Friday 6 February 2015

Burn

Warning: There will be disturbing images in this post.

And probably unwelcome viewpoints, which will offend your sensibilities.

But then you probably knew that already.

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So, apparently, the world is incensed about the burning alive of a Jordanian fighter pilot by ISIS.

That’s all good. I totally don’t condone anyone’s being burned alive. This is something that should not happen.

Actually, I have watched the video of the Burning Alive, and I must say I strongly share the doubts of many online commentators about the episode. Before going on further, I’ll just summarise them for you:

The scene opens with a slick, professionally shot image of a ruined city. We see our protagonist, the pilot, walking alone and unescorted, dressed in an orange jumpsuit, towards the camera, and towards men dressed in desert camouflage pattern uniforms (hitherto unnoticed among the photos of ISIS I’ve seen, by the way) who are waiting in line.






 The production is, actually, very, very slick, and we then see him in a cage with the camera jump-cutting repeatedly to his face to catch his expression.

Then one of the uniformed men takes a torch and touches it to the ground some distance from the cage, whereupon it races towards him in a line of fire he stands watching. I don’t know about you, but if I were in that position, I’d have – I don’t know, run to the other side of the cage? Tried to climb to the top? Tried to run away before ever being even put in the cage? I mean, what the hell could they do, shoot me?



And then there’s a pool of fire around his feet, and the camera angle changes as he slowly and dramatically collapses into the exact centre of the pool of fire occupying the middle of the cage, and apparently only the middle of the cage. The last we see is a poignantly kneeling figure, enveloped in flames.






Damn, real or not, I’ve seen less competent production in major professionally edited movies.

By the way, I've heard it said that he didn't move because he couldn't - his feet were tied in place. That's obviously not true going by the photos above, which show clearly that not only were they not tied together, but they weren't tied to the cage floor...because there isn't a cage floor.

Anyway, the point isn’t whether the video was real or not, and even if it was faked, as I strongly suspect, the chances are extremely great that the pilot, Muath al-Kaseasbeh, is no longer with us; it would be most inconvenient if he turned up alive at a later stage in proceedings. The point is the tidal wave of condemnation that “poured in”, riding on a sea of hypocrisy.

Hypocrisy? Yes, hypocrisy.

Let’s assume that this young pilot was actually immolated alive as depicted in the video. Let’s also assume that it was actually ISIS which burned him, and on its own, not because it had been told to by someone with a vested interest. I’ll also ignore the ISIS justification for burning him alive – that he was treated as he treated those he bombed – as immaterial. 

Let's also take it as read that burning is somehow worse than, say, beheading someone, or droning schools, or bombing TV stations, or eating someone's heart on video. Let's call burning a unique crime. All right.

Well, and so what do we have?

We have Dresden, where tens of thousands, at least, were burned alive by a deliberately created firestorm - all of whom were innocent, in a city with no military value whatsoever, just so Churchill could make a point to Stalin.

And it is these people who are crying outrage.

We have the memory of Vietnamese villages napalmed by US planes, children, clothes burned off their bodies, running screaming at the camera. We have – in that same decade of the 1960s – black Americans burned to death by cheering lynch mobs in the deep south of the United States. We have the Highway of Death in 1991, when retreating Iraqi troops were firebombed for hours by American planes, even though the soldiers had stopped fighting, were withdrawing, and were not attempting to shoot back. We have these same Americans using white phosphorus incendiaries on Fallujah in 2004, incinerating people en masse.




These are the people now crying outrage.

We have the Zionists who as recently as 2009 used white phosphorus on Gaza, in full glare of the cameras, to burn children.

And they are the ones who are outraged.

We have the Japanese who in Nanjing raped women to death, or raped them half to death and burned what was left.


And they are the ones outraged.

We have the hundred or more unarmed protestors burned alive by a Nazi mob in Odessa in May 2014, while police watched, doing nothing; the same Nazis coddled and protected by Supreme Warmonger-in-Chief Barack Obama and the rest of the Western coalition allegedly “fighting” ISIS.

And it is the same West which is “outraged”.

We have the Hindunazis in India, who in January 1999 burned alive an Australian missionary, Graham Staines, and his two young children. These Hindunazis, only three years later, murdered perhaps two thousand Muslims in Gujarat, a huge number of them by burning alive. In one case a pregnant woman was raped, disembowelled by a sword, the foetus pulled out of her belly and impaled on a spike before being burned. And then she was thrown into the fire.

And it is these people who are “outraged”.

At this point in time I don’t know what to be more outraged by, their actions...or by their outrage.

Look, here’s a Japanese soldier who was incinerated on Guadalcanal, and his head stuck on his tank.




Tell him all about their outrage.

4 comments:

  1. great write, the US and allies are not in the least outraged by this when their proxies are burning infants alive as we speak. it is tool for their war agenda. Bitch ass Graham is saying US is going to unleash hell on ME. what lying dickwad, they already have with their ISIS proxies.

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  2. I know that this is not particularly relevant to the overall topic, so apologies in advance.
    I'm not so sure about that last image. I recall having seen that before, probably in "Life" magazine. If memory serves, that was a partially-mummified WWII U.S. GI's head that was mounted to the tank, because his comrades-in-arms wished to make some sort of a sick symbolic "statement" about revenge or some such happy horseshit.

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  3. There's a voice inside my head saying, why the hell can't he stick to fairy stories, I like fairy stories and they sit easy in my head. There is nothing 'easy' about this. But then, If I expected 'easy' all the time, I wouldn't be here. Apart from that flippant irrelevance, I have no words.There are no words.............................


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  4. How soon we here in the (not so very) old US of A forget OUR war crimes. Hell, I was with 5th Marine Regiment in Vietnam and just watching an airstrike with now ancient F-4's made me feel compassion for those poor people, my fellow humans, who were on the receiving end of that shit storm. Four passes each time by two air craft. First run, drop napalm, second run, drop bombs, third run, strafe them with cannons, fourth pass, do a "victory" roll over the target. I'll never, ever forget walking through what was left after those air strikes if I lived another 10 million years.
    I don't know, nor really care if the burning video by ISIS is real or fake, it is the very idea of burning a human being, any living critter, alive that bothers me to no end. I tend to agree that ISIS, much like al-Qaeda IS a product of the goddamn CIA/NSA/five sided puzzle palace (aka; Pentagon). I have lost count of the various "enemies" of the US empire that started out as our best pals. bin Laden, Gaddafi, Saddam, countless others, too numerous to list here.
    Take away message in my opinion, do NOT ever trust the gummint of the US of A.
    I apologize for any of my language that may have upset any readers. I'm and old former combat Marine (67 last birthday) and I still get highly pissed off at the shit "my"(??) gummint does to innocent people around this planet.

    ReplyDelete

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