Skip to main content

 

 

 

In 1999, Bill Clinton was one of the world’s leading war criminals. He had surpassed the crimes of his predecessor and “brought to the commission of war crimes a new eclectic reach and postmodern style,” Edward S. Herman wrote at the time. “A skilled public relations person, he has refined the rhetoric of humanistic and ethical concern and can apologize with seeming great sincerity,” a parlor trick Obama has attempted to emulate.

Clinton bombed the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Afghanistan and the Sudan, killing untold numbers. In the latter case, he bombed a pharmaceutical plant.

His putrid crown was the sanctions regime imposed on Iraq. “UNICEF reports that in 1999 more than 1 million Iraqi children under 5 were suffering from chronic malnutrition, and some 4,000-5,000 children are dying per month beyond normal death rates from the combination of malnutrition and disease,” writes Herman. “Death from disease was greatly increased by the shortage of potable water and medicines, that has led to a 20-fold increase in malaria (among other ailments). This vicious sanctions system, causing a creeping extermination of a people, has already caused more than a million excess deaths,” a toll that has exceeded the toll of “all so-called weapons of mass destruction [nuclear and chemical] throughout all history,” according to John and Karl Mueller.

More: http://www.infowars.com/war-cr...eace-prize-nominees/

 

 

 

Last edited by Bestworking
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Excerpt:

photo

Clinton and NATO specialized in targeting civilians like these Albanian refugees.

In Yugoslavia, Clinton targeted civilian infrastructure and civilian facilities – houses, hospitals, schools, trains, factories, power stations, and broadcasting facilities. Noted journalist John Pilger added “housing estates, hotels, libraries, youth centers, theaters, museums, churches and 14th century monasteries on the World Heritage list” to Clinton’s target roster. According to Yugoslav authorities, 60 percent of NATO targets were civilian, including 33 hospitals and 344 schools, as well as 144 major industrial plants and a large petro-chemical plant whose bombing caused a pollution catastrophe.

Not long after Clinton ran out of targets, the BBC reported that the use of depleted uranium in Serbia would cause 10,000 extra deaths from cancer. Scientists at Kozani in northern Greece reported that radiation levels were 25% above normal whenever the wind blew from the direction of Kosovo while Bulgarian researchers reported finding levels eight times higher than usual within Bulgaria itself, and up to 30 times higher in Yugoslavia.

 

Considering the fact that the Nobel Prize is now a cheap artifact awarded to war criminals and psychopaths, Clinton should be a shoo-in. Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning, and more than 200 other nominees should be dropped from consideration.

Bill Clinton, war criminal extraordinaire, is the ideal choice.

 

 

Last edited by Bestworking

I would not trust the report on radiation increase.  Depleted uranium is just that -- depleted of radioactivity.  Its used as bullets because it cuts thru steel like butter.  The main danger afterwards is breathing dust from the bullets inside a destroyed tank.  Uranium is a heavy metal like lead and arsenic.  Think Flint MI.

Considering the fact that the Nobel Prize is now a cheap artifact

And no one cheapened it more than Obama in 2009.

His promotion of nuclear nonproliferation[2] and a "new climate" in international relations fostered by Obama, especially in reaching out to the Muslim world. [Wiki]

Yeah, buddy.  Those Nobel folks were spot on about the Muslims [must have been Barry's name that gave it away] but not radical Islam.  Clairvoyant about North Korea and nukes, they ain't.  Welcome to the new climate, y'all.

Back to Best's topic.  Clinton is being nominated for the "Noble" Piece Prize for his work with Cuban cigars.

Last edited by budsfarm

Add Reply

Post

Untitled Document
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×