REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Why I Support Our Troops

POSTED BY: SIGNYM
UPDATED: Tuesday, August 2, 2005 05:49
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Monday, July 25, 2005 6:36 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


This isn't a come-on.

If you've read my posts, over time you may have noticed that I dwell on the notion of personal responsibility for freedom and justice. It's an appropriate question, seeing as it's Firefly's central theme. Becasue of that, some people assume that I'm laying the responsibility on our armed services, blaming our troops for everything from illegal warfare to atrocities and barbarism. Nothing could be further from the truth. If there is one thing I know about the military, it's that even the generals have to follow orders from the President. The enlisted have no choice in where or how long they serve, what their objectives are, why they're fighting.

Nope, that responsibility belongs here: in the comfortable yet uneasy, ignorant US civilian population. The ones with the power of the vote. We sit on our asses and second-guess the troops. But then we vote for Bush, and throw them into a meat grinder for no reason. I think we need to ask ourselves: "When do I become Mom (or Dad) Tam, so comfortable... and so afraid... that I will rationalize any horror to isolate myself from MY PERSONAL responsibility?"

I choose to support our troops by opposing George Bush. He and his Cabinet have been humping for Mideast invasions for YEARS, and it's all because of oil. I respect our troops more, I feel more responsibility for them, than Bush does.




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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:04 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
blaming our troops for atrocities and barbarity.


Hey, nice backhand. American soldiers do not commit atrocities and barbarity. If you really supported them you'd ackowledge that our soldiers not only do the best they can, they do the best that has ever been done by soldiers under any flag (with the possible exception of the British...those guys are all class and have been for decades). Not only do they fight fair, they are all volunteers, and they all are subject to to Uniform Code of Military Justice. Our enemies cannot claim the same thing. Matter of fact we treat our enemies better then anyone could possibley imagine (at least we do once we stop shooting at them). The meals at Gitmo are better then local school lunches, the cells are better in the local county jail, and I don't have health insurance, but I bet those prisoners have the best health care they've ever had.

Quote:


I choose to support our troops by opposing George Bush. He and his Cabinet have been humping for Mideast invasions for YEARS, and it's all because of oil. I respect our troops more, I feel more responsibility for them, than Bush does.



Its fine to oppose the President. Thats what Democracy is all about. I do not believe the President wanted a war in the Middle East or anywhere else. But neither is he one to back down from a fight, thats part of the reason I voted for him. Before 9/11 the President's main foriegn policy focus was on tensions with China. Domestically his main concerns were taxes and education.

9/11 made us take a long hard look at the Middle East and right there in the middle was Saddam looking back at us. He has no one to blame but himself (and a few hijackers and Osama Bin Ladden). We looked at the Middle East, we saw it wasn't working, and we set out to change the dynamic in the hopes of defeating Bin Ladden and anyone who supports, harbors, or otherwise encourages people to fly planes full of innocents into buildings full of innocents.

If thats what you oppose you've got a lot of company. Some look just like you, others wouldn't be allowed to get on an airplane, and some would gladly join you in a mass demonstration just for the opportunity to blow themselves up killing you and your fellows and anyone else. You've got issues, thats fine, just be careful who you stand next too during the protest march.

H

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:21 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Hero has quite a flexible "enemies list". It could be Saddam, maybe Osama, or the Islamic Republic of (fill in the blank), or maybe it's just "them". I think we need to empty our arsenals and our barracks to make Hero feel safe.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:33 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Hero has quite a flexible "enemies list". It could be Saddam, maybe Osama, or the Islamic Republic of (fill in the blank), or maybe it's just "them". I think we need to empty our arsenals and our barracks to make Hero feel safe.



Yep. I'd count all of 'them' as my enemies. 'Them' terrorists and 'them' that supports them. 'Them' versus US, I'll take US anytime (even when Clinton was President, although maybe he coulda paid more attention to 'them' and less to Her).

H

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:59 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

original post by Hero:
Yep. I'd count all of 'them' as my enemies. 'Them' terrorists and 'them' that supports them. 'Them' versus US, I'll take US anytime (even when Clinton was President, although maybe he coulda paid more attention to 'them' and less to Her).



Yes It never ceases to amaze me that when one of the few presidents that get in the White House who have a chance of gaining the respect of the world rather than just their fear he is denegrated for things completely unrelated to his leadership.

A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her.
--W.C. Fields

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Monday, July 25, 2005 11:24 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
although maybe he coulda paid more attention to 'them' and less to Her.


Okay, THAT was funny. Really funny.
But your'e makin' it too much a black and white thing.

Hey, didn't you just get sentanced to 'gnawing' or some such thing?


No relation to a judge Chrisisall

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Monday, July 25, 2005 2:07 PM

SKYWALKEN


[img][/img]

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Monday, July 25, 2005 4:08 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I think we need to ask ourselves: "When do I become Mom (or Dad) Tam, so comfortable... and so afraid... that I will rationalize any horror to isolate myself from MY PERSONAL responsibility?"



October 23, 1983 The Islamic Jihad sends two suicide truck bombers into the Marine Barracks and French Barracks in Beirut. The truck bomb crashing into the Marine barracks kills 241 while the French lose 58 in their attack.
November 15, 1983 A U.S. Naval Officer is assassinated by the November 17 terrorist group in Athens, Greece.
March 16, 1984 The Islamic Jihad kidnaps and kills U.S. Political Officer William Buckley in Beirut.
June 14, 1985 TWA flight 847 from Athens to Rome is hijacked by Hezbollah terrorists. 153 are held hostage for seventeen days. One passenger, a United States Navy sailor is killed by the terrorists.
October 7, 1985 The Achille Lauro cruise ship hijacking by four Palestine Liberation Front terrorists kills one U.S. citizen as his wheelchair bound body is dumped into the sea.
April 2, 1986 Palestinian terrorists calling themselves the Arab Revolutionary Cells detonates a bomb on TWA flight 840 as it approaches the Athens airport, opening up a hole in the cabin and sucking out four United States citizens, including one infant.
April 5, 1986 Libyan terrorists bomb a discotheque in Berlin, killing 3 U.S. servicemen and injuring 230 others. In response to this, the United States bombs Tripoli and Benghazi, attempting to kill the Libyan dictator Moammar al-Qadhafi
December 26, 1987 A Barcelona bar known as a U.S. military hang out is bombed, killing one U.S. citizen
February 17, 1988 A U.S. Marine is kidnapped and killed by Hezbollah terrorists in Southern Lebanon
December 21, 1988 Pan Am flight 103 is bombed by suspected Libyan terrorists and crashes in Lockerbie, Scotland killing 259 people.
February 26, 1993 A bomb explodes in the basement of the World Trade Center in New York, killing 6 and wounding more than a thousand.
March 8, 1995 Two U.S. diplomats are killed by unknown gunmen in Karachi, Pakistan.
June 25, 1996 A fuel truck explodes outside the United States military's Khobar Towers building, killing 19 military personnel and wounding 515.
February 23, 1997 A Palestinian gunman opens fire on tourists on an observation deck at the Empire State Building, killing one and wounding others.
November 12, 1997 Four U.S. businessmen are killed in Karachi, Pakistan by members of the Islamic Revolutionary Council.
August 7, 1998 In near simultaneous explosions at U.S. Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, Al Qaeda terrorists kill 291 and wound 5,000 in Kenya and kill 10 and wound 77 in Tanzania.


All before 9/11, all before Bush II. That's just a partial list. At what point do horrors done to us count? At what point is it okay to fight back?

You're statement about "horrors", presumably being done by the US is offensive and disgusting in comparision to true horrors done by those we fight against.
"Just following orders" isn't a valid excuse so attempting to seperate your disdain for the president and the actions of the troups is bullsh**! Every soldier has the right to refuse illegal or immoral orders. So by extension, if you're honest, you have to condem every soldier over there for failing to refuse what you see as illegal and immoral orders.
With all due respect, I think you hate Bush more than you care for the troops.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 5:06 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
At what point do horrors done to us count? At what point is it okay to fight back?



Um...hrm...I don't see any Iraqis on your list. At what point does a third party become the enemy? At what point is it okay to realize we're fighting the wrong people?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 5:20 PM

SUCCATASH



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Monday, July 25, 2005 5:36 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Um...hrm...I don't see any Iraqis on your list. At what point does a third party become the enemy? At what point is it okay to realize we're fighting the wrong people?



Try looking up the name of the leader of the group that shoved a wheelchair bound 69 year old man off the side of a ship.
Then look up where he had taken refuge and when and where he was captured.


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Monday, July 25, 2005 6:47 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Um...hrm...I don't see any Iraqis on your list. At what point does a third party become the enemy? At what point is it okay to realize we're fighting the wrong people?



Try looking up the name of the leader of the group that shoved a wheelchair bound 69 year old man off the side of a ship.
Then look up where he had taken refuge and when and where he was captured.




Uh..well...okay, have we faught back against that guy enough now? Can we go home now?

And since I've got your ear, how does the whole refusing immoral orders thing go? Can you just go up to your C.O. and tell him you think the war in Iraq is an immoral war of agression and you don't have to go?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:03 PM

SEVENPERCENT


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
Try looking up the name of the leader of the group that shoved a wheelchair bound 69 year old man off the side of a ship.
Then look up where he had taken refuge and when and where he was captured.




Wow. Having one terrorist that committed an act of terror 20 years before this war started is a justification for bombing? Need I remind you that as they check the ID's of most of the foreign-born terrorists and Taliban-ers that the really bad folk are coming straight out of the white-picket-fenced neighborhoods of Saudi Arabia? Yet we hold hands with that country, a country that is noticeably corrupt and noticeably civil-rights deficient but who our Pres calls his good buddies?

When is it a good idea to fight back, you asked? It's a good idea when you know who you are fighting and can achieve some reasonable success by going after them. But, and I'll italicize this so it's emphatic, splinter terrorist groups can't be beaten by conventional warfare. They dont have a home country, they dont fight with conventional tactics, and the more innocents you kill chasing them the more their brand of hate spreads. The CIA has already published reports saying by mucking around in Iraq we've doubled the number of terrorists worldwide and are actually training them better than the Soviets did when this same conflict was going on in Afghanistan (ie, imposing your own form of gov't on people that don't want it).

It really bugs me when I see posts like yours. A wide spectrum of groups causing a wide spectrum of damage for a wide spectrum of reasons (over decades no less) becomes an excuse for the armchair general to toss out the latest glass parking lot theory of diplomacy and human relations. It's ok if a 6-year old gets killed, because her country harbored a terrorist, and ya'know, accidents happen in wartime. Listen to me when I say that while accidents happen, they are never acceptible, especially when it's your child. You think all those insurgents are people who always hated us? Better think again, 'cause the world don't work that way.

That's why it's ok to fight back, as long as you have clear targets and clear goals. This administration has neither. It's not the soldiers' fault. I know several people in service in Iraq right now, friends I grew up with and have known for 30 years. People who say if you dont support the war, you dont support the troops are telling me I'm out to get my own friends? The fuck I am. I tell them myself- You kill whoever you have to kill to do your job and get back home. They have jobs to do, and are trying to make the world work as best they can over there. My job is to ensure that the guys in power don't send them to the wrong places, or if they do, that the guys in power get them back alive.

/end rant

------------------------------------------
He looked bigger when I couldn't see him.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:04 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Uh..well...okay, have we faught back against that guy enough now? Can we go home now?

And since I've got your ear, how does the whole refusing immoral orders thing go? Can you just go up to your C.O. and tell him you think the war in Iraq is an immoral war of agression and you don't have to go?



Sure, go ahead, it's immoral to order me to fight there and I won't do it. Then just be able to back it up. If you can't back it up then take your punishment. If you can back it up then you don't have to go and can't be punished.
Or are you supporting the "I was just following orders" idea? So a soldier could shoot a village full of innocents and get off because "he was just following orders"?



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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:20 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Uh..well...okay, have we faught back against that guy enough now? Can we go home now?

And since I've got your ear, how does the whole refusing immoral orders thing go? Can you just go up to your C.O. and tell him you think the war in Iraq is an immoral war of agression and you don't have to go?



Sure, go ahead, it's immoral to order me to fight there and I won't do it. Then just be able to back it up. If you can't back it up then take your punishment. If you can back it up then you don't have to go and can't be punished.
Or are you supporting the "I was just following orders" idea? So a soldier could shoot a village full of innocents and get off because "he was just following orders"?





Uh, what? "Back it up?" What are you talking about? The Iraqis had nothing to do with 9/11. Iraq committed no act of war against this country, ergo we aggressed. What back up do I need to object to something on moral grounds anyway?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 7:47 PM

OPUS


To save space I'll just put my comments..

Couldn't agree more about going after the Saudi's, but your saddling Bush about his relationship with them is a joke. This country has, under dems and repubs been kissing Saudi butt for decades.

You fight terrorists by going after supporters, which also means countries. Regarding the number of terrorists and how well trained they are? Terrorism didn't start with Iraq or Bush or 9/11, and they didn't SUDDENLY get their expertise since 9/11.
The muslim fanatics have been around for centuries with a rebirth in the early part of the last one. To think you can play nice and win the hearts of people whose religion teaches them that anyone who doesn't agree with their religion should die is ridiculous and dangerous.
The wide spectrum of groups for a wide spectrum of reasons over a long period of time? What's the expiration date for terrorists acts? Most of the acts I showed had one of two motivations, either our support of Isreal or islamic fantaticism, usually a combination of both. Which is what we're still dealing with today. Decades of doing NOTHING is why we have terrorism today.
They aren't insurgence, they are the enemy, terrorists. If you're going give any type justification to the parent of a dead 6 year old who fights the US, then extend the same courtesy to Americans. If they quit killing us then they won't make an enemy of us. Or does that only work for them?
I live in a military town, I know people who are over there I even know one who died. But no one, can use the "I was just following orders" excuse if they do something that is wrong.




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Monday, July 25, 2005 8:00 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:

Uh, what? "Back it up?" What are you talking about? The Iraqis had nothing to do with 9/11. Iraq committed no act of war against this country, ergo we aggressed. What back up do I need to object to something on moral grounds anyway?



Where did I say they were responsible for 9/11?
So you would never object to something on moral grounds? Or if you did, wouldn't be able to tell why? The soldiers who have refused have used the moral and legal argument. They think it's an illegal and immoral war.
Or are you saying soldiers have no rights to refuse orders they think are wrong? How about Conscientious objectors? Is that about morals or legality?

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Monday, July 25, 2005 8:25 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:

Uh, what? "Back it up?" What are you talking about? The Iraqis had nothing to do with 9/11. Iraq committed no act of war against this country, ergo we aggressed. What back up do I need to object to something on moral grounds anyway?



Where did I say they were responsible for 9/11?
So you would never object to something on moral grounds? Or if you did, wouldn't be able to tell why? The soldiers who have refused have used the moral and legal argument. They think it's an illegal and immoral war.
Or are you saying soldiers have no rights to refuse orders they think are wrong? How about Conscientious objectors? Is that about morals or legality?



Yikes, Opus, serious miscommunication going on. My mention of 9/11 was my off the cuff "backing it up." My question as to how it worked was sincere. So if I understand you, soldiers have been given alternate duty because they objected to the war in Iraq? If that's true, I'm very glad to hear it.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 8:46 PM

SEVENPERCENT


Quote:

Originally posted by Opus:
To save space I'll just put my comments..

Couldn't agree more about going after the Saudi's, but your saddling Bush about his relationship with them is a joke. This country has, under dems and repubs been kissing Saudi butt for decades.



I'm saddling Bush because he's Pres right now, and 9/11 happened under his watch. The 'blame Clinton' argument holds no water with me. The person in power has the ability to change things when he chooses. Past practice should be just that- past.

Quote:

You fight terrorists by going after supporters, which also means countries.


It means countries when applicable. No confirmed links to organized terror means no bombing. The Achille Lauro hijacker, while a terrorist, was not Osama's number one guy.

Quote:

Regarding the number of terrorists and how well trained they are? Terrorism didn't start with Iraq or Bush or 9/11, and they didn't SUDDENLY get their expertise since 9/11.


No, they didnt, and I didnt say that they did. What I said was the indisputable fact that by going after Iraq, we've made them better at it than they ever were. Our own gov't has said so.

Quote:

The muslim fanatics have been around for centuries with a rebirth in the early part of the last one. To think you can play nice and win the hearts of people whose religion teaches them that anyone who doesn't agree with their religion should die is ridiculous and dangerous.
The wide spectrum of groups for a wide spectrum of reasons over a long period of time? What's the expiration date for terrorists acts? Most of the acts I showed had one of two motivations, either our support of Isreal or islamic fantaticism, usually a combination of both. Which is what we're still dealing with today. Decades of doing NOTHING is why we have terrorism today.



No, decades of not learning from our mistakes is why we have terrorism today. You are good at quoting how well they go after our way of life, but dont remember things we do to them (support for their enemies, deposing rulers, working with oppressive govts when it suits us, etc). The US and the western world keeps kicking over anthills and wondering why the ants bite back. I don't support or justify terrorism, but people don't act for no reason- everyone is a product of his/her environment, life events, and the decisions of people in power. They have reasons they hate us, some justified, most not. But the tactic of doing what we want, pissing someone off, then blowing them up hasnt made us any new friends over there for the last 50 years - I think it's time for a new plan.

Quote:

They aren't insurgence, they are the enemy, terrorists. If you're going give any type justification to the parent of a dead 6 year old who fights the US, then extend the same courtesy to Americans. If they quit killing us then they won't make an enemy of us. Or does that only work for them?


See, there you go with that 'they.' Who are 'they?' everyone in the Mid East? Every Muslim? Brown people? Who are 'they?' I want to know who 'they' are before I agree to let my country bomb people. I knew who 'they' were after 9/11; we had a list of names and a regime that supported them. Iraq has no connection to 9/11, even the Pres has said so. And I morally reject warfare on the grounds of regime change, that's the people of that country's job, not ours.



------------------------------------------
He looked bigger when I couldn't see him.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 8:47 PM

SEVENPERCENT


Sorry for the bold - stupid html -

------------------------------------------
He looked bigger when I couldn't see him.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 9:23 PM

G1223


I support the troops and the war. I see nation building as something that is not wave of a hand poof New Iraq pops into existance. I see the attacks as now starting to turn on to the people and away from our troops. Eventually those people will simply find their attackers and likely just kill them.

I do not think Bush lied to us so much as failed to have up to date intellegence. But that comes from having his assets turned towards satellites rather than HumInt sources. That is a matter of budget and is not reversed with a snap of fin gers.

I am tired of see Bush attacked for his taking action. Iraq violated the terms of the ceasefire time and again. I see the UN as a organization unwilling to uphold it's own decrees.

I keep wondering if those who want us out of Iraq have any idea of how to actually end the threat to this country.


TANSTAAFL

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Monday, July 25, 2005 9:56 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by G1223:
I keep wondering if those who want us out of Iraq have any idea of how to actually end the threat to this country.


TANSTAAFL



Just read any of the threads on the topic on this board, people are full of ideas!

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, July 25, 2005 10:05 PM

PIRATEJENNY


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
This isn't a come-on.

If you've read my posts, over time you may have noticed that I dwell on the notion of personal responsibility for freedom and justice. It's an appropriate question, seeing as it's Firefly's central theme. Becasue of that, some people assume that I'm laying the responsibility on our armed services, blaming our troops for everything from illegal warfare to atrocities and barbarism. Nothing could be further from the truth. If there is one thing I know about the military, it's that even the generals have to follow orders from the President. The enlisted have no choice in where or how long they serve, what their objectives are, why they're fighting.

Nope, that responsibility belongs here: in the comfortable yet uneasy, ignorant US civilian population. The ones with the power of the vote. We sit on our asses and second-guess the troops. But then we vote for Bush, and throw them into a meat grinder for no reason. I think we need to ask ourselves: "When do I become Mom (or Dad) Tam, so comfortable... and so afraid... that I will rationalize any horror to isolate myself from MY PERSONAL responsibility?"

I choose to support our troops by opposing George Bush. He and his Cabinet have been humping for Mideast invasions for YEARS, and it's all because of oil. I respect our troops more, I feel more responsibility for them, than Bush does.









I was just talking about personal respossiblity in another thread. yep each and everyone of us is respossible for what is happening. while I don't believe that Bush was leagally elected to the office of President not the 1rst and certainly not the 2nd time is besides the point, because regardless of what he and his admistration has done wether its cheat his way into office or attack a country based on lies, we all let it happen, we didnot not stand up to the cheating we didnot demand that our public servants take respossiblity, we did not stand up against the attack on Iraq we did not demand that our public servants be accountable for their actiond ..so it should not come as any shock or surprise that they are not accountable, there for we are all respossible. even those of us who did not support this admistration are responssible.

As for the troops, while I don't exactly support them, I do pity them as much as I pity myself..because I feel we are all in the same position...and I know that sentiment is more then Bush and Co feel for the troops!!!

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Monday, July 25, 2005 10:13 PM

G1223


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Just read any of the threads on the topic on this board, people are full of ideas!

HKCavalier



Sorry most of the ideas have read as lets appease our attackers. That is not a peace i would ever feel comfortable with.

TANSTAAFL

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Monday, July 25, 2005 10:16 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Opus, as I understand your argument, we are fighting a "war on terror" with its roots in the Islamic religion. Assuming for the sake of argument that we can actually win the war on terror by killing all terrorists and their supporters (all Muslims?) I'm stumbling over one key point that you really never explained- How is it that we wound up invading the one country that had nothing to do with funadmental Islamist terrorism ie.- Iraq??? If Saddam did anything, he clamped down viciously on Islamic fundamentalism. If his departure did anything, it opened the floodgates of fuandmentalist preachers from Iran.

You can point to insurgents and foreign fighters in Iraq, but they are very much after the fact and so they obviously can't be used to justify the invasion in the first place. So, please explain clearly how Iraq and Saddam became our target in the war on terror.

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 2:51 AM

OPUS


All terrorism isn't done by fanatical muslims. The reasons for going into Iraq range from WMD, to not abiding by UN agreements made at the ceasefire of Gulf war 1, to constantly attacking US planes, the list goes on, if memory serves this early in the morning, 26 reasons were given to congress for going to war. I also beleive it was done as part of a larger strategy.
However, Sadam was harboring terrorists and giving aid to suicide bombers.


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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 3:11 AM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by SevenPercent:

See, there you go with that 'they.' Who are 'they?' everyone in the Mid East? Every Muslim? Brown people? Who are 'they?' I want to know who 'they' are before I agree to let my country bomb people. I knew who 'they' were after 9/11; we had a list of names and a regime that supported them. Iraq has no connection to 9/11, even the Pres has said so. And I morally reject warfare on the grounds of regime change, that's the people of that country's job, not ours.



By that definition you have to object to the US having gone into Afghanistan, the Taliban wasn't responsible for 9/11.
And what about Slobodon Milosovich? Are you condeming the actions done with him? Where was the danger to the US then? Why do we still have troops in Bosnia to this day?
The regime change idea, with Sadam, was being called for by dems as far back as 98, whose opinions suddenly changed when they fell out of power.
As for who 'them' are, people who attack the US, regardless of race, religion or any other designation.

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 4:12 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

All terrorism isn't done by fanatical muslims. The reasons for going into Iraq range from WMD, to not abiding by UN agreements made at the ceasefire of Gulf war 1, to constantly attacking US planes, the list goes on, if memory serves this early in the morning, 26 reasons were given to congress for going to war. I also beleive it was done as part of a larger strategy. However, Sadam was harboring terrorists and giving aid to suicide bombers.
Which brings me to another couple of questions: Apparently your definition of terrorism isn't limited to stateless fanatics. It seems to include by definition "the state" as a terrorist actor, and automatically places WMD or potential WMD into the category of terrorist weapons. Am I correct?

As for your second point- Which terrorists was Saddam harboring? The ones responsible for attacks on US interests eg. our African embassies, the Cole, and 9-11?

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 6:29 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by lynchaj:
As I see it, the GWOT represents a conflict between societies with different basic premises.



Have you ever spoken to an Iranian? Read a single book by an Iranian? Do you know anything about the actual people you're talking about? Many, many Iranians love what America stands for. They argue about the Bill of Rights as if it was their own. All this stuff about "societies with different basic premises" is the result of propaganda which Americans have swallowed out of raw fear and, I think, an underlying conviction that what goes around comes around. Yes, I think we Americans are all aware that we've done some very bad, out of character things on the world stage and like good people throughout history deep down we expect to pay. But it doesn't have to be this way.

We can learn from our faults, take responsibility and make amends. We can start respecting difference instead of suspecting it. Respecting divergent world views instead of condescending to them. Not too very long ago, very decent, morally upstanding Americans owned slaves, our own parents participated in Japanese internment and we dropped the bomb. Were we evil when we did these things? Of course not. We were scared and we didn't know any better.

But now we do. Or should. Our society is not at stake here, AJ. Our society will endure. Have a little faith and cut down on the caffeine--it's making you jumpy.



HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 6:49 AM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

Originally posted by lynchaj:
which side are you on?

I'm on the side of freedom and justice (these used to be known as 'American' values). The GWOT is a ruse designed to inspire the easily frightened into supporting perpetual warfare.

SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 12:11 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Which brings me to another couple of questions: Apparently your definition of terrorism isn't limited to stateless fanatics. It seems to include by definition "the state" as a terrorist actor, and automatically places WMD or potential WMD into the category of terrorist weapons. Am I correct?

As for your second point- Which terrorists was Saddam harboring? The ones responsible for attacks on US interests eg. our African embassies, the Cole, and 9-11?



The "state" can perform acts of terrorism seperate from what would be classified as "traditional" for lack of a better term, acts of agression. In other words simply exploding a bomb wouldn't be terrorism, where, how and why you did , could make it so. If a "state" is sponsoring terrorism, or engauging in it, then WMD would have to be on the table.
How about Abu Abbas.

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 1:37 PM

CITIZEN


Quote:

Original post by SergeantX:
I'm on the side of freedom and justice (these used to be known as 'American' values). The GWOT is a ruse designed to inspire the easily frightened into supporting perpetual warfare.



Perpetual warfare isn't necessarily the goal, its part of the means to obtain the goal, i.e. control. George Orwell type control. I don't know what its like in America but in London you can't take a step without it being recorded on a dozen cameras.

G1223 : TANSTAAFL as in gamedev.net?

A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her.
--W.C. Fields

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 3:31 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Sorry for asking so many questions, I'm sure they sound picky, but if we're warring against "them" I want to know who "they " are.
Quote:

The "state" can perform acts of terrorism seperate from what would be classified as "traditional" for lack of a better term, acts of agression. In other words simply exploding a bomb wouldn't be terrorism, where, how and why you did , could make it so. If a "state" is sponsoring terrorism, or engauging in it, then WMD would have to be on the table.
How about Abu Abbas.

I think in another thread we developed the concept that a terrorist is someone who seeks to create a state of fear by striking at civilians. We never did decide whether that would apply to a government like China or Iraq terrorizing their own population, or whether we would just call that "tyranny". Any opinions? But by limiting the definition to "attacks on civilians to create a state of fear" we were able to eliminate considering whether it was done by stateless fanatics (IRA, Al Qaida) or national leaders (Taliban), whether conventional (explosives) or non-conventional (WMD) weapons were used, or whether the goal seemed to be political (Sunni Arabs) or monetary (Colombian rebels.. which would likely be used to further their agenda).

Does the definition seem too broad to you? Another thing we never decided: What would you say about a nation like North Korea that threatens to use WMD? Is a large enough threat sufficient to be a terrorist act, or do you actually have to go through with it? I dunno- what do you think?

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 4:18 PM

KNIBBLET


Opus, I get so tired of seeing that list as 'proof' of some war that Islam has been fighting against us for years etc.

Those acts were committed by a wide variety of groups for a wide variety of reasons. It's like lumping everything any Western country has done into a list and claiming it as a 'war against Islam'.

Bullshit from you and bullshit from anyone. Bullshit on both sides who try that argument.

http://tv.groups.yahoo.com/group/MN-Firefly/

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 7:22 PM

JADEHAND


Hey all,
I normally stay out of these things because it seems boths sides turn blind eyes to whatever disagrees with them, and alternate definitions to suit their needs. But I shared some of the first few posts with some friends of mine who have and do serve in order to get the inside perspective. I just want to share the following response from one of them:

Quote:

During my service, I never once witnessed a US soldier commit a barbaric
act. In fact, I’ve witnessed the opposite in that US soldiers frequently
exposed themselves to danger to protect non combatants. In every unit I
served with, I found it an unwritten rule to expunge any sociopath that
slipped through basic. We simply reeducated them or threw them out of the
Army. Yes, a US soldier can commit barbaric acts but these acts will be rare
and (are)due to an individual and even rare(r) yet, units. Most importantly, conduct
unbecoming of a US soldier and against international rules of war “WILL”
result in prosecution if exposed. It is against the law.
Terrorists and Insurgents use barbarism to promote terror as a tool in their
war to destabilize the peaceful formation of a new government.
Any attempt to compare the US military with the terrorist or insurgent in
these respects smack of the insanely irrational apologist or deceitful
propagandist demagogue. One needs to be educated as to the truth and guided
back to rational thinking while the other needs to be tried for
insurrection, sedition and espionage then publicly have their tongue cut out
and left hanging in a gibbet for a few weeks from the capitol if found
guilty after all the appeals run out.

Now for a review of a () comment

”I choose to support our troops by opposing George Bush. He and his Cabinet
have been humping for Mideast invasions for YEARS, and it's all because of
oil. I respect our troops more, I feel more responsibility for them, than
Bush does.”

First off no, they have not been “humping” for an invasion for years. No US
government in recent history has desired colonies and empire. That method of
power projection has proven itself a failure and they know it. Also, to
prosecute a war on a whim would be political suicide for a president and a
party. The writer’s implications are irrational and illogical.

Next…
The Middle East has been seething since well before the fall of the Soviet
Union and, “powers” in that region have destabilized without the cold war
support of the US and SU. The US has invaded for oil only in that the
regional destabilization forces it too so, in reality; Bush sent US troops
into Iraq to assist the region in correcting its problems. Safe oil is only
an effect, not the cause.
There are no grandiose “Neocon” (said with my best Darth Vader accent)
imperial aims for oil. If one was to read the philosophy and the goals of
the so called Neocons, they would find the philosophy quite the
philanthropist in that it states the underprivileged nations need financial,
political and military assistance in getting back on there own “independent”
and “self sustaining” feet so as to become safe havens of civilized behavior
and not seething shit holes breeding starvation, misery and terror.
Yes, there are individuals and corporations that desire a piece of the
action and profit; I’ll give you that. There has always been those corrupt
that indulge themselves in war profiteering but, they are not the reason we
invaded Iraq.
I witnessed the President and most of his cabinet on the news for months
state quite clearly that the US would invade because Saddam refused to abide
by “international law”. Yes, the reasoning for the invasion may have been
flawed (WMD data that was not falsified, only inaccurate.) but not only did
Saddam violate the law, he demonstrated complete contempt to the US, UN and
international community in his repeated incorrect actions. WMD and oil pale
in comparison to his contempt of the world, humanity and the Iraqi people.
Example had to be made or others would have taken the same path which
inevitably leads to greater conflict and suffering.
The US invade because Saddam is an egotistical gambler who surrounded
himself with yes men all betting on bum statistics, losing there shirts
along with thousands of lives. Don’t blame Bush; blame the fat head gambler
Saddam, his lackeys and the Baathists who are now murdering there way across
Iraq. The Iraq war was and is just!

Those of you who desire to discuss this rationally are welcome but if you
harp on “Well, Iraq isn’t more stable is it blab, blab” or “Well, there’s
more terrorism today than before, blah, blah” you can save it for yourself.
It falls upon deaf ears and I will not enter argument over irrational,
egoistic chest thumping.
Nation building takes time, effort and blood and we have only just begun to
rebuild Iraq. If the insurgents and terrorists are still as active as they
are today or more so in five years then I’ll reconsider, for now it’s too
early and a crime to quit.

Finally
Opposing Bush doesn’t support the troops. Opposing the war doesn’t support
the troops. The troops are in Iraq fighting a war now and you have a choice
to make; devote your support to rebuilding Iraq or abandoning it and don’t
try to hide behind excuses like “The war is bad, it’s illegal, and people
are suffering, blah, blah” Yes the war is causing suffering but there are
“only” two ways to end it from the home front both with differing results
you can easily predict.

Method one: Protest like you got some guts, show some devotion to a cause
and go out and spend time, effort and money forming groups that eventually
create PACs so you can push out pro war candidates. You’re in the minority
so work hard at it. You will have to make sacrifices and suffer some
hardship but that’s what being the political minority is all about. Be
honest; engage in open, non confrontational debate, argue the points to come
to rational decisions. If you want to prance about singing “kumbyah” and
“hell no we won’t go”, then it’s your right as per the Bill of Rights so go
ahead, knock yourselves out but be warned, it’s a waste of time and your
effort (is) better expended in building an anti war party for the 2008 election.
There is a process as written in our Constitution to oust the leadership.
One way is election the other impeachment but impeachment won’t work because
everyone in the government is really on the same side both Dem and Rep and
no impeachable event has happened.
Yes, I agree with revolution and the founders of this country accepted it
too but revolting over Iraq would be a senseless waste and totally over the
wrong issue.
Be careful with this choice because I warn you the outcome will be a worse
horror in the near future. And, you think this Iraq insurgency is bad…

Method two: Support the rebuilding of Iraq. Let the government continue
doing what it thinks is right. Elect pro Iraq involvement candidates and
tell those corrupt people taking advantage of the war or those who oppose
using sedition to cease and prosecute them to the fullest. Show the world
and especially the Middle East a united America of integrity willing to bear
any cost to save the Iraqi people from the mess they are in.

I prefer this route because anything less would be criminal. To invade a
country, take away its government and then walk away is a crime against the
world. Saddam arranged the date, we slept with Iraq and now we are
responsible to marry her. Anything less soils our integrity and only proves
everything the propaganda says about us. So, show some backbone and a little
integrity and support the troops totally and that includes the CIC. Anything
less will be seen as weakness by the world fostering support for the
terrorists, giving them hope and resolve. Be united and crush the fanatics
resolve and we will soon see the Middle East stable rather than the
worrisome threat that it has been to world peace and prosperity.




Also, just three thoughts of my own here:
1) I hate the use of the word "invade" when it comes to Iraq. We didn't invade. Invade implies a desire to take over and keep it for ourselves. the desire was to remove an insane ruler and replace him with a leadership by and for and of the Iraqi people as an example to other countries in the region that they can be "free".

2) Sevenpercent: You stated that you actually blame Bush for 9/11 because it happened "on his watch". Facts indicate that the attacks were being planned for 3 1/2 years, Bush wasn't in office during that time. Now, I don't mean to imply that I blame the one on watch during that time, but you may what to check out a book called "Derelection of Duty" to find out what was happening during that time.

3)I see many people have been (for lack of a better word) "brainwashed" into following one side or the other. everyone spouts reteric as fact and it's just unbelievable. If we don't get some moderate, "middle of the road" leadership soon, I forsee our problems growing. I'm anti-war myself. I think every soldier on the planet with their sanity intact is too. But i'm also a firm believer that we need to do what has to be done, because no one else will. "all that is necessary for evil to win, is for good men to do nothing." I don't think leaving the terrorists alone will make them go away. Of course, I'm insane.

Sorry to waste your time,
-JadeHand

Visit WWW.Marillion.Com for a better way to live
Visit www.TheInside.org and see Tim Minear's show Weds. 9:00pm EST.....ah FUX nevermind.

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Tuesday, July 26, 2005 7:32 PM

OPUS


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I think in another thread we developed the concept that a terrorist is someone who seeks to create a state of fear by striking at civilians. We never did decide whether that would apply to a government like China or Iraq terrorizing their own population, or whether we would just call that "tyranny". Any opinions?



I would think it would be tyranny, as they're going after their own people and trying to maintain control.

Quote:



But by limiting the definition to "attacks on civilians to create a state of fear" we were able to eliminate considering whether it was done by stateless fanatics (IRA, Al Qaida) or national leaders (Taliban), whether conventional (explosives) or non-conventional (WMD) weapons were used, or whether the goal seemed to be political (Sunni Arabs) or monetary (Colombian rebels.. which would likely be used to further their agenda).

Does the definition seem too broad to you? Another thing we never decided: What would you say about a nation like North Korea that threatens to use WMD? Is a large enough threat sufficient to be a terrorist act, or do you actually have to go through with it? I dunno- what do you think?



I don't think the size of the threat is relevent in regards to whether something is terrorism.
If they're saying,"if you attack me, I'll launch my nukes" then no, I would say it's not terrorism.
But any implied threat, if it get's the desired response is the same as doing it.
"power percieved is power achieved"
So yes, I would say it's concievable that a threat could equal an act.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 8:28 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Opus- Many people have (rightly!) accused me of perservation: a behavioral issue that coincides with autism and other syndromes. Thanks for hanging in with me for so long through my perservative phase.

The definition of terrorism/ terrorist has logical extensions. Any organization or group that threatens to use WMD on innocent civilians is guilty of terrorism. Any organization or group that harms non-combatants to instill a sense of fear is guilty of terrorism. Because even terrorists can create a fine-sounding rationale (freedom) or historical justification (to avenge the ____________massacre) those definitions apply regardless of stated purpose or temporal sequence ("who started it"). It follows that USA threats to nuke Mecca, threats to attack "Muslims", or threats to invade bystander nations would be rightly perceived by the targets and most observers as terrorism.

We know what effect terrorism has on us. Why would we expect that engaging or threatening to engage in the same behavior would have a different effect on others?

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:05 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Any organization or group that threatens to use WMD on innocent civilians is guilty of terrorism.



What do you mean by "any"? What about the whole theory of detterance? That mught be too general. How about John F. Kennedy, was he a terrorist when he threatened nuclear war against Russia during the Cuban Missle Crisis? Just trying to nail down the particulars. Maybe its those you oppose are terrorists, like Bush, and those who oppose Bush, like Saddam and Bin Ladden, can't be. That doesn't make sense.

So, does your argument make Saddam a terrorist for his use of such weapons in the '80s and if so, does it not then make prewar US claims of Iraqi ties to terror much more obvious?

Or maybe your concern is innocet civilians. Who are they? We know the Bush-haters, liberals, and appeasors have said that American, British, and other pro-Isreali anti-terrorist civilians are not innocent. Is that your position? A kind of relative innocence test?

H

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:21 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

How about John F. Kennedy, was he a terrorist when he threatened nuclear war against Russia during the Cuban Missle Crisis? Just trying to nail down the particulars. Maybe its those you oppose are terrorists, like Bush, and those who oppose Bush, like Saddam and Bin Ladden, can't be. That doesn't make sense.

So, does your argument make Saddam a terrorist for his use of such weapons in the '80s and if so, does it not then make prewar US claims of Iraqi ties to terror much more obvious?

Or maybe your concern is innocet civilians. Who are they? We know the Bush-haters, liberals, and appeasors have said that American, British, and other pro-Isreali anti-terrorist civilians are not innocent. Is that your position? A kind of relative innocence test?

Hmmm... is there another meaning to the word "any" that I don't understand? "Any" is pretty inclusive. It's possible... in fact, it's likely... to have terrorists and innocents on BOTH side of a conflict, it's not an either/or definition.

Deterrence is not necessarily a form of terrorism if you are attempting to deter hostilities by threatening the other side's military. (It's like deterring crime- you don't threaten everyone with jail time to deter some, you only punish the guilty... the innocent can be reasonably assured that they will be screened out of the system and should not feel threatened.) But MAD- the threat of annihilating the entire globe- is terrorism on a global scale.

Specifically-
"So, does your argument make Saddam a terrorist for his use of such weapons in the '80s and if so, does it not then make prewar US claims of Iraqi ties to terror much more obvious?" If he used chemical weapons against his own population I think we decided that falls under "tyranny". If he used chemcial weapons against Iranian soldiers (combatants) that would make him a war criminal. If he used chemical weapons (or in fact ANY sort of weapon) against Iranian civilians, that would make him a terrorist. I don't know for sure what his record was on targeting Iranian civilians.

"We know the Bush-haters, liberals, and appeasors have said that American, British, and other pro-Isreali anti-terrorist civilians are not innocent." Yes, I think there are degrees of innocence. A civilian living in tyranny is less culpable than a civilian living in a democracy, for example, because they have almost no influence on what their government does. But while I believe that we civilians living in a democracy have a personal responsibility for our government's actions, the rules of war attempt to separate the combatants from the non-combatants, and the combatants are made to bear the brunt of our decisions. Touching civilians is not fair, doing so makes you a terrorist.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:32 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
But MAD- the threat of annihilating the entire globe- is terrorism on a global scale.



Then we are all victims. If only we had chosen a more sensable path and died in the fires of global annilation...

Damn us Americans and our diplomacy, we've condemned the world to live. Why? Oh God, why?

When you take your next breath ask your if you are breathing because you want to or because America's MAD policy has made it possible?

H

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:38 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Any organization or group that threatens to use WMD on innocent civilians is guilty of terrorism.



What do you mean by "any"? What about the whole theory of detterance? That mught be too general. How about John F. Kennedy, was he a terrorist when he threatened nuclear war against Russia during the Cuban Missle Crisis?


Pretty clear to me, Hero. That's what Signy's saying. The threat of nuclear holocaust is the Big Daddy of all terror. You say no? Have you been alive for any of the past 40 years?

Quote:

Just trying to nail down the particulars.

Liar.

Quote:

Maybe its those you oppose are terrorists, like Bush, and those who oppose Bush, like Saddam and Bin Ladden, can't be.

Cheap shot.

Quote:

That doesn't make sense.

No it doesn't, does it? And who came up with that? You.

Quote:

So, does your argument make Saddam a terrorist for his use of such weapons in the '80s and if so, does it not then make prewar US claims of Iraqi ties to terror much more obvious?

Only to the extent that it makes our own ties to terror much more obvious as well.

Quote:

Or maybe your concern is innocet civilians. Who are they? We know the Bush-haters, liberals, and appeasors have said that American, British, and other pro-Isreali anti-terrorist civilians are not innocent. Is that your position? A kind of relative innocence test?


Cheap shot, again. I'm sorry if it's all too complicated for you, Hero. But there can be terrorism and innocence on the same "side." This whole "sides" mentality is the problem.

I know I prolly should have left this to Signy, but I'm past caring about "should." I try to avoid giving Mr. Tar Baby and his quips the time of day, but the war-hysteria in this country has to stop. I have to believe that talking sense, and calling people like Hero on their b.s. will encourage some of the lurkers here to think a little more critically than Hero.

Sing with me! "I'm turning SignyM, I think I'm turning SignyM, I really think so!"

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:39 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


MAD has made us safer? All it seems to have done is encourage nuclear proliferation and place a whole bunch nations on hair trigger. I thought Reagan had a much better idea with nuclear disarmament. Obviously he must have been a left-leaning, American-hating, enemy-appeasing loony for even thinking of such an idea!

But- DANG! Me and my memory! I forgot that Hero still owes me a couple of answers! Since he said that an enemy is a nation (or group) that "takes the field in armed conflict" against us, I asked him how Saddam became our enemy, since Saddam had not militarily acted against us, our interests in the Mideast, or even his neighboring nation-states. I'm just not gonna respond to Hero until he does. (Signy- make a note of that!)

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 9:53 AM

DIETCOKE


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
blaming our troops for atrocities and barbarity.


Hey, nice backhand. American soldiers do not commit atrocities and barbarity. If you really supported them you'd ackowledge that our soldiers not only do the best they can, they do the best that has ever been done by soldiers under any flag (with the possible exception of the British...those guys are all class and have been for decades). Not only do they fight fair, they are all volunteers, and they all are subject to to Uniform Code of Military Justice. Our enemies cannot claim the same thing. Matter of fact we treat our enemies better then anyone could possibley imagine (at least we do once we stop shooting at them). The meals at Gitmo are better then local school lunches, the cells are better in the local county jail, and I don't have health insurance, but I bet those prisoners have the best health care they've ever had.

Quote:


I choose to support our troops by opposing George Bush. He and his Cabinet have been humping for Mideast invasions for YEARS, and it's all because of oil. I respect our troops more, I feel more responsibility for them, than Bush does.



Its fine to oppose the President. Thats what Democracy is all about. I do not believe the President wanted a war in the Middle East or anywhere else. But neither is he one to back down from a fight, thats part of the reason I voted for him. Before 9/11 the President's main foriegn policy focus was on tensions with China. Domestically his main concerns were taxes and education.

9/11 made us take a long hard look at the Middle East and right there in the middle was Saddam looking back at us. He has no one to blame but himself (and a few hijackers and Osama Bin Ladden). We looked at the Middle East, we saw it wasn't working, and we set out to change the dynamic in the hopes of defeating Bin Ladden and anyone who supports, harbors, or otherwise encourages people to fly planes full of innocents into buildings full of innocents.

If thats what you oppose you've got a lot of company. Some look just like you, others wouldn't be allowed to get on an airplane, and some would gladly join you in a mass demonstration just for the opportunity to blow themselves up killing you and your fellows and anyone else. You've got issues, thats fine, just be careful who you stand next too during the protest march.

H



Nice response. I agree with you.

NY/NJ Browncoats: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/firefly_nyc

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 10:01 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Just going to make one QUICK comment, then it's back to work for me!
Quote:

But I shared some of the first few posts with some friends of mine who have and do serve in order to get the inside perspective.
I'm not sure there is "the" inside perspective. Like anywhere else, people currently or previously in the military have a wide variety of views on the war in Iraq. One officer told me it was "a big mess". One ex-Marine colleague said the same thing. There are soldiers who support the war and soldiers who are looking to get out of the service by any means possible and soldiers who hate it but are sticking it out.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 10:05 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

...blaming our troops for atrocities and barbarity...

R: Hey, nice backhand. American soldiers do not commit atrocities and barbarity.

I assume you've never been a kid?? If you had, you'd understand that there's a difference between getting BLAMED for something and actually doing it. But to tell yu the truth, it does make me a little queasy that a "government prosecutor" didn't catch the distinction.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 10:18 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
MAD has made us safer? All it seems to have done is encourage nuclear proliferation and place a whole bunch nations on hair trigger. I thought Reagan had a much better idea with nuclear disarmament.


MAD kept the world from war. Mutual Assured Destruction delayed the inevitable conflict and drew out the cold war straining the resources of the major powers to the breaking point and turning a interval peace between ever more destructive global conflict into a marathon of social, political, economic and military endurance. Reagan's gift was that as the two superpowers were running out of steam, he kicked our asses into a sprint. The Soviets were unable to keep up and when Reagan started threatening to take the "M" out of MAD, they came to the bargaining table. MAD was never about terror, it was always a diplomatic tool.

Funny. Never saw the Soviets as terrorists. Not even Kruschev and the shoe banging "we will bury your children" bit.

So in your world everybody is a terrorist except you, those you support, and Madagascar. Well I hate Madagascar, but there's no oil there, so I guess we'll let them live...for now.

If we are terrorists, why haven't we killed you for having a dissenting opinion? Wow, if you respond and disagree with me and by proxy the American government, are you not proving my point?


Quote:


But- DANG! Me and my memory! I forgot that Hero still owes me a couple of answers! Since he said that an enemy is a nation (or group) that "takes the field in armed conflict" against us, I asked him how Saddam became our enemy, since Saddam had not militarily acted against us, our interests in the Mideast, or even his neighboring nation-states.



Ignoring his invasion of Kuwait, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Isreal (since they mostly occured during or prior to 1991), how about this: daily attacks on coalition aircraft in the no-fly zone, an attempt to assanate a former US President, the Oil for Food fraud (the largest fraud in human history, with the possible exception of Barbara Steisand), terrorist safe-havens and training camps, medical aid and haven for high ranking terrorists, money for suicide bombers, failure to surrender or leave the country in the face of American invasion (hence taking the field against us in armed conflict). Torture, Murder, and Rape as state institutions (similar to our local Parks and Rec Department next door to our City law deptartment). Goes on and on.

Now the war is over and Iraq is a valued and trusted ally. But Syria and Iran better watch out, they're on the list. Enemies they are becoming, if not already (since they are mostly responsible for the continued violence in Iraq).

H

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 10:43 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
I try to avoid giving Mr. Tar Baby and his quips the time of day, but the war-hysteria in this country has to stop.


"Tar Baby"? No need to get all racial. I demand an apology. You don't see me making racial comments about you.


Lucky I'm white or I'd be really offended...
Quote:


I have to believe that talking sense, and calling people like Hero on their b.s. will encourage some of the lurkers here to think a little more critically than Hero.



Ha! Bring em on. One at a time or all of ya. Heck pile on, a room full a liberals is just a room full of wrong and I've faced that before...

Hey look everybody! The liberals are ganging up on me! Guess I better watch out, those folk might appease me to death. Help, help, they are burying my with understanding and compromise. Oh, no, they're setting free all the child molesters and keeping me from smoking in my car!

A liberal idea is like a rotten fish. Don't matter how many there are, what they are doing, or where you put them, they just smell bad.

H

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 10:45 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
If we are terrorists, why haven't we killed you for having a dissenting opinion? Wow, if you respond and disagree with me and by proxy the American government, are you not proving my point?



God help us! If someone used mass terror to force policy, they would be committing an act of "terrorism," yes? An act, an instance. If they did this habitually, you could reasonably term them "terrorists," yes? All this rant about killing people for having dissenting opinions does not necessarily enter into a definition of "terrorism." Although, such threats are definitively "terrorist." It's the inverse/converse problem. How 'bout we say that the Islamic-identified terrorists we see today are much more committed to their policies of terrorism than we have been.

We are not essentially a terrorist nation, but we have certainly relied upon demoralizing terror to get our way. The problem is, if we do not disavow that legacy we tacitly perpetuate it. The nations of the world hear the implied "or else" behind our policies even if we don't.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 11:05 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
I try to avoid giving Mr. Tar Baby and his quips the time of day, but the war-hysteria in this country has to stop.


"Tar Baby"? No need to get all racial. I demand an apology. You don't see me making racial comments about you.



Uh-oh. Sorry. Seriously, Hero, I meant no racial slur. I take the reference from the story "Br'er Rabbit and the Tar Baby." A tar baby is a trap made up to look like an innocent baby. You don't want to touch it, 'cause if you do you just end up getting tar all over you. It's been my experience that responding to your posts has tended to result in you simply posting more and uglier ones. I have imagined you setting them out as bait to catch the unwary, so you could use your lawyerly skills to unman them. I don't think you play fair, Hero. However, I've been in a contentious mood for a few days now, not my strongest suit, but I'm trying to do the best I can.

I was not aware that "tar baby" had any racial connotations to anyone on the planet, but I could be much mistaken. If I am, I seriously apologize to everyone here! That is never what I intended.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2005 2:33 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I didn't either. I always thought that a "tar baby" was something you stuck to if you attacked it- as in "Br'er Rabbit". "Tar baby" seems particularly appropriate when talking about the Mideast and its oil, something that we keep sticking to every time we get ivolved. But I looked up "tar baby" and apparently it's being used as a racial slur at Redstone Arsenal and I presume elsewhere. Too bad- it was so apropos!

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