#1
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#2
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#3
It makes sense that they would have to bring in Pesudo-Islamic Pakistanis to fight their illegal puppet war on behalf of their colonial overlords, Americo-Israel. The truly Muslim Arabs are a righteous people who would never attack one of their own, their vehemence is saved for the oppressors of the Palestinian people, and they are filled with a righteous fire. None of them care about the Sunni-Shia split, that is a false division created by the British in the year 1918 to allow them to colonize the Middle East and all Arabs know this. I expect that this is the end of the House of Saud, whose people will rise up and overthrow the tyrants who pit Muslim against Muslim and Arab against Arab, and no one in Saudi Arabia will be pleased with the bombing of people they definitely don't consider subhuman half-Ethiopians.
#4
Eminent Historian - "I see this as the beginning of a great civil war, a civil war between two historically opposed and irrreconcilable branches of a religion which are split among different nations or "countries" if you will. A civil war between two or more of these different "countries" with different "religions" to put it simply. *puffs on pipe*"
#5
too many german thread titles. i'm not going to press one for english on my home posting zone.
#6

FSAD posted:

Eminent Historian - "I see this as the beginning of a great civil war, a civil war between two historically opposed and irrreconcilable branches of a religion which are split among different nations or "countries" if you will. A civil war between two or more of these different "countries" with different "religions" to put it simply. *puffs on pipe*"




truly a war that pits brother against brother. And when I say brother, I don't mean, like, an actual brother, but I mean it like the way black people use it. Which is more meaningful I think.

#7
I like the war. I'm drunk right now. I read Sma Kriss. I vote.
#8
This is one of my favourite Onion articles from the 90s.

http://www.theonion.com/articles/blues-musician-to-un-yemen-done-me-wrong,1083/
#9
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#10
has anyone else been trolling likudniks by noting that Iran is one of the few nations meaningfully opposing ISIS and that by opposing Iran they are effectively supporting ISIS? A++. sure sucks that people are dyin' tho!
#11

"This deal, as it appears to be emerging, bears out all of our fears, and even more than that," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet in Jerusalem.

Netanyahu referred to advances made by Houthi rebels allied to Tehran in Yemen, and accused the Islamic republic of trying to "conquer the entire Middle East".

"The Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis is very dangerous to humanity, and must be stopped," he said.



i wonder if anyone in the room cracked up when he said "the Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis." i bet no one did. this is why the world needs Sam Kris

#12
Yemen is where we draw the line in the sand
#13
yesterday in montreal some anti-muslim guys had planned a protest in an area called 'little maghreb', so all the maoists and anarchists and such showed up, so the anti-muslim guys canceled the protest. owned.
#14
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#15

tpaine posted:

getfiscal's life takes place within the tommy westphall universe

i hadn't heard of that before so i just read the wiki about it. good times.

#16

discipline posted:

In Saudi Arabia it's illegal to disobey your father and now they are going to invade Yemen.

Wait... are the fathers invading Yemen?

#17
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#18
Is MY father invading Yemen???
#19
it's more likely than you think
#20
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#21
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#22
The Sunni-Shia divide has existed for centuries, of course, but the manner in which this religious difference has articulated itself today has to a great degree been shaped by the relatively recent phenomena of Anglo-American Imperialism, the Wahhabism spread through its Saudi adjunct, and the regional Shia awakening which was the unintended consequence of both phenomena. It was not an inevitable destiny that in 2015 the Middle East would be riven by conflicts defined largely by sectarian concerns, it was result that had to be created by political actors.

To take the case of Yemen itself: Post-Independence in 1967, this country was divided (albeit, compared to the Koreas and the Germanies, in a relatively amicable manner) by two political entities that had been shaped by the rival political ideologies of Pan-Arabism and Marxist-Leninism. South Yemen was perhaps more ideologically committed to communism during the better part of its existence than North Yemen was to Arab unity, since the latter had to accept the defeated royalists into its political class after the 1970 withdrawal of Egyptian forces, but the fact remains that both sides of the country were governed by secular parties. that were seeking to hold together their territories against the centrifugal forces of religious strife. Tensions between Sunnis and Shia existed but it was contained and expressed within public spheres which aspired be more than mono-confessional entities. It took the multiple defeats throughout the Middle East of such non-sectarian systems by US imperialism, Zionism, and the Saudis to reduce societies like Yemen to the level where the mosque has to increasingly substitute for the state, and religious affiliation for an absent civic identity.*

One can say that the withering away of socialist and Arabist projects revealed the "truth" of that part of the world that is called Yemen as a place of irreconcilable and lawless creeds, but this would fail to register the process by which this allegedly immutable reality has become so politically salient now, as opposed to back in the 1960s when the fundamentalist reaction that was brewing was still sidelined by more dynamic alternatives.

*As I mentioned here, the strife between the secularizing forces in MENA was part of the problem too, but their falling outs occurred in the context of external enemies with the capability and will to take advantage of every setback.

Edited by RedMaistre ()

#23
War??? In the Middle East?????
#24
#25

thirdplace posted:

"This deal, as it appears to be emerging, bears out all of our fears, and even more than that," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet in Jerusalem.

Netanyahu referred to advances made by Houthi rebels allied to Tehran in Yemen, and accused the Islamic republic of trying to "conquer the entire Middle East".

"The Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis is very dangerous to humanity, and must be stopped," he said.

i wonder if anyone in the room cracked up when he said "the Iran-Lausanne-Yemen axis." i bet no one did. this is why the world needs Sam Kris



my friend just informed me that Sam kris retweeted a tweet by a milquetoast former childhood friend of ours who is now a guardian columnist. it was about ed milliband looking silly.

#26
dad is here to help just let me know what you need to you kids want some snacks while you play war haha oh man how do i work the stove!!! let's go to macdongles
#27
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