Originally posted by: Steeplerot
Originally posted by: Lemon law
To Zebo,
While I agree with most of your post-----------------WHERE IN THE WORLD DO YOU COME UP WITH THE CRAZY NOTION that Clinton has killed more Iraqis than GWB??????????????????????????????
Another grim look at why the Iraqis would never have look favorably upon our occupation, and yes, clinton is responsible for starving some say millions of iraqis.
Just to give you a insight as to how us imperialism is not a republican monopoly.
It is a very shameful piece of history americans still have not recognized as to why the world is so disgusted with our foriegn policy.
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20011203/cortright
The grim question of how many people have died in Iraq has sparked heated debate over the years. The controversy dates from 1995, when researchers with a Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) study in Iraq wrote to The Lancet, the journal of the British Medical Society, asserting that
sanctions were responsible for the deaths of 567,000 Iraqi children. The New York Times picked up the story and declared "Iraq Sanctions Kill Children." CBS followed up with a segment on 60 Minutes that repeated the numbers and depicted sanctions as a murderous assault on children. This was the program in which UN ambassador (and later Secretary of State) Madeleine Albright, when asked about these numbers, coldly stated, "The price is worth it."
Albright was also the one who basiclly gave the green light to saddam to invade kuwait, then double crossed him once the corporate world realized how much money they were getting screwed out of, thus first gulf war.
Granted, the neocons already had their corporate sponsored claws into the us by this point, (since the 50's) being that a president is basiclly nothing but a figurehead for big profit. Politics are all smoke and mirrors anyway.
the whole liberal vs. conservative rep vs.dem thing is not even a real issue, if we didn't have our apathetic heads in the sand we would realize its the military industrial complex of america vs. the world. Little distractions like social issues keep our eyes off the big picture.
"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist." -President Dwight D. Eisenhower in his 1961 farewell address
Eisenhower warned of this menace to freedom so long ago, now he rolls in his grave at what we have sacrificed in the name of war profiteers.