He's probably still stuck in the 80's (part of the Iranian Revolution, and all that).
...and what's with that ing windbreaker? Does mommy still dress him in the morning? If there was one world leader who needed a Eye makeover, he's it. Of course he'd probably strangle them all once the episode was in the can....
He's probably still stuck in the 80's (part of the Iranian Revolution, and all that).
------------------->
Ahmadinejad after a small accident with Iran's nuclear program.
Should have pulled a King Darius of Sparta and kicked him into a well.
America is soft and a joke.
America must also like to talk out of it's ass about history it can't even bother to get right, even after seeing "300" for the 87th time.
King Darius of PERSIA
King LEONIDAS of Sparta
you're an idiot, 300 is the roXorz
Yes, I was pleasantly surprised. I really thought it would become a mutual Bush-Bashing party. He rally made good 'l Ahmad-genocide (sorry, can't pronounce his name right) look like the puppet he is.
Funny, how in the buildup to one question, Bollinger sounded just like what the Bush administration has been saying all anyone, yet he criticizes them
I guess he in one that thinks "We Americans can criticize our president, but others cannot"... Could that be the case?
Something else funny about it I heard, but is hard to believe...
They allow them to get a sex change operation, then they are no longer a sexual!
I wonder if that is really true?
C-Y-A. Money talks, BS walks. And I think some of
the money givers, gave him a little advice. Hence,
the intro he gave.
Columbia has a $6 billion endowment and could survive for many, many years if it never saw another dime of contributions. President Bollinger never said that he intended to capitulate to Ahmadinejad -- in fact, he was quite frank in saying that part of having Ahmadinejad speak at Columbia was the opportunity to present his record against Ahmadinejad and afford others with a rare opportunity to take him to task for that record. President Bollinger did exactly what he said he was going to to do. And he did it in a manner that was far more effective than any op-ed or other media segment -- he faced the enemy directly and attacked him on his record. I still have no idea what danger that ever posed, particularly because it seems to be the embodiment of a commitment to free speech.
Ah! The steps of Low Library -- the scene of so many great demosntrations in the history of Columbia University. I remember that scene in 1992 when the LA riots were in full swing; and in 1991 when Desert Shield became Desert Storm. The fullest measure of a society that believes in free speech is the willingness to tolerate dissent and dissent is rarely heard more vociferously than on the steps of Low Library.
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