Posted on 06/30/2004 5:13:09 PM PDT by faludeh_shirazi
The fight against terrorism among Palestinians and against tyranny in Iran is part of the struggle for freedom in the Middle East, President Bush said.
Bush on Tuesday ended a NATO summit in Istanbul by calling for greater democracy in the Middle East and comparing struggles against violence and terrorism in the region. We see the struggle in Iran, where tired, discredited autocrats are trying to hold back the democratic will of a rising generation, he said. We see it in the Holy Land, where terrorist murderers are setting back the good cause of the Palestinian people who deserve a reformed, peaceful and democratic state of their own.
IT'S ABOUT TIME GEORGE -
LETS ROLL - DEFEND IRANIANS - DESTROY THE MULLAHS - REVOLUTION FREEDOM!!!!
This is honestly one of the bests things I've heard George say in a long time! This stuff is STATE SPONSORED - and it's time we focus our efforts on knocking the mullahs out of tehran and freeing IRAN for the people - FREE IRAN FREE IRAQ - POWER TO THE PEOPLE!!
Bush is trying to separate out the bads guys from the not-as-bad guys. That's been his strategy. That's the only hope for the mideast.
Bttr to you and your cause!
'Any nation that compromises with violent extremists only emboldens them, and invites future violence
..........
Of course the State Dept is working on a rewrite as we speak.
B U M P
The people in Iran are not just "no bad so". This isn't Pakistan and Saudi Arabia we're talking about. The young populace in Iran are very educated and pro-US.
I work with a few from Iran who live here. They are smart, rational people. Not sure they support the Iraq war though. Of course half this country doesn't support the war.
George W. Bush will be reelected by a margin of at least ten per cent
Special thanks to President Bush!
Iranians are about as homogenous as Americans. Which is to say that they aren't. I know (a limited few in each category) Muslim Iranians, Christian Iranians and Baha'i Iranians. In many ways quite different, but there are common cultural elements too. (One Baha'i I know of often works with Muslims, but keeps quiet about the faith because the Muslims really hate Baha'is.)
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