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To: GST who wrote (154338)3/17/2003 6:54:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Message 18713104



To: GST who wrote (154338)3/18/2003 12:56:45 AM
From: Bill Harmond  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
>>in the United States we would call it theft

We called it manifest destiny. Doesn't make it right, though.

education.yahoo.com



To: GST who wrote (154338)3/18/2003 11:21:01 AM
From: re3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
the settlements are an issue i haven't been able to really understand, if only because i can't imagine why an Israeli person would see living there a very practical alternative, living in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv has enough day to day peril. however, the "other side" has done, or should i say, not done many things i don't understand, including not offering to resettle some so-called Palestinians in their countries...or maybe i do understand...perhaps the other countries are too smart NOT to...and again, i challenge you to think of why that might be...



To: GST who wrote (154338)3/18/2003 11:42:59 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 164684
 
Scud Stud lobs a missile at Bush

During the Gulf War, NBC reporter Arthur Kent was famed for his boyish good looks. Today, liberated from the network, he's free to say that Bush is out of control.

By Louise Witt
Salon Premium
March 17, 2003

Arthur Kent is pessimistic. A few weeks ago, Kent, an independent documentary filmmaker and journalist based in London, thought another war with Iraq could be avoided and a negotiated settlement could be reached with Saddam Hussein. Not anymore. He fears "dark forces" will unleash a conflict that will kill and maim thousands of innocent civilians, give rise to virulent anti-Americanism and anti-Westernism and plunge the world into strife for years to come.

This isn't idle speculation. Kent first reported on Afghanistan in 1980, soon after Soviet forces invaded the country to subdue mujahedin guerillas. A decade later, NBC News sent him to Dharan, Saudi Arabia, to cover the impending war with Iraq. That's where Kent became an instant celebrity when, in January 1991, he reported live on an Iraqi Scud missile attack. With his dashing good looks, as well as his stylish Italian leather jacket, the media dubbed him the "Scud Stud." After the Gulf War, Kent continued to report on the Middle East and Afghanistan. In June 2001, three months before Sept. 11, PBS aired his film on the Taliban's brutal rule, "Captives of the Warlords." A few weeks ago, his show on the History Channel, "History Undercover," interviewed U.N. weapon inspectors about Saddam's arsenal.

So, who are these "dark forces?" Our leaders. Kent harbors no love for Saddam Hussein. He considers him a tyrant who has starved his people for the past 12 years while buying even more weapons. But the 49-year-old journalist fears that the Bush administration's heavy-handed foreign policy toward Iraq will have devastating and long-lasting repercussions. "These people appear to be doctrinaire political fundamentalists," he told Salon during a recent interview in New York. "I think the Bush administration proceeds at its own peril."

In the city for a few days to film shows for the History Channel, Kent strode into the lobby of the midtown Omni Berkshire Place for our interview looking precisely the part of a broadcast TV journalist: navy blazer, a light blue shirt open at the collar and pale gray trousers. Even in the middle of a long winter, he had a slight tan. Only a few gray hairs at his temples hint at how much time has passed since he became the Scud Stud. To have some privacy and quiet, Kent suggests we talk at a corner table in an empty dining room. We barely sit down before he launches into his criticisms of Bush's foreign policies. Clearly, he's agitated about the imminent war.

[continued ...]

salon.com