Who gives a shit whether she laughed before, during or after the news that one of the planet's biggest shitbags had met a gruesome end?
FWIW. The laugh apparently came after the death was confirmed.
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It would be nice to see the full clip, no?
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Yes, it would. But I haven't been able to find it.
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Oh FFS
Who gives a shit whether she laughed before, during or after the news that one of the planet's biggest shitbags had met a gruesome end? |
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Ah. You've no use for the likes of John Donne, I see.
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You're being a total drama llama
What with your talk of "truly dark souls" and whatnot. You know who had a truly dark soul? Saddam Hussein and his sons. You know who else? Muammar Gaddafi. The problem with lacking nuance is that you've painted HRC with the same brush as Uday Hussein, who murdered people just cuz. Or did he have a really truly dark soul? Are we discussing shades of black, here? For the avoidance of doubt, I might not agree with the process by which Hussein got his neck stretched, and indeed would much rather have put him in ADX Florence for his whole life, but I absolutely do not doubt that, in the less-than-perfect circumstances, he got what was coming to him. Ditto his offspring, ditto Gaddafi. None more blacker! |
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after the craphole that Iraq turned into we should have given sadaam a
"sorry, here is $500 and have a nice day" then let him loose always look out for number one and don't step in number two |
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O/T, but as to Saddam Hussein
...a cellphone video of his hasty execution made it to the internets, as you know, and I remember thinking that it was a helluva thing that the only individual in the room displaying any dignity during that sorry spectacle was Saddam-fucking-Hussein. The guy was a dimestore Stalin, of course, but he imagined himself, as despots will, as the embodiment of his people's greatness, a patriot and protector obliged at times to take stern and even harsh measures to secure the nation's greatness and advance its destiny. No doubt he had an enlarged perception of his personal majesty extending to the sense that the lavish comfort of his several palaces were no more than his due for the heavy historical duties he bore uncomplainingly for Iraq. Your garden-variety tyrant, in other words, and if he hadn't got himself crosswise with a slightly sclerotic hegemony by presuming to lay his finger on the imperial carotid a quarter of a century ago, he might still be an ally-of-convenience in good standing against the schemes and plots of the perfidious Persians. His sons, of course, Uday and Donald Junior, were a couple of nasty pieces of work whose native viciousness, never tempered by the absence of privilege, appears to have been unredeemed by any conspicuous administrative gifts. Good riddance to bad rubbish. At the end of his life—in the aftermath of which I am not certain his surviving people are truly enjoying a better life—the dictator left them a a final message. No doubt Stalin's self-evaluation would have been equally easy on himself (Hitler, I suspect, would have used the ink to berate the Germans for proving unworthy of his labors on their behalf), but I think it's interesting for the light it sheds on a condemned man's narrative of his own character and motives, and I get the sense that he believed it: Many of you have known the writer of this letter to be faithful, honest, caring for others, wise, of sound judgement, just, decisive, careful with the wealth of the people and the state... and that his heart is big enough to embrace all without discrimination.I found that last bit rather interesting. Given that Iraq's criminal justice system appears to have defined criminality rather broadly and to have had standards of due process well short of the minimums recognized by Amnesty International or the ACLU, he must have been astonished at the conscientious diligence of the military lawyers assigned to conduct his defense. A bad guy—don't mistake me—but not conspicuously gamier than many of the USA's clients times past, and only marginally less distinguished if at all in points of statesmanship than his successors. And as I said, the only gravitas displayed in the moments preceding that disgraceful education was his own. cordially, |