Last Man Standing said:
They were not muslims...they were agents who worked for us. Read kid, read.
..
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Project_for_the_New_American_Century
Can you provide a link to show 100% they were not Muslims and they worked for the U.S. government? From all I've read they had nothing to do with the U.S. government.How do you know that? Because one of your "websites" say so? There are many things one can say and state as fact. It is obvious since there is debunking going on everywhere. But to say a guy named Mohamed and his crew were not Muslim, are we to believe them Christian?Jewish? Satanist?
Some try to paint only Americans as villains and act like all the other countries leaders are being framed by us. Yet, citizens of those very countries are not very happy and have little rights.
Someone even tried to state in Iran people of different religions can practically dance in the streets. But my B'hai friends and Catholic friends laugh at that. Villifying America and trying to make those other countries,their rights and leaders look so great make me wonder what can you get out of this?
I agree the U.S. is'nt perfect and we must question governmnet, but this is ridiculous.
Aug 23 2007, 04:08 AM
Post #1
Waxing Poetic
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...and walked out with a magical lamp, yeah. Met Milenko, he gave me three wishes. That night....
Rough justice: 80 lashes for 'immoral' Iranian who abused alcohol and had sex
DAVID WILLIAMS
18:53pm 22nd August 2007
His face covered by a balaclava, an official brandishing a cane repeatedly lashes the back of a man found guilty of breaking Iran's morality laws.
Two police officers hold the legs of 25-year-old Saeed Ghanbari and another his arms to ensure there is no escape from the punishment of 80 lashes handed down by a religious court.
Traffic was brought to a halt in Qazvin, 90 miles west of the capital Tehran, as more than 1,000 men gathered behind barricades to watch the public flogging.
Human Rights groups say there have been a marked rise in recent months in the number of people sentenced to executions and floggings in Iran.
Amnesty International, which said it is "greatly concerned by continuing human rights abuses in Iran", has highlighted figures revealing 117 people were executed in 2006 with thousands facing floggings.
They included a woman, who had been forced into prostitution as an eight-year-old, receiving 99 lashes because of "acts contrary to chasity."
Earlier this year, a man was flogged after a copy of the Bible was found in his car.
At least 120 executions have been recorded so far this year, according to Amnesty, with two youths under the age of 18 when they committed their crimes among those killed