Posted on 02/21/2011 4:12:21 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
CNN news Reader showed short video Clip.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
OH geez you got me- LOL
See #20....
That is worthy of it’s own Thread....for all of the Headline readers.
if he is still there, he may want to get out of the Libyan version of Dodge quick.
Not union trouble again!!
It is headed by the world-renowned Muslim scholar Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi.
I think the world is in for a big surprise. When these revolutions are done and the MB or some other radical Islamo-Commie group is in control all of these newly formed Islamic states will form a unified front of Arab-Islamic states. The global Caliphate will have its beginning.
Dude has done a ton of drugs...and Santana too.
4 seconds?? really. Now we all know he wouldn’t lie. right?
/s
The Mullahs are after him...see #15 and #20.
If the Mullahs are after him, then he’s my friend; the enemy of MY enemy!
LONG LIVE GADDAFI!
Watching CNN and Wolf Blitzer...wants a united group to intervene to stop bloodshed...no mention of the MBH...still believe that the young people can get a Democracy going...right...Mob rule with the Mullahs.
Yeah, I’m actually rooting for Gaddafy on this one. He needs to declare himself supreme religious leader of Libya, pronounce fatwas on all the mullahs, and have them all rounded up and killed and their bodies dumped in the Med.
That’ll sober everyone up in a hurry.
Don’t know when this was written, (reads like one year after 9/11?) therefor how up to date it is, but it’s TOO EASY label him a monster. Recall, a few years ago he announced WE ARE NOT ARABS! And asked ‘WHAT HAVE THE ARABS EVER DONE FOR LYBIA?’
ISLAM WILL NEVER FORGIVE HIM FOR THAT.
“Gadaffi has encountered continued problems with Islamic fundamentalists, most notably the Libyan Islamic Group, and it attempted to assassinate him in 1997. Based mainly in the United Kingdom its influence within Libya does not appear to be substantial.
Many people feel that the internal opposition, both secular and religious, is very weak. Gaddafi has long taken a consistently harsh view of religious fundamentalism, and there are no reports of this attitude changing. There is apparently some political tension between the western and eastern regions of the country, probably partly because fundamentalism is stronger in the east of the country. Developments since 11 September last year and the widespread international attack on terrorism have probably contributed to a marginalisation of fundamentalist tendencies in Libya. Certain opposition against Gaddafi and his regime exists outside Libya, primarily in Egypt and the UK. Most experts do not consider this opposition very strong, and certainly not active and cohesive. The regime is not thought to see it as an actual threat at present.
Many obervers feel the US State Department Country Report on Human Rights Practices regarding Libya does not provide a wholly accurate and up-to-date picture of current conditions in Libya in all respects.
Tribalism remains a key determinant in political allegiances in Libya. Neither oil wealth and modernizing influences nor Qadhafi’s revolution have altered the web of kinship-based loyalties that has characterized Libya’s domestic political scene for centuries. Libya’s tribes are arranged in a pyramidal lineage scheme of subtribal, clan, and family elements. Before Libya’s independence in 1951, the tribes operated as autonomous political, economic, and military entities.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/libya/opposition.htm
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