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Chocoholic wrote:Corcovado, that's what I just said!
Soldier in picture = occupation = wrong
Freza - get it now?
Corcovado wrote:why are u all in denial ??? why u want to find excuses for war??this man should not be in her country with his big gun ... Israel should not be in palestine and lebanon... who died and made them GOD??? stop hiding behind ur fingers and open up ur eyes ... there is evil in the world and its US And Israel
Chocoholic wrote:The point is when you look at the image, you see what you want to see - that's the difference. In my job I have to look at things objectively. The soldier is not in defensive stance, his hold on the weapon is relaxed, his finger isn't even on the trigger, his back is even to the little girl. The girls body posture is relaxed, there is no tension in this image whatsoever.
The only thing wrong with it is the fact that the soldier is there.
I'll ignore you comment about terrorist as it's typical that you'd change the subject to that, we're not talking about that.
freza wrote:Chocoholic wrote:The point is when you look at the image, you see what you want to see - that's the difference. In my job I have to look at things objectively. The soldier is not in defensive stance, his hold on the weapon is relaxed, his finger isn't even on the trigger, his back is even to the little girl. The girls body posture is relaxed, there is no tension in this image whatsoever.
The only thing wrong with it is the fact that the soldier is there.
I'll ignore you comment about terrorist as it's typical that you'd change the subject to that, we're not talking about that.
Please don't ignore my comment because I'm going to think that it's convenient for you to ignore it. You should know that there is such a thing a state terrorism, and military-state terrorism...right? So I'm really not changing the subject at all.
Would you have the same type of objectivity if it was an Al Qaeda soldier in such an image?
freza wrote:"why would it be different Freza?
Chocs is right. the soldier should not be there, but not because of where he is from."
raidah, that wasn't my point, what she said earlier was what I have an issue with. Please look at the thread from the start.
raidah wrote:freza wrote:"why would it be different Freza?
Chocs is right. the soldier should not be there, but not because of where he is from."
raidah, that wasn't my point, what she said earlier was what I have an issue with. Please look at the thread from the start.
i asked the question exactly because i have read the thread from the start. we dont know as much about that photo as we think. so if u wanna be objective u have to interpret only what u see there. the man was not pointing the gun to the child. that photo does not suggest that the soldier represents a danger for the kid. still its not a pleasant photo to see, because the mere prezence of the armed man means some state of war. was the soldier from another nation's army in the exact same position, it would be also unpleasant, but for the same reason, war. and nothing more.
freza wrote:raidah wrote:freza wrote:"why would it be different Freza?
Chocs is right. the soldier should not be there, but not because of where he is from."
raidah, that wasn't my point, what she said earlier was what I have an issue with. Please look at the thread from the start.
i asked the question exactly because i have read the thread from the start. we dont know as much about that photo as we think. so if u wanna be objective u have to interpret only what u see there. the man was not pointing the gun to the child. that photo does not suggest that the soldier represents a danger for the kid. still its not a pleasant photo to see, because the mere prezence of the armed man means some state of war. was the soldier from another nation's army in the exact same position, it would be also unpleasant, but for the same reason, war. and nothing more.
So since Choco is not answering my last question, maybe you can:
Would you have the same type of objectivity (and opinion as above) if it was an Al Qaeda soldier instead of an American occupation soldier in such an image?
raidah wrote:freza wrote:raidah wrote:freza wrote:"why would it be different Freza?
Chocs is right. the soldier should not be there, but not because of where he is from."
raidah, that wasn't my point, what she said earlier was what I have an issue with. Please look at the thread from the start.
i asked the question exactly because i have read the thread from the start. we dont know as much about that photo as we think. so if u wanna be objective u have to interpret only what u see there. the man was not pointing the gun to the child. that photo does not suggest that the soldier represents a danger for the kid. still its not a pleasant photo to see, because the mere prezence of the armed man means some state of war. was the soldier from another nation's army in the exact same position, it would be also unpleasant, but for the same reason, war. and nothing more.
So since Choco is not answering my last question, maybe you can:
Would you have the same type of objectivity (and opinion as above) if it was an Al Qaeda soldier instead of an American occupation soldier in such an image?
i cant believe ur asking this very same question over and over, after u have received the answer both from Chocs and me...
here is what she said :"Soldier in picture = occupation = wrong"
and above in red what i said...
what is it that u dont understand?
freza wrote:raidah wrote:freza wrote:raidah wrote:freza wrote:"why would it be different Freza?
Chocs is right. the soldier should not be there, but not because of where he is from."
raidah, that wasn't my point, what she said earlier was what I have an issue with. Please look at the thread from the start.
i asked the question exactly because i have read the thread from the start. we dont know as much about that photo as we think. so if u wanna be objective u have to interpret only what u see there. the man was not pointing the gun to the child. that photo does not suggest that the soldier represents a danger for the kid. still its not a pleasant photo to see, because the mere prezence of the armed man means some state of war. was the soldier from another nation's army in the exact same position, it would be also unpleasant, but for the same reason, war. and nothing more.
So since Choco is not answering my last question, maybe you can:
Would you have the same type of objectivity (and opinion as above) if it was an Al Qaeda soldier instead of an American occupation soldier in such an image?
i cant believe ur asking this very same question over and over, after u have received the answer both from Chocs and me...
here is what she said :"Soldier in picture = occupation = wrong"
and above in red what i said...
what is it that u dont understand?
I was being very specific, but your answer was NOT. hence I had to repeat myself. "...was the soldier from another nation's army..." I was referring to Al Qaeda in Iraq which can hardly be considered "another nation's army". Right?
So I guess your answer is YES, if this were an Al Qaeda guy you would have the same type of objectivity and you would even say "maybe he's there to help those people". Got it.
I-No-Jack wrote:No, don't care to elaborate. Simply two pictures (you forgot the other) which everyone is free to rant about and make their own conclusions. Just pictures (like the first one on the thread).
kanelli wrote:Intimacy, you are a sweet and smart guy, but people can see through these shameless attempts to continue to stir up anti-US sentiment. There are children all over the world suffering in war torn areas and you only seem to care about the Iraqi ones and most likely because
you want to give people more reason to hate the US/coaltion forces in Iraq. You don't need a gun to terrorise a child, and you don't need to be American either.
There are also little children cowering like that in their homes if they have abusive parents
freza wrote:
Mr. suspicious new member,
I-No-Jack wrote:freza wrote:
Mr. suspicious new member,
Nothing suspicious about it. You know, "better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt"!
Chocoholic wrote:I used to work with UK marines - hotty totty.
Sadly the stuff they've seen you really don't want to know. These guys are very tough on the outside, but still they're very human on the inside.
I-No-Jack wrote:freza wrote:
Mr. suspicious new member,
Nothing suspicious about it. You know, "better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt"!
freza wrote:Chocoholic wrote:I used to work with UK marines - hotty totty.
Sadly the stuff they've seen you really don't want to know. These guys are very tough on the outside, but still they're very human on the inside.
So are the Iraqi occupation fighters. They're human too. They have feelings too. They've seen a lot worse that the UK marines, that's for sure.