You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   29-53   54-78   79-103   104-128   129-140    
 
Author Message
25 new of 140 responses total.
slynne
response 54 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 20:24 UTC 2003

I dont think there is a lot to be gained from killing him either. And 
yet, I cant bring myself to feel sorry for him even though I know that 
is likely to be the outcome of all of this. 
jep
response 55 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 20:38 UTC 2003

I don't think he'll be executed.  There's too much information wanted 
by the government that he has.

I did read an article in the AA News, broadly hinting that pain, 
discomfort, refusing trips to the bathroom, etc. could be used on Iraqi 
military leaders, possibly including Saddam Hussein.  The headline 
stated something about heads of state being immune to such treatment, 
but the body of the article only suggested it was possible he'd be 
treated more respectfully.
scott
response 56 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 20:49 UTC 2003

After Bush and others using the torture angle to further demonize Saddam, like
mentioning specific torture techniques in major speeches (I've seen Bush do
this), it would be rather cynical of America to then condone torture in some
cases.
tod
response 57 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 22:43 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

jmsaul
response 58 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 03:12 UTC 2003

Re #44:  The anti-Saddam demonstrations are no secret.  The subtle point,
         that's going to become less subtle now, is that the people who are
         demonstrating against Saddam don't actually want us around either.
         Some of them have used violence against the Baathists, and will be
         happy to use it against us, too -- and I'm not just talking about
         radical Moslems, because a lot of Iraqis are strong secular 
         nationalists.
klg
response 59 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 03:28 UTC 2003

(Yeah, right.  They were happier with the good old days of being 
kidnapped, tortured, & killed.  Who wouldn't be?)
mcnally
response 60 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 04:42 UTC 2003

  re #59:  that's not at all what he said.  it's clear that you don't
  believe it either.  so why bother to write crap like that?
fitz
response 61 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 07:32 UTC 2003

Hooray for the capture  of Saddam.

His detainment will make the world as safe from terrorism as
the arrest of Noriega stopped the drug problem.

You're safe, Momma.  You're safe, baby.
sj2
response 62 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 07:58 UTC 2003

Re #53, I think what Saddam meant by *negotiating*, when he asked a US 
soldier for it, was whether somehow he could pay something to the 
soldiers and get away. Because, at that point of time, there was 
nothing else to negotiate. Remember, he had US$750,000 with him on 
person and maybe more elsewhere. They even found ~US$650 million in a 
hut in the middle of nowhere, earlier. 

He might have thought that kind of money may buy him freedom.
sj2
response 63 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 11:37 UTC 2003

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3326311.stm

Bush wants him executed.
twenex
response 64 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 12:09 UTC 2003

Heavens, what a surprise.
gull
response 65 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 14:51 UTC 2003

Re resp:53: Killing him will make him a martyr.  The worst punishment
for someone like him would be to lock him up in a cell for the rest of
his life, with no control over anyone.  Maybe give him some pictures of
his old palaces to look at.
gull
response 66 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 14:52 UTC 2003

Re resp:63: Well, of course.  Bush comes from Texas, where executions
are considered entertainment.
bru
response 67 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 14:52 UTC 2003

I am sure a number of families of our dead soldiers would like him dead as
well.
other
response 68 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 16:49 UTC 2003

Cut off his tongue and his hands and set him free.
tembpoib
response 69 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 16:50 UTC 2003

Re: 65. To be a martyr, you have to go out on a blaze of glory. Saddam will
more likely be seen as an embarassment for not fighting to the death.
scg
response 70 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 16:56 UTC 2003

Bush, or Hussein?

We don't like Hussein because he kills people he doesn't like, so we want to
kill him.  I certainly don't want the society I'm part of to function that
way.  Unlike Hussein, I have no desire to kill people, even people I don't
like.

He's under our control now.  He's not in a position to do any further damage.
We've certianly got enough other problems in Iraq, many of them his legacy
and many of them of our own making.  We should work on fixing those, not on
some mindless vengence.
twenex
response 71 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 17:00 UTC 2003

Any death penalty should be imposed after a fair trial, according to
the laws of a free and democratic Iraq, or according to international
law, depending on the venue. I oppose the death penalty, but on moral
grounds, not because I give a damn what happens to that... animal.
rcurl
response 72 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 17:43 UTC 2003

Re #67: keep some balance, bru. I suspect that a lot of Iraqi families
would like to see Bush dead for all their innocent relatives that were
killed in the invasion and aftermath - vastly more, too, than the number
of US soliders that have been killed. Don't you have any concern for the
innocent Iraqi civilians? 

twenex
response 73 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 17:56 UTC 2003

Bru and balance have nothing more in common than that the first
lettrer of each word is "b".
micklpkl
response 74 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 18:49 UTC 2003

resp:66 is quite offensive. I'm wondering how gull came to that conclusion.
twenex
response 75 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 19:39 UTC 2003

A joke, perhaps?
happyboy
response 76 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 19:45 UTC 2003

r74: i'm from there, originally.  he's right.
other
response 77 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 20:44 UTC 2003

(Parts of Austin may be excluded from that generalization, though 
the Statehouse is probably not among them.)
jmsaul
response 78 of 140: Mark Unseen   Dec 18 00:51 UTC 2003

Re #59:  Reread what I wrote.  Move your lips if you have to.
 0-24   25-49   29-53   54-78   79-103   104-128   129-140    
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss