Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Uday's Penalty Kick

I just watched this clip of a documentary about how Uday treated the Iraqi soccer team during the 1990s. The documentary must have been filmed shortly after the 2003 invasion. I can't believe I just saw it for the first time.

One player said "Thank God, today I feel we have the freedom to express ourselves with soccer."

I hope all the people filmed in the documentary are still alive and well.

"While Uday Hussein and his brother Qusay are now dead, they will never be forgotten by the people of Iraq - certainly not by the Iraqi soccer team. Uday was their chief patron - a key position in this soccer-mad country - and, as Olivia Rousset reports, no soccer fan was madder than Uday Hussein."

12 comments :

Iraqi Mojo said...

That was before the "mujahideen", many of them from jarab-infested Jordan, travelled hundreds of miles to mass murder Iraqis. We will not forget what Jordanian jarab like Zarqawi did to Iraq. Nor will we forget what Iraqi jarab like Saddam and Uday did to Iraq.

Anonymous said...

If you don't agree with Iraqi Mojo, that is fine. But it is clear ignorance on your part to communicate your opinions in such a disgusting manner.

This blog is here to clearly discuss common and disparate views on different political issues. Try to express your opinions like a civilized human being, and not like an animal.

David All said...

OT: "Gunmen Kill 6 at Egypt Church after Mass" at http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/01/06/world/main6064844.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody

C.H. said...

"That was 1.5 million dead Iraqis ago"

Sometimes its painful to watch people expose how ignorant they are.

Habis said...

Iraqi Mojo said...
That was before the "mujahideen", many of them from jarab-infested Jordan, travelled hundreds of miles to mass murder Iraqis. We will not forget what Jordanian jarab like Zarqawi did to Iraq. Nor will we forget what Iraqi jarab like Saddam and Uday did to Iraq.

Oh stupid you left the thing that happened before that, the US invasion and occupation and the destruction of Iraq. And then Bremmer the occupier disbanded the Iraqi army and police and made it easy for other terrorists like the Mossad who's website you love come do what they want in Iraq. Then the freedom fighters and Mujahideen came to defend Iraq stupid. We will never forget what the American terrorist army did to Iraq and we will never forget any traitors whether in Jordan or Iraq. It was the American invasion stupid. The Americans are the terrorists and so are the Zionists and anyone who works with them like the Hashemites and the Iraqi puppets. Are you mad at Bremmer for disbanding the Iraqi police and trying to substitute them with Shia militias trained by the jarab in Jordan? How stupid are you?

Aton said...

Habis is a mentally handicapped Jordanian.

Habis I heard from AQ operatives, that if you place a “Zionist” in water, he or she will float like a cork. What is your view on this?

Aton said...

"We teach you what the meaning of civilization is. Got it?"
Habis

Why would anyone let a stupid ignorant Jordanian puppet teach us anything?

C.H. said...

"Then the freedom fighters and Mujahideen came to defend Iraq stupid."

Not a single US soldier was killed last month. The US aerial bombing is now non-existent...Al-Sadr fled to Iran, Hakim is dead, and it has been years since Shiite militias engaged in mass murder. US soldiers pulled out of Iraq 6 months ago and are now twiddling their thumbs on a few bases. Bush even tried to end combat ops back in 2003.

Amidst all this, the "Mujahideen" STILL feel the need to ram explosive-laden buses and dump trucks into daycare centers and label them "the den of infidelity". They STILL feel the need to open fire on traffic cops in Mosul. They STILL feel the need to detonate bombs in fallujah. They STILL feel the need to kill pilgrims during Ashoura. They STILL feel the need to kill embattled, diminished Christians in the north.

The "resistance" sucks. The "resistance" shows that evolution of the human brain still has a long way to go, just like you.

Dolly said...

C.H. we don't know how many people were killed by the Crusade in Iraq.
The minimum is a 5-digit number, and this can be proven.

There are statistics of over 1 million, but citing those can be counterproductive, because some will seize the opportunity to mock such a large figure, and thereby insinuate that no one got killed at all - and it's all one big laughing matter.

So I usually low-ball the estimate, and leave it at tens of thousands.
That makes it obvious that the killing actually did happen, and the numbers are still high enough to condemn.

Dolly said...

Iraqi Mojo:
1,700 suicide bombings? That's how you react to occupation and invasion? I mean Damn!

Sounds better than the rafidhi reaction to occupation and invasion,
which is to sign up to fight for the enemy.

"When the Cross becomes strong, Shi'ism becomes strong as well."
- Salah ad-Deen (12th century)

Dolly said...

As I said earlier, the allies from WW2 still felt the need to persecute Nazi officials even though Germany was no longer an aggressive occupying power.
Why was that? Because they still should be held accountable despite the failure of their project.

So that is why collaborators in Iraq should be persecuted even after the last occupation goon departs.

Dolly said...

C.H. is using the trick of highlighting the more controversial deaths ('they killed a woman') in order to try and delegitimize the less controversial deaths ('they killed a foreign occupier armed to the teeth').

Instead of using this deceitful tactic C.H., you should be straightforward about the fact that you wouldn't support any type of resistance.

Some basic classification would be:
1. targeting foreign troops only
2. targeting domestic turncoat combatants, in addition to (1)
3. targeting civilian collaborators in addition to (1) and (2)

While I personally choose #3, other people are free to select a less extreme approach.
And in fact, most people limit their resistance to #1 or #2.