User talk:AsseObama

Col. Ghadafi was an adventurer championing Islamist nationalism across Africa. However, the cult of personality he had built, which obviously made him underestimate revolutionary progresses, brought him down to the shreds. Ghadafi had tried to bring the Great Arab/Islamic States of Africa with Egypt and Syria. He tried to lead the African tribes people by crowning himself as the elected leader of the African tribes. He tried to magnify himself through his adventurous deal with Omar Bongas the former president of the state of Gabon in which the latter was converted to Islam after receiving generous financial gifts from Ghadafi. Ghadafi also tried, though unsuccessful, to bring the African Union's Head Quarters to Tripoli by blaming Ethiopia as the most dirty, backward, undemocratic and the poorest African nation that did not have any symbolic representation and right to host the visionary African Union. Ghadafi also tried to develop Uranium with a view to acquire nuclear weapons for Libya though he was again unsuccessful and was subject to a modicum of embargos by the international community and different agencies and finally surrendered the whole project and plants to the International Atomic Agency. Ghadafi also resisted not to extradite the Libyan suspects of the Lockerbie plane bombings and received a number of attacks and embargos but finally surrendered the suspects but one of them to the criminal court of which the suspects almost succeeded to verdicts of innocence bu one of them who was later pardoned due to terminal illness in prison. Ghadafi always brought himself as the forerunner of liberty, African fraternity and Islam by portraying himself, his country's cliques, his financial endowments, and his other dealings against the causes by the United States of America - he always presented himself the mortal enemy of what he presented as the American imperialistic hegemony - and by this act tried to obtain the general acceptance of peoples across Africa and peoples of the Arab world and Islams as the authentic protector of Islam. Generlly, Col. Ghadafi has all been an adventurous, unpredictible, fragile, arrogant, and outmoded vain Islamist fundamentalist leader whose cult of personality brought his downfall and a short-lived "civil war" in the otherwise oil-rich Libya. Now, his days are numbered and in the words of Shakespeare, one may truly say unto Old-Brother Ghadafi, "Poor man his days are numbered but why doth he rushez to [h]is execution?"

AsseObama, September 08, 2011

Ghaddaffi's finished his days off!
Ghaddaffi's death is a lifetime witness to what the worst could happen to a man at the end no matter what cults of personality, no matter what riches, no matter what respects, no matter what followers, no matter what rhetorics, no matter what legacies he had built. This is a great lesson for those who think that their mights will forever remain as might and as right as it had been foreaver....and for those who dig their own grave rediculing and repressing every agenda coming from the bottom to the upper leadership by underestimating the collective powers of even astray and illiterate people who are bursting out fired with anger, complex, hopelessness and tyranny!!!!!!!!! The past witnessed the mights of Ghadafi, yesterday witnessed the numbered days of Ghaddaffi, and today witnesses wounded and blood-stained Ghaddaffi rushing to his final execution,...may be tomorrow witnesses Ghaddaffi's graveyard with quotes inscribing the lasting words of Mary Shelley in Frankenstein that runs: "I have good dispositions ;

my life has been hitherto harmless

and in some degree beneficial ;

but a fatal prejudice clouds their eyes,

and where they ought to see a feeling and kind friend,

they behold only a detestable monster."

Poor Ghaddafi, he just swallowed his destined lot of blood disgracefully while he was rushed by his own countrymen to his execution.... and pityful as we are in his numbered days, Ghaddaffi might deserve being remembered as in Frankenstein of Mary Bysche Shelley. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.55.77.210 (talk) 06:32, 21 October 2011 (UTC)