Thursday, March 29, 2007
Is Che Guevara Living in Canada
The mystery surrounding Che Guevara continues to this day.
What if Guevara didn't actually die? What if he faked his own death to avoid further assassination attempts? Surely for someone of Che's status would have no problem finding sanctuary in a friendly country, such as Canada. And surely there is no greater supporter in Canada of radical socialism than the CBC and the academic community.
Is it just a coincidence that David Suzuki started working for the CBC just two years after Che Guevara was killed? Would it not be easy for the academic community to vouch for their poster-boy under a fake name? What if that fake name was David Suzuki? If thats not enough to think about, there's the visual evidence:

Miami Cuban emigre Gustavo Villoldo, 71, a veteran of the failed US-backed Bay of Pigs invasion, said he buried Guevara and two colleagues in October 1967 in a pit in Vallegrande, Bolivia, after cutting a lock of the hair of the Argentine-born revolutionary hero.
What if Guevara didn't actually die? What if he faked his own death to avoid further assassination attempts? Surely for someone of Che's status would have no problem finding sanctuary in a friendly country, such as Canada. And surely there is no greater supporter in Canada of radical socialism than the CBC and the academic community.
Is it just a coincidence that David Suzuki started working for the CBC just two years after Che Guevara was killed? Would it not be easy for the academic community to vouch for their poster-boy under a fake name? What if that fake name was David Suzuki? If thats not enough to think about, there's the visual evidence:

Labels: Dead Dictators, Dirty Liberals, Environment, Funny, Photos, Y2Kyoto
Friday, February 09, 2007
From Reuters:

An image of a group of young Lebanese driving a car through bombed-out South Beirut, taken by Spencer Platt of Getty Images, won the top World Press Photo prize for news photography on Friday.

Described by judges as full of "complexities and contradictions", the August 15, 2006 photo shows five people in a bright red car -- one taking pictures with her camera phone, another with her expression hidden behind designer sunglasses -- driving amid rubble with crumbled buildings in the background.
Labels: Photos






