Freedom Folks

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Galloway Opens Big Bazoo in Syria

You know, every single time I read a quote from George Galloway, I can't believe that the man would utter the words. Read some of the latest offerings from his 24-7 bullshit factory here.

"You know, it never ceases to surprise me that Arab governments can allow a foreigner to come to their country and sit at their tables with their leaders to insult and attack another Arab country. This is the behavior of slave governments, and the Bahraini regime should have asked Condoleezza to leave when she insulted Syria in their presence, in their capital."

And I suppose you would have opposed someone coming to England during WWII to trash talk Nazi Germany? Actually, come to think of it, maybe you would have opposed any negative talk about Hitler & company.

"This is not a dream, you know. In the European Union, there is almost 100 languages, there is many religions, there is countries who only 50 years ago were slaughtering each other by the million in war - totally different cultures with nothing in common except living on the mainland of Europe. But we are making a European Union which in 20 years will balance the power of the United States of America, inshallah."

In case you haven't noticed, Georgie Boy, the United States of America has not been on a mission to bomb Madrid, bomb London, and riot in France, inshallah or not.

"Hundreds of thousands are ready to fight them in the Middle East, and in Latin America there is revolution everywhere. Fidel Castro is feeling young again. Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Ecuador, Chile are all electing left-wing governments which are challenging American domination. And in Venezuela, the hero Hugo Chavez has stood against them over and over and over again."

Anything is OK in you book as long as it's anti-American, right? I won't pretend to understand why you hate America so much, but may I recommend trying a new deodorant? I don't know what, exactly, you're afraid of, but I can smell the stench of fear across the Atlantic.