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| quote: | Originally posted by Magnetonium
In any case, Saddam Hussein didnt murder or order the killings of 100,000 Iraqi civilians.
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Really?
What are all the mass graves about then?
I don't know what's more tragic, the blind hatred of America or the total ignorance of Iraq under Saddam facts.
(I'll even hi-light the important stuff)
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Mass graves have been found in almost every major province. Some of them are group specific (one has been found to house Dawa party members and another one for Islamic Action Organization adherents). Some are age specific. Even the children were not spared. There is no need to go into detailed descriptions of the sites and relate stories of those lucky few who fled only to tell almost unbelievable tales. The real problem lies in the fact that such stories are becoming mundane and have lost their position as the number one news story, having been breaking news items just a few days after the war.
For a third of a century, the Shia people of Iraq have been suffering in the confines of their own Holy Land. They have been subject to the rule of the minority, namely the Sunnies. It is no secret that Saddam and his cohorts subscribe to the Sunni sect. On the outskirts of Tikrit is a little village named Al-Awjah (which not surprisingly translates as "The Twisted"), sparsely populated and neglected for hundreds of years by the rest of the province. Saddam was born precisely in that village in 1937 from a typical Sunni family.
We must endeavor to permanently imprint the memory of those killed by Saddam and his regime in the hearts and minds of generations to come in order to prevent such human catastrophes from being repeated.
It was Saddam's rise that paved the way for his venomous sectarian hatred to be materialized. The Shias were subjected to ethnic cleansing of an unsurpassed scale. For them the punishment for political crimes started with execution and ended with a lifetime of anguish under the brutal torture apparatus of Saddam's notorious penitentiaries. The list goes on to brutalities of detention without trial, torture, and as the west has now come to discover; mass executions and burials.
Official Iraqi documents recovered after the fall of Saddam regime suggest a staggering 5 million executions were made during Bath era alone. Over 10 million were also imprisoned. They were all Shias save a small percentage of Kurds. It is also very interesting to note that after the 1991 Shia uprising over 300,000 were killed or captured never to be seen again, but there were no injured. This is very odd considering the logical fact that wars result in many more injuries than deaths. Under Saddam, however, people were either killed instantly or killed in mass executions soon after. With slogans such as 'After today no more Shias' the army had advanced into the city of Karbala. The killed were killed, the captured were killed, and the injured were killed as well. No one was spared.
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>>Source<<
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Oh, and even if he did kill close to that number - the war in Iraq is far from over and only God knows how many more civilians will die by the end of the war. So can you please stop telling me crap and admit the real problem, that the American invasion is causing a humanitarian catastrophe in Iraq, much worse for Iraqis than before, much less security, more crime, bombings, murders ...
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Yes, with the removal of an all oppressive thumb, the people can now continue with their lives, be it good and bad.
Eventually it'll settle down and reach an equilibrium and yes, it's that time line that's the huge debate.
Actually, the debate is the reasoning of why we went in the first place (which really isn't much of a debate) but if we were presented with, and made aware of the "Bureaucracy of Repression" report from Human Rights Watch, there wouldn't have been much of a debate and there'd actually have be moral clarity in the first place.
>>Bureaucracy of Repression: The Iraqi Government in Its Own Words <<
It's a decision the Iraqis are going to have to answer for themselves, with assistance, until they can stabilize themselves.
They're going to have to struggle, as a country and get a grip.
They've had NO choice or freedom for 30 years! Give them a break already!
And we certainly can't just cut and run just leaving them to the wolves, that would be WORSE than being there and certainly your cries of another genocide would certainly then, unfortunately, come to fruition. 
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for crying out loud, why are people so bloody ignorant and trying to downplay everything all the time? Where's the sense of urgency for Christ's sake? How many times do I have to restate my point???? This forum has been the same before, and its still full of junk.
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I already disclaimered myself when I stated:
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That still doesn't make it right however...
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So I wasn't being ignorant or downplaying Iraq's plight but feel free to ignore that...
All I'm saying is, if you're going to say fantastical things, be prepared to explain it; we're not simply going to take your word on it carte blanche (especially given some of your past posts...) just because it sounds good and everyone else says it.
Get some facts first, then argue.
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Some things never change, do they?[/COLOR]
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That's quite obvious...
___________________
"...End? No, the journey doesn't end here. Death is just another path...one that we all must take.
The grey rain-curtain of this world rolls back, and all change to silver glass...and then you see it...
...white shores...and beyond...the far green country under a swift sunrise."
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