Penelope
Diamond Member
- Jul 15, 2014
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After he went on about the Palestinians and Iran getting the bomb, although he does not let the IAEA in his country, whereas Iran does now with the agreement, he was saying they are gong to get the bomb.
Well if he has it why not Iran.
I hope he watched what went on after him , about Columbia, a war torn country and what they did. Christmas would not work there, but perhaps he can hire the ad man Jose Miguel Sokoloff to creates some ads and ideas for him, No need to watch the video, but one can read all about it underneath. It would be a good think for our Detroit , Chicago and any other city to actually do something for the poor instead of just complaining.
Bibi's excuses are getting very old, he is not really trying and he should not pretend he even wants a 2 state solution if he insists that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish country. That is crazy talk for one who wants a 2 state solution. Bibi is not very bright if he truly wants peace. The following is from the website.
Colombia used to be one of the most violent and isolated places on Earth. But new ways of thinking have helped the country find peace and fight poverty
The following is a script from “The New Colombia,” which aired on Dec. 11, 2016. Lara Logan is the correspondent. Alan B. Goldberg, producer.
For more than half a century, Colombia was one of the most violent and isolated countries on Earth. Infamous for cartels, cocaine, and kidnapping. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia or FARC fought the government in the longest running war in the Western hemisphere. Until recently, when Colombia achieved what many thought was impossible. The war is effectively over, the country transformed.
How do you end a 52-year war that left 220,000 dead and millions displaced against a revolutionary army dedicated to overthrowing the government? Billions in U.S. aid helped. But the Colombian military came up with one of the most unusual ideas in modern warfare: an advertising campaign. They hired a creative ad executive, Jose Miguel Sokoloff, to convince thousands of fighters to give up without firing a shot. How did Sokoloff do it? With soccer balls and Christmas trees.
How unconventional thinking transformed a war-torn Colombia
Well if he has it why not Iran.
I hope he watched what went on after him , about Columbia, a war torn country and what they did. Christmas would not work there, but perhaps he can hire the ad man Jose Miguel Sokoloff to creates some ads and ideas for him, No need to watch the video, but one can read all about it underneath. It would be a good think for our Detroit , Chicago and any other city to actually do something for the poor instead of just complaining.
Bibi's excuses are getting very old, he is not really trying and he should not pretend he even wants a 2 state solution if he insists that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish country. That is crazy talk for one who wants a 2 state solution. Bibi is not very bright if he truly wants peace. The following is from the website.
Colombia used to be one of the most violent and isolated places on Earth. But new ways of thinking have helped the country find peace and fight poverty
The following is a script from “The New Colombia,” which aired on Dec. 11, 2016. Lara Logan is the correspondent. Alan B. Goldberg, producer.
For more than half a century, Colombia was one of the most violent and isolated countries on Earth. Infamous for cartels, cocaine, and kidnapping. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia or FARC fought the government in the longest running war in the Western hemisphere. Until recently, when Colombia achieved what many thought was impossible. The war is effectively over, the country transformed.
How do you end a 52-year war that left 220,000 dead and millions displaced against a revolutionary army dedicated to overthrowing the government? Billions in U.S. aid helped. But the Colombian military came up with one of the most unusual ideas in modern warfare: an advertising campaign. They hired a creative ad executive, Jose Miguel Sokoloff, to convince thousands of fighters to give up without firing a shot. How did Sokoloff do it? With soccer balls and Christmas trees.
How unconventional thinking transformed a war-torn Colombia