If history has taught me anything, it's that 99% percent of the time
Genocide is effective and
can be done with impunity, as long as you follow two caveats:
1. Burn the diaries of any
cute jailbait that you neutralize
Quote:
The one and only reason Hitler's birthday isn't a national Holiday
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2. Don't mess with people who are shameless enough to desecrate corpses by putting skulls on display
Quote:
Whoever said "One death is a tragedy, one million deaths is a statistic" said it before Cambodian corpse-arranging took the art world by storm.
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And while Hitler is still remembered by some as the world's greatest anti-soviet leader
(heck, the invention of highways by itself more than compensates for any damage he caused), the positive sides of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge are forgotten.
Make no mistake: Pol Pot, and his fellow crusaders in the Khmer Rouge are Christians in the loving arms of Jesus, regardless of the lies that liberal-bias historians slander them with.
Exhibit A: The Khmer Rouge believed in Maoism-on-steroids, which is just like conservatism:
Maoists and/or conservatives hate intellectuals, big cities, decadence, and Russians. We love corporate consolidation ("farm collectivization" in Maoist lingo) and idealizing the past. We believe all power comes from the barrel of a gun. We believe all you need to know about Geopolitics and life in general can be learned by watching
Red Dawn and
Rambo 3.
Even the devils website agrees on this point:
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Originally Posted by Wikipedia
Mao also believed strongly in the concept of a unified "people"....Many of the pillars of Maoism such as the distrust of intellectuals and the abhorrence of occupational specialty are typical populist ideas
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Exhibit B: Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan provided the Khmer Rouge with money and weapons, especially land mines. Since Reagan and the Republican Party can't be terrorist financiers, that means the Khmer Rouge are good guys:
Quote:
Originally Posted by The New Statesman
...the US had been secretly funding Pol Pot in exile since January 1980. The extent of this support – $85m from 1980 to 1986 – was revealed in correspondence to a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. On the Thai border with Cambodia, the CIA and other intelligence agencies set up the Kampuchea Emergency Group, which ensured that humanitarian aid went to Khmer Rouge enclaves in the refugee camps and across the border.
Two American aid workers, Linda Mason and Roger Brown, later wrote: “The US government insisted that the Khmer Rouge be fed . . . the US preferred that the Khmer Rouge operation benefit from the credibility of an internationally known relief operation.” Under American pressure, the World Food Programme handed over $12m in food to the Thai army to pass on to the Khmer Rouge; “20,000 to 40,000 Pol Pot guerillas benefited,” wrote Richard Holbrooke, the then US assistant secretary of state.
I witnessed this. Travelling with a UN convoy of 40 trucks, I drove to a Khmer Rouge operations base at Phnom Chat. The base commander was the infamous Nam Phann, known to relief workers as “The Butcher” and Pol Pot’s Himmler. After the supplies had been unloaded, literally at his feet, he said: “Thank you very much, and we wish for more.”
In November of that year, 1980, direct contact was made between the White House and the Khmer Rouge when Dr Ray Cline, a former deputy director of the CIA, made a secret visit to a Khmer Rouge operational headquarters. Cline was then a foreign policy adviser on President-elect Reagan’s transitional team.
...Americans provided the “coalition” with battle plans, uniforms, money and satellite intelligence; arms came direct from China and from the west, via Singapore. The non-communist fig leaf allowed Congress – spurred on by a cold-war zealot Stephen Solarz, a powerful committee chairman – to approve $24m in aid to the “resistance”.
Until 1989, the British role in Cambodia remained secret. The first reports appeared in the Sunday Telegraph, written by Simon O’Dwyer-Russell, a diplomatic and defence correspondent with close professional and family contacts with the SAS. He revealed that the SAS was training the Pol Pot-led force...
In 1991, I interviewed a member of “R” (reserve) Squadron of the SAS, who had served on the border. “We trained the KR in a lot of technical stuff – a lot about mines,” he said. “We used mines that came originally from Royal Ordnance in Britain...
On 25 June 1991, after two years of denials, the government finally admitted that the SAS had been secretly training the “resistance” since 1983. A report by Asia Watch filled in the detail: the SAS had taught “the use of improvised explosive devices, booby traps and the manufacture and use of time-delay devices”. The author of the report, Rae McGrath (who shared a joint Nobel Peace Prize for the international campaign on landmines), wrote in the Guardian that “the SAS training was a criminally irresponsible and cynical policy”.
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Exhibit C: Thanks to the efforts of the Khmer Rouge,
Cambodia is today a Free-market Economic Miracle:
Manliness and self-reliance are the rule: '
There is an ingrained culture of might is right,'
...people take the law into their own hands. Vigilante killings are routine, with even novice monks and art students beating suspected robbers to death.
No trade barriers: "The customs and the military, often with the co-operation of senior members of the government, collude in massive smuggling - of beer, drugs, people, tropical hardwood and the country's archaeological heritage."
No Environmental Regulations:
"Cambodia has lost half its forests in the past 30 years, and the trees are still falling fast. Last year soldiers used heavy equipment to break up 30 tonnes of stone carvings from 1,000-year-old archaeological sites before loading them into army trucks and driving them to Thailand to sell to dealers with rich Western clients."
The Military has power, elitist intellectuals do not: "The military have even been reported to have been extorting 'protection money' from those trying to conserve Angkor Wat - Cambodia's world-famous jungle temple complex."
With no welfare, people are given incentive to work hard: "Average life expectancy is 52, one in five children dies before reaching the age of five, more than a third of the population live below the poverty line and half the children show the effects of malnutrition."
Nobody tries to stop God from punishing homos and sluts: "Aids killed 6,000 people last year."
In short, a conservative paradise: "The elite's exclusive golf course, on the outskirts of Phomh Penh, charges $20,000 (£12,000) for membership, 80 times the average income."