11-27-2006, 10:15 PM | #1 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Support our troops....
Okay, this is a tough one. We've been reading "Support our Troops" bumper magnets for 3 or 4 years now. We've heard it as a middleground between pro and anti war up until very recently, whether it be the I support our troops, so we need to be in Iraq rhetoric or the I support our troops, so we need them home rhetoric. I'm sure we all know someone, are related to someone, or even are someone who has served in the military. It's recently become a very heated subject due to the vast polarization and also prison, torture, and rape scandals. Our troops get injured, lose limbs, or even lose their lives.
So here we go: Do you support the troops? Yes: why, and how do you support them? No: why, and why not? I don't know: what makes you think twice? I'll start. I know that the US never really had any business being in Iraq in 2003. Saddam had been steadily losing power for over a decade, he had goe back and fourth between being open with the UN inspectors and being an arrogant asshat. The question of whether he had weapons kept being brought up again and again. It was clear that under Clinton, Iraq would be bombed, but never invaded. We sanctioned, killing an unknown number of innocent people that had nothing to do with the invasion of Kuwait. The 9/11 happened, and Bushco took advantage of our patriotism. Iraq was invaded based on either falsified or massively incorrect information. Many civilians died in the "Shock and Awe" campaign. We invaded claiming that Iraq had not abandoned the UN resolutions, even though we had no real connection to the situation besides being a member of the UN. The US was never really in any danger. The whitehouse claimed that there was a link between Iraq and the al Qaeda. There was, of course, no link. Our soldiers, the main portion of the Coalition Provisional Authority, took the brunt of the responsibility for keeping the peace after the "War" was declaired as a victory. That's when the insurgency started. Soldiers were attacked. Insurgents were attacked. Civilians were attacked. Children were attacked. The military wasn't sure how to deal with the problem. Prisoners were heald without trial, because as we weren't technically at war, they were not POWs and were not subject to the Geneva Convention. They were tortured. Innocent people were incarcerated. It was covered up pretty well until some very immature and bad soldiers took some very disgusting pictures that were leaked to the media. Suddenly the "support our troops" standby line wasn't so simple. Kidnappings. No trials. Humiliation. Torture. Coverups. Accedental killings. Murders. Rapes. IMHO, the soldiers are like a cross section of our society. There are brave people, there are smart people, but there are also cowards and idiots. A lot of very smart people have weighed the moral implications, then they have made an informed decision whether to continue serving or to leave. Some have stayed, some have left. Those are the troops that I support. Some, however, simply serve. They follow the party line and they do whatever they're told. Shooting guns and driving tanks is fun, and damn the consequences because it's a party. Then reality sets in and fun is replaced by anger. These are the troops I don't support. Those who say that they are in Iraq to protect our freedoms, as if lining the pockets of our rich is somehow saving our freedom of speech. They say that torturing detainees (we can't call them POWs) is saving me from terrorism, even though any expert trained in psychology could explain how useless intel from torture is completly unreliable. I cannot support them. I'm sorry, I know they think they're risking their life for me or for some high ideal like liberty or justice, but that's just not the case. I'm sure some might say that I'm not a soldier so I can't understand. Well I've made a lifetime commitment before. I've been shot at. I've defended people from danger. I'm an active member of the ACLU, the anti-war movement, and the impeachment movement. I vote at every opportunity, and have done so since I turned 18. I do serve my country in the way I think serves it best. Also, I'd like to apologize if I offended you, NCB. I am very opinionated, that's the way I've been since I was a sophmore in HS. Sometimes my big opinions piss people off. I never set out to disrespect someone, just to speak my mind. Sometimes I do both. |
11-27-2006, 11:55 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Artist of Life
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I'm borderline "Yes" and "I don't know." Usually its the leaders of our forces that I have a problem with. That and trust.
I see troops as people, mainly because they are. This makes it difficult since there will always be those people who are dishonorable, misguided, unaware, and sometimes sadistic. While, on the other hand, there are also those who uphold proper conduct, refuse to blindly follow their commanding officers, are proactive, have a conscience, ect. It takes trust to support our troops, which is something I don't give out lightly, if at all. So while I mainly support our troops, its very hard to do with that lack of trust. |
11-28-2006, 05:24 AM | #3 (permalink) |
Addict
Location: Spring, Texas
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A very good OP. Lots of good insight and as always Will, I love that you are one of those who think and research before you say something.
Personally I support our troops, unconditionally. Whether I believe in what they are there for or not, whether I support the reason for them to be there or not, I support them by wishing them well, welcoming them home when they come, sending care packages periodically, and always taking time to talk to any of their families that are here, waiting for them to return. While our opinions differ Will, I hope that you will agree with me that even if they don't like why they are there, or WE don't like why they are there, we should ALWAYS let them know that their Country loves them, and hopes for a safe return from duty. You and I DO have a big difference in opinion when it comes to the military. Personally I know, from experience, that if members of the military do not follow orders, liked or not, people die. We may not agree with the orders given, but in MOST cases (remember, I said MOST cases not all), unless the order is illegal, and I don't mean in the MORALITY sence, but the LEGAL one, i.e. UCMJ laws, orders must be followed. Period. The members of our military CANNOT be afforded the luxury of picking and chosing what orderes to follow, and what ones not too. The moment you hesitate to decide if the order is the right one, someone may die, and USUALLY itwinds up being a friend, or worse, yourself. Now I am NOT saying that we should be ther, personally I have on MANY occasions expressed my dissatisfaction with how things were done. But we can't just let the military pick and choose. If you don't like the order, and you think there is something immoral about it, then afterwards, voice your opinion. I don't care what people say, I have seen morality orders questioned after the fact, and NOBODY was ever chastized for bringing it up. It happens all the time. Now if you know that an order is ILLEGAL in the UCMJ, then you CAN refuse the order, and even as an enlisted person, you can arrest the officer giving the order. Of course you better hope you can prove it, but thats another thread right there. Whatever your viewpoint, we should ALWAYS let ALL of the troops know that we care. Otherwise, why should they fight for us EVER?
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"It is not that I have failed, but that I have found 10,000 ways that it DOESN'T work!" --Thomas Edison Last edited by Deltona Couple; 11-28-2006 at 05:28 AM.. |
11-28-2006, 05:33 AM | #4 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Tobacco Road
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I'm going to say that this poll is pretty much going to come down political lines, as well as whether or not someone (or someone's spouse) has actually served. Yeah, I know, a real Capt Obvious there
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11-28-2006, 06:19 AM | #5 (permalink) | |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
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I support the individuals our country has in the military. I fervently hope for their safety and their expedient return home. I am vocal in my opinion that they are being used as pawns in an unjustified war. I am furious with the political apparatus that needlessly put them in harm's way. Now: just because they're in the military, does that give them a free pass on all behavior? Of course not. There are Lynndie Englands in the world. It's not a surprise that they show up in the military. There are lots of reasons a person might join the service--noble notions like honor and patriotism are great, but I suspect more people are in the military for what they can get out of it: the training, the education assistance, and in some cases the opportunity to play out aggression and violence that they can't do legally at home. I believe and hope that the latter category is a vast minority. All the military people I know personally (and I know several) are above all professional adults, competently trained and capable of accomplishing any job they're given. I have the highest respect for them. What I find really regrettable is the way "you don't support our troops" has become a political club. It seems like the days of using that accusation against anyone who questions the war are over--the tide has turned so thoroughly on the war that criticism of the policy is generally accepted to be valid. But for a couple years there, any questioning of the war or its motivations meant you were a treasonous non-troop-supporting terrorist. |
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11-28-2006, 08:11 AM | #6 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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Very very simply put from a veteran, I support and will always support our troops, those that are active and those that served their time.
Do I support this war? No. When I signed into the Navy, I did so for one purpose to protect and serve MY COUNTRY, not someone else's. To this day, if my country needs me I will serve in any way I can. But I can not go and fight and possibly die in a country that our leaders, 1) lied to us for the reason we are there, 2) fight in a country where they do not want us, and 3) fight in a country while leaving our own borders unsecured. What is going on in Iraq meets all 3 of those criteria I am against. We can not afford this war, our troops are not international police, we should not ever go into a country simply because we do not like their leadership, and we should not be in a country where they had no true way to threaten our safety. All this Iraq war did was divide the world and make us look horrid. It did nothing in making us safer, if anything it made us even more vulnerable and gave fuel to our enemies to recruit more people. North Korea and Iran have laughed at us, have built up their nuclear programs, have threatened us and we sit in Iraq for reasonings only a mad, egomaniacal, little man with a Napoleonic complex can truly believe.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" |
11-28-2006, 08:40 AM | #8 (permalink) | |||
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I also consider that those troops, of another generation, were in signifigant numbers, drafted involuntarily into military service. US troops today who do not question and resist immoral or illegal orders, are part of an "all volunteer" force, and should reasonably be held to a higher standard of humane, legal, and moral conduct. The still small, (when one takes into account a concerted DOD and Bush admin. effort to distort and conceal this sensitive and damning information)....but steady stream of information about abuse of Afghani and Iraqi residents is indicative of my suspicions that not much has changed since the Vietnam war. I'm posting the entire LA Times Aug. 6, 2006 article here, because I am not convinced that the information contained in it has elicited a reaction commensurate with what it tells us, if we choose to seriously consider it. Instead, the reaction seems to be, over and over....one of denial and or downplaying what we should have learned, by now. Some of your statements remind me of the plot of the <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107048/">movie</a>, "Groundhog Day" . US troops are members of a professional fighting force. IMO, we must give them credit and hold them responsible for discerning what is a bullshit, illegal, pre-emptive "war of choice", and what constitutes fighting a direct and imminent threat to our national security. Maybe not on day one of any given conflict that they are ordered to participate in, but surely when the fight is a thousand or more days old, as this phoney, GWOT now is. The acceptance by many of "our troops" of the bullshit that Saddam's Iraq was somehow, "behind the planning and execution" of the 9/11 attacks is too pervasive and too ingrained to be an anomoly. It would seem that too many troops want to believe this crap. IMO, this is a mitigating circumstance that puts even more pressure on them to behave honorably, but instead seems to be a deliberate excuse for refusal to question illegal orders that originate from a US CIC who is himself, a war criminal, guilty of the cardinal Nuremberg trial sin; instigation of aggressive war against a sovereign nation. I think Deltona.....that you are somewhere between a "one and a "two" on the "scale" described in the immediately following quote box. I think that the only way we can hope to stop the unfolding repeat of what happened in Vietnam.....happening again now, in Iraq and in Afghanistan, is for all of us to be closer to "threes". We have no hope of avoiding the circumstances that our soldiers of today, now find themselves in, if we cannot even sincerely deal with what US soldiers did to the people of Vietnam, and what the small slice of information reaching us since late 2001, indicates that they might be doing to the people of Afghanistan and Iraq. When it comes to who we vote for and the use of military force that we support, we are all in the same shoes as our soldiers. When we embrace the idea of reflexively letting them "off the hook", no matter what orders they decide to unquestioningly follow....issued by the flawed politicians who we have supported....isn't this all really a "game" of letting ourselves "off the hook"? It will only stop when each of us adult Americans, in uniform, or in civilian clothes, finally says ENOUGH !! and works towards ending the depraved cycle of US involvement in armed conflict that does not reach the threshold of neccessary to counter an imminent threat to our national security. Quote:
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11-28-2006, 09:06 AM | #9 (permalink) |
Tone.
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Host, when we talk about the troops as a collective unit, we can still support them while not supporting the few individuals who commit atrocities. To say otherwise would be no different than saying "I saw a black guy rob a convenience store once, so all black people are criminals." I don't think anyone on here supports the atrocities that individual soldiers have committed, but I also don't think that the rest of the soldiers, who are innocent, should have to suffer for those atrocities.
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11-28-2006, 09:07 AM | #10 (permalink) |
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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Support the troops. Support. The. Troops.
Hmmm...lemme tell you something. Putting a $2 yellow magnetic ribbon on the back of your SUV is not supporting the troops. Give the lip service a rest. I grow weary of it. You really want to support the troops? You really want to actually get up off of your ass, and actually do something about it? In fact, I challenge everyone here, that says that they support the troops, to call, write, or e-mail thier congressmen, and thier senators, and demand that the VA is adequately funded. It's quick. It's simple. Hell, you don't even have to break a sweat. But, if everyone that ever said; "I support the troops.", or put a yellow magnet on their car, would do that one simple act of support, then there would not be a one year wait for returning vets, some of which are returning with fewer body parts than we sent them over there with, to see a VA doctor. How about if everone that ever displayed ('cause I don't see a whole lot of 'em, anymore) one of those ribbons, were to donate an amount double the cost of the ribbon (you paid $2 for your ribbon, then you donate$4) to their local veterans organization. VFW, American Legion...what have you. Or...if you're eligible...join. It's not just an old man's drinking club.
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. Last edited by Bill O'Rights; 11-28-2006 at 09:28 AM.. |
11-28-2006, 09:08 AM | #11 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Really, truely facinating reads, Host. I hope that we are able to get a realistic scope of what's going on in Iraq eventually, before history is rewritten.
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11-28-2006, 09:15 AM | #12 (permalink) |
Psycho
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As with all sound bytes this is a loaded issue. There are two real questions we have to ask. What does 'support' mean? And what is meant by 'our troops'? I think any debate really breaks down into a symantical argument over what these terms mean.
So, as for me, if support means unquestioning affirmation then I say no. If it means wish them well then I say yes. As for our troops, if that means the individual people serving in general then yes. However, if it means the overall structure and institution of 'our troops' then no. Also if it means all troops without exception then no, since I will not stand behind those troops that unjustly take life, rape, or abuse. To sum up then, I don't want any of the individuals sent overseas for war to come to harm and I will actively do what I can to protect them and help them do their jobs, however I will not turn a blind eye to the activities of some troops that I feel act contrary to the general principle I just stated or basic human decency. I further, will not support a policy, institution, or administration that I feel act contrary either. I support the troops in my prayers for their well being, in my votes to elect officials I think can best handle the situation they are in, and by exercising the rights I feel they are risking their lives for. I think a more accurate question is 'What does supporting our troops mean to you?'. I think that would more accurately present a balanced sentiment towards our feelings on this issue, but maybe that is just me.
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"The courts that first rode the warhorse of virtual representation into battle on the res judicata front invested their steed with near-magical properties." ~27 F.3d 751 |
11-28-2006, 09:31 AM | #13 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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"support our troops" was floated as a political meme from the outset.
i dont know folks, bt to my mind you'd have to have been blind not to recognize that. it has nothing to do with meaningful support of anything, really: on this pan and bor are exactly correct. it was one of those wedge memes designed to split those who supported the bush people from those who did not, and which functioned to displace debate away from the myriad political problems attending the iraq war to something else, something dispositional and abstract. in itself, it means nothing. functionally, it was a pretty effective little meme, and the residuum of its effectiveness is playing out across this thread. functionally, it meant: if you focus on the people being sent into disaster, if you feel for them, then it follows that you have to see any situation into which they are sent as legitimate (otherwise people would die for nothing, and that is not acceptable)... have fun squaring that one in november 2006.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-28-2006, 09:53 AM | #14 (permalink) | ||
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Location: Tobacco Road
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If you really want to support the troops, give to them. Here are a few orgs that help. Do what you may with them http://www.christmasbibles.org https://www.treatsfortroops.com http://soldiersangels.org Oh, and here's one for will www.pissonthem.org
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11-28-2006, 10:36 AM | #15 (permalink) | |||
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Location: Spring, Texas
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I find it somewhat humorous that the article you referenced was all based on atrocities during the Vietnam war, not the current war. The military has changed much since that time. The people choosing to enlist are different, usually better educated than those of that time as well. I am not saying that the things that happened then are not happening now, but in todays military, they are MUCH lower in number of incidents, and if you read the news as often I you appear to, you would know that these things are being brought out to light, and those responsible ARE being punished for their crimes. This STILL does NOT suggest that we shouldn't support our military men and women! In the same sense you could by analogy say that if you found 3 or 4 bad apples on the tree, you should cut the whole dang tree down....it is just absurd to think that way. War sucks for everyone directly involved, plain and simple, it sucks. But that doesn't mean we should abandon ALL our troops support because of the way we despise our leader(s). Quote:
You paint me by your post as a warmonger, and this is not true. You show me a world without wars, without conflict, without crime, and I will gladly lay down my arms and live peacefully. I don't WANT to go to war, I don't NEED to go to war, but if I am called to duty, I will serve my country, because I love my country, and I love everyone in it. I served so that you and yours CAN choose to voice your opinion, you CAN choose to have the liberties afforded to you. You have those rights because men and women like myself are willing to go where needed, and when needed. The war in Iraq IS ridiculous, and yes, we should bring our troops home. We have no valid reason to be there, but REGARDLESS I will ALWAYS support our troops WHEREVER they go. THAT DOES NOT MAKE ME A WARMONGER...It makes me a loving countryman and patriot! Quote:
As I have said to WillRavel before, I am not as eloquent or well worded as he is, and from your text, I am probably not as eloquent as you either, however I still believe in my convictions. I have seen things in combat that would probably make most of the people on this forum lose their lunch. I have seen first hand the way the news and media twist some things that happen to "sell" their news, while crucifying innocent men in uniform. It is unfortunate in all aspects.
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"It is not that I have failed, but that I have found 10,000 ways that it DOESN'T work!" --Thomas Edison |
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11-28-2006, 11:54 AM | #16 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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I suppose I support the men and women in the military the same way I support anyone. There are a lot of things in this world that I don't like, lots of livelihoods and ways of life that I, personally, do not agree with. But to say that I do not support those who chose as such, whatever that means, I think everyone would agree is ridiculous. Why should I demarcate those who choose to serve in the military and support or not support them? I wish them all the best and hope they come home safely. For whatever that means and whatever good it does.
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Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
11-28-2006, 03:19 PM | #17 (permalink) | |
spudly
Location: Ellay
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In fact, I think that the idea that the Iraq war is unequivocally illegal is naive. You may argue that the war has been waged in a criminal way (possibly) or that its moral or ethical basis was fundamentally flawed from the beginning (probably), but the idea that existing UN resolutions allowed for the use of force has enough traction that the idea would be tied up in any judicial proceeding for a long, long time. In this case, the legal bar may have been set far below the ethical and moral ones. That doesn't render the bars interchangeable. P.S. Just because we haven't learned all of the lessons of the Vietnam War does not mean that we are repeating our mistakes in their entirety. P.P.S. Nice thread willravel.
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Cogito ergo spud -- I think, therefore I yam Last edited by ubertuber; 11-28-2006 at 03:24 PM.. |
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11-29-2006, 12:56 AM | #18 (permalink) | |||
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What you describe as a "recipe for quick anarchy", is the process of soldiers reasoning....on the spot, sometimes....whether what they are ordered to do, conflicts with their sworn oath.....detailed in the second quote box, below. You leave me with the impression that there is nothing a soldier can do, in real time, to prevent a war crime from happening, or to avoid complicity, if he is ordered to participate in a plot to commit, or in commission of what he should reasonably know to be a war crime or a serious treaty violation. Your stance seems to leave no option to avoid following orders to commit illegal acts, at the time that the opportunity to avoid or to try to prevent the commission of these acts occurs. Let's review where soldiers currently serving in Iraq, are at. Allegedly, 80 percent of them back Mr. Bush, politically, and a majority of them believed, as recently as in Feb., 2006, that Saddam's Iraqi government aided the 9/11 hijackers or conspired with them to carry out the "airliners as missles" attacks on US domestic targets. I personally cannot respect soldiers who not only do not question their CIC...because I believe that he is a war criminal, along with other key officials in his administration, but who wholeheartedly offer their political support to him, and.....3-1/2 years into this war crime of an invasion and occupation, would still do anything that their CIC asks of them....even as they have allowed him and his psy-op propaganda machine to "fool" them into believing that the "fight" in Iraq is a bout "pay back" for 9/11, and about "fighting them over there, so we won't have to fight them here". I see the question of supporting troops possessed of such blind loyalty and unquestioning zeal towards their criminal CIC and his hopelessly warped and disingenuous mission, as akin to "supporting" a battered wife, who keeps re-admitting her abusive husband into their dysfunctional household, only to end up back in an emergency room for more sitiches or in a dentists office to repair the teeth knocked out of her head, yet again, by her violent, abusive, partner. How many rounds of arrest of the abusive partner, release and return to the home, and succeeding episodes of assault on the "victim", would it take before you lost respect, and withdrew support from the "victim"? I see no excuse, anymore. Where once, any soldier could point to support for war from nearly 90 percent of the American people, as a reason not to look deeper at what they were actually being ordered to do.....participate in the invasion and occupation of a distant, small, weak nation that had not attacked us, after their CIC, promised to obtain the neccessary resolution for the invasion from the UN, but then backed out of that promise, and ordered the invasion, anyway. I'm not saying that a soldier must mutiny as a condition for my support or respect, but I do require, as a condition, after the information available 3-1/2 years into this situation is considered, and it must be considered, if for no other reason, the fact that some of our military have been to Iraq four times, and because the security situation there still deteriorates, that the "firmness" of the unquestioning political and ideological support for Bush, and the justification for the price some of our soldiers have paid....the risks that they still are taking......shoe some signs of "softening". I don't buy the excuse that the military avoids politicizing "the mission", the evidence is that this has clearly not been true. The dissatisfaction, seen last spring by 18 former military commanders, aimed at Rumsfeld, must now be aimed where it should have rightly been aimed in the first place....squarely at Mr. Bush. So far, the biggest "mission accomplished" achievement of US soldiers in Iraq, seems to be the unification of Iraqi shi'a with their Iranian brothers. IMO. not worth American troops dying for, and past the time when at least some US soldiers should be reacting to that outcome....in the way that they vote, greet Bush when he uses them as "props" in his staged media events, and in their response to orders for 5th and 6th trips over to Iraq, and.....in their rates of enlistment, and re-enlistment! Uber....it seems neccessary to repost an excerpt of an article that roachboy and I have both already posted on these threads, since late spet., 2006: Quote:
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11-29-2006, 04:46 AM | #19 (permalink) |
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Location: Spring, Texas
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Again Host, you are making an ASSUMPTION that we are defending those who carry out unlawful orders. THIS IS A TOTAL FABRICATION. I am all for prosecuting war criminals. But you cannot go around and blindly call all orders given while in our current situation as illegal. Example: Assuming our current purpose of being in Iraq is illegal, a soldier is given the order to take his troops and patrol the base entrance, to not allow ANYONE on base that does not have a military ID, and to prevent any action taken against their orders. If someone attempts to enter base without first providing ID, and the above mentioned soldier gives the order to use deadly force, he DOES NOT HAVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE THE ORDER GIVEN. If he were to refuse the order, and allow that person entry onto base, he is in violation of orders, and should be tried as such. In the same sense, I am NOT saying that he would be lawful to use deadly force on that person as well as say the 4 people sitting in the car behind them.
The law is NOT OPEN FOR INTERPRETATION AT THAT TIME. It is finite and is not to be questioned. You cannot CHOOSE to take action above what is ordered, nor are you to CHOOSE to take a lesser action because you feel that it would be MORALLY wrong to follow the orders. BUT AT NO POINT DO I EVER CONDONE TAKING ACTION ABOVE THE LAW! And I tell you, don't EVER think that I support someone doing that. You are using too wide of a brush to paint the picture here. I love how all these annalists sitting comfortably in their chair can "armchair quarter back" what is going on over there, and soooo many people can just sit there and agree with them. Are you over there? do you see with your OWN TWO EYES what is going on? Then stop accusing our military men and women of "blindly" following orders. They are in it, they live it day in and day out! Just because you feel like many others that we are not justified to be there, doesn't mean you have the right to sit back and accuse every troop over there of committing war crimes. I have ran out of time to go on, I'll add more later.
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"It is not that I have failed, but that I have found 10,000 ways that it DOESN'T work!" --Thomas Edison |
11-29-2006, 04:59 AM | #20 (permalink) |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
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A question for both of you, both for my own clarification, and to bring some focus to what I believe Host is trying to say.
Let's say I'm a soldier whose unit is ordered to Iraq. Let's say I believe our country's presence in Iraq is illegal. Is my order to ship out to Iraq therefore illegal? If so, what should I do? |
11-29-2006, 05:07 AM | #21 (permalink) |
Mulletproof
Location: Some nucking fut house.
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Strange how those little yellow magnets always get debated in posts like these. Still though somewhere in the back of my mind, I like to think that when people see one of them on the back of a vehicle, that perhaps they think of, or say a prayer for someone like my son. Then again I'm biased and think of my son every minute of every day and don't need the magnets as a reminder.
BTW, NCB's suggestion to send things to the troops is a good one. Hygiene products are just as welcomed by these men and women as snacks and candy. We send DVDs when we send packages. After the movies are watched, they get passed around from Marine to soldier to Marine and back again until it is unwatchable. http://marineparents.com/ always has suggestions on what to send as well as the best way to send it.
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11-29-2006, 05:11 AM | #22 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Tobacco Road
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11-29-2006, 05:19 AM | #23 (permalink) | |
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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Seems pretty cut and dry, to me.
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. |
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11-29-2006, 06:17 AM | #24 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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I have to agree with ubertuber on this one. I don't think this war is a cut and dry case of illegal warmaking and, in my opinion, any effort to condemn ourselves from within takes away much needed attention on how we will work toward a solution to this mess.
Its also important to remember that the men and women in our military are our neighbors and fellow Americans. I'm not at all comfortable with our questioning the legality of simply being part of the military regardless of how popular the war is.
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Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
11-29-2006, 06:39 AM | #25 (permalink) |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
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So, NCB and BOR, you're saying that, having joined the military, I relinquish any rights I might ever had about objecting to any particular policy or initiative I might be used to further? That when I join up, I'm signing a blank check to be cashed however the administration and my superiors see fit?
(This isn't a trick question--I'm actually curious about how this works. And you're right, NCB, I don't have a clue how the military operates. Hence the questions.) |
11-29-2006, 07:21 AM | #26 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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war is a legal status attributed to a political state of affairs.
the state of war. being at war. it seems that state power is so constructed (by us, but we forget) that any war is necessarily legitimate except when it isnt. when is a war not legitimate? generally, it seems, a war is not legitimate ex post facto when you lose. in certain cases, after you loose, a court can be convened that retroactively delegitimates a war and thereby exposes to prosecution all the agents who acted within the bounded rationality shaped by the assumption that that war was legitimate. in the case of nuremburg, part of the problem was that the germans in particular had created real problems for the notion of nationalism by, well, going kinda far with it, and the allies liked nationalism, they relied on it themselves, just not the same kind of nationalism exactly, not precisely the same kind no, but close, in the same ballpark, the same sort of nationalism, but not exactly the same----so there had to be a process of bad apple naming and locating and there we have it. nationalism uber alles. huzzah. so it follows for example that genocide is only genocide when you loose a war involving "genocidal acts"--acts that one might argue tend toward genocide but which do not themselves constitue genocide. if you win, then there is no genocide. think manifest destiny instead. it is nice to have holidays that do and do not bring to mind that sort of thing, the non-genocide genocide particular to nation-states that do not loose the war. we gather together and eat tremendous amounts. thanks for not letting us loose, we do not say. but i digress. in the context of a "legitimate" war--that is of a legal status attributed to a political state of affairs--there are extensions of policy that unfold within a frame of reference that is taken by the actors as being necessarily legitimate. war involves killing lots of people and policy directives can be issued such that lots more of a particular category of people are killed than others and so it goes. the legitimacy of the war---the logical framework within which the various actions that unfold are oriented---at one level is decided by the actions of the state. so from the viewpoint of a military, any officially sanctioned action is necessarily legitimate because it is officially sanctioned. and any official sanction is legitimate. so in principle there is never any reason for members of the military to not follow orders because there can be no illegitimate war. there is the possibility of refusing to follow a patently illegal or unethical order. but there is no absolute position from which an order can be judged patently illegal or unethical. and the military itself operates within a bounded rationality that would tend strongly to exclude this kind of consideration. this is referred to as hierarchy, discpline, espirt du corps, that kind of thing. it is a problem. you would think that states would be very reluctant to deploy their military because the military is not a deliberative body and so exists to apply directives shaped by political decisions concerning state interests, those which are sanctioned by the legal category "state of war"...you would think that states would only deploy their military in situations where the basis for the action was unproblematic...like as a defensive move...a defensive move directed at an adversary who actually did what that adversary is accused of doing. in other words, you would think that states would not make shit up as the basis for deploying their military, wouldnt you? remember the maine. the gulf of tonkin. wmds. war on terror. and you would think that the political consequences of making shit up as the basis for a war would be quite dire, wouldnt you? that making shit up as the basis for war would be outside the limits circumscribed by immunity from prosecution enjoyed by state actors. because would you not agree that the responsibility for all the damage, to all sides, inflicted in the context of a war without adequate justification would rebound onto the holders to state power who undertook that war? but this too would be ex post facto. sometimes afterward, a legal proceeding could happen that would retroactively declare a previous war to have been a problem. o you guys sholdnt have done that. that was bad. in real time, however, people die. and there is no legal basis for refusing orders like that which host outlines. but i would think that "supporting our troops" would extend to a demand that war not be undertaken for arbitrary reasons. that an administration be held to account for fabricating reasons to use the military. you would think that "support our troops" would entail not wanting to see the folk who are in the military placed in traumatic situations unless there is a clear and compelling reason to do so. i would think that "support our troops" would go way beyond simply sending folk in the military stuff....tho i suppose doing so is a good thing as the people who are charged with executing an irrational and unnecessary policy are not the ones responsible for making that policy, now are they? i mean, who is? ultimately, i would think that the people who politically supported george w bush are responsible for the iraq war and that the least they can do is send some stuff to those folk, since it was their political actions that resulted in the military being deployed to iraq in the first place, isnt it? i wonder how much stuff you have to send to the folk stuck in the increasing lunacy that is iraq to enable conservatives to forget that their political actions are directly responsible--are a condition of possibility--for the military being in iraq in the first place?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-29-2006, 07:29 AM | #27 (permalink) |
Crazy
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Yes ratbastid, when you join the military you VOLUNTARILY forfeit many of the rights that you then fight to preserve for others. You do NOT get to make a moral call on orders. Doing so can, has, and SHOULD result in criminal charges being made.
If the order given is UNLAWFUL, then you can refuse to follow it. However unless you can later prove that the order was unlawful you may still be charged with insubordination which is a CRIME according to the UCMJ. Militaries only work when all people are working as a single unit. Having orders run through EVERY moral compass that EVERY soldier has before being followed would destroy that cohesiveness. It's like any other organization, in order to function there can only be ONE leader, with several followers. I support our troops by sending out care packages, and writing to my Representative regularly asking him to support resolutions to shorten the amount of time soldiers are spending overseas, bringing every soldier home sooner. I had not thought to request more funding for the VA hospitals. I would love to support the idea of bringing them all home now and ending this farce, but we’re in to deep now to just stop. Though we do need to set up a timeline for getting out and getting home. I find it interesting that our government justified this war in Iraq by claiming the existence of WMD. North Korea has begun target practice with their WMD and I have yet to hear the call for arms issued by our president over this. If it looks like hypocrisy, it smells like hypocrisy, and it sounds like hypocrisy- what else can it be? Yes ratbastid, when you join the military you VOLUNTARILY forfeit many of the rights that you then fight to preserve for others. You do NOT get to make a moral call on orders. Doing so can, has, and SHOULD result in criminal charges being made. If the order given is UNLAWFUL, then you can refuse to follow it. However unless you can later prove that the order was unlawful you may still be charged with insubordination which is a CRIME according to the UCMJ. Militaries only work when all people are working as a single unit. Having orders run through EVERY moral compass that EVERY soldier has before being followed would destroy that cohesiveness. It's like any other organization, in order to function there can only be ONE leader, with several followers. I support our troops by sending out care packages, and writing to my Representative regularly asking him to support resolutions to shorten the amount of time soldiers are spending overseas, bringing every soldier home sooner. I had not thought to request more funding for the VA hospitals. I would love to support the idea of bringing them all home now and ending this farce, but we’re in to deep now to just stop. Though we do need to set up a timeline for getting out and getting home. I find it interesting that our government justified this war in Iraq by claiming the existence of WMD. North Korea has begun target practice with their WMD and I have yet to hear the call for arms issued by our president over this. If it looks like hypocrisy, it smells like hypocrisy, and it sounds like hypocrisy- what else can it be?
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~~^~<@Xera @>~^~~ "A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing." ~Erno Philips
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11-29-2006, 07:44 AM | #28 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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"The courts that first rode the warhorse of virtual representation into battle on the res judicata front invested their steed with near-magical properties." ~27 F.3d 751 |
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11-29-2006, 08:55 AM | #29 (permalink) | ||
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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Then that soldier has that right. However...that soldier had better make damn good and sure that he can make a convincing argument before a military courtmartial. Quote:
Look...I know that it's hard for a lifetime civilian to understand. It's hard to explain. But when I first got out of the Air Force, after eight years, to reenter civilian life, I had a huge culture clash when one of my subordinates flat told me that because he didn't feel like it, he just wasn't coming into work that day. That was most definately something that I was not accustomed to, and had to adjust to real fast. Are we coming to a time when soldiers are issued uniforms, boots, weapons, flak vests, helmets...and a full time personal attorney to take with him into combat?
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. |
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11-29-2006, 09:14 AM | #30 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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11-29-2006, 09:23 AM | #31 (permalink) | |
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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And...you act like the suspension of habeas corpus is unprescedented. Abraham Lincoln? Oh...wait...another Republican. Never mind.
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. |
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11-29-2006, 10:21 AM | #32 (permalink) |
spudly
Location: Ellay
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host:
You raise good points, and I'll do my best to show you how my thinking works. First off, I acknowledge the right and responsibility of soldiers, airmen, sailors, and marines to not obey an illegal order. However, I hold that in the scope of the oath taken by military members, this war is legal until found unconstitutional - and guess who does that. Not individuals, but courts. Here I am making a distinction between the order to go to war, which on its face is authorized by Congress, and illegal orders issued in a legal (or otherwise) context. In other words, you've got to go to Iraq. But when your superiors tell you to burn down civilian houses every time a soldier dies, you could probably disobey that order and get cleared later. I'm making this distinction, because Congress passed a vote authorizing the President to use force in Iraq. Until this authorization is found by a court to be unconstitutional, it is enough to render the war legal enough to prosecute on. Now your articles suggest that a savvy court challenge to Congress' authorization of force and the President's use of force would be an interesting proceeding to watch, but it just hasn't happened yet. I also continue to reject the idea that "the military" as a whole (and as distinguished from individual service members) has a right to refuse directives issued by the civilian government. A military that is not under the direct control of our civilian government is a de facto 4th branch of government, and a branch of government that has all of the guns gets to run the show - a la Pakistan. Ratbastid, I'm gonna side with BOR and say your hypothetical service member has to go to Iraq. The only ways out of it would be to contend that the order was given illegally (which would be hard to prove, since your initial orders are merely to report for duty there, not kill people or whatever), go AWOL (which is obviously not a legal alternative), or file for conscientious objector status. This last is the most plausible, however it requires that you are opposed to any and all war on moral or religious grounds. In other words, no, you don't get to pick and choose which policies you wish to uphold. It's a blanket deal. And filing for conscientious objector status in this case (because of a political opposition) would be a corruption of the purpose of the procedure. roachboy: Killer post. I think that "winning" a war wouldn't even absolve you of ex post facto findings of illegality and prosecution. Fantasize with me for a moment about a near future in which we secure Iraq, pacify all insurgents, and witness a stable, democratically elected government which gives us oil for free in perpetuity out of gratitude, and nearby nations salivate for democracy. This would be a successful outcome under any rubric I've heard. However, it would not eliminate a legal proceeding (or impeachment proceeding) alleging that the invasion was undertaken under false pretenses and in violation of Congress and the President's constitutional roles and our various Treaty obligations. Nor would it necessarily absolve military and civilian leaders of responsibility for war crimes committed in the course of a ethical and legal war. Kind of makes you wonder what would have happened if survivors of Yokohama had filed against McNamara and LeMay for the firebombings in Japan. Obviously this didn't happen, but I believe we now live in a world in which such a thing could happen.
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Cogito ergo spud -- I think, therefore I yam Last edited by ubertuber; 11-29-2006 at 10:28 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
11-29-2006, 10:43 AM | #33 (permalink) |
It's all downhill from here
Location: Denver
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I worry about our troops, which is probably not quite the same as supporting them. I worry for their safety.
As for all the popular methods of "supporting" the troops, I find them somewhat meaningless on anything other than a symbolic level. I don't see throwing money at them as support, and I don't see arguing in their favor as support. Their situation remains the same on the ground, regardless of what you or I do. They are still stuck there indefinitely, and there is still no defined, attainable goal set in place or them to achieve. Who they need support from is the people who put them there in the first place: the Bush administration. That is the only kind of support that will do them any meaningful good.
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Bad Luck City |
11-29-2006, 12:10 PM | #34 (permalink) | |||
Banned
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To everyone who cited the US military oath as justification to obey all orders; there is a fair rebuttal to your arguments, early in the second quote box in my last post.
Deltona Couple, I may have used "too wide of a brush to paint you with", and I apologize. We do agree on a number of things, but I think that you should consider that I am not demanding rejection of any order by a soldier as a minimum requirement of my support for their service in Iraq, or for that matter, in Afghanistan. I am only looking for a shift in the sentiments of too many of them...that they behave less like a "battered wife". (as in; thank you for the slap across my cheek, sir....may I have another?). They can do that by showing political support for Mr. Bush in lesser numbers, by reducing to a small minority the number of troops who believe that their "service" in Iraq is "payback" to Saddam for his role in the 9/11 attacks, by refusing to clap and cheer when ordered to assemble en masse to provide an audience for a Bush "media op"....props who appear at one of his speeches, or by questioning policy....by heaven forbid....voting for non-republican candidates in elections...., and by say....1/2 of one percent of them refusing orders to go to Iraq the first time, or the fifth time.....refusing to reenlist, refusing to enlist.... I guess it comes down to my reaction that it would be so much easier to "support the troops", if they didn't "seem", en masse, to "like the mission", so much. I react with revulsion to my perception of their unquestioning and unbridled "enthusiasm", for what they have been ordered to do in Iraq, and to an extent in Afghanistan. Am I the only one, who is familiar with, what I take to be a common expression among our troops....a bastardization of the new version of the Vietnam era mission, of "winning"...."hearts and minds"? For those of you unfamiliar with what some of our troops say of this "mission"....(does it matter much, if it is said in jest, or in all seriousness ?) <b>"hearts and minds" = "one in the heart and two in the head"</b>. Ubertuber, I think that you'll have to do better....you initially responded to my postings with very strong words... .....and roachboy, as usual, you "get it"....this post's for you..... <b>Was Goering correct in stating, in reaction to death sentence, that it was "only victors' justice", is that the level that some of you relegate our American society to, today?</b> Quote:
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11-29-2006, 12:19 PM | #35 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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11-29-2006, 12:59 PM | #36 (permalink) | ||
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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Would you have soldiers, that are actively involved in combat conditions, call for a "time out", while they consult with their attorneys over whether or not the orders that they have received are lawful under the Uniform Code of Military Justice? Or, do you suppose that every soldier, sailor, marine and airman on active duty should have a Juris Doctorate from an accredited law school? I understand that you have no idea of how the military operates, so let me help a little. When a soldier is given an order, by his Commanding Officer, it is expected to be carried out...immediately. There is no time alloted for debate. There are no calls to the Judge Advocate's office. The order is swiftly carried out.
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. |
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11-29-2006, 01:09 PM | #37 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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Fucking whoa, people. Ever hear of prejudicial discrimination? The vast majority of men and women in our military would never kill for fun or any other unjustified reason other than, perhaps, being afraid or overwhelmed. Sure there is bravado and morbid jocularity, but this is the same sort of thing that goes on in hospitals and police stations. It relieves stress. It doesn't mean that every person who says or laughs at these things is foaming at the mouth to kill. Hate this war, HATE IT!, I do, but for crying out loud, get a grip. You can't possibly be thinking this through to any logical conclusion about the ethical standards of our troops as a whole. Fucked up, horrible shit happens...it happens EVERYWHERE. It happens here in my hometown everyday and there's no war going on here. You can't take the actions of a few and use it to summarize the intentions of the whole. It is simple textbook bias.
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Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
11-29-2006, 01:11 PM | #38 (permalink) | ||
will always be an Alyson Hanniganite
Location: In the dust of the archives
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Talk about rhetoric. Have you never heard of gallows humor? It's what these guys use to keep themselves sane. And as far as killing without sympathy, empathy or remorse goes...I don't know about you, but I want the guy that's watching my back, in a hostile situation, to kill with no sympathy...no empathy...and I hope, no remorse. This comment disturbs me a bit... Quote:
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"I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires." - Susan B. Anthony "Hedonism with rules isn't hedonism at all, it's the Republican party." - JumpinJesus It is indisputable that true beauty lies within...but a nice rack sure doesn't hurt. Last edited by Bill O'Rights; 11-29-2006 at 01:14 PM.. |
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11-29-2006, 02:02 PM | #39 (permalink) | ||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Soldiers without remorse or morality are not soldiers, but weapons; souless machines that may do what they want whenever they want without being bogged down by conscience. That's wrong. That's the best way for people, be they innocent or guilty, to be murdered. Soldiers should be just and fair and honest and seek to protect the peace. My grandfather was a very proud Army officer, and he exemplified what I'm talking about. He fought bravely across the Pacific in WWII, he fought in Vietnam and Korea, but he was very clear that the US was wrong to be there and that not only would we regret the wars, but he would never be proud of a military that blindly followed orders. The military has the right to say no to the monkey in the oval office if they know that his orders will directly lead to endangering the US or our allies, or the Constitution. They would have been justified in saying "no" to the Iraqi War. Quote:
I have no idea when people started thinking it was necessary to remove your soul from the battlefield, but whenever that was, the soldier died and the killing machine was born. |
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11-29-2006, 02:55 PM | #40 (permalink) |
spudly
Location: Ellay
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Will, you are romanticizing past generations of soldiers. Pinkos, gooks, Nips, ragheads, camel jockeys, Japs, etc... They've dehumanized the enemy for this entire century and likely all the ones preceding it. Hell, look at the portrayals of Japanese civilians in the old Loony Toons cartoons. An enlightened war has yet to take place. I think the gallows humor BOR speaks of is two-fold: it is both a protection of the sanity (through disengagement) of people in inhuman circumstances, and it is a measure of the psychological damage already sustained by those conditions.
host: I am interested that you think I need to "do better", but I don't agree. I didn't disagree that soldiers et al have a responsibility to disobey orders that are unlawful to a reasonable person under the Constitution or UCMJ. However, even this can only be justified at your court martial, and in the face of murky water at the UN combined with Congressional authorization, the standard of unlawful to a reasonable person doesn't apply. Unlawful and unethical are completely different standards. If you are suggesting that the military has an obligation to disobey the directives of our civilian government (as it seems you may be doing), then I can only repeat that the idea is breathtaking in its shortsightedness. How many nuclear wars would we have started in the Cold War? (It's a trick question - the first would have been the last.) What would have happened at the Cuban Missile Crisis the Joint Chiefs could have over-ridden Presidential authority? If you think that I am suggesting that civilian authority or military war criminals are above the law (winners or losers) you are misunderstanding me. On the other hand, if you think that military service involves each soldier weighing the moral basis of policy (which is what you are talking about - not the legal basis for a specific order) then you are misunderstanding much more than just me. Also, I don't think including assessments of Bush and Goering as moral equivalents do your cause any good at all. There's a lot more to Goering's villainy than "a pack of lies".
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Cogito ergo spud -- I think, therefore I yam |
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support, troops |
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