| Topic: |
Religions > Bible |
| User: |
"SheBlewHimDidYouBlowHim" |
| Date: |
09 Mar 2005 06:08:44 AM |
| Object: |
DAY 6 OF 30 |
day 6 of 30 to see if god can go 30 days without COMMITTING A MURDER
God the MASS MURDERER not doing too well.
You would think this "loving, caring, all-knowing supreme being" would be
able to quit COMMITTING MURDERS for a period of 30 days, but then again,
this is god the mass murderer we are talking about. Well, I will say he is a
supreme MURDERER. DEATH TO GOD THE MASS MURDERER
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/03/09/iraq.main/index.html
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Violence flared anew in Iraq on Wednesday, with
attacks in Baghdad killing three while 19 people were found shot to death
near the western city of Qaim.
The 19 bodies were found in the village of al-Rumana in western Iraq near
the Iraq-Syria border.
According to Qaim hospital director Dr. Hamdi al-Aloussi, all of the victims
were shot in the forehead.
The bodies were found around 6 p.m. (10 a.m. ET Tuesday) before being
brought to nearby Qaim. A woman's body was among the dead, but police had
not identified the other bodies.
Insurgents in Iraq have targeted anyone perceived as cooperating with the
interim government or multinational forces.
On Tuesday, 15 beheaded bodies were found in a vacated military warehouse,
an officer from the Iraqi emergency police services said.
The Iraqi army discovered the unidentified bodies, the officer said. The
warehouse is on the road from Latifya to Karbala, south of Baghdad. It has
not yet been determined when the people were killed.
In southern Baghdad, the bodies of two people thought to be working with
U.S. forces were found stuffed in barrels Tuesday night, a police official
said.
The official said the two -- Sajed Radi Ali and Ali Kadhem Mohammed -- were
believed to have been working for the multinational forces at a nearby base.
The dead men were in separate barrels found in the Canal Street area, he
said, and with each body was a note that said: "He was a traitor working
with the Americans, so he was to be killed."
In central Baghdad, meanwhile, a suicide bomber driving a garbage truck
detonated early Wednesday near the Ministry of Agriculture, killing two
people and wounding 22 others, emergency police said. The bomber also died
in the attack.
According to police, the truck was approaching the hotel through a courtyard
when ministry security officers became suspicious and opened fire on it,
causing it to detonate.
Iraqi police said they believe the truck was using the open courtyard to
approach the hotel without passing through hotel security checkpoints.
The attack took place around 6:30 a.m. (10:30 p.m. ET Tuesday), leaving a
massive crater and littering the area with burning vehicles. At least 40
cars belonging to the Ministry of Agriculture were damaged.
Following the massive explosion, flames and a large plume of black smoke
rose above the blast site as U.S. army helicopters circled overhead.
Also in Baghdad, gunmen early Wednesday opened fire on a minibus carrying
employees to work, killing one and wounding three others, according to Iraqi
Police Emergency Services.
The workers, employed by a Kuwaiti company, came under small-arms fire in
the Zayuna neighborhood at around 7:30 a.m. (11:30 p.m. ET Tuesday). They
were headed to a job site in Abu Ghraib.
U.S. investigates Italian, Bulgarian deaths
The U.S. military said Tuesday it has launched two investigations after the
recent shooting deaths of an Italian security agent and a Bulgarian soldier.
A top U.S. commander said the timing of the fatal incidents is troubling.
On Friday, U.S. troops at a Baghdad checkpoint fired on a car carrying an
Italian journalist -- newly freed hostage Giuliana Sgrena -- and Italian
security agent Nicola Calipari, wounding Sgrena and killing Calipari.
The U.S. military initially said the car carrying Sgrena was rapidly
approaching the checkpoint and ignored repeated warnings to stop.
Italian Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini, while saying Tuesday that the
actions were a tragic mistake, disputed the military's account based on the
driver's version of the incident. Fini demanded a thorough investigation.
(Full story)
Brig. Gen. Peter Vangjel has been named to head the probe, in which Italian
officials were invited to take part, the military said.
The investigation is expected to take three to four weeks, the military
said.
A little more than an hour before that incident, Jr. Sgt. Gardi Gardev died
in what the Bulgarian government said a preliminary investigation showed was
probably the result of "friendly fire."
"[The multinational force] values greatly our partnership with Bulgaria in
helping the Iraqis achieve democracy," the U.S. military said. "We are
committed to working with our Bulgarian partners to determine the cause" of
the death.
The incident took place Friday night 37 miles southeast of Diwaniya, about
100 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov said Gardev died when his
patrol, which had fired warning shots to stop an Iraqi civilian car,
received heavy fire from the direction of a U.S. Army communications
facility about 165 yards away.
"The investigation results and the information we have as now give us enough
reason to believe that that tragic death of Jr. Sgt. Gardev is a result of a
friendly fire," Svinarov said.
Svinarov said the Bulgarian chief of staff, Gen. Nikola Kolev, had sent a
letter to his American counterpart, Gen. Richard Myers, requesting a full
investigation "aimed at clarifying all details and avoiding such incidents
for the future."
Eight Bulgarians have been killed in the war.
Gen. George W. Casey, commanding general of the multinational force, said at
a press briefing in Washington that "obviously, the timing gave me cause for
discomfort. I mean, it's another unfortunate incident."
"Both the Bulgarians and us are looking into exactly what happened," he
said.
"Every time there is an incident like this, we look at it, we look at the
procedures that were followed, we use those to adapt our procedures," he
said. "But, obviously, two things coming right on the heels of each other
was troublesome."
Interior Ministry official slain
Gunmen early Tuesday killed a top official with Iraq's Interior Ministry as
he was leaving his home in western Baghdad, Iraqi police said.
The attack took place at around 7:30 a.m. (11:30 p.m. ET Monday) in the
Ghaziliya district. Shots from the four gunmen struck the official in the
head and stomach.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's terror group, Al Qaeda in Iraq, purportedly claimed
responsibility in an Internet statement for the killing of Gen. Ghazi
Mohammed Issa, the deputy chief of the ministry's immigration office,
according to The Associated Press. The claim could not be confirmed.
.
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| User: "SheBlewHimDidYouBlowHim" |
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| Title: DAY 6 of 30, god MURDERING MORE CHILDREN |
09 Mar 2005 04:53:58 PM |
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God the MASS MURDERER killing more children.
Gopd's not doing very well, he has MURDERER a lot of people on day 6 here,
and in keeping with his wanting to MURDER children, he MURDERED A LOT OF
THEM TODAY
DEATH TO GOD THE MASS MURDERER
The only good god is a DEAD god
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/03/09/mass.poisoning/index.html
CNN) -- Nearly 30 elementary school children in the Philippines have died
after eating fried cassava balls obtained from a vendor, a local official
told CNN.
Fourteen children died Wednesday before reaching hospitals and 13 died upon
arrival, a spokesman for Ubay Mayor Eutiquio Bernales said.
Two more children also have died, but it was not clear when. Thirty-five
more are in critical condition.
The victims suffered severe stomach pain, then vomiting and diarrhea after
eating the snack during morning recess, The Associated Press reported.
They were taken to at least four hospitals near the school in Mabini, a town
on Bohol Island, about 610 kilometers (380 miles) southeast of Manila, AP
said.
"Some said they took only two bites because it tasted bitter and the effects
were felt 5-10 minutes later," Dr. Harold Gallego of Garcia Memorial
Provincial Hospital in the nearby town of Talibon told AP.
The vendor who sold the cassava balls insisted nothing was wrong with them
and ate a few to prove the point. Now she, too, is in critical condition.
All of the children were in the first and second grades of San Jose
Elementary School in Mabini. Francisca Doliente AP that her 9-year-old niece
Arve Tamor was given some of the deep-fried caramelized cassava by a
classmate who bought it from a regular vendor outside the San Jose school.
"Her friend is gone. She died," Doliente said, adding that her niece was
undergoing treatment.
Grace Vallente, 26, said her 7-year-old nephew Noel died en route to the
hospital and that her 9-year-old niece Roselle was undergoing treatment.
"There are many parents here," AP quoted her as saying from L.G. Cotamura
Community Hospital in Ubay.
"The kids who died are lined up on beds. Everybody's grief-stricken."
Cassava is a starchy, tuberous root that is a low-cost source of
carbohydrates in humid, tropical areas; it is also the source of tapioca.
Cassava contains amino acid-derived cyanogenic glucosides -- some more than
others -- and must be thoroughly cooked to remove toxic levels.
Eaten raw, the human digestive system will convert part of it into cyanide.
Two cassava roots contain enough to be fatal
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| User: "SheBlewHimDidYouBlowHim" |
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| Title: MORE OF DAY 6 OF 30 |
09 Mar 2005 07:01:00 AM |
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God the mass murderer at it again.
god's religious people (the peaceful religion, according to our idiotic
president) strike again.
save lives, ban religion
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/03/09/iraq.main/index.html
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Violence flared anew in Iraq on Wednesday, with
attacks in Baghdad killing three while 26 people were found shot to death
near the western city of Qaim.
The 26 bodies were found in the village of al-Rumana in western Iraq near
the Iraq-Syria border.
According to Qaim hospital director Dr. Hamdi al-Aloussi, all of the victims
were shot in the forehead. Police said they think the victims were killed
four days ago.
The bodies were found around 6 p.m. (10 a.m. ET Tuesday) before being
brought to nearby Qaim. A woman's body was among the dead, but police had
not identified the other bodies.
Insurgents in Iraq have targeted anyone perceived as cooperating with the
interim government or multinational forces.
In central Baghdad, meanwhile, a suicide bomber driving a garbage truck
detonated early Wednesday near the Ministry of Agriculture, killing two
people and wounding 22 others, emergency police said. The bomber also died
in the attack.
According to police, the truck was approaching the hotel through a courtyard
when ministry security officers became suspicious and opened fire on it,
causing it to detonate.
Iraqi police said they believe the truck was using the open courtyard to
approach the hotel without passing through hotel security checkpoints.
The attack took place around 6:30 a.m. (10:30 p.m. ET Tuesday), leaving a
massive crater and littering the area with burning vehicles. At least 40
cars belonging to the Ministry of Agriculture were damaged.
Following the massive explosion, flames and a large plume of black smoke
rose above the blast site as U.S. army helicopters circled overhead.
On Tuesday, 15 beheaded bodies were found in a vacated military warehouse,
an officer from the Iraqi emergency police services said.
The Iraqi army discovered the unidentified bodies, the officer said. The
warehouse is on the road from Latifya to Karbala, south of Baghdad. It has
not yet been determined when the people were killed.
In southern Baghdad, the bodies of two people thought to be working with
U.S. forces were found stuffed in barrels Tuesday night, a police official
said.
The official said the two -- Sajed Radi Ali and Ali Kadhem Mohammed -- were
believed to have been working for the multinational forces at a nearby base.
The dead men were in separate barrels found in the Canal Street area, he
said, and with each body was a note that said: "He was a traitor working
with the Americans, so he was to be killed."
Also in Baghdad, gunmen early Wednesday opened fire on a minibus carrying
employees to work, killing one and wounding three others, according to Iraqi
Police Emergency Services.
The workers, employed by a Kuwaiti company, came under small-arms fire in
the Zayuna neighborhood at around 7:30 a.m. (11:30 p.m. ET Tuesday). They
were headed to a job site in Abu Ghraib.
U.S. investigates Italian, Bulgarian deaths
The U.S. military said Tuesday it has launched two investigations after the
recent shooting deaths of an Italian security agent and a Bulgarian soldier.
A top U.S. commander said the timing of the fatal incidents is troubling.
On Friday, U.S. troops at a Baghdad checkpoint fired on a car carrying an
Italian journalist -- newly freed hostage Giuliana Sgrena -- and Italian
security agent Nicola Calipari, wounding Sgrena and killing Calipari.
The U.S. military initially said the car carrying Sgrena was rapidly
approaching the checkpoint and ignored repeated warnings to stop.
Italian Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini, while saying Tuesday that the
actions were a tragic mistake, disputed the military's account based on the
driver's version of the incident. Fini demanded a thorough investigation.
(Full story)
Brig. Gen. Peter Vangjel has been named to head the probe, in which Italian
officials were invited to take part, the military said.
The investigation is expected to take three to four weeks, the military
said.
A little more than an hour before that incident, Jr. Sgt. Gardi Gardev died
in what the Bulgarian government said a preliminary investigation showed was
probably the result of "friendly fire."
"[The multinational force] values greatly our partnership with Bulgaria in
helping the Iraqis achieve democracy," the U.S. military said. "We are
committed to working with our Bulgarian partners to determine the cause" of
the death.
The incident took place Friday night 37 miles southeast of Diwaniya, about
100 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov said Gardev died when his
patrol, which had fired warning shots to stop an Iraqi civilian car,
received heavy fire from the direction of a U.S. Army communications
facility about 165 yards away.
"The investigation results and the information we have as now give us enough
reason to believe that that tragic death of Jr. Sgt. Gardev is a result of a
friendly fire," Svinarov said.
Svinarov said the Bulgarian chief of staff, Gen. Nikola Kolev, had sent a
letter to his American counterpart, Gen. Richard Myers, requesting a full
investigation "aimed at clarifying all details and avoiding such incidents
for the future."
Eight Bulgarians have been killed in the war.
Gen. George W. Casey, commanding general of the multinational force, said at
a press briefing in Washington that "obviously, the timing gave me cause for
discomfort. I mean, it's another unfortunate incident."
"Both the Bulgarians and us are looking into exactly what happened," he
said.
"Every time there is an incident like this, we look at it, we look at the
procedures that were followed, we use those to adapt our procedures," he
said. "But, obviously, two things coming right on the heels of each other
was troublesome."
Interior Ministry official slain
Gunmen early Tuesday killed a top official with Iraq's Interior Ministry as
he was leaving his home in western Baghdad, Iraqi police said.
The attack took place at around 7:30 a.m. (11:30 p.m. ET Monday) in the
Ghaziliya district. Shots from the four gunmen struck the official in the
head and stomach.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's terror group, Al Qaeda in Iraq, purportedly claimed
responsibility in an Internet statement for the killing of Gen. Ghazi
Mohammed Issa, the deputy chief of the ministry's immigration office,
according to The Associated Press. The claim could not be confirmed.
.
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| User: "SheBlewHimDidYouBlowHim" |
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| Title: DAY 6 OF 30 - more murders by god |
09 Mar 2005 04:51:17 PM |
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god the MASS MURDERER busy at work:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/03/09/toddler.survives.ap/index.html
HOUSTON, Texas (AP) -- A 2-year-old boy survived for up to two days on
pancake syrup and onions after his caretaker died in their home, police
said.
The boy was found on Monday after a relative of Gladie Mae Johnson, 64,
became concerned because she hadn't heard from her.
When the relative knocked on the door of Johnson's home, she heard knocking
back from inside. She entered through an unlocked back door and found the
boy and Johnson's body.
Johnson was last seen alive on Friday and may have died on Saturday, Houston
Police Department Sgt. Paul Motard said. She apparently died of natural
causes.
Investigators found an open and nearly empty container of pancake syrup on
the floor. Some onions also were found lying near Johnson's body.
Johnson was a friend of the boy's family and had been caring for him since
last year, when his mother went to prison, Child Protective Services
spokeswoman Estella Olguin said.
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| User: "SheBlewHimDidYouBlowHim" |
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| Title: Re: DAY 6 OF 30 |
09 Mar 2005 06:16:20 AM |
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is the "all-knowing, loving, caring" god getting ready to COMMITT MORE
MURDERS ?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7132927/
MOUNT ST. HELENS, Wash. - Mount St. Helens released a towering plume of ash
Tuesday, its most significant emission in months but one that seismologists
did not believe heralded any major eruption
The volcano has vented ash and steam since last fall, when thousands of
small earthquakes marked a seismic reawakening of the 8,364-foot mountain.
Late afternoon television footage showed the plume billowing thousands of
feet into the air, then drifting slowly to the northeast.
The ash explosion happened around 5:25 p.m., about an hour after a 2.0
magnitude quake rumbled on the east side of the mountain, said Bill Steele,
coordinator of the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network at the University
of Washington.
Steele said he did not believe the explosion had increased the risk of a
significant eruption and noted that recent flights over the volcano's crater
did not reveal high levels of gases.
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