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Report Claims Libya Protest Deaths Hit 200

Reagan should have taken this scumbag out in the 80s. The guy was a huge financier of terrorism.

Interesting though how under Bush in 2001 after 9/11, the US managed to come to detente with this thug dictator and keep supporting his regime.

Gee. I wonder if it had anything to do with the oil?
 
Interesting though how under Bush in 2001 after 9/11, the US managed to come to detente with this thug dictator and keep supporting his regime.

Gee. I wonder if it had anything to do with the oil?

It had more to do with a mood swing that had Khaddafi suddenly wanting to be nice with the West.

Speaking of oil, CNN was reporting that the rebels have control of Libya's oil fields and are saying that if the "Colonel" doesn't go soon, they'll turn off the oil.
 
I guess he's ready to go meet Allah and get his reward of women
 
waste of lives. :(
Gaddafi and his supporters will be punished by the people.

[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDfVWc7Gbkk&feature=related[/ame]
 
The reports I'm seeing are really confusing. One says a third of the country is no longer under Ghadaffi's control; another says much of the army is no longer taking his orders; another says his supporters are crushing the rebels.

I say the U.S. should airlift personal weapons and drop them to the rebels -- if the Colonel is going to arm his followers, let's even the odds.
 
It was true in 1983, and it's STILL true - I see that nobody has formed a consensus on how to spell [STRIKE]Kadaffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Qa'daffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Khadaffy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Gadaffy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Ghadaffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Kaddafy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Smith[/STRIKE] yet.
 
The reports I'm seeing are really confusing. One says a third of the country is no longer under Ghadaffi's control; another says much of the army is no longer taking his orders; another says his supporters are crushing the rebels.

I say the U.S. should airlift personal weapons and drop them to the rebels -- if the Colonel is going to arm his followers, let's even the odds.

It depends what part of the country they're talking about. I think they're all true. (well, with the exception of 'crushing' the rebels. I've seen nothing to suggest that)
 
Oh, and is anyone seeing a pattern emerging in the middle east? This turmoil has the potential of toppling most of the current regimes and sending the region into chaos.
 
It was true in 1983, and it's STILL true - I see that nobody has formed a consensus on how to spell [STRIKE]Kadaffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Qa'daffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Khadaffy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Gadaffy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Ghadaffi[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Kaddafy[/STRIKE] [STRIKE]Smith[/STRIKE] yet.

HA! Apparently in 1986, when he responded to a letter from some second-graders at a school in Minnesota, he signed the letter "Moammar El-Gadhafi. :confused:

I think "Qaddafi" is the most common spelling
 
Oh, and is anyone seeing a pattern emerging in the middle east? This turmoil has the potential of toppling most of the current regimes and sending the region into chaos.

Yup.

Or it has the potential to finally turn a whole bunch of medieval post-colonial tinpot dictatorship shitholes into functional modern democracies.

Who can tell?

It is probably the same as the anticipation when a whole bunch of rebels created the United States of America.
 
Iraq is neither stable nor a democracy. It's run by a bunch of thugs backed up by their respective state militias.

Please read for content, I did not say it was stable or a democracy. I said that it is currently MORE stable than the other governments in the region except for possibly Israel and Turkey (which since you brought it up also have democratic 'forms' of government). That stability though as I also said has nothing to do with its government democratic, puppet or whatever, it has to do with its people just coming out of a decade long civil war and having little energy or desire to be starting a revolution right now. But in my opinion, the democratic 'form' of government it has, regardless of if you think its real or not, contributes to that stability. Most of the forces that would rise for a revolution to overthrow the government either already have or have become involved in the process and would undermine their interests to change now.
 
Please read for content, I did not say it was stable or a democracy. I said that it is currently MORE stable than the other governments in the region except for possibly Israel and Turkey (which since you brought it up also have democratic 'forms' of government). That stability though as I also said has nothing to do with its government democratic, puppet or whatever, it has to do with its people just coming out of a decade long civil war and having little energy or desire to be starting a revolution right now. But in my opinion, the democratic 'form' of government it has, regardless of if you think its real or not, contributes to that stability. Most of the forces that would rise for a revolution to overthrow the government either already have or have become involved in the process and would undermine their interests to change now.

That last is what it takes to have a central government among people with competing interests: it has to be worth more to them to stay involved in the process than to oppose it. Sometimes that means compromise by one group or another -- an angle that kept the American colonies together by planting the seeds for a civil war in the future. The trick is to avoid institutionalizing that sort of divide.
 
It's just like this tinpot to bring in foreign mercenaries. He doesn't care about the people, and plainly doesn't even trust his own people, if he has to resort to that.

I wonder what the chances are of this becoming a standoff, with eastern Libya becoming effectively a separate country?
 
I keep wondering -- reporters have mentioned over and over that the government has shut down the internet. But aren't there satellite connections? If there are, we could do a world of good by handing out servers for free to people who have satellite service, so they can serve as hubs for hundreds or thousands of others. If not, we could do a world of good by handing out the gear for satellite service and servers to go with it.
 
It's just like this tinpot to bring in foreign mercenaries. He doesn't care about the people, and plainly doesn't even trust his own people, if he has to resort to that.

I wonder what the chances are of this becoming a standoff, with eastern Libya becoming effectively a separate country?

Libya is still very much a tribal orientated society. With several tribal chiefs encouraging their respective peoples to support the opposition forces, and with military defections adding armour, artillery, aircraft and military personnel to the opposition forces we are merely discussing the time when Gaddafi's regime crumbles.

We may expect the violence to escalate.
 
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