Angelina Jolie is a Helmet Head
Thu, 07 February 2008 at 4:31 pm
Angelina Jolie arrives by plane and makes her way into the Green Zone in Baghdad, Iraq on Thursday.
The U.N. Goodwill Ambassador had lunch with American soldiers and voiced her opinion and listened to the ideas of others in day-long meetings. Jolie appealed on Thursday for more international help for the millions of Iraqis displaced internally and abroad, U.N. officials said.
Pictured below: Secretary of State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky, Top U.S. Commander in Iraq Gen. David Petraeus and Paula Dobriansky, the U.S. under secretary of state for global affairs, in Baghdad, Iraq.
Photos: AFP/HO/Spc. James Deady/Reuters/U. S. Department of Defense, AP Photo/Staff Sgt. Lorie Jewell US Army
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3194 Comments
Guess angie is home now?
Life & Style magazine put little Shiloh Jolie Pitt on the cover of their magazine this week.
The sensational and untrue story claims that her superstar parents have increased security after discovering a chilling note threatening her safety left outside one of their homes.
But it’s all lies, Poppa Pitt says!
“This is absolutely not true and reckless and dangerous to put these ideas out into the world,” says Brad.
Agreed!
Nice to know the story is complete bullshiz, though.
[Image via Fame Pictures.]
Thanks Jared for all the new threads of the amazing and inspiring Angelina Jolie.
What other celebrity can say that they met and had a sit down with the top military general of the US Military no one else. This woman is truly amazing and a inspiration to a lot of people including me. I am so proud of the work she is doing for the UN and all of the other work that she do to help others. And so proud to be a fan of hers
tabitha
tabitha, I didn’t say the men and women fighting the war thought it was bogus. That is MHO. I am sure of them feel that way as I have seen some of them being interviewed. But that is not what my post said. Peace
damn trolls,they should stop coming to a thread of a person they hate
Gulli–so glad to see you post–I’ve missed you! I’ve also missed Pasing Through and Missouri Gal (Chad). Angie is so wonderful–it’s no wonder the whole world reallizes her great heart. I just saw a clip of her on our local news. Thanks, Angie–we’ll try to live up to your dreams!
bdj @ 02/07/2008 at 8:18 pm
Geez whatever troll(s). Everybody knows somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody. It ain’t that serious. Folks here are discussing the many accomplishments of AJ. She is someone to be admired. If others don’t see it that way, fine. However, AJ will continue to live her life, perform her UN duties and take care of her family. What is said on this blog, pro or con, does not amount to a hill of beans. AJ has continue to do what she feels is right despite huge amount of criticism. I am sure this will not change. Peace to all.
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exactly, (laughing)
Oh Angie, I beg to the angels for you return safe from this trip.
GOD BLESS YOU.
brad should sue life and style,they are a piece of shi* tab
wooden legs Angelina
Btw for the record, Brad admitted that the marriage did not end because the X did not want kids. Was he lying or are you
I probably had a crisis in my 30’s. I had a turbulent life (while married to his ex). Some of my movies flopped. My career suffered greatly.
————-
As you blieve my ex’s VF interview, I was not eager to have babies with
her.
Life is too short. I need life to be everything I want it to be. My ex and I decided to end the charade because we both want to lead meaningful lives. Together we cannot have purpose driven lives because we have divergent goals and priorities in life. I respect the deep friendship we shared for seven years. Angelina is not the cause of the break-up of the farcical MERGER.
After meeting Angie, I became a NEW man, both intimately and artistically speaking. She is my great love, the mother of my kids and she means the world to me. She is the best gift that I could ever give to my kids.
Angie and I are as much as in love as in the first day. I am totally committed to her. She is the only focus in my vision for the future. We will probably have seven to nine kids.
Now I finally found the woman in Angie I truly want to have a family life forever.
… Brad Pitt
wow, she’s a heavy hitter! petraeus met w/her??
angie 2016?
The other day someone was saying she shouldn’t ride a bike pregnant. I wonder how what they are thinking about her now. LOL. That’s why we love Angie!
wooden legs Angelina
Btw for the record, Brad admitted that the marriage did not end because the X did not want kids. Was he lying or are you
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I probably had a crisis in my 30’s. I had a turbulent life (while married to his ex). Some of my movies flopped. My career suffered greatly.
As you blieve my ex’s VF interview, I was not eager to have babies with
her.
Life is too short. I need life to be everything I want it to be. My ex and I decided to end the charade because we both want to lead meaningful lives. Together we cannot have purpose driven lives because we have divergent goals and priorities in life. I respect the deep friendship we shared for seven years. Angelina is not the cause of the break-up of the farcical MERGER.
After meeting Angie, I became a NEW man, both intimately and artistically speaking. She is my great love, the mother of my kids and she means the world to me. She is the best gift that I could ever give to my kids.
Angie and I are as much as in love as in the first day. I am totally committed to her. She is the only focus in my vision for the future. We will probably have seven to nine kids.
Now I finally found the woman in Angie I truly want to have a family life forever.
… Brad Pitt
I have not been able to express my disgust at Lifeless and sh*it ragazine for that crap they put up about Shiloh. Every child in America and all over the world needs to be protected from harm. This tabloid has taken it upon itself to consistently endanger this childs life with their vile gabbage that they write. That cover this week was the worst cover I believe any magazine has ever doctored about an innocent child.
Clearly their motivation can not just be having great sales. They are as vindictive and careless as any murder or bank robber. How could they stoop that low? The FBI needs to step in and investigate his claims because those are very serious allegations and if found to be lies the perpetrators need to be thrown in jail for even endagering an innocent childs life with such insinuations. I am pissed and enraged by that article I know it was two days ago, I just saw it today and am pissed beyond words!!!!
Angie is so great she is amazing!
God bless Angelina Jolie.
Geez whatever troll(s). Everybody knows somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody. It ain’t that serious. Folks here are discussing the many accomplishments of AJ. She is someone to be admired. If others don’t see it that way, fine. However, AJ will continue to live her life, perform her UN duties and take care of her family. What is said on this blog, pro or con, does not amount to a hill of beans. AJ has continue to do what she feels is right despite huge amount of criticism. I am sure this will not change. Peace to all.
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Good post.
She’s not the first female to put herself in a difficult position nor will she be the last. Christiane Amanpour is an example. A journalist who is very passionate about what she does. I feel Angie has the same passion for her position with UNHCR.
http://www.usaweekend.com/00_issues/001217/001217amanpour.html
War correspondent. Dedicated journalist. Now add “new mother.”
Here, CNN’s Christiane Amanpour details for the first time how having a child profoundly alters the way she covers the world.
Jerusalem — It was Thursday, Sept. 28, as I was sitting at home in London, when I realized I was in trouble.
I had just heard that Ariel Sharon, the leader of Israel’s right-wing Likud Party, had walked onto the Temple Mount, sacred to Jews as the site of the second Israeli temple but also holy to Muslims as the spot from which they believe the prophet Mohammed ascended to heaven. The visit had immediately unleashed the pent-up fury among Palestinians.
But the politics were not my concern. The violence was. With all hell breaking loose, I knew, once again, my phone would ring and the assignment desk at CNN headquarters in Atlanta would want to get me out the door and on a plane to Israel.
After all, don’t I specialize in precisely this kind of story? I’ve been shot at in Bosnia and dodged gunfire from hostile militias in Somalia and Rwanda. Now, the assignment was Israel. What was the big deal?
The big deal was that I did not know if I wanted to go this time. After a decade spent on front lines, in battle zones and besieged cities, chasing danger all over the world, my life had changed, and I had a new kind of responsibility.
Now I was not only a wife, but a mother, too. I had just come off maternity leave; my son was exactly 6 months old.
This was going to be the test. Could I continue being a war reporter and a mother? My line of work may be a little extreme, but like just about every mother in the world, I now faced the eternal dilemma: how to balance my professional and personal lives.
For the past 10 years, I had had little thought for my own safety. Nor was I inclined to have a serious personal relationship — and certainly not a child because, as I had once told an interviewer, a mother had a responsibility to try to stay alive! I was passionate about my work, and I knew I could not split my loyalties.
Now my words were coming back to haunt me. I had been quite cavalier before, even throughout my pregnancy. When anyone asked me whether I would continue my crazy life, I would say, “Oh, yes, and I’m looking for bulletproof Snugglies for the baby, too!” I was determined to prove a professional woman can actually do it all.
Now I had to put aside the bravado and decide whether I would willingly place myself in harm’s way again.
Reluctantly, I walked out of the house. I am able to dash off virtually at a moment’s notice because I am lucky enough to have live-in help. My husband and I also agree to avoid traveling at the same time.
All the way on the flight to Israel my heart was pounding. I don’t remember feeling this kind of fear before. And I knew what it was: I was afraid of leaving behind a motherless son. I was afraid of checking out of a home and family life that has become as important and satisfying as my work.
I became quite morbid, quite irrational, even imagining the plane would crash before I ever got to the war zone. I actually had to tell myself to get a grip.
Fortunately, once I hit the ground all the old instincts quickly kicked in, all my old passion for the job reawakened. I realized it is in my blood.
As a concession to my new status as a mother, I did something I had always hesitated to do: I put on my bulletproof jacket before heading off to work. On the way to cover the latest clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers, I even found myself on the mobile phone, calling home to organize baby sitters, play groups and menus!
Life had certainly changed.
Beyond the fear, which in the end is manageable, for a new mother this story is torture. There are just so many children on the front lines being hurt and killed.
Until you have your own child you never really understand the power of a parent’s love and concern. My husband and I are always amazed by how we feel differently now, even watching movies or reading books about parents and children. For the first time we understand what it means to feel vulnerable.
You’ve all seen the pictures of Palestinian children throwing stones at Israeli army positions for the past two months. As a journalist, I know this intifada is different. This time, unlike the uprising that began in 1987, there is gunfire from both sides. This time, the violence is even more tragic, given how close a permanent peace seemed this summer when Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered unprecedented concessions to the Palestinians at Camp David.
As a journalist I know all that, but as a mother I am horrified by the daily death of children. Of about 240 people killed, mostly Palestinians — the number as I write this — 55 are under 18, according to a Palestinian Human Rights group tabulating the daily death toll. I find this particularly hard to take these days. Some of the dead are as young as 7, 9. A baby, 1 1/2 years old, was killed. All died of gunshot wounds, some in the head, others in the chest. One little boy died wearing his school uniform and backpack.
The rage has reached such a pitch that the kids have gotten swept up in the action. In the poverty-stricken Palestinian ghettos, it’s almost become a game in which many children, like the adults, feel they have nothing left to lose.
I covered the funerals of three young men in the Gaza Strip, one 13 years old. His face looked so innocent. I wondered whether he had ever really understood that he could end up dead.
My driver, Abu-Ali, made me realize how difficult it is to be a parent in this worn-torn region. He had just called home to make sure everyone was safe, only to be told that his 6-year-old son had been out with the demonstrators. He yelled at his son, told him to stay home or he would give him a good hiding. The little boy, in all his innocence, told him, “But Dad, I was just defending my country.” Sweet, perhaps, and terribly, terribly sad. A 6-year-old swept up in rhetoric and passions he has yet to fully comprehend. All I could think was: What would I do if that had been my son? Near Jerusalem, a class of Jewish kindergartners had to cower beneath their tables during a gun battle outside.
In the past decade, I have witnessed the effect of war on children from Africa to Afghanistan, Bosnia to Kosovo, and now in the Middle East. Too often, they are victims of their parents’ wars. My reporting always has been affected by the sight of children who have been hurt or killed. But now, as any mother reading this will understand, it’s sheer torture to enter a ward full of moaning, wounded children. I am so much more aware that this kind of trauma suffered by children, wherever they are, could sow the seeds of sadness and strife for at least another generation.
No matter what your faith, Jerusalem is a profoundly spiritual place. It’s a city in which to ponder not just the politics and religion of this region, but also to reflect on the big questions you may have about your own life and work.
For me, the questions are coming fast and furious now. I had a terrible shock back in May, when I was still on maternity leave and my son was 6 weeks old. Two of my best friends and colleagues were killed in an ambush while on assignment in Sierra Leone. I thought about how easily that could have been me. But I was also angry, because these days American news organizations are retreating from coverage of foreign news, retreating from the kinds of stories my colleagues and I risk our lives for.
This trend is perhaps the single biggest frustration in my life today. Why do we keep coming to all these places, abandoning our comfortable homes, leaving our husbands and sons, when we don’t even know whether the news we cover, the stories we tell, will ever make it onto your television screens or into your newspapers?
Our bosses tell us that you, the American readers and viewers, don’t care about anything that takes place in the rest of the world. I do not believe that. From the letters and calls I get, I have found Americans to be decent, compassionate people who do care when human rights are being trampled, when children are being killed, when people are starving, no matter where in the world that happens. I also believe strongly that if Americans rightly believe in promoting their democratic values and morals around the world, then they do need to know about the world.
All these thoughts were going through my mind as I landed in Israel, and in the days and weeks to come in my new role as working mother.
People may wonder why I continue doing this. They may even fault me. Believe me, I have asked that question of myself many, many times. My answer is this: I have to. I deeply believe that my profession is among the most noble.
When my son is old enough to look me in the eye and ask me, “Mummy, why do you go to those dangerous places? What will happen to me if you get killed?” I hope I will be able to say, “Because I have to. Because if the storytellers quit, the bad people will win.” Then again, he has not yet asked me, and I really don’t know what I will say when he does.
She sees how serious the situation is, you can just tell from her expressions.. she’s thinking and knows more than she says. These pictures are compelling. Ange, you’re inexplicably brave and smart to bring cameras here. Wish to see those cameras at our school here by the TX border where I teach. Count your blessings everyone. ~peace
I can’t see why they hate her, they should look at the mirror & see themselves & ask what they do today to help others? Ange is making a difference, she is the voice of those refugees who needs help. What a remarkable & outstanding woman of our time, I’m happy that Brad support her commitment to the UN , it’s completely volunteer job, she has no monetary gain out of this but still continue with tireless effort to help others. My loudest applaud to you & Brad’s behind support. God bless the Jolie-Pitt’s.
energy,i feel the same way
wooden spine!jealous of brads babies momma.lovin it!
jeffrey @ 02/07/2008 at 8:04 pm
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and you posted because…..haven’t seen your name!
RachelSun #89, thank you for being the perfect antidote for the poison of #77, holly. She is one of millions of women around the world doing risky or comparatively dangerous things because they feel passionately, and believe in causes. They express the same thing …they hope to make the world better for all children, including theirs, and they cannot turn their backs on forgotten people. Did YOU know about the Iraqui refugees before today, Holly? I didn’t, so thank you, Angelina.
Brad should stay to be Holly Wood Pretty Boy with All Holly Wood Next Door Image Girl forever.
tanning together with topless
botox at skin doctor together
plastic surgery together
colouring blonde together
smoking together
I don’t understand some of you people. Instead of saying oh she is pregnant and shouldn’t be going to Iraq. She is doing her job as a goodwill Ambassador. Who is to say she is pregnant, it is a rumour until she admits it.
She is wearing a Bulletproof vest and a helmet. The vest isn’t to hide something it is to protect her, she is in a war zone!
Maureen @ 02/07/2008 at 8:44 pm
Very interesting article. Thanks for posting. Amanpour is someone that I admire also and follow her reports on CNN. There are many reporters, field workers and UN Relief works on the front lines making a difference and often not reported on. AJ is someone who has turned the spotlight away from herself onto causes and people that are often forgotten or overlooked in our tabloid society. She is a celebrity who is using her fame for good. It certainly draws people attention and get them talking about issues that they would otherwise ignore. Thanks again.
angel @ 02/07/2008 at 8:49 pm
Angel, that is completely unacceptable and at this point, there needs to be laws to protect celebrities children because these fools crossed the line. Brad and Angie need to sue coz that is a very dangerous allegation that should be pursued, they are putting very lethal ideas in crazy people’s heads, this is irreversible once people start thinking like that. Am just soo mad, its like my child was put in harms way. I would kick a*rse for real.
bwahahaahah lovin it!
wooden legs Angelina @ 02/07/2008 at 7:55 pm
love how she dissed the cnn reporter about being pregnant, brad has convertered her to his world … you freaks will not know about their world anymore she has shut you all out .. LOL. i told you all she is wexactly what her man is. BBT was blood sex freak, she was a just that. brad is knock yr lady and be barefoot and pregnant and never talk of our private life and now she is just that … wonder what her next man will be?? lets hope a faithful person.
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Not talking about her life = her turning into Brad? Rotflmao
Err hello let me make a small list right quick
1.Flying planes
2. world traveling
3. adopting
4. more humanitarian work
4. tattooes
I’m sure I could go on and on with the many things brad has done because of Angie.
Saraicita @ 02/07/2008 at 6:42 pm request @ 02/07/2008 at 6:33 pm Can someone bring the CNN video which shows Angie is talking with a soldier from Texas at lunch table ?
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http://mx.youtube.com/watch?v=jHKQypR2TbE
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Thanks Saraicita
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