Andrew wrote:
You are quite wrong there. I never condone killing, especially unarmed civilians.
I don't think you do. I doubt anyone in this forum condones it. I just wonder what the other side of the coin could be in Bahrain as you mentioned.
Andrew wrote:
What I find disturbing is the inconsistancy and that some human rights violations are deemed acceptable and some are not. All human rights violations are unacceptable, there is never an excuse.
Sure, but we are talking about one specific situation in Bahrain. It was something that happened independently and was unique unto itself. They already lost their race this year. If the race was scheduled originally for the date it is now, I would have trouble the race being used as a political tool, and the FIA refusing to go after assurances things are OK. Why should we go back now though. Bernie loves contracts, and in the contract there was the "Force Majeure" clause, but that is a force outside of your control.
Obviously shooting people is a choice, not Force Majeure.
Andrew wrote:
Ultimately my stance is, there are observers acting like their countires muck doesn't stink. If the Bahraini government is guilty of killing as many unarmed protestors as we are led to believe then there should be sanctions raised against them. Ultimately, this will be done by the UN, a body made up of countries (some of which) have committed crimes which are just as bad or worse than the crimes that the Bahraini government are being accused of.
Again, you can't talk about other places and observers acting like they don't stink because that has nothing to do with the issue of Bahrain.
That video I showed you is not fake. I can not understand how documented news is an
if but you are entitled to your opinion even in the face of overwhelming facts.
I understand the reasons people want the race to go on, and I respect the people getting a race, but it doesn't mean what happened is any less horrible and tragic and should not be forgotten just because the race takes place.
A respected Neurosurgeon at Manama's biggest hospital and inspecting the bodies, reported that protesters "were all shot from close range," adding that forces "do shoot to kill."