World Protests Iraq War...AGAIN!!

Duty Honor Country

Active member
I just went through 125 pictures of people, including Americans, protesting against the US in Iraq. I was not surprised to see the normal puppets of Bush associated with Hitler and the Nazis.

The Chicago police know how to deal with these people
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BUT in Iraq, there were protests of a different kind. Iraqis were infront of the Jordanian embassy protesting because the involvement of a Jordanian in that suicide attack that killed 125 people in FEB
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Funny how the nature of the protests are a bit different.
 
At least some people are protesting at the right things... I dislike hippies. They can get real violent and they have at me for my decision of joining the army.
 
Throngs of people are confused about the issue. Rationality is being torn apart by confusion. Assertions appear to be overstated. And the defensive words seems to be absurdily false.

What else can I to say about this?
 
Kilgore said:
At least some people are protesting at the right things... I dislike hippies. They can get real violent and they have at me for my decision of joining the army.

Try having a dad who continuously protested the War in Iraq while I was playing in the sand box. Politics is always a touchy issue between my dad and I.
 
Kilgore said:
At least some people are protesting at the right things... I dislike hippies. They can get real violent and they have at me for my decision of joining the army.


it's alright mate NO ONE like hippies....even i don't like hippies...in fact i'm pretty sure even other hippies don't like hippies.


now, take a note people....probably best if you're sitting down too;


THIS PROTEST WAS POINTLESS

i'm all for protesting, hell i protested the start of the war, but now the time is to get Iraq all nice and on the right track....and then maybe everyone can go the hell home for a while.
 
I agree with you Chewie. After it became known it was extremely unlikely Saddam had WMDs during the invasion I really did question the starting of the war. But I believe the fight's changed and the objectives have changed and there's nothing about the mission that isn't just at this point.
Sure, Saddam was taken care of, Iraq fell into chaos as a result, but there are people working around the clock to try to put Iraq back together again. And this is more than you can say for a lot of other countries that have caused disturbances elsewhere. Right now, just to suddenly pull out would be one of the wrongest things you could do. America just made a promise to the Iraqis and it's got to keep its word this time.
 
13th...

I think this war was not about WMD instead it was a plan that targeted Saddamm. WMD was a door that lead to the assault. Instead of telling the public Saddam's demize by force, the uS government sugar-coated the intent with WMD to create public panics. Cheese and rice, if you want to toppled Saddam, say it out loud in the very beginnings (just tell how bad he was, not after the panics of WMD), instead putting on a facade.

Of course, I don't support a pullout at this point of time. If the US pullout, it will further agonize the middle eastern publics and create unstability. I think the protest try to remind people the mind game politician play to gain their goals.
 
yes, americans came to this mess, its their responsiblity to clean up this mess

i agree, if they pulled out more chaos will occur, so screw u hippies
 
Dunno. Saddam seemed to really act like a guy who did have WMDs. I think the US Government believed Saddam had it. If they knew it was fake all along, imagine what a big temptation they would have had to simply make up the WMD that Saddam "posessed?" You know, planted evidence.
 
Peace group at war with police




Auckland: A peace group has declared war on police, claiming heavy-handed and provocative actions during a protest in Auckland at the weekend.
About 100 protesters — part of a Global Peace and Justice Auckland organised march — demonstrated outside the ANZ bank in the central city protesting over military action in Iraq and the bank’s involvement in a consortium managing the Trade Bank of Iraq.
Four people were arrested as police broke up the Saturday demonstration. Three were charged with obstruction and a fourth with assaulting a police officer.
But a peace group committee member, John Minto, yesterday attacked the police actions, calling their behaviour “provocative, heavyhanded and violent”.
He has written to Police Commissioner Rob Robinson protesting at specific actions, including. —
¿ The provocative action of police in escorting a vehicle through the middle of the demonstration.
¿ The “violent manhandling” of protesters, and the “violent arrest” of four peace group supporters.
¿ The “provocative” use of plainclothed police and police photographers.
¿ The taking of “dozens” of photographs of protesters at a simultaneous protest in Wellington.
Mr Minto said in his letter that police held a “long-standing, deepseated, simmering resentment” of protest groups.
Similar police actions in Auckland and Wellington showed “a coordinated attempt by the police to assert their authority over the right to peaceful protest”.
A spokeswoman for Mr Robinson said no comment would be made until his office had studied the letter.
One protester, Simon Oosterman, claimed to have been assaulted by a police officer while being held in a patrol car.
Mr Oosterman said he had been arrested on a charge of obstructing a footpath, and was put in a stranglehold while waiting to be taken away.
“He held my jugular with his fingers so tight it sounded like I had helium in my throat.”
Mr Oosterman said he had been “passively resisting” his arrest when he was assaulted in the patrol car. A police officer slammed the driver’s seat back into his knees, and claimed the protesters “were just like the Springbok tour people”.
“He was just mocking me. It was completely inappropriate.”
Mr Oosterman — who caused a scene at the Auckland District Court a few weeks ago when he turned up naked for a court appearance — was due to appear in the court today in relation to Saturday’s protest.
He was also scheduled for a status hearing today, the latest appearance on a charge of indecent exposure stemming from a naked bike ride against oil dependency [/b]
 
the_13th_redneck said:
Dunno. Saddam seemed to really act like a guy who did have WMDs. I think the US Government believed Saddam had it. If they knew it was fake all along, imagine what a big temptation they would have had to simply make up the WMD that Saddam "posessed?" You know, planted evidence.

Well, sure we knew it!!, Europe and the US sold Irak the MDWs to fight Iran!!!
 
Man, those hippies really crack me up.
Did that bike ride REALLY have to be naked? Seriously. What these jack a$$es need to do, is to actually be useful and try to invent a car that will not use petrol and be a heck of a lot cheaper on the long run than the regular petrol oil stuff. Need SOLUTIONS, not noise.
It's like protecting nature. That hippie camping next to a national park pretending its his own work isn't going to make any difference. Do you know how to make the difference? Make money. Organize and fund meaningful and productive projects. BUY KEY LAND. Grab yourself a geographer and mark out the most important parts of the water basins and buy land there.
It's a bit like someone I know who treks up the mountain every sunday to feed the birds. What did that achieve other than keep that person fit? Nothing. The fitness bit is great, but for birds, for nature etc., which is supposed to be the whole point of the trek, it doesn't make any difference whatsoever.

Also stauro, yes Europe and the US backed Saddam to try to curb the relgious fanaticism that was sweeping the region. Maybe just a little too much. But when Saddam proved to be a very bad egg, something had to be done. Europe didn't want to do it. Kind of like screwing up Africa and leaving it be. If you play with your toys, you have to clean up the room afterwards.
Just because of one mistake it doesn't mean you have to pack up and go home. No that's the quitters mentality. Make a mistake? Try to fix it.
 
I have no problem with people who peacefully protest something, but it's the clowns who jump on the bandwagon and start wrecking stuff that make me mad...
 
Pete031 said:
I have no problem with people who peacefully protest something, but it's the clowns who jump on the bandwagon and start wrecking stuff that make me mad...

After all, wasn't it a protest for peace? :lol:
 
Kinda like how some hippies at my school tape excessive amounts of paper flyers on the wall saying "SAVE THE TREES."
An irony perhaps? ;)
 
Yet again, we have people weeping and wailing and whining about something that is already over and done with. We're in Iraq and we've removed its former government. Most of the protesting seems to be focussed on how wrong it was for the USA and allies to invade Iraq to begin with. I disagree, but its a pointless debate in all honesty. We're there. Its not possible go back in time and not invade Iraq, so enough complaining about it already!

Some of the protests are naive enough to believe that the USA should pull out completely right now. Nothing could be more irresponsible. Those same jackasses would turn right around an say that its all our fault if we did pull out now, leaving Iraq to collapse into anarchy.

No end of the complaints these people with toss in, but do they actually have any viable alternative solutions? Nope, they just want to complain.
 
The greatest waste of energy comes when you spend it countering the protesters. They just want to draw attention, that's the way they are.
 
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