Re: Hizballah can be reasoned with



When you want to talk about traitors, you should include the one and only
Hizbiran !
Go clean your garden and then come lecture on chastity .


"Nimrod" <Nrode@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:f0da9k$13b$1@xxxxxxxxxxx
as usual Mr.. you tend to blur the reality with your utter
demagogueries. suffice it to say that most of the 14th
whatever group are incapable of meeting their fellow
Lebanese half way, because they are not self confident
enough, and because they know full well deep down...
that they are traitors to Lebanon and to the real cause
of the people who marched in March 2005. they know
very well that they stole their dreams and aspirations....
for the glorious pompous empty promises of Condi and
Elliott Abrams and their masters in tall Avive and Washington.

Dream on people , dream on, with leadership like yours...
you are truly going places.....


"BM" <m-e-d-a-w-a-r@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:f0d9b0$elh$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

In article <1177164200.072492.248060@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Basil H <hamdan.basil@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Most Lebanese fear them and loathe them.
What a disgusting death cult.
May they go to Iran or Syria and give us peace.

There was a talking head on TV criticizing major Lebanese sects. When
he
got to the Shiite community, he said they're afraid of other Lebanese
and
other Lebanese are afraid of them. There is a lot of unwarranted
generalization in this statement. The kernel of truth is that Hizbollah
is the only armed group and their orders come from Syria and Iran.
Hizbollah is an armed fifth column in our midst.

On the other hand, the Shiite community may feel under-represented,
or that it's not getting it's numbers worth from the Lebanese division
of
power pie. The solution should be to eliminate the sectarian system
of government. Nothing good comes out of it. Instead of trading
weapons
for a bigger share, Hizbollah should sit together with Lebanese of same
and
other sects and figure out a new system of government that is not based
on
sectarianism.

As far as other major sects, the talking head criticized the Maronite
community for being in perpetual division (Geagea-Aoun) and the Suni for
allowing religious fundamentalists to exist in their midst. An example
of
Suni religious extremism that was supported by religious mainstream is
the
demonstration that, in an unintended consequence, burned the Danish
consulate.
The Geagea-Aoun division is at the core of the presidential problem. If
the presidential problem were to get resolved by the Maronite community,
most other political immediate problems will vanish instantly.

bassem





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