ping
In this case, we are "the driver" and "the bloody car accident" are the Bosian war crimes. What we need to do is keep our eyes forward, while still acknowledging the car accident and praying for its victims.
Some of what happened was real, and much was fictionalized to frame a context that made Serbs the fall guys for the war itself. The only way to do that was to dehumanize and demonize "the Serbs" into some unique species of subhuman -- the same way that Goebbels did to Jews (except in this case, it was to project onto them the image of inhuman "Nazis"). It had to be done, otherwise, people would be looking for some real context for how this horrible war between "real humans" happened. But instead, the only "real humans" we are offered in the MSM are Muslims (and some Croats)That, alone, should tell us something if we are listening.
Today, we know that the Golden Chain letter of the original donors to al Qaeda was found in Bosnia and that letter was dated three years before the war between Muslims and Serbs even started. We know Izetbegovic was an Islamist. We know that foreign Mujahaddin were fighting on the Muslim side. We know that we have been subjected to a propaganda campaign by the Muslims and the globalists. We also know that several of the 9/11 hijackers cut their jihadi teeth during the Bosnian war. We know that the attacks on America by al Qaeda began with a year of the Bosnian war (1st Trade Center Bombing).
All roads to this terrorism against us began in Bosnia -- and we opened the door to it. We just forgot tell the Serbs to get the hell out of the way while we chose to commit suicide on their land.
The court's decision on Karadzic is a foregone conclusion, even though it would be like convicting a US president for what some of our soldiers in Iraq chose to do without orders from him . But this is what the Hague was set up to do from the very beginning, convict the easy and expedient political targets and vindicate those who may have done worse but are "our political pawns".
Welcome to the NWO, where there are no rules, no fairness, no morality, no justice and no laws -- only power in a sugar-coated "moral" pill to make it easy to swallow. George Orwell underestimated the insidiousness of it.