Every one lost my vote to!!! Dear Mrs. Clinton:
Your statement on Kosovo is moronic, especially considering that 40% of the Albanians in Kosovo are illegal aliens who cross the border from Albania into Serbia as easily as Mexicans cross our borders each night in San Diego and El Paso. Granting these illegal aliens more rights than Serbs who have lived on this territory for generations makes you an accessory to crimes against humanity. Less than 45% of the Albanians cast their ballots two weeks ago...not a very good indicator of their will to follow in the footsteps of KLA terrorists like Hashim Tachi. You just lost my vote and the votes of 1.4 million Serbs in the United States. Your husband denied food and medicine to the Serbs for nearly 8 years. Our military dropped cluster bombs on civilians and poisoned their water table and the Danube River for hundreds of miles for decades to come. Secretary of State Albright took pride in starving to death 500,000 Iraqi children, what a hideous human rights record on which you run for the highest office in this nation. As a double victim of genocide, I lost 17 members of my family were were burned to death in the Serbian church in Vojnic, Croatia in 1942. During "Operation Storm" in August 1995 when 200,000 Serbs were cleansed from Croatia, the last 5 relatives of my name were too old and too sick to flee. I was notified a month later they were found with their throats slit, thanks to you, your husband and people of your ilk. William Dorich Los Angeles November 29, 2007 Statement of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton on Future Status of Kosovo On December 10, the US-EU-Russian troika seeking a mutually acceptable settlement of the future status of Kosovo will make its report to the United Nations and to the world. Given the current position of the Russian government, it is unlikely that any agreement will be reached. If this is the case, I believe that further delay would be highly inadvisable. This process, which started far too late thanks to the neglect of the Bush Administration in its first term, has run its course. With Russia threatening to veto any arrangement submitted to the U.N. Security Council, we must be prepared to strongly support the will of the majority of the people of Kosovo. If the government in Pristina decides for independence, I would strongly support prompt U.S. recognition, and I would urge the European Union to do the same. I also congratulate the people of Kosovo on the orderly, peaceful election they have just completed. In supporting the independence of Kosovo, I want to stress the high importance that I attach to full protection of the rights of all minorities in Kosovo, especially the Serbs. This is an absolute necessity as Kosovo goes forward. I am also concerned about the deterioration of the situation in Bosnia. Twelve years after the Dayton Agreement ended that war, a combination of American neglect, European Union weakness, and Russian and Serbian obstructionism threatens the stability and future of Bosnia. I urge the Administration to pay more attention to this issue, so that it does not once again become a major threat to European stability, especially at the same time as the Kosovo situation approaches a historic juncture. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
