20 September 2006

WHAT IS G.W. DOING?

Did I miss something? Did the "Palestinians" become a recognized people overnight? Was a Pal state officially formed while I was sleeping? George Bush is crazy to be shaking hands with the man that allocated all the funding for the Munich massacre. Yes Abu Mazan or Abbas as he is called today helped Black September finance the Munich operation.

My vote is clear. There will never be a Pal state. It should not exist. For those who do not really understand it is actually quite simple.

Palestine was never a state…only a frame of mind.


19 September 2006

HOW MUCH LONGER SHOULD WE WAIT?
There are only some many days left until they have the ability to erase Israel from history.

Tonight I listened to the speech Satan made to the United Nations. The begining was not at all interesting, nor was the middle, or the end. But one should not his tone about "occupying" powers. "Some countries want to use weapons and words to intimidate other countries." He referenced "Palestine" a few times during his rant. Here is a man who is not Arab...he is a Persian Shia Muslim. The Arab world from Egypt to Iraq are mostly Sunni Arabs. Why is a Persian Shia Muslim so interested in a Sunni Arab cause with an enemy (Israel) that was an ally for so long ago? And how much longer will Europe wait for their destruction? Even today the french dictator Emperor Chirac said the world should go back to talks...is the brain working Emperor?

We must prepare for the worst. The people that are elected to represent us have been hijacked by foriegn interests. I have a final solution for mad man...your death. So let us hope the CIA or the Mossad have plans to make that a reality. I would never favor such an act, but this act would truly change the course of history.

12 September 2006


This is from our friends in Iran at the Tehran Times Online:

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The percentage of Americans who blame the Bush administration for the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington has risen from almost a third to almost half over the past four years, a CNN poll released Monday found.

Asked whether they blame the Bush administration for the attacks, 45 percent said either a "great deal" or a "moderate amount," up from 32 percent in a June 2002 CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll.

But the Clinton administration did not get off lightly either. The latest poll, conducted by Opinion Research Corporation for CNN, found that 41 percent of respondents blamed his administration a "great deal" or a "moderate amount" for the attacks.

That's only slightly less than the 45 percent who blamed his administration in a poll carried out less than a week after the attacks. Still, most Americans appear to be fatalistic, with more than half -- 57 percent -- saying they think that terrorists will "always find a way to launch attacks no matter what the U.S. government does."

The poll was carried out August 30 through September 2 by Opinion Research Corp. with 1,004 American adults questioned by telephone. The sampling error for the questions was 3 percentage points.


Jewish heavy-hitters swing at Iran

The Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs announced Tuesday that it had enlisted Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel and internationally renowned lawyers Irwin Cotler and Alan Dershowitz to its campaign to expel Iran from the United Nations.

The JCPA will be circulating a document at the UN calling for Iran's ouster based on the UN Charter, which says that member states "that have persistently violated the principles contained in the present charter" can be removed.




The JCPA is maintaining that Iran has violated the convention against genocide by its threats to Israel and pursuit of nuclear weapons, as well as abrogated the foundational charter's requirement that member countries "refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state."

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has indicated he plans to addess the UN General Assembly in the near future, even as the United States considers imposing sanctions for its pursuit of a nuclear program.

"The United Nations was established in the aftermath of the Second World War by member states who were determined to never let the crimes that had just occurred ever happen again," said Dore Gold, president of the JCPA and a former Israeli ambassador to the UN. "The UN had a dismal record in the 1990s countering acts of genocide in Rwanda and Bosnia, and therefore we view this call for taking the genocide convention seriously as an opportunity for the UN to redress the errors of the past."

Though kicking out a member nation would be a highly atypical event, Gold noted that there was precedent for such a step, citing the exclusion of South Africa when it was an apartheid regime.

Article From: The Jerusalem Post Online