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destruction

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Everything posted by destruction

  1. What's the matter pedopublican fag. Can't find any preteens to molest? No cars to steal? No houses to break into? No computers to steal like the one you use that is obviously stolen? No blacks to shoot over the weekend you racist right wing bush loving wacko fuck? Shut the fuck up bitch. I'll go anywhere I please. Gonna do something about it cockboy? Don't like it? Leave. Seriously nazi loving bush bot. Shut up and die like a good neocon. I know. You fucks treat war like it's a sport so much you petitioned ESPN to show live coverage. Seriously, since you love murdering innocent civilians (whose skin color isn't as white as yours) so much in a lie based war... I mean criminal genocidal acts of inhumanity, why don't you join up and show how much of a man you really are instead of playing armchair general with your playstation like the little pussy-whipped whitbred fag you truely are? If you do decide to breakdown and pry your white supremacist ass off your gaming chair, I hope you get blown away in an ambush on your first mission. Good luck. To Igloo: Again, when are you gonna join? To DrLoser: Same question.
  2. http://www.mpb.com/gallery/mpb/halloween/9410/17020.jpg right click and choose save target as...
  3. http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/01/15/clash_between_protesters_averted/ Clash between protesters averted Police head off neo-Nazi march By Russell Nichols, Globe Staff | January 15, 2006 Boston police escorted 10 members of a neo-Nazi group outside of the city limits yesterday, heading off a collision between the group and a much larger gathering of counterprotesters, officials said. Word spread last week that a group called White Revolution had planned to protest outside the Museum of Afro-American History at 1 p.m. yesterday, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday. The neo-Nazi group never showed up outside the African Meeting House on Beacon Hill yesterday, but about 125 people from various high schools, colleges, and community groups gathered there at 11 a.m. and marched in the rain for more than three hours chanting: ''Nazi scum go away! You can't touch MLK!" The north side of Joy Street was closed off during the antidemonstration and police -- some on horseback -- surrounded the group with crowd-control batons, in case the scene turned violent. ''We allow the protest to go on as long as it's peaceful," said Deputy Superintendent Tom Lee of the Boston Police Department. At about 2:45 p.m., news that the neo-Nazi protesters were at the State House spurred a continuation march to Beacon Street. The neo-Nazi group was gone, though, whisked away by Boston police, Lee said. ''It's important to confront them," said Keegan O'Brien, 16, a Wellesley High School student who had posted protest fliers. ''To say we're not intimidated." National Park Service Protection Division officers stood watch protecting the museum's property. The museum remained open yesterday and Beverly Morgan-Welch, executive director, said the demonstration brought in more people than usual. ''It's sad, but understandable," she said of the neo-Nazis' planned protest, ''because people do not know American history. It allows people to engender hatred. It's very sad." Darnell Williams, president/CEO of the Urban League, told Khury Petersen-Smith, a 23-year-old demonstrator who had helped lead the counterdemonstration, the counterprotesters had remained true to King's legacy. ''You won nonviolently and that's what Martin Luther King stood for," Williams said. Russell Nichols can be reached at rnichols@globe.com.
  4. Crap as usual from a bush loving wackjob who swings on his cock 24/7.
  5. US defends Pakistan terror drive US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has defended tactics used in the fight against al-Qaeda militants amid growing anger towards the US in Pakistan. Protesters in Pakistan have blamed the US for the deaths of 18 civilians in a missile attack on a village on Friday. Ms Rice did not say if the US carried out the attack, the intended target of which, according to media reports, was al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri. Islamabad has protested to the US, saying the strike missed its target. Jets, or in some accounts an unmanned aircraft, reportedly fired missiles at a housing compound in the village of Damadola, near the Afghan border, on Friday. Tough tactics Pakistan's Islamic opposition parties have led street protests against the attack, accusing the US of killing innocent civilians and violating Pakistani sovereignty. "America raised the bogey of Zawahri to provide justification for this attack," Meraj ul-Huda, an opposition leader, told a rally in the city of Karachi. Ms Rice said tough tactics are necessary in the fight against al-Qaeda. "We'll continue to work with the Pakistanis and we'll try to address their concerns," she said on Monday. Describing the country as an ally in the "war on terror", she said al-Qaeda and its supporters "are not people who can be dealt with lightly". She said she could not comment on any specific circumstances. US visit Thousands of Pakistanis have been taking to the streets across the country to protest at the attack. Hundreds of people have also been travelling to see the remains of the houses flattened by the strike in Damadola. Among them was a local Islamic militant commander and fugitive, Maulana Faqir Mohammad, Pakistani daily The News reported. He told the newspaper the US was linking Zawahiri to the village in order to cover up a botched strike. Praising Zawahiri as a soldier of Islam, Mr Mohammed reportedly said: "I am a small man with few resources but I would offer him refuge if he made a request". Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz is the latest high profile figure to condemn the attack, the Associated Press news agency reported. Speaking on the eve of a visit to the US, where he plans to discuss the economy and security issues, Mr Aziz said Friday's incident, though "regrettable", did not take away "from the fact that Pakistan needs investment". Osama Bin Laden's top aide, Mr Zawahiri has eluded capture since the US overthrew the Taleban in Afghanistan in 2001. The US has about 20,000 troops in Afghanistan, but Pakistan does not allow them to operate across the border. Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/4617196.stm
  6. they missed... Airstrike misses Al-Qaeda chief Christina Lamb 'Wrong information' blamed for Pakistan deaths AN AMERICAN airstrike targeting Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Al-Qaeda mastermind, was prompted by “wrong information” and killed Pakistani villagers including five women and five children, according to senior Pakistani officials. The attack took place in the early hours of Friday, when CIA-operated Predator drones circled the village of Damadola in the Bajaur area in northwest Pakistan before launching four Hellfire missiles at a mud-walled compound. Three houses were razed to the ground and 22 people died. NI_MPU('middle');US officials said the raid was based on “good reporting” of Zawahiri’s presence in the village at a dinner celebrating the Muslim Eid holiday. Intelligence officials took away four bodies for identification. The 54-year-old Egyptian doctor has been on the run for more than four years despite a $25m (£14m) price on his head and is said to have had narrow escapes in the areas between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Damadola lies in this rugged, mountainous area, just five miles from Afghanistan. When Pakistani intelligence received a tip-off that Zawahiri was there, it seemed to be a likely hideout. The village is controlled by a pro-Taliban party, the Tehrik Nifaz Shariat-i-Mohammadi, led by the charismatic Sufi Mohammad, whose supporters are believed to help Taliban and Al-Qaeda leaders on the run. The neighbouring Afghan province of Kunar is dominated by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the fundamentalist warlord with whom Zawahiri has close ties. As the dead were buried yesterday amid angry scenes, villagers confirmed that their Eid guests had included four men who had come from Afghanistan. But they insisted that the four were not high-level Al-Qaeda officials as claimed. “We live on the border and all have friends and relatives on both sides,” said one villager. Among the mourners was Shah Zaman, who lost two sons and a daughter in the attack. “I ran out and saw planes,” he said. “I ran towards a nearby mountain with my wife. When we were running we heard three more explosions and I saw my home being hit.” Sahibzada Haroon Rashid, a member of parliament who lives nearby, said the planes had targeted three houses belonging to jewellery dealers. “The houses have been razed,” he said. “There is nothing left. Pieces of the missiles are scattered all around. Everything has been blackened in a 100-yard radius.” Last night Pakistan’s foreign ministry protested to the US ambassador over what it described as the “loss of innocent civilian lives”. Shaikh Rashid Ahmed, Pakistan’s minister of information, said: “We don’t know whether Zawahiri was there or not. We are investigating.” Another senior government official insisted that Zawahiri was not in the village. “They acted on wrong information,” he said. One Pakistani intelligence officer claimed that Zawahiri had been present but the Americans had taken too long to react and “missed him by six hours”. Although Al-Qaeda has been overshadowed in the past two years by events in Iraq, the killing of Zawahiri would have been the biggest coup so far in the war on terrorism. Zawahiri acts as doctor and adviser to Osama Bin Laden, its leader, who suffers from low blood pressure. He is regarded as Bin Laden’s deputy, appearing alongside him in videos. In his trademark white turban and large glasses, Zawahiri has issued the majority of statements in the name of the organisation. In one, after the July 7 attacks in London, he threatened the Queen, calling her “one of the severest enemies of Islam”. To miss him again is an embarrassment for Washington. In March 2004 the Pakistani military — acting with CIA back-up — thought it had surrounded Zawahiri in South Waziristan, even sending DNA from one body to be tested. Pakistan’s president, Pervez Musharraf, excitedly told CNN that Al-Qaeda’s “number one or two” had been surrounded. This proved to be false. Friday’s attack will compound local anger against Musharraf. According to intelligence sources, it was the second attempt to assassinate Zawahiri in eight days. A missile smashed into the home of a militant cleric in the Saidgi area, also close to the Afghan border, after a tip-off that Zawahiri was there. Eight members of Maulvi Noor Mohammad’s family were killed in the attack. Additional reporting: Mohammed Shehzad, Islamabad, Dean Nelson, Delhi http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1986114,00.html
  7. Belafonte's Bush remarks 'private': UNICEF Saturday Jan 14 13:47 AEDT AP - The UN children's agency says singer Harry Belafonte was speaking as a private citizen, not a UNICEF goodwill ambassador, when he called US President George W Bush "the greatest terrorist in the world". The 79-year-old Belafonte, famous for his calypso-inspired music, made headlines during a trip to Venezuela when he spoke out against Bush. He also said millions of Americans support the socialist revolution of Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, a high profile Bush opponent. Belafonte was a close collaborator of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. He has been a UNICEF goodwill ambassador since 1987. He also has been an outspoken critic of the US embargo of communist Cuba. The US Fund for UNICEF said in a statement that Belafonte made the comments about Bush and Chavez "as a private citizen and was not speaking as a UNICEF ambassador, nor acting in an official capacity on behalf of the organisation". As a goodwill ambassador, UNICEF said, Belafonte has travelled to Senegal, Rwanda and South Africa and has promoted the rights of children. He also has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for UNICEF. Belafonte led a delegation of Americans including actor Danny Glover, Princeton University scholar Cornel West and farm worker advocate Dolores Huerta that met Chavez for more than six hours on Saturday. Several members, including Belafonte, attended the president's television and radio broadcast on Sunday. During the broadcast, Belafonte told Chavez, "No matter what the greatest tyrant in the world, the greatest terrorist in the world, George W Bush says, we're here to tell you: Not hundreds, not thousands, but millions of the American people ... support your revolution". "We respect you, admire you, and we are expressing our full solidarity with the Venezuelan people and your revolution," Belafonte added. http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=81422
  8. Update 14: Bush Fields Questions About War, Policies By DEB RIECHMANN , 01.11.2006, 06:25 PM After initial reservations, President Bush said Wednesday that he isn't bothered by congressional hearings into his domestic spying program as long as they don't aid the enemy. "That's good for democracy," Bush said, provided the hearings don't "tell the enemy what we're doing." In the days after the secret wiretapping without warrants was revealed, Bush cautioned against hearings, saying that congressional leaders had been privately consulted and that he had worked within the law to authorize eavesdropping on Americans with suspected ties to terrorists. Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter, R-Pa., has promised hearings on the issue, and the Senate Intelligence Committee could also investigate. House Democrats have asked their Intelligence Committee for hearings, and Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee plan to hold a forum on the monitoring program's legal ramifications on Jan. 20. In Louisville, Bush hosted a casual, town hall-type event reminiscent of his campaign stops. Bush paced, with microphone in hand, like a talk show host in front of signs that left no doubt about the administration's message of the day: "Winning the War on Terror." Bush's approval rating bumped up slightly to 42 percent in December, but it remains low, with 40 percent of Americans approving and 59 percent disapproving of the way he's doing his job, according to the latest AP-Ipsos poll conducted the first week of January. After his opening remarks, Bush fielded about 10 questions from the audience of invited groups. White House press secretary Scott McClellan said the questions were not prescreened. Bush said no topics were off-limits, and even invited a question about Iran, but nobody asked one. Instead, the audience wanted to know about the war, terrorism and a host of domestic issues, including health care, education and immigration. Bush acknowledged differences over Iraq. "Whether you agree with me or not, we're doing the right thing," Bush said, adding that terrorists or insurgents fighting democratic reform in Iraq are "not going to shake my will." A 7-year-old boy's question - "How can people help on the war on terror?" - gave Bush an opening to score some political points against his critics and try to keep Democrats from using Iraq as an issue in this year's midterm elections. "It's one thing to have a philosophical difference - and I can understand people being abhorrent about war. War is terrible," Bush said. "But one way people can help as we're coming down the pike in the 2006 elections is remember the effect that rhetoric can have on our troops in harm's way, and the effect that rhetoric can have in emboldening or weakening an enemy." It was the second day in a row that Bush warned his critics to watch what they say or risk giving comfort to U.S. adversaries. On Tuesday, before a gathering of Veterans of Foreign Wars, he said Democrats who do will suffer at the ballot box in November. Bush appeared in a Kentucky district where Andrew Horne, an Iraqi war veteran who opposed the invasion, is hoping to unseat Republican Rep. Anne Northup, a strong Bush supporter. None of the questions Bush received at the Kentucky International Convention Center were combative. Viewpoints were different across the street, where about 200 noisy demonstrators protested Bush's policies. Renee Woodrum of Louisville said, "When I think it can't get any worse and then I hear some other scandal or some corrupt thing that's going on or more soldiers are dying, and I can't believe it." "I just don't know how much longer America can afford to have George Bush as our president. I think the war is causing more hatred toward America and encouraging terrorism." http://www.forbes.com/business/services/feeds/ap/2006/01/11/ap2444021.html
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