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« British Terrorism Threat Level Reduced After June Report | Main | Tom Tancredo: Nuke Mecca »
July 19, 2005

Don't Question Their Patriotism, Part Six Bazillion and Ninety-Five Of An Ongoing Series

Detailed brief against the anti-anti-terrorist left. I guess it's too far to say that most of these organizations are actually pro-terrorist, but there's not much sunshine between being pro-terrorist and "merely" being anti-anti-terrorist.

I had not heard this. It's so shocking I sort of question the provenance of the report. But if true, Great Odin's Raven, this is disgusting:

The FBI may have also been alarmed that the protests enjoyed the professional organizing skills of Leslie Cagan and Medea Benjamin, who boasts of her role in the violent and costly anti-World Trade Organization riots. Benjamin’s organization Code Pink donated $600,000 in money and supplies to “the other side” in the terrorist stronghold of Fallujah, Iraq.

The article is a rebuttal to left-wing organizations' constant complaints that the FBI is collecting fat dossiers on them. Well, at the risk of stating the obvious, when you send money and supplies to our terrorist enemies killing our soldiers and Iraqi civilians, that sort of piques the government's interest, non?


posted by Ace at 01:39 PM
Comments



Zeus's beard! What were they thinking.

Posted by: The Colossus on July 19, 2005 01:52 PM

I'm thinking
"Aid and comfort to the enemy"

Posted by: Iblis on July 19, 2005 02:11 PM

And Henry Waxman authorized it.

Posted by: Phil Smith on July 19, 2005 02:24 PM

Hardly shocking.

Posted by: Sean M. on July 19, 2005 02:53 PM

Damn but I'd love to see a bunch of these weenies rounded up and shot for treason. Publically advocating resistance to the government's policies is constitutionally guaranteed fredom of speech; actually giving the enemy money and supplies is friggin treason, clear and simple. The problem however is the social backlash. The tougher the government is on these people, the more traction they get. Since it is the great "Undecided" in the middle who actually decide our elections, it is political suicide to even prosecute them for these acts. The best thing that can be done is probably to expose them by publishing the names and addresses of their donors on the internet and let the comon people as they say "police themselves." I've already banned everything with a Levi's lable from my house because of their indiscriminant support of gun control. I wouldn't have any qualms about not patronizing businesses who's officers were on the Code Pink trators list.

Posted by: Dacotti on July 19, 2005 03:37 PM

I wouldn't have any qualms about not patronizing businesses who's officers were on the Code Pink trators list.

I've been saying for years that nothing will change visa-vie that Left until the right begins to use the power of the boycott en masse. So far, it has been ignored. But it really is the only way to deal with these traitors for no matter how much money the George Soros' have to support them (which I suspect is why conservative boycotts have failed) sooner or later they'll have to stop aiding and abetting them, especially when the right effectively boysotts their personal businesses.

THE RIGHT MUST BOYCOTT!!!

Posted by: 72 VIRGINS on July 19, 2005 03:54 PM

Great Odin's Raven


Haaa! ...finally got a chance to watch it the other night.

Weirdest flick I've seen in a long time. Every other scene seemed to have me wondering..."where in the hell are they going with this?"

Posted by: on July 19, 2005 04:31 PM

Ooops...that was me btw.

You and youz "remember personal info?" crapola 'n sheeeit : D

Posted by: The Ugly American on July 19, 2005 04:32 PM
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What? Skeleton of the most famous Musketeer, D'Artagnan, possibly discovered in Dutch church closet.
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Charles de Batz de Castelmore, known as d'Artagnan, the famous musketeer of Kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV, spent his life in the service of the French crown.
The Gascon nobleman inspired Alexandre Dumas's hero in "The Three Musketeers" in the 19th century, a character now known worldwide thanks to the novel and numerous film adaptations.
D'Artagnan was killed during the siege of Maastricht in 1673, and there is a statue honoring the musketeer in the city. His final resting place has remained a mystery ever since.

A lot of Dumas's stories are based on bits of real history. The plot of the >Three Musketeers, about trying to recover lost diamonds from the queen's necklace, was cribbed from the then-almost-contemporaneous Affair of the Queen's Necklace. And the Man in the Iron Mask is based on real accounts of a prisoner forced to wear a mask (though I think it was a velvet mask).
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I noticed a continuity problem. Maybe. Now, as of the time of The Hobbit, it was unknown that this magic ring was in fact a Ring of Power, and it was doubly unknown that it was the Ring of Power, the Master Ring that controlled the others.
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