Thursday, 9 June 2011

Viagra- Gaddafi's secret weapon?

Col Muammar Gaddafi has truly lived up to his moniker of ‘Mad Dog’, if the latest allegations against the Libyan leader are to be believed. Claims that he has been distributing Viagra, as part of his troop's ration packs, and a decree to brutalise women sound much like the punch- line to a loathsome quip; the kind of distasteful comment conjured up by the senseless and idiotic pranksters of this world.

Rather than an offensive joke doing the rounds, it is, in fact, the news headlines which bring these distressing accusations of brutality. Far from a new phenomenon, the rape of women has been viewed as the spoils of victory in the Hebrew Scriptures to a means of psychological warfare in such recent conflicts, as Bosnia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, it takes an abominable mind to take the deplorable act of rape and the use of Viagra to its latest depths.

The systematic practice of rape is recognized under the Geneva Convention as a crime against humanity and a war crime. Gaddafi’s latest villainous deed serves to demonstrate his delusion, desperation and defiance and suggests that he will make good on his Tuesday announcement of dying in Libya as a martyr. One can only hope that his wishes are answered very soon.

 
Posted by Picasa



http://www.uneditednews.co.uk/

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Col Muammar Gaddafi - Who's M.A.D?

Muammar’ mad-dog Gaddafi must be cursing the missed opportunity of voluntarily relinquishing power, leaving his people on amicable terms and slipping off quietly to plunder the billions of state money he has salted away. With the issue of a warrant, for his arrest, by the International Criminal court, it is of little surprise the Libyan leader has announced "We shall not leave. We shall not surrender. We shall not sell it," and added. "We welcome death. Martyrdom is a million times better.

Do not be fooled by his precarious perm, blunt rants and outlandish fashion sense- rumoured to be heavily influenced by, the now deceased, Michael Jackson. Col Gaddaffi, was once a revolutionary hero; in a bloodless coup, he snatched power from Libya’s King Idris and quickly addressed the unfair exploitation of the country by Western oil companies by aggressively re- negotiating oil prices.

He considered himself a great political philosopher and put together his ‘ green book’; said to solve the contradictions inherent in capitalism and communism and to put the world on a path of political, economic and social revolution and set oppressed peoples free everywhere. Gadaffi introduced free education at all levels, including university and post-graduate study and women flourished educationally under his reign.

Subsequently, he went on to rule his people for a period of sixty years ‘liquidizing’ any opposition to his rule, both at home and abroad. Political conversations with foreigners became a crime punishable by three years of prison; foreign languages were removed from the school curriculum; prisons were run with little or no documentation of the inmate population, offence or length of the sentence and the government executed dissidents publicly with the option of watching the televised repeat on the weekend.
What could have been –if Muammar had followed a more honourable path?

 
Posted by Picasa


Who Influenced Who?

 
Posted by Picasa


http://youoffendmeyouoffendmyfamily.com/dictator-fashion/

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Notorious neighbours

Why do such awful things become fads – crocs, overweight women exposing their G-strings on the high street and mass murderers living in plain view?
The recent apprehension of some of the world’s most wanted men has revealed a curious trend. Regardless of their rankings as fugitives, these men are not to be been found in caves, underground bunkers or some leafy undergrowth in the nearest Latin American jungle.

Sheltering in plain sight seems to be all the craze among the culprits of crimes against humanity, genocide and mass murder these days. In the case of, Ratko Mladic, his capture uncovered the Serbian village of Lazarevo as the idyllic, retirement retreat for the former Bosnian Serb military commander.

There is something rather strange about mass murderers going about their business in plain sight; purchasing the daily periodicals from the high-street newsagent or sending off letters and post cards from the single-manned post-office like any other pensioner. I always thought small villages bred familiarity and nosy neighbours?

With no false moustaches, curly wigs or prosthetics to disguise their faces of evil, it may seem unlikely that such infamous villains could wander around in local communities unnoticed. However, given time even the most notorious criminals can appear as ordinary as the next flat-capped, spectacle-wearing pensioner.

In the case of Mladic, local neighbours claimed he could not have possibly hidden in a populated village of less than 3,000, with one villager quoted as saying “They brought him here to make the arrest. It was just a setup to make less of a fuss.”

Former Nazi guard, John Demjanjuk, who was sentenced last month for being an accessory to the murder of some 28,000 Jews was discovered living in Ohio, as a retired mechanic from the local Ford car plant.

Only Osama Bin laden can have been considered to have maintained a degree of discretion by never venturing to the shops himself, hosting loud parties at his complex or returning any of the footballs to the neighbouring children, who managed to lose them over his compound wall. I anticipate the Pakistani authorities pointing to the recent apprehension of Mladic as a supporting example of how effortlessly a war-criminal can be over-looked.

Although fads are fleeting do not be surprised to discover war lords- Joseph Kony or Goran Hadzic captured in a town near you.



 
Posted by Picasa




Ratko Mladic on the left & John Demjanjuk on the right

http://www.latestbbcnews.com/killer-of-eight-thousand-muslims-former-bosnia-serbian-army-chief-general-ratko-mladic-arrested.html

http://oneuspost.com/2011/05/12/john-demjanjuk-convicted-over-nazi-camp-deaths/