Results for: complicated minds
Doom Jap - Complicated mind 1988 kirampdayiniz.rar
2008-05-12 - extension: rar - size: 69 MB
Doom Jap - Complicated mind 1988 kirampdayiniz.rar
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1959 ComAnes
2009-12-04 - extension: rar - size: 55 MB
1959 ComAnes
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Video results for: complicated mindsMore results from video
britney spears Breathe On Me REAL INSTRUMENTAL! have fun! Lyrics: It's so hot in here. Ohh, it's so hot, and I need some air. Oh boy, (More) have fun! Lyrics: It's so hot in here. Ohh, it's so hot, and I need some air. Oh boy, don't stop 'cuz I'm halfway there. It's not complicated, it's just syncopated, We can read each other's minds (Less)
Cambodia: THE REAL MURDERERS ARE YUON ANGKAR LUER (4/6) [EN] Was Norodom Norindrapong really a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge when he and Prince Sihamoni were (More) Was Norodom Norindrapong really a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge when he and Prince Sihamoni were called to return home from overseas by receiving a faked telegram had summoned them back to Phnom Penh in April, 1976? As Prince Norodom Norindrapong clearly confessed to his Khmer children 2 years ago on Radio Free Asia, which was replayed on 9 October, 2003, after he died on 8:
"Pol Pot was a true nationalist. Pol Pot used to leading his DK army fought against Yuons. And Pol Pot's regime was to have Yuons who had hidden inside to kill too many Khmers. And all good committees who were murdered by Yuons in the country. Prince Norodom Sihanouk who was under house arrest, but the DK leaders like Khieu Samphan, and Sdech (Prince Norodom Sihanouk) often made a visit to DK cooperative. We went to every province, we were not to be imprisoned; I accompanied him to see the hydraulic system of dikes, to see factory workers, to see workers' living, had food, to have houses built. They didn't bully us. We were comfortably served with food. They let us have servants. We all-royal families went to see DK cooperatives. And I followed up with DK Radio was that I saw DK regime that fairly served workers and farmers. And from 1976-79; we went to Siem Reap, Kompong Som, Kompong Speu, Kompong Cham, Sisophon...etc."
And recently, interviewed with RFA, 30 July, 2003, Chhang Yuk clearly told us that the Vietnamese shipped arms to Khmer Rouge in 1976. He's got documents being signed by Vietnamese.
In fact, she has denied these facts in person, right here in Sweden. In 1980, she told a reporter in Stockholm, "I admit, as I told you, that there were excesses, but those excesses had been ordered from Hanoi." Her husband, Khmer Rouge deputy premier and minister of Foreign Affairs comrade Ieng Sary, telling a reporter that, "We weren't aware of life at the grassroots that is the way murders are able to happen. But the murderers were Vietnamese agents."
As the wanton ruination brutalized the peasantry the Khmer Rouge had little difficulty in recruiting the many very young men that it sought. Youths, even children, were the desired trainees; their young minds would readily accepts the simple, savage shibboleths handed down from the remote leadership, who demanded unthinking, immediate obedience to the most bizarre of orders. These ignorant young recruits quickly had any concept of good or evil, cruelty or kindness erased from their lives. The high command or source known as Angkar issued instructions that were followed simplicity, no matter how extreme.
In the south and south-east, Khmer Rouge zone commanders had a closer relationship with and reliance on the Vietnamese who had nurtured them for some years and still provided arms and support.
Chann Sokhom, who was the principal organizer of the "spontaneous demonstrations" of 1970, said, with ill concealed contempt for my ignorance, as follows:- "The Khmer Rouge and Sihanoukists do no exist. They were figments of the propaganda and imagination of Mr Sihanouk hiding in Peking. "The only forces assigned against the Khmer Republic were the North Vietnamese and Vietcong. These forces occasionally had the odd Khmer among them and they also killed Khmers and left their bodies on the battlefields to trick the westerners and non republican fools."
This issue remains complicated and intricate, because there is so much involved concerning certain countries, including powerful ones. For example, Mr Benson Samay, Defense lawyer for Ta Mok, in his interview on television, stated that "...Ta Mok will implicate people, including U.S. Secretary of State [Henry Kissinger] based upon existing documents...and leaders of certain countries...."
Far be it from me to conceal the sometimes sublime heroism of my Khmer Rouge compatriots (in their capacity as fighters). But it is unseemly for Kampuchean patriots to make themselves look ridiculous to the whole world with the bald-faced assertion that "with kitchen knives, bows and arrow, and a few old rifles, we were able from the start to destroy hundreds of American cannons, airplanes, fighter-helicopter, and tanks." Distorting the facts in this way means stripping the heroic Khmer Rouge yotheas' real exploits of their credibility.
Let us render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's. Let us frankly admit that in the so-called Khmer Rouge victories of 1971, 1972, and 1973 over American, South Vietnamese, and Lon Nol forces, at the Cambodia-Vietnam border as well as within the country-the battles of Kirirom, Pich Nil (Route 4), Kompong Cham, Kompong Thom (Chenla I, Chenla II)-Vietnamese artillery and tanks, as well as their numerous infantry divisions, made a very important contribution, not to say a decisive one. For until the end of the war (April, 1975), the Khmer Rouge army never came up with any real armoured units or artillery. (Less)
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