Protesters dressed as ghosts take part in a demonstration against a possible U.S. attack on Iraq, near the Washington Monument, October 26, 2002. Protesters hope as many as 100,000 people will converge on the U.S. capital for the anti-war message. (Eliana Aponte/Reuters)
These silly Spaniards can't spell. He forgot the S!
An unidentified couple march during an anti war demonstration in Madrid, Spain Sunday Oct. 27, 2002. Some three thousand people marched through Madrid to protest against the possible U.S. attack on Iraq. Banner on man's head reads 'Peace'. (AP Photo/Paul White)
Thousands of protesters against a U.S. war on Iraq plan to meet in the U.S. capital on Oct. 26, arriving in 250 buses from states as far afield as Texas, Vermont and Florida. Georgetown University students hold a 'die-in' protest against the possibility of the United States going to war with Iraq, October 23, 2002 on campus in Washington. Photo by Jim Bourg/Reuters
A 'die-in'? Drugs have completely eviscerated any imagination these loons might have had.