Posted on 12/29/2006 9:11:00 AM PST by AVNevis
But they didn't go into the shelter, stayed outside of it in the armored vehicle.
Do you say tornadoes or tornados.
North Hills is where I will be spending my summers now...nice little development for working people.
LOL!!! (but probably true) Wonder if they will be wearing armbands tomorrow?
So...izzee daid yet?
His body should be run through a wood chipper and then fed to a herd of hogs. Then give each family member a hog.
LOL! Quite so.
... still..., then.
Will there be punkin pie?
The whole family should be hung with him, IMO.
Pure Genius
If I can keep the stream, and I spoke Arabic, it would be groovy.
"CNN presstitute whining that this has disrupted the sleep cycles of those in Iraq."
Sounds like legitimate grounds for one righteous jihad if you ask me. / sarc off
Move over, sons. Daddy's on his way.
I just have a queasy feeling--I don't fully trust the Iraqis to go through with it.
I'll be glad when it's done and over.
A Song for the Occasion:
Saddam's roasting on an open fire--
Devils nipping at his toes,
Although it's been said, many times, many ways:
"SAYONARA, A$$hole!"
I can't wait to see his picture in the same condition.
Daddy might have grown a couple inches in height and more than a couple in girth in prison though.
Keep that handy... you can add their daddy soon.
U.S. court refuses to spare Iraqi
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A U.S. appeals court refused to block the military from sending a former top Iraqi official to his death Friday. A similar request by former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is pending before a federal judge in Washington.
Awad Hamed al-Bandar, the former chief justice of the Revolutionary Court, was convicted and sentenced alongside Saddam. He asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to order the military not to turn him over to Iraqi officials.
The appeals court issued only a short order denying al-Bandar's request, removing a procedural hurdle before the execution is to be carried out.
Al-Bandar argued that his trial violated his rights under the U.S. Constitution, but the Justice Department argued that foreigners being tried in foreign courts are not protected by the U.S. Constitution.
bttt
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