John Kerry is a dream. He is everything the leadership of America should be. God! I hope John Kerry wins. America's children need him so badly. The children of other countries need John Kerry as America's president too. Thank you, John Kerry. The planet needs your good leadership. America loves you, and God hopes you win.
God gave us skin for a reason, so that it could hold our blood inside our bodies, not so that it could be spilled! We, the American people are sick of seeing blood spilled! We are sick of seeing children burn! WE ARE SICK OF WAR!
WE ARE SICK OF WAR!
We, the American people want peace and love, not war!
LOVE,
http://www.joematters.com
By the way, I don't know if all of you saw this or not:
Both my grandfathers fought in the USA military and they would NOT BE HAPPY ABOUT "WHITE HOUSE WARNING" !!!!!!!
I didn't know Washington DC was
authorized to give out "WHITE HOUSE WARNING"s to
other countries! (The following article was
copied exactly as seen on www.tehrantimes.com)
http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?
Da=7/26/2004&Cat=4&Num=003
07/26/2004
http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp...4&Cat=4&Num=003
Purported Threat To Italy And Australia Over Iraq
BAGHDAD (Reuters) -- A purported statement from militants linked to Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda threatened Italy and Australia on Saturday with attacks if they did not withdraw their troops from Iraq.
"Australian people, if your government refuses to withdraw ... we will shake the ground beneath your feet ... and columns of rigged cars will not stop," said the previously unheard-of Islamic Tawhid Group, the Al-Qaeda organization, Europe.
"Italian people, we advise you accept our offer and if you refuse you will hear columns of rigged cars shaking your cities," the group said in a statement posted on a Website.
Italy and Australia are major contributors of troops to U.S.-led forces in Iraq.
Militants have been mounting a campaign of hostage-taking and attacks to undermine the U.S.-led forces and Iraq's new interim government headed by Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.
The Philippines withdrew its troops from Iraq this month to spare the life of a Filipino hostage. It joined Spain, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua and Honduras as countries that have pulled out of what once was a 34-nation U.S.-led coalition. WHITE HOUSE WARNING
"The terrorists have demonstrated that they want to attack those who are committed to helping the Iraqi people ... you cannot make a separate peace with terrorists," said White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan.
Iraq and Egypt tried on Saturday to secure the release of a senior Egyptian diplomat after he was snatched in a brazen kidnapping while leaving a mosque -- the first envoy to be taken hostage in the violence racking Iraq.
Allawi urged Cairo not to pander to the kidnappers, who seized Mohamed Mamdouh Qutb on Friday afternoon in Baghdad after reports Cairo might consider helping Iraq with security. Egypt said it had no plans to send troops to Iraq.
Qutb is the number three in Egypt's Embassy in Baghdad. "We are involved in intense talks to try to secure his release," said a source at the embassy. "We were so shocked. He's a very decent and religious man."
Al-Jazeera broadcast a video tape on Friday of Qutb sitting in front of six hooded and armed men from a group calling itself the Lions of God Battalions in Iraq.
The kidnapping of a well-protected diplomat outside a busy place of worship is a step up in sophistication for militants and raises the stakes in the wave of hostage-taking that has hit Iraq since April. Foreign truckers have been prime targets. TOP IRAQI BUSINESSMAN ABDUCTED
The chief of Iraq's al-Mansour Construction Company, a state-owned firm, was kidnapped on Saturday as he drove to work in Baghdad. Raad Adnan Mahmoud was also director-general of Iraq's Housing and Construction Ministry.
Militants have seized dozens of foreigners since April to push demands for foreign troops and foreign companies to leave Iraq. Several hostages have been killed.
In the latest violence in Iraq, gunmen in two cars opened fire on police at a checkpoint in southwest Baghdad, wounding seven, police at the scene said.
A U.S. soldier died from wounds sustained in fighting west of Baghdad on Friday, bringing to 666 the number of troops killed in action in Iraq since last year's U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein.
An explosion set fire to an oil pipeline north of Baghdad.
Guerrillas frequently attack Iraq's oil infrastructure in efforts to disrupt the country's reconstruction.
Allawi met Syrian Prime Minister Naji al-Otari in Damascus on Saturday and both countries said they would form a committee to improve security along their long desert border.
U.S. officials have accused Syria of failing to do enough to keep foreign Islamic militants from crossing into Iraq. PAKISTANI SETS OUT TROOP STANCE
Pakistani Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said his country had told the United Nations it would send troops to Iraq if Allawi's government asked for them and other Muslim nations also sent soldiers.
"(President Pervez Musharraf) made it clear that we could consider sending troops only if the request comes from the Iraqi government, other Islamic countries also do the same and our Parliament approves it," said Ahmed.
Any deployment of Pakistani troops to Iraq is likely to draw stiff opposition at home from hardline Islamic groups wary of Musharraf's support for the U.S.-led war on terror that toppled the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.
Allawi's government is heavily reliant on some 160,000 mostly U.S. foreign troops for security while it builds up its own forces.