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From - President Bush Speaks to United Nations Remarks by the President To United Nations General Assembly

"...THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Mr. Secretary General, Mr. President, distinguished delegates, and ladies and gentlemen. We meet in a hall devoted to peace, in a city scarred by violence, in a nation awakened to danger, in a world uniting for a long struggle. Every civilized nation here today is resolved to keep the most basic commitment of civilization: We will defend ourselves and our future against terror and lawless violence.

A few miles from here, many thousands still lie in a tomb of rubble. Tomorrow, the Secretary General, the President of the General Assembly, and I will visit that site, where the names of every nation and region that lost citizens will be read aloud. If we were to read the names of every person who died, it would take more than three hours.

The terrorists call their cause holy, yet, they fund it with drug dealing; they encourage murder and suicide in the name of a great faith that forbids both. They dare to ask God's blessing as they set out to kill innocent men, women and children. But the God of Isaac and Ishmael would never answer such a prayer. And a murderer is not a martyr; he is just a murderer.

Yet, there is no such thing as a good terrorist. No national aspiration, no remembered wrong can ever justify the deliberate murder of the innocent. Any government that rejects this principle, trying to pick and choose its terrorist friends, will know the consequences.'

12 posted on 01/18/2002 6:30:34 AM PST by veronica
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To: veronica
"No national aspiration, no remembered wrong can ever justify the deliberate murder of the innocent."

True. But if I support evil policies and vote for people to implement these policies, am I an innocent?

Perhaps I ought to claim sovereign immunity. :)

A mafia don is not innocent simply because he did not personally pull the trigger on his enforcer's gun. He's guilty of at least conspiracy to murder.

I will grant however that this guilt is almost completely an American oddity. American conspiracy law is quite strict.

19 posted on 01/18/2002 7:09:16 AM PST by Tauzero
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