06-28-2006, 02:43 PM | #41 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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06-28-2006, 02:46 PM | #42 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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stevo:
it's interesting to wander back in after moving and other such....thanks. i am not sure if arguments for immediate withdrawal are anything more than ethical arguments, really. if the war was launched under false pretenses--which it was--then....as a practical matter, i do not know enough about what is actually happening in iraq (none of us do...such is the nature of "information" about the war in the mainstream press in this degenerate post-thatcher world) to feel like i can make a coherent judgment about when to withdraw. i think ethically the americans are obliged to get out. but this administration is a bit--um---ethics challenged, and so. it is obvious that the americans have made quite a mess of things: it is amazing to me, however--really amazing--that the administration can and has used such evidence of its own incompetence as has surfaced to legitimate the war itself, brushnig aside the legion of problems that the false pretenses which they floated to justify it have and continue and will continue to generate.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
06-28-2006, 03:54 PM | #43 (permalink) |
Banned
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"My conclusion: I don't want to be wrong. I don't want to hold onto thoughts/opinions because that's what I've always believed. I want to use my time to listen, learn and form new conclusions. One way to do that is to challenge my own assumptions, to actively chase down the things I prefer to believe and subject them to a greater scrutiny BECAUSE I prefer to believe them."
Wasting your time reading Hosts posts will not guide you on your noble path....neither will suggesting to those that think differently than you regarding this "War on Terror" they have a thought process tantamount to that which gave way to slavery, and better yet the earth being flat. |
06-28-2006, 09:22 PM | #44 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Tell you what then, Matthew, I'll stop reading your posts, and you can stop reading my posts. I'll stop reading Ustwo's posts, and you can stop reading roachboy's posts. We can go on ignoraing anything that we disagree with until the only words you read are those that you already agree with. Then we will live in a world of pure, innocent bliss. No need to worry about being right or wrong, no need to question one's self, just the everpresent echo of our own voice.
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06-30-2006, 07:10 PM | #45 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Nowhere
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I just saw a movie last night, called "Why We Fight". One interesting part of the movie was interviews with the pilots who flew the stealth planes into Iraq, for the purpose of dropping bombs on a palace to kill key figures (possibly Saddam). These were the opening shots of the war, however - the bombs missed and hit nearby houses. The next morning, the casualties coming into the Iraqi hospitals were 100% civilian. In the interview with the pilots, it is clear they didn't have a clue as to what had actually happened to their payloads, and the most that they were struggling with morally was one pilot debating whether or not to tell his daughter that he thought the mission was to kill Saddam (which he seemed proud of).
It was pretty sad. Another pretty sad fact is that around 40000 civilians have died as estimated by media reports and the group that was published in the Lancet. The majority of the deaths of this war have been civilians. Children in school, moms, dads, friends of others. All dead. Many soldiers believe they are doing the correct thing, and believe the war is just. I disagree. |
06-30-2006, 10:20 PM | #46 (permalink) |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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To get back to the initial post, I disagree with the statement that politics is so partisan because the right and left just refuse to listen to each other's valid points. In fact, I believe the hightened partisanship is the result of a long litany of things, including high incumbency rates, an incompetent media (or outright liars like Fox News), and the most despicable, rule-breaking Republican leadership in the House and Senate. Oh, and that Bush fella's doing a heck of a job, too.
But the point of my post is this: the left has had to listen to the right's talking points for years. Fox News. The House. The Senate. The White House. It simply isn't that both sides talk past each other; rather, the right spins and spins and spins and the left has had to shout as loud as it can at a Washington that has utterly ignored any opinions that diverge even minutely from the right's positions. The fact of the matter is that much of the right has taken to creating its own facts and long ago departed from the quaint realm I like to call reality. I mean, let's take Iraq as an example as long as it is being debated here. Despite all evidence - and facts, and reality - to the contrary, several of the folks from the "right" here on this board have stated their beliefs that WMDs did/do exist in Saddam's post-1991 Iraq. Other folks on the "right" state - despite any and all evidence to the contrary - that those who wish for withdrawal "will not listen [to] reason, do not realize (or care) what would happen if we were just to pack up and leave tomorrow." What proof is there of this claim? I believe that those on the left have given the issue great thought. We obsess about this issue. We "bleeding hearts" care a great deal about what is best for this country and without a shred of supporting evidence are accused of not caring what happens to Iraq if we were to pull out. I can stand - in fact, encourage - debate over what our next step in Iraq should be. It's a complicated issue with a dizzying array of interests and difficulties to take into account. But to cut off debate by insisting that merely opposing the Bush administration's stance is to neither realize nor care what the consequences would be is simply unacceptable. And of course, we could mention other things: like how the media, despite Republican control of Washington, Fox News, etc., is at fault for delaying progress in Iraq and Afghanistan; how things really are improving in those two countries; how al Qaeda and Saddam were linked; how Saddam helped in 9/11; etc. I mean, the right wing lies outside this topic could span centuries to list (pick a topic, any topic). The point is, the left has a reputation for being boring policy wonks who study every detail of every proposal and equivocate when it comes time to choose a course of action. That stereotype is partially true. But liberals DO NOT miss the "good points" made by the right the same way the right misses the "good points" made by the left. That is simply not true.
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07-02-2006, 05:18 AM | #47 (permalink) |
Sir, I have a plan...
Location: 38S NC20943324
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Well, I might as well roll up my sleeves and wade on in.
1. Why we fight: Under the terms of the 1991 ceasefire, Iraq was obligated to give free and unfettered access to weapons inspectors, and to account for the dispossition and/or destruction of his WMD stockpiles which we knew he had (we kept the reciepts). He did not do this. The onus of action was on Iraq to preserve the ceasefire from the 1991 conflict. They did not do this, therefore it was legal for us to invade Iraq. Unfortunatly it was, as we have seen, not neccessary to invade Iraq. There was never a threat to us, regardless of what the initial posters military friend said (how would he know how close a weapon was to being nuclear capable, anyway). 2. Are the troops doing a good job: For the most part, yes. I'll even give it an emphatic HELL YES. What sucks is that that for all the good the military is doing on a small scale, the big picture keeps getting worse. We build schools, dig wells, pave roads, and stock hospitals, but every day more and more Iraqis are killed in sectarian violence. Iraq is less secure now than is has been since Hulagu, and it is the fault of a failed policy, not the military. 3. Immediate withdrawl vs. reinforcing failure: This is the 90th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme, and we are at it again. It is not feasable (politicaly) to cut and run, and it is getting less and less feasable to keep pouring our young men and women into the meat grinder with no foward progress being made. The cynic in me believes that we will declare victory a few months prior to the 2008 elections. Blah, this has all been rehashed a million times. The point is this: It does not matter what the military thinks.<p>It is not our job to like or dislike the mission, or to play cheerleader or protester. It is our job to carry out the orders of the President of the United States. <p> It is your job, as citizens, to decide if the mission is justifiable, and if it is not, make the neccessary changes.
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Fortunato became immured to the sound of the trowel after a while.
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08-02-2006, 04:06 AM | #48 (permalink) | |
Banned
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Recently, I traveled with my wife to a large U.S. military base to attend a ceremony that included the awarding of a medal for outstanding achievment, and promotion in non-comm rank, to her son, who serves in an elite unit in one of the branches of the armed services.
I have great respect for my step-son's effort and service, but....as usual, in talking to him and to other soldiers who he serves with, the following polls results seem to be "the norm": Quote:
It is much more difficult, to experience, "in person", dedicated U.S. troops, including our close relative, voicing these same "beliefs". One of my step-son's friends and fellow soldier, informed me that superiors briefed him with the satisfying info that the U.S. administration has not disclosed information about the success of ongoing military operations that would be of political benefit to it, so as.....he was told.....not to jeopardize futher progress. This "briefing" had the intended result, because it influences that soldier to regard the administration with trust and admiration, but it also seems to pull him into an "inner circle", where he enjoys being privy to "special knowledge" that you and I have no access to.....but that he cannot verify as authentic. We left our step-son and headed home....disturbed that the "spin" these troops receive, causes them to form inaccurate opinions and misplace their trust in a flawed and untrustworthy civilian command. The Harris poll results are just "icing on the cake"! |
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08-02-2006, 11:06 AM | #50 (permalink) | ||||
Banned
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(Note how Lt. Col. Ralph Kauzlarich "swiftboats" Pat Tillman and his family....because "christians" wouldn't ask so many questions. The military awards/promotion ceremony that I attended recently, began with a prayer that refered to "our father", and closed with a prayer that described my stepson and his comrades as "god's soldiers".) I live in a country where we are not told the true reasons for going to war, how the president and his administration handled, influenced, or reacted to pre-invasion Iraq intelligence, despite 3 investigations, in a country with one party rule and a "stacked" SCOTUS, a country where the military lies about the circumstances of a "celebrity soldier's" death, for purposes of political PR, complete with a "staged" and false....eulogy at the soldiers memorial service, and then posthumously awards him the nation's second highest medal for "valor", on the "reco" of a Colonel who knew that the valor "story" was false; a Colonel who subsequently smears the dead soldier's family because they aren't religious enough to swallow the lying bullshit that he and the rest of the military and civilian command spewed to keep them from asking questions about the circumstances of their son's death. Is that how you want me to be, stevo? Should I strap on "my god", and dumb the fuck down? Should I "glad hand" my step-son, wave the flag, and follow the POTUS, over a cliff? I practice the alternative.....the polar opposite to that "strategy", stevo. If they lied about their "poster boy", Tillman, what else are they lying about? Should I simply chalk it up to a "one time" aberration, stevo.....and blindly trust everything that they tell us, going forward? Is that your "game plan", stevo? The inspector general's "report" on the death of Pat Tillman, should be released next month....only 29 months after he was killed in April, 2004. Quote:
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Last edited by host; 08-02-2006 at 11:11 AM.. |
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