Do what the hell you please.

On Jan 25, 6:57 pm, kangaroo <[email protected]> wrote:
> So what do you want people to do?
> Are you expecting them to praise him?
> Personal accomplishment doesn't make people admire.
>
> On Jan 24, 3:47 am, Chon Chumleas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > From the horse's mouth:
>
> > Enemies of the People
>
> > 01/23/10
> > By Dan Nailen
> > Salt Lake Magazine (Utah, USA)
>
> > Thet Sambath is a Cambodian newspaper journalist whose father was
> > murdered by the Khmer Rouge in 1974, and whose mother was forced to
> > marry a Khmer Rouge militiaman two years later.
>
> > For a decade, Sambath spent his free time journeying into the
> > notorious "killing fields" of his home country to try and understand
> > why so many of Cambodia's people were murdered. The result of that
> > work is Enemies of the People, which Sambeth co-directed and produced
> > with Rob Lemkin.
>
> > The film revolves around the relationship Sambath established with
> > Nuon Chea, aka "Brother Number Two" (pictured below with Sambeth) and
> > dictator Pol Pot's right-hand man. It took Sambeth years of gaining
> > Chea's trust before he opened up and admitted that he and Pol Pot had
> > plotted the killings as a means of defending their communist vision
> > from "enemies of the people." Chea doesn't ever express remorse for
> > the program he calls the "solution," but he does to Sambeth directly
> > when the reporter tells the old man about his own family's
> > relationship with the Khmer Rouge.
>
> > Sambath also tracks down several of the Khmer Rouge's foot soldiers,
> > mostly peasants and farmers who were simply "following orders" when
> > they slit the throats of their neighbors and buried them in mass
> > graves. It's chilling to watch one of the men graphically illustrate
> > how he would kill his victims, and it's intriguing to see how each of
> > these murderers deals with what they've done all these years later.
>
> > Enemies of the People could prove to be an important historical
> > document for decades to come. Sambeth kept his recorded conversations
> > with Nuon Chea under lock and key for years, in fear they'd be
> > confiscated and used as evidence in a trial. Indeed, the film ends
> > with Nuon Chea's arrest by a joint force of the United Nations and
> > Cambodia. He's charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes, as
> > well as genocide, and his trial is slated, for now, for 2011.

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