Angelic Infusion

Exploring the Realm where Mortals and Angels Meet

American Journalizm
Monday, April 7, 2008
 
the goal is to create and maintain an ongoing civil war to tear the Iraq nation into fragments
Loved Ones…as you sit on the couch and browse through the news on ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN…you are exposed to filtered stimuli created to make you come to the conclusion we are in Iraq to bring Democracy to imprisoned peoples…

no mention is ever made of Oil…no mention is ever made of the 2nd largest known oil deposit on this planet which is beneath the soil of Iraq… A big silence/big lie… of the truth not being broadcast into your living room.

The United States of America Washington Government goal is without a doubt to create and maintain an ongoing civil war to tear the Iraq nation into fragments resulting with SHELL OIL, STANDARD OIL, AND BRITISH PETREOLEOM entering and removing the national assets of the Iraqi people….providing fuels for United States SUV’s …

Not many common Americans have actually visited the country and really know the beautiful people of Iraq…following is the honest account of one true American…who saw what we are doing…and realized we are not there to free the Iraqi people…we are there to destroy them and steal their oil.

Camilo Mejia is a former staff sergeant in an infantry unit for the Florida National Guard who served in Iraq but later refused to return to combat and applied for conscientious objector status.

He was convicted of desertion in May 2004 and served a year in an army prison. He is now a prominent member of the Iraqi Veterans Against the War (IVAW) organization. "When I first arrived in Iraq, in the beginning we were all really skeptical and didn't know what to expect, but pretty soon it became clear that we were there to stay.

[During the invasion] we began to be attacked and obviously we responded with overwhelming force. [There was] an escalation of the battle because of the way that we were conducting ourselves, not only with total disregard for the lives and wellbeing of people but with disregard for our own tactics as soldiers.

We were instigating firefights and provoking the population of Iraq,

leading to the injury of many of our soldiers and also the killing of many unarmed Iraq civilians.

The first mission that we had was running an Iraqi prisoner of war camp.

In the camp we used mental techniques such as performing mock executions with a pistol to the head of a detainee, depriving them of light by putting bags on their heads, keeping them surrounded by concertina wire so they couldn't really move without injuring themselves and sleep deprivation and light deprivation.

All of these things in order to break them down emotionally and physically in order to, quote unquote "soften them up for interrogation".

I arrived back home [from Iraq] in Oct 2003 when I was given a two week furlough.

While I was in Iraq it was really difficult for me to make decisions based on my morality or my conscience as the environment was so intense, the number one priority was to keep alive.

But when I came home I had peace of mind to go back to these questions that were haunting me from the very beginning of the occupation.

I had to choose between being a good soldier and a good human being - I chose to follow my conscience and to not go back.

After I denounced the war in March 2004 there were no known public resisters to the Iraq war, much less veterans who have been there and were speaking about their own experiences and how Iraqis were being brutalized by the occupation.

The case became very public and much politicized and two months after my public surrender to the military I was tried by court martial but it was a very biased trial - you could tell from the beginning that the military weren't going to play nice.

Most of our arguments were denied by the military judge who did not allow the jury to hear anything of the sleep deprivation and the conditions.

I was found guilty of desertion and given a 12-month sentence in a military facility. I was also demoted to private, had forfeiture of pay and a discharge from the army.

Ending the war

Now, I think that Iraq is not something we can view from a hopeless perspective.

I think it's our duty to end the occupation and I believe the military has the power to end it because without the military muscle they cannotwage endless immoral and pre-emptive war against the Iraq people.

I advocate the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all occupying forces.

The Iraqis are a wonderful people, I have had the privilege of befriending Iraqis over there and they love their country and each other very much and they are determined to kick out the occupation and rebuild their country.

So I do believe there is hope for them, but I also believe that it is in their own hands to rebuild their country on their own terms.

Loved Ones...what role do the broadcastors play as they implement mind control via your television set...what is the journalists role in this crime you pay for now and will pay for in the future?

What are the spiritual costs?

What are the economic costs?

Loved Ones…include Camilo Mejia and all his loved ones in your prayers and petitions for protection and strength …I do.

You and all your loved ones are always in my prayers.

Samuel Joseph Bell
www.angelicinfusion.com


 

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