source: press.rs |
Now, I am a New Yorker and a Serb. I condemn anyone who plotted to kill innocent civilians, not only in the city I live in, but anywhere on the planet. I know this is a moot point and a little hypocritical one at that, if you are paying taxes and buying bullets that strike innocent hearts, but, unfortunately, for billions of people, including yours truly, the only way to fight injustice is to yell "Injustice!"
Anyway, if the Medunjanin kid really was plotting to bomb New York City's subway,* I applaud the U.S. courts for dishing out the harshest punishment, thus protecting the American civilians from the enemy that its government created and let in. Yes, the Bosnian Muslims are reputed allies and, I'd say, friends of the U.S. government, whose military fought alongside them against the Bosnian Serbs. The war brought a lot of them to America, and many of them are Muslim first, Americans probably never. Some decide to act upon that difference, like Medunjanin or Sulejman Talović, the Bosnian Muslim terrorist who killed five people in Utah in 2007. While I understand when a Palestinian wants to kill Americans, I feel a special kind of contempt towards Bosnian Muslims who kill Americans. As a man of high moral standards, I condemn ingrates who stab their friends in the back, which is how these Bosnian terror cells and individuals - and Albanian ones for that matter - repay for the Americans aiding their war against Serbs.
source: telegraf.rs |
Oh, how convenient this rogue term "international" is... When it comes to killing Serbs, in the Operation Storm or in the NATO butchering of Serbia in 1999, the international law doesn't apply. Hell, even the U.S. Constitution goes out the window (which shows that the American nation does not hire the American military anymore, but that's a different issue), since the U.S. Congress did not approve going into war against Serbia in 1999 either.
So now we have these two simple situations: one, an alleged plot to kill Americans worthy of a life-in-prison sentence, and the other, an imperial military operation that successfully drove 220,000 Serbs out of their ancestral homes and killed more than 2,000 of those unable to run for their lives or unwilling to abandon their land. Now, under what kind of international justice system - let's pretend this is a non-imperialist category that can indeed exist - the first situation warrants a life in prison in the country that is a standard-bearer of the international rule of law agenda, while no one is held accountable for the mass murder and the expulsion of a quarter million people, a crime way more horrific than mere plotting to kill? I stand corrected: a crime way more horrific if one applies moral standards and common sense, not if one holds "the international law" principles over it.
source: glas-javnosti.rs |
The most important message here is the imperial one and it is clear and terrifying; to all those that didn't get it in the past two decades: killing Serbs is fine by us and if you do it, make sure you consult us, so it's done right.
*considering the numerous cases where FBI agents were reportedly initiating and fomenting potential terror cells for career gains and budgetary purposes, i.e. fabrication of a reason to operate, it is hard to believe anything that mainstream media report on these terror plots
4 comments:
America has a long history of "insulting" (more like assaulting)small countries that have no patron watching over them. Why should Serbia be any different. Americans saw an opportunity to inject their influence in the Balkans and they seized it. They chose allies in the region that would facilitate their occupation. Serbia's only hope was an already prostrate Russia that was itself being gnawed by Western wolves. The future? Until we realize that our very survival is at stake we will continue to circle the drain into oblivion.Maudlin, but true. America and it's allies would like nothing better than to carve up Serbia's corpse. Vojvodina? Raska? I fear it is not over yet.
may be croats would be happy and blind. But people of all over the world has seen that Hague Court is only a empire's puppet. These 3 judges are only empire servants they dont deserve any respect and till the end of his days they would carry on in his memory The Serbian ones murdered and displaced by the fascist marionettes of the empire, the Croatians
@Djordje. It's far from over, you are right. It's not over as long as Serbia has something to be taken from it. The only glimmer of hope, albeit very slight, is that with the removal of the West-imposed administration and the installation of merely a West-friendly one, Serbs in Serbia can breathe more freely and begin realizing the danger the nation is in. It is far fetched, but it is a break with the darkness of Tadic's government nevertheless.
@Anonymous
I can't agree that the whole world saw what the Serbs saw, but it is good you brought it up. I think it is a common misconception - and one the Serbs have to stop habitually refer to - that there is such a thing as "the whole world" as an entity that creates opinions or takes sides. A lot of Serbs are used to equating the Western world, i.e. the North Atlantic imperial community, with the entire world, often calling it "the international community." There is no such a thing. There has never been a united international community with one attitude on any one issue, including Serbian issues. Some regional alliances of countries, such as the EU, the NATO etc. fought wars against Serbs, but majority of the world never bothered us nor was it ever against us. Huge countries such as China, India, Russia, Brazil, the entire Subsaharan Africa, never showed any sign of animosity towards the Serbs. By allowing the language of guilt, i.e. "the whole world is against us, therefore, we must be wrong" paradigm, to enter our consciousness, we are accepting the guilt we shouldn't accept. Such language is imposed to create a false idea of a moral supremacy of an entity that calls itself "the international community." There is no international community; there are only selfish interests, out of which some go directly against the interests of the Serbian nation.
I used the point you were trying to make about the whole world seeing the injustice to make a larger point of staying away from the Serb-hostile paradigm.
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