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To: monkeyshine; ipaq2000; Lent; veronica; Sabramerican; beowolf; Nachum; BenF; angelo; ...
ping
3 posted on 09/09/2002 6:32:00 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
To Hell with making our northern border easier to cross. CLOSE IT - ALONG WITH OUR SOUTHERN BORDER!
27 posted on 09/09/2002 7:04:19 PM PDT by 11B3
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To: dennisw
Looks like Canada has let a few too many diaper-heads into their country.
33 posted on 09/09/2002 7:07:57 PM PDT by jackbill
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To: dennisw
Listen to the media here and you'd never guess the majority were Arabs.
36 posted on 09/09/2002 7:12:59 PM PDT by Lent
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To: ex-Texan
See this thread.
45 posted on 09/09/2002 8:01:12 PM PDT by 2sheep
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To: dennisw
Someone in Canada can post this on bulletin boards throughout C. U. Montreal!
Freeeeee Speach Ueber Alles!

The speech he couldn't give - Violent protesters at Concordia University in
Montreal prevented former Israeli prime minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU from
addressing students on Monday. This is what he planned to say

By BENJAMIN NETANYAHU

The Globe and Mail Wednesday, September 11, 2002 - Page A13

I have come here to voice what I believe is an urgently needed reminder:
that the war on terror can be won with clarity and courage or lost with
confusion and vacillation.

International terrorism depends on the support of sovereign states, and
fighting it demands that these regimes be either deterred or dismantled. In
one clear sentence, President George W. Bush expressed this principle in his
historic speech a year ago: "No distinction will be made between the
terrorists and the regimes that harbour them." Such strategic clarity was
applied with devastating effect to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan that
supported al-Qaeda terrorism.

But that is only the first step in dismantling the global terrorist network.
The other terrorist regimes must now be rapidly dealt with in similar
fashion.

Israel has not experienced a terrorist attack like the one the world
witnessed on that horrific day last September. That unprecedented act of
barbarism will never be forgotten. But, in the past two years, Israel's six
million citizens have buried more than 600 victims of terror -- a per capita
toll equivalent to more than half a dozen September 11ths. This daily,
hourly carnage is also unprecedented in terrorism's bloody history.

Yet, at the very moment when support for Israel's war against terror should
be stronger than ever, my nation is asked by many to stop fighting. Though
we are assured by friends that we have the right to defend ourselves, we are
effectively asked not to exercise that right.

But our friends should have no illusions. With or without international
support, the government of Israel must fight not only to defend its people,
restore a dangerously eroded deterrence and secure the Jewish state, but
also to ensure that the free world wins the war against terror in this
pivotal arena in the heart of the Middle East.

Instead of praising Israel for seeking to minimize civilian casualties
through careful and deliberate action, most of the world's governments
shamelessly condemn it.

For many months, many of these governments have rightly supported the war
against Afghan terror. Yet their patience for the war against Palestinian
terror ran out quickly. The explanations that are offered for this double
standard are not convincing.
First, it is said that war on Palestinian terror is different because a
political process exists that can restore security and advance peace.

This is not so. There can never be a political solution for terror. The
grievance of terrorists can never be redressed through diplomacy. That will
only encourage more terror.

Yasser Arafat's terrorist regime must be toppled, not courted. The Oslo
agreements are dead. Yasser Arafat killed them.
He tore them to shreds and soaked them in Jewish blood by violating every
one of its provisions, including the two core commitments he made at Oslo:
to recognize the state of Israel and to permanently renounce terrorism.

With such a regime and such failure of leadership, no political process is
possible. In fact, a political process can only begin when this terrorist
regime is dismantled.

Second, it is said that waging war on Palestinian terror will destabilize
the region and cripple the imminent war against Saddam Hussein. This concern
is also misplaced.

Clearly, the urgent need to topple Saddam is paramount. The commitment of
America and Britain to dismantle his terrorist dictatorship before it
obtains nuclear weapons deserves the unconditional support of all sane
governments.

But contrary to conventional wisdom, what has destabilized the region is not
Israeli action against Palestinian terror, but rather the constant pressure
exerted on Israel to show restraint.

It is precisely the exceptional restraint shown by Israel that has
unwittingly emboldened its enemies and inadvertently increased the threat of
a wider conflict.

I must also tell you that the charge that Israel, of all countries, is
hindering the war against Saddam is woefully unjust. For my country has done
more than any other to make victory over him possible.

Twenty-one years ago, prime minister Menachem Begin sent the Israeli air
force on a predawn raid hundreds of miles away on one of the most dangerous
military missions in our nation's history.

When our pilots returned, we had successfully destroyed Saddam's atomic bomb
factory and crippled his capacity to build nuclear weapons. Israel was
safer -- and so was the world. But rather than thanking us for safeguarding
freedom, the entire world condemned us.

Ten years later, when American troops expelled Iraqi forces in the gulf war,
then secretary of defence Richard Cheney expressed a debt of gratitude to
Israel for the bold and determined action a decade earlier that had made
victory possible.
That is why there is no alternative to winning this war without delay. No
part of the terrorist network can be left intact. For if not fully
eradicated, like the most malignant cancer, it will regroup and attack again
with even greater ferocity. Only by dismantling the entire network will we
be assured of victory.

But to assure that this evil does not re-emerge a decade or two from now, we
must not merely uproot terror, but also plant the seeds of freedom.

Because only under tyranny can a diseased totalitarian mindset be widely
cultivated. This totalitarian mindset, which is essential for terrorists to
suspend the normal rules that govern a man's conscience and prevent him from
committing these grisly acts, does not breed in a climate of democracy and
freedom.

The open debate and plurality of ideas that buttress all genuine democracies
and the respect for human rights and the sanctity of life that are the
shared values of all free societies are a permanent antidote to the poison
that the sponsors of terror seek to inject into the minds of their recruits.

That is why it is also imperative that, once the terrorist regimes in the
Middle East are swept away, the free world must begin to build democracy in
their place.

We simply can no longer afford to allow this region to remain cloistered by
a fanatic militancy. We must let the winds of freedom and independence
finally penetrate the one region in the world that clings to unreformed
tyranny.
86 posted on 09/11/2002 8:15:43 PM PDT by joesnuffy
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