REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

The Gloating Thread

POSTED BY: CHRISISALL
UPDATED: Sunday, March 5, 2023 08:16
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Saturday, November 10, 2012 6:51 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"One of the most terrible things I saw when Obama was elected President was this: Most of the anti-war protesters vaporized."

I personally thought the fight to end the wars was over (and he did give us a date certain to getting out of Iraq, which he kept, and has given us a date certain to get out of Afghanistan), along with those other things that were wrong - we'd get better environmental protection, justice for the people over the financial misdeeds that broke the economy, closing of Gitmo and civilian trials of its inmates, a reversal of domestic spying and the threat of citizen indefinite detention etc. I kept thinking, well, OK, he's dealing with this and this and ... It took me two years to figure out that, indeed, Obama was a problem on a lot of things. For me perhaps being tired from the dubya years also figured in. So for me personally, the first couple of years were a test drive before I realized what the problems were.

I can't speak about other people.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:08 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

I may be mistaken, but I think the current President adhered to the withdrawal timetable set by the former President.

If withdrawal is the right word for what we've done.

On other fronts, I wonder if constant bombing and border invasions by drone devices seems less like war to us.

--Anthony


Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:27 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"... I think the current President adhered to the withdrawal timetable set by the former President."

Just a historical note - there was some idea that the US would keep combat troops in Iraq if it (the US) could negotiate an agreement with the Iraq government to do so. The US failed to secure an agreement and a lot of the old chicken-hawks from the dubya years and a lot of people on the right (including our own rapster) said the US should extend its time in Iraq until such an agreement was reached. Kind of like taking Iraq hostage until you get what you want. So the president actually took flak for taking all combat troops out of Iraq, and on schedule.


"On other fronts, I wonder if constant bombing and border invasions by drone devices seems less like war to us."

It does to me. It is a lesser war than wholesale bombing with troops and tanks shooting DU at people, so it seems less like war.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:28 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

But somehow we can't learn from the horrific acts that occurred when the Soviet Union was allowed to extend their philosophy of government control of every aspect of life over half of Europe? The acts of the Secret Police can teach us nothing? The lessons of the gulags have no relevence? We take nothing away from artists who weren't allowed to buy paint because their work was abstract, not 'Socialist Realism'? The hundreds of pictures on the walls of the former Secret Police headquarters in Budapest - pictures of people who were brought to the building and never left - have nothing to say? I'm beginning to wonder if you don't criticize the Soviet Union because you see nothing done wrong that deserves criticism.


Of course we can, but what can we learn that's relevant to us???

I learned that putting a single person in charge of everything is dangerous. I learned that people can be misled by patriotism or manipulated by fear into heinous acts of betrayal. I learned that people can be blinded by ideology. I learned that taking land away from peasants is never a good thing.

And one of the things I learned, both from our acts and from the acts and policies of other nations is that it is important that people not blind themselves into violence and killing to support an idea. I learned that if you have to kill to impose your beliefs on others, then you have truly lost in the marketplace of ideas. I find that moral code works, whether I apply it to us, to jihadists, or to Stalin or Mao. So you can wonder all you like and insert whatever innuendo into your posts that you choose, but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:35 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

"On other fronts, I wonder if constant bombing and border invasions by drone devices seems less like war to us."

It does to me. It is a lesser war than wholesale bombing with troops and tank shooting DU at people, so it seems less like war.



Hello,

Then I wager that war has been successfully sanitized. He who can afford the robots can wage war in perpetuity and without horrifying his population.

--Anthony



Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:36 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

But somehow we can't learn from the horrific acts that occurred when the Soviet Union was allowed to extend their philosophy of government control of every aspect of life over half of Europe? The acts of the Secret Police can teach us nothing? The lessons of the gulags have no relevence? We take nothing away from artists who weren't allowed to buy paint because their work was abstract, not 'Socialist Realism'? The hundreds of pictures on the walls of the former Secret Police headquarters in Budapest - pictures of people who were brought to the building and never left - have nothing to say? I'm beginning to wonder if you don't criticize the Soviet Union because you see nothing done wrong that deserves criticism.


Of course we can, but what can we learn that's relevant to us???

I learned that putting a single person in charge of everything is dangerous. I learned that people can be misled by patriotism or manipulated by fear into heinous acts of betrayal. I learned that people can be blinded by ideology. I learned that taking land away from peasants is never a good thing.

And one of the things I learned, both from our acts and from the acts and policies of other nations is that it is important that people not blind themselves into violence and killing to support an idea. I learned that if you have to kill to impose your beliefs on others, then you have truly lost in the marketplace of ideas. I find that moral code works, whether I apply it to us, to jihadists, or to Stalin or Mao. So you can wonder all you like and insert whatever innuendo into your posts that you choose, but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones.



Hello,

I second these lessons, and laud them.

--Anthony


Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:44 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by ANTHONYT:
Then I wager that war has been successfully sanitized. He who can afford the robots can wage war in perpetuity and without horrifying his population.


The domestic civilian control ones are next...


Disgusting, all of it.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:49 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

That he has a difficult job with fierce opposition does not convince me to judge him less harshly. If he did what he could, each time he could, I could judge him less harshly.

I agree with that. From what I have read, Obama didn't make a sincere effort to get to know the opposition and play the other "political games" that MIGHT have helped him overcome some of the opposition. I don't judge him as harshly as you do, because he was up against a concerted and agreed-upon opposition, but I nonetheless recognize his failing.
Quote:

I also thought Maggie Thatcher's little war in the Falklands was just about as hypocritical as Reagan's invasion of Grenada, and Tony Blair was Bush's lapdog.

I agree with that as well.

AND Chris' "dialogue"--which pretty much describes my worries about Obama when he was running for Prez. I do, however, disagree with Anthony's condemnation of that dialogue. A savvy politician can find ways to work around the road blocks, and some do. Others get completely stymied. Others succeed at getting some things done despite opposition and "the way the world really is", and get stymied at others, like I believe Obama has been. It's all too easy for us to judge, and judge harshly, without knowing all the facts, all the ins and outs of politics and what a President REALLY has the power to accomplish. I'm less willing to judge.
Quote:

Anyone paying close attention could see right through their paper thin rhetoric, all their "numbers" and "facts" could not stand up in the light of day.

But they WEREN'T paying attention, much less CLOSE attention; they were buying into what FauxNews and the other right-wing pundits were telling them. Unfortunately, that is all too often the case, with either side--people have their own lives and pay far more attention to those than to politics, not realizing that the politics will AFFECT their lives.

I also agree with Chris'
Quote:

Obama (or someone like him) serves to stonewall the progress of a total fascist takeover/makeover of America
While I might not see it as "fascist", I certainly see what the would do, had they the power, which would be harmful to this country.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:52 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

I'm aware that I'm not Liberal enough for the folks in what is mostly a very Liberal forum. I don't hate the rich enough. I don't think that everyone who has a different view of what the country should be is evil (just wrong, maybe). I don't feel the need to type in ALL CAPS a lot, or personally attack the folks I disagree with except after quite a bit of provocation.

I disagree with your characterizations. It's not about being "liberal enough", and you should know it. The "liberals" here disagree with a lot of things Democrats, Obama, etc., do. Those on the right virtually never disagree--or at least not openly--with the GOP, Republicans, etc., do. They LAUD it to the skies, they claim the bad things "didn't happen" or "weren't done". And you go after the left, but rarely the right, which only naturally makes people recognize which side you are on.

I'd like to know among us "hates" the rich; I don't, I just want them to be on a more level playing field and without the power to keep giving themselves special treatment; I think it's only natural they would want to protect their wealth, but as it is, they use their money to put themselves OVER everyone else, tax-wise and in other ways.

I don't know where you get " everyone who has a different view of what the country should be is evil". If you were even slightly objective, I think you'd see that MOST of the liberals here think those who have a different view are merely wrong in our estimation; it's those who would IMPOSE their views, some reflective of their religion, some laws which negatively affect the rest of us, some focused so much on FORCING their views of abortion on everyone--those things are evil to me and I want to fight them--that doesn't make the people who are doing it "evil".
Quote:

I can hear Niki complaining about all the little contributors

Gosh, it would be nice if you guys (always on the right, by the way) didn't put words in my mouth! I'm not sure why I would be "complaining" about little contributors, but I don't think that's what you meant. The fact is, and I've said it before, I'm well aware there is power and money on both sides--all sides--which manages to get what they want via lobbyists, etc. But given corporations and the wealthy tend to favor the right, I recognize they have more power to get what they want. That's the difference.

I'm well aware that unions, for example, have the money to get those they want elected, and thus get preferential treatment. It may be my own prejudice which sees Citizens United as having given inordinate power to affect things to those who have the money to utilize it, whereas unions are generally lobbying for things which are good for workers, and I'm more in favor of workers getting breaks than the ultra-rich and corporations. That's my bias and my honest evaluation; it would be nice if you didn't paint me with the stripe YOU choose to view.

Kiki made a very valid point I wish people would remember, because I recall it very clearly
Quote:

there was some idea that the US would keep combat troops in Iraq if it (the US) could negotiate an agreement with the Iraq government to do so. The US failed to secure an agreement and a lot of the old chicken-hawks from the dubya years and a lot of people on the right (including our own rapster) said the US should extend its time in Iraq until such an agreement was reached. Kind of like taking Iraq hostage until you get what you want. So the president actually took flak for taking all combat troops out of Iraq, and on schedule.

That IS what happened, word for word, and I'll find cites for it if anyone wants.

Lastly, I also second Sig's latest remarks. To say we've "learned nothing" is pretty ridiculous; I don't think we needed to "learn" how horrible those things were. But aside from fighting to see they don't happen HERE, I'm not sure what's expected of us.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:53 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"He who can afford the robots can wage war in perpetuity and without horrifying his population."

It's not just whether or not our troops are safer or whether or not it appears more sanitary or whether our hands look cleaner. Numbers of civilians matter too. The Afghanistan/ Iraq wars work out to about 13,000 civilians slaughtered per year while drone strikes work out to about 400 per year. So it is a lesser war.

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/06/afghanistan-iraq-wars-killed-1
32000-civilians-report-says
/

"Afghanistan, Iraq Wars Killed 132,000 Civilians, Report Says

At least 132,000 civilians have died from 10 years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a new study by Brown university. And that’s a conservative estimate.

No one can say with certainty how many civilians have died in these wars. But researchers at Brown’s Watson Institute for International Studies found that between 12,000 and 14,000 of them perished in Afghanistan — the most recent of which came from Tuesday’s audacious insurgent attack on Kabul’s most famous hotel. Another 120,000 died in Iraq."


http://www.cnn.com/2012/09/25/world/asia/pakistan-us-drone-strikes/ind
ex.html


"Drone strikes kill, maim and traumatize too many civilians, U.S. study says

"TBIJ reports that from June 2004 through mid-September 2012, available data indicate that drone strikes killed 2,562 - 3,325 people in Pakistan, of whom 474 - 881 were civilians, including 176 children. TBIJ reports that these strikes also injured an additional 1,228 - 1,362 individuals," according to the Stanford/NYU study."

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:55 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

It's not just whether or not our troops are safer or whether or not it appears more sanitary or whether our hands look cleaner. Numbers of civilians matter too. The Afghanistan/ Iraq wars work out to about 13,000 per year while drone strikes work out to about 400 per year. So it is a lesser war.


Hello,

But of course, if we can war forever because we've roboticized it, the drones will win the total body count in the end.

--Anthony





Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 8:00 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

It's all too easy for us to judge, and judge harshly, without knowing all the facts, all the ins and outs of politics and what a President REALLY has the power to accomplish. I'm less willing to judge.


Hello,

I think it's our job to judge. Harshly. If we the people don't hold feet to the fire, who will?

We can remember him fondly, if we wish, when he has retired. While he's working, he's working for us, and I feel it's our duty to be a bitch of a boss, if you'll pardon my French. :-)

--Anthony


Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 8:02 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Lastly, I also second Sig's latest remarks. To say we've "learned nothing" is pretty ridiculous; I don't think we needed to "learn" how horrible those things were. But aside from fighting to see they don't happen HERE, I'm not sure what's expected of us.


Hello,

Aptly put. Resisting such tyranny and inequity at home is the fuel of much of the criticism levied in these threads.

--Anthony




Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 8:04 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Hello,

But of course, if we can war forever because we've roboticized it, the drones will win the total body count in the end.

--Anthony



Well, I'm not quite sure what this means, but I'll think on it. That is why we discuss things - to reconfigure our thoughts in order to grasp what the other means.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 10:03 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

But somehow we can't learn from the horrific acts that occurred when the Soviet Union was allowed to extend their philosophy of government control of every aspect of life over half of Europe? The acts of the Secret Police can teach us nothing? The lessons of the gulags have no relevence? We take nothing away from artists who weren't allowed to buy paint because their work was abstract, not 'Socialist Realism'? The hundreds of pictures on the walls of the former Secret Police headquarters in Budapest - pictures of people who were brought to the building and never left - have nothing to say? I'm beginning to wonder if you don't criticize the Soviet Union because you see nothing done wrong that deserves criticism.


Of course we can, but what can we learn that's relevant to us???

I learned that putting a single person in charge of everything is dangerous. I learned that people can be misled by patriotism or manipulated by fear into heinous acts of betrayal. I learned that people can be blinded by ideology. I learned that taking land away from peasants is never a good thing.

And one of the things I learned, both from our acts and from the acts and policies of other nations is that it is important that people not blind themselves into violence and killing to support an idea. I learned that if you have to kill to impose your beliefs on others, then you have truly lost in the marketplace of ideas. I find that moral code works, whether I apply it to us, to jihadists, or to Stalin or Mao.



Yet the only such acts you criticise, in minute and excruciating detail, are those you figure were committed by the U.S., even if they occurred in the Hoover presidency, and the people who implemented them are long dead. It never seems to occur to you that the acts of the U.S. in the Cold War were in response to the actions of the Soviet Union, which you might reasonably say had blinded themselves into violence and killing in support of Communism, and had killed to impose their beliefs on others. Aid and Kumbaya wasn't going to help Eastern Europe and the Balkans get the Soviets out. Breaking the Soviet Union, as messily, clumsily, and often violently as it was done, did get them out from under the Soviet's oppressive rule.


Quote:

So you can wonder all you like and insert whatever innuendo into your posts that you choose, but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones.


Stifle dissent? Purge anyone who disagrees with the Party? Reduce individual freedom as much as possible? Eat the insufficently doctrinare? Convince children to inform on their parents? I could go on, but you get the picture.

In Budapest, there are little bronze plugs in the walls of buildings all over town. They are there to mark where the Russian bullets hit as they put down the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. They're there to make sure the people of Hungary don't forget the lessons THEY learned from communism.

That you say you have taken only positive lessons from watching what communism has done in the world in the last hundred years speaks more to your character than any innuendo you believe I'm casting. You apparently think that the communists were right to do what they did, and that Eastern Europe would be better off under a Soviet regime. Not sure much of Eastern Europe would agree with you.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 12:10 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


You cherry picked that line from the rest of signy's post. That's not fair.

However, from where I stand, people can have whatever views they like on this forum. If you only want to criticise the left, or the right, or you can't say one positive thing about the other side, then fair enough.

I think we've kind done to death the 'you only criticise the other side and see your side as all good' conversation. I think most of us are pretty much guilty of something akin to that, and if not, well so be it. Can we move on.

My views on Mitt - from abroad, or from a broad, whichever you prefer.

He's not evil. I think he is a fairly moderate republican at heart. In another political climate, he probably would have made a decent enough president, even though his ideology differs from mine. He certainly isn't a man of the people.

I don't think you can hold moderate views in the republican party anymore. I believe it has become a vipers nest of extremist ultra conservatives with a take no prisoner approach. I find their views on a whole range of issues reprehensible and their econonic solutions ideological driven and incredibly naive, particularly those identified with the Tea Party.

Interestingly, I find those considered to be on the left of American politics, would most likely be considered centreists anywhere else in the world. They are less ideological driven and more pragmatic. Hence you have a party/president that disappoints those who are truly on the left and wanted to see more change.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 12:21 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
My views on Mitt - from abroad, or from a broad, whichever you prefer.
He's not evil.

He's a cartoon version of a real human being. And no, he's not evil; he's just drawn that way.
Quote:


Interestingly, I find those considered to be on the left of American politics, would most likely be considered centreists anywhere else in the world.

Yes, American politics has co-opted & twisted the labels. 'Conservatives' are anything but, the 'left' are mostly centerists, the 'right' are practically neo-fascist-lite, and the actual 'left' barely exists.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 3:33 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
You cherry picked that line from the rest of signy's post. That's not fair.



Bullshit.

How unclear do you think "...but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones" can be? If someone here said "...but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching republicans have been positive ones" and folks jumped all over it, would you call that cherrypicking?

Let SignyM answer.

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Saturday, November 10, 2012 3:44 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
How unclear do you think "...but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones"

What if I said the lessons I've learned from Hitler have been positive ones? How NOT to be? Loosen your focus, Geeze. Jeeze!

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 2:50 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
How unclear do you think "...but rest assured that the lessons I've learned from watching "communism" have been positive ones"

What if I said the lessons I've learned from Hitler have been positive ones? How NOT to be? Loosen your focus, Geeze. Jeeze!



But SignyM didn't add the "...how NOT to be". I have yet to see her say anything at all bad about the Soviet Union or China. I have yet to see her agree that any of the atrocities committed in the name of Socialism were worthy of condemnation.

I'm just curious to see where she really stands, and await her answer.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 3:32 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

'Conservatives' are anything but, the 'left' are mostly centerists, the 'right' are practically neo-fascist-lite, and the actual 'left' barely exists.
I don't see this as co-opting and twisting the labels themselves, except in how they are used these days. It's my belief (and that of many others) that this has been going on for a long time now. "America has moved right" is an oft-discussed topic. "Conservatives" have moved so far right that, as has often been said, Ronald Reagan couldn't get nominated--much less elected--today. Anyone moderate is considered "left" and anyone even slightly actually left is considered communist or something equally pejorative.

The following is an excerpt from the book "Stop Me Before I Vote Again", and more aptly explains what I believe than I ever could. Note that it was written in 2005, and what has happened since. It's long, but an excellent read, I thought when I read it:
Quote:

The Ratchet Effect

The ratchet is a simple, ubiquitous, ancient bit of machinery. There's one in your bicycle wheel (it allows you to coast without pedaling), there's one in your watch (if you're the old-fashioned type and have a mechanical watch) and there's one in the jib sheet winches of your boat (if you're a yachtsman; but then in that case you probably aren't reading this book). What the ratchet does is permit rotation in one direction but not in the other. Here's a diagram:



The American political system, since at least 1968, has been operating like a ratchet, and both parties -- Republicans and Democrats -- play crucial, mutually reinforcing roles in its operation.

The electoral ratchet permits movement only in the rightward direction. The Republican role is fairly clear; the Republicans apply the torque that rotates the thing rightward.

The Democrats' role is a little less obvious. The Democrats are the pawl. They don't resist the rightward movement -- they let it happen -- but whenever the rightward force slackens momentarily, for whatever reason, the Democrats click into place and keep the machine from rotating back to the left.

Here's how it works. In every election year, the Democrats come and tell us that the country has moved to the right, and so the Democratic Party has to move right too in the name of realism and electability. Gotta keep these right-wing madmen out of the White House, no matter what it takes.

(Actually, they don't say they're going to move to the right; they say they're going to move to the center. But of course it amounts to the same thing, if you're supposed to be left of center. It's the same direction of movement.)

So now the Democrats have moved to the "center." But of course this has the effect of shifting the "center" farther to the right.

Now, as a consequence, the Republicans suddenly don't seem so crazy anymore -- they're closer to the center, through no effort of their own, because the center has shifted closer to them. So they can move even further right, and still end up no farther from the "center" than they were four years ago.

In fact, the Democrats' rightward shift not only enables the Republicans to move farther right themselves; it actually compels them to do so, if they want to maintain their identity as the angry-white-guy party par excellence. (A great part of the Republicans' hysterical hatred of Bill Clinton arose from this cause: with Democrats like Clinton, who needs Republicans?)

The ratchet clicks: Nixon. The pawl holds: Carter. Click again: Reagan. And again: Bush Senior (and Iraq War I). The pawl holds: Clinton. Click: Bush Junior and Iraq War II; then another click, and it's Bush Junior triumphant, and God knows what to come.

Has the phrase "conspiracy theory" crept into your mind yet? Let me exorcize it. This is not a vast conspiracy. Nobody planned it out. What I am offering here is a structural explanation, not a conspiracy theory. There is a very important difference. Perhaps an analogy will help.

I assume that most people reading this book believe in the Darwinian theory of evolution. We often speak of the "function" or "purpose" of anatomical structures -- like your liver, or your thumb, or the hammerhead shark's odd cranium. But this way of talking doesn't commit us to believing that somebody planned these structures out. They were not contrived; they evolved.

The same holds true for the rightward ratchet in contemporary American politics. No Machiavelli schemed it into existence; it evolved. And it evolved for the same reason that anything evolves: it was useful. But useful to whom?

Not useful, certainly, to the millions of slightly, or more-than-slightly, left-of-center Americans who troop glumly to the polls every four years, hold their noses, and vote for the "lesser evil," even though they expect nothing from their candidate. Nor is it useful to the forty to fifty percent of Americans who don't bother to vote at all because neither candidate has managed to say anything that seems relevant to their lives,

I have a somewhat unlikely friend, a rich man in Chicago -- let's call him Al. Politics is not Al's profession, or even his first interest in life, but he is a well-connected, intelligent guy who has some pet political causes. I happened to ask him one year, during a Senatorial campaign, which candidate he and his friends were contributing to. Both candidates were quite friendly to his cause, and I thought he might have had a hard time deciding between them. Al looked at me as if I had just revealed unsuspected depths of idiocy. "Both, of course," he replied.

"Both?"

"Well, we're giving a little more to X [the Republican], naturally, 'cause he's got a better chance of winning. But we've given a lot to Y [the Democrat], too. In fact, I think we may be his biggest single bloc of support."

"But... which one do you want to win?"

He laughed. "It doesn't matter. We own 'em both."

The ratchet works really well for people like Al: and that's what keeps it in operation. It's not that he's an especially right-wing guy himself; in fact, he thinks of himself as a liberal. But the ratchet has lowered his taxes, gotten the unions out of his plant, fattened the budget of his wealthy suburban school district (and correspondingly starved the urban districts where his employees live). He thinks Bush is a contemptible idiot, and may even have voted for Kerry himself (though he's very reluctant to talk about it). But what's beyond question is that the ratchet has operated to his benefit.

Absent some countervailing pressure from what we'll call, for short, the Left, it's a foregone conclusion that the political system will evolve in a way that responds to the desires of the wealthy and powerful.

Over time, the Democratic Party has assumed the role of ensuring that the countervailing pressure from the Left doesn't happen. The party contains and neutralizes the Left, or what there is of it. Left voters are supposed to support the Democrat, come what may -- and it's amazing how many of us have internalized this supposed obligation -- but they are not allowed to have any influence on the party's policies, either during the campaign or during the Republicans' infrequent holidays in opposition. Al's employees mostly vote Democratic. They get nothing for their pains, but the Clinton years were as good for Al as the Reagan years.

But that's not the worst of it. The reluctant-Democrat voters -- like my neighbor Annie -- don't realize that their votes are not just wasted: they are positively helping drive the ratchet. The fact that these captive lefties can be counted on not to bolt enables the James Carvilles and the Al Froms and the other DLC "triangulators" to pursue their rightward course without fear of any consequences. Annie and all the other well-meaning dependable Democrats are supplying an essential part of the fuel that keeps the machine going.

Again: Nobody planned this. The Democratic Party fell into its role in the ratchet for historical reasons, which we will explore in the next chapter. But now that the machine is up and running and delivering the goods for the wealthy and powerful, there is certainly no reason for the wealthy and powerful to interfere with it. And there is no means by which the less wealthy, whose power is only in their numbers, can affect it at all -- except by depriving it of their support.

Over the decades since the ratchet started operating, each party has developed a story, a narrative, or less politely, a scam, that depends crucially on predictable behavior by the other party. Those Republicans, say the Democrats, they're crazy extremists; last year it was Iraq, next year it'll be Iran. We have to stop them by any means necessary, even if it means wearing their clothes.

The Republicans reply: Where do you get off calling us crazy? You voted for the Iraq war. And you're defending Iran now?

Oh no, say the Democrats, those Iranians, they're terrible. Somebody really needs to do something about them. Why haven't you guys done it?

At this point Annie gets upset and calls her Democratic congressman. "Ted! Are you advocating war with Iran?"

"Naaah, naah, Annie," Ted coos, "That's just to get our guy elected. Gotta keep those crazies out of the White House."

Annie hangs up the phone, trying to feel reassured, and tomorrow's New York Times will announce that war with Iran is a matter of bipartisan consensus.

The Democrats depend on the Republicans to frighten their constituencies and keep them in the Democratic corral. It's not too strong to say that in effect, they encourage the Republicans to play the bad cop. The Republicans, conversely, need a bogeyman to energize their activist base -- a Godless, urban, liberal bogeyman who will tempt good Christian boys into sodomitical vice and take away people's guns. So far, the relationship between the party narratives is symmetrical: each is Bad Cop to the other's Good Cop. But there are some crucial asymmetries, and it's these asymmetries that drive the ratchet effect.

One of the most important asymmetries is that while the Republicans can be as ferocious as they please on matters relating to culture -- sex, religion, and so on -- the Democrats are not prepared to be ferocious on the only possible counterweight to culture, which is... class. In fact, not only are the Democrats unwilling to be ferocious, they're unwilling to raise the topic at all. It's the Great Unmentionable of American politics.

It was not always thus. Class politics was one of the pillars of the Democratic party of Roosevelt -- the party that Annie is remembering when she pulls the donkey lever. http://stopmebeforeivoteagain.org/stopme/chapter02.html



It says "All rights reserved. Paper or electronic copies may be made for personal use only"--Okay, this is my personal use...and if it encourages others to read the entire on-line book (free), it's an advertisement for same. While I don't agree with everything in the book, it is to me an excellent treatise on the problem.

Notice that he talks about class, which DID become an issue this time around. Not that it did any good; not that Democrats are willing to get "ferocious" about it--or anything ELSE, for that matter. But it did catch people's attention for once, for whatever good that does. None, in essence, because he's absolutely right to quote the Republicans as saying "It doesn't matter. We own 'em both." They do, and we're complicit in it.

Not that I have the SLIGHTEST idea how to stop the rightward movement; as long as we have two parties, and both are "owned" by the right, I see no hope of the ratchet going any direction but right.

By the way, I've never seen Mitt as "evil", nor any of the others. I see him as maleable, and the crazies like Akin as misguided. That they encourage one another to be more and more extreme is "evil", but I see no way to stop it.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 6:16 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Okay Geezer- Rest assured, the lessons I've learned from watching Republicans have been positive ones. In fact, I've tried to learn lessons from history- hopefully, universal lessons that can endure regardless of society or vantage point, my essential definitions of right and wrong, honed by the horrors of history.

There, how's that?

I'll explain the main lesson I learned from history again, and see if it makes more sense the second time around.

Every leader .... every single one... who has visited great horror on his population (or others) has done so with good intentions, or at least good excuses. There is no leader who has ever said I'm going to kill 30% of the population and terrorize the rest just because I can. And those who willingly participate in brutality, from the workers and peasants in early Russia to the cadres of young revolutionaries in the Great Leap forward, did so for good and noble reasons. It happens in every society... why we genocided native Americans, why young Maoists beat their elders and school friends to death. why the Nazis invaded other nations and rounded up socialists and Romas and Jews. Hell, even the human sacrifices of pre-Columbian civilizations were to bring the rain. In the cause of doing great good, we step by step crept into the realm of destroying Vietnamese villages in order to save them.

When the reasons sound so compelling.... we're going to be invaded, our survival depends on this outcome, the other side is a madman, god wills that we do this .... what might prevent me (at least) from being swept up in the same fervor? What line do I draw, what threshold do I create that prevents me from being inveigled into supporting something heinous? The only lessons that seems clear to me are

(1) Sacrifice must result in some real, material good. For all of the urgings of Mao and Stalin, collectivization resulted in a FALL in output. For all of our interventions, the people we invaded suffered more harm than good. For all of the humans sacrificed, the rain didn't come anyway.

(2) If you must spill blood to support your "idea", then your idea isn't very good.

I'm therefore not persuaded that our interventions were necessary or just. Overall, most people were poorer and more oppressed after our involvement than before. The rationale for killing and oppressing people based on ideas like "freedom", "democracy", and "anti-communism" are comparable to killing people for a "new society" and "worker solidarity". They are just words.

If you want to help, help. Support the things you think need to be done. Build schools, dig wells, plant trees, build clinics. Shut out the oppressors from your support and from your economic dealings. Defend, with deadly force if necessary, those who are being killed. I think if you follow those rules, then you will not add to senseless, useless misery but will make things better for more people.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 7:29 AM

CHRISISALL


No room for misinterpretation there, Signy!

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 7:32 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"... has done so with good intentions, or at least good excuses."

I'm not sure I agree with that.

Brutal dictators have terrorized entire countries simply to garner more wealth. People have carried out that brutality simply b/c they were paid and their own nature didn't forbid it. The unaffected have gone along with it b/c it wasn't their problem. Targets have gone along with it b/c they felt their best chance of survival was to comply rather than resist.

I don't see that there has to be some overarching positive social 'value' that people subscribe to that allows utter brutality to propagate and endure in a society.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 7:36 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I wanted to post this as a separate item.

Geezer is confused (whether intentionally or not) about the terminology. He mistakes a 'positive lesson' with a 'negative example'.


It is possible to learn a 'positive lesson' from a 'negative example'. I've read that about 10% of abused children do so - they decide that they will never treat their child - sometimes anyone - the way they were treated.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 7:48 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


(1) Sacrifice must result in some real, material good. For all of the urgings of Mao and Stalin, collectivization resulted in a FALL in output. For all of our interventions, the people we invaded suffered more harm than good. For all of the humans sacrificed, the rain didn't come anyway.

(2) If you must spill blood to support your "idea", then your idea isn't very good.


I definitely agree with these.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 12:15 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Okay Geezer- Rest assured, the lessons I've learned from watching Republicans have been positive ones. In fact, I've tried to learn lessons from history- hopefully, universal lessons that can endure regardless of society or vantage point, my essential definitions of right and wrong, honed by the horrors of history.

There, how's that?



I would have said "useful lessons", since I'd guess to most people "positive lessons" means something good learned, rather than a cautionary tale.

Quote:

Every leader .... every single one... who has visited great horror on his population (or others) has done so with good intentions, or at least good excuses. There is no leader who has ever said I'm going to kill 30% of the population and terrorize the rest just because I can.


Not sure I can agree with that. I'm sure you can think of leaders who you believe were thinking "I'm going to take everything of value out of this country so I can live the high life, and when folks finally turn on me I'll head for someplace with no extradition carrying a suitcase full of dollars and my Swiss bank account numbers." or "My ego demands that I have total power of life or death over my subjects, and I may have to kill a few every now and then to make sure the message is clear." in your definition of "good intentions."

I don't believe that everyone is a hero in their own mind.


Quote:

And those who willingly participate in brutality, from the workers and peasants in early Russia to the cadres of young revolutionaries in the Great Leap forward, did so for good and noble reasons.
Or to get in on the loot or move up in the Party.

Quote:

It happens in every society... why we genocided native Americans.
That was straight land grab. No noble reasons there, except as window dressing.

Quote:

why young Maoists beat their elders and school friends to death.
Religious mania? Mao worship?
Quote:

why the Nazis invaded other nations and rounded up socialists and Romas and Jews.

Gotta have a scapegoat.

Quote:

When the reasons sound so compelling.... we're going to be invaded, our survival depends on this outcome, the other side is a madman, god wills that we do this .... what might prevent me (at least) from being swept up in the same fervor?

Sometimes the other side IS a madman.

Quote:

What line do I draw, what threshold do I create that prevents me from being inveigled into supporting something heinous? The only lessons that seems clear to me are

(1) Sacrifice must result in some real, material good. For all of the urgings of Mao and Stalin, collectivization resulted in a FALL in output. For all of our interventions, the people we invaded suffered more harm than good. For all of the humans sacrificed, the rain didn't come anyway.



But how do you tell? If you think, as you mentioned above, that Stalin and Mao believed their sacrifice (of others) would result in some real, material good (I don't BTW), how do you know until it works or doesn't? Same with U.S. interventions. If the folks who planned them did so believing their sacrifice (of others) would result in real, material good, why do you condemn them so strongly? I again note that the places that U.S. intervention didn't work at all (Vietnam, North Korea, Cambodia, Cuba, etc.) aren't exactly the greatest places to live.

Quote:

(2) If you must spill blood to support your "idea", then your idea isn't very good.

The Allies in WWII spilt plenty of blood in order to support their "idea". Sometimes when your "idea" is threatened, force is the only response that's going to work.

Quote:

I'm therefore not persuaded that our interventions were necessary or just. Overall, most people were poorer and more oppressed after our involvement than before. The rationale for killing and oppressing people based on ideas like "freedom", "democracy", and "anti-communism" are comparable to killing people for a "new society" and "worker solidarity". They are just words.


But in many countries, people were already being killed and oppressed in the name of the "new society" or "worker solidarity". Should we have let that continue? Would the people there have ended up even poorer and more oppressed if socialism/communism had succeeded? Countries with former and existing socialist and communist regimes generally don't have a real good track record of either economic prosperity or personal freedom when under those regimes.

Quote:

If you want to help, help. Support the things you think need to be done. Build schools, dig wells, plant trees, build clinics. Shut out the oppressors from your support and from your economic dealings.

And when the oppressors go to other oppressive countries for help, troops, arms, etc.? If you build schools and they blow them up or attack the children there? You dig wells and they destroy them?

Quote:

Defend, with deadly force if necessary, those who are being killed. I think if you follow those rules, then you will not add to senseless, useless misery but will make things better for more people.


I know from experience that the Viet Cong were destroying villages to save them long before that quote was uttered. When I was working the comm center in Hue during 1971-72, we got messages every day about village chiefs and teachers and their families being tortured and killed, all the food in the village being stolen, and all the young men kidnapped. Sometimes the same village every couple of months. This was done to keep the people in line and keep the village as a safe haven for the VC. Should we not have tried to defend those people who were being killed, robbed or kidnapped?

...

Overall I guess I'd have to say that if your requirements get too near the ideal, I'm afraid that you're going to be disappointed in pretty much any group or government. As we've noted in discussions about the recent election, sometimes none of the available choices are what you'd really like, and are sometimes only the least bad of a bad lot. In a lot of situations, the best solution is still unpleasant, and deciding to do nothing is even worse. And often you can't know the cost or how it will turn out until after everything is over. You just have to make your best guess and try to do as little harm as possible.

I'm pretty sure that if the old U.S. Cold Warriors had the 20/20 hindsight available to us today, they'd have done things differently, and probably less heavyhandedly. I'm afraid that if Stalin and Mao and their successors had the same hindsight, things would have been a lot worse for a lot more people.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 2:35 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"I'm pretty sure that if the old U.S. Cold Warriors had the 20/20 hindsight available to us today, they'd have done things differently, and probably less heavyhandedly. I'm afraid that if Stalin and Mao and their successors had the same hindsight, things would have been a lot worse for a lot more people."

Now, this comes across as just one of those internalized propaganda pieces you just assume everyone else is going to accept.

Intentions can be judged by results, especially over time. It's rare to get a good result accidentally with bad intentions iterated continuously. And China got a good result compared to, say India. China must have had good intentions at the start. B/c look at the result.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 10:10 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Not sure I can agree with that. I'm sure you can think of leaders who you believe were thinking "I'm going to take everything of value out of this country so I can live the high life, and when folks finally turn on me I'll head for someplace with no extradition carrying a suitcase full of dollars and my Swiss bank account numbers." or "My ego demands that I have total power of life or death over my subjects, and I may have to kill a few every now and then to make sure the message is clear." in your definition of "good intentions." I don't believe that everyone is a hero in their own mind.
Hmmm... I also said "good excuses". I'm giving our fearless leaders the benefit of the doubt here, because I'm pretty certain that nearly everything we ever did in the Mideast had to do with oil, and everyplace else was in support of capitalism. But I'm sure there were SOME people who believed in that shining city on a hill. It sounded good, anyway. So let's go with that, just to be nice.

Quote:

But how do you tell? If you think, as you mentioned above, that Stalin and Mao believed their sacrifice (of others) would result in some real, material good (I don't BTW), how do you know until it works or doesn't? Same with U.S. interventions. If the folks who planned them did so believing their sacrifice (of others) would result in real, material good, why do you condemn them so strongly? I again note that the places that U.S. intervention didn't work at all (Vietnam, North Korea, Cambodia, Cuba, etc.) aren't exactly the greatest places to live.
Well, that's the problem here, there, and everywhere: You try a policy and you're sure it;s going to work. But it doesn't, and so you think the answer is to try it again, just harder. Mao didn't believe that his Great Leap Forward wasn't. We couldn't believe that killing a million or so in Vietnam didn't make the nation better. At some point you've got to realize that button doesn't work, and killing people doesn't make it work any better.

Quote:

The Allies in WWII spilt plenty of blood in order to support their "idea". Sometimes when your "idea" is threatened, force is the only response that's going to work.
The Allies were attacked with armies. There was more than an "idea" at stake.

Quote:

But in many countries, people were already being killed and oppressed in the name of the "new society" or "worker solidarity". Should we have let that continue? Would the people there have ended up even poorer and more oppressed if socialism/communism had succeeded? Countries with former and existing socialist and communist regimes generally don't have a real good track record of either economic prosperity or personal freedom when under those regimes.
The funny thing is, where people really WERE getting killed en masse (Ukraine, China), we didn't do anything. And in places where we DID intervene, people really weren't getting killed... until we started the killing ourselves, anyway. Too many of our "interventions" were into nations which had elected moderate reformers... shall I go over the list again?

Quote:

Sometimes the other side IS a madman.
All the more reason not to descend to his level.

Quote:

Countries with former and existing socialist and communist regimes generally don't have a real good track record of either economic prosperity or personal freedom when under those regimes.
Actually, they had a pretty good record of economic prosperity. I can point to India versus China,, for example, Russia before and after the fall of the USSR, and Brazil during and after the military juntas, as very specific examples of relative prosperity.

Quote:

And when the oppressors go to other oppressive countries for help, troops, arms, etc.? If you build schools and they blow them up or attack the children there? You dig wells and they destroy them?
Then you keep digging wells. Because bombing a nation to the stone age really doesn't get you anywhere.

Quote:

Should we not have tried to defend those people who were being killed, robbed or kidnapped?
Yes, because carpet bombing and napalm worked so well. Right?

Quote:

As we've noted in discussions about the recent election, sometimes none of the available choices are what you'd really like, and are sometimes only the least bad of a bad lot. In a lot of situations, the best solution is still unpleasant, and deciding to do nothing is even worse. And often you can't know the cost or how it will turn out until after everything is over. You just have to make your best guess and try to do as little harm as possible.
I have almost never seen the USA decide in favor of doing "as little harm as possible". Supporting governments that disappear thousands of people, selling arms that make it possible to kill 500,000, invading a nation and killing a hundred thousand... you keep pressing that military button and it doesn't work ETA as intended most of the time. In fact, we are generally very good at doing more harm than good, invading nations all over the world and causing misery everywhere. If we took HALF of our military budget and put that into development, we all would be better off.

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 11:12 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


Quote:

I have almost never seen the USA decide in favor of doing "as little harm as possible"... If we took HALF of our military budget and put that into development, we all would be better off.


True that! Eisenhower warned about the military industrial complex. Did you see Lord of War? Great movie based on a real guy.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Sunday, November 11, 2012 11:38 PM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


Just spent an owr catching up on this topic. Lots uv well considered stuff. (research project idea for Stanford: duz Firefly attract smarter people or duz it make people smarter?). And sum good gloating to! My fave wuz the Youtube rant.

A frend uv mine iz trapped in the Fox/GoP eko chamber and wuz very confident that Romney wuz going to win wen he wuz here on Tuezday. Got a very glum email the next day. hehehehehe!

He had sum uv the standard Fox fearmongering claptrap about an Obama 2nd term and the usual broken Libertarian small government babble, all in a tone indicating that he had Dust In The Wind playing on repeat all day.

Herez my reply:

Quote:

Plenty of examples of smaller governments around now. Doesnt work.

Think of the destruction an individual or organization can cause with our technology, wether thru ambitions of empire or careless exploitation. There needs to be an entity with the power to make and enforce wise rules to keep things from going to hell.

About the American Experiment.

"...in order to form a more perfect union.."

This is why I believe the conservative philosophy fails the reality check. When was the experiment over? When did we perfect the country? 1955? 1985? Are we supposed to go back and park the country in the Golden Reagan era or Leave It To Beaver fantasy world?

There may be no such thing as a perfect society. Anything the human race has established so far obviously hasnt lasted. The only way for a nation to continue in a changing world is to adapt to it. Accept the fact that we will always be in transition. To understand this is to realize that conservatism is just stubborn sentiment at best, and self destructive nonsense if carried too far.

We need leaders who have the foresight to choose the best future for the nation and the vision to make the transition as smooth as possible.



Really, the Republican party needz to change the way it selects its candidates. America needz them to do this. Like Rachel Maddow sed in that clip sumwun linked to, we need to hav SERIOUS oppozing viewz, not fact and lojik denying idiots with 50,000 watt tranzmitterz.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com

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Monday, November 12, 2012 5:49 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

not fact and lojik denying idiots with 50,000 watt tranzmitterz
heh heh heh!

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Monday, November 12, 2012 6:18 AM

STORYMARK


Quote:

Originally posted by JO753:
Quote:

I have almost never seen the USA decide in favor of doing "as little harm as possible"... If we took HALF of our military budget and put that into development, we all would be better off.



True that! Eisenhower warned about the military industrial complex. Did you see Lord of War? Great movie based on a real guy.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

http://www.nooalf.com



Looks like you forgot your alterna-spelling for a moment there.

Keep it up!




Excuse me while I soak in all these sweet, sweet conservative tears.

"We will never have the elite, smart people on our side." -- Rick "Frothy" Santorum

"Goram it kid, let's frak this thing and go home! Engage!"

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Monday, November 12, 2012 7:31 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
[Hmmm... I also said "good excuses". I'm giving our fearless leaders the benefit of the doubt here, because I'm pretty certain that nearly everything we ever did in the Mideast had to do with oil, and everyplace else was in support of capitalism. But I'm sure there were SOME people who believed in that shining city on a hill. It sounded good, anyway. So let's go with that, just to be nice.



This'll probably cover some of what you've said below, but I'd rather put it all in one place that spread it around in chunks.

I think that the U.S. Cold Warriors were concerned about more than oil or capitalism. I think they were worried about maintaining democracy and freedom. I figure thay thought they had good reason.

Look at what they knew in the early to mid 1960s. The had seen the Soviet Union genocide the Ukrainians by starvation so they could sell their grain to raise money. They had seen the armed takeover of Eastern Europe and the Balkans at the end of WWII, the removal (often fatal) of all possible opposition, and the installation of brutal puppet regimes. They had seen China invade and conquer Tibet. They had seen the North Korean proxies of the Soviets and China (and eventually Chinese troops as well) invade South Korea, with the loss of 36,000 Americans in resisting them. They had seen the brutal supression of revolts in several Eastern European countries. They saw the Cuban 'land reformers' armed with nuclear missles by Russia. They heard Chairman Khrushchev threaten to bury us.

When they saw the Soviets were providing military or financial support to "peoples armies" in Central and South America, they feared (not unreasonably, I believe)that many more Cubas or Polands could be at hand. And they took what they thought were the best actions to prevent this. From 50 years later, we can see that some of their plans were flawed, but that historical view is a luxury they didn't have.

Then again, do you think that the Soviets didn't want to spread their viewpoint, and the same type of government they had installed in Eastern Europe, into the Americas?

Quote:

Well, that's the problem here, there, and everywhere: You try a policy and you're sure it;s going to work. But it doesn't, and so you think the answer is to try it again, just harder. Mao didn't believe that his Great Leap Forward wasn't. We couldn't believe that killing a million or so in Vietnam didn't make the nation better. At some point you've got to realize that button doesn't work, and killing people doesn't make it work any better.


But unfortunately, sometimes killing a few million does work. See the Ukranian genocide for an example. Stalin got his money, and lots of empty land for ethnic Russians to resettle.

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The funny thing is, where people really WERE getting killed en masse (Ukraine, China), we didn't do anything.


That's kind'a disingenuous. Hardly anyone knew about the Ukraine until it was over, and there was really no chance to militarily stop the takeover of Tibet, the Cultural Revolution, or the Great Leap Forward.

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And in places where we DID intervene, people really weren't getting killed... until we started the killing ourselves, anyway.
Korea? Vietnam? The Viet Minh were killing Vietnamese who didn't care for communism when the French were still there.

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Too many of our "interventions" were into nations which had elected moderate reformers... shall I go over the list again?


You could, and I'll note how many of your 'elected moderate leaders' weren't. Sukarno in Indonesia comes to mind, or maybe Gustavo Rojas in Colombia.

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Sometimes the other side IS a madman.
All the more reason not to descend to his level.


But sometimes you do have to resist him, or be lost.

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Countries with former and existing socialist and communist regimes generally don't have a real good track record of either economic prosperity or personal freedom when under those regimes.
Actually, they had a pretty good record of economic prosperity. I can point to India versus China,, for example, Russia before and after the fall of the USSR, and Brazil during and after the military juntas, as very specific examples of relative prosperity.



I notice you don't mention any with a good record of personal freedom.

Brazil is at best a mixed economy, not pure socialist or communist, so I'm not sure that you can count them.

You also left out the dismal economic performance of pretty much all the Eastern Bloc and Balkan countries when under Soviet domination, Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cambodia.

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Then you keep digging wells. Because bombing a nation to the stone age really doesn't get you anywhere.

So there's nothing in between those two options?

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Should we not have tried to defend those people who were being killed, robbed or kidnapped?
Yes, because carpet bombing and napalm worked so well. Right?



Okay, then. For you, there apparently is nothing between those two options.

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I have almost never seen the USA decide in favor of doing "as little harm as possible". Supporting governments that disappear thousands of people, selling arms that make it possible to kill 500,000, invading a nation and killing a hundred thousand... you keep pressing that military button and it doesn't work ETA as intended most of the time. In fact, we are generally very good at doing more harm than good, invading nations all over the world and causing misery everywhere.

I could note that the Soviet Union and China have done the same, and worse, often to their own people.

Then again, at the end of WWII we controlled Japan and West Germany. We rebuilt those countries, gave them a firm economic footing and the foundations of a democratic government, and turned them loose. That turned out pretty well.

The Soviets controlled Eastern Europe. They installed repressive puppet governments, buried personal freedoms, and crushed dissent. Good reslut? Not so much.

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If we took HALF of our military budget and put that into development, we all would be better off.

Could be. That was the position we were in prior to WWII, and it took quite a while to ramp up. Modern conflict moves much faster than it did in the 1940s and you end up fighting with what you already have on hand.

BTW. Just want to note that I enjoy actually discussing stuff again, instead of exchanging insults. I'll be nice if you will.

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Monday, November 12, 2012 10:07 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"I think that the U.S. Cold Warriors were concerned about more than oil or capitalism. I think they were worried about maintaining democracy and freedom."

By eliminating or helping to eliminate genuinely democratically elected heads of state and installing or supporting brutal dictators? It seems like democracy and freedom were what they SAID, not what they DID. Given that what they DID was persistently aimed in the direction of dictators over decades of time (even as recently as arming the mujaheddin), I find it hard to credit them with intentions of freedom and democracy. It's about paying less attention to the talk, and more to the walk. And by their walk while they may have been anti-Soviet, it didn't make them pro-freedom.

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Monday, November 12, 2012 2:04 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
Quote:

Originally posted by ANTHONYT:
Quote:

I guess you consider my lack of criticism as tacit support.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Well, yeah. My insufficently rabid criticism of Romney seems to have convinced many folks here of my tacit support, so why not?



Hello,

This is a valid point.

But I do want to stress it is not rabidness which impresses, but rather consistency. I know some of your positions thanks to long association on this board, but I do not know you to critique the 'right' as often as the 'left.' It suggests a bias. I am prepared to believe there is no bias. Are you prepared to believe me when I tell you that there has been an inbalance in commentary?

--Anthony



Well, since most of the criticism on this forum tends to be focused on the Right, spending all my time going "me too" seems kind'a pointless. Issues like marriage and reproductive rights I'll chime in, but after I see the same complaints over and over again, I don't even bother responding. Then again, a lot of that criticism IS rabid, over the top, or just plain bullshit, which I object to.

Also note that when I criticize the 'left', I generally do so on policy issues, not on Michelle's dress or Pres. Obama's place of birth. I don't make up 'funny' insulting names for Democratic politicians or post 'clever' pictures of their personal life. When I cite stuff, it's generally from mainstream media or sources, not partisan bloggers or publications.

I'm aware that I'm not Liberal enough for the folks in what is mostly a very Liberal forum. I don't hate the rich enough. I don't think that everyone who has a different view of what the country should be is evil (just wrong, maybe). I don't feel the need to type in ALL CAPS a lot, or personally attack the folks I disagree with except after quite a bit of provocation.

Look at this thread. Who starts throwing insults? Who will throw more after reading this post?



Ok Geezer, first of all don't pretend that your involvement in the partisan fray is so passive. It's not. You enter into it purposefully and energetically and one-sidedly. You say the site is strongly liberal. Fine, I agree. But why do you feel the evident need to counter, and redress this wave of liberal opinion? I compare you to someone like CTS, another professed liberatarian who I see as fairly centrist. She criticises both sides, but mainly just stays clear of the partisan fray. She doesn't have the strange, anti-liberal compulsion that you have.

Even in your above post you reveal your anti-liberal bias:

Quote:

I'm aware that I'm not Liberal enough for the folks in what is mostly a very Liberal forum. I don't hate the rich enough. I don't think that everyone who has a different view of what the country should be is evil (just wrong, maybe). I don't feel the need to type in ALL CAPS a lot, or personally attack the folks I disagree with except after quite a bit of provocation.

That's supposed to be a list of specifically liberal traits?? Ha! See, you pay lip-service to the idea that both sides engage in ugly partisanship, but in your mind you associate it specifically with one side. Geezer, say hello to your bias.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Monday, November 12, 2012 6:31 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:


BTW. Just want to note that I enjoy actually discussing stuff again, instead of exchanging insults. I'll be nice if you will.


I'm having this weird idea that you're my Dad in cyber-disguise here...

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 4:02 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Ok Geezer, first of all don't pretend that your involvement in the partisan fray is so passive. It's not.


Is anyone's involvement here?

Quote:

You enter into it purposefully and energetically and one-sidedly.

Not sure about that. I support a lot of liberal social positions. I also disagree with both Democrats and Republicans about the need for an across the board tax increase.

Quote:

You say the site is strongly liberal. Fine, I agree. But why do you feel the evident need to counter, and redress this wave of liberal opinion?
Examples? List the policies liberals espouse that I have tried to counter. Mostly when when I've chimed in during this election cycle, it's because of the mean-spirited and often downright dishonest personal attacks on Republicans by the folks here. I generally got no brief for Republican policy, but it aggrivates me to see so much bullshit thrown.


Quote:

I compare you to someone like CTS, another professed liberatarian who I see as fairly centrist. She criticises both sides, but mainly just stays clear of the partisan fray. She doesn't have the strange, anti-liberal compulsion that you have.


If you (editorial 'you') have stayed out of the fray the past year, you wouldn't have posted much. And again, what liberal policies do I disagree with?

Quote:

Even in your above post you reveal your anti-liberal bias:

Quote:

I'm aware that I'm not Liberal enough for the folks in what is mostly a very Liberal forum. I don't hate the rich enough. I don't think that everyone who has a different view of what the country should be is evil (just wrong, maybe). I don't feel the need to type in ALL CAPS a lot, or personally attack the folks I disagree with except after quite a bit of provocation.

That's supposed to be a list of specifically liberal traits?? Ha! See, you pay lip-service to the idea that both sides engage in ugly partisanship, but in your mind you associate it specifically with one side.



When I'm discussing the actions of liberals on a liberal forum, and point out that a lot of the liberals exhibit those traits, it seems perfectly reasonable to me. Your assumption that I'm saying ONLY liberals do such things makes me think I've hit pretty close to home.


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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 5:15 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Ok Geezer, first of all don't pretend that your involvement in the partisan fray is so passive. It's not.


Is anyone's involvement here?


But you CLAIM to be non-partisan - that's the difference.

Your assumption that I'm saying ONLY liberals do such things makes me think I've hit pretty close to home.

Are you claiming that Wulf, Rappy, 6ix et al DON'T engage in this? Is that your claim?

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 6:49 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

When I'm discussing the actions of liberals on a liberal forum, and point out that a lot of the liberals exhibit those traits, it seems perfectly reasonable to me.


First off, this isn't a "liberal forum" as you choose to refer to it. If it were a liberal forum, liberals here wouldn't come in for the vicious attacks that have gone on since the day I arrived. Simple as that. If you want to ignore the "I laugh at your tears" and ALL the other things tossed out here by Wulf, Rap, Six, Zit, Hero and others, you can choose to; that doesn't mean they don't happen. I would assume it moves back and forth over time, but since I've been here, the right wingers have been QUITE vocal, quite negative, and have had no compunction about expressing their views. There are sufficient number of them to hold their own quite nicely, and aside from Jong and possibly one or two others, they have been FAR uglier, certainly in their attacks on me, than I have seen going the other way.

You consistently call out liberals and talk about liberals in a negative vein. I do not see you talking about conservatives the same way. The consistency is what caused me to be confused because I had previously THOUGHT of you as pretty nonpartisan. I don't know when that changed or if I just didn't notice, but over time it became obvious to me where your bias was and I was forced to recognize it. Not because you periodically went after liberals, but because you do so CONSISTENTLY, seemingly without ever finding fault with anything/anyone on the right. It became too obvious for me to ignore, and confused me until I accepted your bias.

IF you had chosen to recognize that both sides have behaved negatively, that would be different. By calling out only liberals, you create an unspoken statement that conservatives don't. I, and others, have been quite clear in recognition of the fact that there is blame enough to go around on both sides, but you consistenly only call out liberals. That's the difference.

Claiming to be nonpartisan doesn't make you so; your ACTIONS and words speak to your partisanchip or lack thereof. Simple as that.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 8:14 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Just a few quick examples from your posts:

"Of course, being from a liberal source, they then go on to criticize this as not being good enough" http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=53303&mid=9
15118


I don't recall you ever dismissing things coming from "a conservative source"...in fact I often see quotes by you from Fox, and other "conservative" sources.

Back in '04, I guess I didn't notice the bias, or maybe there was less of it. But, "Kerry's (energy) plan would: Provide $10 billion to help auto plants adapt to build high-tech ''cars of the future'' by responding " Why do I get the feeling that if Pres. Bush had suggested this, it would be classified as "Lining the Pockets of Big Business"? http://beta.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=6612&mid=8
4990


You posted at great length about the lies fact checkers had found in Biden's speech, saying "And those doggone conservative Republicans at the Washington Post just keep finding more DNC speech comments to pick on." Given the WaPo has both liberal and conservative columnists, I don't know which was doing the fact checking, but I'm guessing the implication was that the WaPo is actually liberal...? It's not, as far as I know. Liberals complain it's conservative; conservatives complain it's liberal.

You remarked that everyone was only picking on the Republicans' lies, despite the fact that I had put up a lengthy post quoting discrepancies fact checkers had found on BOTH sides.

Back in September you immediately responded to my thread about Clinton having "killed" at the Dem convention with "The truth, apparently." and link to an article which called one of Clinton's statements "a stretch", then followed up with a whole slew of quotes about untruths at the convention, including "And in other liar news, DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz..." http://blu.fireflyfans.net/mthread.asp?b=18&t=52952

When asked why you were paying no attention to Ryan's many lies, you responded something to the effect of why should you, when others already were?

You got into a protracted argument about "...San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro said there have been 4.5 million “new jobs” under Obama. The fact is the economy has regained only 4 million of the 4.3 million jobs lost since Obama took office." by claiming that was "So not so actual or valid, perhaps." Problem is, claiming there were "NEW jobs" had nothing to do with jobs that were lost "since Obama took office" (which of course ignores the fact that we were losing jobs in massive numbers WHEN he took office and thereafter, before his policies took effect). The basic point being, and you kept arguing this, that saying there were "new jobs'" has nothing to do with jobs LOST, so the claim WAS "actual and valid".

Those are just a few samples. I've noticed sometimes you seem to have a particular bent for going after me and my posts. For example, you went after me for a metaphor about something going faster than a "'motzaball' (yes, I misspelled mozzaball) through hot chicken broth" by saying it was the absolute worst metaphor you'd ever seen, then brought it up AGAIN later, saying "learn how to spell". Apparently you really liked that one, which is just something I heard from a (yes, Jewish) friend years ago and found amusing.

Lately you've nailed on me a couple of times about my new signature...specifically in one instance, "So is this the "neener, neener" you don't do? Hypocrisy, thy name is Niki2." http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=53437&mid=9
16895


Mike responded: "Is it any more hypocritical than you calling others trolls?" which was in response to your "No point in discussing it with Mike and Storymark, since they've just devolved into trolls." In other words, you were quite content to call me a hypocrite for stating "Oh, dear, so sad...people are actually trying to communicate with Rap, with facts and figures even. By now, who doesn't know...well, you know."--unquestionably a snark, but stating something we've run up against time and time again, while calling others trolls yourself. I had actually stated clearly that I would "TRY" to resist the ugliness; ergo, my remark on the futility of trying to offer Rap facts and figures wasn't NEARLY as "ugly" as calling two forum members trolls.

That's as much time and energy as I'm willing to put into it. Suffice it to say I rarely see any negativity from you toward the right, while negativity and disses toward the left are pretty prevalent. Yes, you have disagreed with BOTH sides at times, but rarely, if ever, pointed out negative feelings toward the right, while frequently expressing dismissiveness and negatively toward the left.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 8:18 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:

First off, this isn't a "liberal forum" as you choose to refer to it.



Liberals do most of the posting here. You certainly do your share.


Quote:

You consistently call out liberals and talk about liberals in a negative vein.

I criticize liberals here for posting stuff I consider as personal attacks, slander, and lies that would otherwise go unremarked. If I criticize the Obama administration, it's for what I see as policy failures.


Quote:

By calling out only liberals, you create an unspoken statement that conservatives don't.


But you and others call out only conservatives for insults and demeaning accusations. Don't remember much seeing you criticize Mike or Story, for example, for their personal attacks. ETA: Not to mention your personal insults of conservatives here as well.

Once again, list the liberal policies you think I've actually disagreed with instead of making vague insinuations. Then we can talk.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 9:55 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Quote:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by kpo:
Ok Geezer, first of all don't pretend that your involvement in the partisan fray is so passive. It's not.
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Is anyone's involvement here?


Yes. CTS, Byte, Riona - none of these argue enthusiastically for or against a particular side. They don't care which side is winning the partisan fray. You and I do. And the same thing that makes us care, is what makes us biased.

Quote:

Quote:

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You enter into it purposefully and energetically and one-sidedly.
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Not sure about that. I support a lot of liberal social positions.


The one does not preclude the other. And an interesting thing, the times I've heard you speak up about things like gay marriage it's been to criticise Obama ("he should've supported it sooner"), and never the Republicans. My charge against you is not that you're a typical conservative - you're clearly not - but that you have a strong anti-liberal bias. Hell, you don't even have to be closer to the GOP in terms of positions - you just have to fear and dislike the left more. How could that be? Perhaps you've spent a lifetime arguing against communism, and so have the left fixed as the bad guys. Or perhaps you see the left as coming into conflict more with your libertarian views, and that matters more to you than the social issues.

Quote:

Mostly when when I've chimed in during this election cycle, it's because of the mean-spirited and often downright dishonest personal attacks on Republicans by the folks here. I generally got no brief for Republican policy, but it aggrivates me to see so much bullshit thrown.

Does it aggravate you as much when Auraptor, Hero, Whozit, Wulf etc. do it? I'm guessing no. Because you don't see them as the problem. The reason I call you out on this is because I can see that I'm kinda the mirror of you: I see bullshit and dishonesty on the left, but I just roll my eyes at it and move on. Because those people to me, are not the real problem. You apparently do likewise to people on the right.

Quote:

Your assumption that I'm saying ONLY liberals do such things

You started the paragraph, "I'm aware that I'm not Liberal enough for the folks..." And then you said, "I don't hate the rich enough." It sounded very much like you were talking specifically about liberals. And the context is why you fall out with liberals, but not conservatives. So why talk about things both sides do? Also, although most of the current nastiness may come from the left, that hasn't always necessarily been true. At times, with folk like Kaneman and Wulfenstar I'd say the right has been worse. Did you ever come into conflict with those guys?

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 10:24 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Amen KPO.

Oh, Geez, you make me laugh:
Quote:

But you and others call out only conservatives for insults and demeaning accusations.

Talk about "unclear on the concept". I'M A LIBERAL! I'm an avowed liberal! You just made my point for me; given you only call out liberals, hence you are a conservative. Get it?
Quote:

Don't remember much seeing you criticize Mike or Story, for example, for their personal attacks. ETA: Not to mention your personal insults of conservatives here as well.

There's your laugh for the day. You'd have to be blind not to have noticed the MANY times I have called out liberals here for getting down in the gutter and attacking our righties...SPECIFICALLY, BY NAME! Mike can probably produce quotes and links, since it's him I have gone after most often. Are you actually so blind that you've missed my castigation of the lefties here who've been as nasty sometimes as the righties???

Every single time I've ranted on about the nastiness here I have pointed out that it is on BOTH SIDES--in my opinion more frequent and uglier from the right, but I've never EVER said it was exclusively from the right! Ask anyone here who remembers the many times I've chastized people and wished to high heaven they wouldn't go on forever in threads doing the tit-for-tat thing.

Oh, my (wipes tears from eye), thank you for the giggles...

Or is that part of the "denial" stage...?
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My charge against you is not that you're a typical conservative - you're clearly not - but that you have a strong anti-liberal bias.

Bingo. Also
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the same thing that makes us care, is what makes us biased.

Bang on. You may not be a Republican, Geez, you may not be a "staunch conservative". But the anti-liberal bias is what causes people to see you as a righty, however you feel about policies. Essentially: You go after the lefties here and say negative things about the left "out there"; you ignore the same things from the right.

Self-awareness may be something with which you're not familiar. Me, not so much. I've often admitted my own nastiness; I've quite freely criticized the left; I've expressed sympathy for the right because I think their party has been pre-empted by the EXTREME right; I've chastized lefties here for being nasty; I've stated clearly that I want a viable Republican Party; and I've given points to people here who dislike me intensely when I agree with them. Yet I'm quite open that I'm a liberal (tho' an independent). How's about you?

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 10:33 AM

STORYMARK


I admire the both of you for trying to reason with the old man.

I don't see it doing much good. He'll continue to claim he's a centrist while attacking the left and defending the right - its all he ever does.

But its a noble effort.




Excuse me while I soak in all these sweet, sweet conservative tears.

"We will never have the elite, smart people on our side." -- Rick "Frothy" Santorum

"Goram it kid, let's frak this thing and go home! Engage!"

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 11:06 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
Just a few quick examples from your posts:

"Of course, being from a liberal source, they then go on to criticize this as not being good enough" http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=53303&mid=9
15118
]

But they did in fact criticize Romney's selection of women for 42% of his cabinet.

"First of all, according to MassGAP and MWPC, Romney did appoint 14 women out of his first 33 senior-level appointments, which is a reasonably impressive 42 percent. However, as I have reported before, those were almost all to head departments and agencies that he didn't care about -- and in some cases, that he quite specifically wanted to not really do anything. None of the senior positions Romney cared about -- budget, business development, etc. -- went to women."

You included it in a post criticizing Romney for not picking enough women. Don't I have the right to comment on what you're saying?


Quote:

Back in '04, I guess I didn't notice the bias, or maybe there was less of it.

Considering you weren't on the board until 07/11/2009, per your profile, I'm wondering how you noticed anything here. Who did you used to be? Rue?

Quote:

But, "Kerry's (energy) plan would: Provide $10 billion to help auto plants adapt to build high-tech ''cars of the future'' by responding " Why do I get the feeling that if Pres. Bush had suggested this, it would be classified as "Lining the Pockets of Big Business"? http://beta.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=6612&mid=8
4990



Why did you have to go back eight years to find something you THINK shows bias against Kerrys plan, when I ended that post with, "Not saying it's a bad idea, but..." which you mysteriously left off. And considering that both the Iraq war and the Bush Tax cuts were widely reported as "lining the pockets of the rich" seems likely such a proposal by Bush would get called that too.

Quote:

You posted at great length about the lies fact checkers had found in Biden's speech, saying "And those doggone conservative Republicans at the Washington Post just keep finding more DNC speech comments to pick on." Given the WaPo has both liberal and conservative columnists, I don't know which was doing the fact checking, but I'm guessing the implication was that the WaPo is actually liberal...? It's not, as far as I know. Liberals complain it's conservative; conservatives complain it's liberal.


And other folks here posted about Romney's and Ryan's lies. Go give them a hard time as well.

Quote:

Back in September you immediately responded to my thread about Clinton having "killed" at the Dem convention with "The truth, apparently." and link to an article which called one of Clinton's statements "a stretch", then followed up with a whole slew of quotes about untruths at the convention, including "And in other liar news, DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz..." http://blu.fireflyfans.net/mthread.asp?b=18&t=52952


I'm beginning to get your drift. I have no right to disagree with you about anything, or express an opinion contrary to what you believe. Too bad.

Oh, and look at that first post you cited (the 'folders' one) for a wonderful example of liberals overdosing on personal insult and character assassination.




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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 11:20 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
My charge against you is not that you're a typical conservative - you're clearly not - but that you have a strong anti-liberal bias.


In real life I get along with liberals quite well, even in political discussions. Maybe it's just the particularly virulent brand I see here that sets me off.
Quote:


Does it aggravate you as much when Auraptor, Hero, Whozit, Wulf etc. do it?


Sometimes, but there's generally someone to call them on it, although usually with insults instead of actual rebuttal.

Quote:

The reason I call you out on this is because I can see that I'm kinda the mirror of you: I see bullshit and dishonesty on the left, but I just roll my eyes at it and move on. Because those people to me, are not the real problem. You apparently do likewise to people on the right.


So I'm a surrogate for your criticism of yourself?

$100.00 an hour, please.

Quote:

So why talk about things both sides do? Also, although most of the current nastiness may come from the left, that hasn't always necessarily been true. At times, with folk like Kaneman and Wulfenstar I'd say the right has been worse. Did you ever come into conflict with those guys?

Not too much, I always figured Kaneman was out there with PN, and Wulf seems to have enough problems. Besides, they didn't make a habit of insulting me .
.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:06 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Yeah, Mark, I'm gonna give up. I thought somehow I could get through.

Before I do, however, I'll respond one last time.

As to the first, it was your crack "being from a liberal source" to which I was referring. You have every right to comment on anything; my point was the snark "being from a liberal source", which indicated your bias.

As to my remark about '04, I wasn't clear enough. I was saying that apparently your bias was clear back in '04, so when I came in I must have just missed it--previously I thought you hadn't BEEN so biased when I first came here, and that something must have changed between then and now, get it? In '04 I had never heard of Firefly...I came here about a year or so after, having seen Serenity, someone made the connection for me and I fell in love with Firefly.

It's pretty obvious I'm not getting through. The issue at hand, as far as I've been concerned, is YOUR BIAS. That's all...not what you thought of policies, but that your phraseology indicates an anti-left bias. Can you follow that?

Ergo, the Kerry thing: "Why do I get the feeling that if Pres. Bush had suggested this, it would be classified as "Lining the Pockets of Big Business"? That's a snark, a rightie-type of snark, indicating where you're coming from.

And again "And other folks here posted about Romney's and Ryan's lies"--LIBERALS on this forum posted about Romney's and Ryan's lies. I expect that from them, and from me, we ADMIT we're liberals. You pointed out lies exclusively on the left--without, by the way, any mention of "given lies from the right have been pointed out, I thought I'd point out some on the left"...which you might note, I did in the LONG thread I put up listing lies ON BOTH SIDES. In other words, you focused solely on lies supposedly told by the left...thereby once AGAIN indicating your bias.
Quote:

I have no right to disagree with you about anything, or express an opinion contrary to what you believe. Too bad.

Now THAT's truly pathetic! The debate is whether you have a pro-right--or if you will, anti-left--bias. I provide examples. You don't address the examples of your writing, just the things to which they refer, and at no time do you say anything which argues the fact that you're biased. Instead you reach waaaaaaay out there to say I'm indicating you've got no right to disagree with me or express a contrary opinion. Wow. Some reach.

To be absolutely clear--tho' I've said this over and over and over AGAIN when Rap or you or any of your rightie friends have used that little ploy: ANYONE can say ANYTHING here or disagree with ANYONE else or express ANY opinion. The others on this board will interpret what they say, agree or disagree with it, OR POINT OUT THAT WHAT THEY WRITE INDICATES A BIAS in favor of Democrats, Republicans, liberals, conservatives, right or left. WE are saying you are distinctly biased against the left--or toward the right, or whatever. That is the issue at hand. You choose not to address that issue. That's fine. My accusation (and that of others) continues to stand unchallenged.

Finally,
Quote:

Oh, and look at that first post you cited (the 'folders' one) for a wonderful example of liberals overdosing on personal insult and character assassination.

You continue to make me smile. When and where, specifically, did I say liberals were free of personal insults and character assassinations? You'll have to point it out to me, because I've never claimed it, and I've been clear--once again, and I note you didn't address it--over and over and over to state that there is enough blame to go around ON BOTH SIDES. I believe there is more ugliness on the right--that's my right to believe. But both sides have engaged in ugliness, I say that freely as an avowed liberal/leftie/whatever.

As to
Quote:

particularly virulent brand
you see here, obviously by the wording of the sentence you consider the "virulence" to come only from the left. Have you yet ONCE admitted the ugliness on the right? CAN you? Are you CAPABLE of that? We've yet to see it; all you've done is argue you put stuff up anti-liberal because there's so much bias against the right. That does not answer the question. I have no expectation you will admit to the nastiness here that comes from the right, OR that you have a bias against the left. I'm beginning to think you're incapable of it.

And so KPO, who is almost invariably pretty civil, tries to throw you a bone by showing you his own "vulnerable underbelly", and you respond with
Quote:

So I'm a surrogate for your criticism of yourself?

Wow. That speaks absolute volumes!

And THIS is beginning to get under my skin just a bit, which is why I'm typing without making an effort to be civil. I'm not angry, I don't hate you, it's okay if you disagree with me (since you seem to need all those reassurances), but I've had my fill of frustration for the day, thank you. I've been trying to communicate with you and you've been dodging and weaving for all you're worth. So I will now take Mark's most sage advice and give up. It was worth a try: Once. Never more.

Ergo, I will consider you a "rightie" in future, a staunch conservative, whether Republican or not, just as I am a leftie, a staunch liberal, tho' I'm not a member of the Democratic party and do not agree with all their policies. I actually don't think you've been trying to communicate in this thread, I think you've been playing games and quite possibly trying to get my/our goat. So I say to you, from a liberal to a conservative, for your refusal to acknowledge your bias or communicate honestly:


I will now return to my previous efforts to be as civil as I can manage...to everyone. Bye!


Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:07 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Who did you used to be? Rue?


Hello,

If I had to guess who Niki2 used to be, I'd guess that she was the previous Niki. I'm supposing that's the significance of the 2.

--Anthony


Note to Self:
Raptor - woman testifying about birth control is a slut (the term applies.)
Context: http://tinyurl.com/d6ozfej
Six - Wow, isn't Niki quite the CUNT? And, yes, I spell that in all caps....
http://tinyurl.com/bdjgbpe
Wulf - Niki is a stupid fucking bitch who should hurry up and die.
Context: http://tinyurl.com/afve3r9

“The stupid neither forgive nor forget; the naive forgive and forget; the wise forgive but do not forget.” -T. S. Szasz

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012 12:17 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Just spotted your post Anthony. Originally I tried to sign up as Niki...it told me the name already existed, so I signed up as Niki2. Just to clarify.

You take care now, mister; you are one of the most imaginative posters I know in the gentle way you go about it. I wish we could clone you...on left, right and center! Unfortunately we cannot, so we'll continue to be frustrated by the unavowed ugliness on both sides, including that which pretends not to be ugly, or not to be right-wing.

Take care, you. I bow to your gentleness.

Tit for tat got us where we are today. If we want to be grownups, we need to resist the ugliness. If we each did, this would be a better reflection on Firefly and a more welcome place. I will try.

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