The Iraq War Was Wrong Blog

The world has many wrongs, and many wars, but there's only one wrong Iraq war.

"A wrong war like during the Iraq war was cannot just be sitted idly by by." --The Proprietor

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Relevant Movie Reviews: Enchanted

Disney does it agian with Enchanted, a delightful fairy tale and also, turns out a incisive allegory for how much The Iraq War was wrong.

Enchanted start's out like most good Disney movie's where its a cartoon and there's a beautiful princess with beautiful dresses and right away I was intranced by the magic. Theres one scarey scene where she's chased by a big scarey green troll that I had to close my eyes but mostly it was a great start to what I THOUGHT was going to be yet another Disney cartoon classic.

BUT. All of the sudden the wicked stebmother did something and the princess Jizelle was fall down the well. I was SO FREAKED because what's going to happen to her. Little did I know that she would come out the other side to the REAL WORLD. Our world. Of New YOrk City! This was amazing becuase first she was a cartoon and then suddenly she's no longer a cartoon. I was like what? I'm still not sure how the did this effect of making a cartoon character look SO real (almost like a real person, except for around the eye's you could tell) but kudo's to the CGI department for a amazing, and largely convincing effect.

Anyways, when she gets there she is helped by the charming Patrick Dempsey and I forget what else happens but there's at least 3 awesome song's. Then basically the evil queen comes after her and WATCH OUT. I won't spoil it but lets just say it involve's a big giant dragon

This is the part where I started realizing, "hey, they're commenting on The Iraq War". Because The Iraq War was the same kinda thing, us trying to kick someone out (Saddam, instead of the princess like the movie version) just because we was afraid he would take are power ect. And then we came after him with "shock and awe which is a metaphorcal big Disney dragon if I every saw one. Plus castles etc. The connection got pretty obvious by the end so if you want to be up on the latest in cutting edge anti Iraq War arguments you totally gotta to check out Disney's Enchanted. Also why no Oscar for Amy Adam's. That was robbed serously.

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

Did you know?

It's was four (4) years ago on this today that fateful day when I decided to start The Iraq War Was Wrong Blog. In that intervening time, a whole generation of kids have entered & left there high school, and other stuffs has happened, but when I thing about what I've accomplished most of all (by blogging about how The Iraq War Was Wrong) I'm awestrucken. Truly awestrucken. We all are.

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Monday, August 27, 2007

but is it (as) wrong with ciorba?

I came to Romania with a specific purpose in mind. Another nail in the coffin!
I was always worried that somebody would show up on the site, saying s.thing like "that's just your subjective opinion, masquerading as an objective fact" (about the iraq war being wrong). Essentially, he/she'd be saying that it's a matter of persepective so I came to Romania to be at a different angle (than in America) at iraq and to show that's it's wrong no matter which way you look at it (the war).

Well, no surprises! It's very wrong from here too.
Of course, I can't go to every fucking corner of the globe to see if it's wrong from there (tho' I can try if this NGO plan kicks in) but being here has to count for something!

p.s The issue of location/food/perspective was alluded to in iww's blog entry with those russian dishes. That's why I had to test it over ciorba.
When I had my ciorba, I sort of forgot to think about the Iraq war (sorry) but if it wouldn't have seemed wrong I'd have noticed it.

p.p.s No, I didn't ask anyone here if the iraq war was wrong. Their (subjective)opinion wouldn't matter anyway. I think it's possible to just 'feel' it's wrongess and that's what counts!

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Friday, May 18, 2007

We are destroying Iraq enivornment

from
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72023

BAGHDAD, 8 May 2007 (IRIN) - The River Tigris has long been a symbol of prosperity in Iraq but since the US-led invasion in 2003, this amazing watercourse has turned into a graveyard of bodies. In addition, the water level is decreasing as pollution increases, say environmentalists.
Pollution in the river is caused by oil derivatives and industrial waste as well as Iraqi and US military waste, they say.

The river was one of the main sources of water, food, transport and recreation for the local population but after four years of war and pollution, it has been transformed into a stagnant sewer, according to environmentalists.

"The situation is critical. The river is gradually being destroyed and there are no projects to prevent its destruction," said Professor Ratib Mufid, an environment expert at Baghdad University.

"A large part of the river has been turned into a military area, forcing families to leave their homes around the riverbanks and close restaurants. Fishermen are prohibited from fishing where the river passes through the capital and all vessels are banned in the area," Mufid said.

The river is contaminated with war waste and toxins, and residents of the impoverished Sadr City suburb are often left with no alternative but to drink contaminated water from the Tigris. This is why, specialists say, many Sadr City residents are plagued by diarrhoea and suffer from recurring kidney stones.

In the hot dry summer months, when the water level drops, mud islands can be seen, and water levels appear to be decreasing every year.

"The problem of decreasing water flow starts in Turkey's Taurus mountains. Between there and Kurdistan, many dams have been built which help to decrease the water flow. The idea [of dam-building] was to prevent floods which over the years affected northern communities, but the consequence can now be seen with nearly half the previous water flow," Seif Barakah, media officer for the Ministry of Environment, said.

Ban on shipping, fishing

Military forces have banned shipping and fishing in the river, and many families who depend for their income on fishing have been deprived of their means of survival.

"Many fishermen have been killed trying to fish at night because they encountered insurgents looking to plant bombs on the riverbanks. It is still possible to find some men trying to fish, but it is rare," Barakah said.

During the day, military boats can be seen making their daily patrols, and in more secure areas, such as those near the fortified Green Zone, snipers are on guard 24 hours a day preventing insurgents from entering the zone.

Dead bodies

Every day local police haul bodies from the Tigris bearing signs of torture. Locals who live near the river constantly see floating bodies.

The situation is even worse in Suwayrah, a southern area of the capital, where the government has built barriers with huge iron nets to trap plants and garbage dropped in the river but now this is also a barrier for bodies.

"Since January 2006 at least 800 bodies have been dragged from those iron nets, and this figure does not include those collected from the central section of the river. Most of the bodies are unidentified and buried without family claims," said Col Abdel-Waheed Azzam, a senior officer in the investigation department of the Ministry of Interior.

According to Azzam, 90 percent of the bodies found in the river show signs of serious torture. "Because of the state of the bodies, it is not useful to try to have an autopsy done, and if the bodies are not claimed within 24 hours they are automatically buried," he said.

Highly polluted

During Saddam Hussein's regime people caught dumping garbage in the river were punished, but today mountains of rubbish can be seen on the riverbanks; and these affect the normal watercourse and pollute the area.
"With dams decreasing the water flow, the salt level rises and in conjunction with the high level of pollutants dumped in the river by northern cities, this reduces oxygen levels, making an unpropitious environment for any living being," Barakah said.

Fishermen said that years ago it was easy to catch a fish in the river but today even if you use nets it is practically impossible to catch a fish and many can be found floating, having died of pollution and lack of oxygen.

"Today, the only fish you can catch are those floating and which died from pollution after ingesting toxic waste and eating rubbish," said Ateif Fahi, 56, a fisherman in the capital, Baghdad.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Genocide in Falluja

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Iraqi women in prison after Saddam fall

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where is the souls of American soldiers? Did they sell it to the Evil?

Troops ceasing children for water

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Troops Raiding Iraqi Houses

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US soldiers Killing Civilians in Iraq

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Afghanistan and Iraq a same war

Dear all,
I warmly invite you to READ (and not ignore) the piece “Afghanistan and Iraq: the same war” by David Orchard and Michael Mandel.

Four years ago, the U.S. and Britain unleashed war on Iraq, a nearly defenceless Third World country barely half the size of Saskatchewan. For 12 years prior to the invasion and occupation, Iraq had endured almost weekly U.S. and British bombing raids and the toughest sanctions in history, the “primary victims” of which, according to the UN Secretary General, were “women and children, the poor and the infirm.” According to UNICEF, half a million children died from sanctions-related starvation and disease.

Then, in March 2003, the U.S. and Britain possessors of more weapons of mass destruction than the rest of the world combined attacked Iraq on a host of fraudulent pretexts, with cruise missiles, napalm, white phosphorous, cluster and bunker-buster bombs, and depleted uranium (DU) munitions.

The British medical journal The Lancet published a study last year estimating Iraqi war deaths since 2003 at 655,000, a mind-boggling figure dismissed all too readily by the British and American governments despite widespread scientific approval for its methodology (including the British government’s own chief scientific adviser).

you can read the rest of this entry on this blog. or on this blog.

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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Time Stamp Confirms BBC Reported WTC 7 Collapse 26 Minutes In Advance

9/11 - BBC reported the the collapse of WTC 7 building 26 minutes in advance. click here and read

How? Why?

Moreover - No One Could Have Predicted The Collapse Of WTC 7
Building was specifically designed to have floors removed without collapsing
click here and read

So, what are the answers and the questions?
Why are "we" in Afghanistan and Iraq?

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