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Its raining shoes Halelujah!

Another mistake the US made was that they isolated the Sunnis and promoted the Shias and Kurds. This gave wrong impression to the Sunnis and also the Shias and Kurds tried to force their policies rather than implement after proper dialogue with all parties concerned on important matters. The result is sectarian divide in the country.

The same mistake was repeated in Afghanistan where Pashtuns were isolated and northern alliance put in power.

This is now getting off-thread topic, but I agree with you about the Sunnis. I think if the US had left the Iraqi Army standing, that would have given the Sunnis their necessary power base. It is hard to fault the US for its special treatment of the Kurds in Iraq and the Tajiks in Afghanistan. After all, both groups were the most receptive to the US goals in each country.
 
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Sectarian violence was such a foreseeable consequence if toppling Saddam was a major objective, I can't understand why the US couldn't plan accordingly. Seems like sectarian violence was also a major objective if you ask me but what do I know, right?

Sectarian violence on the scale that occurred was not anticipated. Perhaps this was because the US was mainly advised by Shia and Kurdish Iraqi exiles. And, no, I do not agree that sectarian violence was part of the plan. This violence has served no purpose for the US and has cost us Billions of $'s and 4000 of our soldiers lives.

But this (US mistakes in Iraq) is off the shoe throwing topic. So I'm not going to keep responding to off-thread topics after this post.
 
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Sectarian violence on the scale that occurred was not anticipated. Perhaps this was because the US was mainly advised by Shia and Kurdish Iraqi exiles. And, no, I do not agree that sectarian violence was part of the plan. This violence has served no purpose for the US and has cost us Billions of $'s and 4000 of our soldiers lives.

But this (US mistakes in Iraq) is off the shoe throwing topic. So I'm not going to keep responding to off-thread topics after this post.

You are the one sir who tied Bush's failed Iraq policy to this shoe throwing incident. I was hoping you would take the bait to reveal the weakness to your argument, while getting a good lecturing at the same time.

:enjoy:
 
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Saudi man bids millions for shoes thrown at Bush

Says size 10s more valuable than everything he owns

DUBAI (Farrag Ismail)

A Saudi man offered to pay $10 million for the pair of shoes that an Iraqi journalist lunged at U.S. President George W. Bush, saying he considers the size 10s a "medal of freedom."

Retired school teacher Mohamed Makhafa, 60, said he thought Muntazer al-Zaidi's shoes, which almost hit Bush during a press conference in Baghdad, were more valuable than everything he owns.

"It is more precious than all my property. I will bequeath it to my children and display it in a museum and call it the Medal of Freedom," Makhafa told AlArabiya.net.


Makhafa said the combined value of the land and property he owns exceeds the price he is offering for Zaidi's shoes, adding if the journalist's lawyer manages to reclaim the infamous pair he will buy them.


Arab pride

Makhafa said he does not look at it from a commercial perspective and said his offer was the start of an auction.

"This is a partial salvation for the Arab pride that has been violated by the current American administration and its occupation of Arab and Muslim countries and it shedding of innocent blood," Makhafa said.

The 60-year-old stressed that he does not hold a grudge against the U.S. and said he respects its people, but hates its foreign policies that have humiliated Arabs and Muslims.

Makhafa announced his offer on the internet and said tribesmen and public figures in the Arab world had expressed their support and many showed interest in taking part in the auction.

Makhafa calls himself an activist and has been involved in various social issues in his community. In an unprecedented initiative, he sued the Ministry of Transportation for a road accident that claimed the lives of 28 people. He also took part in exposing swindlers who cheated some local shareholders out of their money.


(Translated from the Arabic by Sonia Farid.)


Saudi man bids millions for shoes thrown at Bush
 
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bush intrview after incedent


 
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He actually wanted boots then shoes hahaha
 
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Shameful act, however i do understand the emotions of the perpetrator. Yes, he showed remarkable calm but what has been done to him will serve as a reminder for future generation of leaders in the world. He is your favorite, isn't he, flint????? you idealize him and would have liked to see him as your leader after your 9/11, don't you?????

:lol: No actually I agree with the majority opinion that he's one of the worst Presidents in history.

He may not have brains, but he's got a cool head. Gotta give him that.
 
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Yeah right, hell will freeze over before Zardari steps into a mosque even by mistake. But we can expect a new rule though, asking reporters to remove their shoes before a press-conference.
 
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December 16, 2008



The Iraqi journalist who tossed his shoes at President George W. Bush missed the commander in chief, but he scored a direct hit on the web zeitgeist.

The incident, in which reporter Muntadar al-Zeidi flung his footwear at Bush during a Baghdad press conference Sunday, has turned into a fast-moving internet meme, spawning dozens of games and video mashups.



In the Sock and Awe browser game (screenshot above), players toss shoes at the bobbing-and-weaving president. The Flying Babush and Bush's Boot Camp games offer similar action.

Comedic video cut-ups like b3ta.com user printmeister have already filtered the great presidential shoe toss of 2009 through the lens of The Matrix (embedded, right).

See more animated shoe-toss GIFs inspired by World of Warcraft, perpetually meme-compliant cats and other pop culture favorites after the jump.

Documentary footage of al-Zeidi's infamous shoe toss have proven popular online as well, with various clips showing the incident in raw form and slow motion quickly racking up millions of views.

Meanwhile, al-Zeidi, a journalist based in Cairo, Egypt, is well on his way to becoming the international hero of Bush haters. A Facebook group dedicated to al-Zaidi -- who capped his shoe toss with the soon-to-be-immortal words, "This is your farewell kiss, you dog!" -- already shows hundreds of fans.

"Great job!" wrote Facebook user Khan Zada on the fan page. "The real hero. God bless you mate."

Bush, who likened al-Zaidi's actions to flipping the bird at an irritating motorist, "harbors no hard feelings about the incident," said White House press secretary Dana Perino. The journalist's punishment, if any, will be left to Iraqi authorities, according to the White House.

More Animated GIF Mashups









 
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The Shoes We Longed For

The young journalist who took on Bush has become a unifying Iraqi symbol, a national hero

by Sami Ramadani

Within a few unlikely seconds, a pair of size 10 shoes have become the most destructive weapon the people of Iraq have managed to throw at the occupying powers, after nearly six years of occupation and formidable resistance. One Iraqi writer called the shoes, hurled by a journalist at George Bush, "Iraq's weapon of comprehensive destruction".

While the uprisings of Falluja, Najaf, Basra and Baghdad against the occupation will always remain as landmarks of a people resisting occupation, these incredible seconds have united Iraqis in the most dramatic fashion.

Contrary to most media coverage, the 28-year-old TV reporter Muntadhar al-Zaidi made history not by merely throwing a pair of shoes, the highest expression of insult in Iraqi culture, at the US president, but by what he said while doing so and as he was smothered by US and Iraqi security men. He groaned as they dragged him out of the press conference. They succeeded in silencing him - and according to his brother he was beaten in custody - but he had already said enough to shake the occupation and Nouri al-Maliki's Green Zone regime to their foundations.

Strip the words away, and his and the Iraqi people's cry of deep pain, anger and defiance would amount to no more than a shoe-throwing insult. But the words were heard. "This is the farewell kiss, you dog," he shouted as he threw the first shoe. The crucial line followed the second shoe: "This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq." Once those words were heard, the impact of a pair of shoes became electrifying. A young journalist has put aside the demands of his profession, preferring to act as the loudest cry of his long-suffering people. If one considers the torture and killings in Iraqi and US jails that Muntadhar often mentioned in his reports for al-Baghdadia satellite TV station, he was certainly aware he risked being badly hurt.

As the Iraqi and Arab satellite stations switched from the live press conference to reporting reaction to the event, the stunned presenters and reporters were swept away by popular expressions of joy in the streets, from Baghdad to Gaza to Casablanca. TV stations and media websites were inundated with messages of adulation. The instant reply to any criticism of "insulting a guest" was: "Bush is a mass murderer and a war criminal who sneaked into Baghdad. He killed a million Iraqis. He burned the country down."

Expressions of support and demands for Muntadhar's immediate release have spread from Najaf and Falluja to Baghdad, and from Mosul in the north to Basra in the south. An impressive show of anti-occupation unity is developing fast, after being weakened by the sectarian forces that the occupation itself has strengthened and nourished, as Muntadhar himself used to stress.

No one asked after Muntadhar's religion or sect, but they all loved his message. Indeed, I have yet to come across an Iraqi media outlet or website that pronounced on his religion, sect or ethnicity. The first I heard of his "sect" was through US and British media.

The reality is that Muntadhar is a secular socialist whose hero happens to be Che Guevara. He became a prominent leftwing student leader immediately after the occupation, while at Baghdad University's media college. He reported for al-Baghdadia on the poor and downtrodden victims of the US war. He was first on the scene in Sadr City and wherever people suffered violence or severe deprivation. He not only followed US Apache helicopters' trails of death and destruction, but he was also among the first to report every "sectarian" atrocity and the bombing of popular market places. He let the victims talk first.

It was effective journalism, reporting that the victims of violence themselves accused the US-led occupation of being behind all the carnage. He was a voice that could not be silenced, despite being kidnapped by a gang and arrested by US and regime forces.

His passion for the war's victims and his staunchly anti-occupation message endeared him to al-Baghdadia viewers. And after sending Bush out of Iraq in ignominy he has become a formidable national hero. The orphan who was brought up by his aunt, and whose name means the longed or awaited for, has become a powerful unifying symbol of defiance, and is being adopted by countless Iraqis as "our dearest son".

The Shoes We Longed For | CommonDreams.org
 
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Good that Bush left the conference, otherwise this could happen :cheesy:

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