 You've indicated that the Americans were implicated or implicated in the death squads. Are they also implicated in those massive car bombings that happened about a year ago and up to eight months ago or so? I found it mysterious that there were hardly any American casualties, and yet a lot of them were right in Baghdad, where you'd think the Americans had roadblocks and things. And I heard apocryphal stories about bombs being planted at the roadblocks in cars that then drive up. OK, a couple more. You mentioned the number of members of Iraq veterans against the war, some hundreds. Surely with the numbers of US soldiers there, there was a great deal of questioning going on. And you find other expressions of that taking place in the military. Are there any examples of units refusing to carry out orders for massacres rather than for human rights? Yeah. OK, I'll take those three. The Democrats, why they want to look at withdrawal. The short answer is they're all funded by the same people. They're all being applied pressure from the same lobby groups, whether they be military, industrial, complex, lobby groups, or APAC, or JINSA. They're all the same. It's just the level of donations to different people in different parties varies somewhat. And right now, because of the catastrophic situation the Republican Party is in, because of the Cheney administration, all of the corporate funders in the military, industrial, complex, lobby groups, and funders, they're all shifting their funds over to the Democrats. I mean, when Rupert Murdoch is campaigning, fundraising for Hillary Clinton, this is a pretty clear message of what's happening with the Democrats. There's no difference between the Democrats and the Republicans. So I just answered the second part of your question. America's involvement in car bombings, it's really, really difficult to say. But there are a couple of evidences of involvement. One involved British undercover SAS officers. This was actually a very well-documented, reported on story. There was a good ways back, it was at least a year and a half ago, down in Basra. Two undercover British SAS special forces guys were caught wearing dishtashes, wigs, mustaches, and driving in an unmarked car. They were pulled over by Iraqi security forces. The car had explosives, remote detonating devices, and a lot of weapons and communication equipment. And they were thrown in jail, and they were going to be tried for planting bombs at Moss to foment sectarian violence. And before they could be tried, the British military, with tanks and helicopters, raised the jail to the ground and got their two guys out. And actually, it was March 2006 in Tikrit, there were security contractors. It wasn't reported what company they were with. Western security contractors, again, pulled over by Iraqi security forces in Tikrit in a very, very similar incident. And in the last US troop resistance, I was on book tour in the end of October. I went up to Fort Drum in upstate New York. Rock Veterans Against the War has a strong chapter there, because most of them are actually active duty troops. And they have a GI resistance cafe. It's called the Different Drummer Cafe. And I was talking to a couple of the guys there that went up while I was up there, because I gave a talk at the Different Drummer Cafe. And one of them was an active duty troop soldier who had just come back from Iraq after spending a year there. And he was in the outskirts of Fallujah and Abu Ghraib city area. And he said, we were getting attacked so often when we were running our patrols, literally going out every other day and getting a roadside bomb. And we knew also, none of us believed in the mission. And plus, what aided that, although morale, was that our commander, we knew our commander was sending us out to get in combat, because he got a medal, even if he wasn't with us. And so enough, enough, so we would go out on patrols, we'd find a big empty field, we'd go park our unarmed Humvees under ideally some bait palms, and we'd listen to music and we'd drink cigarettes and we'd drink soda, I'm sorry, we'd listen to music, we'd smoke cigarettes and we'd drink soda and we'd pretend. And we'd call in every hour, as was our policy, to base and say, yeah, we're still searching the field for weapons caches. And then we'd go back home, after 12 hours, and he said, we were doing this every other day. And then I talked to another guy, also active duty, in Iraq at a different year of the occupation and a different location, same exact story. And it was rampant, I talked to more and more of these guys and it was rampant and I thought, oh, wow, I'm on this, and they called these, you know, they used to call them search and destroy missions, they call them search and avoid missions in Iraq. And I was all kind of full of myself, and thinking, oh, this is a great story and I wrote it up for Interpress Service and posted it. And then a little further down the road, I went to another presentation and there was a bunch of Iraq veterans against the war guys there and they were selling these CDs. And I started talking to one of them about what I had just told you guys about. And he's like, oh, at the time I didn't know they were called search and avoid missions. And I said, yes, these guys were really doing this. He's like, oh, yeah, all of us were doing this. He's like, look at this CD, we've got a song on here called search and avoid. So yeah, that's it.