Angelina + Lucky

Cambodia is AJ’s first love.

Angelina Jolie, a force to behold With beauty and grace, she shines like gold Her eyes full of passion, her heart so pure A woman of strength, of that I am sure She fights for justice, for those in need A voice for the voiceless, a leader indeed Her compassion knows no bounds In a world full of chaos, she stands her ground A mother, an actress, a humanitarian She wears many hats, with such dedication Her presence lights up any room A true inspiration, a beautiful bloom Angelina Jolie, a name that rings true A woman of substance, of that we all knew May she continue to shine bright And inspire us all, with her guiding light.

Oh Cambodia, land of beauty and grace Your ancient temples and rich culture we embrace From the bustling streets of Phnom Penh To the tranquil waters of Tonle Sap Lake Your people, resilient and strong Their smiles brighten every day long Through hardship and struggle they endure Their spirit shines pure and sure The sunsets over Angkor Wat A sight that leaves us in awe and awe The colors dance across the sky As we bid the day goodbye Cambodia, you hold a special place In the hearts of those who know your grace We cherish every moment spent with you Our love for you forever true So here’s to Cambodia, our beloved land May you always stand strong and grand We’ll cherish you forevermore Our love for you will never wane or fade.

10 thoughts on “Angelina + Lucky

  1. Joe has the true history of Cambodia’s killing fields.

    On 18 March 1969, pressurized by President Richard Nixon’s
    Security Adviser Henry Kissinger, the United States launched an
    attack on Cambodia with B-52 bombers from high altitude in order to
    “demolish the NLF bases” there. Each of the planes dropped some
    thirty tons of bombs. The intensive bombing went on for fourteen
    months. More sporadic attacks continued until 15 August 1973, when
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    the US Congress pushed through a stop. In total, 540 000 tons of
    bombs were dropped on Cambodia.
    In his book “The Trial of Henry Kissinger” (2001), the journalist
    Christopher Hitchens presents evidence that Kissinger is liable to
    prosecution for the instigation of murder in Santiago (Chile), Nicosia
    (Cyprus), and Washington D.C., war crimes in Vietnam, the bombing
    of Cambodia, massacres in Bangladesh in 1971 and as well as genocide in East Timor in 1975. This has not yet been done.
    Prince Norodom Sihanouk was no longer able to control the
    situation in Cambodia, where many areas had become effective bases
    for the communists. General Lon Nol subsequently carried out a coup
    d’etat, overthrowing Prince Sihanouk with the help of the CIA on 18
    March 1970. In April of that year American and South Vietnamese
    troops were let into Cambodia to “save the country from communism”. In this way, Lon Nol, who had appointed himself “marshal”,
    forced “the Khmer Republic” into the war in Indo-China. Close to two
    million peasants fled to the capital, which already had one million
    inhabitants. The Finnish investigating commission estimated that
    American warfare in Cambodia had cost the lives of at least 600 000
    people. In May 1970, American troops entered Laos as well.
    The American military equipment for Lon Nol’s regime was insured
    by the national Soviet insurance agency (Gostrakh), according to
    Chinese sources (“Soviet Foreign Policy: Social Imperialism”, Chinese
    Embassy, Helsinki, 1977, p. 10). The same source states that Czechoslovakia manufactured arms for Lon Nol in a factory inside Cambodia.
    At the same time, Peking supported the Red Khmer, while Moscow
    stood behind the Vietnamese red terrorists, who according to Gary
    Allen, also received arms from the United States.
    Soon, many of Lon Nol’s supporters realized that they had been
    shamelessly used, and joined the democratic movement behind
    Sihanouk. Thus the communist Pol Pot Kmae-kroh movement was
    helped to power on 17 April 1975, indirectly by the United States
    and directly by China. Pol Pot (actually Saloth Sar) renamed the
    country Kampuchea (the original name Cambodia was taken back
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    after the fall of the communist regime in 1989). This was the
    beginning of an unequalled reign of terror. On the Thai border were
    6000 men belonging to the khmer-serei guerrilla, which represented
    democracy. They did not receive any aid from the United States. On
    the other hand, 25 000 Red Khmer terrorists continuously and
    secretly received Western aid, according to a British documentary,
    “Cambodia the Year Zero”, by the Australian journalist John Pilger.
    Between 1975 and 1979, some two million people were killed in
    Kampuchea (of a population of eight million), under the motto of Pol
    Pot: “Keep them – no gain. Exterminate them – no loss. We will burn
    away the old grass, so the new will grow.”
    The operation had been planned two years before by a group of
    ideologists belonging to the political lodge Angka Loeu (The Higher
    Organization). Their aim was to implement all communist Chinese
    principles at once (in China itself it took 25 years). Everything from
    the past was to be destroyed and annihilated. Angka Loeu consisted
    of a score of intellectuals (teachers and bureaucrats). Of the eight
    leaders (Khieu Samphan, May Mann, Ieng Sary, Nuon Chea, Son Sen,
    Pol Pot and others), five were teachers, one a university professor,
    one an economist and one a bureaucrat, according to Paul Johnson.
    All had studied in France in the early 1950s, and there become
    members of the French Communist Party and freemasons, learning
    from the leaders of the Martinist Order that the use of violence was
    good for society, a “truth” eagerly propagated by the radical leftwing freemasons.
    Kenneth Quinn, of the US State Department, had received information about the plans of Angka Loeu, and wrote a report about the
    planned mass murder, dated 20 February 1974 (“Political Change in
    Wartime: The Khmer Krahom Revolution in Southern Cambodia 1970-
    74”, American Science Association, 4 September 1975). The plan
    stated that “individual members of society must be mentally reconstructed” and that “the traditional foundations, structures and
    forces, which have shaped and governed the life of an individual
    must be torn down, using terror and other means”. After this, the
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    individual would be “rebuilt in accordance to party doctrine,
    replacing old values with new ones”. This reeks of freemasonry. The
    American leadership did not intend to interfere with such a plan. One
    does not to disturb one’s masonic brothers when they follow international instructions.
    The carnage in Cambodia began on 17 April 1975, when the Red
    Khmer, young indoctrinated peasant soldiers entered the capital
    Pnomh Penh, the home of three million people. The violence began
    at 7 a. m. with attacks on Chinese shops. The first murders were
    committed at 8. 45. At 10 a. m., the soldiers opened fire on everyone
    they saw in the streets, in order to cause panic, so that everyone fled
    the city.
    All hospitals were evacuated. Rockets were fired towards any
    house showing signs of movement. In the evening, the water was
    turned off. No officers were in sight. The intellectual freemasons who
    had planned these evil deeds, to build a society without cities or
    money, did not appear. The Red Khmer took the women and small
    children to the killing fields.
    All ties of friendship were banned. Only dark clothes were allowed,
    brightly coloured clothes were regarded as expressions of individualism.
    This was typical of the masonic humanism that spread from France
    to other parts of the world. The leaders of the Revolution (all freemasons) had declared, in 1793: “We will rather turn all of France into
    a graveyard than fail.” (Guy Lenotre, “The Mass Drownings in Nantes”, Stockholm, 1913, p. 157) Compassion with the victims was
    regarded as criminal (ibid, p. 153). The masonic leaders wanted to be
    rid of the royalists and the enemies of the people, whom they regarded as “superfluous mouths”. Among the victims were women and
    children. The mass drownings in the Loire River were called “floods”,
    and were organized by the Common Welfare Committee (13 members,
    all freemasons).
    The Red Khmer had learned much from this “revolutionary” terror
    imposed on the French by Jewish freemasons.
    491
    In April 1976, the leader of Angka Loeu, Khieu Samphan, became
    head of state and was replaced as chief of government by another
    fanatic middle class “revolutionary”, Pol Pot.
    Pol Pot often had his victims buried alive. He gave orders to
    torture 20 000 women and children to death. In all, 90% of the intellectuals were murdered. The Red Khmer even assaulted villages in the
    neighbouring countries. On 28 January 1977, the Red Khmer killed
    the inhabitants of three Thai villages, before burning their houses,
    according to a Reader’s Digest article of January 1979.
    Khieu Samphan admitted to an Italian journalist in August 1976,
    that one million “war criminals” had died, according to Paul Johnson.
    In a quick invasion the Vietnamese forces defeated Pol Pot, and
    occupied Kampuchea on 25 December 1978. On 7 January 1979, a
    new regime was installed under Heng Samrin, who received Soviet aid
    (with the help of the United States). On 11 January the People’s
    Republic of Kampuchea was proclaimed.
    The Red Khmer continued to receive aid from the West. During the
    following years, Pol Pot was still supported by the United States and
    China as well as their allies, among them Thatcher’s Great Britain.
    Although the Red Khmer had ceased to exist in January 1979, its
    members were still allowed to represent Cambodia in the UN.
    In 1981, the high-ranking freemason Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter’s national security adviser, declared: “I encouraged the
    Chinese to support Pol Pot.” He admitted that the United States “turned a blind eye” to the fact that China sent arms to the Red Khmer
    via Thailand (John Pilger’s article “They Supported a Mass Murderer”).
    This was the same Brzezinski, who in 1979 had openly admitted
    that “the world is changing under the influence of forces ungovernable by any government”, according to Paul Johnson.
    Pol Pot’s activities in exile had been secretly financed by the
    United States since January 1980. The extent of this aid – 85 million
    dollars between 1980 and 1986 – was shown by a letter to the US
    Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. The CIA ensured that
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    humanitarian aid went to the Red Khmer bases. Two American aid
    workers, Linda Mason and Roger Brown, later reported: “The US
    government insisted that the Red Khmer should receive food…”
    (John Pilger)
    Following American pressure, the World Food Program sent food
    valued at 12 million dollars to the Thai army, to be delivered to the
    Red Khmer. “Between 20 000 and 40 000 of the Red Khmer soldiers
    received this aid”, according to Richard Holbrooke, who was an
    assistant secretary of state at the time. The food convoys were paid
    for by the Western governments.
    The senior officer of the Red Khmer prison camp was the notorious
    mass murderer Nam Phann (the right hand of Pol Pot), known to the
    aid workers as the Butcher.
    The former Deputy Director of the CIA, Ray Cline, paid a secret
    visit to the Red Khmer operative headquarters. Cline was at the time
    President Ronald Reagan’s national security adviser.
    Until 1989, Britain’s role in Cambodia remained secret. Simon
    O’Dwyer-Russell, foreign correspondent of The Sunday Telegraph,
    revealed then that British SAS units trained Pol Pot’s units. They
    were all veterans of the Falklands War, commanded by a captain.
    Later on, Jane’s Defence Weekly reported that this kind of training
    had been taking place at secret bases in Thailand for more than four
    years.
    Pol Pot was assured by his masonic masters that he would never
    have to face charges of crimes against humanity. This promise was
    officially made in 1990. The UN presented a “peace plan”, in which
    all mention of genocide had been omitted.
    The UN Commission on Human Rights voted down a resolution
    dealing with “atrocities of a genocidal character, committed in particular when the Red Khmer were in power”. The prime movers behind
    this concession were the United States and China. The UN commission decided that its member states no longer would “trace,
    arrest, deliver or prosecute those responsible for crimes against
    humanity in Kampuchea”. Governments were no longer under
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    obligation to “prevent those responsible for acts of genocide in 1975-
    78 to return to power”. This is not what they say of the Nazis.
    The Peking gangster regime, together with the US and British
    governments, supported Pol Pot’s soldiers and supplied them with
    modern arms, which enabled them to execute their raids of terror
    into the country from neighbouring Thailand.
    On 25 June 1991, the British government finally admitted that the
    SAS had secretly trained Pol Pot’s “resistance movement” since 1983.
    The Guardian wrote that “the SAS training was a criminally
    irresponsible and cynical political act”.
    When the Red Khmer were welcomed back to Phnom Penh by UN
    officials, the Australian general John Sanderson, in a filmed interview, refused to condemn the Red Khmer as responsible for the
    genocide.
    A Cambodian lawyer pointed out: “All foreigners who have been
    involved must be put on trial… Madeleine Albright, Margaret
    Thatcher, Henry Kissinger, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George
    Bush.” His ambition was to prosecute them and make them explain
    to the world why they had supported the Red Khmer. But that is not
    likely to happen.
    In 1998, Khieu Samphan asked his countrymen to forget the past
    to enable the country to look forward. The Western masonic leaders
    would also feel better, if Cambodia failed to come to terms with its
    past.
    CIA used the confusion around the Vietnam War as a cover for
    large-scale drug trafficking wholesale from the so-called golden
    triangle. This was revealed by Professor Alfred W. McCoy in his
    thorough investigation, “The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the
    Global Drug Trade” (New York, 1991). The drugs were sent to the
    United States inside the bodies of dead soldiers.
    Meanwhile, Wall Street had decided that all of Vietnam should be
    delivered to the communists. This intention was announced by President Richard Nixon on 22 January 1969. He called it “vietnamization” of the war. In August 1969, the Unit

  2. why does she even give a f**** about Cambodia?

    nobody gives a f**** about us. i escaped the Cambodian killing fields, just like Joe escaped the Yugoslavian killing fields

  3. BP was a bad , abusive, drunken father to Maddox

    Cambodia was my first love. My son Maddox. Named after the USS Maddox sunken ship that triggered the Vietnam War.

  4. Zahara’s birth mother, Mentwabe Dawit, was found by Reuters to be alive and living in Ethiopia in 2007.

    Maddox is the orphan Snake.

    Psalm 68:5 tells us, “Father of the fatherless and protector of widows is God in his holy habitation.”

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