Either you mom ****ed some apes or your dad ****ed some pig. Or you
wouldn't be half-ape and half-swine.
On Apr 23, 5:01 am, uUGLY2 <jismqu...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Boy, those GOONS & THUGS ... they sure stick together, don't they?
>
> Like pieces of fly-laden EXCREMENT.
>
> Seems the CHINK goons & thugs tried to ****p the 'frican goon/thug,
> Robert MUGABE, a few million rounds of ammo and killing weapons so
> Mugabe (has a goon & thug ring to it, no?) can KILL his political
> opponent(s) who beat him in a recent presidential "election" that he
> tried to rig. And Mugabi's great cheerleader Thabo Mbeki of South
> 'frica (damn, 'nother goon/thug) was wi****ng "The Mugab" well.
>
> But thankfully some non-goons & thugs in neighboring countries
> refused
> the Chink ****pment. And now perhaps the un-goon/thug Zimbaweans might
> finally be
> able to kick the criminal Mugabi out of the office he's held via
> goonery and thuggery for several decades!
>
> And also thankfully, the world is WITNESS to just how China -- a goon
> and thug nation if there ever was one -- conducts itself in
> "international relations."
>
> And the world is supposed to respect the Chinks' Olympics
> aspirations?
>
> Think again!
>
> --------------------------------------------
> "Action on Zimbabwe"
>
> "Africans reject a Chinese arms ****pment for Robert Mugabe."
>
> Wednesday, April 23, 2008; A20
>
> SOUTHERN AFRICAN leaders at last have demonstrated a willingness to
> confront the ongoing political crisis in Zimbabwe, as well as its
> instigator, Robert Mugabe. Ironically, the impetus for action came
> from China, one of the autocrat's best friends.
>
> Late last week, a Chinese ****p appeared in the South African ****t of
> Durban bearing a huge load of arms for Zimbabwe's regime: 3 million
> rounds of assault rifle ammunition, 3,000 mortar rounds and 1,500
> rocket-propelled grenades. South African President Thabo Mbeki, who
> has shamelessly coddled Mr. Mugabe, did nothing to stop the ****pment.
> But South Africa's democracy has begun to work against his loathsome
> policy. A newspaper published details of the cargo. Dockworkers
> refused to unload it. Public interest groups obtained a court order
> barring the weapons' transit.
>
> The Chinese ****p duly sailed to Mozambique, a neighbor of South
> Africa
> and Zimbabwe. But there, too, it was refused a dock. With the
> encouragement of the Bush administration, Angola joined the boycott
> this week. By yesterday morning, a Chinese Foreign Ministry
> spokeswoman was obliged to announce that the ****p "is now considering
> carrying back this cargo" to China. She also claimed the ****pment was
> "normal trade in military products" -- a description that
> unintentionally spoke volumes about Beijing's amoral policy of
> supplying weapons to Zimbabwe, Sudan and other repugnant regimes.
>
> Ten days ago, the Southern African Development Community was unable
> to
> agree on any direct criticism of Mr. Mugabe, much less on any action
> to pressure him to respect the results of the election he lost more
> than three weeks ago. The boycott of the ****p, which was also
> sup****ted by the community's current president, Zambia, was an
> im****tant step in the right direction. So were the comments of Jacob
> Zuma, the president of South Africa's ruling party and a likely
> successor to the lame-duck Mr. Mbeki. In Berlin yesterday, Mr. Zuma
> said, "We speak out to promote democracy. . . . [A]s all democrats
> know, no government can justly claim authority unless it is based on
> the will of the people." Mr. Zuma told the Reuters news agency that
> "African countries should identify some people to go in" to Zimbabwe
> in an attempt to resolve the crisis.
>
> Such intervention -- as opposed to the sham "mediation" of Mr. Mbeki
> -- is long overdue. Zimbabweans want it: The country's church leaders
> issued a joint statement yesterday saying that international action
> was needed to stop Mr. Mugabe's violent campaign to overturn the
> election results by beating, abducting and murdering opposition
> sup****ters across the country. The 84-year-old strongman pays no heed
> to Western governments, which long ago used up most of their
> available
> sanctions against his regime. If Zimbabwe is to be rescued, it must
> be
> by its fellow Africans. Turning around the ****p was a start; now
> African leaders must focus their efforts on turning out Mr. Mugabe.
>
> http://www.wa****ngtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/22/AR200...


|