5 Comments
- shawnfassett, on 10/11/2007, -1/+10What is wrong with these pro-Israel, anti-American leaders we have in power right now?
- NapoleonGold, on 10/11/2007, -0/+3Yep, not surprised.
This has nothing to do with Jews or Christians or Muslims (which all have Moses in common), this is just Israel and American praying that they can go Nuclear on a region that we have actively sought to divide and conquer since Israel was founded. Religion is just another false pretense amongst many to murder another couple of million people. So sad so very tragic. - jagermeistr, on 10/11/2007, -0/+3"Iran is acting aggressively and consistently to undermine moderate regimes in the Middle East, establish itself as the dominant regional power and reshape the region in its own ideological image."
seems like we and iran have more in common than we think if you go by what he said. - smackywentz, on 10/11/2007, -0/+2Are we Israel? No. Can Israel handle Ahmadinejad should he ever pose a real threat? Yes. If not, when they do require aid, they can go in front of the UN and request it just like everyone else. Until then, let us not bother ourselves with other nation's affairs. We have enough problems as it is.
- inactive, on 10/11/2007, -7/+1......no...the question should be "Why are American idiots like yourself too stupid to read the handwriting on the wall?"
On December 14, 2005, Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad delivered a televised speech in which he called the Nazi murder of six million Jews a fabrication. "They have created a myth in the name of the Holocaust and consider it above God, religion, and the prophets. If someone were to deny the existence of God... they would not bother him. However, if someone were to deny the myth of the Jews' massacre, all the Zionist mouthpieces and the governments subservient to the Zionists tear their larynxes and scream against the person as much as they can." In October 2005, he presided at a "World Without Zionism" conference. Banners called for Israel to be "wiped off the map." The use of English to display the slogans belied the explanation that such rhetoric was meant for internal consumption only.
Ahmadinejad's comments surprised Europe "It's really shocking that a head of state who has a seat in the United Nations can say such a thing," said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barrosso. The German foreign ministry summoned the Iranian chargé d'affaires to protest the "shocking" remarks.


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