Of course I feel sad for Saddam. The USA had no right to take over that country. There are many dictators in the world so what is next?
2007-01-02 07:59:53
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes I feel sad for Saddam, not for his hanging, he had it coming a million times over.
What I do feel sad about is that he, and the hard line dictators of some other countries, had the chance to bring freedom and prosperity to his country, and he blew it. Instead he took the iron fist approach.
Hitler had the same opportunity and blew it also. One never learns from the other. Saddam, Il of N.Korea, Ahamdinejad, Hitler, Mussolini, and so many others have, or had the chance to go down in history as their countries greatest heroes. Instead, they'll all end up the same.
2007-01-02 01:18:41
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It's amazing how many people get religion when they are marching to their death. For the bulk of his life, Hussein was totally secular and only pretended to be a practicing Muslim when he was trying to make points with the Arab world.
But do I feel sad for Hussein, absolutely not. The man was a monster and murdered hundreds of thousands. If anyone deserved to die, he did.
2007-01-02 01:50:56
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answer #3
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answered by kathy_is_a_nurse 7
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no sadness at all here did you cry when Michlovich (sp?) died? How about when you read about hitler? Does that make you sad also? The best thing for some ppl that could happen to them is just to die. I don;t think Saddam got upset about any of the ppl he had killed, OR inflicted many other types of trama on.
2007-01-02 01:11:35
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answer #4
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answered by lethander_99 4
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I only feel sad that they didn't break his arms and legs with a sledge hammer. Gas him. Then, throw him off a building............before they hanged him. He got a much easier death than he deserved.
Now that I think about it. It would have been cool to spit some Copenhagen in his eyes before they pulled the lever.
2007-01-02 01:20:16
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answer #5
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answered by B aka PE 6
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i ask your self that too, and that i don't be attentive to if we are able to ever totally understand. some each and every person is born with recommendations harm that makes them lack a ethical experience. yet maximum of those human beings will in no way make a lot of themselves, purely lead tousled lives and finally end up in reformatory. i don't be attentive to how one among those adverse guy or woman would desire to upward thrust to a lot capacity, yet it has occurred many instances in historic previous.
2016-12-11 21:03:00
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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No, I feel no sorrow for the ending of a terrible tyrant's life. That is how they should all be treated. For someone who brutally murdered 10's to 100's of thousands of his own countrymen, he fully earned his execution.
It is the duty of good and free people everywhere to execute murderous tyrants.
2007-01-02 01:11:56
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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kinda. Since we helped him in the Iran-Iraq war in the early 80's, then out of our own paranoia we decided to kill him and try and create a new government in his country. Kinda unfair since his violations of the U.N. policies were minimal. The western world(who is concerned with controlling terrorism) would be better off with him still in office. I did feel kinda sad for him. Not terribly though.
2007-01-02 01:11:30
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i did feel sad because he was a human being even though he did all that horrible stuff. They should locked him in a 1 person jail and give 1 big meal a day until he dies.
2007-01-02 01:10:52
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answer #9
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answered by talkativegirl 1
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No, I dont feel sorry for him in the least. I wonder why he wasn't holding the Quran when he gassed, had his military men rape, and torture men, women, and children who also believe in the Quran? Hmmmm? Maybe he wan't a true believer, but wanted to manipulate people like you, in his last seconds of life? Is that possible?
2007-01-02 01:10:03
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answer #10
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answered by xenypoo 7
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