← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · DRSLICEIT
Thread ID: 5768 | Posts: 10 | Started: 2003-03-23
2003-03-23 20:37 | User Profile
Any human that gets his kicks out of seeing this war and the carange that is being laid on the innocent people of Iraq, are truly disturbed.
As one who has experienced three tours in Vietnam as well as operations in a few banana republics, I am sick of seeing the media flaunt the on-going atrocities in the name of Liberating Iraq. More and more it is evident that our leader are doing this for the dream of a greater israel and for no other reason.
2003-03-23 23:09 | User Profile
The only people who look "shocked and awed" at this point are Rumsfeld and Co. You can detect fear in their quavering voices and shifting eyes. They've fed America with a seven course dinner of lies, disinformation and half-truth. They thought they gambled on a sure bet. Saddam's resistance would crumble in a couple of days if any was offered at all. A straight flush. But now that Saddam has layed out an Ace, King and Queen of Spades they're sweating.
2003-03-23 23:26 | User Profile
In Gulf War 1, old man Bush was prepared to take 10,000 casualties in removing Saddam from Kuwait. I have heard that the little Bushwhacker does not give a sh*t how many casualties it takes to deliver Iraq to the Zionist if he wants to be reelected.
My opinion is that anything over 1,000 body bags in the next 30 day's would get that cowpoke sent home impeached and bareback.
2003-03-24 05:08 | User Profile
Hackworth said on CNN that he has sources that tell him the number of KIAs in the ambush today was more like at least 50 American soldiers (vs. the Pentagon figure of 12). He said that there were, all told, probably 100 American soldiers killed in the ambush (vs. 12 killed, 12 missing). With all the attention given to the POW video, no attention was given to the video of the burned-out armor of the APCs and Bradleys. Given the fate of all those American soldiers inside, it is ghastly. And to think, this is an elective war, a war of aggression, based on BS facts and dubious hypotheticals. Geez, if only we had some territorial dispute we could latch onto as a reason for war.
2003-03-24 06:54 | User Profile
Originally posted by DRSLICEIT@Mar 23 2003, 14:37 ** Any human that gets his kicks out of seeing this war and the carange that is being laid on the innocent people of Iraq, are truly disturbed.
As one who has experienced three tours in Vietnam as well as operations in a few banana republics, I am sick of seeing the media flaunt the on-going atrocities in the name of Liberating Iraq. More and more it is evident that our leader are doing this for the dream of a greater israel and for no other reason. **
AMEN to that!
Wow, you've certainly "been there, done that" as far as military experience goes. It's good to have a voice like yours on our side.
2003-03-24 07:08 | User Profile
Faux Jews says the "secured" southern Ramalla oilfields have just become "dangerous" again - just like al Naseriah, Umm Qasr & the Faw Peninsula.
Boosh's little "cakewalk" is beginning to look like a goathump instead.
Maybe, just maybe, this could be the necessary quagmire that brings down this hebrew house of cards.......
2003-03-24 07:16 | User Profile
Originally posted by N.B. Forrest@Mar 24 2003, 01:08 ** Maybe, just maybe, this could be the necessary quagmire that brings down this hebrew house of cards....... **
We can certainly hope. It would be nice if something good came out of this clusterf__k.
2003-03-24 16:57 | User Profile
NB Forest...Unfortunately a good ass kicking is what is probably needed to get America back on track and off the agenda for a Greater Israel.
2003-03-24 18:24 | User Profile
With the events of this weekend, it would seem the Iraqis are hell-bent on throwing as much sand in the gears of ZOG's military machine as they can. As someone pointed out, the Iraqis can't run. Where would they run to? They were just fine fleeing Kuwait in '91 with loot, since they saw safety ahead in the form of the Iraqi border, only to run smack into 500lb snakes, napalm and 20mm & 30mm cannon fire. They didn't forget this humiliation and I am reminded of footage of the "highway of death" (some psyops flunky got a promotion for that one, I'll wager) being presented with no small amount of gloating as evidence of ZOG's military might. What particularly struck me was the pathetic image of a roasted Iraqi soldier, permanently fused to the steering wheel of his truck and grinning like a well-fed possum, simply because his lips had burned off. Kind of makes the pious whining of Rumsfeld and Co. ring hollow when they complain of U.S. POWs being turned into a spectacle.
The image that has characterized the "fun" so far for me has been the face of the black, female POW shown lovingly on all the networks, save American ones, of course. That face, an example of "shock and awe" if there ever was one, graphically demonstrated the diversity-plauged mess our military has become far more effectively than any racialist ever could. Combined with the events at Camp Pennsylvania of late, that face makes "diversity is our strength" sound more like a terminal disease than the joke we all thought. Just ask the RAF what they think about our training standards. That is not to crap on the troops who've been dealt a sh*tty hand by our fearless(-ful?) leaders. They're doing the best they can under the circumstances, but they'll no doubt treat revelations from the $1,500,000 set in Qatar with a lot more suspicion from now on. Such are the beginnings of most of America's overseas adventures. Bataan, anyone?
I don't know if the Iraqis are winning, but they are not losing (yet), which is essentially a victory for them. The Pentagon has already blown what credibility it had with pronouncements of imminent collapses, surrenders (8000 POWs? Did I say that? I meant 8. Next question!) and secured objectives that were anything but. This is in keeping with the Office of Strategic Disinformation's mission, though they seem to have had what could be charitably described as teething pains. Does anyone remember them? Their first press release announced their creation, while their second announced their disbandment due to popular outcry. Seems that press release was actually their first exercise. The press, especially Faux News, has been simply grotesque in their eagerness to bend over and spread 'em for the administation. Talk radio does not even bear mentioning. The fact that any bad news has gotten through the cotton-candy face they've put on this whole mess makes me wonder how bad things are really going.
I hope our White troops come home safely, but I fear that Bush will keep feeding them into the grinder, right up until he is thrown from the White House, in pursuit of the victory that Wolfowitz assures him is "just around the corner."
The best of the Goyim shall indeed be killed. God, can't we learn anything from history or do we have to be hit with it between the eyes every time? Never mind, I think the answer would only depress me.
2003-03-24 19:39 | User Profile
The image that has characterized the "fun" so far for me has been the face of the black, female POW shown lovingly on all the networks, save American ones, of course. That face, an example of "shock and awe" if there ever was one, graphically demonstrated the diversity-plauged mess our military has become far more effectively than any racialist ever could. Combined with the events at Camp Pennsylvania of late, that face makes "diversity is our strength" sound more like a terminal disease than the joke we all thought
Yes, if there was ever a woman regretting that her mama hadn't come through with that promised job at the post office, it was this unfortunate wannabee mechanic whose main goal in life, up to yesterday, was to get out of the service with a disability pension.
It was sad to watch these young Americans backing and filling yesterday in a way that only Americans or westerners seem capable of doing. I expected to hear "dat ain't mah tank. Das mah frens tank".
The North Koreans realized quickly during their war how much easier it was to break American prisoners than, say, Turkish ones. Why this is so, I am not smart enough to say. But I sense that it has to do with the radical individualism or, shall I say, self absorbtion/indulgence that is the hallmark of western culture rather than the self identity as a part of an enduring whole that marks the non western man.
Such are the beginnings of most of America's overseas adventures. Bataan, anyone?
We do not have a sparkling tradition here.
Our idiotic and naive training in the early part of WWII caused the disaster at the Kasserine Pass in which American troops surrendered so promiscuously that not only the allies but even the Germans were astonished.
Most American soldiers seem to arrive at the scene of their first disaster with wildly inflated opinions of their military prowess. In WWII they embarked from hastily constructed training camps assured that the battle hardened nazis would surrender in abject fear the minute the untested American host walked off the gang planks. The result was a humilating defeat. So humiliating that the English, driving those ridiculous looking tiny little tanks, had to save our bacon.
We did the same thing in Vietnam.
Mogudishu was our greatest defeat since the Little Big Horn.
And we are ripe for an upset in Iraq.