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djxeno

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  1. PLO central committee: Halt attacks against all Israelis By Arnon Regular (Ha'aretz) Nov. 25, 2002 The PLO's Central Committee has called for "the end of all military action, particularly against Israeli citizens." In a statement formulated at a meeting in Ramallah on Friday, one day after a suicide bus bombing in Jerusalem killed 11 people, the committee released a statement that may be interpreted as intervention in Israel's election campaign. "While recognizing the level of violence, and murder, and settlements, and occupation against the Palestinian nation, the committee calls on our people and the national Islamic forces [Fatah, Islamic organizations] to be aware of the needs of the current period and not to be dragged into a trap set by the Israeli leadership intended to broaden the war and take advantage of the elections to mislead the Israeli public." The committee, headed by PA Chairman Yasser Arafat, also called for an immediate dialogue with members of the Israeli peace camp. The panel said hope would be restored for the two nations through a comprehensive peace plan that complements the Taba negotiations, the Bush plan and the Saudi Arabian peace initiative. The committee would present the plan to the Israeli and Palestinian public as a realistic alternative for peace." Hamas criticized the committee's declaration on Friday. The organization's spokesmen were angry over the declaration's wording, which implied the halting of terror attacks against settlers and soldiers.
  2. U.S. expected to approve $14 billion aid to Israel By Moti Bassok (Ha'aretz) Nov. 25, 2002 Israel will submit a request Monday for $14 billion in economic aid to U.S. National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice. President George Bush is expected to quickly approve the request - $4 billion in defense aid. and U.S. guarantees for $10 billion - with minor changes, Israeli sources said. The sources said the Republican congressional majority would approve the aid within 3-6 months. After Finance Ministry director general Ohad Marani and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's bureau chief Dov Weisglass submit the request, it will be handled by both Israeli and U.S. officials who will determine the duration of the grant and guarantees, and various technical details. The guarantees will apparently be for five years but it is unclear how the defense aid will be laid out. Sharon told Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz during a meeting eight days ago with Finance Minister Silvan Shalom, that as soon as the U.S. makes a positive decision on the defense grant, he will consent to some of Mofaz's requests for budget increases. The sources say the grant will allow the government to direct defense spending to growth oriented projects. Some treasury officials are not pleased with the request for such high guarantees, fearing that some of the money will not be directed to growth projects. However, sources at the prime minister's office say news of the aid will improve the country's international financial standing, and could encourage both local and foreign investors to reconsider Israel. The U.S. aid will also substantially influence the strategic situation in the Middle East. Sharon first raised the question of aid in his Washington meeting with Bush in mid-October. The formal request was completed by Marani's staff in the past two weeks, with the explanation that Israel has increased military spending in the past two years because of the Palestinian uprising and the expected U.S. war with Iraq. Last week, Turkey and Jordan received generous American military aid of $2 billion to prepare for the possible war with Iraq. The request for the guarantees - the option of getting improved loan terms from U.S. banks - is based on Israel's need to stabilize the economy and pull out of recession. Last week Washington approved Israel's annual military aid of $2.16 billion for 2004, and is expected to approve its civil aid soon.
  3. I sincerely hope most of you ignorant people are only on this board for entertainment...
  4. LOL that was funny as hell, did u see the souls of the other dead animals talking to lemmiwinks...LOL. And the sleeping mexican was funny as hell too LOLLLLL.
  5. What the fuck do you know about me, and you're calling me nuts and telling me to get out of this country? Once again you have called me a moron, another personal attack. It just goes to show that my post went entirely over your head.
  6. You guys really crack me up. I can't believe how insecure you are with your own beliefs that you have to relate to childish, ignorant namecalling and personal attacks. So I become a trader if I hate Bush, alot of you on this board hate Clinton and the Dems, but you don't see me telling you to fuckin leave this country do you? Jesus, have some respect and grow up. Attack the issue for God's sake, are you all that immature? Just because I posted something doesn't mean I believe every word there and believe it %100. I just posted it for people to read. Or you only want to read things you agree with and stay ignorant? you Never know these days what can and cannot be true. Let me give you a small analogy, take for example house music and the radio. You know if we listened to nothing else but radio our music taste would be pretty drab and dull. The only thing we would know to be music is the crap we here on the radio. We had to look further, deeper, and find house music, a beautiful form of music. That being said, if we believe everything the media tells us we will go through our lives with blindfolds on. We have to go deeper and find the truths, whatever they may be. So please stop with the personal attacks and come at me with some legit arguments, Im not 4 years old anymore. -XeNo-
  7. I will...after you fuck Bush up the ass
  8. http://www.hermes-press.com/nazification_step3.htm
  9. "According to the Israeli newspaper, Ma’ariv, the scope of the phenomenon is frightening .." OCCUPIED JERUSALEM - Dozens of Israeli occupation soldiers who have killed Palestinian civilians while serving in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are reportedly suffering from what is increasingly described as “the intifada syndrome.†According to the Israeli media, many of the soldiers who have been discharged from army service are now facing “personal crises†stemming from their respective “harsh†experiences in the West Bank and Gaza. According to the Israeli newspaper, Ma’ariv, the scope of the phenomenon is frightening as dozens of these soldiers are seeking an escape from their problems by coming under the influence of drugs, including some instances of heroine and cocaine. Ma’ariv reported on 15 November that some soldiers tried to commit suicide or hurt themselves. The right-wing newspaper quoted one soldier who served in an undercover unit as saying that “we didn’t know that what we did would haunt us in the future.†“We went into houses, we clashed with the Palestinians, we killed civilians, some of whom were innocent. You do the job and you don’t think it’s going to hurt you in the future. You’re told that that’s the task. Today I regret some of the things I did, and today, I stay at home banging my head against the wall, I don’t have a job and no one talks to me.†A former paratrooper who has been under psychological treatment for the past three months related the following: “ We’d go into houses. We’d see children and old people crying. We shot their television sets. At first you don’t pity, you do the job. But when you sit at home later you begin to understand that you’ve done things that have hurt you emotionally.†The Hebrew newspaper pointed out that many of the soldiers concerned became addicted to hard drugs. “An officer from an elite unit, who fought against the Palestinians for two years, went to Thailand. He tried to escape what had happened to him in the territories, was unsuccessful and fell into drugs. He returned to Israel and moved on to harder drugs, to cocaine. He was treated with his parents by his side. A few days later, they found him dead. No one knows to this day from what.†The Israeli army is aware of the phenomenon, but has a hard time treating it. “We can’t monitor this phenomenon. We can’t treat every combatant who gets caught up in drugs and emotional distress,†said an army spokesperson. -IAP News (iap.org). Redistributed via Press International News Agency (PINA). -XeNo-
  10. What I don't understand is, if they are SO sure an attack is imminent, why can't they prevent it? All they tell us is to remain vigilant... -XeNo-
  11. Yes, yes, what lovely propoganda...
  12. American-born Nita Renfrew went to Israel as an idealistic young liberal who wanted to experience life in a country she believed was a model for the world. What she discovered was not what she expected. It gave her new insights into what the Arab-Israeli conflict was really all about. In subsequent years, after leaving Israel, Renfrew traveled widely, including a stint as the Spanish correspondent for LeMonde Diplomatique, the well-known French foreign affairs journal. She has been a radio commentator and is the author of Saddam Hussein, an authoritative and objective (but very hard to find) biography of the Iraqi leader. Following her recent appearance as featured speaker at the Third International Conference on Authentic History and the First Amendment, sponsored in Washington, D.C. by The Barnes Review, Renfrew was a guest on the June 23 broadcast of Radio Free America, the weekly call-in talk forum sponsored by American Free Press with host Tom Valentine. What follows is an edited transcription of the interview. Valentine’s questions are in boldface. Miss Renfrew’s responses are in regular text. Tell us, just how did a young American girl end up settling down in Israel? When I first went over to the Middle East in 1968, it was right after the 1967 war. I had been living in Mexico. We had all heard about how heroic the Israelis were because they had defeated these monstrous Arabs who had wanted to push the Israelis into the sea and how the Israelis had “made the desert bloom.†So I thought Israel was some kind of idealistic country and that’s why I wanted to go over there. I was about 21 at the time. I lived on a kibbutz, right on the border of Jordan, next to the Golan Heights, which had been occupied during the 1967 war. We were being shelled all the time there on the border. That’s exactly where I had my first clue as to what was going to happen to Iraq in the future. The first day I was sent down to work in the banana fields with a group of Americans. There were eight American girls working next to the border that day. We were putting paper bags over the bananas to keep them from freezing before they were picked. There was always somebody with us. I watched a Mirage jet fly over a Palestinian village that was on a hilltop on the other side of the border and watched a mushroom cloud rise over the village as the Mirage returned and flew back into Israel. I had seen pictures of atomic blasts and thought this was what it was, but the cloud was smaller. Everybody laughed at me and said, “Oh no, that was just napalm.†I said, “They’re dropping napalm on a civilian Palestinian village?†And they responded, “Well, these Palestinians come across the border and put land mines in the fields and bombs in buses, so we have to do this once a week.†I was there for nine months and I watched it happen once a week, with the Palestinians doing nothing to provoke it. This was the beginning of my disillusionment, watching what I saw. I realized Israel was not what I thought it was. After I had been there for three weeks, they left us without a supervisor down by the border in the banana fields and told us, “If the Palestinians start shooting at you, there’s a trench over there. Go hide in it.†I was working and wondering why they had left us unsupervised. All of a sudden there was this tremendous explosion and I felt this stinging on my face and I threw myself on the ground, thinking they were shooting at us. I thought I heard my partner—we worked in pairs—laughing hysterically and I looked at her and saw she didn’t have a leg. She had stepped on a land mine and was crying hysterically—not laughing. The Israeli soldiers came and took us out of there. I had an Israeli-born boyfriend there at the kibbutz and he was very idealistic. He came running up to me and said, “Thank God it wasn’t you. I worried all morning that it might be you.†I responded, “You mean you knew there was a land mine there?†He said, “Oh yes, we knew. We caught three Palestinian guerrillas and the army killed them but we only found two of the land mines. We knew that there was a third one but we couldn’t find the tracks and we couldn’t find it with a metal detector.†In other words, they used these idealistic American girls—including you—as guinea pigs? Yes, we were unwilling human shields. I asked my boyfriend, “Well, why didn’t you tell us about the land mine?†And he said, “Well, then you wouldn’t have gone to work and we didn’t want to lose the bananas.†I said, “Well, why didn’t you guys go down there?†And he said, “Well, everybody on the kibbutz knew and we didn’t go down there.†So the blinders fell off my eyes. My partner survived, losing her leg, but I don’t think anyone told her that they knew there was a land mine there. As a result of experiences such as this, I became interested in the politics of what was happening in the Middle East and I started asking a lot of questions. Young Israelis who were my age had been in the military and they fought in the 1967 war. I started asking them questions about the Arabs. They said, “Oh, the Arabs are all cowards and run away.†But they said there were two exceptions: the Bedouin guard of King Hussein in Jordan, who were very brave and who would fight to the death. However, they said there were not many of them, so they were not too worried about them. And they also said that the Iraqi soldiers were formidable. The Iraqis fought to the death. They said that the Iraqis didn’t have good training or weaponry. But if they ever did, they would be a threat to Israel. They said that Iraq had a large population and a lot of oil wells. I kept hearing this all the time, and, of course, it didn’t mean much to me. But later, as I saw that Israel was behind a lot of the policies designed to destroy Iraq and with the 1991 war against Iraq, I began to understand it all. After I left Israel and came to New York, I followed events in the Middle East very closely. I met many Arabs from all of the different countries. In 1984, after the United States re-established relations with Iraq, I was invited as an American journalist to visit Iraq. This was following the Iran-Iraq war. I had a lot of Persian friends. I had previously visited Iran and I actually met the Ayatollah Khomeini right after he assumed power. I had been watching the Iran-Iraq war. Khomeini had been in exile in Iraq for many years during the time that the shah ruled Iran. Saddam Hussein had come to power in Iraq in 1968 when the Ba’ath Party came to power. Ba’ath basically means “Renaissance†in Arabic. And it’s important to understand what the Ba’ath Party is, because it has to do with why Israel has problems with Iraq and Saddam. The problem that Israel has with Saddam is its problem with the ideology of the Ba’ath Party, really, even though the Israelis try to personalize the matter, as the Israelis are now trying to do with Yasser Arafat, the leader of the Palestinians. It sounds better, public-relations-wise, if you want to get rid of a “terrible dictator†as the Israelis have portrayed Saddam, and now Arafat. In fact, Saddam Hussein has been one of the proponents of Pan-Arabism or Arab nationalism since the time he was a child. This refers to a unity among all Arab countries. Although Egypt’s former leader Gamal Abdul Nasser is identified with Pan-Arabism, Nasser got a lot of his ideas from the Ba’ath Party and was influenced by its ideology after it came into existence in Syria in 1947, formed by two Muslims and a Christian. This was at a time when the Zionists were expelling the Palestinians from Palestine in preparation for declaring the state of Israel in 1948. One of the main tenets of the Ba’ath Party has been to restore Palestinian sovereignty in Palestine and to unite the whole Arab people so that they would be a united country and a bastion against what they considered to be European colonialism. Israel is a key component of that colonialism. As vice president in Iraq, Saddam was considered an equal partner of his cousin, who was the president. In 1979, Saddam’s cousin resigned as president for health reasons and Saddam became president. This was right after Khomeini returned to Iran. Khomeini hated Saddam because the shah of Iran had asked him to expel Khomeini because Khomeini was creating opposition to the shah. Saddam agreed to expel Khomeini and that’s when Khomeini went to Paris and was able to rally and successfully oust the shah. The Persians in Iran didn’t like the United States because the United States was backing the corrupt and brutal regime of the shah in Iran. This leads right into the Iran-Iraq war which began after Khomeini assumed power in Iran, after the shah was ousted by Islamic fundamentalists. That’s right. You see the Ba’ath Party of Iraq is a secular party. It believes in the separation of state and religion. So the Shiite Muslims in Iran, led by the Ayatollah Khomeini, wanted a Muslim religious state like Khomeini brought to Iran. In fact, Khomeini wanted an Islamic republic composed of all of the Islamic states and eventually a world government. But to have that, Khomeini needed to conquer not only Iraq but also Mecca and Medina which are sites in Saudi Arabia that are holy to all Muslims—both Shiites and Sunnis. He had to go through Iraq, which is the only Arab country with a land border with Saudi Arabia. So Khomeini was calling on the radio for the Shiite soldiers in Iraq to defect and assassinate Saddam. The Shiites are more than 50 percent of the Islamic population in Iraq. There were assassination attempts. Saddam believed that even though Iran had more than three times the manpower of Iraq and far greater strategic depth, he figured he could do a preemptive strike against Iran, since there were sanctions on Iran and the country couldn’t get spare parts. Saddam calculated that would stop Iran from invading Iraq and the rest of the Arab world. However, Saddam miscalculated the fact that, during the shah’s time, Iran had financed part of the defense industry in Israel. There were arms factories in Israel that belonged jointly to Israel and the Iranian government. While Khomeini was saying that Israel was another enemy of the Muslims, the Iranian army continued to have the same liaison people with Israel. Israel, in turn, saw this as an opportunity to give Iran parts for its military hardware and to get a war started between Iraq and Iran and therefore take the attention away from the Palestinian question. And that intrigue by Israel led to the now-infamous Iran-contra arms deals, in which Israel played a major role, though that was downplayed by the American media. The United States was drawn into this when U.S. officials started sending and selling all kinds of weapons to the Iranians to fight Saddam. This was all supposedly done by the United States to get the American hostages out of Iran. But Israel’s agenda was to get that war started and to keep it going. So every time one side started to lose the war, Israel would get the United States to supply that side—either Iraq or Iran—with satellite intelligence and spare parts. When that side got stronger, then the United States would supply the other side. The United States was playing both sides. Where did Saudi Arabia fit in this? Right before the Iran-Iraq war started, Saddam had made a trip to Saudi Arabia and he had met with King Fahd. Although Saudi Arabia has a small population, it has a lot of oil wells. The same thing can be said about Kuwait. Both of those countries agreed that Iraq would use its manpower to fight the war and they would help pay for the Iraqi war effort since it was really a war effort to defend all of the Arab countries against Iran, and those countries, in particular. That was very critical, since Iran had a large population and they could send wave after wave of Iranian soldiers against Iraq. In fact, Iran started doing that. They called it “human wave attacks.†They had North Korean training. They would send these lightly-armed young men and old men across the border into Iraq by the tens of thousands and Iraq almost fell at a certain point. Is this when sarin gas was used in chemical warfare in the Iran-Iraq war? It was in roughly 1985 when this began. Because the southern part of Iraq narrows to a little point—the British had carved out the state of Kuwait from Iraq—the Iranians were able to get just a few miles from the border of Kuwait. If they had managed to stay there, they would have broken into Kuwait and Iraq would probably have fallen very quickly. As a momentary digression, I think it is important to reiterate the point you just made: The fact that there was never any such nation as Kuwait until the British created it by taking the land away from Iraq. That fact was hardly ever reported by the American media when Saddam invaded Kuwait in 1990. That’s right. There was never any such nation as Kuwait. It was just a little town. The Iraqis were traditionally hard to govern and they still are. They are very independent and autonomous-thinking. I think one of the reasons the British wanted to cut off Kuwait was so that the British could make Iraq into almost a landlocked country, when Iraq had traditionally been a sea-faring country. To return to Saddam’s use of poison gas against the Iranians, where did Saddam get this gas? From the Americans, apparently. He had been building some rudimentary gas plants before, but the Americans apparently helped him build more of them. One of the plants was a precursor to the mustard gas plants of Bechtel Corp. I want to point out that Iran was also using chemical weapons. I don’t know where Iran got those weapons. There is a famous incident involving a Kurdish village, Halabja, in which chemical weapons were used, but the truth about what really happened has been overwhelmingly distorted and covered up by the U.S. media. Toward the end of the Iran-Iraq war in 1988, the Iranians had started an offensive in the north after their efforts in the south, around Kuwait, had failed. They redirected their efforts to the north, because there’s a lot of oil up there, too. The Kurds in Iraq had been continuously armed by Israel, starting in the 1950s, in order to destabilize Iraq. The Kurds had also been armed by the shah for the same reason. Now the Iranians under Khomeini had begun to arm them again. Everybody from President Bush to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld have said that “Saddam killed his own Kurdish population†in Halabja, using poison gas. There was a battle in Halabja between the Iranian army and the Iraqi army. The mayor of Halabja, who is related to a man I know here in the United States, said that it was the Iranians who dropped the chemical weapons on the village—not the Iraqis—and the Kurds got caught in the cross-fire. It was not done deliberately. One of the indications, he said, is that when the Kurds fled the village, they didn’t flee across the border to Iran, but back into Iraq since the planes were coming from Iran. Interestingly enough, there is a U.S. Army War College report, by Stephen Pelletier, who headed up the analysis team on the Iran-Iraq war for the United States. He and his co-author based their report on the information that was being continuously gathered by the CIA and the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency during the Iran-Iraq war. The report said that the Kurds in Halabja had died from cyanigin blood agents. The Iraqis were not known to have any cyanigin blood agents but the Iranians were. So the U.S. Army War College report concluded that the Kurds died from Iranian chemical weapons—not Iraqi chemical weapons. Mr. Pelletier still stands by his re port and was recently quoted as saying so in The Village Voice. This leads into another thing: Here in the United States we are very much concerned about women’s rights and we always hear about the mistreatment of women in Arab and Muslim countries. It’s not that way under Saddam Hussein at all. No, on the contrary. As a matter of fact, in Saudi Arabia, a lot of women—including women in the royal family—named their sons “Saddam†right after the 1991 war because he is a hero to women. In Iraq, women enjoy many of the equal rights that we do in this country. I have found that half of the university students in Iraq were women. About half of the government employees, up to the mid-levels, were women when I was there. I believe this is a great factor in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait not liking Saddam, since their women are often saying, “Why can’t we be like Iraq?†So they point toward Saddam as being a model for what they would like to have in their own country. In your book on Saddam, you pointed out that Saddam himself wanted an education so badly that he abandoned his own family. When Saddam was 10 years old, his cousin from a nearby town came to visit and he showed him how he could read and write, by writing in the dirt. Saddam was fascinated by this and when his cousin returned to Tikrit, he begged his family to allow him to go to school. They told him, “You don’t need to know how to read and write. You’re going to be a poor melon grower.†So he ran away from home and went to his cousin’s house, where his uncle was a teacher. Saddam stayed there and went to school. His best subject was history. He was always fascinated by history, especially Arab history, which is why he naturally fell in with the Ba’ath Party’s ideology of restoring the Arab world to its glorious history. In fact, Saddam has given a great deal of money to archeological research. Artists love Saddam, too, because he supports the arts. If an election was held in Iraq, he might not have to rig it, contrary to what the American media might contend. I was talking to a Jordanian businessman the other day. Jordan is a monarchy. This businessman said to me: “You know, I have always hated Saddam Hussein because I hate socialism.†The Ba’ath Party has a socialist concept and believes in housing and education for people, to be paid for by Iraq’s oil riches. So this Jordanian businessman hates Saddam because of that ideology. However, he said, “If I were an Iraqi today, I would vote for Saddam. If Saddam is intelligent, he will hold elections because he’ll get 95 percent of the vote. No other Arab leader would get that kind of vote today.†Yet, the American media portrays Saddam as some sort of hated dictator. We always hear about how he has to live in a different bunker or palace every day. Well, even though Saddam is very popular, he has a lot of powerful enemies. So there’s always an assassin around somewhere. Saddam is a Sunni Muslim and the Shiite Muslims are the more fundamentalist types. They are the ones who resent Saddam’s liberal policies. The Shiites also resent Saddam, who believes in separation of religion and state. They would rather see a fundamentalist Muslim state. If the United States attacks Iraq—and it appears as if the civilians in our government want to do it, despite the fact that our Joint Chiefs of Staff have protested—we will achieve what the Arabs have never been able to achieve, and that is to unite the Arab world. It’s impossible to predict what would eventually happen. But this would unite the Arab world in fury against the United States. I believe that all of what we call “terrorismâ€â€”which is happening with the Palestinians against Israel—would be directed toward us. Anything could happen. Another thing which would happen is what the Joint Chiefs of Staff said: If we attack Iraq and go into the cities, Saddam will know that he has nothing to lose and will use chemical weapons against our troops. God knows what will happen. It’s totally unnecessary. Iraq and Saddam have never been our enemies. They have always wanted to be our friends. The reason the Gulf War happened in 1991 is because Israel does not want a strong Arab nation in the area. And by strong, I mean a country that has both a large population and the oil wells. When I went to Iraq in the late 1980s, it was about to be officially declared a “First World Country†because Saddam had built the country up to such an extent. But it was so totally destroyed in 1991 by the U.S.-imposed sanctions which are causing—according to the UN—the deaths of 5,000 children every month. It totals something like nearly two million deaths. For every child that dies, there are five who grow up malnourished to the point that they have brain damage. The United States has done terrible things to that country. If they hate us in the future, it’s no wonder.
  13. any of y'all read this?
  14. Actually, there was over 125,000 people in D.C. that day. -XeNo-
  15. http://internationalanswer.org/pdf/iraqfactsheet.pdf -XeNo-
  16. I'd take nyc radio over philly radio anyday Philly radio has no house music, not even late at night -XeNo-
  17. Was this an actual speech? It's all over the place?!?! -Omer
  18. Um....actually you being a Jew does not make you an infidel. Did you not read verse 69 I posted? However, you not believing in God would make you an infidel. You made a point about Islam needing an overhaul. You are right that the hatred of Jews is taught but however that is not taught in the religion. However Judaism (the actual religion) teaches that you are the "chosen people." There is nothing of the sort in Islam. Judaism even discourages converts, while we embrace them. Since Judaism is a racial thing, converts dont make any sense, however they still exist. I just told you before that Allah rewards you due to your faith, not your race. You talk about how Muslims are taught to hate Jews, well I can say the same that Jews are taught that they are superior to everybody else. What really disgusts me tribal is that you believe your precious IDF is completely innocent and a moral example to all of the militaries of the world. I know you won't believe any word of what my freind wrote, but please read his first hand account of Jenin when he went over there in June. http://bbs.clubplanet.com/showthread.php?threadid=123076 -XeNo-
  19. 18 June, 2002 1:20 PM local time. Greetings from Jenin, occupied Palestine! First, a few business items: 1) It appears that a hacker may have entered this account & sent out an opinion piece: something about terrorism, 9-11, etc. If you have received this, please know it wasn't from me. 2) The I'm getting overwhelmed with requests to join my mailing list, which is great but, being a seat of my pants activist in a warzi\one, I don't have the time to do all the administrative cutting & pasting to maintain zuch a list. If anyone with basic email skills would like to volunteer for a few hours, that would be great. The following dispatch is public domain, please copy and forward as appropraite. Palestine Report #6. By Dan Fortson Jenin is a study in contradiction. Perhaps the hardest hit area in occupied Palestine, the damage is everywhere, yet the residents show an unequalled spirit of resistance & determination. You have probably seen pictures of the destroyed homes & the huge swath cut by the bulldozers in the middle of the camp. Infrastructure, roads, & especially water have been severly disrupted. The local economy is crippled, all the schools are closed, yet people find the will to keep going. I've heard that it was reported in Ha A'rtz, an Israeli newspaper, that the man responsible for running the bulldozer was having family problems & was drunk when he went on his 18 hour wrecking spree. Whatever the case, the damage is inexcusable. Upon arriving here on Sunday I heard yet another tragic story of senseless waste of human life: a six year old boy was bitten by a scorpion & rushed by ambulance to the hospital. The ambulance was stopped at a checkpoint and, despite continuous pleas by the crew, was detained for more than six hours before finally being allowed to pass. The boy made it to the hospital but the poison had advanced beyond return. He died a few hours later. Upon hearing this story, I & two colleagues from Iceland went to the Red Crescent office to offer our services as escorts & human shields. At least one of us is on duty at all times &, if needed, we hope to use our international standing to negotiate the safe passage of ambulances on critical missions as provided for by international law. It's a long shot, especially given Israel's flagrant disregard for international law, but we have to try. We owe them that much at least. Meanwhile, Israeli aggression has changed form somewhat. Now it's mostly psychological terrorism. THey send a few tanks or helicoptors several times each day or night to fire only a few rounds, then leave. Each time though, the residents must respond as though it will be a full scale attack. Heart rates climb, business activity stops, children scream, & everyone heads for cover. Regarding the chackpoints, my trip to palestine has exposed many myths of the illegal occupation. One of which is the myth that the hundreds of checkpoints set up by the Israeli occupational army have something to do with security. It's a lie. THey don't check identification against a database, they rarely search bags, & except for recreational harrassment, they don't even question travelers. As evidence of lax security, three friends of mine walked unchallenged into an Israeli army camp, took photos of an illegal fence under construction, met & chatted with soldiers, then left without incident. A few hours later there was a suicide bombing at a similar camp killing one soldier. I have more work to do in the refugee camp & will keep you posted as things progress. Best wishes, Dan
  20. Tell me why the fuck they are there in the first place? Your motherfuckin' country changes its borders every fuckin day! How can you fuckin expect peace?!?! Explain that! By your logic you are saying "Yeah come to my city, destroy my house, murder my children and I will be cool with everything you do here and i won't do anything to fight back." I'm sorry the Palestinians don't get 3 billion a year like you Isreali's so you can build your precise schools and universities so you all can become doctors and laywers. It's a shame the schools the Palestinians do have, are defunct cuz of the curfews. Oh yeah, science and technologys is non-existent. Hey well maybe if everything didn't get bulldozed every hour because of "suspected terrorits" maybe the Palestinian youth would have a place where they could learn. We suck Israel's cock everyday and tell me what do we get in return? Even Ariel Sharon doesnt listen to Bush and you know that's a fact. Tell me, once again, what the fuck do we get in return? The ONLY reason we send them money is so Israel can be more powerful than the surrouding Muslim countries. Tell me Tribal, since you are jewish, yet you don't beleive in God, do you Jews believe you are the chosen people and everybody else is just shark meat. That's the mentally that seems to be practiced within the Israeli goverment. Personally, I beleive that God would make a covenant based on faith, not race. Seems more logical to me, I doubt God is a racist. Chapter 5 69. Those who believe (in the Qurán), those who follow the Jewish (scriptures), and the Sabians and the Christians,- any who believe in Allah and the Last Day, and work righteousness,- on them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve. 70. We took the covenant of the Children of Israel and sent them messengers, every time, there came to them and a messenger with what they themselves desired not - some (of these) they called impostors, and some they (go so far as to) slay. 71. They thought there would be no trial (or punishment); so they became blind and deaf; yet Allah (in mercy) turned to them; yet again many of them became blind and deaf. But Allah sees well all that they do. Watch out Israel ! -XeNo-
  21. Can you believe Jerry Fallwell called him a "terrorist?"
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