dekker87, on 01 June 2011 - 03:40 PM, said:
which have been refuted. president whoever of whereversville murdering civilians using american supplied weaponry is NOT the us committing mass murder.
This is getting tedious. You have refuted nothing as anyone with eyes can read.
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a bombing campiagn designed to prevent the vietcong from digging in??
what do you think it was? a deliberate act designed to kill civilians?
I can't believe you're even trying to debate this. I mean it is a matter of public record.
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where are these millions of civilians the USA has killed then?
Eh.. dead..
And that was a reference to Vietnam only.
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which have been refuted. president whoever of whereversville murdering civilians using american supplied weaponry is NOT the us committing mass murder.
No, it is U.S. sanctioned and supported murder.
Noam Chomsky: El Salvador, Oscar Romero, who was assassinated
in 1980.l Romero was assassinated only a few days
after he had written a letter to President Jimmy Carter
pleading with him not to send aid to the military junta in
El Salvador, which would be used to crush people struggling
for their elementary human rights
This is sanctioning murder. No two ways about it. Without such arms, thousands of innocent civilians would have been spared. And on and on it goes. This is how the U.S. generally operates.
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what's hilarious is that you said the US has committed mass murder and then start posting statistics about wars that the US military had no involvement in!!
What exactly are you talking about? I have given many examples and then went on to further explain how the U.S. facilitates and sanctions mass murders, which is essentially just as bad.
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serious man...what planet are you on?
Definitely a different one from you it seems...
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the only qualifier is that the US themselves actually carried out the killings.
Need I go back to my original post in this thread? I have provided many examples.
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i've heard it all now!! your proof is 'i've read a book on the subject'!!!
/Sigh.
A Quarter Century of U.S. Support for Occupation
East Timor Truth Commission report uses declassified U.S. documents to call for reparations from U.S. for its support of Indonesian invasion and occupation of East Timor from 1975 until U.N. sponsored vote in 1999
http://www.gwu.edu/~...BB174/index.htm
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which isn't remotely the same as the US carrying out mass killings themselves is it....
Actually, considering that such acts could not have been carried out without the help of the U.S. (read the above link), it essentially is the same. Especially when the acts are public knowledge hyet the support still continues.
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i didnt say they were totally blameless...i'm saying that the US didnt carry out the murders themselves.
How many times must I tell you that I have already provided very legitimate examples. I know you think you have "refuted" the examples, but you have not. Nicaragua, Cambodia/Laos, Vietnam, Sudan, Grenada, and there are loads more.
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How is it utter nonsense to state that "Without the U.S. (CIA) then these acts could not have taken place. these regimes were sanctioned by the U.S. govts of the times."?
No U.S. armd (and training much of the time) = no thousands of dead civilians.
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i didnt say it was okay..i explained that's why the US suported them.
So you are now claiming that it was wrong of the U.S. to support, fund, train (much of the time) and arm these brutal regimes? Could this be morals actually creeping into your post? Never...
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wtf are you talkin about!?!?
My bad, I simply got my figures/situations mixed up. I definitely did not "make it up".
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more total bs!!!
i don't think i've ever seen anyone mug themselves off on a forum to such a deep degree before...that 10's of 1000's figure you're referring to has it's genesis in a newspaper article written by an anti-american german politician...there is no mention of this anywhere else.
Unfortunately the factory was Sudan's primary source of pharmaceuticals, covering the majority of the Sudanese market. Werner Daum (Germany's ambassador to Sudan 1996–2000) wrote an article in which he estimated that the attack "probably led to tens of thousands of deaths" of Sudanese civilians.
http://en.wikipedia....n_(August_1998)
That's what happens when you target a place where medicine is created in a Third World Country. Lost of people die as a result.
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Just because it was a war, does not mean that the mass murder of civilians did not happen. This is like claiming allied/German bombing of civilian centres was not mass murder = it was.
Regardless of the mistake I made about Grenada, the U.S. is still, quite clearly, guilty of mass murder, by definition. There is no escaping this fact.
Edited by expandmymind, 01 June 2011 - 04:23 PM.
'People are just not informed about this country's [Britain's] real role in the world. They are provided with systematically distorted views and information about the past and present that makes it easier for elites to pursue their policies in their interest and often against the public interest.' - Mark Curtis, page 356, 'Web of Deceit'.