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#11 | |
Zartan
![]() Join Date: July 18, 2001
Location: America, On The Beautiful Earth
Age: 51
Posts: 5,373
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I'll stand as one of those accusers who has never left the borders of America my whole 29 year 11 month old life. There is a long list of muslim cultural sensitivities we have just trampled on in our zest for regime change. This comes from someone who has lived in many U.S. states north south east and west and has asorbed plenty of American culture from way more than T.V. and movies. I have drawn this conclusion from American news sources [img]graemlins/offtopic.gif[/img] Any way-back on topic... I dont see anything wrong with these treasure being shown abroad. I do see a problem with this decision being made arbitrarily by the occupying powers if thats the case, but as far as I know the Bagdad museum is still run by the same Iraqis who ran it before the invasion, so I would imagine they were part of this decision making process. Further more, if these Iraqi museum officials did authorize this, than the Muslim and Arab world wouldn't have no grounds to cry foul and claim the Americans were showing off the spoils of war. Only the extreme fundamentilst could make this claim, and they make all sorts of claims so it doesnt matter anyway. I am interested in the ancient cultures of the middle east myself and look forward to seeing this exhibit if it comes to Boston, so I might be biased on this topic. ![]() If it turns out that the Iraqi museum officials had no say in this, than it may have the appearance of showing off war booty, even if thats not the intent at heart. Now this article clearly is about showing off war booty, good or bad: Story [ 08-04-2003, 12:05 AM: Message edited by: Chewbacca ]
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#12 | |
Thoth - Egyptian God of Wisdom
![]() Join Date: May 10, 2002
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand.
Age: 43
Posts: 2,860
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Again, it's that sort of gloating that doesn't win the US military any new friends. Taking the picture isn't all that bad, putting on display could be historically educational, but putting it on the floor for people to walk all over, well, that just reeks of bully-vanity to me. Pride cometh before a fall.
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#13 | |||||
Banned User
Join Date: September 3, 2001
Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Age: 63
Posts: 1,463
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But you know as well as I do (and as Saddam's sons learnt to their cost) that no-one is allowed to BREATH without the permission of the 'Coalition Administration'. The removal of artifacts could *only* occur with the full approval and authorisation of that administration. Quote:
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Even Saddam Hussein recognised the cultural significance of the artifacts that it contained. The museum, if anything, was over-funded during his reign and lavishly decorated to boot. When the US first threatened to invade, Saddam used the national pride in the country's history to rally the people, making references to previous attempts by invaders to conquer 'civilised' Bagdad. You think that it doesn't matter to Iraqi's? The British museum (state owned and run by the way) is *still* arguing with the Greek and Egytian government over the return of artifacts - taken from their respective countries more than two hundred years ago. It matters - these are state treasures - not theme park rides. Quote:
And even *if* an item genuinly belonged to Saddam, then look at the British example. The Queen of England is undoubtably the rightful owner of the Crown Jewels. The jewels were either given to or commissioned by her ancesters - her legal ownership is unquestionable. Yet even the Queen recognises their cultural significance and has sworn that she holds them for future generations of Britain. They are never to be sold, broken up or to leave the country. Remember that these artifacts have never been displayed abroad before - not even in the time before Saddam. They were considered to be state treasures - as important to the nation as the Crown Jewels are to Britain. Quote:
However, I do believe that this shows a remarkable lack of sensitivity that will further damage the US's public image abroad - and believe it or not - I don't want the anti-US feeling to increase. The world is unstable enough as it is without unneccesary provocation. |
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#14 |
Drow Priestess
![]() Join Date: March 13, 2001
Location: a hidden sanctorum high above the metroplex
Age: 55
Posts: 4,037
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Although I would like to see this travelling exhibit (I am a fan of museums), the timing and the circumstances aren't the most wise. Perhaps they should just compile photos of these objects into book form and publish that first, then worry about putting together an exhibit. That way, the objects are available to everyone and the proceeds from book sales can be funneled back to the museum. Oh, well...
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Everything may be explained by a conspiracy theory. All conspiracy theories are true. No matter how thinly you slice it, it's still bologna. |
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