Comments on: U.N. Extends Iraq Mandate

Security Council Authorizes 160,000-Member Multinational Force To Stay Another Year

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by agnim November 28, 2006 4:23 PM EST
"...are you actually trying to stipulate that the Jews are responsible for the past attempts on their own annihilation?"

diverinnl at 12:37 PM : Nov 28, 2006

Those who are responsible for attempts at Jewish annihilation ARE RESPONSIBLE for their actions!
There should be no doubt about that.

That was why I used the word "German and evil European", say. It is ALWAYS evil to murder and mass humans, ALWAYS!

However, even the Jews have it clearly written in their writings,

"What you sow you shall surely reap".
That is the Law of Karma, which is ALWAYS in force, even for those who delude themselves that they are somehow a 'chosen people'.

Fortunately for us, the Jews have kept hundreds of generations of their history, from which we can see the clear pattern of their 'sowing and reaping'.

Coming out of Egypt the Jews ethnically cleansed the region to create their first israel.
That was the Jewish 'sowing seeds' of ethnic cleansing, which they will eventually 'reap' later.

The Jews were later ethnically cleansed from the region by the Babylonians, Persians, Romans, say. That was the 'reaping' from the 'seeds' of ethnic cleansing 'seeds' sown earlier by the Jews.

This IS NOT to say that what the Persians, Babylonians, Romans, Europeans did to the Jews was right. No!

However, right or wrong, the wheel of KARMA turns!'

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by vamecegr November 28, 2006 4:21 PM EST
Would I send my son to this war? You might ask would I send him to WW II? Or Vietnam? Maybe you would distinguish those conflicts and whether you would send your son to fight in them. But that question is misdirected in a very important way: I can't command my son to go to war. He has to make that choice. So the better question would be: would I volunteer to fight in Iraq, WW II, Vietnam? Would I volunteer to fight in any war? Respond if drafted? I don%u2019t know. I'm not equivocating, only addressing that it is a hypothetical. To a hypothetical, I can answer, sure I'd fight. But I have nightmares of battle (from my past life as a pansy democrat). So how do I feel toward those who do volunteer? Impressed and maturely knowing that many things go into their decision. But I do strongly believe that a country that can't find those men is doomed. The fact that we can find them is one reason why I say there is no failure in Iraq. Objectively, I also believe it for other reasons. An attempt to establish democracy in the Middle East is a bold, brilliant, noble effort, facing a high chance of failure. That's why I greatly respect and admire those who have made the attempt--the Bush administration. They have been resolute, something I have not seen in my lifetime. They may not succeed, for reasons outside their control or fault: traitors on the home front being a big one.
******** you sux. reading your words makes me want to puke

V/R

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by vamecegr November 28, 2006 4:21 PM EST
Would I send my son to this war? You might ask would I send him to WW II? Or Vietnam? Maybe you would distinguish those conflicts and whether you would send your son to fight in them. But that question is misdirected in a very important way: I can't command my son to go to war. He has to make that choice. So the better question would be: would I volunteer to fight in Iraq, WW II, Vietnam? Would I volunteer to fight in any war? Respond if drafted? I don%u2019t know. I'm not equivocating, only addressing that it is a hypothetical. To a hypothetical, I can answer, sure I'd fight. But I have nightmares of battle (from my past life as a pansy democrat). So how do I feel toward those who do volunteer? Impressed and maturely knowing that many things go into their decision. But I do strongly believe that a country that can't find those men is doomed. The fact that we can find them is one reason why I say there is no failure in Iraq. Objectively, I also believe it for other reasons. An attempt to establish democracy in the Middle East is a bold, brilliant, noble effort, facing a high chance of failure. That's why I greatly respect and admire those who have made the attempt--the Bush administration. They have been resolute, something I have not seen in my lifetime. They may not succeed, for reasons outside their control or fault: traitors on the home front being a big one.
******** you sux. reading your words makes me want to puke

V/R

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by bushrocks1 November 28, 2006 3:50 PM EST
Would I send my son to this war? You might ask would I send him to WW II? Or Vietnam? Maybe you would distinguish those conflicts and whether you would send your son to fight in them. But that question is misdirected in a very important way: I can't command my son to go to war. He has to make that choice. So the better question would be: would I volunteer to fight in Iraq, WW II, Vietnam? Would I volunteer to fight in any war? Respond if drafted? I don%u2019t know. I'm not equivocating, only addressing that it is a hypothetical. To a hypothetical, I can answer, sure I'd fight. But I have nightmares of battle (from my past life as a Jacobite). So how do I feel toward those who do volunteer? Impressed and maturely knowing that many things go into their decision. But I do strongly believe that a country that can't find those men is doomed. The fact that we can find them is one reason why I say there is no failure in Iraq. Objectively, I also believe it for other reasons. An attempt to establish democracy in the Middle East is a bold, brilliant, noble effort, facing a high chance of failure. That's why I greatly respect and admire those who have made the attempt--the Bush administration. They have been resolute, something I have not seen in my lifetime. They may not succeed, for reasons outside their control or fault: traitors on the home front being a big one. Now those traitors have apparently occupied the high ground. Yet... we're still in Iraq. Why?...I'm waiting.
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by diverinnl November 28, 2006 3:37 PM EST
Agnim, your points are, to put it bluntly, absurd. Please correct me if I'm misunderstanding you but are you actually trying to stipulate that the Jews are responsible for the past attempts on their own annihilation? The Egyptians, Romans, Nazi's, and Islamic extremists are not accountable for their attempts at mass extermination of an entire race of people?
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by pendragon679 November 28, 2006 3:33 PM EST
bushrocks1, go home, please; your mommy's calling you.
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by pendragon679 November 28, 2006 3:33 PM EST
"What other disaster of great magnitude are the Jews blamed for?"

Uh...if I remember my basic theology correctly, Jesus was born of Jewish (Hebrew) parents. Therefore, the Jews can be blamed for a "disaster of great magnitude" called Christianity.
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by agnim November 28, 2006 3:20 PM EST
If the biblically blinded US really want to help the 'chosen people', then we should help the Jews pay attention to the HUMANITY around them; because their jehovah will NEVER EVER be able to save the Jews from karma they continue to foolishly earn by their unending ethnic cleansing.

All the Semites can share the space, which they for idiotic reasons deem important to them.
Our role should be to help them find their common Semitic ground.

The US role should not be to mindlessly follow middle east maniacs to further threaten world peace.

Because of their historical focus on learning, the Jews are relatively smart people; and they are plying the lesser endowed Americans like a fiddle in a deadly opera with destructive global consequences.
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by patriotic9 November 28, 2006 3:14 PM EST
That's why we went to Iraq.Saddam was not only sunni but also a SECULAR guy who had a CATHOLIC FOREING MINISTER and females in his cabinet.Also at the time of Saddam,it was mandatory for both boys and girls to go to schools and the IRAQIs used to be one of the best,doctors,scientists,etc in the middle east.Religious education were banned and EXTREMISTS used to be prosecuted.United States has removed SADDAM from power and as a result of DEMOCRACY those RADICAL EXTREMIST SHIAs have been brought into power who are dreaming for an EXTREMIST ISLAMIC EMPIRE form IRAN in the EAST to LEBANON in the WEST ruled under those AYATOLLAHs who call us THE GREATES SATAN.Most of the people in the MIDDLE EAST don't care about race or country but they do care about their religious affiliations.It's very clear that not only IRAQI SHIA insurgents were trained by HEZBOLLAH but HIZBOLLAH might also has got weapons from IRAQI SECURITY FORCE(I think other people also might have seen the news of so many weapons given to the IRAQI SECURITY FORCE by UNITED STATES are missing and unaccounted for)The only people who got benifited from this war are ISLAMIC RADICALS,ARAB OIL BUSINESSMEN and OIL COMPANY OWNERS in OUR COUNTRY.And what about OSAMA BEEN FORGOTTEN.Didn't we start this war to capture him DEAD or ALIVE?
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by diverinnl November 28, 2006 2:38 PM EST
That is a good point Ozilot. Renewable energy sources benefit us financially as well as being beneficial to our environment. Unfortunately, the oil lobby has and has always had a HUGE influence in our government and I don't see a substantial federal push for investing in alternate energy research and development. It needs to get stronger than grass roots.
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