Thursday, June 23, 2005

 

Subsidizing Genocide In Zimbabwe

A devastating new strategy for genocide is shaping up in Zimbabwe:

On Tuesday vegetable gardens the urban poor plant in vacant lots around Harare were added to the police's targets. The government says the plots are threatening the environment.
There are four clinical symptoms of AIDS used to diagnose it in Africa:
  1. a persistent dry cough;

  2. a high fever

  3. loose stools or diarrhea for 30 days

  4. a 10 percent loss of body weight over a two month period.
These are also the symptoms of simple malnutrition.

Mugabe will starve the people both to eliminate many and to terrorize the rest. Then he will blame the deaths on AIDS.

Many Hollywood celebrities will join him in the latter. Bush will be blamed for inadequate funding and drug co’s for the cost of meds.

Mugabe will demand money from the world to fight the disease. The UN will support him in this, esp other African dictators who will see it as a fine strategy, a way to get paid for killing your opponents. And it will spread.

Political Correctness kills.

Hat Tip: Tim Blair

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

 

EU: Setting Up Round Two

Read this excerpt carefully, because what the story describes is not really what was said. First, the description:

If the French and the Dutch reject the EU Constitution on Sunday and Wednesday, they should re-run the referendums, the current president of the EU, Jean-Claude Juncker, has said.
But he does not really say that at all! Let's hear it from the man himself:
"If at the end of the ratification process, we do not manage to solve the problems, the countries that would have said No, would have to ask themselves the question again", Mr Juncker said in an interview with Belgian daily Le Soir.

His words come despite a statement by the French prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin on Tuesday (24 May) saying that another referendum is "not a perspective that France could accept".
Germany has already ratified its position without a referendum, and Mr Juncker is quietly suggesting that other countries can do the same. His words do not therefore come, as the article says, "despite" any statement by Raffarin; in fact, the two men are wholly consistent, not only with each other, but also with the elitist spirit in which the entire project has been handled to date. Thus begins round two.