Axis & Allies .org Forums
    • Home
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Register
    • Login
    1. Home
    2. cystic crypt
    3. Topics
    0%
    • Profile
    • Following 0
    • Followers 0
    • Topics 100
    • Posts 3,084
    • Best 2
    • Controversial 0
    • Groups 0

    Topics created by cystic crypt

    • cystic cryptC

      Battlemap toolbar

      Axis & Allies Revised Edition
      • • • cystic crypt
      6
      0
      Votes
      6
      Posts
      1.5k
      Views

      rjclaytonR

      The general recommendation seems to be to try not to move the toolbar too close to the edge of the screen.  This will hopefully help you avoid “losing it” in the future.

    • cystic cryptC

      If this comes to your town - Don't Miss It!!!

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      7
      0
      Votes
      7
      Posts
      1.9k
      Views

      dezrtfishD

      I’ll file that one away in the usefull information file.  :evil:

    • cystic cryptC

      Third time in a row!!!

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      5
      0
      Votes
      5
      Posts
      1.5k
      Views

      S

      Maybe not surprising, ajgundam5, but certainly deserving of praise.  The US invented the game of basketball, but now struggles for dominance…point of reference.

      Cystic Crypt, congratulations to the gold medal winners.  Their hard work paid off! :-D

    • cystic cryptC

      Very Interesting

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      41
      0
      Votes
      41
      Posts
      7.0k
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      @froodster:

      I have a friend who stayed in Baghdad during the Allied bombing as a human rights observer. She belonged to the same organization that later had three members kidnapped. If any of you right-wingers want to get really riled up, go check out their website at http://cpt.org - which incidentally was the first website I ever designed.

      the funny thing about these guys are they are from ethnic and cultural groups which traditionally vote “conservative”.

    • cystic cryptC

      WW II History

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      6
      0
      Votes
      6
      Posts
      1.7k
      Views

      ?

      You can find a LOT of them by searching some of the well known ships and moving up the hierarchy at some sites to get the other ships.

    • cystic cryptC

      Remembrance Day

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      2
      0
      Votes
      2
      Posts
      1.1k
      Views

      JenniferJ

      Happy veteran’s day, vets and active service personnel!

      Remember, it is better to make the other poor b@astard die for his country then to die for yours.  If you don’t believe me, ask your friends, family and other assorted loved ones!

      KISS<<<

    • cystic cryptC

      Atlanta Ga

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      18
      0
      Votes
      18
      Posts
      3.4k
      Views

      dezrtfishD

      So you didn’t go to stone mountain?  BTW that other guy is Jefferson Davis.

    • cystic cryptC

      This is news why?

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      5
      0
      Votes
      5
      Posts
      1.4k
      Views

      JermofootJ

      I noticed that the report showing the Iraq war was increasing terrorism was closely trailed by the “but…if we lose, it will be worse.”

      My first impression was that the “rider” to that report was released later to show why Iraq is necessary, and we can’t be done with it.

      However, I find it difficult to understand how they know an Iraq pullout would increase terrorism.  How is it possible?  Furthermore, that doesn’t excuse why we got into it in the first place.

    • cystic cryptC

      Outsourcing Torture - the Maher Arar story

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      1
      0
      Votes
      1
      Posts
      868
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      Here is a clear case of the Canadian gov’t and the RCMP blowing it BIG time. 
      Ironically the current gov’t says that “it wasn’t in power when this occurred” but at the time they were actually criticizing efforts to bring Arar home at that time in their role as “her majesty’s loyal opposition”.

      Those liberal wags at the NYT . . .
      OTTAWA, Sept. 18 — A government commission on Monday exonerated a Canadian computer engineer of any ties to terrorism and issued a scathing report that faulted Canada and the United States for his deportation four years ago to Syria, where he was imprisoned and tortured.

      The report on the engineer, Maher Arar, said American officials had apparently acted on inaccurate information from Canadian investigators and then misled Canadian authorities about their plans for Mr. Arar before transporting him to Syria.

      “I am able to say categorically that there is no evidence to indicate that Mr. Arar has committed any offense or that his activities constituted a threat to the security of Canada,” Justice Dennis R. O’Connor, head of the commission, said at a news conference.

      The report’s findings could reverberate heavily through the leadership of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which handled the initial intelligence on Mr. Arar that led security officials in both Canada and the United States to assume he was a suspected Al Qaeda terrorist.

      The report’s criticisms and recommendations are aimed primarily at Canada’s own government and activities, rather than the United States government, which refused to cooperate in the inquiry.

      But its conclusions about a case that had emerged as one of the most infamous examples of rendition — the transfer of terrorism suspects to other nations for interrogation — draw new attention to the Bush administration’s handling of detainees. And it comes as the White House and Congress are contesting legislation that would set standards for the treatment and interrogation of prisoners.

      “The American authorities who handled Mr. Arar’s case treated Mr. Arar in a most regrettable fashion,” Justice O’Connor wrote in a three-volume report, not all of which was made public. “They removed him to Syria against his wishes and in the face of his statements that he would be tortured if sent there. Moreover, they dealt with Canadian officials involved with Mr. Arar’s case in a less than forthcoming manner.”

      A spokesman for the United States Justice Department, Charles Miller, and a White House spokesman traveling with President Bush in New York said officials had not seen the report and could not comment.

      Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Canada planned to act on the report but offered no details. “Probably in the few weeks to come we’ll be able to give you more details on that,’’ he told reporters.

      The Syrian-born Mr. Arar was seized on Sept. 26, 2002, after he landed at Kennedy Airport in New York on his way home from a holiday in Tunisia. On Oct. 8, he was flown to Jordan in an American government plane and taken overland to Syria, where he says he was held for 10 months in a tiny cell and beaten repeatedly with a metal cable. He was freed in October 2003, after Syrian officials concluded that he had no connection to terrorism and returned him to Canada.

      Mr. Arar’s case attracted considerable attention in Canada, where critics viewed it as an example of the excesses of the campaign against terror that followed the Sept. 11 attacks. The practice of rendition has caused an outcry from human rights organizations as “outsourcing torture,” because suspects often have been taken to countries where brutal treatment of prisoners is routine.

      The commission supports that view, describing a Mounted Police force that was ill-prepared to assume the intelligence duties assigned to it after the Sept. 11 attacks.

      Mr. Arar, speaking at a news conference, praised the findings. “Today Justice O’Connor has cleared my name and restored my reputation,” he said. “I call on the government of Canada to accept the findings of this report and hold these people responsible.”

      His lawyer, Marlys Edwardh, said the report affirmed that Mr. Arar, who has been unemployed since his return to Canada, was deported and tortured because of “a breathtakingly incompetent investigation.”

      The commission found that Mr. Arar first came to police attention on Oct. 12, 2001, when he met with Abdullah Almalki, a man already under surveillance by a newly established Mounted Police intelligence unit known as Project A-O Canada. Mr. Arar has said in interviews that the meeting at Mango’s Cafe in Ottawa, and a subsequent 20-minute conversation outside the restaurant, was mostly about finding inexpensive ink jet printer cartridges.

      The meeting set off a chain of actions by the police. Investigators obtained a copy of Mr. Arar’s rental lease. After finding Mr. Almalki listed as an emergency contact, they stepped up their investigation of Mr. Arar. At the end of that month, the police asked customs officials to include Mr. Arar and his wife on a “terrorist lookout” list, which would subject them to more intensive question when re-entering Canada.

      However, the commission found that the designation should have only been applied to people who are members or associates of terrorist networks. Neither the police nor customs had any such evidence of that concerning Mr. Arar or his wife, an economist.

      Skip to next paragraph
      Related
      Related Site: Canada Commission (ararcommission.ca)
      From there, the Mounted Police asked that the couple be included in a database that alerts United States border officers to suspect individuals. The police described Mr. Arar and his wife as, the report said, “Islamic extremists suspected of being linked to the al Qaeda movement.”

      The commission said that all who testified before it accepted that the description was false.

      According to the inquiry’s finding, the Mounted Police gave the F.B.I. and other American authorities material from Project A-O Canada, which included suggestions that Mr. Arar had visited Washington around Sept. 11 and had refused to cooperate with the Canadian police. The handover of the data violated the force’s own guidelines, but was justified on the basis that such rules no longer applied after 2001.

      In July 2002, the Mounted Police learned that Mr. Arar and his family were in Tunisia, and incorrectly concluded that they had left Canada permanently.

      On Sept. 26, 2002, the F.B.I. called Project A-O and told the Canadian police that Mr. Arar was scheduled to arrive in about one hour from Zurich. The F.B.I. also said it planned to question Mr. Arar and then send him back to Switzerland. Responding to a fax from the F.B.I., the Mounted Police provided the American investigators with a list of questions for Mr. Arar. Like the other information, it included many false claims about Mr. Arar, the commission found.

      The Canadian police “had no idea of what would eventually transpire,’’ the commission said. “It did not occur to them that the American authorities were contemplating sending Mr. Arar to Syria.”

      While the F.B.I. and the Mounted Police kept up their communications about Mr. Arar, Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs was not told about his detention for almost three days. Its officials, acting on calls from worried relatives, had been trying to find him. Similarly, American officials denied Mr. Arar’s requests to speak with the Canadian Consulate in New York, a violation of international agreements.

      Evidence presented to the commission, said Paul J. J. Cavalluzzo, its lead counsel, showed that the F.B.I. continued to keep its Canadian counterparts in the dark even while an American jet was carrying Mr. Arar to Jordan. The panel found that American officials “believed — quite correctly — that, if informed, the Canadians would have serious concerns about the plan to remove Mr. Arar to Syria.”

      Mr. Arar arrived in Syria on Oct. 9, 2002, and was imprisoned there until Oct. 5, 2003. It took Canadian officials, however, until Oct. 21 to locate him in Syria. The commission concludes that Syrian officials at first denied knowing Mr. Arar’s whereabouts to hide the fact that he was being tortured. It says that, among other things, he was beaten with a shredded electrical cable until he was disoriented.

      American officials have not discussed the case publicly. But in an interview last year, a former official said on condition of anonymity that the decision to send Mr. Arar to Syria had been based chiefly on the desire to get more information about him and the threat he might pose. The official said Canada did not intend to hold him if he returned home.

      Mr. Arar said he appealed a recent decision by a federal judge in New York dismissing the suit he brought against the United States. The report recommends that the Canadian government, which is also being sued by Mr. Arar, offer him compensation and possibly a job.

      Mr. Arar recently moved to Kamloops, British Columbia, where his wife found a teaching position.

    • cystic cryptC

      My Bad

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      1
      0
      Votes
      1
      Posts
      818
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      The other night after copious amounts of something red that sounds like “whine” i posted some remarks that might have been interpreted to mean that zooey, balungaloaf and m36 are 3 below average posters. 
      You should not have read this as such.
      I think that these are the same person.

      (oh - and sorry for causing you a headache Mod’s - i should know better)

      everything is fine just dont call people… well you know… " below average posters"

    • cystic cryptC

      Name my puppy!

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      22
      0
      Votes
      22
      Posts
      3.7k
      Views

      Imperious LeaderI

      goober  or baby goober

    • cystic cryptC

      We've got a technical . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      44
      0
      Votes
      44
      Posts
      11.0k
      Views

      JenniferJ

      @Chengora:

      Thanks, Jen.  I’m still waiting for Tom’s Hardware to update their CPU chart, but my understanding was that Intel initially released only its two top Core 2 Duo processors for testing.  I understand that the other 3-4 lower end processors were also being tested, but I wasn’t sure which if anyone had done it yet.

      I probably should just be patient, though, since DirectX 10 cards haven’t even come out.  :-D

      I’m going with the 1.83 Ghz Duo in my laptop.  Should be good enough.

    • cystic cryptC

      The war on terror . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      1
      0
      Votes
      1
      Posts
      821
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      For those interested in the help and sacrifices of their allies . . .
      http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/afghanistan/canada.html

      http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2006/07/23/omez-warren.html
      http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/afghanistan/casualties/total.html

      Note - in addition to a naval force and over 2000 troops (including the renowned Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry), the Black Watch and the Joint Task Force 2’s are all in the muck.  Meanwhile hundred’s of millions have been earmarked for humanitarian aid and the RCMP and Canadian army instructors are training Afghan police and military units.

      Just in case you cared.

    • cystic cryptC

      My (so called) life this year . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      2
      0
      Votes
      2
      Posts
      1.3k
      Views

      ?

      Last thing first…
      Obviously I am a split in my views on those points, but with a slight imbalance to “Peace” (but my “War” points are the most strongly held…)

      Main topic…
      That is a “so called” life? 
      Profesional career with diverse specific pursuits within the field; travel, new experiences; continuing education…
      I call that a LIFE.

    • cystic cryptC

      Good news for some, and maybe others . . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      13
      0
      Votes
      13
      Posts
      2.5k
      Views

      D

      Have fun CC!

    • cystic cryptC

      Upset of the century!!

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      7
      0
      Votes
      7
      Posts
      1.5k
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      @MuthaRussia:

      Guys…how can you even argue this? Thats like saying my team can breathe under water better than yours can fly…

      Both teams suck. USA baseball isnt ANYTHING, I repeat ANYTHING without latin america. :roll:
      I hate to say this, but it’s true.

      There may be something to this . . . .
      Yesterday we lost to Mexico (9-1).

      Go South Africa!!!

    • cystic cryptC

      Curling

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      11
      0
      Votes
      11
      Posts
      1.8k
      Views

      dezrtfishD

      Nice one….

    • cystic cryptC

      Australia

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      6
      0
      Votes
      6
      Posts
      1.4k
      Views

      ?

      All i can say:

      G’Day, Mate
      grab yourself a stubby and enjoy

      i am envious … but my time will come :)

    • cystic cryptC

      Alternative Lifestyles . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      1
      0
      Votes
      1
      Posts
      963
      Views

      cystic cryptC

      I just saw The Banff Mountain Film Festival.  Some excellent footage from around the world by people looking to challenge whatever limits that might have been imposed on them.

      http://www.chestnutmtnproductions.com/banff/banffhome.htm

      If it comes to your corner of the world - i recommend checking it out.

    • cystic cryptC

      A few of MY favorite quotes . . .

      General Discussion
      • • • cystic crypt
      11
      0
      Votes
      11
      Posts
      2.3k
      Views

      Guerrilla GuyG

      I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. — Albert Einstein

      one of my favorites…

      The reason men like war is because it is the only thing that they do that women don’t laugh at. - Don’t know

      Nobody ever won a war by dying for his country, he won it by making the other bastard die for his. — George S. Patton

      O Lord our Father, our young patriots, idols of our hearts, go forth to battle-be Thou near them! With them, in spirit, we also go forth from the sweet peace of our beloved firesides to smite the foe. O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with their little children to wander unfriended the wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sports of the sun flames of summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail, imploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and denied it-for our sakes who adore Thee, Lord, blast their hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitter pilgrimage, make heavy their steps, water their way with their tears, stain the white snow with the blood of their wounded feet! We ask it, in the spirit of love, of Him Who is the Source of Love, and Who is the ever-faithful refuge and friend of all that are sore beset and seek His aid with humble and contrite hearts. Amen. The War Prayer, Mark Twain.

    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    • 2 / 5