Yip one man and one gun acting alone. In Haditha it was one unit with their commander acting alone In the wikileaks video it was one apache crew and their helicopter acting alone. Bit of a recurring theme here
Please attempt to argue the case that he would not have been there "if 19 Islamic nutters did not fly a plane into the twin towers" paying key attention to what Afganistan had to do with 9/11. I await your argument.
The taliban did offer to hand Bin Laden over if the Yanks could provide evidence of his involvment in 9/11, which of course, they couldnt. They would have had just as much chance of finding evidence of my involvment.
I wasnt fishing, it seriously annoys me that I have to hypothetically watch my by hypothetical back while growing hypothetical hash plants while the people im hypothetically hiding from answer to smack dealers.
Hypothetically I'd like to taste those and hypothetically i know people who could sell it I watched that Jorge Cervantes Ultimate Grow last night, quite enjoyed it even though I've no intention of starting a grow (not any time soon anyway) it was quite a good video <MDgetshardonsfromhorticulture>
I've never been to this section of not606 before but I must say you have all thoroughly entertained me for all the wrong reasons.
dont be fooled by anyone on GC, people just spew there darkest deepest depraved thoughts on here, if you were to meet any of us in real life they would be totally different
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/fighting_words/2011/02/news_flash_the_taliban_violate_human_rights.html The turning point, in the mind of the human rights "activists," appears to have occurred in late January, when a Taliban suicide-murderer killed at least 14 civilians in the Finest Supermarket in Kabul. Among the slain was a well-known local campaigner named Hamida Barmaki, whose husband and four small children were also killed. One wonders in what sense this was the Taliban going too far—women are killed and mutilated by them every single day in Afghanistan. Yet let the terror reach one of the upscale markets or hotels that cater to the NGO constituency in Kabul, and suddenly there is an abrupt change from moral neutrality. Perhaps it is fortunate for the Taliban that they take few, if any, prisoners and maintain no places of detention—at least they don't have to face the righteous scrutiny of those who (like Amnesty International and Julian Assange) have seriously compared Guantanamo to the Gulag. Moreover, their refusal of any military discipline makes it hard if not impossible to distinguish their corpses from others who may have been killed in an airstrike. And can you imagine a Taliban fighter being disciplined by his "superiors" for murder, or demoted for lack of care toward the local population, as has happened several times with U.S. officers and soldiers?