12 Years of The UN.
This is the bitter fruit of the left and their useful idiots.
"This is all because of Saddam!" shrieked Ali Majid al-Shamali, in tears, as he waved his arms at the long rows of graves marked with metal signs, well over 1,000 of them. "My brother! My brother!"
He sat on the ground and stroked the dirt on the grave of his only brother, Walid, arrested in October, 1993. A man from another family at the graveyard tried to comfort him. "You lost only one person?" the man asked. "We lost eight here."
Two women in black wailed. Both men started to cry.
1 posted on
04/26/2003 8:32:19 AM PDT by
Leisler
To: Leisler
Didn't this whole nihilist attitude start with Nietsche? Or have I got the wrong gloomy, screwed-up German philosopher?
2 posted on
04/26/2003 8:46:38 AM PDT by
expatpat
To: Leisler
With all things constant, the variable is and always will be human mind.
To: Leisler
André Glucksmann: At the opening of the University of Salamanca, one General Millán Astray shouted Viva la Morte. Miguel de Unamuno, who was in charge of the occasion, was a conservative, the protégé of Francos wife, a philosopher of the right. He reproved the general for this impermissible, unacceptable statement, and added: You, my general who has lost an eye in the war, are a handicapped man not because you have lost an eye but because you have shouted Long live death With all due respect to Mr. Glucksmann, his knowledge of history (and of Castilian Spanish) appears to be lacking. First, the cry was "Viva el Muerto!", not "Viva la Morte" (which is not even a Spanish phrase). The slogan, which indeed means "Long live Death!", is the motto of the Tercio de Extranjeros -- the Spanish Foregn Legion, which was founded by José Millán Astray. Far from being a cry of nihilism, as Gluckmann suggests, Viva el Muerto is a battle cry, implying thoughtless bravado and fierceness in battle rather than a generalized desire to kill for the sake of killing.
I hate it when people who know nothing of Spanish history attempt to refer to Spanish history to make a political point. The history of the Civil War in Spain is a fascinating and complex subject, and one that deserves careful study instead of superficial sampling.
Viva España!
4 posted on
04/26/2003 8:55:38 AM PDT by
B-Chan
(Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
To: Leisler
btttttttttttttttt
5 posted on
04/26/2003 8:55:51 AM PDT by
dennisw
To: Leisler
A great line from the article: "In the beginning you are in the minority, but in the end there is the reality principle. "
6 posted on
04/26/2003 10:03:14 AM PDT by
dark_lord
To: Leisler
Thanks for the post.
[z]
9 posted on
04/26/2003 10:14:04 AM PDT by
zechariah
(The Lord is with you, Mighty Warrior!)
To: Leisler
"Two women in black wailed. Both men started to cry."
But I misjudged mankinds need to sleep
To: Leisler
Back to the problem that confronts us all; nihilism. It seems to me that those on the left who argued for a war against Saddam invariably recognized that the threat posed by nihilist ideologies to civilization is far greater than the threat to world peace posed by the US. Sometimes the cost of that 'peace' outweighs the cost of war.
14 posted on
04/26/2003 3:05:46 PM PDT by
moni kerr
(Lead, follow or get the hell out of the way)
To: Leisler
Good post. I hadn't seen this one. Thanks.
17 posted on
04/27/2003 11:56:03 PM PDT by
TheMole
To: Leisler
...there is something worse than war, and that is Auschwitz. Thank you, Leisler, for this brilliant post.
18 posted on
04/28/2003 11:05:21 AM PDT by
betty boop
(God bless America. God bless our troops.)
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