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Chosen1
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Damn! That shyt is for real!!! (LOL) Even the movie, "I'm gonna get you sucka" (By the elder Waynes of Waynes brothers and I think that is the name of the movie, but I could be wrong) captures that Black revolutionary psychosis. Why is it most radical Blacks are shacked up with white chicks? It boggles the mind.


quote:
Originally posted by Just call me Jari:
The difference between a White Racist and a Black One, The white racist will never sleep with a black chick, the blacks will Yell DEATH TO WHITEY, and later that night go to the Nearest Honkey Tonk to get a fat drunk white chick...LOL



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-Just Call Me Jari-
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Isnt it obvious..??

Whites have pride in their race, their racism stems from the Pride in their ancestors.

Negro Racists and Radicals suffer from infeority complex, their racism stems from them really wanting to be white deep inside.

They will call the white man an Albino but in the same breath claim the Culture he created, even if that said culture opressed Africans.

quote:
Originally posted by Afrocentric Liars Exposed:
Damn! That shyt is for real!!! (LOL) Even the movie, "I'm gonna get you sucka" (By the elder Waynes of Waynes brothers and I think that is the name of the movie, but I could be wrong) captures that Black revolutionary psychosis. Why is it most radical Blacks are shacked up with white chicks? It boggles the mind.


quote:
Originally posted by Just call me Jari:
The difference between a White Racist and a Black One, The white racist will never sleep with a black chick, the blacks will Yell DEATH TO WHITEY, and later that night go to the Nearest Honkey Tonk to get a fat drunk white chick...LOL




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Chosen1
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Dude, this is a deep way of looking at it. I never thought of it that way. There does seem to be different types of racism; one is based in racial pride while the other is based in racial inferiority.

quote:
Originally posted by Just call me Jari:

Whites have pride in their race, their racism stems from the Pride in their ancestors.

Negro Racists and Radicals suffer from infeority complex, their racism stems from them really wanting to be white deep inside.


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Mike111
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^He,he, two Albinos fronting as Black and finding common ground. Lovely, just lovely.
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Zioncity
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Wow so white racist have pride in their race but blacks is an inferiority complex. I really hope you not black for fear of you breeding and your uncle tomism spreading to your seeds. White racist would never sleep with a black chick? What the hell do you think was going on during slavery? You are right in a way though i think most white men prefer boys over women anyway. While black men love women so its hard for us to pass up a piece lol!

quote:


Don't Worry go get a Pink Albino Chick, Watch his jump over himself to sleep with her...

The difference between a White Racist and a Black One, The white racist will never sleep with a black chick, the blacks will Yell DEATH TO WHITEY, and later that night go to the Nearest Honkey Tonk to get a fat drunk white chick...LOL

Watch the Tin Foil I-talian Purr...LOL

Are you white? No black man with any kind of self respect talks like that
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IronLion
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Zion

Geri is a pink doggie fronting as a black man..

Now you know the depth of his problems!

Lion!

--------------------
Lionz

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IronLion
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness:
Ironlion what are your thoughts on the Trans Atlantic slave trade?

I believe it happened and multi millions of slaves were taken from Africa.

correct me if I'm wrong but you believe it was minimal and greatly exaggerated, please explain

Is this the topic of this thread?

Why not start another thread on topic
you stooooopid boi!

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IronLion
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quote:
Originally posted by Afrocentric Liars Exposed:
Damn! That shyt is for real!!! (LOL) Even the movie, "I'm gonna get you sucka" (By the elder Waynes of Waynes brothers and I think that is the name of the movie, but I could be wrong) captures that Black revolutionary psychosis. Why is it most radical Blacks are shacked up with white chicks? It boggles the mind.


quote:
Originally posted by Just call me Jari:
The difference between a White Racist and a Black One, The white racist will never sleep with a black chick, the blacks will Yell DEATH TO WHITEY, and later that night go to the Nearest Honkey Tonk to get a fat drunk white chick...LOL



Pssst, Jeri Jeri pink dog
and "Liars Exposed", look...

this here is good for Itchy pink butts
 -

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anguishofbeing
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quote:
Originally posted by the lioness:
Ironlion what are your thoughts on the Trans Atlantic slave trade?

I believe it happened

Yes there is evidence for this, none for gassed Jews or extermination plan though.

We are free to debate the Atlantic Slave trade, not holocaust story. Fined and jailed in EU. Why?

[Eek!]

 -

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anguishofbeing
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quote:
The white racist will never sleep with a black chick,
how the hell do you explain mulatto babies during slavery? wasnt jefferson a white racist? what a dumbo, it must be your religion. [Roll Eyes]
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IronLion
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^Geri the pink dog is not only dumb like an untrained animal, he is also nasty like putrefied garbage!
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IronLion
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THE TURKICS AND THE ITALIACS MUST GO OR GHADAFI AND HIS AFRICAN ARMY ARE GONNA KILL THEM ALL, TO THE LAST BULLET!

Governments scrambled by air and sea to pick up their citizens stranded by Libya's bloody unrest on Tuesday, with thousands of Turks crowding into a stadium to await evacuation and Egyptians gathering at the border to escape the chaos.

At least two airlines, British Airways and Emirates, the Middle East's largest, said they were canceling flights to Tripoli, as reports spread that bodies of protesters littered the streets of a district in the capital.

Two civilian ferries from Turkey and one military ship were expected to arrive in the hard-hit eastern city of Benghazi on Tuesday to evacuate about 3,000 Turkish citizens after the country was unable to get permission to land at the city's airport.

Meanwhile, about 5,000 Egyptians have returned home from Libya by land and about 10,000 more are waiting to cross the Libya-Egypt border, an Egyptian security official said. Egypt says it will also send six commercial and two military planes to repatriate thousands more caught in the revolt against Moammar Gadhafi's regime.

Other countries said they were preparing planes to fetch their citizens, with Serbia, Russia, the Netherlands and France reporting they had permission to land in Tripoli. Libya is one of the world's biggest oil producers, and many oil companies were evacuating their expat workers and their families.

Turkey has a huge presence in Libya, with about 25,000 citizens in the country and more than 200 Turkish companies involved in construction projects worth more than $15 billion. Some of the construction sites reportedly came under attack by protesters but no Turkish citizen has been harmed so far, authorities said.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said 10 other countries have also asked for help from Turkey to evacuate their citizens, though he did not identify them. He said Turkey was also evaluating options to get its citizens out through Tunisia or Egypt. More than 1,000 Turkish citizens had been airlifted so far, he said.

"Our priority is to evacuate our citizens. We call on Libyan authorities to be sensitive toward the safety of foreigners," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, urging the authorities not to use violence.

In Egypt, Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit accused Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam of inciting against Egyptians by suggesting they joined the protests against his father.

The Egyptian security official said troops have beefed up their presence on the border with Libya and set up a field hospital there. He did not give details and spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to share such information.

Italy was sending an air force transport aircraft to Benghazi to evacuate roughly 100 Italian citizens. Italy's state radio said Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa made the announcement to reporters in Abu Dhabi, where he is on an official visit.

Italy, with large energy interests in Libya, has some 1,500 citizens living or working in the country. Some citizens have been leaving in recent days aboard regularly scheduled commercial flights from Tripoli. In addition, a special Alitalia flight from Tripoli was expected to arrive at Milan's Malpensa airport later Tuesday.

A Dutch air force transport plane had been given clearance to fly to Tripoli and was expected to leave early afternoon to pick up about 100 Dutch citizens and arrive back in the country Tuesday night, the Defense Ministry said.

Russian Emergencies Ministry spokeswoman Irina Andrianova said in televised comments that an Il-76 plane is to take off for Tripoli on Tuesday to collect 134 Russians. A total of 563 people are to be evacuated eventually on four planes, she said. Most are employees of state companies Russian Railways and Gazprom, plus their families.

Ukraine is planning to send a defense ministry plane and the Bulgarian foreign ministry said a government plane was ready to take off from Sofia airport as soon as it had permission to land in Tripoli to pick up 180 people.

The French Foreign Ministry said three French Airbus planes were heading to Tripoli's airport - where the French Embassy has set up a temporary office - to fly out 530 to 550 people.

Spanish oil company Repsol-YPF had about 200 workers and relatives of workers in Libya before the crisis began, and a company source said Tuesday that some had been evacuated from the country and that Repsol was trying to get the rest out. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because the source was not authorized to discuss the matter.

Other oil companies, including Italy's Eni, Royal Dutch Shell PLC, U.K.-based BP and Germany's Wintershall, a subsidiary of BASF, have been pulling out employees.

Emirates said it was halting its daily flights to Tripoli until further notice. British Airways canceled Tuesday's flight to Tripoli and its return leg to London's Heathrow Airport as a precaution, spokesman Euan Fordyce said. The airline, which flies daily to and from Tripoli, is reviewing flights for the rest of the week, Fordyce added.

Germany's Lufthansa said it was going ahead with its scheduled flight from Tripoli to Frankfurt on Tuesday, and was using a larger plane than usual to get as many people out as possible.

In addition, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said that two German military planes were in the air to help the evacuation effort. He added that "all other possibilities are being examined, including the sea route."

Many Germans already left on a scheduled flight Monday, Westerwelle said. But, German diplomats were working on getting people out. Some 500 Germans are registered as living in Libya, and the foreign ministry estimates that some 400 were still there Tuesday morning, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity in line with German government policy.

http://www.turnto23.com/news/26948260/detail.html

--------------------
Lionz

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Mazigh
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quote:
Originally posted by Afrocentric Liars Exposed:
WOW! Do you speak Arabic, Mazigh? What did this gentleman do to warrant this kind of meeted out mob justice (if it is justice)?

They are forcing him to tell how he used his weapon against the Libyans.
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IronLion
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quote:
Originally posted by Mazigh:
quote:
Originally posted by Afrocentric Liars Exposed:
WOW! Do you speak Arabic, Mazigh? What did this gentleman do to warrant this kind of meeted out mob justice (if it is justice)?

They are forcing him to tell how he used his weapon against the Libyans.
Ungrateful rat..

Please tell the world how this "black" African used his weapon against the Turkics and the Italics to give you a free country.
 -

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IronLion
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THE BLACK TRIBES OF LIBYA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52UwolPOWTw&feature=player_embedded

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alTakruri
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Libya's Alleged Foreign Mercenaries: More Gaddafi Victims?


By ABIGAIL HAUSLOHNER / SHEHAT Abigail Hauslohner / Shehat – Thu Feb 24, 1:45 pm ET


At the Aruba School in the Mediterranean coastal town of Shehat, less than a mile from a grassy hillside covered in Roman ruins, a poster bearing Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's picture is being used as a doormat. School is not in session. But in the current state of limbo gripping eastern Libya, or "Free Libya," as some are calling it, the Aruba School is serving a different function. It is a prison for nearly 200 suspected mercenaries of the Gaddafi regime.

Libyan soldiers who have defected from Gaddafi's ranks stand guard at the school's gates, draped in belts of ammunition and cradling machine guns - more to protect their hostages than to keep them from escaping, some locals whisper. A group of civilians from the nearby towns has gathered at the gates. They want to get a glimpse of the "African mercenaries" who they say killed their families and neighbors last week. Shouting breaks out. The guards let them into the school's lobby and then hold them back. "They are scared that they will hurt the Africans," says Tawfik al-Shohiby, an activist and chemical engineer.

The soldiers have good reason to be protective. Rumors abound in this restless region on Libya's eastern Mediterranean coast about the identity of the forces who fought the protesters for days before eastern Libya fell, as they say, "to the people." At the ransacked airport of Labrak, on the road between the towns of Darna and Beida, where clashes were fierce, Gaddafi's government flew in two planes of foreign mercenaries on Wednesday night to fight the protesters, say the airport employees standing amid the wreckage.

The protesters accuse Gaddafi of sending foreigners from Libya's southern neighbors of Chad and Niger because he had no one else to support him. They say the mercenaries were rounded up and paid to fight. And they have found ID cards from Niger and Chad to prove it. One activist displays a traveler's check for 15,000 Libyan dinars alongside a matching national ID card from Chad, as well as a stack of others.

At the Aruba School, contained in a series of cold, thinly insulated classrooms, roughly 200 suspected mercenaries huddle beneath blankets on mattresses on the floor. Captured by rebels in the streets and from nearby army bases, some prisoners say they were moved several times before arriving at their makeshift prison. Given their claim that there were once 325 of them - flown in from Libya's southern town of Sabha - the remaining men consider themselves lucky. Many were captured during fierce clashes between residents and Gaddafi's forces last week; in the ensuing chaos, a group of men from al-Baida executed 15 of the suspected mercenaries on Feb. 18 and 19 in front of the town's courthouse. They were hanged, says the country's former Justice Minister Mustafa Mohamed Abd al-Jalil (who has quit and joined the revolution). It wasn't entirely planned, but the people here were enraged.

Most of the prisoners say they were recruited in Sabha, a town deep in Libya's Sahara that is heavily populated by Gaddafi's tribe. Ali Osman, head of a state-affiliated youth organization, says they fell victim to invitations to attend a pro-Gaddafi rally in Tripoli, only to wind up on an army base in al-Baida. In the chaotic firefights that rattled this coastal region late last week, some of the men were captured, others were killed and some are missing. But there may not be a single or clear answer to who exactly the Aruba School prisoners are.

"There are snipers among them, but they won't talk," says a guard, pointing his finger at the huddled individuals in the room, containing Ali and 75 others. Ali insists they are innocent. "We were brought to the airport in Sabha and told we were going to participate in peaceful protest in Tripoli to support Gaddafi," he says. After a 1.5-hr. flight late last week, he was surprised when the plane landed at Labrak.

The men were put on buses and taken to an army base in al-Baida. Then, says Ali, a protest outside the base turned into an intense firefight between those outside and those inside. At some point, the soldiers on the base offered the men from Sabha weapons. "They told us the people of this city want to kill you because there are rumors that there are mercenaries among you," Ali says. By the night of Feb. 18, soldiers began to defect, joining the revolution. And that's when soldiers turned to the men from Sabha and said they should run, or they might be killed, Ali says. He surrendered when ambulances pulled up and the people inside were informed that they wouldn't be hurt if they laid down their weapons. He and a group of other prisoners were taken to a nearby mosque and guarded by local elders, he says. "At the same time, there were people outside who lost their relatives in the clashes, and they were shouting. One tried to attack us. People at that time didn't know who's Libyan and who's a foreigner."

The notion that Gaddafi is employing foreign mercenaries to fight his own people is an outrage, a feeling shared by al-Jalil, the former Justice Minister as well as army officers. But it's also a tactic that, some say, their leader has used before.

Indeed, many of the prisoners at the Aruba School are dual nationals - Libyans with roots in Chad or Niger. And some are entirely foreign. Three men, two 19-year-olds and an 18-year-old, crossed the porous Saharan border from Chad into Libya's south just a few weeks ago, looking for work. They wound up on the Aruba School floor, they say, after being told by a taxi driver in Sabha that they could get a free plane ride to Tripoli.

Other prisoners raise their hands when asked if they're members of "Khamees' battalion" - an allegation spread widely beyond the school's walls. Khamees is one of Gaddafi's sons, and al-Jalil says that each son controls a unit of Libya's military. "Every one of Gaddafi's sons has an army and does whatever he wants with his army," he says.

The residents of Libya's east remain angry, particularly as accounts of ongoing massacres in Tripoli spill across the spotty phone lines. But the guards at the Aruba School say their prisoners won't be hurt. Still, like most Libyans awaiting the collapse or survival of Gaddafi's 41-year regime, their fate hangs in the balance.

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argyle104
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alTakruri,

Why do you have such an inferiority complex to so called "berbers"? Its psychotic. I know from one of your posts in the past, you were upset because their women did not want you like those (LOL!) "hot Indonesian chicks" did.


Damn man get over it.

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-Just Call Me Jari-
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Vigilante Justice, and War Crimes commited against black Lybians and other innocent blacks.

quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
Libya's Alleged Foreign Mercenaries: More Gaddafi Victims?


By ABIGAIL HAUSLOHNER / SHEHAT Abigail Hauslohner / Shehat – Thu Feb 24, 1:45 pm ET


At the Aruba School in the Mediterranean coastal town of Shehat, less than a mile from a grassy hillside covered in Roman ruins, a poster bearing Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's picture is being used as a doormat. School is not in session. But in the current state of limbo gripping eastern Libya, or "Free Libya," as some are calling it, the Aruba School is serving a different function. It is a prison for nearly 200 suspected mercenaries of the Gaddafi regime.

Libyan soldiers who have defected from Gaddafi's ranks stand guard at the school's gates, draped in belts of ammunition and cradling machine guns - more to protect their hostages than to keep them from escaping, some locals whisper. A group of civilians from the nearby towns has gathered at the gates. They want to get a glimpse of the "African mercenaries" who they say killed their families and neighbors last week. Shouting breaks out. The guards let them into the school's lobby and then hold them back. "They are scared that they will hurt the Africans," says Tawfik al-Shohiby, an activist and chemical engineer.

The soldiers have good reason to be protective. Rumors abound in this restless region on Libya's eastern Mediterranean coast about the identity of the forces who fought the protesters for days before eastern Libya fell, as they say, "to the people." At the ransacked airport of Labrak, on the road between the towns of Darna and Beida, where clashes were fierce, Gaddafi's government flew in two planes of foreign mercenaries on Wednesday night to fight the protesters, say the airport employees standing amid the wreckage.

The protesters accuse Gaddafi of sending foreigners from Libya's southern neighbors of Chad and Niger because he had no one else to support him. They say the mercenaries were rounded up and paid to fight. And they have found ID cards from Niger and Chad to prove it. One activist displays a traveler's check for 15,000 Libyan dinars alongside a matching national ID card from Chad, as well as a stack of others.

At the Aruba School, contained in a series of cold, thinly insulated classrooms, roughly 200 suspected mercenaries huddle beneath blankets on mattresses on the floor. Captured by rebels in the streets and from nearby army bases, some prisoners say they were moved several times before arriving at their makeshift prison. Given their claim that there were once 325 of them - flown in from Libya's southern town of Sabha - the remaining men consider themselves lucky. Many were captured during fierce clashes between residents and Gaddafi's forces last week; in the ensuing chaos, a group of men from al-Baida executed 15 of the suspected mercenaries on Feb. 18 and 19 in front of the town's courthouse. They were hanged, says the country's former Justice Minister Mustafa Mohamed Abd al-Jalil (who has quit and joined the revolution). It wasn't entirely planned, but the people here were enraged.

Most of the prisoners say they were recruited in Sabha, a town deep in Libya's Sahara that is heavily populated by Gaddafi's tribe. Ali Osman, head of a state-affiliated youth organization, says they fell victim to invitations to attend a pro-Gaddafi rally in Tripoli, only to wind up on an army base in al-Baida. In the chaotic firefights that rattled this coastal region late last week, some of the men were captured, others were killed and some are missing. But there may not be a single or clear answer to who exactly the Aruba School prisoners are.

"There are snipers among them, but they won't talk," says a guard, pointing his finger at the huddled individuals in the room, containing Ali and 75 others. Ali insists they are innocent. "We were brought to the airport in Sabha and told we were going to participate in peaceful protest in Tripoli to support Gaddafi," he says. After a 1.5-hr. flight late last week, he was surprised when the plane landed at Labrak.

The men were put on buses and taken to an army base in al-Baida. Then, says Ali, a protest outside the base turned into an intense firefight between those outside and those inside. At some point, the soldiers on the base offered the men from Sabha weapons. "They told us the people of this city want to kill you because there are rumors that there are mercenaries among you," Ali says. By the night of Feb. 18, soldiers began to defect, joining the revolution. And that's when soldiers turned to the men from Sabha and said they should run, or they might be killed, Ali says. He surrendered when ambulances pulled up and the people inside were informed that they wouldn't be hurt if they laid down their weapons. He and a group of other prisoners were taken to a nearby mosque and guarded by local elders, he says. "At the same time, there were people outside who lost their relatives in the clashes, and they were shouting. One tried to attack us. People at that time didn't know who's Libyan and who's a foreigner."

The notion that Gaddafi is employing foreign mercenaries to fight his own people is an outrage, a feeling shared by al-Jalil, the former Justice Minister as well as army officers. But it's also a tactic that, some say, their leader has used before.

Indeed, many of the prisoners at the Aruba School are dual nationals - Libyans with roots in Chad or Niger. And some are entirely foreign. Three men, two 19-year-olds and an 18-year-old, crossed the porous Saharan border from Chad into Libya's south just a few weeks ago, looking for work. They wound up on the Aruba School floor, they say, after being told by a taxi driver in Sabha that they could get a free plane ride to Tripoli.

Other prisoners raise their hands when asked if they're members of "Khamees' battalion" - an allegation spread widely beyond the school's walls. Khamees is one of Gaddafi's sons, and al-Jalil says that each son controls a unit of Libya's military. "Every one of Gaddafi's sons has an army and does whatever he wants with his army," he says.

The residents of Libya's east remain angry, particularly as accounts of ongoing massacres in Tripoli spill across the spotty phone lines. But the guards at the Aruba School say their prisoners won't be hurt. Still, like most Libyans awaiting the collapse or survival of Gaddafi's 41-year regime, their fate hangs in the balance.


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argyle104
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Just call me Jari, what has caused this supersized victim mentality you posess?
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IronLion
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quote:
Originally posted by IronLion:
quote:
Originally posted by Leo Minor:
The Libyan Turks are using black African mercenaries to support their Turk rule.

Libya protests: 'foreign mercenaries using heavy weapons against at demonstrators'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8336467/Libya-protests-foreign-mercenaries-using-heavy-weapons-against-at-demonstrators.html


Are they black Libyans, or foreigners?

Are Libyans Africans or Turks?

Last time I checked Libya was in African Union!

Abdel Rahman Shalgam, Libyan Ambassador to the UN speaking at the UN Security Council Friday:

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