Nos, ha te nem tudod a különbséget a kifejezetten a civilek ellen szakosodott, teokrata kormányok által pénzelt megszálló terrorszervezetek, és az azoknak visszaverni, azokat kipicsázni próbáló, hadbíróság által ellenõrzött, köztársaságok által összeállított nemzeti hadseregek között, akkor nem tudok mit csinálni veled.
Mondom, csak a jófiúkra tudnak hurrogni az emberek, a rosszfiúkról alig szivárog ki bármilyen információ, ami meg kiszivárog, azt se akarják meghallani az emberek. Szép kis kettõs mérce.
Dehát ugyebár, a Star Warsban is a Birodalom a gonosz, és a lázadóknak drukkolunk.
Olvasmányként ajánlom Steve Vincent írásait, akit a külföldrõl pénzelt iraki fasiszták megöltek. Hiába no, soha nem bírták az igazságról beszámoló riportereket.
" I repeat — words matter. Terms like "paramilitaries," "death squads," and "fascists" clarify the nature of our enemy and underscore a fundamental point that the American media has inexcusably ignored: it is the Iraqi people who are under attack. They are the victims, their future is threatened, they are bleeding from wounds inflicted by pan-Arab Baathists and pan-Islamic jihadists. By calling these neo-fascists the "Resistance" the media reverses the relationship of assailant and defender and renders a terrible disservice to the millions of Iraqis who oppose, in ways large and small, these totalitarian forces. Hadeel gave her life resisting fascism. Yet to the Ted Ralls and Michael Moores of this world, she was a Quisling who deserved to die.
How did this happen? How did the media confuse the real forces of resistance — police officers, administrative workers, translators, truck drivers, judges, politicians and thousands of others — with men who plan car bombings, assassinate government officials, and rampage through religious shrines in their quest to reinstate tyranny? Part of the reason is the anti-American bent of the international media: many reporters will sacrifice anything — including journalistic integrity — to defame the U.S. effort in Iraq. Then there is the semantic problem of the word "occupation" and its pejorative connotation: in the rudimentary arithmetic of the media, anything that "resists" a negative must, by definition, be positive. "