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grazie della citazione
a
andrea |
Homepage |
05.21.08 - 10:49 pm | #
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I supported, support and will support the war. And I can assure you that my relationship with oil is not exactly "profit"
a.man. | Homepage | 05.20.08 - 4:10 pm | #
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
First off all:
I do support the troops in Iraq, of course; who doesn't ?
However, I don't support THIS war.
But what does "Support the Troops" mean?
If it means moral support, then YES.
They are all Americans as we are Americans and we love them.
If it means being willing to tell Congress to shell out tax money, grow deficits, destabilize economy in order to feed a failure, then NO.
This war is Bushes war and, had he listened to Colin Powell, we would have held back until we had a real reason to "declare” war.
I respect your point of view, and I would agree whit you if war was the solution but is not.
Our enemy is terrorism, not Iraq:
-None from that land was involved in 9/11,they came mostly from Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Org...1,_2001_attacks
-There were no WMD in Iraq.
-Bin Laden is still alive and threatening us.
-That country is now split in three strongholds –kurdish-sunnis-sciites- fighting each others, besides our troops are exposed to road-bombs& ambushes placed by terrorist groups hidden among them, taking advantage by this huge chaos where you can’t tell right from wrong.
-Sad to say but muslim integralism won in Iraq.
- We erased the dictatorship and Saddam Hussein-then our job was done !
Now it’s clear that we are still there, mostly to take control of oil’s production.
This was the plan ,still running :
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007...on/
edjuhasz.php
kendall |
05.22.08 - 8:28 am | #
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I don’t think oil’s business worth even one wound-brave-marine and I assume that Iraq’s oil belongs to Iraqi people, hope you can share my feelings.
Beside:
In 2002-before the invasion -was $24.00 a barrel of oil-Now it’s $135.00.
You do the math ,then tell me who are the winners ,if “we the people” or oil-companies.
This failure cost the lives of more than 4.000 braves u.s. soldiers, not to mention that since our invasion, roughly one million of Iraqi civilians have been slain, plus five millions homeless as a result.
I just hope you won’t call it “collaterals damage”.
take a look at this:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nati...headlines-
world
Let’s face the fact :
How can you fight against terrorism with a conventional army ??
I don't know what level of politics you took, but terrorist groups are not states or nations.
You go there and while you unleash hell and bust up everything, terrorist groups CAN-and people CAN NOT- go back and forth through a next nation ‘s borders- perhaps they move to another continent eventually- - it’s silly, isn’t it ??
Isn’t time-according whit u.s. people majority and Obama -to get an exit strategy and a “CHANGE” of strategy ?
take a look at this:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS...nomy/
index.html
http://www.gallup.com/poll/10678...s-New-
High.aspx
kendall |
05.22.08 - 8:29 am | #
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I'd be proud (but incredibly sad) to have my son die for his country.
But how many people would agree to lose their children dying for a religious, civil, oil-war in another country that doesn't directly concern us ?
Would you ?
The death statistics don't show the thousands that are maimed for life, both physically and emotionally.
We will be paying for their care for decades to come.
$120 Billion per year for the war ?
Nah, that is only the upfront costs.
We should have stayed home and protected our country from our shores.
If our troops were on our side of the pond protecting our own borders we would have far less problems with illegal immigration.
The monies spent rebuilding the destructive damages we've done in Iraq could have been spent helping the victims of Katrina, etc..
We need to bring our remaining troops home and spend the money we waste on war to help those (our) troops that have already been wounded (physically and mentally) to date. It is ashamed the way our disabled Veterans have to struggle after they have sacrificed so much for us.
It's time to stand together as Americans and reclaim our Country and find solutions to our problems.
You know, when you think of what McCain said about being there even 100 years, well if you think logically that certainly would end the war, cause everyone would be dead in Iraq and that will certainly end the war!
End it now!
Enough blood has been spilled.
My prayers are with the families and friends that have lost their loved ones in this needless war.
With Memorial day coming up-observed in 2008 on May 26-I would like to thank all of our Veterans and their families for the sacrifices that have been made, whether just or not.
ciao.
kendall |
05.22.08 - 8:30 am | #
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Sapete che io credo che questa "guerra" Obama-Clinton danneggi + McCain?
Infatti chi se lo filerà finchè non si concluderanno le primarie Democratiche?
Io ho questa sensazione...
Gab |
05.22.08 - 12:37 pm | #
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non si vede niente!!!
dove sono i commenti? 
mauro |
05.22.08 - 12:53 pm | #
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ah ecco basta scrivere un post e tutto si risolve!
mauro |
05.22.08 - 12:53 pm | #
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grazie a.man 
@gab non credo sia così, ricordate veltroni? ha iniziato la campagna prima di berlusconi, ha rimontato forse un pò e poi è tornato nei ranghi a -10 appena berlusconi ha iniziato a fare sul serio.
magari ora come ora potrebbe soffrire un pò perchè i riflettori sono puntati su altri. ma quando la clinton sarà definitvamente out, allora mccain inizierà la sua campagna seriamente, e allora si troverà col fucile carico, contro un obama che le ha già sparate tutte.
detto questo non credo che sia attualmente prevedibile l'andamento delle elezioni usa, bisognerà aspettare l'uscita di scena di hillary
bralic |
Homepage |
05.22.08 - 1:54 pm | #
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