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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/10/2006 12:39:16 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1582723
 
Expert to Congress: Iran ‘Wants Us Dominated or Dead'
NewsMax ^ | 10 March 2006

WASHINGTON -- Michael A. Ledeen, a former consultant to the National Security Council and to the U.S. State and Defense Departments delivered scathing testimony on Iran to the House Committee on International Relations this week, citing his fear "that the obsession with the nuclear question often obscures the central policy issue: that the Islamic Republic has waged war against us for many years and is killing Americans every week."

The author of "The War against the Terror Masters" held little back from the lawmakers with such polemics as, "They want us dominated or dead. There is no escape from their hatred, or from the war they have waged against us. We can either win or lose, but no combination of diplomatic demarches, economic sanctions, and earnest negotiations, can change that fatal equation. They will either defeat us, or perish."

The former commissioner of the U.S.-China Commission warned the lawmakers that in his opinion the terror war in Iraq is a replay of the strategy that the Iranians and the Syrians used in the 1980s to drive the U.S. and its French allies out of Lebanon:

"Those Americans who believed it was possible to wage the war against terrorism one country at a time, and that we could therefore achieve a relatively peaceful transition from Saddam's dictatorship to an elected democracy, did not listen to the many public statements from Tehran and its sister city in jihad, Damascus, announcing in advance that Iraq was about to become the ‘new Lebanon.'"

The expert outlined a worst-case scenario that he suggested might unfold once Iran managed to put nuclear warheads on their intermediate range missiles:

"They might even be able to direct them against American territory from one or more of the Latin American countries with which the mullahs are establishing strategic alliances.

"The mullahs make no secret of their strategy; just a couple of weeks ago, when the leader of Hamas was received in honor in Tehran, a photograph of the event was released, in which there was a colorful poster of President Ahmadi-Nezhad and Supreme Leader Khamenei along with Castro, Morales and Chavez.

"The mullahs would be pleased to nuke Israel, and they would be thrilled to kill millions of Americans."

The author noted that from the first hours of the fanatical regime of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979, "Iran declared war on us in language it seems impossible to misunderstand."

He reminded the lawmakers of the recent statement by Hassan Abassi, the chief strategic adviser to President Ahmadi-Nezhad – "America means enemy, and enemy means Satan."

The expert ran through a brief resume of the enemy: "They created Hizbollah and Islamic Jihad, and they support most all the others, from Hamas and al-Qaida to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command. Iran's proxies range from Shiites to Sunnis to Marxists, all cannon fodder for the overriding objective to dominate or destroy us."

Recalling to the committee members the recent ABC News broadcast of a story about the discovery of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) sent from Iran into Iraq, he noted his agreement with the conclusion of Richard Clarke, the former White House counterterrorism chief and an ABC News consultant, about those powerful bombs that have taken the lives of some many of the soldiers and Marines serving in Iraq.

"I think the evidence is strong that the Iranian government is making these IEDs, and the Iranian government is sending them across the border and they are killing U.S. troops once they get there," said Clark. "I think it's very hard to escape the conclusion that, in all probability, the Iranian government is knowingly killing U.S. troops."

At one point, the former college professor challenged the panel: "The Iranian war against us is now 27 years old, and we have yet to fight back!"

He further suggested that future historians would be baffled at the intensity and tenacity with which successive American administrations have refused to deal seriously with the obvious and explicit threat from the Islamic Republic of Iran.

On that subject of fighting back, Ledeen – almost surprisingly after his dramatic rhetoric – eschewed the notion of outright invasion or bombing of the various nuclear sites around the desert country.

Military action carries enormous risks, the expert opined, because of the many unforeseeable consequences.

"Some number of Iranians would likely be inclined to rally to the national defense, even if they hate the regime," he said. "It's impossible to estimate how many of them would take this path. Moreover, there would inevitably be innocent victims, and our strategy should aim at saving innocents, not killing them. Add to that the virtual certainty that Iran would respond with a wave of terrorism, from Iraq to Europe to the homeland."

But if military action is a poor choice in his opinion, the expert gave even worse marks to diplomacy as a solution:

"The first step in crafting a suitable policy toward Iran is to abandon the pretense that we can arrive at a negotiated settlement. It can't be done."

Part of what Ledeen ultimately recommended to the committee was seizing the assets of the Iranian leaders.

"The mullahs have ruined the lives of most Iranians, they have greatly enriched themselves at the people's expense, and a good deal of that money has been squirreled away in foreign bank accounts," he explained.

The consultant gave as his favorite example of the greed of the Iranian ruling class a transaction tax, roughly worth 5 percent of the purchase price, all of which goes into the personal fund of the Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.

"That money properly belongs to the Iranian people, whose misery grows from day to day," Ledeen said. "We should hold it for them, and return it to a freely elected government after we have helped them overthrow their oppressors."

But the cornerstone of the author's strategy is regime change – from within but openly supported by the U.S.

"Too many of us have forgotten the enormous impact of Ronald Reagan's denunciation of the Soviet Union as an ‘evil empire.' The intellectual elite of this country condemned that speech as stupid and dangerous, yet the Soviet dissidents later told us that they considered it enormously important, because it showed that we understood the nature of the Soviet regime, and were committed to its defeat.

"In like manner, the Iranians need to see that we want an end to the Islamic Republic. We need to tell them that we want, and show them that we will support, regime change in their country, peaceful, non-violent regime change, not revolution from the barrel of a gun."

On the pragmatic end, the expert wants the U.S. to help the Iranian people build resources for a strike fund, noting that workers need to be able to walk off the job -- above all the oil fields and the textile and transportation sectors -- and know they will be able to feed their families for several weeks.

Facilitating communication is also a key he says, pointing to the instruments of communication -- servers, laptops, satellite and cell phones and phone cards, which the U.S. could supply.

"The regime has been more effective in identifying and repressing nation-wide communications among dissidents. They have been less effective quashing local networks," Ledeen said. "We should accordingly provide the local networks advanced technology in order for them to better communicate between cities and regions."

Ledeen also endorsed the suggestion that the President appoint someone responsible for Iran policy, and who would advise the president and report to the Congress.

"The Iranians will be encouraged by someone who they believe to be firmly on their side, while they will be discouraged by someone who has participated in the failed efforts to formulate a serious Iran policy."



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/10/2006 10:19:51 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
BLOOMBERG SUSPENDS 'HATE TALK' IMAM

By NILES LATHEM in D.C. and DAVID SEIFMAN in N.Y.
NY POST March 10, 2006

nypost.com


March 10, 2006 -- The head Islamic chaplain for the city jail system was suspended yesterday after he claimed Muslims were being tortured in Manhattan lock-ups, and declared that the "greatest terrorists in the world occupy the White House."
The action against Imam Umar Abdul-Jalil, the executive director of ministerial services for the Department of Correction, came in response to a story in yesterday's Post.

Mayor Bloomberg and City Correction Commissioner Martin Horn put Abdul-Jalil on paid administrative leave from his $76,602-a-year job, pending the outcome of an investigation into his inflammatory remarks.



Outraged lawmakers demanded Abdul-Jalil be fired immediately, but Bloomberg said he is a civil service employee.

"We have to remove this cancer and make sure it is never allowed to spread again," fumed Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Queens), who chairs the City Council's Public Safety Committee.

Abdul-Jalil, 56, who is also imam of the Masjid Sabur mosque in Harlem, is one of the city's most prominent Muslim leaders and has participated in a number of high-profile events with major city and state political figures - including emotional 9/11 memorial services at Ground Zero.

He has been at the Correction Department since 1993 and was appointed head chaplain overseeing 40 chaplains of all faiths in the spring of 2004.

Last April, a counterterrorism organization, the Investigative Project, secretly recorded two speeches Abdul-Jalil gave at a conference sponsored by the Muslim Students Association in Tucson, Ariz. The group released the recording to The Post.

In remarks to two panels at the conference, Abdul-Jalil alleged that Muslims jailed after the 9/11 attacks were being "tortured" in the Manhattan Correctional Center, that "the greatest terrorists in world occupy the White House" and that Muslims should not allow "Zionists of the media to dictate what Islam is to us."

Debra Burlingame of Westchester, whose brother Charles Burlingame was the pilot of the plane that crashed into the Pentagon, said it was an "absolute outrage" that a religious leader who participated in 9/11 memorial ceremonies would make those remarks.

"It's beyond duplicitous. It's an insult to those who died on 9/11," she said.

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Rep. Peter King (R-L.I.) and several other New York area politicians called for Abdul-Jalil to be axed.

"A person with those views should not be allowed to serve in any government agency," King said.

"It is wholly inexcusable for a public servant wearing a New York City uniform to advance such a hateful and bigoted philosophy," Rep. Vito Fossella (R-S.I.) said in a letter to Horn yesterday.

Abdul-Jalil could not be reached for comment last night.

Earlier this week, he initially denied the remarks. Later, he conceded he probably made them but his words were being "taken out of context."

Abdul-Jalil said he has nothing against President Bush, whom he called a "spiritually oriented person" and said he was making a broader definition of terrorism to include "racism."

Additional reporting by Stephanie Gaskell

niles.lathem@nypost.com



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/10/2006 10:21:33 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1582723
 
And what happens to the terrorist? He merely gets suspended.

Outraged lawmakers demanded Abdul-Jalil be fired immediately, but Bloomberg said he is a civil service employee.
...yet only last month, Bloomberg did this....

Bloomberg immediately fired a city worker when he was caught taking smoking breaks. Check this out...

"Last month a story about city employees and their smoking breaks drove the mayor bonkers and he fired a well-respected city employee for the crime of smoking in public. Although the story indicated that the smokers highlighted in the story were exceeding their smoke break allotment, subsequent evidence, uncovered by the paper that wrote the original story indicates that the terminated employee was dismissed unjustly.

The employee, Bob Swinton, has retained legal assistance so cannot speak directly about this case. His wife, however, does want to set the record straight: What happened to my husband was wrong and we will get our day in court. My husband was used as a scape goat in his campaign and the sad part is, he does not care that he has wrecked our lives because he is surrounded by money and power. My husband is so depressed and I hope he survives this. I have to push myself to get out of bed every day just to function and to show my children that I am not quitting."

Yet Abdul keeps collecting his paycheck. Something is wrong here.

Never fear, the ACLU will get him his job back and a nice settlement.

"We have to remove this cancer and make sure it is never allowed to spread again," fumed Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Queens),

And what happens to the terrorist? He merely gets suspended.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 10:33:55 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
Slobodan Milosevic Found Dead in His Cell
yahoo news ^ | March 11,2006

BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro - Slobodan Milosevic, the former Yugoslav leader on trial for alleged war crimes, was found dead in his prison cell at the U.N. tribunal in The Hague, Belgrade's B-92 and Serbia's state radio said Saturday. He was 65.
A U.N. war crimes prosecution official in the Dutch capital, speaking on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the media, confirmed the report to The Associated Press.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

Are these dutch retarded? This is the second prisoner they’ve lost in a week and a half.

3 posted on 03/11/2006 7:38:51 AM EST by ketelone
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

He's been trying to force Clinton to come and testify at his trial. Could this be another case of Arkancide?

7 posted on 03/11/2006 7:44:49 AM EST by NRA2BFree
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

I guess the trial is over?

8 posted on 03/11/2006 7:44:56 AM EST by Echo Talon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies | Report Abuse ]
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

The court was not getting him convicted with their kangaroo court so I hope someone checks the autopsy very carefully.

9 posted on 03/11/2006 7:45:24 AM EST by Lion Den Dan
________________________________________
To: ketelone
One is a mistake, two careless, three a plot...

Was this of natural causes?

11 posted on 03/11/2006 7:52:46 AM EST by vimto
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

Found him dead in his cell? Hmmm...

15 posted on 03/11/2006 8:11:20 AM EST by paudio
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies | Report Abuse ]
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776


UN strikes again!

16 posted on 03/11/2006 8:13:20 AM EST by F-117A ]
________________________________________
To: ketelone

The Dutch don't have a death penalty -- formally.

19 posted on 03/11/2006 8:26:00 AM EST by GAB-1955
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

Now the UN legal team will have to go home and give up their probably ridiculously high expense accounts and other perks. :-(

20 posted on 03/11/2006 8:51:32 AM EST by CPOSharky
_______________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776

Jim McDougal and Slobodan Milosevic have more in common than any of us will ever know.

Hint: Both died in prison before they could testify against Bill Clinton.

21 posted on 03/11/2006 9:13:46 AM EST by Paloma_55
________________________________________
To: AmericanMade1776; diverteach; Unkosified; muir_redwoods; Candor7; hellinahandcart

1.)Slobodan defends Christian Serbs against Islamic Terrorists.

2.)In 1999,and in direct support of Islamic Terrorists the U.S./NATO bomb Christian Serbs defending their Homeland.

3.)Two Years later Islamic Terrorists fly planes into U.S. buildings on 911.

Not to mention the Madrid and London and Bali Bombings. The beheading of Daniel Pearl, Nicholas Berg, and murder of Tom Fox and others, all brought to you by Islamic Terror.

What, only the West and the U.S. and Israel can defend themsleves against Islamic Terror?
Eastern European Christian Nations cannot?

28 posted on 03/11/2006 9:47:51 AM EST by gitmogrunt



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 11:19:51 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1582723
 
Terror Meets Delusion: The Murder of Tom Fox (insanity of the left)
The American Thinker ^ | 3/11/2006 | Rocco DiPippo

Yesterday, peace activist Tom Fox was found murdered in Iraq.

Fox, along with fellow activists Harmeet Singh Sooden, Norman Kember, and James Loney was kidnapped in Baghdad verall disdain for America, as indicated by statements he made on his blog. He also suffered from a terrible naiveté:

I think it would be fair to say that a survey of opinion taken from news sources in various parts of the world would find people using the words ‘fear and hatred’ much more often than they would use the words ‘respect and love’ when it comes to describing the United States. Not only in the Middle East but in Europe and in much of Asia and other areas as well. We are seen more as an empire rather than a beacon of hope to the oppressed and downtrodden. We are seen more as a militaristic superpower, bent on imposing our will on others, rather than the keeper of the flame of the hope and promise of democracy,
said Thomas William Fox, ignoring, among other things, the fact that people fear America so much, that they flock to its shores in droves, seeking freedom and peace and economic opportunity.

After reading most of his blog entries, it seems to me that Fox’s tragic flaw, the one that ultimately got him killed, was that he did not really believe that some men are more evil than others.

Crippled by this moral confusion, Fox habitually ignored the greater of two evils. His blog entry on Fallujah hints at as much. Though in his writings he essentially described the liberation of Fallujah as a senseless act, he failed to mention that after U.S. forces chased out and killed the Islamists who had held the town hostage, they made the gruesome discovery of nearly two dozen torture chambers, awash in blood, some with bloated bodies and hacked off body parts dumped near them. Lt. Col. Gareth Brandl, a Marine said,

The face of Satan was here in Fallujah, and I’m absolutely convinced that that was true.
Ultimately, Tom Fox saw that face up close and personal. It is the face of those who commit shocking evil while promising Heaven on Earth. I wonder if, in the end, he finally recognized it for what it was—and is.

The Utopian fanatics who killed Tom Fox could have cared less whether or not he was sympathetic towards them, or if he hated them or whether he believed in God, or not. They could have cared less if he had a family or friends who loved him. They did not care for his compassion. They did not care that, on some levels, he even empathized with them: they, who held him captive. They did not care that, in his way, he was trying to help alleviate the suffering of their brothers and sisters.

All Tom Fox was to his captors and murderers was filth—a piece of garbage; a weak, vile, subhuman infidel of the Western variety; a creature to be spit on and reviled and, when no longer useful, slaughtered like an animal and then discarded. They treated Mr. Fox like they would treat us all, as stones to be kicked aside while building the road to Paradise. They treated Mr. Fox, and if given the chance they’d treat us all, like the Nazis treated the Jews.

If there are lessons to be learned from the murder of Tom Fox, they are primarily for the Left: Like a person, it is never too late for it to abandon its suicidal march until the moment the executioner strikes.

Thomas William Fox (1951-2006) R.I.P.

Rocco DiPippo, a freelance political writer, publishes "The Autonomist" website.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 11:21:37 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1582723
 
Tom Fox simply used a different approach to achieve the goal of the world-wide left: subjugation of each and every person on the face of the earth to totalitarian rule.
The left despises George Bush for defeating Sadaam Hussein because Hussein was running a perfectly good brutal dictatorship. The defeat of Hussein set the left back for years in establishing as many socialist utopias as possible.

The last thing the left wants is more free people. Tom Fox was doing his part to assist the terrorists in establishing a oppressive system of government; the fact that it would hide behind a "religon" is irrelevant.

The last thing he ever expected was to actually be forced to experience what he wanted for the rest of the world. Useful leftwing idiots are supposed to be spared the consequences of their actions.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 1:58:46 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
Police: U.S. hostage shot, tortured
Tom Fox among four peace activists kidnapped in November

Saturday, March 11, 2006

The FBI confirmed Friday that a body found in Iraq is that of U.S. Christian peace activist Tom Fox.

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- American hostage Tom Fox -- who was kidnapped with three other Christian peace activists in November -- has been found shot in the head with his body showing signs of torture, Iraqi emergency police told CNN Saturday.

There was no word on the whereabouts of Fox's fellow hostages -- Canadians James Loney, 41, and Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32, and 74-year-old Briton Norman Kember -- who were last seen in a video broadcast Tuesday on Arab television.

Fox's body was found wrapped in a blanket around 5 p.m. Thursday in the Daoudi neighborhood in western Baghdad -- dumped on the main road near a train station. His hands and feet were bound, police said. He was wearing gray trousers and a gray shirt.

Police discovered the body and then contacted an Iraqi army patrol that was nearby. The Iraqi army also determined that the body appeared to be of a Westerner, and U.S. forces were called to the scene.

A spokesman for the U.S. military confirmed they picked up the body Thursday evening, and it was later determined to be that of Fox.

More than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis have been kidnapped since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Fifty-four foreign hostages are known to have been killed by their captors, Reuters reported.

Fox, 54, a Quaker from Clear Brook, Virginia, had been abducted with three other members of Christian Peacemaker Teams on November 26.

"In grief we tremble before God who wraps us with compassion. The death of our beloved colleague and friend pierces us with pain," a statement from Christian Peacemaker Teams said.

"We mourn the loss of Tom Fox, who combined a lightness of spirit, a firm opposition to all oppression and the recognition of God in everyone.

"We renew our plea for the safe release of Harmeet Sooden, Jim Loney and Norman Kember."

The brief video of those three hostages was aired Tuesday on the Arabic-language TV network Al-Jazeera. Noticeably absent from the video was Fox, and his status was not mentioned.

A group calling itself the Swords of Righteousness Brigade claimed responsibility for the abductions, and had threatened to kill the men if Iraqi prisoners held by the United States and Iraq were not released.

Fox's death was announced by the U.S. State Department on Friday.

"The FBI has verified the identity of a body found in Iraq," said spokesman Noel Clay. "While additional forensic testing will be completed in the United States, we believe this is the body of Tom Fox."

He said Fox's family was notified, and he offered them the department's "heartfelt condolences."

Doug Pritchard, co-director of Christian Peacemaker Teams in Toronto, said the humanitarian organization planned to maintain its presence in Iraq, at least until the fate of the other captives is known. The group has five workers in the country in addition to the remaining captives.

"We know the risks involved. It's very much a part of our training," Pritchard told a news conference late Friday.

He and Chicago co-director Carol Rose blamed the U.S. involvement in Iraq, backed by Britain, for the captives' dilemma, and urged both nations to release detained Iraqis.

Rose said Fox was "a very quiet man, very thoughtful and had a very subtle and quiet sense of humor."

Although Tuesday's 25-second video that aired was silent, an Al-Jazeera anchor said the three men were pleading with their home governments and Gulf Arab leaders to assist with securing their release.

On the tape were Briton Norman Kember and Canadians James Loney and Harmeet Singh Sooden. The date of February 28, 2006 was superimposed on the tape. In the video, the men were seated, and no hostage-takers were visible.

There have been other videotapes of the men, including one released on an Islamist Web site in December that showed the hostages wearing orange jumpsuits and speaking individually to the camera.

In it, Fox and Kember were blindfolded and their hands chained together.

"I'd like to offer my pleas to the people of America, not to the government of America, a plea for my release from captivity and also a plea for a release from captivity of all the people of Iraq," Fox said.

"The only way that we can all be free is for the American and British soldiers to leave Iraq as soon as possible."

Kember, speaking in a tired, raspy voice, said, "I have been opposed to this war, Mr. (British Prime Minister Tony) Blair's war, since the very beginning. I ask of him now, and the British government, to do all that they can to work for my release and the release of the Iraqi people from oppression."

In response, British Foreign Minister Jack Straw said his government was open to hearing from the hostage-takers, but that the group's demands were ones "plainly no government could meet."

There have been many international calls for the men's release, including pleas from Muslim clerics.

Pritchard said he was with Fox not long before he was kidnapped, when there was a special group meeting. The day before his abduction, Fox wrote an essay in which he asked, "Why are we here?"

"We are here to root out all aspects of dehumanization that exists within us. We are here to stand with those being dehumanized by oppressors and stand firm against that dehumanization," he wrote.

Fox's friend, John Surr, said Fox felt his calling in Iraq was worth the potential risk.

"He was willing to go in there at all costs," Surr said.

Fox, a 54-year-old Quaker, had two children, according to Christian Peacemaker Teams. He enjoyed cooking and playing music on his recorder and bass clarinet.

A music major, Fox graduated from college in May 1973. Though he was unwilling to participate in U.S. military actions in Vietnam, he auditioned for and earned a spot in the Marine Band, based in Washington, where he played to support his family.

After leaving the military, Fox quit the band to become a grocer, according to Christian Peacemaker Teams.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 2:03:44 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
(Illegal alien) Thieves Steal Checks From Retirement Home Residents

cbs4denver ^ | Mar 10, 2006

AP) DENVER Prosecutors said Friday they filed theft, conspiracy and other charges against three people accused of stealing $2,300 in checks from residents of a retirement complex.
One of the three also tried to steal Social Security numbers and other personal information, and two were in the country on expired vacation visas from Ghana, Denver district attorney's spokeswoman Lisa Curtis said.
The suspects, Leticia Osei Bonsu, George Oppong and Raymond Wayoe, also face charges of forgery and criminal impersonation.
Bonsu, also known as Mavis Ofisu-Armaah, and Oppong were in custody on immigration holds because of expired visas, Curtis said.
Wayoe, also known as Jackson Aidoo, was released on a $10,000 bond, she said.
Prosecutors said Bonsu, using the Ofisu-Armaah name, was working as a nurse's aide at Cherry Oak Retirement Community and took checks from residents' apartments and gave them to Oppong and Wayoe. Six checks were cashed, Curtis said.
When she was arrested, Bonsu's purse contained other checks from more than 20 Cherry Oaks residents, and she also had several Social Security cards and other identification cards, Curtis said.
Curtis said Oppong worked at the Cherry Park retirement community and Wayoe worked as a certified nursing assistant at a local hospital, which she did not identify.
All three have been fired, she said.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 2:03:45 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
.



To: AK2004 who wrote (279362)3/11/2006 4:45:08 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 1582723
 
Friends of murdered US hostage urge no retribution
Reuters ^ | March 11 2006

Friends of U.S. peace activist Tom Fox, who was kidnapped and killed in Iraq, cited his stance against retribution on Saturday and called for the remembrance of all victims of violence around the world.

Members of the Langley Hill Friends Meeting, a peace group in northern Virginia to which Fox belonged, read a statement he co-wrote in October 2004 in which he shunned violence, even to rescue him should he ever be kidnapped.

"We reject violence to punish anyone who harms us," said Doug Smith, quoting Fox, in a statement read to reporters at the group's headquarters in McLean, Virginia.

"We forgive those who consider us their enemies," Fox's statement continued

(Excerpt) Read more at metronews.ca ...