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Iraqi actors killed for entertaining kids
UPI ^ | April 22 2006

Posted on 04/22/2006 9:03:47 PM PDT by jmc1969

Faud Radi and Haidar Jawad, Iraqi children's entertainers, were executed by armed militias -- the new moral guardians of Baghdad.

The two actors were part of the Happy Family Team, a troupe seen on television and adored by millions of children, the Times of London reported. Their troupe was part of an 11-day festival intended to help youngsters forget Baghdad's curfews, bombings and the dangers of daily life.

The group had been threatened by gunmen who objected to drama classes the company gave to children of all faiths and ethnic backgrounds, the newspaper said.

"We didn't take them seriously," said Safaa Eadi, 31, a founding member of Happy Family Team.

The troupe's building was burned down and, on the eve of the festival, Radi and Jawad were shot. Jawad died instantly and Radi was dragged from their van and beaten to death.

Surviving members of the group voted unanimously to go ahead with the pageant and have vowed to carry on.

(Excerpt) Read more at upi.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: iraq; iraqichildren
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To: floridaobserver

Savages? What high horse did you ride in on? If my tax dollars can free an oppressed people, then so be it. I didn't realize that in order to be free, a people had to be Madison Ave quality first.


21 posted on 04/22/2006 9:58:07 PM PDT by MissouriConservative (People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid - Kierkegaard)
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To: jmc1969

It's that old Taliban mentality. Time to stop the pussyfootin.'


22 posted on 04/22/2006 9:58:54 PM PDT by luvbach1 (More true now than ever: Near the belly of the beast in San Diego)
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To: Wormwood

Lets send Michael Savage first with all the pissed off, holier-than-thou paleocons and Buchananites. Maybe they will get lucky and just bitch the murderous fanatics to death.


PresidentFelon


23 posted on 04/22/2006 10:04:08 PM PDT by PresidentFelon
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To: PresidentFelon

No such luck. Paleocons will just say it is our fault for supporting Israel and we should just withdraw immediately.. Oh wait, was that a sarcasm post? :::Hits himself on the head:::


24 posted on 04/22/2006 10:09:03 PM PDT by IranIsNext
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To: jmc1969

You sound pretty confident about this. And I like the way you see it. I hope you're right.


25 posted on 04/22/2006 10:29:06 PM PDT by Nova
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To: jmc1969

Those poor kids over there. They never have a chance growing up under Islam.


26 posted on 04/22/2006 10:31:04 PM PDT by Fruitbat
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To: jmc1969

There seems to be no limit to their intolerance. They hate everything.


27 posted on 04/22/2006 10:32:49 PM PDT by KittyKares
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To: Nova

Here is a good article you might want to look at.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2136297,00.html


28 posted on 04/22/2006 10:34:45 PM PDT by jmc1969
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To: MissouriConservative

I second that.


29 posted on 04/22/2006 10:37:06 PM PDT by Sockdologer
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To: P.O.E.

like a hydra.


30 posted on 04/22/2006 11:22:59 PM PDT by Atchafalaya (When you're there, that's the best!!)
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To: MissouriConservative

I third that.


31 posted on 04/22/2006 11:37:22 PM PDT by American in Singapore (Liberals: Their ignorance and stupidity is becoming dangerous)
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To: jmc1969

Sounds logical and if what you say happens I will be dancing in the streets (along with some other friends).


32 posted on 04/22/2006 11:39:01 PM PDT by American in Singapore (Liberals: Their ignorance and stupidity is becoming dangerous)
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To: Atchafalaya
Ah, for the good old days....

"By pelting it with fiery shafts Hercules forced it to come out, and in the act of doing so he seized and held it fast. But the hydra wound itself about one of his feet and clung to him. Nor could he effect anything by smashing its heads with his club, for as fast as one head was killed another came to the help of the hydra by biting his foot. So he called for help on Iolaus who, by setting fire to a piece of the neighbouring wood and burning the roots of the heads with the brands, prevented them from sprouting. Having thus got the better of the sprouting heads, he chopped off the immortal head, and buried it, and put a heavy rock on it, beside the road that leads through Lerna to Elaeus." - Apollodorus


33 posted on 04/23/2006 7:15:21 AM PDT by P.O.E.
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To: Wormwood

When Colin Powell suggested that "You broke it---you bought it", I remember the chorus shouting him down.


That's at the Pottery Barn. Iraq ain't no Pottery Barn. Plus it was never not broke to begin with!

Looks like Bush may not have a choice if he loses control of either the House or Senate.


34 posted on 04/23/2006 8:23:09 AM PDT by floridaobserver
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To: MissouriConservative

Now it is our obligation to free all of the oppressed people in the world? That includes all of Africa, most of Asis, and South America. We can't even free Haiti.


35 posted on 04/23/2006 8:25:32 AM PDT by floridaobserver
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To: floridaobserver
"Now it is our obligation to free all of the oppressed people in the world? That includes all of Africa, most of Asis, and South America."

Yes. We are the ideal when people think of freedom. We are Reagan's city on a hill. What would the world think of our words when don't back them up with actions? They would think we are the democratic party! All our words, from then on, would be though of as hollow and sound bites, but nothing to believe. I believe we are the greatest nation on earth, the most powerful free country that has ever existetd. With that power and freedom come responsibility, the responsibility to help mankind reach what is bred within all of us, the yearning for freedom...freedom to be what you want to be, freedom to make mistakes and not pay with your life, freedom to choose who you want to marry, where you want to live and the freedom to elect who you want to elect, not some military junta that decided it knows best for you.

I'll leave you with words that stirred me as a young man....words from the greatest President this nation has ever seen....Ronald Reagan.

You can call it mysticism if you want to, but I have always believed that there was some divine plan that placed this great continent between two oceans to be sought out by those who were possessed of an abiding love of freedom and a special kind of courage.

This was true of those who pioneered the great wilderness in the beginning of this country, as it is also true of those later immigrants who were willing to leave the land of their birth and come to a land where even the language was unknown to them. Call it chauvinistic, but our heritage does not set us apart. Some years ago a writer, who happened to be an avid student of history, told me a story about that day in the little hall in Philadelphia where honorable men, hard-pressed by a King who was flouting the very law they were willing to obey, debated whether they should take the fateful step of declaring their independence from that king. I was told by this man that the story could be found in the writings of Jefferson. I confess, I never researched or made an effort to verify it. Perhaps it is only legend. But story, or legend, he described the atmosphere, the strain, the debate, and that as men for the first time faced the consequences of such an irretrievable act, the walls resounded with the dread word of treason and its price—the gallows and the headman's axe. As the day wore on the issue hung in the balance, and then, according to the story, a man rose in the small gallery. He was not a young man and was obviously calling on all the energy he could muster. Citing the grievances that had brought them to this moment he said, “Sign that parchment. They may turn every tree into a gallows, every home into a grave and yet the words of that parchment can never die. For the mechanic in his workshop, they will be words of hope, to the slave in the mines—freedom.” And he added, “If my hands were freezing in death, I would sign that parchment with my last ounce of strength. Sign, sign if the next moment the noose is around your neck, sign even if the hall is ringing with the sound of headman’s axe, for that parchment will be the textbook of freedom, the bible of the rights of man forever.” And then it is said he fell back exhausted. But 56 delegates, swept by his eloquence, signed the Declaration of Independence, a document destined to be as immortal as any work of man can be. And according to the story, when they turned to thank him for his timely oratory, he could not be found nor were there any who knew who he was or how he had come in or gone out through the locked and guarded doors.

Well, as I say, whether story or legend, the signing of the document that day in Independence Hall was miracle enough. Fifty-six men, a little band so unique—we have never seen their like since—pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor. Sixteen gave their lives, most gave their fortunes and all of them preserved their sacred honor. What manner of men were they? Certainly they were not an unwashed, revolutionary rebel, nor were then adventurers in a heroic mood. Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists, 11 were merchants and tradesmen, nine were farmers. They were men who would achieve security but valued freedom more.

And what price did they pay? John Hart was driven from the side of his desperately ill wife. After more than a year of living almost as an animal in the forest and in caves, he returned to find his wife had died and his children had vanished. He never saw them again, his property was destroyed and he died of a broken heart—but with no regret, only pride in the part he had played that day in Independence Hall. Carter Braxton of Virginia lost all his ships—they were sold to pay his debts. He died in rags. So it was with Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Rutledge, Morris, Livingston, and Middleton. Nelson, learning that Cornwallis was using his home for a headquarters, personally begged Washington to fire on him and destroy his home--he died bankrupt. It has never been reported that any of these men ever expressed bitterness or renounced their action as not worth the price. Fifty-six rank-and-file, ordinary citizens had founded a nation that grew from sea to shining sea, five million farms, quiet villages, cities that never sleep—all done without an area re-development plan, urban renewal or a rural legal assistance program.

Now we are a nation of 211 million people with a pedigree that includes blood lines from every corner of the world. We have shed that American-melting-pot blood in every corner of the world, usually in defense of someone's freedom. Those who remained of that remarkable band we call our Founding Fathers tied up some of the loose ends about a dozen years after the Revolution. It had been the first revolution in all man’s history that did not just exchange one set of rulers for another. This had been a philosophical revolution. The culmination of men's dreams for 6,000 years were formalized with the Constitution, probably the most unique document ever drawn in the long history of man's relation to man. I know there have been other constitutions, new ones are being drawn today by newly emerging nations. Most of them, even the one of the Soviet Union, contains many of the same guarantees as our own Constitution, and still there is a difference. The difference is so subtle that we often overlook it, but is is so great that it tells the whole story. Those other constitutions say, “Government grants you these rights” and ours says, “You are born with these rights, they are yours by the grace of God, and no government on earth can take them from you.” In recent years we have been treated to a rash of noble-sounding phrases. Some of them sound good, but they don't hold up under close analysis. Take for instance the slogan so frequently uttered by the young senator from Massachusetts, “The greatest good for the greatest number." Certainly under that slogan, no modern day Captain Ingraham would risk even the smallest craft and crew for a single citizen. Every dictator who ever lived has justified the enslavement of his people on the theory of what was good for the majority.

We are not a warlike people. Nor is our history filled with tales of aggressive adventures and imperialism, which might come as a shock to some of the placard painters in our modern demonstrations. The lesson of Vietnam, I think, should be that never again will young Americans be asked to fight and possibly die for a cause unless that cause is so meaningful that we, as a nation, pledge our full resources to achieve victory as quickly as possible.

I realize that such a pronouncement, of course, would possibly be laying one open to the charge of warmongering—but that would also be ridiculous. My generation has paid a higher price and has fought harder for freedom that any generation that had ever lived. We have known four wars in a single lifetime. All were horrible, all could have been avoided if at a particular moment in time we had made it plain that we subscribed to the words of John Stuart Mill when he said that “war is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things.”

The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks nothing is worth a war is worse. The man who has nothing which he cares about more than his personal safety is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.

Standing on the tiny deck of the Arabella in 1630 off the Massachusetts coast, John Winthrop said, “We will be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us, so that if we deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken and so cause Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword throughout the world.” Well, we have not dealt falsely with our God, even if He is temporarily suspended from the classroom.

Somehow America has bred a kindliness into our people unmatched anywhere, as has been pointed out in that best-selling record by a Canadian journalist. We are not a sick society. A sick society could not produce the men that set foot on the moon, or who are now circling the earth above us in the Skylab. A sick society bereft of morality and courage did not produce the men who went through those year of torture and captivity in Vietnam. Where did we find such men? They are typical of this land as the Founding Fathers were typical. We found them in our streets, in the offices, the shops and the working places of our country and on the farms.

We cannot escape our destiny, nor should we try to do so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon us two centuries ago in that little hall of Philadelphia. In the days following World War II, when the economic strength and power of America was all that stood between the world and the return to the dark ages, Pope Pius XII said, “The American people have a great genius for splendid and unselfish actions. Into the hands of America God has placed the destinies of an afflicted mankind.”

We are indeed, and we are today, the last best hope of man on earth.

Those words are plastered on my wall at home and at work, they are the words that keep the fire lit within my heart for America and for America's responsibility within the world. They are words no generation should ever forget.
36 posted on 04/23/2006 2:13:13 PM PDT by MissouriConservative (People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid - Kierkegaard)
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To: P.O.E.

Were it to happen exactly like that!!


37 posted on 04/23/2006 7:51:39 PM PDT by Atchafalaya (When you're there, that's the best!!)
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To: American in Singapore; jmc1969
See the article link in post #28.

I'm praying it goes well.

Either way, terror squads are already here and are increasing their presence and abilities; so emphasis may soon shift away from Iraq regardless.

38 posted on 04/24/2006 1:46:34 PM PDT by Nova
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