Author Topic: Pakistani Floods. Blame Bush?  (Read 989 times)

fightingquaker13

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Pakistani Floods. Blame Bush?
« on: August 20, 2010, 04:54:42 AM »
 I am an Episcopalian. We believe in free will and don't generally blame natural disasters on anyone. BUT..... The floods in Pakistan's tribal areas? The fact they are following savages that hate and oppress women and view individual rights and liberty as heresy and blasphemy? Whose fault is it? Why, its W's and BO's of course. ::)
 Now look, I've made it clear I don't like W. I ain't too hot on BO either. But this? Maybe folks over there need to think that when you sanctify a false god by oppressing and murdering the innocent in its name that there might be consequenses. Is this a wake up call to repentence? Not conversion mind you, just a moment of "Gee we shouldn't stone people to death or bury disobedient daughters alive". Hardly. In fact, its all our fault. W did it, or at least BO. America caused the flood and is responsible for Pakistani incompetance. Of course. >:(
FQ13 who hopes to be forgiven for thinking that God ought to have sent a bit more water. I hate to say that (and really don't mean it) its just that when you snuggle up to the evil that is extreme Sharia, what the hell do you expect?  You believe in God? Good. He's sending you a message. Please listen. :-\
 Rant over. I will pray for the victims and probably open my check book when I find a charity I trust. Still, I wonder what, if anything, will get through to these people. ???


This from the press


ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and a senior U.S. senator warned on Thursday that Taliban insurgents are trying to exploit rising anger over the country's worst floods to promote their cause.

More than four million Pakistanis have been made homeless by nearly three weeks of floods, the United Nations said on Thursday, making the critical task of securing greater amounts of aid more urgent.

Eight million people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance and many may not care where they get it.

The floods began washing away villages and destroying roads and bridges just after the government had made progress in stabilizing the country through offensives against Taliban.

Islamist charities, some with suspected links to militant groups, stepped in to help victims, possibly boosting their image at the expense of the U.S.-backed government, which is still accused of being lax nearly three weeks into the crisis.

U.S. Senator John Kerry, who visited flood-hit areas with Zardari, said action must be taken to prevent anyone from exploiting frustrations.

"We need to address that rapidly to avoid their (Pakistani's) impatience boiling over, and people exploiting that impatience and I think it's important for all of us to understand that challenge," Kerry said, in a clear reference to the Taliban. "We also share security concerns."

About one third of Pakistan has been hit by the floods, with waters stretching tens of kilometers from rivers.

In a small town in Punjab, people waved empty pots and pans at a military helicopter, wondering, like millions of others, when food supplies will arrive.

Aid agencies have been pushing for more funding as they try to tackle major problems such as food supplies, lack of clean water and shelter and outbreaks of disease.

The U.S. needs a stable Pakistan, which it sees as the most important ally in the war against militancy, especially in neighboring Afghanistan, where a Taliban insurgency is raging.

In a sign of growing concerns over the ramifications of the floods, Kerry said $200 million from the $7.5 billion U.S. aid package for Pakistan over five years, which he co-authored, would be diverted to the relief effort.

The bill was unpopular in Pakistan as it ties some funds to fighting militancy, to cooperation in stopping nuclear proliferation and ensuring Pakistani civilian government dominance over the military.

Kerry said he was shocked after seeing miles of destroyed homes and displaced people in camps in sweltering heat.

Floods have ruined crops over more than 1.6 million acres, hammering the mainstay agriculture industry. Aid workers say water could stagnate on the surface for months, making planting difficult.

The government also faces the prospect of food riots and social unrest.

Zardari, who drew a hail of criticism after he left on a trip to meet the leaders of Britain and France as the disaster unfolded, also said militants could capitalize on the floods.

"There is a possibility that some, the negative forces, would exploit this situation, this time of need," he told a joint news conference with Kerry, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

"They would take babies who become orphans and then put them in their own camps, train them as the terrorists of tomorrow."

(Additional reporting by Faisal Aziz and Sahar Ahmed in Karachi, Zeeshan Kaider and Kamran Haider in Islamabad, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Rosemarie Francisco in Manila and Jonathan Thatcher in Singapore)

(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Alistair Scrutton)

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tombogan03884

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Re: Pakistani Floods. Blame Bush?
« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2010, 09:16:28 AM »
FQ, no surprises here.
They are just like our own Dems, haven't you noticed how they spent the last 2 years blaming Bush for everything. Heck, when he was in office some meathead wanted to impeach him for the Tomato /salmonella outbreak.
As for exploiting the "tragedy" (sorry, somehow I just don't get choked up about the deaths of people who hate me )
Both sides will, one group will be saying some variation of what FQ posted, the other side will be saying Allah is pissed at you because you don't kill more people.
Who do you think they will listen to ?

WatchManUSA

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Re: Pakistani Floods. Blame Bush?
« Reply #2 on: August 20, 2010, 09:48:55 AM »
“You don’t ever want a crisis to go to waste; it’s an opportunity to do important things that you would otherwise avoid.”

       – Rahm Emanuel
"Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies." (Groucho Marx)

 

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