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Sorry, Gucci... chronic-pumping facemasks are not standard equipment on the AH64.
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my dreams are now officially crushed.
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I think the media is the only real enemy the US military has anymore. If public opinion isn't for the war, then it is hard to get anything done. Never mind that a lot of innocent people were killed by the extremists a few days ago in the market and apartments in Baghdad...
I think this movie quote sums up my thoughts: Quote:
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Hell, I was waiting for that Full Metal Jacket quote... ya know, the one with the Huey M60 gunner.
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"How can you shoot women and children?" "Easy, just don't lead them as much." I don't think the video is all that bad. I mean, what happened is fucked up looking back on it. Hindsight is always 20/20. But in that time and place, I believe the situation called for action. They obviously took the wrong action, or went about it wrong, but they had to do something. Have you ever read any books about soldier's accounts of war? They admit to actually wanting to kill the enemy. "Jarhead" is a great example. "Soft Spots" by Clint Van Winkle is another one. What do you think the military does? They kill, it comes with the occupation. I'd be damn excited if I was in an Apache popping off rounds like that. With the happiness and overall approval of killing: they need to say something to "get them through" the fact they just killed another human. I'm having a hard time trying to put that into better words, which is a problem because this is the internet. If this wasn't on video, people wouldn't be flipping shit like they are. |
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Of course, the issue here is less whether the US military is made up of "bad people" as is the complete disconnect between the way the war is waged and how it was and is described. It's been the case for at least 60 years, and in all likelihood, in near future another one of these wars will be contemplated. And then someone will point out that lots of nasty things happen in wars. But the usual suspects will again reply that the US troops are all "nice people," and that this war will indeed be clean and without "collateral damage," and how dare anyone suggest that civilians would be killed by the thousands. And then when the shit hits the fan again, we'll hear about how "war is hell," and that if only we didn't know about what goes on we'd be happy and all that, only to repeat everything. |
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I don't know whether to be horrified or ecstatic that I'm now fully entrenched in 9er's sig. :lol:
what does a civilian look like? This is a good point considering the types of war that the US is engaged in. |
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I like this thread a lot and have read all the responses eagerly because it really cool to see the varied opinions. I especially enjoy the cognitive dissonance of being ready to dismiss some of the opinions as wrong out of hand, but coming from people I agree with on other things. WAit a minute... you have no problem with them being right when they agree with you.
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... Lasereth's quoted post is useful. |
Hmm, a case of mistaken identities on the battlefield. I'm surprised it's never happened before.
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It shouldn't be surprising to anyone to hear these guys act like they "WANT" to kill them. I mean they did enlist, after all. You've got to want it, or at least be ambivalent about ending a human life if you're willing to become a pawn
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... You know, I'd hate to violate any board rules, but seeing as how I was one of those enlisted men at one time, I'm going to count the above quote as a violation itself, and tell you to fuck yourself, dickwad. |
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I wonder what would happen if there were no pawns and no desire to put the pawn training into action.
Oh. right. we'd be speaking a different language. |
the thread seems still be to stuck with a basic division between folk whose experience led them through the military (directly or indirectly) and who tend to see in the clip something well inside the realm of ordinary experience and those who do not see killing unarmed civilians and a couple children as being part of the realm of ordinary experience, not even in a combat situation.
what's curious about this is the extent to which this division then feeds into a strange inside/outside game. the relativist position argues in the end that no-one but themselves could possibly understand so no-one but themselves is in a position to pass judgment about what you see as a technical glitch, a mistake. others, looking at the same footage, see unarmed civilians being mowed down and a heap of rationalizations piled up for that---most of which read to me like "ooops" or, better, "it's the civilians fault." from there it is possible to have discussions about rules of war and whether there really are any---from the relativist viewpoint in this thread, it almost seems like there is only one rule and that is dont end up like the civilians and children do in this clip so that the fact that you're alive indicates no rules could be violated in this or any other situation. but that's fucked up, i think. if you back away from this level, it seems to me that if this "war is hell" line is the case--and i do not doubt it for a second as making the world into an approximation of hell seems a project that nation-states devote special creativity to, which makes you wonder about nation-states and the capitalism for which they stand, but that's another matter----if this it is case that once war starts there are no rules, anything goes anything at all (which is a very bush administration line)----then it should fucking well be the case that the machinery that is war is put into motion for the right reasons. and in iraq, the machinery was not put into motion for the right reasons. this kind of killing of civilians has been alarming routine in the colonial adventure in iraq. of course it's the other guy's fault (i learned that in this thread). but if the reasons for the unfolding of the war-is-hell machine in the first place are not correct, then it seems to me that every last one of those deaths is murder and that responsibility for those deaths rebounds back onto the people who put the machinery into motion in iraq in the first place. and it seems like this is the kind of position that all sides could agree on in this thread... . |
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You know, so they can practice "what they signed up for".... Can you imagine the twisted desires of those who work for Doctors without Borders? Not only do they want people to be sick and injured, they also want it in a backdrop of poverty, war, and/or endemic disease. I don't think it helps to further dehumanize an already dehumanizing aspect of our world. For the record, I was surprised to hear what I deemed an eagerness to shoot without having adequate information. |
I've started building a scale model of an AH-64D Apache so I can do reenactments.. little plastic people, the ack-ackac-kack-ackack sounds, and even with some witty banter like "they just drove over bodies... lol" and "look at those dead bastards! muahhahahaha!"
http://img169.imageshack.us/img169/3462/img02252.png http://img355.imageshack.us/img355/5572/img02262.png I just finished getting getting the front gear and tail rotor on. The cockpit is amazingly hard to detail, and the nose gun is next. The main blades are one of the last steps. |
we're gonna need grainy video of the reenactment.
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Yes you are.
..and especially Gucci...his spot's already been spoken for. I've made prior arrangements. |
My spot was reserved before you and your virgins tried to convert me to allah Dlish.
:D |
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you have the benefit of playing the video over and over and in slow motion..
they didn't. |
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WikiLeaks – “Collateral Murder”
here's another commentary on the clip. unlike alot of military-relativist arguments, this guy is both sympathetic and quite critical--and unlike alot of folk, to do that he makes separations between actions within the continuum that you're shown. and he's a bit snippy about the presentation from wikileaks in places as well. have a look. |
We also have the benefit of knowing that those were photographers before even viewing the film. If that knowledge was erased, and we were given just the information those soldiers had - grainy images of a group of people, some of them armed, not far from a firefight - I think most of us would have come to the same conclusions the gunner and pilot came to.
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maybe---**maybe**---with respect to the photographer. but no way in hell with respect to the van. that's why i think this is an actionable situation. the people in the van were murdered straight up. strange that so many are good with that. maybe because it's just another bunch of iraqis, yes?
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I tend not to remember the "van incident" as a separate event, I suppose. Does that make me an awful human being? Forgetful, maybe. I watched the video twice and don't really intend to watch it again.
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pony:
not at all...i didn't mean the language to sound that way. the thread's been bugging me i think. shifting back out to pick up on a more general point, not talking specifically at you now, pony: all this swimming about at the shallow end of the pool thinking o it's all good bad things happen in a way no rules no problem why i'd have done the same thing. i don't think i would have. i don't think alot of people would have done the same thing. i don't think what we see in that clip is acceptable. i think there's a difference between whether one *can* explain something and the idea that because a sequence of events *can be* explained that therefore it's justified. i don't get it. |
I definitely see the initial attack and the part with the van as two separate incidents. Add to that the man crawling on the ground and the eagerness to kill him, because I think that directly leads into the van incident.
Anyway, mistakes do happen, and while I would have liked to see them actually witness ANY sort of hostile intentions before firing, I'm willing to classify the first section as "unfortunate" in my brain. I really can't find any way to excuse the attack on the van though. |
I'm having a hard time finding anything more accurate that roach's last link, WikiLeaks – “Collateral Murder”.
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Of course, before the discussion over whether mistaking the camera for an RPG is justifiable, there is (or should be) the discussion about whether action should be taken based on what everyone acknowledges as grainy and poor quality video. There is nothing that says that those sorts of things must be used, and there is a lot that can be mistaken for a gun or an RPG in a densely populated area.
Sure, relying less on these ultra long distance videos might lead to a few more military casualties. But they would almost certainly result in less civilian casualties. |
That's an excellent link RB - I totally missed the RPG that he pointed out.
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I can't in good conscience condone the van shooting though. Those folks were unarmed and contrary to what the pilot claims I can find no evidence in the video that they attempted to pick up any weapons or do anything other than provide assistance to the wounded. On that count I find myself in favour of legal action. |
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I guess it's a good thing that we have the jobs that we have, no? |
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i love ya', brother... |
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. . . No, seriously. ... Ya know, I was really hoping people would be offended by Jinn's helicopter model talk. It was way brutal. And you have the nuts to call us military dudes callous assholes? In the words of Sgt. Lester Garcia: "Yeaaah, riyeeeht." |
I'm going to paint the little target guys on the ground with TS-8 Italian Red, TS-18 Metallic Red, and TS-11 Maroon. If you mix it up enough before the spray it looks just like recently coagulated blood.
http://www.tamiya.com/english/produc...y_img/ts11.gifhttp://www.tamiya.com/english/produc...y_img/ts18.gifhttp://www.tamiya.com/english/produc...ay_img/ts8.gif I was recently toying with some simple animatronic stuff based off watch batteries, and I might be able to make the plastic people 'squirm' if I wire it up right.. And I found these cool RPG scale model toys at Hobbytown.. http://www.48specialmodels.com/48pic...us-rpg-set.jpg I'm going to paint them like cameras for my reenactment. |
Don't you have some gunfire to run toward?
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What conclusion do you come to? |
Except as the video makes clear, the "really big American gun" was more than a few blocks away from where the bodies were, which was a densely populated neighborhood. Whatever you think about the initial shooting, shooting the van is pretty indefensible.
And the whole "I'm more of a man because I care less" attitude in this thread is bullshit. As is the whole "I'm a manly man, therefore only I can judge the morality of anything." Lots of people around the world live in places where violent deaths on a per capita basis (not to mention an absolute basis) far, far outstrips anything American troops have faced in over 60 years. Lots of people actually go to these places to try to help a bit. And the funny thing is that these people don't become indifferent to random killings. If you think it's tough being a serviceman, try being on the other side of those guns for a bit. Not everyone who has seen crap or even been subjected to crap in their lives becomes a moral relativist. Edit: of course, the moral relativism would probably disappear if the video was of someone else doing that to Americans. |
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Let me give you some perspective on this issue alone. I sell, and shoot, .50BMG rifles. This thing fires a round about the size of a carrot, with a projectile 12.7mm (1/2 inch) in diameter. Effective range is about 1.25 miles. This weapon's muzzle-blast can be heard from well over a mile away, will rupture eardrums at close ranges (less than 5 meters or so), and echoes for several seconds in mountains or built-up areas. With the proper loading, it can penetrate an inch or so (20mm) of Rolled Homogeneous Armor, at a range of 100 meters, at an impact angle of 90 degrees. The 30mm Hughes chain-cannon fires a round the size of a paper-towel roll, with a projectile the size of a potato that's designed to knock out tanks and can penetrate around 12in of RHA. Compare the size of the two rounds, and you have an idea of just how loud this weapon is. Now, the 30mm doesn't normally use AP rounds; rather it's a sort of high-velocity grenade launcher. This means that besides the noise, there's a lot of blast and shrapnel damage, at least in the immediate impact zone. Again, this thing is pretty obvious. Now, consider that the insurgents don't use 30mm cannon, or anything even close. Bombs, rifles, light machineguns and mortars, rocket-propelled grenades...lots of noisy stuff, but nothing that produces a number of VERY loud explosions in short order, combined with an identically-spaced series of very loud muzzle-blasts. Remember, and as the video shows, this thing is a giant machinegun. The only other things on the battlefield which would produce a machinegun's distinctive cadence writ so -very- large are the Mk-19 automatic grenade launcher and the various 25mm and 30mm cannon carried by Army/Marine APCs; none of which, nor anything like them, are commonly fielded by Iraqi insurgents. Either way, this is the kind of noise that anybody with a brain could identify as Pissed Off Yankees Tearin' Shit Up. It's not the kind of thing anybody with kids and more than two braincells runs TOWARDS. Even if you have to go (family in danger, etc), anybody half-sane would have at least gotten the kids behind some cover and told them to stay put -before- racing into the near vicinity of some sort of airborne explosive barrage in this gallant but sadly fatal rescue attempt. Was the death of the "good samaritan" and the wounding of his innocent children a tragedy? Absolutely. Was it avoidable? Again, absolutely, but on the parts of -both- parties. Papa could have done the reasonable thing and not driven towards the sounds of Pissed Off Yankees, and the Apache crew could have been more careful about whom they shot at. More than enough blame to go around there. As for the reporters killed with the armed men; they knew the risks and went anyway. This is why we admire combat correspondents and read their work. One should not be surprised when, if one insists upon hanging around with armed men in an area known to be a zone of conflict between such fellows and aforementioned Pissed Off Yankees, one gets killed by Pissed Off Yankees. I can't summon too much outrage over the death of someone who, fully appraised of the risks, goes into such a dangerous situation. Edited to Add: This is akin, IMO, to the deaths (likewise tragic and frequently preventable, but consensual) of not only soldiers but also of dangerous-game hunters, spear-fishers, explorers, sailors, firefighters, dissidents righteous or misguided or just plain mean. They chose to dance with death every bit as much, and just as every now and again an elephant takes his dying revenge or a building collapses onto some gallant would-be savior of life, every now and again combat reporters pay the Ferryman's price to practice their chosen trade. |
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All those paragraphs and you still miss the point. My point wasn't whether the van could hear the gunfire, but whether it was driving towards it, which is what has been used to justify the shootings. In fact, when you look at the video, you see that while the van is driving TOWARDS the bodies, it is driving AWAY from the helicopter and the position where the shots came from. As such, it is fairly obvious that the van is not driving towards the firefight, but away from it. |
9er, I wouldn't think of you as a monster or a murderer, but merely a man performing the duties he was called to do by his boss. Now as far as the bosses go, I'll more than happily stick a murderer tag on them and see them in a court.
While there are some things that soldiers do that need to be prosecuted, I can't in good conscience blast a man that is following orders when that is his duty. In war things are rarely black and white, but the government and the big brass tend to see in only those two colors. |
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HOWEVER, there is no question as to whether the van was moving towards the scene of the shooting. At some point or another it had to be. Thats where it got shot up. I think it was you that missed Dunedans point. Summary: Big guns make big noise. It doesn't matter which direction the van was traveling at the time of the shooting, or if it was even in motion at the time. What does matter is the van's proximity to the scene of the shooting. As the van arrived on scene roughly 2 minutes after the shooting, one can surmise that it was pretty darn close and would have been aware of the gunfire. |
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http://chazdrums.files.wordpress.com...dead_horse.jpg I'm done with this thread. To all: no hard feelings. |
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"this land is mine" "no! it's mine!" "I disagree so I'm going to tell these people I pay to shoot the people you pay" Ever play chess? Many of the pieces have much more relevance and importance in carrying out strategy and winning the conflict, but fuck those guys, it's the king that matters. Quote:
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Why is this your 1st reaction? You're only making my case against the military think-tank process by admitting you were previously enlisted yourself. In fact you're not the only enlisted to jump my ass about my views, but you know what? not a single fucking one of you bother to ask me to explain, you instantly jump in to hostile mode and it's up to me to act the part of being civilized and making the peace, enlightening people that knowledge, acceptance, negotiation, compromise and a more selfless vision of the future is all I'd rather focus on in the grand view of humanity in 10,000 years. I am by no means a perfect representation of the human I'd like to see in everyone, but I would sure as hell try to opt for the more peaceful path, not only in conversation, but physical manifestation. The military trains people to kill other people, then tells them to go kill other people.They do it because if they don't, they get thrown in prison amongst other things. Soldiers are not civilians, they don't get the freedom to say "no, I don't want to fight, I just want the paycheck" Regardless of the many other things the military does. I'm not just slamming the U.S. Military here, I'm slamming pawns in general from any nation. I understand the concept of nationalism from an economic standpoint, being the mess that it is anyways, I've never really understood it from a conflict perspective though. how does drawing lines that defines "which people I can kill, vs which people I will protect" serve humanity as a whole? Everyone standing in that circle is my friend, everyone outside of it? We'll just wing it. Yeah I know I come across like an unrealistic peace sign flinging hippy but guys.. War is just an ouroboros, the cycle won't break, the chicken & egg shit has been done to death on this, the point is even with all the hyperbole of "we'd all be speaking another language" (which btw, why does it really matter?) the point is, as an individual, I think it's rather clear that the function of the military is to kill. Knowing that, if you enlist, you're a pawn to that directive even if you were hoping not to kill anyone, because they can stick you in a sandbox halfway across the world in a situation where you have no choice but to comply or suffer the fate of being killed yourself by the other team, who, ironically, might just so happen to be in your shoes. Whether a US soldier dies, or an insurgent dies, it changes nothing, it's the idea, the motive, the will, the reason... that needs to die. The idea that killing a couple hundred thousand people here and there makes you "right" in the global theatre of things. Anyways, I don't spit on people who serve, I have friends who currently serve, the military does offer a compelling lifestyle in financial incentives, education, and travel experiences to people who feel hopeless to attain the status via civilian methods, but it doesn't mean that everyone who joins is gambling on a better life vs hoping they don't have to kill someone. Man don't take my word for it, even the recruiters try to go after kids who would join gangs by telling them that the military is the biggest gang in the world. So again, it does not surprise me, it disappoints me. Is that clear? I swear to god, you act like I kicked your puppy with this barrage of over-reactionary responses I just had to deal with. |
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That's sort of the problem with this entire war. There are no clear cut enemies. They don't wear uniforms and have bombs strapped to their bodies or rpgs under their clothes. It's not like they're walking around in red British uniforms saying "we're really the bad guys, go after us".
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this is a colonial occupation. the occupier is by definition in an adversarial relation to the population as a whole, which typically resists being occupied through all kinds of means some formal or overt-to-violent, many more diffuse. the problem is being in the position of a colonial occupation force. there is no good way to be in that place. the bush administration should never have placed the military in that position. such occupations, particularly this one, are a structuring crime from which others flow. and the situation brutalizes all sides, dehumanizes all sides. you could say that by the time that gunner is opening up on the crawling man, something of his humanity had already been taken from him by the situation of being part of a colonial occupation.
but this is not news. this is what enables the israel/palestine dynamic to unfold as it has. (there's a whole long glorious european history dehumanization and brutality beyond that.) so this isn't just any combat situation. and it really makes no sense to float versions of the "shit happens" defense simply because the first move that "shit happens" entails is a bracketing or putting aside of the simplest fact of the matter: the americans are a colonial occupation force in iraq and this is the kind of situation that colonialism opens onto. the solution is to get the fuck out of iraq. |
everyone knows what the solution is, but until the murderers who hold the purse make that order, it's a bit pointless isn't it?
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Previous assessment still applies. |
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that's a nice photo, mister 9.
why is it here? |
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just asking.
this is a strange thread. it keeps moving back and forth over the same divide. then photographs show up. http://www.obscurantist.com/images/plan9_terriennes.jpg |
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well, since we're looking at photographs, perhaps you'd also like to see some by namir noor eldeen, who is the unarmed photographer you see being killed by Heroic Americans.
Remembering Namir Noor-Eldeen - Lens Blog - NYTimes.com the photographs are remarkable. the defense of the killing by michael kamber kinda noxious in that ethical black hole kinda way that seems to take shape when the real issue is not what you see or hear but what you want to believe about folk you empathize with (or don't as the case may be). for what it's worth, that's what i see the thread as too often devolving into: a matter of conflicts between people who place their empathies in different relations to the video clip and what these respective placements entail for what one is willing or able to interpret. |
I find it rather sardonic that the term "Heroic Americans" has now popped up. I also find it to be highly insulting. Nobody in this thread has said that the people in the Apache were heroes for the actions that took place. Nobody that I have seen has said that they don't empathize with both groups in this incident. Taking this conversation to that level undermines your own argument rb.
All that has been said is that Namir was collateral damage in this incident and while there is still a lot to the story that we don't know yet, I cannot fathom why anyone would attack people who are involved in a war they don't even want to be in. The shitty part of the reality is that they signed the service papers and they have no other choice but to do what they are told. No is not an option for these men. Along those lines, nobody is sitting here saying that soldiers get it right 100% of the time. The fault for me, lies with the idiot and his men who declared this war necessary. The other fact of the matter is that those men in the video and countless others who are other there right now have it much worse than I'll ever have. They get ripped from their families to take a bullet for man who wields a pen, they get divorce papers, they come back in body bags or they come back to a country that hates them for their service instead of hating the men and women who put them over there to begin with. I think at the end of the day, there is no right or wrong to this discussion. Both sides are tragic, which is why it would make more sense for the people to push harder for the agenda that they really want and to force the kings who hold the power to follow the demands of the people. The military is just an easier target.. which is another tragedy in itself. |
Shit happens,
If you expect soldiers to wait until they are 100% zero-defect certain they will be killed long-before the results are in. Nobody intentionally kills civilians, but it happens. Also, when a fight kicks off one of the discriminating factors is whether people are maneuvering towards the fight or away from it. These things are not quiet, and no sensible person will run towards one unless they intend to be involved in some form or fashion. After being friendly is ruled out and barring any additional information that leaves bad-guys. Unfortunately the reporters were displaying the same pattern of behavior that would be expected of an insurgent. |
the reason for going in that direction is pretty simple: the tendency in the thread amongst folk who defended the americans to treat the people killed under the rubric of abstractions like "collateral damage" or "unfortunate side-effect" while at the same time doing as you do--going on at some length in an empathetic story about the hardships endured by the americans--how one cannot know, how hard it is on them to be a colonial occupation force.
and it is. it has to be. colonialism degrades everybody. it doesn't particularly matter what folk say when they're confronted with something like this, because usually in being confronted they recognize the point and are already moving past it, making it go away or addressing it (sometimes these are the same, sometimes they aren't). and taking things in that direction was a matter of chance: i happened to run across this collection of namir noor eldeen's work. and looking at the images drove home the gap that separates the abstraction who is killed as "collateral damage" from the human being who was shot up by these people in a helicopter by mistake. and it added a bit more perversity, as if any was needed, to the audio in the clip. like i say, colonialism degrades everyone and every thing. it'd be good if people from the bush administration were made to stand trial for this debacle. if it weren't for the project for a new american century, none of this would have happened. |
the term collateral damage does not mean that those of us here who are stating it as such can't make the connection that another needless person is dead because of a power hungry fiend who wields a pen and an oil company.
I'm angry that the Bush administration put not only our sons and daughters at risk, but the iraqi sons and daughters and the afghani sons and daughters at risk. No matter how angry I am though, I still personally cannot in good conscience degrade a man who took an oath to the service of our country and is merely performing the actions he is instructed to perform. I also cannot in good conscience degrade a man for using his skills with a camera for being in the area and being gunned down. I empathize with both parties on this, but again, at the end of the day, the term collateral damage still applies and the sad fact is that the government officials that wanted this to happen don't care about collateral damage. They only care about lining their pockets and satisfying their own prideful indulgences. http://www.newsgroper.com/files/post...8017624(1).jpg Keep crying mother fucker.. your tears earn you no sympathy. |
great, I get mocked, insulted & what have you, instead of returning fire.
You were give an opportunity to explain yourself or apologize and instead you chose the least intelligent response on the internet of "TLDR" I'm not impressed. Still gonna go with my assessment that you're part of the problem, not part of the solution. |
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great find cynth. i think this article covers a lot of issues and stances covered here
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the last statements made by McCord...those are the most telling to me.
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