lations of Elk and Geezers Cloisterlands in ya face condescendences!
Seems ya got my Teddy's Last Hurrah Contest Post replies quite well-
the PTSD shove a tennis ball down a blk asian fem Ref's throat is ole man river Fem Abzug PokeaHauntas news --
hmm
If ya dont like whats in my thread quit spamming it with off topic replies of hate chatter
now git stalker! and Take ya Edward MOORE Kennedy Services Act of 2009 civilian military Americorps in ya face mgmt interns to every SAG and meida outlet or burn baby burn gas hand held cocktail Angela Davis and K Cleaver born again law Porfessorships of Liberian Constitution(created by ACS INC POTUSES) Racism for of color only dispersed african citizens premitted in Liberia as a citizen(zimbawean South Africa?) White African American hate crimes pattern here that USA funds through Sirleaf the Iron Lady trained by CITIC Cinese bankers for black chinese farmers in Liberia off US TAX bucks to buy Monvoria !
The muslim sharia jiza system of social capitalism not for prophets Conseems to be ya burga calling---
get it?
hit a link if ya can't grasp crackers of wheat and silk hulls foreparents common speak--
Try this
Its in banality of the Banility Crown English licensed speak to disarm Afganistan gunsmith err license em to Oil for Food Social Advisory Counsel to UN Secretary General aka US Commissions on The Status of Women Inc in every mayor's office to ensure no honest c`itizen is apptd to Gerry family courts of misdemeanors without Bar Association Natl Lawyers Guild of Emma Goldman born agains approvals
hmm
the link topass stalker spammer the link
forget the Red foxx gibberish in the 2000 page HC Alan Solomont Nursing home Czar head of Kennedy's Service Act of 2009 signed by Dunham and robinson Theologists
<link>
What is clear already, however, is that Communists and other dictators are entirely correct in their fear of an armed populace.
With the exception of Rumania, the countries of the Warsaw Pact have so far made the transition from dictatorship to democracy without violence. Does this prove that in the modern world, the right to bear arms no longer has any relation to political liberty? Not at all.
The collapse of the Soviet empire did not begin in Grenada in 1983, or in Poland in 1980, but rather in Afghanistan in 1979. In December of that year, General Secretary Brezhnev ordered a surprise attack on the U.S.S.R.'s southern neighbor, to prop up a local Communist regime that was on the verge of being overthrown by Muslim guerrillas.
The Red Army quickly seized the cities and took control of the government. Most of the world expected that the Soviet conquest would be completed in a matter of weeks, and the Afghanistan itself would be absorbed into the U.S.S.R. as a Soviet "Republic."
But the Afghans, like the Swiss, are a proud and independent mountain people who have maintained their freedom for centuries through force of arms. The gun culture of Afghanistan is as strong as any on the planet. The Afghans had a long tradition of expert gunsmithing. Using tools inferior to those in the Sears catalogue, Afghan gunsmiths began turning out home-made versions of the Soviet army's Kalashnikov rifles. Pakistani gunsmiths across the border found a lucrative business in selling home-made guns to the rebels.
And the Afghan people knew how to use the guns. Explained one rebel commander to a New York Times reporter, "All tribesmen are trained in the use of guns from childhood, in their home villages."
The imperial Soviet army tried every trick in the book: carpet bombing, chemical warfare, anti-personnel explosives disguised as toys for children to pick up, crop destruction to starve the people into submission. Yet the "primitive" mountain people of Afghanistan fought the mightiest army in the history of the world to a draw for seven years. When the U.S. finally began providing Stinger missiles to the rebels in 1986, the Soviets lost control of the air. The Kremlin acknowledged that its imperial appetite was larger than its imperial capacity, and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan began.
But it was too late for the Kremlin; the Afghan warriors had already set the dominos of the Soviet empire tumbling. In Poland in the early 1980s, the Solidarnosc movement began a social revolution. Union leader Lech Walesa credited the Afghan rebels with creating the essential breathing space for Solidarnosc. Bogged down in an unwinnable war in Afghanistan, the Soviet army was reluctant to undertake an invasion of Poland to crush Solidarnosc.
Within the Soviet Union, the failure of the invasion of Afghanistan fanned popular resentment against a regime that had sent its young men to die for nothing. Even Communist Party apparatchiks began to see that the Soviet military was not an infallible solution to Soviet problems.
In the closing months of 1989, the Soviet