.
VR
DrowVampire's Journal


DrowVampire's Journal

THIS JOURNAL IS ON 47 FAVORITE JOURNAL LISTS

Honor: 0    [ Give / Take ]

PROFILE




10 entries this month
 

I had an interesting night out ....

17:58 Sep 30 2006
Times Read: 747


I had an interesting night out .... last night.



Drove around 9 girls and 3 guys around Calgary on a 'drinking' tour



One girl, nice girl, seems confortable with herself, a little short, industrial strength glasses; held my interest for about 2 hours. One of the tour guys wanted to know what she does for a living, she says "I cant tell you"



She told me this, and I asked her the same question. Same answer.



Logically, the only 2 jobs I am think of that would have any woman answer like that, is "stripper" or "prostitute"



I did not tell her that, kind of pointless I guess.



I wonder ....


COMMENTS

-



 

Hello HeartBreak

16:59 Sep 30 2006
Times Read: 752


Strange, we had a good relationship.



But she did even refusing to tell me about her life in great detail. Which made me nervous.



I miss her, now it seems: her yahoo messager account may have been deleted as is her 2 VR accounts.



After over 2 weeks, still no response from her on IM, I tried phoning, now she put a block on her phone from my number. So I know she's home, and not 'kidnapped' by her friend again.



She never still one word to me, I dont know whats going on at all.



Except that sounds like a "good bye"



Good bye Lana.



Hello HeartBreak ....


COMMENTS

-



 

The dumbing of South Africa

01:25 Sep 29 2006
Times Read: 755


The stupidity sweeping the nation is a good dress rehearsal for what life would be like under a Zuma presidency, writes Mondli Makhanya



24 September 2006




AND so we find ourselves, at this point in our evolution as a nation, glumly staring into the future with trepidation. For the first time since that hopeful 1994 dawn, we are uncertain about what tomorrow may hold. Respected commentators have painted a gloomy picture of life under a President Jacob Zuma.



Scenarios of a South Africa in which the foundation that has been laid over the past 12 years will begin to crack; scenarios of a free-for-all South Africa that will be governed by a man who owes favours to dodgy arms dealers, back-street businessmen and all manner of disjointed lobby groups.



But will it really be that bad? Probably not. In a country of 45 million people, one would assume there will be checks against that slide.



Nonetheless, what we see through the prism is rather frightening. Through this prism we see thuggish shirt-burning, armed mobs who dislike the orderly society that the current regime has turned this country into over the past decade. We see crooked Western businessmen treating us like they do other developing nations.



We hear incoherent noises coming from the mouths of those who would most likely shape and influence policy if Zuma were to become president.



We see a nation descending into stupidity.



The past year has been a period in which a country once capable of intelligent conversation turned into a nation of babbling fools.



Take some of this week’s happenings at the Congress of South African Trade Union’s gathering in Midrand, Gauteng.



On Monday, as delegates broke into song in praise of the Cosatu leadership, general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi took the microphone and told them to change their tune.



“Sing that new song,” he urged them, “the one about the dog.”



And they did.



“Thina ngoZuma sobulala igovu lenja [We will kill this big ugly dog for Zuma].”



To Vavi’s disappointment, they did not sing it with gusto, but that moment set a tone for the entire congress. This big ugly dog, a thinly veiled reference to President Thabo Mbeki( or anyone seen to be close to him), was at the receiving end of much venom at the congress.



As was Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, who had been invited by the Cosatu leadership to speak about how she would carry out her new task as Aids czar. She told the delegates — or at least tried to — that she would devote her energy to ending the war between the government and civil society on Aids, and focus the nation’s attention on the job at hand.



Instead of applauding this fresh approach, the delegates only wanted to nail her for being the wife of Bulelani Ngcuka, the man who initiated investigations into Zuma’s “generally corrupt relationship” with Scha-

bir Shaik.



They drowned her out with songs denouncing her husband. She left the stage humiliated and degraded.



Sidney Mufamadi, a Cosatu founding father who is now perceived to be too close to the “big, ugly dog” that is the nation’s President, was also shouted down when he tried to present the ANC’s perspective on the transforming society.



The only ANC leaders who received rapturous welcomes were Zuma himself (at that point a corruption accused) and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, who has two common-law criminal convictions to her name.



And so it went, on and on. A trade union federation which has been the incubator for some of the country’s brightest leaders had been transformed into a noisy fish-market.



The scenes at the Cosatu conference were not out of kilter with the current climate in South Africa.



In recent months, we have heard a senior union leader denounce the Ten Commandments because they did not fit in with Zuma’s lifestyle, a youth leader call for university vice-chancellors to be beaten up because they dared question the integrity of the generally corrupt great leader, and a teenager being given a platform to demand of Archbishop Desmond Tutu that he reveal his sexual history.



It would be nice to regard these as dismissable quirks, foolish heat-of-the-moment statements. Except that they are not.



They are symptoms of the pandemic of stupidity that is sweeping across the land.



This is what the Jacob Zuma saga has done to us. It has caused us to suspend our thinking capacity.



How did we get here? Is it just a case of us mimicking the intellectual capacity of the man who would be leader, that has turned us into dolts?



Inasmuch as many would like to believe so, this is not the case. In fact, it is quite the opposite.



It is our refusal to be ourselves that has landed us in this situation. It is the refusal of South Africa to draw on its very rich intellectual and activist culture that has short-changed us.



The irony of the South African situation is that the intellectual Mbeki presidency has made South Africans feel mentally inadequate. We wait for the President to pronounce on major issues before we feel something is worth debating.



The question of our identity was not on the agenda until Mbeki made his famous “I am an African” speech.



We had not seriously considered the obvious racial cleavages until he told us we were a country of two nations — one predominantly black and poor and the other largely white and affluent.



There had been only muted debate about our crass materialism until a few months ago, when the President urged us to reconsider our values. There are plenty more examples of us waiting for permission from the top before we can broach the simplest of subjects.



The fact is that while we accuse Mbeki of appropriating power to himself, we have voluntarily handed over our collective brain to him. He does all our thinking and our agenda setting and we just limp lamely behind him. Even when he asks us to engage with him, all we do is look upon him with awe or disdain. Without him, it seems, we cannot initiate any thinking projects.



This is one of the main reasons we fear a Zuma presidency. We are afraid of what we will become once our collective brain is taken away.



Who will think for us? Who will lead our policy interrogation? Who will construct and manage the complex web that is our governance matrix? Who will engage with world leaders and global corporate captains on the same level that Mbeki has?



We look into the future and all we see is the dancing, prancing serial accused. And we fear.



Zuma’s supporters — so dwarfed, intimidated and alienated by the pipe-smoking intellectual — warm to the entertainer. In him they see someone they can have fun with. They see someone who will give the nation a great big street party.



As the sun sets on the Mbeki presidency, our High Courts become a theatre where the people look for light relief. And Zuma, the man who has turned those buildings into his entertainment stage, has become for them a reprieve from an intellectual presidency.



So maybe in Zuma we will get the president we deserve, a leader who, while not understanding the complex matrix that is governance and policymaking, will at least not make us feel intellectually inferior.



He will lead us in song, dance with us and make us forget our misplaced ambitions of wanting to sit at the top table of the world’s great nations.



That is why the stupidity that is sweeping the nation is a good dress rehearsal for what possibly awaits us in the next three years.



This week many South Africans began to make peace with the fact that this may be our future. Those with an aversion to order partied into the night, looking forward to a future in which shady merchants and confused leftists will form an unholy alliance.



Thinking South Africans looked on in dismay and wondered why this nation was so eager to take 12 steps backwards and undo its gains.



But these thinking South Africans felt helpless in this situation. There was nothing they could do about it.



The President was in New York, addressing the United Nations General Assembly. Perhaps when he got back, they murmured among themselves, he will think us out of this.



*******



South Africa's state broadcaster was guilty of barring six prominent government critics from the airwaves, a leaked report says.



The report said the exclusions were "indefensible" and singled out head of news Snuki Zikalala for his "inappropriate" interventions.



South African Broadcast Commission (SABC) itself commissioned the report but has not released its findings in full.



SABC's chief executive Dali Mpofu said the report vindicated his position that there was no blacklist.



'Restricted views'



Although SABC has released only a summary of the report's findings, the Mail & Guardian newspaper obtained a full copy and has published lengthy excerpts.



'GAGGED' CRITICS

Moeletsi Mbeki

Karima Brown

Aubrey Matshiqi

William Gumede

Sipho Seepe

Trevor Ncube

Elinor Sisulu, activist

Archbishop Pius Ncube



The report into whether SABC guidelines had been broken was commissioned after accusations that Mr Zikalala barred certain political analysts from news and current affairs programmes.



It says six commentators and two campaigners, who want South Africa to take a tougher line with Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, were affected.



They include Moeletsi Mbeki, the president's brother, who has often criticised South Africa's economic policy.



The leaked excerpts say that terms such as "blacklist" and "banning" are "beside the point".



But it says: "The underlying problem is the exclusion of particular individuals for reasons which are not objectively defensible.



"This situation restricts the range of views available to South Africans who depend on the SABC to provide them with the information upon which they make their democratic choices."



The report says Mr Zikalala intervened "at a micro-level inappropriate to his level of management... which can only impact appropriately on morale".



The report finds it "not implausible" that decisions were taken "to avoid the censure, real or perceived, of Mr Zikalala".



Former head of news Pippa Green wrote to Mr Zikalala to complain but, according to the Mail & Guardian, received the reply: "I don't think I have the time and energy to be involved in such arguments."



BBC Southern Africa correspondent Peter Biles says the SABC appears to be standing by Mr Zikalala and says it is confident that he can carry out his duties.



But our correspondent says the widespread perception is of a public broadcaster increasingly inclined to exercise self-censorship in support of the ANC-led government.



Mr Mpofu strongly defended the SABC, saying the report found "no political motive".



He added: "The point that I am making, that I will make to my grave, is that there's no blacklist."

COMMENTS

-



 

Prisoners

17:54 Sep 17 2006
Times Read: 814


U.S. war prisons legal vacuum for 14,000







By PATRICK QUINN, Associated Press Writer



BAGHDAD, Iraq - In the few short years since the first shackled Afghan shuffled off to Guantanamo, the U.S. military has created a global network of overseas prisons, its islands of high security keeping 14,000 detainees beyond the reach of established law.



Disclosures of torture and long-term arbitrary detentions have won rebuke from leading voices including the U.N. secretary-general and the

U.S. Supreme Court. But the bitterest words come from inside the system, the size of several major U.S. penitentiaries.



"It was hard to believe I'd get out," Baghdad shopkeeper Amjad Qassim al-Aliyawi told The Associated Press after his release — without charge — last month. "I lived with the Americans for one year and eight months as if I was living in hell."



Captured on battlefields, pulled from beds at midnight, grabbed off streets as suspected insurgents, tens of thousands now have passed through U.S. detention, the vast majority in

Iraq.



Many say they were caught up in U.S. military sweeps, often interrogated around the clock, then released months or years later without apology, compensation or any word on why they were taken. Seventy to 90 percent of the Iraq detentions in 2003 were "mistakes," U.S. officers once told the international Red Cross.



Defenders of the system, which has only grown since soldiers' photos of abuse at

Abu Ghraib shocked the world, say it's an unfortunate necessity in the battles to pacify Iraq and

Afghanistan, and to keep suspected terrorists out of action.



Every U.S. detainee in Iraq "is detained because he poses a security threat to the government of Iraq, the people of Iraq or coalition forces," said U.S. Army Lt. Col. Keir-Kevin Curry, a spokesman for U.S.-led military detainee operations in Iraq.



But dozens of ex-detainees, government ministers, lawmakers, human rights activists, lawyers and scholars in Iraq, Afghanistan and the United States said the detention system often is unjust and hurts the war on terror by inflaming anti-Americanism in Iraq and elsewhere.



Building for the Long Term



Reports of extreme physical and mental abuse, symbolized by the notorious Abu Ghraib prison photos of 2004, have abated as the

Pentagon has rejected torture-like treatment of the inmates. Most recently, on Sept. 6, the Pentagon issued a new interrogation manual banning forced nakedness, hooding, stress positions and other abusive techniques.



The same day,

President Bush said the

CIA's secret outposts in the prison network had been emptied, and 14 terror suspects from them sent to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to face trial in military tribunals. The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down the tribunal system, however, and the White House and Congress are now wrestling over the legal structure of such trials.



Living conditions for detainees may be improving as well. The U.S. military cites the toilets of Bagram, Afghanistan: In a cavernous old building at that air base, hundreds of detainees in their communal cages now have indoor plumbing and privacy screens, instead of exposed chamber pots.



Whatever the progress, small or significant, grim realities persist.



Human rights groups count dozens of detainee deaths for which no one has been punished or that were never explained. The secret prisons — unknown in number and location — remain available for future detainees. The new manual banning torture doesn't cover CIA interrogators. And thousands of people still languish in a limbo, deprived of one of common law's oldest rights, habeas corpus, the right to know why you are imprisoned.



"If you, God forbid, are an innocent Afghan who gets sold down the river by some warlord rival, you can end up at Bagram and you have absolutely no way of clearing your name," said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch in New York. "You can't have a lawyer present evidence, or do anything organized to get yourself out of there."



The U.S. government has contended it can hold detainees until the "war on terror" ends — as it determines.



"I don't think we've gotten to the question of how long," said retired admiral John D. Hutson, former top lawyer for the

U.S. Navy. "When we get up to 'forever,' I think it will be tested" in court, he said.



The Navy is planning long-term at Guantanamo. This fall it expects to open a new, $30-million maximum-security wing at its prison complex there, a concrete-and-steel structure replacing more temporary camps.



In Iraq, Army jailers are a step ahead. Last month they opened a $60-million, state-of-the-art detention center at Camp Cropper, near Baghdad's airport. The Army oversees about 13,000 prisoners in Iraq at Cropper, Camp Bucca in the southern desert, and Fort Suse in the Kurdish north.



Neither prisoners of war nor criminal defendants, they are just "security detainees" held "for imperative reasons of security," spokesman Curry said, using language from an annex to a

U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing the U.S. presence here.



Questions of Law, Sovereignty



President Bush laid out the U.S. position in a speech Sept. 6.



"These are enemy combatants who are waging war on our nation," he said. "We have a right under the laws of war, and we have an obligation to the American people, to detain these enemies and stop them from rejoining the battle."



But others say there's no need to hold these thousands outside of the rules for prisoners of war established by the Geneva Conventions.



U.N. Secretary-General

Kofi Annan declared last March that the extent of arbitrary detention here is "not consistent with provisions of international law governing internment on imperative reasons of security."



Meanwhile, officials of Nouri al-Maliki's 4-month-old Iraqi government say the U.S. detention system violates Iraq's national rights.



"As long as sovereignty has transferred to Iraqi hands, the Americans have no right to detain any Iraqi person," said Fadhil al-Sharaa, an aide to the prime minister. "The detention should be conducted only with the permission of the Iraqi judiciary."



At the Justice Ministry, Deputy Minister Busho Ibrahim told AP it has been "a daily request" that the detainees be brought under Iraqi authority.



There's no guarantee the Americans' 13,000 detainees would fare better under control of the Iraqi government, which U.N. officials say holds 15,000 prisoners.



But little has changed because of these requests. When the Americans formally turned over Abu Ghraib prison to Iraqi control on Sept. 2, it was empty but its 3,000 prisoners remained in U.S. custody, shifted to Camp Cropper.



Life in Custody



The cases of U.S.-detained Iraqis are reviewed by a committee of U.S. military and Iraqi government officials. The panel recommends criminal charges against some, release for others. As of Sept. 9, the Central Criminal Court of Iraq had put 1,445 on trial, convicting 1,252. In the last week of August, for example, 38 were sentenced on charges ranging from illegal weapons possession to murder, for the shooting of a U.S. Marine.



Almost 18,700 have been released since June 2004, the U.S. command says, not including many more who were held and then freed by local military units and never shipped to major prisons.



Some who were released, no longer considered a threat, later joined or rejoined the insurgency.



The review process is too slow, say U.N. officials. Until they are released, often families don't know where their men are — the prisoners are usually men — or even whether they're in American hands.



Ex-detainee Mouayad Yasin Hassan, 31, seized in April 2004 as a suspected Sunni Muslim insurgent, said he wasn't allowed to obtain a lawyer or contact his family during 13 months at Abu Ghraib and Bucca, where he was interrogated incessantly. When he asked why he was in prison, he said, the answer was, "We keep you for security reasons."



Another released prisoner, Waleed Abdul Karim, 26, recounted how his guards would wield their absolute authority.



"Tell us about the ones who attack Americans in your neighborhood," he quoted an interrogator as saying, "or I will keep you in prison for another 50 years."



As with others, Karim's confinement may simply have strengthened support for the anti-U.S. resistance. "I will hate Americans for the rest of my life," he said.



As bleak and hidden as the Iraq lockups are, the Afghan situation is even less known. Accounts of abuse and deaths emerged in 2002-2004, but if Abu Ghraib-like photos from Bagram exist, none have leaked out. The U.S. military is believed holding about 500 detainees — most Afghans, but also apparently Arabs, Pakistanis and Central Asians.



The United States plans to cede control of its Afghan detainees by early next year, five years after invading Afghanistan to eliminate al-Qaida's base and bring down the Taliban government. Meanwhile, the prisoners of Bagram exist in a legal vacuum like that elsewhere in the U.S. detention network.



"There's been a silence about Bagram, and much less political discussion about it," said Richard Bennett, chief U.N. human rights officer in Afghanistan.



Freed detainees tell how in cages of 16 inmates they are forbidden to speak to each other. They wear the same orange jumpsuits and shaven heads as the terrorist suspects at Guantanamo, but lack even the scant legal rights granted inmates at that Cuba base. In some cases, they have been held without charge for three to four years, rights workers say.



Guantanamo received its first prisoners from Afghanistan — chained, wearing blacked-out goggles — in January 2002. A total of 770 detainees were sent there. Its population today of Afghans, Arabs and others, stands at 455.



Described as the most dangerous of America's "war on terror" prisoners, only 10 of the Guantanamo inmates have been charged with crimes. Charges are expected against 14 other al-Qaida suspects flown in to Guantanamo from secret prisons on Sept. 4.



Plans for their trials are on hold, however, because of a Supreme Court ruling in June against the Bush administration's plan for military tribunals.



The court held the tribunals were not authorized by the U.S. Congress and violated the Geneva Conventions by abrogating prisoners' rights. In a sometimes contentious debate, the White House and Congress are trying to agree on a new, acceptable trial plan.



Since the court decision, and after four years of confusing claims that terrorist suspects were so-called "unlawful combatants" unprotected by international law, the Bush administration has taken steps recognizing that the Geneva Conventions' legal and human rights do extend to imprisoned al-Qaida militants. At the same time, however, the new White House proposal on tribunals retains such controversial features as denying defendants access to some evidence against them.



In his Sept. 6 speech, Bush acknowledged for the first time the existence of the CIA's secret prisons, believed established at military bases or safehouses in such places as Egypt, Indonesia and eastern Europe. That network, uncovered by journalists, had been condemned by U.N. authorities and investigated by the Council of Europe.



The clandestine jails are now empty, Bush announced, but will remain a future option for CIA detentions and interrogation.



Louise Arbour, U.N. human rights chief, is urging Bush to abolish the CIA prisons altogether, as ripe for "abusive conduct." The CIA's techniques for extracting information from prisoners still remain secret, she noted.



Meanwhile, the U.S. government's willingness to resort to "extraordinary rendition," transferring suspects to other nations where they might be tortured, appears unchanged.



Prosecutions and Memories



The exposure of sadistic abuse, torture and death at Abu Ghraib two years ago touched off a flood of courts-martial of mostly lower-ranking U.S. soldiers. Overall, about 800 investigations of alleged detainee mistreatment in Iraq and Afghanistan have led to action against more than 250 service personnel, including 89 convicted at courts-martial, U.S. diplomats told the

United Nations in May.



Critics protest that penalties have been too soft and too little has been done, particularly in tracing inhumane interrogation methods from the far-flung islands of the overseas prison system back to policies set by high-ranking officials.



In only 14 of 34 cases has anyone been punished for the confirmed or suspected killings of detainees, the New York-based Human Rights First reports. The stiffest sentence in a torture-related death has been five months in jail. The group reported last February that in almost half of 98 detainee deaths, the cause was either never announced or reported as undetermined.



Looking back, the United States overreacted in its treatment of detainees after Sept. 11, said Anne-Marie Slaughter, a noted American scholar of international law.



It was understandable, the Princeton University dean said, but now "we have to restore a balance between security and rights that is consistent with who we are and consistent with our security needs."



Otherwise, she said, "history will look back and say that we took a dangerous and deeply wrong turn."



Back here in Baghdad, at the Alawi bus station, a gritty, noisy hub far from the meeting rooms of Washington and Geneva, women gather with fading hopes whenever a new prisoner release is announced.



As she watched one recent day for a bus from distant Camp Bucca, one mother wept and told her story.



"The Americans arrested my son, my brother and his friend," said Zahraa Alyat, 42. "The Americans arrested them October 16, 2005. They left together and I don't know anything about them."



The bus pulled up. A few dozen men stepped off, some blindfolded, some bound, none with any luggage, none with familiar faces.



As the distraught women straggled away once more, one ex-prisoner, 18-year-old Bilal Kadhim Muhssin, spotted U.S. troops nearby.



"Americans," he muttered in fear. "Oh, my God, don't say that name," and he bolted for a city bus, and freedom.



___



EDITOR'S NOTE — The Associated Press staff in Baghdad and AP writers Andrew Selsky in San Juan, Puerto Rico; Matthew Pennington in Kabul, Afghanistan; Anne Plummer Flaherty in Washington, and Charles J. Hanley in New York contributed to this report.


COMMENTS

-



 

Goths will get blame ..... ?

03:09 Sep 15 2006
Times Read: 819


From BBC news (live bookmarks)



Police in Canada have named the gunman who went on a shooting spree in a Montreal college, killing a young woman, as 25-year-old Kimveer Gill.



Gill, from Montreal, wounded 19 others in his gun rampage before being killed in a shootout with police.



Six people remain critical care following the attack at Dawson College.



Gill had a blog on VampireFreaks.Com in which he posed with guns and referred to himself as an "Angel of Death".



His blog contains a photo gallery of more than 50 pictures showing the young man in a variety of poses with different guns and wearing a long black trench coat.



'Emotionless'



"His name is Trench," he wrote in his profile. "You will come to know him as the Angel of Death."



Clad in black and carrying three weapons, Gill opened fire outside Dawson College, then entered the canteen when it was crowded with students and staff during lunch hour on Wednesday, witnesses say.




I didnt say its anyone's fault.



VampireRave might be in the 'crosshairs' of some parents now, as VampireFreaks.



A few months ago, a young woman from Saskatchewan I think, from VampireFreaks too, was taken to court from abetting a felon accused of murder.



When Columbine happened, some blame when to Doom and Duke Nukem.



VampireFranks and VampireRave might end up in the BLAME catagory too over this.

COMMENTS

-



 

Smokers

03:21 Sep 14 2006
Times Read: 824


Will you bloody dumb asses realize just how much you stink after smoking ?



Oftentimes enough to take my breath away.



Smoking fowls up a house, clings to clothes, walls and furniture.



I HATE CIGARS AND CIGARETTES !



Repulsive smell !


COMMENTS

-



 

What I did on 9/11 2001

02:34 Sep 09 2006
Times Read: 831


I was fired from my full time job about 4 weeks earlier, I had a midnight shift job that night.



I woke up at 9:45, waking up slowly. I turned the TV on at 10:56, Star Trek DS9 starts at 11. But City TV instead is Live at the CN tower, telling the viewers the Tower is being evacuated in respect for the WTC victims.



Question I have: What the Fuck is this WTC? I never heard of it before. Expect for the mention of a some bombing years ago.



I am very angry, no DS9.



I get on my chat room Africam. 50 % of the regulars is in North America. Total confusion in there too. Slowly I learned what happened.



By 1500, I finally know what the WTC is and I feel confused and scared as hell.



My friend Claire is missing in NYC. Her parents cant reach her by phone. Panic!



Claire planned to visit WTC.



2200 now, I am at work, my typing speed is down to 10 words/min. I am capable of 35 to 43 wpm. All of us temps are listening to the radio. I get fired since I cant type fast enough.



1 day later, I phoned home. Turned out Claire and her friends stayed in the harbour. She's alive.



I am really scared, the world changed.



My aunt says doomsday is coming, the final war: Christians vs Muslims.


COMMENTS

-



 

Months after 9/11 2001

02:28 Sep 09 2006
Times Read: 833


November and December 2001, I start to realize what THE most documented day in history has more plot holes then Rick Berman and Braga's writing efforts.



This is pure BS, pure lies we are being told here.



I phone in to RFRB 1010, I see this pending Iraq war will be terrible, thousands of civilians will die, and the Americans wont get a damn. "let them die!" attitude.



Days before the Iraq war started, I got warned in my usual chat server about my new quit message "to George W Bush: Whats in your head ? Whats in your head? zombie !"



I refused to change my quit message, I was got banned. Its odd, the mosiac of Africam chatters is from all over the world, less than 30% of regulars is in North America.



Today, Sept 8 2006, George W Bush, calls himself a "war time president"



His scoreboard

Wins: 0

Losses: 4



Since the "major conflict was declared over", I am quite pleased when I hear US soldiers killed in Iraq. Bush's "private little war" is costing $500 per second!



And for what ?



What the "war against Terrorism" is accomplishing though is an evil type of genius.

* Create Muslims who hate the US, they will attack it.

* Thus the military will keep growing and growing. The funding for the armed forces will be there.



I believe bin Laden was framed for 9/11



And/or the Americans aren't even looking for him. He's far more dangerous "out there, plotting"



Bush and others encourage Americans to be fearful. Benefitting the armed forces.


COMMENTS

-



 

Terrorism, The High Ground

01:19 Sep 08 2006
Times Read: 836


From Star Trek TNG



DATA: Captain, I am finding it difficult to understand many aspects of Ansata conduct. Much of their behavioral norm would be defined by my program as unnecessary and unacceptable.



CAPTAIN PICARD: And by my... "program" as well, Data.



DATA: But, if that is so, Captain, why are their methods often successful?

I have been reviewing the history of armed rebellion and it appears that terrorism is an effective way to promote political change.



PICARD: I have never subscribed to the theory that political power flows from the barrel of a gun, Data...



DATA: In most instances, you would be correct. But there are numerous examples where it was successful... the independence of the Mexican State from Spain, the Irish Unification of 2024,

the Kenzie Rebellion...



PICARD: Yes, I'm aware of them...



DATA: Then, would it be accurate to say that terrorism is acceptable when the options for peaceful settlement have been foreclosed?



PICARD: Data, we cannot condone violence.



DATA: Even in response to violence?



(Picard looks at him)



PICARD: These are questions that mankind has been struggling with since creation. I am afraid your confusion, Data... is only human.

COMMENTS

-



 

Humour

01:21 Sep 07 2006
Times Read: 838


The Boer Computer Dictionary from South Africa



Monitor - Keeping an eye on the braai



Download - Get the firewood off the bakkie



Hard drive - Trip back home without any cold beer



Keyboard - Where you hang the bakkie and bike keys



Window - What you shut when it's cold



Screen - What you shut in the mosquito season



Byte - What mosquitoes do



Bit - What mosquitoes did



Mega Byte - What mosquitoes at the dam do



Chip - A bar snack



Micro Chip - What's left in the bag after you have eaten the chips



Modem - What you did to the lawns



Dot Matrix - Oom Jan Matrix's wife



Laptop - Where the cat sleeps



Software - Plastic knives and forks you get at KFC



Hardware - Real stainless steel knives and forks from Checkers



Mouse - What eats the grain in the shed



Mainframe - What holds the shed up



Web - What spiders make



Web Site - The shed (or under the verandah)



Cursor - The old bloke that swears a lot



Search Engine - What you do when the bakkie won't go



Yahoo - What you say when the bakkie does go



Upgrade - A steep hill



Server - The person at the pub that brings out the lunch



Mail Server - The bloke at the pub that brings out the lunch



User - The neighbour that keeps borrowing things



Network - When you have to repair your fishing net



Internet - Complicated fish net repair method



Netscape - When fish manoeuvres out of reach of net



Online - When you get the laundry hung out



Off Line - When the pegs don't hold the washing up


COMMENTS

-






COMPANY
REQUEST HELP
CONTACT US
SITEMAP
REPORT A BUG
UPDATES
LEGAL
TERMS OF SERVICE
PRIVACY POLICY
DMCA POLICY
REAL VAMPIRES LOVE VAMPIRE RAVE
© 2004 - 2025 Vampire Rave
All Rights Reserved.
Vampire Rave is a member of 
Page generated in 0.5789 seconds.
X
Username:

Password:
I agree to Vampire Rave's Privacy Policy.
I agree to Vampire Rave's Terms of Service.
I agree to Vampire Rave's DMCA Policy.
I agree to Vampire Rave's use of Cookies.
•  SIGN UP •  GET PASSWORD •  GET USERNAME  •
X