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Free LEBANON (from the syrian occupation) |
Yazan24 Joined: May 29, 2003 Posts: > 500 PM, WWW
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Ure not under real occupation, stop making it a big deal..
Are Syria killing people?
Taking and occupying land by kicking people out of their homes?
Bulldozing houses?
Thats the situation in many other countries, so STFU. |
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santo911 Joined: Oct 06, 2004 Posts: 223 From: Dubai PM |
Quote:
| On 2005-03-12 16:58:56, Yazan24 wrote: Ure not under real occupation, stop making it a big deal..
Are Syria killing people?
Taking and occupying land by kicking people out of their homes?
Bulldozing houses?
Thats the situation in many other countries, so STFU.
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WHO THE F.CK ARE U? PUNK! What THE HELL DO U KNOW ABOUT LEBANON AND SYRIA. THEY ARE TAKING MONEY FROM EVERY ECONOMIC SECTOR OF OUR COUNTRY! ITS A SILENT OCCUPATION! STOP SAYING SH.T AND DO SOME SEARCH WORK BEFORE TRYING TO BE WIZE
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tranquil Joined: Dec 15, 2001 Posts: > 500 From: Oslo, Norway PM |
@santo911
I'm NOT going to get involved it this "freedom fight" of yours but just a little info for you mate.
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On 2005-03-12 13:44:00, santo911 wrote:
My dream IS TO SEE SYRIA AS DESTROYED AS I SAW LEBANON IN 1990...
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Saying things like that will only get Esato members turing agains you and start a flamewar.
Replying to Yazan24, the way you just did, certainly ain't going to make it any better.
This topic is very politicaly loaded so keep this topic on a suttle level and it will stay open.
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Yazan24 Joined: May 29, 2003 Posts: > 500 PM, WWW
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OK I'll try to be more diplomatic about it.
Stealing money from the economics sector VS. Killing innocent people.
Immobile troops VS. Bulldozing house
Hmm.
I wonder which is worse.
And I did do my research, I know my stuff.
I truly believe that the SYRIA-LEBANON conflict is exaggerated.
Also how do they steal money from your economics sector.
The syrian people who live their invest in Lebanon encouraging economic development and growth.
Syrian investment in lebanon is very high.
I dont think you know what your talking about. I think you just a lebanese person who feels the need to exaggerate the situation.
Its only partial political occupation.
__________________
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Esato- The first Biased Sony Ericsson Forums
MP3 Ringtones? Oh yeah Laffen killed them.
[ This Message was edited by: Yazan24 on 2005-03-13 16:14 ] |
santo911 Joined: Oct 06, 2004 Posts: 223 From: Dubai PM |
IM NOT GOING TO RESPOND TO WHAT YAZAN SAID FOR HE DOESN'T KNOW WHAT HE IS SAYING. But i DEMAND THAT HIS POSTS GET ERASED FROM HERE, BECAUSE HE DONT EVEN KNOW 1% ABOUT OUR SITUATION HERE...
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Yazan24 Joined: May 29, 2003 Posts: > 500 PM, WWW
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I do know, I live in a neighboring country of lebanon, Jordan, I lived in lebanon for quite a while.
The Syrian occupation over lebanon is purely a political one. The syrian government has deeper political control than ever before. But many have debated that the syrian involvment is in the best interest of lebanon.
Also Syria is withdrawing very soon, hence it doesnt matter what you say here.
More developed countries such the USA, are trying to pressure Syria into withdrawing however whenever Syria suggests something they are insulted and claim it is not enough, this seems like another Iraq situation, where although inspectors said nothigns there, it was not enough for the US.
I do know what I am talking about,
I said Syria does not attack innocent people and kill them in Lebanon
CORRECT.
Syria has a partial positive impact through investment on the Lebanese Economy.
CORRECT.
Syria's occupation over Lebanon is almost completely political.
CORRECT.
You are probably a young teen who does not comprehend the situation completely, and is using the internet as a medium to spread the news, although its not effective since you dont have your facts straight.
-Kamikaze- Esato- The first Biased Sony Ericsson Forums MP3 Ringtones? Oh yeah Laffen killed them. |
Yazan24 Joined: May 29, 2003 Posts: > 500 PM, WWW
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he stench of hypocrisy in Bush’s calls for Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon is enough to require a gas mask. Bush and his friends in the Israeli and (yes) French governments pointedly demand an end to Syria’s “occupation” of Lebanon. Meanwhile, the U.S. is the biggest occupying power in the Middle East, maintaining 10 times as many troops in Iraq as Syria has in Lebanon. And Israel illegally occupies the West Bank, Gaza and Syria’s Golan Heights--occupations that have been widely condemned since 1967.
What’s more, for most of the last 30 years, the U.S. tolerated--and at times encouraged--the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. This history is so buried that even liberal writer Tom Engelhardt, author of the TomDispatch.com Web site, admitted that he didn’t know it until last month.
Syria intervened in 1976 during the Lebanese civil war, with the backing of the Arab League. With the Palestinian-allied left on the verge of routing the right in the war, Syria invaded Lebanon on the side of the right. The Syrian regime concluded that having a right-wing government allied with Israel in power in Lebanon was preferable to having a Lebanon controlled by leftist militias. Not coincidentally, the U.S. agreed. It acknowledged the “positive role that the Syrian government play[ed] in Lebanon.”
And Hezbollah is a Lebanese Militant Group not a Syrian, they just have an alliance with Syria.
Get your facts straight.
The demand of the Lebanese to get Syria out of their country has been growing for years. But it really gathered momentum when the Syrian-backed government unilaterally extended its mandate last September--at a time when it wasn’t clear whether Bush or John Kerry would be the next U.S. president.
The February assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri gave Bush Jr. and his Israeli allies an opportunity to win a longstanding strategic aim that has nothing to do with supporting “democracy” in Lebanon. Both the U.S. and Israel view Syria, with its alliance with Iran and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, as one obstacle to their total control of the Middle East. Weakening Syria by means of supporting its Lebanese opponents is certainly preferable to the U.S. than sending in the Marines.
By the way, the last time that the U.S. mounted a full-scale invasion of Lebanon, in 1958, the Eisenhower administration was trying to quell a popular uprising that erupted after the U.S. tried to extend the mandate of a right-wing government that was widely expected to lose upcoming democratic elections.
-Kamikaze- Esato- The first Biased Sony Ericsson Forums MP3 Ringtones? Oh yeah Laffen killed them. |
tranquil Joined: Dec 15, 2001 Posts: > 500 From: Oslo, Norway PM |
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On 2005-03-13 23:02:00, santo911 wrote:
IM NOT GOING TO RESPOND TO WHAT YAZAN SAID
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Well, since you state it as clearly as that I'll let Yazan24 have the last post in this discussion.
Feel free to continue via PM or exchange phone numbers.
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Access the forum with a mobile phone via esato.mobi
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