Read the 60 Minutes episode titled ‘Interrogator Shares Saddam’s Confessions’ (24 January 2008), which is still on the web. Saddam Hussein spent six months with his jailer, George Piro, before he was able to trust Piro enough to reveal why he refused to tell the world that his WMD’s were destroyed in the late 1990’s. Apparently Sadaam was afraid Iran would invade an Iraq with no WMD’s.
Most famous Stockholm Syndrome case was Patty Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army, its leader Donald DeFreeze nom de guerre was Cinque, the real Cinque led a revolt of slaves against the crew of the slave ship Amistad.
ᴮᴼᴿᴱᴰ2ᴰᴱᴬᵀᴴ 3 months ago
it was tasty
Botulism Bob 3 months ago
Read the 60 Minutes episode titled ‘Interrogator Shares Saddam’s Confessions’ (24 January 2008), which is still on the web. Saddam Hussein spent six months with his jailer, George Piro, before he was able to trust Piro enough to reveal why he refused to tell the world that his WMD’s were destroyed in the late 1990’s. Apparently Sadaam was afraid Iran would invade an Iraq with no WMD’s.
Angry Indeed Premium Member 3 months ago
That’s what you get when you eat Swedish….
ctolson 3 months ago
Especially the last paragraph – “The End”
baskate_2000 3 months ago
Not funny — and very bad.
ChessPirate 3 months ago
“How did you like that book on High-Rise Building Construction?”
“It was riveting…”
zenyattafan 3 months ago
Sounds like a parlor game if everyone gets tired of Tom Swifties.
kendavis09 3 months ago
Best book he ever ate. Plenty of fiber and roughage.
Smeagol 3 months ago
Most famous Stockholm Syndrome case was Patty Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army, its leader Donald DeFreeze nom de guerre was Cinque, the real Cinque led a revolt of slaves against the crew of the slave ship Amistad.
Strawberry King 3 months ago
Once he added some salt.
eddi-TBH 3 months ago
I really identified with the author.