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  • MÁ BÀI NÀY KHÔNG THỂ NÀO CHẤP NHẬN ĐƯỢC TỪ HÌNH THỨC CHO TỚI NỘI DUNG DKM KHI NHỮNG BẬC ĐẦU NÃO THỲ LÀM ĐÉO GÌ LÂU LÂU MỚI TỤ HỘI 1 NƠI.CÒN MÂU THUẪN KHI BÁC RA NƯỚC NGOÀI RỒI LÀM ĐÉO GÌ BIẾT TIẾNG DÂN ĐỊA PHƯƠNG MÀ NÓI .LÀM VIDEO THÌ NGU VÃI LỒN .LÀ TAO GHI RA VIẾT CHO TỤI MÀY CUNG~ ĐƯỢC ĐÚNG LÀ.....NGU NHƯ CHÓ

  • Lost and lonely coz you’re the only one

    That knows me and I can’t be without you

    Lost and lonely coz you’re the only one

    That knows me and I can’t be without you

    Hai kya yeh jo tere mere darmiyaan hai

    Andekhi ansuni koi dastaan hai

    Hai kya yeh jo tere mere darmiyaan hai

  • Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

    Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere

    Ajnabi se huye kyun pal saare

    Yeh nazar se nazar yeh milaate hi nahin

    Ik gani dehaayi cha gayi hai

    Manzilein raaston mein hi gum hone lagi

  • Ho gayi ansuni har dua ab meri

    Reh gayi ankahi bin tere

    Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

    Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere

    Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

    Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere

  • Raah mein roshni ni hai kyun haath choda

    Iss taraf shaam ne kyun hai apna muh moda

    Yun ke har subah ik bereham si baat ban gayi

    Hai kya yeh jo tere mere darmiyaan hai

    Andekhi ansuni koi dastaan hai

  • Lagne lagi, ab zindagi khaali khaali

    Lagne lagi har saans bhi khaali

    Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

    Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere

    Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

  • Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere

    Bin tere, bin tere, bin tere

    Koi khalish hai hawayon mein bin tere .. lost and lonely ..

    lost and lonely…lost and lonely

  • Chuyện dài Việt Cộng, nghe mệt

    By hoangde · February 17, 2012 · 8 Comments

    Đời sống ·

    Vụ án ông Đoàn Văn Vươn hình như tới bữa nay vẫn chưa kết thúc, nghe đâu ông thủ tướng ra lệnh cho đàn em dưới trướng điều tra cho kỷ và trả lại công bằng cho gia đình ông Vươn,

  • chiêu này nghe quen quen… Giống như mấy ngài dân cử ở đây mị dân kiếm phiếu vậy.

    Mà nghĩ cũng ngộ nha, trên thế giới này hình như tui chưa có nghe bất cứ một nước lớn nhỏ nào có chuyện chính phủ đặt ra hình phạt đình chỉ công tác một ông quan gì đó mà chỉ có 15 ngày,

  • cái này giống như vợ giận chồng “tui cấm cửa ông 15 ngày hổng được tới gần tui nha” nghe giống như trò hề…

    Đúng là chỉ có cộng sản mà là cộng sản made in Viet Nam mới có luật “rừng” kiểu đó!

    Trở lại chuyện ông Đoàn Văn Vươn, mặc dù nhà nước nhận định trong vụ án này ông Vươn làm đúng,

  • chính quyền sở tại là sai hoàn toàn nhưng cũng vẫn phạt tù ông Vươn còn thằng cha chủ tịch hay phó chủ tịch, bí thư gì đó của thành phố hay quận huyện của chổ ông Vươn ở chỉ là phạt nhẹ ”giơ cao đánh khẻ” thôi…

    Gia đình ông Vươn bây giờ màn trời chiếu đất thì kệ mẹ chúng nó! chúng nó đói, thê thảm chứ có mắc mớ gì các quan tham ô đâu mà thắc mắc, phải không?

  • Việt cộng ngàn đời vẫn là việt cộng, lối xử lý theo kiểu luật rừng, mạnh thằng nào thằng đó chơi… chẳng có lề lối gì hết ráo!

    Bởi vậy mới nói, Việt cộng bây giờ ra sân chơi lớn với các đàn anh quốc tế nhưng lối chơi vẫn chỉ là lối chơi của bọn trẻ con, không biết đường đâu mà rờ!!!

  • khi bác mất, cả dân tộc việt nam khóc thương, điều đó đã nói lên tất cả, ko 1 lời bịa đặt, xuyên tạc nào có thể làm thay đổi hình anh vị cha già kính yêu của dân tộc trong lòng mổi người con đất việt

  • bon cho phan dong! chet me chung may di!

  • cái đống văn thế này được nghĩ ra cũng hay đấy, tao không nghĩ ra được ở VN cái giống loài nào kêu được như thế...

  • dyt me nha may song tot con tao song ngheo kho mat lozz may thang chung may phan dong muon nam kkaka em theo phan dong voiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

  • Các thành phần phản động và chống phá nước mình trên Youtube ngày càng nhiều. Chắc là vượt biên qua Mĩ và được cho ít đồng nên mới nảy sinh như vậy. Mọi người hãy cân nhắc và có chính kiến nhé, kô nên tin vào những lời lẽ và thông tin phản động như vậy. Đất nước ta chỉ cần hoà bình và yên ổn thế này là đc.

  • lu~ suc sinh . chet me chung may di

  • du ma tao chem chet me may thang pgan quoc. lon ma tui bay, lu~ suc sinh . lu khon nan chung may khong da la nguoi viet nam. tao cam thay xau ho~ . neu duoc phep giet nguoi. tao xin tinh nguyen xe xac chung may thanh tung manh~

  • Bác là người mà toàn thể nhân dân kính trọng, điều đó không ai có thể thay đổi được.chỉ có những loài thú phản bội tổ quốc, phản bội quê hương, những con thú đội lốt người mới, những kẻ ganh tỵ xấu xa với nhân dân Việt Nam mới có thể đưa ra được những đoạn video như thế này. sự tôn kính đối với Bác trong những người con Việt Nam đối với Bác là không có gì thay đổi được. MỌI HÀNH ĐỘNG VÔ LIÊM SỈ ĐỀU KHÔNG LÀM LUNG LAY ĐƯỢC TÌNH CẢM ĐÓ ĐÂU NHỮNG CON THÚ ĐỘI LỐT NGƯỜI KIA.

  • General Walt tells of the “revolutionary purity” of Vietcong who came home to two other villages. In one case, a 15-year-old girl who had given Walt’s Marines information on VC activities was taken into the jungle and tortured for hours, then beheaded.

  • As a warning to other villagers, her head was placed on a pole in front of her home. Her murderers were her brother and two of his VC comrades. In the other case, when a VC learned that his wife and two young children had cooperated with Marines who had befriended them, he himself cut out their tongues.

  • Genocide.

    In such fashion did the storm of terror break over South Vietnam. In 1960, some 1,500 South Vietnamese civilians were killed and 700 abducted. By early 1965, the communists’ Radio Hanoi and Radio Liberation were able to boast that the VC had destroyed 7,559 South Vietnamese hamlets. By the end of last year, 15,138 South Vietnamese civilians had been killed, 45,929 kidnaped. Few of the kidnaped are ever seen again.

  • Ho’s assault on South Vietnam’s leadership class has, in fact, been a form of genocide — and all too efficient. Thus, if South Vietnam survives in freedom, it will take the country a generation to fully replace this vital element of its society

  • But the grand design of terror involves other objectives, too. It hopes to force the attacked government into excessively repressive anti-terrorist actions, which tend to earn the government the contempt and hatred of the people.

  • It also seeks valuable propaganda in the form of well-publicized counter-atrocities certain to occur at the individual level — for South Vietnamese soldiers whose families have suffered at communists’ hands are not likely to deal gently with captured VC and North Vietnamese troops.

  • Dr. A. W. Wylie, an Australian physician serving in a Mekong Delta hospital, points out that a hamlet or village need not cooperate with the Saigon government or allied forces to mark itself for butchery; it need only be neutral, a political condition not acceptable to the communists. After a place has been worked over, its people of responsibility are always identifiable by the particularly hideous nature of their wounds. He cites some cases he has seen:

  • — When the VC finished with one pregnant woman, both of her legs were dangling by ribbons of flesh and had to be amputated. Her husband, a hamlet chief, had just been strangled before her eyes, and she also had seen her three-year-old child machine-gunned to death. Four hours after her legs were amputated, she aborted the child she was carrying. But perhaps the worst thing that happened to her that day was that she survived.

  • — A village policeman was held in place while a VC gunman shot off his nose and fired bullets through his cheekbones so close to his eyes that they were reduced to bloody shreds. He later died from uncontrollable hemorrhages.

  • — A 20-year-old schoolteacher had knelt in a corner trying to protect herself with her arms while a VC flailed at her with a machete. She had been unsuccessful; the back of her head was cut so deeply that the brain was exposed. She died from brain damage and loss of blood.

  • Flamethrowers at Work.

    Last December 5, communists perpetrated what must rank among history’s most monstrous blasphemies at Dak Son, a central highlands village of some 2,000. Montagnards — a tribe of gentle but fiercely independent mountain people.

  • They had moved away from their old village in VC-controlled territory, ignored several VC orders to return and refused to furnish male recruits to the VC.

    Two VC battalions struck in the earliest hours, when the village was asleep. Quickly killing the sentries, the communists swarmed among the rows of tidy, thatch-roofed homes, putting the torch to them.

  • The first knowledge that many of the villagers had of the attack was when VC troops turned flamethrowers on them in their beds. Some families awoke in time to escape into nearby jungle. Some men stood and fought, giving their wives and children time to crawl into trenches dug beneath their homes as protection against mortar and rifle fire.

  • But when every building was ablaze, the communists took their flamethrowers to the mouth of each trench and poured in a long, searing hell of fire — and, for good measure, tossed grenades into many. Methodical and thorough, they stayed at it until daybreak, then left in the direction of the Cambodian border.

  • Morning revealed a scene of unbelievable horror. The village now was only a smoldering, corpse-littered patch on the lush green countryside. The bodies of 252 people, mostly mothers and children, lay blistered, charred, burned to the bone. Survivors, many of them horribly burned, wandered aimlessly about or stayed close to the incinerated bodies of loved ones, crying. Some 500 were missing; scores were later found in the jungle, dead of burns and other wounds; many have not been found.

  • The massacre at Dak Son was a warning to other Montagnard Settlements to cooperate. But many of the tribesmen now fight with the allies.

    If the communists’ “persuasion” techniques spawn deep and enduring hatred, Ho could not care less; the first necessity is the utter, subjugation, of the people. Ho was disturbed by the rapid expansion of South Vietnam’s educational system: between 1954 and 1959,

  • the number of schools had tripled and the number of students had quadrupled. An educated populace, especially one educated to democratic ideals, does not fit into the communist scheme. Hence, the country’s school system was one of Ho’s first targets. So efficiently did he move against it that the World Confederation of Organizations of the Teaching Profession soon sent a commission, chaired by India’s Shri S. Natarajan, to investigate.

  • Typical of the commission’s findings is what happened in the jungle province of An Xuyen. During the 1954-55 academic year, 3,096 children attended 32 schools in the province; by the end of the 1960-61 school year, 27,953 were attending 189 schools. Then the communists moved in. Parents were advised not to send their children to school.

  • Teachers were warned to stop providing civic education, and to stop teaching children to honor their country, flag and president. Teachers who failed to comply were shot or beheaded or had their throats cut, and the reasons for the executions were pinned or nailed to their bodies.

  • The Natarajan commission reported how the VC stopped one school bus and told the children not to attend school anymore. When the children continued for another week, the communists stopped the bus again, selected a six-year-old passenger and cut off her fingers. The other children were told, “This is what will happen to you if you continue to go to that school.” The school closed.

  • In one year, in An Xuyen province alone, Ho’s agents closed 150 schools, killed or kidnapped more than five dozen teachers, and cut school enrollment by nearly 20,000. By the end of the 1961-62 school year, 636 South Vietnamese schools were closed, and enrollment had decreased by nearly 80,000.

  • But, in the face of this attack, South Vietnam’s education system has staged a strong comeback. Schools destroyed by the communists have been rebuilt, destroyed, and rebuilt again. Many teachers have given up their own homes and move each night into a different student’s home so the communists can’t find them, or commute from nearby cities, where they leave their families.

  • Against such determination, the size of Ho’s failure can be measured: in 1954, there were approximately 400,000 pupils in school in North and South Vietnam together; today South Vietnam alone has some two million in school. About 35,000 — four times as many as in 1962 — now attend five South Vietnamese universities, while 42,000 more attend night college

  • A South Vietnamese government official explains: “A war shatters many traditional values. But the idea of education has an absolute hold on our people’s imagination.”

    Bar of Justice.

    The pitch of communist terrorism keeps rising. After the Tet carnage at Hue early this year, 19 mass graves yielded more than 1,000 bodies, mostly civilians

  • old men and women, young girls, schoolboys, priests, nuns, doctors (including three Germans who had been medical-school faculty members at Hue University). About half had been buried alive, and many were found bound together with barbed wire, with dirt or cloth stuffed into their mouths and throats, and their eyes wide open.

  • The communists came to Hue with a long list of names for liquidation — people who worked for the South Vietnamese or for the US government, or who had relatives who did. But as their military situation grew increasingly desperate,

  • they began grabbing people at random, out of their homes and off the streets, condemned them at drumhead courts as “reactionaries” or for “opposing the revolution” and killed them.

  • xạo lồn !!! kon nào viet bai nay có khieu wa vay !!! di viet truyen sex di !!! hahahahahahah!!! may tuong? doi that giong nhu may cai porn movie may hay xem ay ah` !!! tao noi that neu wa that co' de nhu vay thi` cha3 có thang nao de lo lieu vay dau !!!! rửa chim đi thúi wa!!!

  • người xưa có câu : đã thô lỗ lại còn lộ liễu ; cuộc đời mỗi người ai mà không có sai lầm nhưng sửa chữa nó thì lại coi như không ; bọn phản động việt nam cộng hòa chúng mày biết sai không sửa giờ lại kêu gọi lật đổ nhà nước XHCN việt nam bọn tao sống => bọn này mơ giữa ban ngày rồi quên đi con => đừng nghĩ rằng lật đổ nước tao là dễ ; không có mùa hè đắp chăn đâu baby

  • @DaiLenMatHo Ham dọc là bà ngoại và bà nội bà già mày ham mà ko được nên gđ 3 đời dòng họ mày mới cay cú như thế! Thôi đừng muốn ăn gắp bỏ tay người nha =))

  • @DaiLenMatHo Ngu tiếng việt thì đừng có viết cái kiểu rặn từng chữ như rặn ỉa. Bộ mày định rặn ỉa rồi bóc cứt ăn hay sao mà rặn kinh vậy?

  • co' ra hang` nghin` cai' clip giong' vay. cung~ ko lam` lung lay duoc. nhung~ nhiu` yeu nuoc' , yeu Bac' Ho` dau....may' chu'

  • Comment removed

  • Đã mang danh phản quốc ko biết tự xấu hổ nhục nhã, còn quay lại cắn càn. Cái thói vô liêm sỉ, vô đạo đức, vô nhân tính của chúng mày chỉ xứng đáng làm chó Mỹ Ngụy

  • 3 đời nhà bọn mày ức chế cái gì?? Bà nội bà ngoại tụi bây ức vì ko Hiếp được Bác hay sao mà cứ to mồm sủa bậy vậy?? Chắc các bà nhà tụi bây ngủ lang với trâu bò chó heo nên đẻ ra tụi bây phần CON trội hơn phần người

  • @laogiahamhoc

    mày chỉ

    ham dọc

    cặc hồ!

  • Dr. A. W. Wylie, an Australian physician serving in a Mekong Delta hospital, points out that a hamlet or village need not cooperate with the Saigon government or allied forces to mark itself for butchery; it need only be neutral, a political condition not acceptable to the communists. After a place has been worked over, its people of responsibility are always identifiable by the particularly hideous nature of their wounds. He cites some cases he has seen:

  • — When the VC finished with one pregnant woman, both of her legs were dangling by ribbons of flesh and had to be amputated. Her husband, a hamlet chief, had just been strangled before her eyes, and she also had seen her three-year-old child machine-gunned to death. Four hours after her legs were amputated, she aborted the child she was carrying. But perhaps the worst thing that happened to her that day was that she survived.

  • — A village policeman was held in place while a VC gunman shot off his nose and fired bullets through his cheekbones so close to his eyes that they were reduced to bloody shreds. He later died from uncontrollable hemorrhages.

  • — A 20-year-old schoolteacher had knelt in a corner trying to protect herself with her arms while a VC flailed at her with a machete. She had been unsuccessful; the back of her head was cut so deeply that the brain was exposed. She died from brain damage and loss of blood.

  • Flamethrowers at Work.

    Last December 5, communists perpetrated what must rank among history’s most monstrous blasphemies at Dak Son, a central highlands village of some 2,000. Montagnards — a tribe of gentle but fiercely independent mountain people. They had moved away from their old village in VC-controlled territory, ignored several VC orders to return and refused to furnish male recruits to the VC.

  • Two VC battalions struck in the earliest hours, when the village was asleep. Quickly killing the sentries, the communists swarmed among the rows of tidy, thatch-roofed homes, putting the torch to them. The first knowledge that many of the villagers had of the attack was when VC troops turned flamethrowers on them in their beds. Some families awoke in time to escape into nearby jungle

  • Some men stood and fought, giving their wives and children time to crawl into trenches dug beneath their homes as protection against mortar and rifle fire. But when every building was ablaze, the communists took their flamethrowers to the mouth of each trench and poured in a long, searing hell of fire — and, for good measure, tossed grenades into many. Methodical and thorough, they stayed at it until daybreak, then left in the direction of the Cambodian border.