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buster2010
So says the babykiller that is constantly crying for war. If he has such a hard on to go to war with Iran then let him pick up a rifle and lead the way. But that would put him and Israel in danger it's much better to get stupid Americans to do the fighting for them. The funniest part is it takes him about ten seconds to decide where to start lying.edit on 2-10-2013 by buster2010 because: (no reason given)
reply to post by Kurius
this man's wrath probably stemmed from a deep, psychological scar/disturbance, however entirely misplaced. But it is also likely there are other concealed motives.
combatmaster
buster2010
So says the babykiller that is constantly crying for war. If he has such a hard on to go to war with Iran then let him pick up a rifle and lead the way. But that would put him and Israel in danger it's much better to get stupid Americans to do the fighting for them. The funniest part is it takes him about ten seconds to decide where to start lying.edit on 2-10-2013 by buster2010 because: (no reason given)
So, you think Americans are stupid? Netanyahu is a Babykiller? lol
Why does Iran back Hamas? Is it because they are a democracy with peacful intention of forwarding worldwide sociability and peace? Or maybe, just maybe, Iran is not the golden boy we all want it to be and they are manipulating the naive westerner? But no, you are all too clever to get played, right?
Look, im not saying Netanyahu is a hero. Im just saying that Iran is in no position to be defended. They have not proven that they are sincere in their agenda. So who knows?
On Friday a four-year-old Palestinian boy was shot dead by a soldier - the most recent child victim of the Israeli army. Chris McGreal investigates a shocking series of deaths. Nine-year-old Abdul Rahman Jadallah's promise to the corpse of the shy little girl who lived up the street was, in all probability, kept for him by an Israeli bullet. The boy - Rahman to his family - barely knew Haneen Suliaman in life. But whenever there was a killing in the dense Palestinian towns of southern Gaza he would race to the morgue to join the throng around the mutilated victim. Then he would tag along with the surging, angry funerals of those felled by rarely seen soldiers hovering far above in helicopters or cocooned behind the thick concrete of their pillboxes. Haneen, who was eight years old, had been shot twice in the head by an Israeli soldier as she walked down the street in Khan Yunis refugee camp with her mother, Lila Abu Selmi.