Iraqis lay a wreath at Arlington National Cemetary
- Adex_Xeda
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Iraqis lay a wreath at Arlington National Cemetary
...to say thank you for the American soldiers who died for their freedom.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2004 ... 05275.html
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2004 ... 05275.html
- Niffoni
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I'm glad. It's important to start mending fences, even when things haven't been completely resolved. I'd honestly like to hear more stories about both countries remembering the people (Iraqi and American) who died in the horrors of armed conflict which (hopefully) will mean a better life for their children in the long run.
I was at a huge campus memorial ceremony for the American soldiers and Iraqi civilians who were being killed a few months back, and it was really something. It didn't even turn into an anti-war protest, just a lot of people who in some small way were acknowledging the ugly side of it and remembering the people who bore the brunt of it.
Admittedly most of the sympathy was for the Iraqi civilians killed and wounded, and rightly so, but it was nice to see that no one cheapened the deaths of the American soldiers either.
I was at a huge campus memorial ceremony for the American soldiers and Iraqi civilians who were being killed a few months back, and it was really something. It didn't even turn into an anti-war protest, just a lot of people who in some small way were acknowledging the ugly side of it and remembering the people who bore the brunt of it.
Admittedly most of the sympathy was for the Iraqi civilians killed and wounded, and rightly so, but it was nice to see that no one cheapened the deaths of the American soldiers either.
Let's think the unthinkable, let's do the undoable, let's prepare to grapple with the ineffable itself, and see if we may not eff it after all. - Douglas Adams
Your pre-teen arguments are amusing. That said, it is pretty irrelevant for the definition of a bribe whoever it was that chopped them off. And of course, since it was Saddam they were enemies of the former regime and obviously would be thankful for it's removal. Would be more interesting to get an un-biased person (good luck finding an un-biased Iraqi one way or the other however).
- Midnyte_Ragebringer
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- Dregor Thule
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Of course not, but Iraq never increased our "freedom" or protected it. Hell if anything it took away some of our freedom.Spang wrote:every US service member (soldeirs are only in the army) is protecting your freedom right now.
do you think we'd be this free if the military just stopped being?
WW2, the Revolutionary War, WW1 etc are wars that protected our freedom. Iraq and Vietnam were unncessisary bullshit
-xzionis human mage on mannoroth
-zeltharath tauren shaman on wildhammer
-zeltharath tauren shaman on wildhammer
Iraq is part of the Axis of Evil. 'nuff said!Xzion wrote:Of course not, but Iraq never increased our "freedom" or protected it. Hell if anything it took away some of our freedom.Spang wrote:every US service member (soldeirs are only in the army) is protecting your freedom right now.
do you think we'd be this free if the military just stopped being?
WW2, the Revolutionary War, WW1 etc are wars that protected our freedom. Iraq and Vietnam were unncessisary bullshit
Iraq didn't take away some of our freedom, that has to be attributed, in genral, to terrorism of all kinds. Those suckers refuse to line up in straight lines to be shot down with superior forces. For this, I blame the american indians who didn't line up to be shot either. Hence, the american indian is responsible for any loss of freedom we may be experiencing now.