Happy 89th birthday to Saddam Hussein!
A brief tribute honoring the third-to-last (hint: the other two were in Libya and Syria) statesman rampart against the Zionist-Masonic tide.
Testified by the ghost of a Crusader-savaged nation,
emanating from the cradle of human civilization,
outcries the shed blood of martyred innocents flowing in streams:
‘Vindicated! vindicated! of a surety is the Ancien Régime!’
As his deposers bomb each other over slices of the stolen cake,
the ghost of Saddam Hussein howls in laughter from the grave!
For the hollow promise of ‘democracy’ indeed proves itself a lie
when only sectarian death squads flourish and magnify
as the lamentable sons of humanity grievously learn all too late!
Declared from the heavens and their abiding host
shall be the truth unto the planet’s uttermost!
For yea! what do you anticipate, you deluded patsies of Khomeini and al-Wahhab?
Is the dignified honor of national glory heralded by your degenerate mob?
The receipts lie not, you served your Crusader masters in Afghanistan;
so incensed by the Soviets, you betrayed your native land!
Then the utility of Zionist-backed Islamically pure mujahideen evaporated clean dry
as the ‘Taliban’ alienated its antecedents’ sponsors save three under the blue sky
till 2001’s September stage act returned their ‘prestige’ back to the sand!
As Zionist occupiers magnified from Afghanistan to Iraq,
the LARPers of jihad assumed the limelight was theirs to run amok!
For little did Zarqawi’s pitifully deluded wretches know,
their movements were permitted entirely by Bush, Bremer, and co.!
Nor were Tehran’s created ‘anti-American’ stooges any more intelligent men,
since their boss Soleimani concurrently used Badr to collude with the Great Satan!
Now to you LARPers of ‘resistance,’ suffer your faces to wane blue,
because this upbraiding is for none other than you!
When the ba’ath stood alone in ’91 and sent the Zionists a targeted smack,
were you even yet an infant helplessly crying upon your mommy’s lap?
Amongst Iraq’s resilient survivors are your ‘resistance’ theatrics scorned and loathed
for unimpressed are they by thine effort to cynically weaponize their reproach!
From city to city and street to street,
prefer they coalesce around even Mullah Atari!
And out of the south’s Shia cries still unfettered nostalgia for one particular name
(mourning alongside honorable women and dignified men of minority sects likewise)
not any of Persia’s mullahs, but yea! Saddam Hussein!
Incline thee thine hearing to the conclusion of this matter!
from Persia’s mullahcracy to the nazijewish filth of Tel Aviv,
and stretching worldwide from sea to shining sea,
no peace shall be found in unrepentant enemies of God’s predestined shahīd,
the great Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd!
In a town which has seen violent clashes between Hoj-atoleslam al-Sadr’s brigades and coalition forces, official security was provided by a handful of blue-shirted Iraqi police, utterly outnumbered and powerless in the face of the numerically far superior Badr militia which controlled every approach road to the town. Astonishingly, in a city which suffered more than most during Saddam’s brutal crushing of the 1991 Shia uprising, the crowd around the shrine were unanimous that things were worse now than under the Baathist leader.
‘Under Saddam there was at least stability and security throughout the country,’ said Muhammad Abdul Hussein, 25. ‘He executed and killed people but the Americans are worse.’
—Stephen Farrell (Apr. 9, 2004), “Oppressed Shias say life was better under Saddam,” The Times
‘(Prime Minister) Nuri al-Maliki is sitting in (Baghdad’s fortified) Green Zone, what’s he doing to protect us? What’s the point of this government?’ said Mohammed Mehdi, a Shi’ite, whose cousin was jailed in 1982 and whose brother was killed in a car bomb in Dujail last month.
‘Saddam Hussein is the only noble leader we’ve had,’ he added, before shouting ‘God bless Saddam 1,000 times,’ within earshot of U.S. troops accompanying reporters visiting the town, 50 km (30 miles) north of Baghdad.
Mehdi and Mukhlif’s views were echoed elsewhere as Reuters spoke to around 15 passers-by and shopkeepers in Dujail’s high street.
A crowd of men and boys gathered to sing Saddam’s praises, and boys on their way home from school chanted: ‘After Saddam, came the destroyers’ and complained of a lack of electricity, clean water and money for school books.
—Mohammed Abbas (Oct. 11, 2008), “War-weary Saddam victims miss his iron rule,” Reuters










