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Old 01-01-2007, 01:11 PM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lady Sage
I give kudos for Host, Mr Ravel and you as well Dilbert and a few others. Thank you for stating your replies the way you did and thank you as well for not taking mine personally.
thanks

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Originally Posted by Lady Sage
If Hitler had lived there may very well be no Jews left on the planet. I suppose that would have been alright in some people’s eyes. I am not a violent person. Some people, however, do deserve to die. This is not to say that I, myself, would kill them.
Well no, if we go back, instead of Hitler killing himself, and instead, locking him up in jail, we would still have Jews, he instigated the movement, and was responsible for many deaths, as is Saddam, but killing him would not stop future murders, nor would it stop those of the past. Imagine all the things we could have learned if he was still alive, maybe we could have found more concentration camps sooner, saving lives, maybe he would become like Stanley Tookie Williams III, one of the founders of the Crips, Tookie was convicted of several cold blooded murders, and was placed in jail on death row, he eventually fixed his ways, he became an outspoken opponent of violence and started writing children’s books, he has been nominated for 5 Nobel peace prizes. Hitler could have also reformed, or been an outspoken proponent of violence, we don’t know. However, if he was in jail, for the rest of his life, he could no longer hurt anyone ever again.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lady Sage
I did not like Saddam, nor did I love him. I do not feel pain at his death. It didnt make me lose any sleep. I do not and will not mourn him. I can not even prove that the person who was hung WAS in fact Saddam. I do however feel better knowing that if in fact the person who was dispatched was him, he can no longer harm any more people.

Now, let us bring our men and women home. It is my hope that his death signals the beginning of the end of our involvement in Iraq.
The sad thing is this is not about saddam, the insurgents are not fighting us because of saddam; they are fighting us because we are in their country.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ch'i
I'm not trying to win an argument. Lady Sage is someone I hold in contempt for her rash point of view. I do not repect it, will always despise it and fight it to my last breath. Ignorance, in her case, emphasized the exact meaning of her sentiment. I cannot stand people who would justify such a depraved retrospect.
And if you don’t respect her point of view, how do you intend to change it. Change comes through debate, or through force. Since you are apposed to force, debate is the only other way. If you are not willing to have a civil discussion where can we go from here, things will not change if we don’t try to change them. Lady Sage joined my group hug, come on Ch’I.
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Old 01-01-2007, 01:16 PM   #82 (permalink)
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Mr. Dilbert. There are many ways of making a ham sandwich. There are many ways of dealing with a problem as well.

I accept that you do not agree with my celebration and I respect that.
In turn I shall respectfully agree to disagree with you.

Shall we have a nice diet pepsi and ham sandwich to celebrate our group hug?
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Old 01-01-2007, 01:31 PM   #83 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Lady Sage
Shall we have a nice diet pepsi and ham sandwich to celebrate our group hug?
How about a mineral water with a bit of cranberry juice in it and an organic salad? Some of us have new year's resolutions.
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Old 01-01-2007, 01:46 PM   #84 (permalink)
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. . . . . . . . . .

Last edited by Ch'i; 01-02-2007 at 12:33 AM..
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Old 01-01-2007, 02:02 PM   #85 (permalink)
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pfft diet Pepsi, now I don’t respect you...

I used to be pro death penalty, and I have no problem with killing someone who is a threat. If Saddam came out shooting, drop him. However, I am adamantly apposed to the death penalty because of prosecutorial misconduct, innocent people are placed on death row, and one day we will know for a fact we have executed an innocent person, on that day we are all murderers. Saddam, was guilty as sin though, but I just don’t think more death solves anything.
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Old 01-01-2007, 02:42 PM   #86 (permalink)
 
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i agree with what host said above and find that i have little to add to it.

the range of responses in this thread is interesting: i have not been particularly shocked by any of it, chocking it up to difficulties that accompany anyone's efforts to look at fiasco squarely.

if you exclude any coherent pretense to justice having been served here--justice being a function of proper procedures having been followed in a context generally understood to be legitimate--none of which applies in this case, no matter what you think about saddam hussein--the remaining considerations are political. this article from today's guardian is fairly eloquent:

Quote:
Milestone on the road to nowhere

Monday January 1, 2007
The Guardian


Saddam Hussein's execution is likely to make little difference to the fate of the country he ruled so cruelly for more than two decades. Few can now doubt that he was guilty of terrible crimes against humanity - his own people and others - and showed not a shred of remorse. Millions around the world were able to watch the grotesque, sordid spectacle of his final, defiant moments, cursing "Americans, spies and Persians" to the very end. It is hard to imagine that Iraq's bloody divisions could get very much deeper. Reactions there - and there can be no mistaking the jubilation alongside the apathy and the fury - have predictably been split entirely along sectarian lines.

The spate of killings that followed was equally predictable; Saturday's 90 or so dead was a fairly average daily toll. Even with Saddam buried, the violence seems to have an unstoppable momentum of its own. Nuri al-Maliki's government signed his death warrant, but it has been unable to defuse or crush the Sunni insurgency, end the routine suicide bombings, kidnappings and murder, or ensure that its own Shia security forces do not act as sectarian death squads. A government whose writ barely runs beyond Baghdad's Green Zone and whose commitment to justice consists of little more than killing the tyrant is hardly a government worth the name. It could have been done differently. The twisted politics of war and occupation poisoned the judicial process that allowed hooded thugs to place the noose around Saddam's neck, taunting him as they did. That process was fundamentally flawed. Neither judges nor lawyers showed an understanding of international criminal law. Witnesses testified anonymously, defence lawyers were murdered and a judge was removed under government pressure. A UN or international tribunal in a neutral venue would have been better.

It bears repeating that the death penalty remains a cruel and unusual punishment. It was only a matter of time before the lightly sanitised official version of the execution was supplemented by uncensored mobile phone pictures of the whole tawdry event - snaps from the scaffold for our digital age. Perhaps (an unintended useful consequence?) they will win new recruits to the abolitionist cause.

Saddam went unrepentantly to the gallows because of one atrocity: the killings of 148 Shia villagers after a failed assassination attempt in Dujail in 1982. But justice, and the memory of his many thousands more victims, would have been better served if had stood trial for the "Anfal" campaign against the Kurds for which he and his accomplices were accused of genocide. The same is true for the crushing of the Kurdish and Shia rebellions after the 1991 Gulf war, and for his invasions of Kuwait and Iran. It may be naïve to believe that a different judicial course might possibly have served some putative process of truth and reconciliation to help heal Iraq's wounds. But it is certain that nothing but vengeance and retribution are served by the brutal and public manner of his end.

The hanging took place as President Bush (breathtakingly hailing it as "a step towards democracy") was consulting advisers at his ranch to plan his next Iraqi move - anticipating the moment when US fatalities, which have already surpassed the dead of the 9/11 attacks, reach 3,000. At least there was no American awkwardness at the use of the death penalty. That had a squirming Margaret Beckett repeating Britain's principled opposition to it but bizarrely "respecting" Iraq's sovereign right to use it. Saddam's crimes were committed in the name of sovereignty too. His execution can only augur badly for the future of a ruined country that is now worse off in so many ways than it was in the darkest days of his dictatorship. The condemned man boasted he was prepared to die as a sacrifice for Iraq. But this ghastly milestone of his death will do it no good at all.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,1980909,00.html
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Old 01-01-2007, 04:20 PM   #87 (permalink)
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what most sunnis find the most offensive is the fact that he was hung on one of the holiest days on the islamic calender, Eid al-Adha. its like putting a war criminal like bush or milosovic to hang on christmas day.
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Old 01-01-2007, 09:39 PM   #88 (permalink)
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justice to all the victims.
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Old 01-01-2007, 09:50 PM   #89 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dlishsguy
what most sunnis find the most offensive is the fact that he was hung on one of the holiest days on the islamic calender, Eid al-Adha. its like putting a war criminal like bush or milosovic to hang on christmas day.
That's a really good point (and something that probably should have occoured to me....good catch!). I think this was meant as a way to break the spirit of some of the fighters because the idiots in Washington think that the insurgency was pro-Saddam.

What happened to military intellegence?
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Old 01-02-2007, 06:53 AM   #90 (permalink)
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Ahh the greatest oxymoron of all time.
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Old 01-02-2007, 06:54 AM   #91 (permalink)
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I have some leftover ham.
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Old 01-02-2007, 07:59 AM   #92 (permalink)
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I guess, to be honest, I'm shocked at the speed at which it happened. However, I think there are a lot of good questions about the way, time, etc that it was carried out on that need to be answered.

My personal opinion? Not entirely sure. I haven't decided how I feel about the death penalty, especially the death penalty in another country where I don't know how they carry about with their trials/processes. I can say though, that I don't agree with it in the US, so I doubt it would make any sense for me to agree with it anywhere else.
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Old 01-02-2007, 10:42 AM   #93 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimellow
I am curious about why the camera shot was lowered to the ground after he was dropped/hung. Was it out of respect, or just a result of jostling?
A friend of mine who is a conspiracy theorist speculates that the video was staged and edited, and that Saddam is not really dead. The camera shot is lowered, then the video edited with pictures of a dummy corpse.

I think he's a nutcase myself.

I have seen the video, and I felt uncomfortable watching it the whole way through. It was disturbing knowing that I was watching a man about to die, and then watching the actual moment.
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Old 01-02-2007, 01:21 PM   #94 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dilbert1234567
we still shouldn't kill, at some point, we will know, for a fact, that we did execute an innocent person (sadam excluded) on that day, we all will be murders, and all deserve to die. if its to expensive, we need to stop giving them so much, cut there food with saw dust, put them to work.
he is guilty of gassing the Kurds with chemical weapons

fact

that makes him a murderer

in his country, under his laws, he is liable to be hanged

and this is what has happened

a fitting end for him, I say
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Old 01-02-2007, 04:04 PM   #95 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by paulskinback
he is guilty of gassing the Kurds with chemical weapons

fact

that makes him a murderer

in his country, under his laws, he is liable to be hanged

and this is what has happened

a fitting end for him, I say
yes he is a murderer, I have no doubt in my mind, and yes it does fit with the laws of the countries (although I’m sure there is a clause that says dictators are above the law...) it is their country and they have a right to dispatch justice how they see fit, however, I still disagree with the death penalty in general. However, things start to get gray, the Kurds were killed under Iraqi law, legally, how do we punish someone who obeyed the laws of the land; are we more moral then they are (I think we are) but this does not answer the question, we applied our law to him, and he was found guilty of breaking our laws. He is a murderer under our standards, and was punished by his law.

Not to say I don’t think the world is better off with him gone.
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Old 01-02-2007, 04:38 PM   #96 (permalink)
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3000 of our citizens have been killed....and this is what we have to show for it.

3000 of our citizens were killed on 9/11 ......and we have....nothing to show for it.


I am somewhat dissapoined, call me strange.
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Old 01-02-2007, 04:42 PM   #97 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Chimera
3000 of our citizens have been killed....and this is what we have to show for it.

3000 of our citizens were killed on 9/11 ......and we have....nothing to show for it.


I am somewhat dissapoined, call me strange.
Yes, Saddam had nothing to do with 9/11. Ossama is still ... somewhere. The towers aren't even being rebuilt yet over 5 years later. I'd not call you strange for recognizing that our wound is still open and those that truely inflicted it are still free as birds.
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Old 01-02-2007, 06:03 PM   #98 (permalink)
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All the things we can do and all of the gadets we have and we still cant find a 6'5 arab hooked to his luggage. I am definately not a happy camper about such.

Good point Mr. Will. I hope he meets a very messy and painful end in whatever way the cosmos has in mind for him.
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Old 01-02-2007, 07:07 PM   #99 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Lady Sage
Good point Mr. Will. I hope he meets a very messy and painful end in whatever way the cosmos has in mind for him.
The CIA, MI6 and Packistan's Inter-Services all paid and trained Osama bin Laden and his fellow fighters as they fought with the Afghan Mujaheddin from the 80s into the 90s in order to attack soviet republics of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. We made the "terrorist camps" that trained thousands of men who were for all intents and purpouses Islamic reigious zealots that we galvanized. We helped them attack Soviets. We gave them stinger missles and trained them to use them.

We did this to ourselves by being frighteningly short sighted. We brought together thousands of radical militants and used them to fight our enemy while exploiting them and we didn't see that there would be consequences? Jesus Christ. A 2-year-old could figure this stuff out.

Bottom line: if you think Osama bin Laden should be brought to justice, then you should probably group our own intelligence community in with him for being responsible for current global, islamic-radical terrorism.

Last edited by Willravel; 01-02-2007 at 07:18 PM..
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Old 01-02-2007, 07:14 PM   #100 (permalink)
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"Is this the bravery of Arab men?"

Love him or hate him, you have to give the son of a bitch credit for never backing down.

Oh well, one less asshole in the world.
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Old 01-02-2007, 10:23 PM   #101 (permalink)
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My own sentiment has been voiced several times over on this thread, but I'll echo those who see the impotent farce of Saddam Hussein's execution simply as one more death in Iraq.

A death made ever more insignificant by every innocent Iraqi who has died/is dying/will die because of our overzealous incursion into Iraq and inept mismanagement of its prosecution at virtually every turn. Who feels safer today with Saddam dead? How many Iraqis do you suppose feel safer?

Anyone who wants to treat this as something to celebrate doesn't earn a lot of my respect either. You are playing along with a game for fools in deliberate ignorance of what we have done...and at what price we have earned this ridiculous hanging.
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Old 01-02-2007, 10:44 PM   #102 (permalink)
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You are playing along with a game for fools in deliberate ignorance of what we have done...and at what price we have earned this ridiculous hanging.
There was nothing gained through executing Saddam save for one more death, and an anti-climactic sense of justice for those who sought vengeance for his crimes.

That is not justice.

Last edited by Ch'i; 01-03-2007 at 12:50 AM..
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Old 01-03-2007, 02:10 AM   #103 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
The CIA, MI6 and Packistan's Inter-Services all paid and trained Osama bin Laden and his fellow fighters as they fought with the Afghan Mujaheddin from the 80s into the 90s in order to attack soviet republics of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. We made the "terrorist camps" that trained thousands of men who were for all intents and purpouses Islamic reigious zealots that we galvanized. We helped them attack Soviets. We gave them stinger missles and trained them to use them.
We did this to ourselves by being frighteningly short sighted. We brought together thousands of radical militants and used them to fight our enemy while exploiting them and we didn't see that there would be consequences? Jesus Christ. A 2-year-old could figure this stuff out.
Bottom line: if you think Osama bin Laden should be brought to justice, then you should probably group our own intelligence community in with him for being responsible for current global, islamic-radical terrorism.
To think people think I am insane by suggesting that we the people should mind our own damn business. Oh well. What does a woman know?
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Old 01-03-2007, 02:23 AM   #104 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Lady Sage
To think people think I am insane by suggesting that we the people should mind our own damn business. Oh well. What does a woman know?
how to make ham sandwiches, apparently.
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Old 01-03-2007, 04:15 AM   #105 (permalink)
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The death of Saddam will do nothing to improve the lives of the Iraqi people.

Though he committed horrible crimes, I am not a believer in "eye for an eye".

In taking his life and in such a barbaric way as hanging, the people who condemn him become no better than him.

I do not feel sorry for his death because he was likely beyond redemption and to some extent deserved to die, but deep down I felt it was wrong. I do live in a country that was one of the first in Europe to abolish the death penalty so that probably makes me biased.

I also have to say that it's shameful the way the images of Saddam's death were shown on public TV and made available on the internet in full.
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Old 01-03-2007, 05:42 AM   #106 (permalink)
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I agree with you little_tippler:

Quote:
Originally Posted by little_tippler
I also have to say that it's shameful the way the images of Saddam's death were shown on public TV and made available on the internet in full.
I was gratefully out of touch will all media output this weekend but I was appalled to see even the very brief clip of his execution that I finally did see and even more disgusted at how it has been paraded around for us all. It seems that the world has finally abandoned grace for good. And apparently we have all decided that the terrorist indulgence of morbid voyeurism makes for good television copy.
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Old 01-03-2007, 05:58 AM   #107 (permalink)
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I also have to say that it's shameful the way the images of Saddam's death were shown on public TV and made available on the internet in full.

No it isn't. I firmly believe that if the government is gonna condone an execution, they should HAVE to show it on TV. Maybe if more people saw the barbarism that is legalized murder, they'd get tired of it, and demand that we put a stop to it.

That's the same reason we absolutely SHOULD show the destroyed bodies of our dead soldiers. Sure, it's shocking and very uncomfortable to watch. But maybe if people saw that every damn day on the TV they wouldn't be so eager to support getting into another war. I'm willing to sacrifice the supposed dignity of a few dead people in order to save thousands of lives.
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Old 01-03-2007, 06:16 AM   #108 (permalink)
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not to derail, it'd just be nice to have the news not be so god damned depressing all the time, yes, ok, lets report about some child abuse, a house fire, a murder, a hit and run on someone riding thier bike, oh hey, here's some f'n snow for you bastards too!

yeah, screw that. news is crap.
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Old 01-03-2007, 06:17 AM   #109 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shakran
No it isn't. I firmly believe that if the government is gonna condone an execution, they should HAVE to show it on TV. Maybe if more people saw the barbarism that is legalized murder, they'd get tired of it, and demand that we put a stop to it.

That's the same reason we absolutely SHOULD show the destroyed bodies of our dead soldiers. Sure, it's shocking and very uncomfortable to watch. But maybe if people saw that every damn day on the TV they wouldn't be so eager to support getting into another war. I'm willing to sacrifice the supposed dignity of a few dead people in order to save thousands of lives.
I completely understand your point of view but I believe the only outcome of it would be that people would only become more enured and unaffected by images of death and less reflective about the concepts of war and execution. Anything shown often enough on television becomes something no longer of reality. It removes the watcher from real experience. Or maybe I'm just no longer convinced of mankind's innate tendency to move away from barbarism.
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Old 01-03-2007, 06:34 AM   #110 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mixedmedia
I completely understand your point of view but I believe the only outcome of it would be that people would only become more enured and unaffected by images of death and less reflective about the concepts of war and execution. Anything shown often enough on television becomes something no longer of reality. It removes the watcher from real experience. Or maybe I'm just no longer convinced of mankind's innate tendency to move away from barbarism.
I think a large problem is the psychological influence of the way news is presented to us. Newcasters are taught to try to remain mostly "neutral"

They can talk about baby cannibalism for all it matters to them, and they still do it with this absurd "it's just the news" tone of voice.

If anything desensitizes people, its that. I mean you grow up listening to these people and hell, if they are so calm, everything must be ok, right?

So after listening to these people talk about war, about terrorist attacks, about economic issues, about things which are supposed to test our very moral beliefs of life and death, day in , day out, year after year, "it's just the news". I mean, you start off well enough, you might actually care about the news, but you know, one day you might just be a little withdrawn, "well theres nothing I could have done about that" and it's all downhill, apathy sets in.

THAT is what pisses me off, and it'll never change because no station will get a real personality presenting the news.
Likewise, they really can't either since it would imply that because thier newscasters feel or think a certain way, it's being imposed upon thier viewers.

meh. Ok, i'm done ranting. I'll shush now.
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Old 01-03-2007, 07:09 AM   #111 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mixedmedia
I completely understand your point of view but I believe the only outcome of it would be that people would only become more enured and unaffected by images of death and less reflective about the concepts of war and execution. Anything shown often enough on television becomes something no longer of reality. It removes the watcher from real experience. Or maybe I'm just no longer convinced of mankind's innate tendency to move away from barbarism.
Well, look back at the vietnam war. People were pretty quiet about it here at home until the TV started showing the bodybags being unloaded at the airforce bases. Then the protestors started getting very loud indeed.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Shauk
not to derail, it'd just be nice to have the news not be so god damned depressing all the time, yes, ok, lets report about some child abuse, a house fire, a murder, a hit and run on someone riding thier bike, oh hey, here's some f'n snow for you bastards too!

yeah, screw that. news is crap.
I agree that news is largely crap (take notes, since I work in news) but not for the reasons you say. If anything the news needs to be more depressing. There's a lot of depressing shit happening right now. We just killed our 3,000th soldier in Iraq. The economy is in the toilet (I don't care what Bush says, just go down to your local Salvation Army and ask them how much demand for the food shelf has increased). A regional war is about to break out in the middle east. Bush is threatening to embroil us in yet another war (Iran). People are dying daily because they can't afford treatments that are available and could save their lives. And those are just a few examples of the crap that's going on in the world.

Yet what do we see on the nightly news? People diving into a frozen lake for fun on January 1st, christmas lights, a pet that does some cool trick, the first baby of the year, the last baby of last year, a man-on-the-street interview about new years resolutions, kids visiting Santa at the mall, last minute christmas shopping on the 24th, the grand opening of a donut shop, and other inane bullshit that's pushing the real issues right off the broadcast. And just so you know, all of those examples are stories I worked on in the last month, and I guarantee that someone at just about every station in the country did the same thing.

News is depressing? Yep, it sure is, because a lot of it just plain isn't news anymore.

Of course the flip side of that problem is that the American people feel they have a god given right to be happy 100% of the time. If something makes them unhappy, rather than trying to change it, they often sweep it under the rug. If the news is depressing then get the hell out there and make a difference - -change that situation so we have something good to report for once. But no, that's not the American way. The American way is to blame the news for reporting things we don't like.


Quote:
They can talk about baby cannibalism for all it matters to them, and they still do it with this absurd "it's just the news" tone of voice.
And yet people gave Dan Rather shit about how "unprofessional" he was because he broke into tears after 9/11 on Letterman.

Quote:
THAT is what pisses me off, and it'll never change because no station will get a real personality presenting the news.
Likewise, they really can't either since it would imply that because thier newscasters feel or think a certain way, it's being imposed upon thier viewers.
Now here we can come to an agreement I think. See, I think this forced neutrality in journalism is stupid (and that's made me rather a pariah amongst many of my colleagues). In the first place, who the hell do we think we're fooling. Of course we have opinions. We're humans, not robots.

We should absolutely report all sides of an issue, but I frankly don't see anything wrong with a commentary section of the broadcast - provided you clearly label it as commentary.

People are giving Katie Couric a lot of crap for the opinion section of her newscast. Frankly I think that's just about the only thing she's done right since she took the anchor chair.

Let's not forget that it was Murrow's commentary that took down Joe McCarthy and his communist witch hunt. It was Cronkite's commentary that finally convinced the president that America was not behind the Vietnam war. He began shutting it down almost immediately. Yet today we shy away from commentary. Oh my god somebody might think we're biased! So the hell what? So we're biased. If we're biased we probably have a damn good reason for it.

Now, in order to do this right we have to move journalism back to the way it was under Murrow and Cronkite. Cronkite didn't just sit at his anchor desk pontificating on a war he'd never visited. He went over to Vietnam, several times, and the last time he traveled all over the country (not just where the military wanted him to go) to see for himself what was going on, then prepared reports on it, and THEN told us what he thought.

Today we have "embedded" journalists running around in Iraq, going only where the military wants them, seeing only what the military wants them to see. So frankly we're not qualified to give you a commentary on how the Iraq war is going. We don't see what's really happening. We need another Cronkite to come in, tour the country on his own, see what's going on, and tell us about it.

But that would cost money and news is decidedly for-profit now. We get better ratings by interviewing last night's American Idol loser and telling you about Britney Spears not wearing panties.

It all boils down to corporate ownership. We've let 5 major corporations own the majority of the media outlets in this country. GE doesn't give a crap about good journalism, all they want to see is huge profits coming in from ALL their divisions. It's a lot more expensive to send a reporter to Iraq on his own (Rather than being cared for and fed by the military) than it is to get paparazzi video of celebrities without underwear.

What's the solution? Break up the journalistic monopolies. 5 megacorporations should not be dictating what we see on the news each night. Democracy cannot survive without a feisty and independent press acting as a watchdog to government.

We do that, and stop insisting that news rake in 30% profits every year, and we'll start to see some genuinely good changes not just in journalism, but in the rest of the country as officials realize they're now being watched.
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Old 01-03-2007, 07:23 AM   #112 (permalink)
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I see your point, Shauk, but if you take away neutrality with the news, then people aren't going to be cool with that either. We already feel that the media is biased, how are we going to feel if the news presenter appears more passionate about one murder victim than another? We'll decide that they are prejudiced, either by race, class, social status, etc. The only option is neutrality.

Anyway, here in England, there are people presenting the 'news' in less neutral terms - but they are seen more as political commentary and / or propaganda (either for or against mainstream media).

But I agree on the desensitization. It's horrible, makes us less human.
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Old 01-03-2007, 09:15 AM   #113 (permalink)
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I am amused at the fact that with all of the valid, important things in the world to bitch about, people are spending their time complaining about the death of Saddam Hussien.

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Old 01-03-2007, 09:30 AM   #114 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by debaser
I am amused at the fact that with all of the valid, important things in the world to bitch about, people are spending their time complaining about the death of Saddam Hussien.

Well, if you had any talent for detecting the not-so-subtle you'd see that no one here is "complaining about the death of Saddam Hussein."
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Old 01-03-2007, 09:32 AM   #115 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by debaser
I am amused at the fact that with all of the valid, important things in the world to bitch about, people are spending their time complaining about the death of Saddam Hussien.

It's hardly our only complaint. The root of the complaint is in the failed war in Iraq, and I'd say that's a valid complaint considering that it's causing the deaths of tens to hundreds of thousands of people, including military forces from our home countries, and is bankrupting the US government and is creating global instability. It's kinda a big deal.
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Old 01-03-2007, 09:48 AM   #116 (permalink)
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So apparently the guy who recorded it on his cell phone has been arrested.

Is that really the right guy to punish? The whole situation was chaotic, and probably deserves criticism, and as such I doubt that the rules about recording the event were made clear to all involved. I sure didn't see a "No Flash Photography" sign posted anywhere in the video.

Bah. I think if people would just think things through for all of 30 seconds, things like this could be avoided. I'm against the death penalty, but if you're going to execute someone like Saddam, at least have it be an organized, non-chaotic event.
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Old 01-03-2007, 10:50 AM   #117 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
Torture is evil no matter who is being tortured, and the death penalty is evil because it serves no purpous but vengence.
Sorry but I have to state my point of view here. The death penalty serves a distinct purpose and it is not to torture the victim. The purpose of the death penalty is that it gets people who will not ever be a functioning part of society of the street permanently. Think of psychopathic murders here. The death penalty removes these people from society because there is no other viable way to do so. Locking someone up for the rest of their life is not cheap by any means. Think about it, all of the people in jails are being supported by the government. The death penalty serves as a cost effective, efficient way to deal with those that can never be part of society.

At least, this is how it is intended. Is it 100% fool proof? No, nothing truly is.
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Old 01-03-2007, 10:57 AM   #118 (permalink)
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First of all, you took willravel's comment out of context.

Secondly, the death penalty is not the only viable option. Talk to any therapist about prevention methods, and Second Step programs.

Last edited by Ch'i; 01-03-2007 at 10:59 AM..
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Old 01-03-2007, 11:00 AM   #119 (permalink)
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Although I am decidedly opposed to the death penalty, largely due to a tainted judicial system, I will shed not one tear for poor Sadaam.

I will say that I believe his trial was nothing more than a sham, and that he was a "dead man" from the moment he was drug from his spider hole. The whole thing was just a huge joke.

So why should we be at all surprised to discover that his "execution" more closely resembled a public lynching than a state sponsored execution? Even if Sadaam didn't deserve anything more dignified than what he got...the rest of the world did. That was just pathetic.
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Old 01-03-2007, 11:28 AM   #120 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cadre
Sorry but I have to state my point of view here. The death penalty serves a distinct purpose and it is not to torture the victim. The purpose of the death penalty is that it gets people who will not ever be a functioning part of society of the street permanently. Think of psychopathic murders here. The death penalty removes these people from society because there is no other viable way to do so. Locking someone up for the rest of their life is not cheap by any means. Think about it, all of the people in jails are being supported by the government. The death penalty serves as a cost effective, efficient way to deal with those that can never be part of society.

At least, this is how it is intended. Is it 100% fool proof? No, nothing truly is.
If you look at the statistics, the death penalty is NOT more cost effective. In fact, studies conducted in state after state after state that practices the death penalty have determined that it costs the taxpayer millions of dollars more per year to invest in the death penalty system of jurisprudence.
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