affairs!
Face up to what is done in the name of islam, by those who call themselves muslims!What issues you twit?
Trust me, the Caliphates job is to bring the unity of the Muslims back together again, thats why most Muslims want one.
That is alot of concocted bull .. no one was vying for power, people there have lived harmoniously for ages side by side.. do you know anything at all about Iraq? Have you ever been? if you haven't then shut your ignorant bazoo or go share it on the christo fundie forum, idiots there would lap it up and hail you as their king.. what is curious though, since the ''yanks'' presence there not only have things been hellish, but there is also that mysterious disappearance of Iraqi scientists and intellectuals, which the yanks have made sure they take out along with the treasures of ancient Babylon:You have completely misunderstood my meaning!
I do not, and would not advocate for the yanks!
I clearly implied, that even before the yanks went in, that Iraq was an unstable mess, with various factions vying for power!
This 'powder keg' was brutally kept from going off, by the 'bathist's' regime!
And I said of myself:
Who’s killing Iraqi intellectuals?
By David Hoskins
Published Dec 3, 2005 9:29 PM
Iraqis opposed to the U.S. occupation believe there is a systematic campaign of targeted assassinations aimed at Iraqi intellectuals and that a well-organized enemy intent on keeping Iraq weak and susceptible to foreign occupation is carrying out the killings.
The Monitoring Net for Human Rights in Iraq recently reported Iraqi police figures demonstrating that well over 1,000 Iraqi academics and scientists have been shot to death since the beginning of the U.S.-led invasion. The U.S. State Depart ment has confirmed that hundreds of university professors have been killed.
The shooting of peaceful academics clearly differentiates these killings from those attributable to the Iraqi resistance’s effort to defend its homeland. The popular insurgency has primarily targeted U.S. and British forces along with Iraqi military and police personnel who cooperate with the occupation.
Whoever is responsible for the assassination of academics must also have access to sophisticated intelligence techniques that allow for the widespread targeting of a particular grouping of civilians.
The attacks on Iraqi intellectuals first began when U.S. forces purged at least 15,500 researchers, scientists, teachers and professors for alleged ties to the Baath Party. The dismissal, and subsequent emigration, of so many leading professionals contributed to a destabilized Iraq and provided the occupiers with an excuse for staying in the country.
An article in the [London] Times Higher Education Supplement (Sept. 15, 2004) points out that “there is a widespread feeling among the Iraqi academics that they are witnessing a deliberate attempt to destroy intellectual life in Iraq.”
The cold-blooded nature of the assassinations leaves many wondering exactly who is responsible for this ongoing campaign. The Iraqi resistance denies it is responsible, and those interested in liberating Iraq from the occupation have no motive to carry out such wide-scale killings.
Osama Abed Al-Majeed, the president of the Department for Research and Development at the Iraqi Ministry for Higher Education, has accused the Israeli secret service, Mossad, of perpetuating the violence against Iraqi scientists. A June 2005 report by the Palestine Information Center claims that Mossad, in cooperation with U.S. military forces, was responsible for the assassination of 530 Iraqi scientists and professors in the seven months prior to the report’s publication.
Mossad unquestionably has the motive and means to assassinate leading Iraqi intel lectuals. The Israeli intelligence agency contains a Special Operations Division called Metsada which is tasked with conducting assassinations, sabotage and paramilitary projects. Israel has a long history of interference in Iraq, going back to the 1981 bombing of a nuclear energy plant that stood 15 miles outside Baghdad that just before that attack had voluntarily undergone inspection by the Inter national Atomic Energy Agency.
Regardless of who is responsible for the killing of Iraqi scientists and academics, it is clear that the U.S. and Britain, as the leading occupying powers, have the responsibility for the precarious situation in which these intellectuals are forced to live.
Dr. Saad Jawad is a university professor who was known to speak out against certain Baathist policies. But he recently said, “To tell the truth, in the time of Saddam Hussein, we used to speak to our students freely.… But now, a lot of people are not willing to say these kinds of things because of fear.”
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Podcast: Looting of the Iraq Museum
Wednesday, April 21
Join Dr. Donny George Youkhanna, the former director general of the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad, as he shares his unique experience and perspectives on the current archeological and museum conditions in Iraq.
Dr. Youkhanna was instrumental in the recovery of thousands of Mesopotamian artworks and artifacts looted during the U.S. invasion in 2003. He was also President of the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage. In 2006, he was forced to leave Iraq and is now a visiting professor at the State University of New York, Stony Brook.
The Looting of the Iraq Museum: An Evening with Dr. Donny George Youkhanna was recorded at the American Museum of Natural History on Feburary 24, 2010.
awrence Rothfield discusses the systematic and well-organised looting at the Iraq National Museum in 2003 on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Artworks Feature: “Looting Iraq's treasures”. Here Michael Gurr interviews Lawrence Rothfield author of The Rape of Mesopotamia on the looting of the Baghdad National Museum. The programme also contains some robust comment from Donald Rumsfeld. More than 15,000 artefacts vanished from the museum collections onto the black market, going to the dealers and buyers who are desperate to own some of the world's most ancient artefacts. And no-one, it seems, lifted a finger to stop it. Seven years on, while the Iraqis may well remember, around the world, the media has a short attention-span. This, combined with our own 'disaster fatigue', means that by now the sacking of the Baghdad Museum is pretty largely forgotten. Although the programme focussed on this, in fact looting on the archaeological sites scattered across the whole country in the aftermath of intervention aimed at destabilising the country and toppling its regime was arguably many times worse than what happened at the museum. It's estimated that perhaps 100,000 to 400,000 collectable artefacts have been ripped out of the ground, mostly between 2003 and 2006. To put that in context, the total holdings of the museum, which inventories everything excavated since 1924 until 2003 was only 170,000 items.
You can listen to the programme [here].
So muslims can be 'despots' and mistreat other muslims can they?
what you find puzzling and shocking can fill compendiums as is usually the case with most under-educated people!I find that shocking and puzzling!
What is done you chawbacon is done in the name of world domination and, a few masterminds manipulating herd like yourself to believe that your 'freedom fries' and nakes w hores in 750cc prosthesis are something worth killing for!Face up to what is done in the name of islam, by those who call themselves muslims!
What issue you twit? I don't even need to make a marginal effort to showcase you for the fool that you are!I guess your rhetoric is aimed at deflecting the issues hey!
Fine. I was just interested to see what you have to say about that verse.
Muslims desire to spread Islam however we cannot force anyone to convert. How Islam will prevail you ask? By Muslims setting a good Islam and spreading the knowledge of Islam.
That is a refreshing viewpoint. Good to hear!
But, it must be such an impediment, when so many unpeaceful things are done in the name of islam/muslims/allah?
It must put your cause back no end!
τhε ṿαlε'ṡ lïlÿ;1398831 said:
That is alot of concocted bull .. no one was vying for power, people there have lived harmoniously for ages side by side.. do you know anything at all about Iraq? Have you ever been? if you haven't then shut your ignorant bazoo or go share it on the christo fundie forum, idiots there would lap it up and hail you as their king.. what is curious though, since the ''yanks'' presence there not only have things been hellish, but there is also that mysterious disappearance of Iraqi scientists and intellectuals, which the yanks have made sure they take out along with the treasures of ancient Babylon:
this one is cute:
so I really wish you'd shut your ignorant bazoo
what you find puzzling and shocking can fill compendiums as is usually the case with most under-educated people!
What is done you chawbacon is done in the name of world domination and, a few masterminds manipulating herd like yourself to believe that your 'freedom fries' and nakes w hores in 750cc prosthesis are something worth killing for!
What issue you twit? I don't even need to make a marginal effort to showcase you for the fool that you are!
In Iraq, the Ba'ath party remained a civilian group and lacked strong support within the military.
Yes, and what would the the Prophet say?
Surprised that you would allow the west to get involved in an islamic issue, particularly one within the ummah!
That is a refreshing viewpoint. Good to hear!
But, it must be such an impediment, when so many unpeaceful things are done in the name of islam/muslims/allah?
It must put your cause back no end!
τhε ṿαlε'ṡ lïlÿ;1398846 said:
what is the point of regurgitating the same crap over you? I have already established and repeatedly that whatever problems Iraq is having should be solved by Iraqis it is certainly not a carte Blanche for you and yours to come killing, maiming and stealing.. to make the analogy so simple that even you can understand.. If I had a fight with my cousin and it got heated, what right have you a complete outsider to come in, not only killing my cousin, but other family members, posing some of them nude, torturing some, mocking the children of my village and then looting the goods and claiming that you were only trying to help-- are you this imbecilic?
Now, Please take a hike I have zero tolerance for simpletons!
I see you can't admit you have got me wrong hey!
I do not support the yanks in anything!
And my restating and clarifying my point is no 'regurgitation'!
Iraq is a mess now, and will still be if and when the yanks clear off!
And my point still is, that Iraq under saddam was a mess!
Which you have now sort of conceded!
I have no tolerance for untruth!
saddam murdered 1,000's of muslims!
Surely that is against the Prophet's teachings!
But that 'unity' of which you speak hardly existed in history -- it's nothing more than a romanticised version of Islamic history.
whats the matter? been stung by the jealousy bug?But that 'unity' of which you speak hardly existed in history -- it's nothing more than a romanticised version of Islamic history.
When the US was rattling it's sabre at Afghanistan he told me that Saddam was threatening to demand Euros for his oi
And my point still is, that Iraq under saddam was a mess! Which you have now sort of conceded! I have no tolerance for untruth! saddam murdered 1,000's of muslims! Surely that is against the Prophet's teachings!
Personally I am looking forward to oil running out![]()
τhε ṿαlε'ṡ lïlÿ;1399052 said:
once the oil runs out, there will be another reason to be there.. I have to big a headache now to go into a laundry list of it!
I've heard oil companies are investing in alternative energy. Not sure if it is true...
As long as Israel continues to receive aid and the necon dominate US foreign policy, the US will always get involved in the Middle East.
It is, they have massive budgets. Any "oil" company that does not diverge to simply become an "energy company" will die out with the oil. They know this, and that is why they invest in alternate energy sources such as hydrogen fuel cells etc.
Most countries will have some interest in the other countries in the world. I don't expect the US will have as many shall we say "active campaigns" in middle-eastern countries because once the natural resources are gone they will be of less interest. Although I expect the US will try to keep military stations in as many countries as they possibly can because they are strategically useful in their active campaigns elsewhere.
the damage has been done, greed for oil or stability was just the carrot on the stick.
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