Rusty Shackleford has been following the case of American hostage Roy Hallums for months. He writes;
As you know, The Jawa Report was the first media to report that Roy Hallums was taken hostage in Iraq. Since that time, we have done everything in our power to support the Hallums family, raise money, and keep Roy’s name in the media.
Today, Roy is alive and free..

Looks like a bad day for a Moonbat.
Check this out. From CNN (US counterpart to CBC the home of master moonbat and tin foil officionado Ted Turner) of all places.
The American People Are Not Stupid
Congratulations are just pouring in over at Jawa. This is your opportunity to say * Job well done* and I wish you would.
Also I forgot to thank them on behalf of Western Canadians for sacrifices endured against terrorism. Maybe someone could do that eh?73s TG
PLAYPress Conference with Jalal Talabani, President of Iraq
Jalal Talabani, President of Iraq, discusses the Iraqi constitution and the situation in his country during a press conference at Voice of America. Talabani, appointed State President by the Iraqi National Assembly on Apr. 6, 2005, will meet with Pres. Bush before going to New York for the annual United Nations Summit Meeting.
9/9/2005: WASHINGTON, DC: 1 hr. : CSPAN3
http://www.rapp.org/url/?IWQVVIGE
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Over at Belmont Club:
Aristides said…
“A document that the few cannot hold up as a banner of victory is a success for the many. In the new Iraq, there will be no victors, and no vanquished…
Thank you, America, for your dignity and courage. We fought together to end a civil war. There was a civil war, a civil war of Saddam Hussein against the people of Iraq.
Now, we continue to struggle side-by-side to uproot the Iraqi fascism that has long threatened us all. By treating the Iraqi people as partners, the United States has courageously made the final and most important alteration to its policy in the Middle East.”
Jalal Talabani, President of a Free Iraq.
Think about it. Whatever this is, it is not a failure. >>>>>>more:
http://www.rapp.org/url/?K4BD3YO8
Prime Minister John Howard reflects on the consequences of the September 11 attacks, four years on.
This year marks the fourth anniversary of the horrendous September 11 terror attacks in the United States. It is again an opportunity to think of the tens of thousands directly affected, Australians included. In this country we remember in particular 10 Australians who were killed, in addition to some 3000 people who died in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.
The events of September 11 were an attack on a way of life, which both our societies hold dear. Just as the terror strikes in Madrid, Bali, London, Jakarta, and the many attacks in Iraq are a continuation of a fight against those who preach hatred and despair.
Despite the terror attacks we have suffered together, we have seen new democracies emerge and develop around the globe, including Afghanistan, Iraq and East Timor to name a few. Those who oppose democracy and religious freedom should consider how many new authoritarian governments have been formed in this time. For this reason Australia has reaffirmed our commitment in Iraq and in Afghanistan.
The acts of violence on September 11 have changed our lives irrevocably. Many of us who work in public buildings now work behind concrete bollards, shatter-resistant windows and in the permanent presence of security guards. These are everyday reminders of the threat we now face.
In the wake of the terror attacks, the provisions of the ANZUS Treaty were invoked for the first time in its 50 years.>> more
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1481964/posts