Ich frage mich immer, was in den Hirnen dieser Schreibtisch-Täter überhaupt vor sich geht?
Diese Leute müssen doch mal eine gewisse Moral besessen haben, als sie sich für diesen Beruf entschieden?
Druckbare Version
Ist da was dran? All Jazeera berichtet auch von "Liberation", also Ratteninvasion auf gut deutsch.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DImxgjo6ZiU
Eigendlich ja. Ähnlich wie der Begeisterung Junger Menschen für den Polizeidienst oder ähnliche Dienste.
Das liebe Geld wird es hauptsächlich sein in Kombination mit der Politisch Korrekten Einstellung und Bequemlichkeit.
Ein echter Journalist hingegen muss Arbeiten, Unbequem sein, Quellen Forschung Betreiben und vieles mehr. Dazu die Sorge um sein Einkommen das bei echten Journalisten meist sehr gering ist.
Der Lohnschmierer hingegen hat diese Sorgen nicht.
http://www.n-tv.de/politik/Milizen-t...le7530576.html
Man beachte die Wortwahl des Artikels
Die Stadt wurde regelrecht trocken gelegt:http://www.libyaherald.com/2012/10/24/bani-walid-falls/Zitat:
Numerous homes are known to have been destroyed over the course of the conflict, and the town has been without regular essential services such as fuel, electricity and water for several weeks.
Nur haben die verblödeten Rebellen damit auch die Pumpen des "Great Man-Made River" lahmgelegt, wodurch u.a. auch Tripolis seit Tagen kein Wasser mehr bekommt:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAaHxdPAG4o
Im Stadtkern Bani Walids wird auch weiterhin gekämpft. Die Loyalisten sowie Einwohner BaniWalids haben sich in den westlichen Stadtteil zurückgezogen und halten dort den Rattenangriffen stand. Zudem gibt es eine sichere Passage aus der Stadt sollte die Lage nicht mehr zu kontrollieren sein.Vielen Dank an Morris Hermann für seine erstklassigen Interviews
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2dft_2AQjc&list=UUweyNwo4cZM5gsIpuG4Zlew
Von den westlichen Massenmedien bestätigt. Bani Walid ist nicht gefallen:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012...and-bani-walidZitat:
Bani Walid was supposed to be safe. The last of Muammar Gaddafi's loyalists were supposed to have been purged from this Libyan desert town, after an eight-day offensive by the army. Instead, there was mayhem here on Thursday, as it became clear the Gaddafi loyalists are far from beaten.
A mile into what has become a ghost town after weeks of fighting and siege, a checkpoint of tense young pro-government militiamen barred entry, saying fighting was continuing. The staccatto boom of an anti-aircraft gun mingled with the heavy thumps of rocket-propelled grenades from somewhere inside the town.
Told to turn back, the Guardian found the road into townjammed with cars bringing several hundred refugees back home. Barring their way were two sand-coloured militia pick-up trucks.
A bearded government militia commander could be seen with his pistol jammed against the head of the driver of a black sedan who was revving his engine. The commander withdrew his pistol, firing twice into the air, and the crowd panicked.
Seconds later one of the teenage militiaman opened fire with a machine gun, the bullets blasting over the heads of the terrified refugees.
Opening the back door of the car the Guardian was travelling, a man in a blue shirt lunged in, screaming that we should stay and witness what was happening. Then he scampered forwards, leaned in and began wrestling with the driver for the car keys. The driver put his foot down, the car shot forward, then swerved as a terrified little girl in a black dress ran into our path.
We cleared the throng and stopped to talk with frightened refugees, some in shock. "We ask them (the militia) 'what do you think your are doing', then they shoot in the air," said a bearded man in a black shirt who refused to give his name.
"Our government says we can come home, it was on TV, and the militia says no," said Mohammed Hamzen, wearing a long golden robe. "I am here with my children. What can I do with them?"
With thousands of angry refugees stranded on the desert highway, and pro-Gaddafi gunmen still resisting inside the town, Libya's government has been left flat-footed by a crisis fast turning into its worst nightmare.
After the UN secretary general, Ban Ki Moon, called for restraint from both sides, the Libyan government has been anxious to complete the capture of the town it says has been home to Gaddafi loyalists blamed for a string of kidnaps and murders.
Instead, the battle continues and the anger of the refugees is sharpened because Eid, Islam's key festival, begins on Friday.
Also clear is that it is the army, not its leaders, who are calling the shots. Last Friday, chief-of-staff Youssef Mangoush announced a 48-hour ceasefire to allow refugees to leave, but the following day the army launched its heaviest offensive of the battle, which has already cost an estimated 20 dead and 200 wounded.
On Wednesday Mangoush announced the military operation was over and the town had been handed back to civil control. The reality on Thursday was that resistance has not yet been crushed.