*Bring Najaf to New York*

Discussion in 'Texas Bikers' started by X98, Aug 28, 2004.

  1. X98

    X98 Guest

    In the name of The Waco Executioner of Antichrist

    *Bring Najaf to New York*

    Peace Brent,

    8/28/04

    [see news report below]

    Thanks for bringing to our attention that there are many good thinking
    people in this world and for pointing out that there is a greater number
    being deceived by the USraeli media... especially in America.

    To manage the Najaf slaughter a horse and pony media "truce show" is being
    given to us at this moment. I don't believe this "guy" Sistani is anything
    more than a Sign of Satan, let's call him S.S. Sistani. The best we could
    say for him is that he has had a lobotomy and is now under microchip
    implanted mind control.

    Whatever the case he will remain on the top ten Most Wanted list until some
    basic questions are answered

    .........................................................
    1. Where is Ayatollah Sadr?

    2. Where is his spokesman?

    3. Where is the victorious Mahdi Army

    4. Where are the Martyred and wounded bodies from inside the Mosque?

    5. Why are we not shown the damage done by USrael to the Shrine?

    6. Why has S.S. Sistani not condemned the murders and rapes of Bush. Why has
    he not condemned the Bush for the desorcration of the burial sites
    throughout Najaf?

    7. Why would Bush allow a "march" on Najaf when his pig nature soldiers
    daily murder women and children at road check points throughout Iraq?
    .............................................................


    There are many more unanswered questions, all of which point to...

    "This truce is a Hollywood production to cover a mass slaughter and remove
    the word Najaf from the mouths of the protesters in N.Y.."

    Surly, the ongoing terrorism by this nation is a mark of disgrace from which
    it will never recover and yet the horror about to be unleash on Humanity, by
    *The Bush Crime Family,* within the next three weeks will terrify even the
    most evil natured among us.

    I believe that thousands of civilians have been gassed! These were the
    *unarmed civilians* who were already at the Shrine while S.S. Sistani was in
    England kissing Bush's ass.

    When Ayatollah Sadr (the Sing of God) declared a jihad against Britain, in
    defense of the Holy Shrine, S.S. Sistani ran to arms of that very whore of
    the west. This is the same thing the Shaw did in 1979 with the American
    whore.

    There is *NO PEACE in Najaf...* and there will be none until Bush, Sharon
    ,and Blair are arrested and tried for war crimes against humanity. Until
    that day anyone who says "There is peace in this world." is nothing but a
    lying bastard whose teeth should be broken before the public to show the
    magnitude of such a lie.


    Word is Bond


    Nemo Me Impune Lacessit


    Ali Andrew X98
    xXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxXxX

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "brent" <>
    To: <>
    Sent: Friday, August 27, 2004 10:05 PM
    Subject: [WU] Bring Najaf to New York

    in media these days. Also the author brings to light an important
    issue--how the media sometimes simply refuses to talk about the real,
    relevant issues. Do you really think Bush or Kerry's military records are
    more important than the fact that they both support the illegal and unjust
    war in Iraq? Think about it.
    Republican National Convention and the accompanying protests. Much is
    predictable: tabloid hysteria about an anarchist siege; cops showing off
    their new crowd-control toys; fierce debates about whether the
    demonstrations will hurt the Republicans or inadvertently help them.
    Every day, US bombs and tanks move closer to the sacred Imam Ali Shrine,
    reportedly damaging outer walls and sending shrapnel flying into the
    courtyard; every day, children are killed in their homes as US soldiers
    inflict collective punishment on the holy city; every day, more bodies are
    disturbed as US Marines stomp through the Valley of Peace cemetery, their
    boots slipping into graves as they use tombstones for cover.
    to the election. Instead it's relegated to the status of a faraway
    intractable ethnic conflict, like Afghanistan, Sudan or Palestine. Even
    within the antiwar movement, the events in Najaf are barely visible. The
    "handover" has worked: Iraq is becoming somebody else's problem. It's true
    that war is at the center of the election campaign--just not the one in
    Iraq. The talk is all of what happened on Swift Boats thirty-five years ago,
    not of the cannons being fired from US AC-130 gunships this week.
    already, I find myself thinking about the words of Vietnam veteran and
    novelist Tim O'Brien. In an interview for the 1980 documentary Vietnam: The
    10,000 Day War, O'Brien said, "My time in Vietnam is a memory of ignorance
    and I mean utter ignorance. I didn't know the language. I couldn't
    communicate with the Vietnamese except in pidgin English. I knew nothing
    about the culture of Vietnam. I knew nothing about the religion, religions.
    I knew nothing about the village community. I knew nothing about the aims of
    the people, whether they were for the war or against the war.... No
    knowledge of what the enemy was after.... and I compensated for that
    ignorance in a whole bunch of ways, some evil ways. Blowing things up,
    burning huts as a frustration of being ignorant and not knowing where the
    enemy was."
    country about which it knows virtually nothing, there is plenty of
    deliberate brutality, but there is also the unintended barbarism of blind
    ignorance. It starts with cultural and religious slights: soldiers storming
    into a home without giving women a chance to cover their heads; army boots
    traipsing through mosques that have never been touched by the soles of
    shoes; a misunderstood hand signal at a checkpoint with deadly consequences.
    with fresh blood; it's that Americans appear unaware of the depths of this
    offense, and the repercussions it will have for decades to come. The Imam
    Ali Shrine is not a run-of-the-mill holy site; it's the Shiite equivalent of
    the Sistine Chapel. Najaf is not just another Iraqi city; it is the city of
    the dead, where the cemeteries go on forever, a place so sacred that every
    devout Shiite dreams of being buried there. And Muqtada al-Sadr and his
    followers are not just another group of generic terrorists out to kill
    Americans; their opposition to the occupation represents the overwhelmingly
    mainstream sentiment in Iraq. Yes, if elected Sadr would try to turn Iraq
    into a theocracy like Iran, but for now his demands are for direct elections
    and an end to foreign occupation.
    major in the Marines whose August 23 New York Times op-ed reads as if it
    were ghostwritten by Karl Rove. Butler brags that though he has been in Iraq
    for just over a month, he "know a bit about the caliph, about the five
    pillars and about Allah." He goes on to explain that by swooping low over
    Najaf's cemeteries, he is not inflaming anti-American hatred in the Arab
    world but "attacking the source of the threat." The helicopter pilot
    blithely dismisses his enemies as foreign fighters and ex-Baathists and "a
    few frustrated Iraqis who worry about Wal-Mart culture infringing on their
    neighborhood."
    is made up of Iraqi citizens, not foreigners. They are not Baathists; they
    were the most oppressed under Saddam's regime and cheered his overthrow. And
    they aren't worried that Wal-Mart is taking over their neighborhood; they
    are enraged that they still lack electricity and sewage treatment despite
    the billions pledged for reconstruction.
    elections and an end to occupation through sermons, peaceful protests and
    newspaper articles. US forces responded by shutting down their newspapers,
    firing on their demonstrations and bombing their neighborhoods. It was only
    then that Sadr went to war against the occupation. And every round fired out
    of Butler's helicopter doesn't make Des Moines and Santa Monica safer, as he
    claims. It makes the Mahdi Army stronger.
    demonstration seems to be to express general outrage about Iraq, to say "no
    to war" and "no to the Bush agenda." This is an important message, but it's
    not enough. We also need to hear specific demands to end the disastrous
    siege on Najaf, and unequivocal support for Iraqis who are desperate for
    democracy and an end to occupation.
    year when people throughout the United States will have the opportunity to
    send a resounding message of opposition to the Bush Agenda: November 2,
    election day, and August 29, in New York City." Sadly, this isn't the case:
    There is no chance for Bush's war agenda to be clearly rejected on Election
    Day, because John Kerry is promising to continue, and even strengthen, the
    military occupation of Iraq. That means there is only one chance for
    Americans to express their wholehearted rejection of the ongoing war on
    Iraq: in the streets outside the Republican National Convention. It's time
    to bring Najaf to New York.
    (Picador) and, most recently, Fences and Windows: Dispatches From the Front
    Lines of the Globalization Debate (Picador).


    Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
    ADVERTISEMENT





    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Yahoo! Groups Links

    To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WACOuncensored/

    To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:


    Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
     
    X98, Aug 28, 2004
    #1
    1. Advertisements

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.