![]() |
1k
Well we have passed the 1k mark in Iraq. Over 1000 US soldiers have died. Please take a moment an pray for the soldiers who gave it all.
Then when your done also pray for those on the other side who have died. |
thanks for the "stop and think" reminder.
check and check. no matter our political stance, at least we're together in lamenting the loss of life. |
Sorry, can't pray to nothin'
But I can loathe the man who sent them there to die. |
Quote:
|
Every single one?
And, more or less, how many do you know personally? I suspect it might be a few less than the tens of thousands who are serving. Finally, don't the latest polls show that the majority of people now do not support the war? Simple, unbaited question. Mr Mephisto |
That's great Ustwo. Let's also not forget that they went through a gruelling training course that conditioned their mind for exactly the task they were assigned for. If I was trained for a mission, I'd be pretty disappointed if I was never deployed.
Now on the other side of the matter, there are those of us who are fortunate enough to have not had to fall back on a career in the military as our favorable choice. We are able to stand back and see the entire picture - not from the mouth of a few of our close friends - but from the collective response of an entire continent. While your military friends are being welcomed by the smiling faces of the Kurds, I get to read how every country in europe grows more and more impatient with our incompetent president. Oh I could go on... I'm at work though. |
I will be thinking about three of my friends in the Marines, two of whom are in training and the other about to go back for his second tour, and not one believeing they made the wrong choice or are not doing the right thing.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
smiling faces of kurds huh? sure, while 12 years olds are being sent with bombs in your direction. while the kid you've never seen is celebrating his first birthday while you're sleeping in a tent on the other side of the world. while your wife is lonely and worried sick she'll get a telegram each day. while your best girl gets tired of waiting and sends you a dear john letter that you read inbetween the incoming mortar rounds. you think you're more in tune with the situation than the soldiers whose lives are on the line? let's all shed a tear for halx and the papers he has to read. |
Quote:
Halx- That's a mighty narrow-minded response. I'm kinda surprised. I am "fortunate" enough... I've spent over ten years in IT, have made decent money and not had to worry too much. I enlisted just over two years ago now of my own free will. Not for money, or free college (though I am going back), but because I wanted to serve my country. I've always had good grades, I scored a composite 99 (percentile) on the ASVAB and could have been anything I wanted, but chose Combat Arms. And frankly, I believe I'm intelligent enough to see it from both sides. Personally, I'm not a fan of Bush. I also don't care much for Kerry. Regardless of what either says, both will bring more war upon us. I believe the "War on Terrorism" in it's roots is a valid and valiant effort. It has, however, run amuck and I understand that. The attack on Iraq, I believe, was a good thing. It may have been unfounded in it's "intentions" for WMDs, but alleviating Sadam from power was a good thing. As for the world at large, especially our "friends" in Europe... we're damned if we do, damned if we don't. So many coutries and people like to bash the U.S. for interevening and playing "Big Brother". But if something comes along and we take no action at all, we're suddenly heartless and cruel because we DON'T use our power and wealth to fix other people's problems. Hmmmm... that's real history my friends. Bush's biggest problem is that he's not a diplomat. Clinton probably could've done the same thing and had most of the world ecstatic about it. Bush is a bad speaker, a bad politician and a bad diplomat. *shrug* Vote him out... That's what our country is all about, right? Will this change things? Probably not. Do you believe that the U.S. doesn't face another attack if Kerry wins? Do you believe that we won't go to war with Syria or Korea in the next few years? Sure, we might not, but we very well may, regardless of our presidential outcome. And sorry, this isn't 9 weeks of Army Basic Training talking, it's 27 years of being an American citizen talking. Hopefully you can understand the difference and see that I'm not just a brain washed machine, and that some people do sit somewhere just off the fence to one side. Do things need to be fixed? Yup! But it takes time... be patient! |
*applaud irateplatypus*
Your post came during the midst of my reply. And you're absolutely correct! |
Quote:
That's funny, what about all the children who lost their parents on 9/11/2001? What about those innocent citizens? Frankly, I feel pity on the Muslim nations... they've been at war for HOW many hundreds of years? They don't know anything else. Besides, our fighters are over there, in an Army, faces to the world, those cowards hide in mosques and schools, behind women and children with masks on their faces, saying they do it for Allah?! WTF?!?!?! I'm sorry, I didn't realize it was shameful to show your face fighting for something you supposedly believe in. Those cowardly *edit* deserve every last bullet they eat. |
My friend just accepted a job as a network/systems admin on a military base somewhere in Iraq (contractor, not military), I will most definitely be praying for him and others that are "serving" our "leaders".
|
Quote:
That's odd, i always thought I was serving my country, not my president... *ponder* |
Quote:
What did the kids do to us? What did the old lady taking care of her 3 grandchildern do to us? The fact is there are a lot of innocent people in Iraq dieing by our careless raids. If you think every Iraqi that has died deserved it then you have serious issues. Simply going in with force isn't helping the problem at all. Every time we kill an innocent we bolster the ranks of the opposing forces. Ever time will kill an opposing force we do the same also. |
While prayer is not part of my life, I hope that if it is, you take a moment to pray for all of those who have died in Iraq. For those of us who are not particularly religious, it still behooves us to take a moment as well and think about the lives and opportunities lost due to war. It does not matter whether you are for or against this war, loss of life is a tragedy. It does not matter whether it is an American or an Iraqi. Also remember that in four days, we will have reached the 3rd anniversary of 9/11. Take some time to remember that as well.
|
Quote:
I don't think every Iraqi that has died deserves it... I think every militant who died has. The clerks and bankers and wives and mothers and fathers and husbands at the World Trade Center didn't "do anything" either. Yes yes, Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11. There are theories that bin Laden did receive money from Iraq, but that's neither here nor there. We bolster the ranks of the opposing force just by being us... by being Americans, by being free, by being Democratic, by being Christian,. by being friends with Israel... We didn't need to kill any innocent children to get attacked in the first place. *shrug* People have hated us as a nation for a LONG time. This is nothing new. Radical muslims and terrorists have also been killing innocents for a LONG time... just not in the U.S. I wonder if anyone has taken a global, historical view of everything that has led up to now. The fact that the U.S. USED force against any of it's enemies, perceived or otherwise, is not a shock to a lot of people that study such things. *shrug* I'm not really sure why Iraq not being involved in 9/11 has much to do with anything... we should've finished that fight off 13 years ago. We just had to come back for a rematch. |
Yes we should have, when we had the support of the world and the people of Iraq. But Bush senior locked us into a withdrawl before he left office.
|
Rekna, please look at my post again. I said I feel no pity for those FIGHTING our boys at this point in time. The last I checked, our soldiers aren't fighting innocent children. Yes, it is true that innocents die in wars, this is a fact of life. You live, and therefore you must die. It is sad to see people die so violently at such a young age, but there is nothing I can do to help. I am here, they are there. That is the way it is.
|
I'm waiting for the parades in the streets.
|
Sure, people, go ahead and get pissed off at me. You don't think I don't respect these soldiers? You're totally wrong. However, unlike you, I can look at the picture from a totally objective viewpoint. Sure, some people chose to give up their high-paying job to go over and fight the war. That's just not the case for the majority, though. Don't ever think you have some sort of point because you can think of a couple exceptions to a statement. I'm not here preaching law, just giving my opinion, and I don't have to be correct about 100% of the people I'm covering in a blanket statement to feel justified.
I respect soldiers and their will to do the dirty work for us. It's quite obvious that without them, I would not be allowed to be the asshole that I am today. HOWEVER, just because they feel they are fighting the good fight does not mean they are. Just because they find themselves buried in the ranks and experiencing the war from a first-hand point of view does not mean they are seeing the whole thing. So, hats off to the soldiers, for they are truely devoted men and I can respect that. It's a shame they have been mislead and falsely persuaded. |
Quote:
*Hypothetical statement |
I always find it odd when christians claim to mourn the dead.
I would think their religous tenets would allow them to be estatic--after all, aren't those men and women shooting on up to heaven to be with their Lord and Savior? And doesn't every death get the world closer to the endtimes--after all, isn't that what bush and other reborns desire? It must be an odd existence to believe things that conflict with real social demands of grief. I used to live that lifestyle and now I can barely remember how I managed to ensure the beliefs demanded of me meshed with my lived experience. So my sympathy lies with the christians who have to deal with yet another inconsistency in their ideological house of cards. And if anyone questions my or Halx's concern or respect for military peoples, come live in Southern California for a bit where you'll deal with a lot more than abstract soldiers used for politicking. |
smooth, whilst I agree with some of the underlying implications of this thread, I think degenerating into criticising other people's religious beliefs is just a little petty.
I'm atheist, but I repect those who are not. Let's not start insulting people's religion. Mr Mephisto |
Its a pity... War's hell. :/
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Even if you do find one or two periods of complete peace for the US you will certainly agree upon further reflection that your arguement is none. War is part of humanity it seems and the muslim nations didnt fight in more wars than the rest of the globe. Also i dont realy consider bombing a country to rubbles before sending ground units as very herioc or valiant. Its clever for sure. And if you dont happen to have mechanical guided rockets, well then you have to do some serious indoctrination and use a biological guided rocket. Thats also clever. Not saying either is good. |
Quote:
a) The US is a much younger country. They've been at it much longer than us. b) War IS part of humanity, I agree. I think that point have been lost on many people on this thread, though. THey have fought more though... just not "wars". Sending people into public places with explosives strapped around their guts isn't "war", it's "terrorism" c) It isn't valiant, or heroic... it's smart. That's what tactics are all about. Shooting officers first, and from trees no less, wasn't considered "heroic" or "valiant" but it won us our freedom over 200 years ago. *shrug* Seems to make sense to me. |
Quote:
@b) care to validate in which extend "they" fought more or alternatively comply with my request to provide "peace - periods" for the USA longer than 25 years? @c) thx for rephrasing me, those tactics make sense to me too :|. This discussion deals with the war on iraq. Sending iraqis with explosives strapped around them to disrupt the efforts of the invading nation is called guerilla warfare and certainly is part of war eversince. I wont contest the fact that noniraqi entities probably have had their hands in some/many of the incidents but why that is the case is a whole different can of worms apart from the fact that mercenaries arent a novel concept either. I know where you coming from though Xeph. to parapharse the arguement of the post by you that i was initialy replying to: They are fighting a dirty war and are used to it cause they are at it basicaly ever since. I might have distorted it a bit but just for simplicities sake :cool: The point is we all are at it ever since and when the opportunity arises we use dirty tricks and thereby you cant imho make a qualified or qualifying statement about anyone with that arguement. |
I'm staying out of 90% of the thread simply because getting involved would increase my heart rate higher than working out and I already did that this morning.
Quote:
|
As for providing a peace period, I cannot... but most of the time we've been at war in the last 100 years has been to protect or save someone else's ass. Let's see... WWI... we didn't have much to fear, but our allies did. Rescue! WWII, we tried to stay neutral, but the Japanese decided a nice Sunday surprise was in order... also, our allies needed us. Rescue + Saving EVERYONE's asses! Korea... We went, with many blessings... Sort of a rescue. Vietnam, we went in with the best of intentions... we also weren't the only ones to go (French? Russians?). Failed rescue, but rescue nonetheless. Desert Storm... Ally in need, big bad man taking over small country... world outraged... we went in... RESCUE! I see a pattern, here. Outside of MAYBE this fight, we've never gone to war for shits and giggles. Also, this war is multifaceted... Afghanistan and Iraq are a big package as far as the military is concerned. Whether you believe one to have anything to do with the other or not is irrelevant.
Next issue... Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
about 10 years ago i had a girlfriend (yeah, really) with a younger brother. I think he was about 10 or 11 at the time I knew him. cool little guy. we used to take him to the skatepark and I spent a long summer afternoon showing him how to make a spine ramp to ramp transfer. end of the day he was showing me how to do it with an extended layback. i let him drink half my beer and drove him home listening to the dead kennedys. When he asked, i left him the cassette.
didn´t think about this kid for 10 years until recently. during one my infrequent calls to the homestead, my mom asked if i remembered the little big guy. shit poor white trash family. not a lot of future promise. high school degree = burger king. he joined the army. you know, career training and college tuition. better than flipping burgers. apparently he had a lot of interest and natural talent in wireless communications. Probably just the thing to put him in the valuable employee range. about 7 weeks ago he became one of the statistics. this kid just wanted a good fucking job. i really don´t know what to think or say about this. best i can come up with is rage. yeah, long time ago i knew a cool little kid. i´m goddamn sure his death did not make the U.S. a safer place for other cool little kids. he died to preserve the power and special interests of these PUNKASS rich kids that will never know what motivates the average american youth. an authentic desire to just squeeze by. make a living. have kids. respect the rights of others. to be normal. how can these hipocritical pussy extra privaleged slimebags ever begin to understand how much more valuable these lives are compared to their own? sorry for the rant. now i go look for the tequila. Prosit! |
Let us "ALL" remember that these are People. Dead people who should be remembered with dignity, and not used for political advantage.....we are in a war that is debatable in its ethics. The people who have died are to be commended, regardless of how one feels about the person(s) who deployed them.
|
you know....for such a simple first post....to simply mourn the loss of soldiers that were killed over there...this has gone way off track in my opinion
Who cares what religious preference or non preference you are....where is the simple compassion that Rekna posted for? Why does the mourning of the soldiers have to be dirtied with the "debating" on the whys and wherefores of how or why it happened? Whatever happened to a good old fashioned moment of silence? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
1 minute for each life would take like 16 hours. yeah, silence is golden. |
I will only pray for the innocents that have perished. And the 1k soldiers, I do not consider innocent. Therefore, I will only pray for the Iraqis who wanted nothing to do with anything yet had bombs dropped on their heads.
|
Quote:
Plenty of the dead Iraqis (like those in the Mahdi Army) are guilty of murder and mayhem also. Tsk tsk. Shame on you for singling out one side for compassion, and not the other. It's makes said opinion (or "compassion") worthless. Mr Mephisto |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I may not agree with you entirely, as I believe everyone is entitled to compassion if they lose their lives, but at least I now know you didn't mean only one side was worth it. Mr Mephisto |
Quote:
If, indeed, you are the type to be completely against war, for any reason at all, I feel bad for you. Your contempt for those who fight for your freedom to feel that contempt sucks just a little bit of your soul away, my friend. I hope you don't (or truly, that none of us do) live to see a war in which we HAVE to fight for our very freedoms and homeland. I'd hate to see you suffer through the pains of hating those who save your life. |
Back to the original post:
Thanks for the reminder and I can definitely mourn the loss of life and the stupidity of wars. |
equating the iraq war with world war 2 is somehow ok, but there are cautions thrown about the board on comparisons with vietnam?
how does that work? the analogy to world war 2 is so completely false, so thoroughly misguided as to hover on that line between obscene and funny. the idea that being a pacifist--of all things--would lead one to have contempt for the people who are in the military is almost as bad. most of the actual pacifists that i know--not fictions generated in some far right fever dream of who their opposition might be--are religious people, particularly quakers--their whole position is rooted in compassion--for military personel who are killed in too-often absurd wars (like iraq) and for the casualties inflicted on civilians (you know, collateral damage).. this kind of pacifism has nothing to do with the characterization floated above. nothing. (i am not myself a pacifist, btw) when i think of the number of troops killed in iraq, i am angered all over again at the bushlogic that put them to be there in the first place. it was, is and will remain an unnecessary, illegal war. over 1000 americans killed carrying out the neoconservative fantasies of american global hegemony--who knows how many iraqis killed for the sake of the same fantasy scenario, combattants and (particularly) civilians. it is good to think, and think hard, about these deaths and hold the administration responsible for them to account. there was no security justification for this war. there was no strategic justification for this war, outside the hellucinations of the wolfowitz crowd. there was no human rights justification for this war--the american state has never cared about human rights abuse so long as the regime that carried out those abuses was politically convenient. the motives of the state are a far cry from the motive imputed to the state by the public. this is theater, this war. 1000 americans dead. uncounted iraqis dead. yes, it is good to think about this. it is good to think hard about this. |
Quote:
The war in Iraq is not "fighting for my freedom". Iraq was never a threat to neither my freedom nor my life. I will NEVER fight any war because I personally do not have the capability to kill someone as it goes against everything I believe in. You can believe you are fighting for "freedom" all you like, but in reality you are putting your life at risk for a individual who wouldn't give a shit less whether you live or die. As for your comment about praising soldiers had it been another war, you are wrong. I will never praise any soldier (murderer) for any excuse they use to kill for. I personally would rather die myself than kill another...at least that way I know my soul wont be in for eternal suffering. Go ahead and consider them heroic or consider them courageous, but I don’t believe murder constitutes any of those qualities. Being heroic or courageous would be to resist war and have the will power and wisdom to understand killing is wrong. EDIT: As a side note: I am not religious at all, as I believe ultimately, religion is the root of all evil...but I do know the difference between right and wrong. |
While I disagree with the sentiments expressed, I support the right to say them.
I would however caution against calling people murderers because your philosophy is different. |
Quote:
|
I'm reading through this post and I'm getting kinda angry about what I read. I feel like I'm about to piss everyone off, but I feel this needs to be said and I hope that someone can agree with me. I don't want to be a cynical asshole but I'm afraid that's where I am.
First of all, isn't the whole, "My friend is more patriotic than your friend" schtick a little uncouth? It wouldn't make a bit of difference if I had 1,000 friends in the Army in Iraq and every last 1,000 of them thought the war was shit; there are tens of thousands of soldiers over there. I was in the military during Gulf War I and I can assure you that some were thrilled to go and some thought the war was bullshit. This whole my-pro-war-soldier-friends-in-Iraq-outnumber-your-anti-war-soldier-friends spiel is tiresome and vice versa. To use this as some sort of patriotic score-keeping is vulgar. Second, our 1,000 dead pale in comparison to the tens of thousands of Iraqis who have died. If we fancy ourselves members of the human race, then every war death is devastating, especially non-combatant deaths. Remember, Saddam was the supposed to be the bad guy, not the entire nation of Iraq, yet we ignore Iraqi deaths as if we have somehow relegated all Iraqis to the realm of enemy. If we only value American deaths as noteworthy, then our place in this world is unjustified. We are talking about war, yet we used cliched political sound bites and call it dialogue or debate. Unless we are willing to inflict and endure some verbal wounds and do so intelligently, then we are going to be stuck in intellectual quicksand with no one to blame but ourselves, and the deaths will continue to mount while we arrogantly deride the "other" side as immature, ignorant, or unpatriotic. This elementary bickering dishonors everyone who has died in this conflict, and we're all guilty of it. |
Well said JJ.
Mr Mephisto |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I pray for the dead of the innocents and the people who fight for what I believe in.
Ah the Monroe Doctorine, where has it gone. |
Quote:
First of all, I do not "bow blindly" to our Commander-in-Chief. I follow orders that are laid out above me in the chain of command, as do hundred of thousands of other soldiers in our fine United States military. And though I may have to take a life without hesitation (and only to save my own, or my battle buddies), why would you think it would be without remorse? Do you know any war vets? Have you ever talked to them about the war? Remorse is often felt very strongly by those who encountered fire fights and know that a soldier, friendly OR enemy, died because of it. I do not put my life at risk for any individual. I put my life at risk for ALL individuals in this country and as far as I can tell, even by the sentiment of this thread, the great many of them do care. Just because you are callous against soldiers does not mean that everyone is. And just because I fight does not mean I do it for the President. As for your soul suffering eternally (and also not being religious), being spiritual is religious. Religion doesn't have to take the form of some half-baked (or fully-baked) organized church. If you have a soul, and you worry about it, you're religious, whether you believe in god, the ethereal realm, or any other type of afterlife. I'm not "religious", by your sense of the definition either, but I believe that what I do in good conscience will not harm my soul in the afterlife. I believe that nazi soldiers are just as likely to be in heaven as any other human being, save those who tortured and killed prisoners in death camps by cruel and unusual means. *shrug* There's a line... a pretty broad, ugly, big one. Overall, it's obvious we won't ever agree on this topic. It seems the two of us are about as polar as opposites can get. However, I respect your right to have your opinion, and I'm saddened slightly that any would think of me or others like me as murderers. C'est la vie! Quote:
Our thousand soldiers who have died HAVE paled in comparison to Iraqis who have died, including Iraqi military, civilians and militants. I do feel for the Iraqis with the loss of civilians, and I respect greatly the loss of the military members who died in the initial fight. However, I have a hard time respecting those who say they fight for their god, but must hide and be secret about so much. If they at least came out and said, "We're scared and think this is wrong so we'll fight against it" then fine, but to hide and fight in cowardice in the name of your god is just ridiculous. On a side-note, and I've mentioned it either earlier in this thread or in another thread... if you look hard and close, and from various sources (including non-U.S.), the vast majority of non-combatant deaths have been caused BY those same Iraqi militants. Surely it could be argued that our presence led to their deaths. But honestly people... the militants are killing their own countrymen... as per usual. Our presence hasn't changed as much over there as a lot of people would like to believe (for better or for worse). I'm surely not racist. I know a good number of people of Arabic decent, including Muslims and Iraqis. However, the mindset of many of the people over there has fallen into this terrorist suicide-bomber mentality, and it's been that way since long before 2003, or 2001 or 1991. It's been that way for decades, and even centuries in some aspects. We just see it in the news a lot more because sometimes our people are dying there, too. It's sad that American citizens would get so bent out of shape about something without actually knowing much about the history of the people or countries or area of the world that the news is happening in. If this is elementary bickering, than I apologize. From my perspective it's the truth, and it shows Americans in a terrible light, not for being warmongers or Big Brother, but for being uninformed, ignorant and being lemming and sheep to the media. Try looking at the world through your own eyes, not the eyes of the newscaster on Channel 7. |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Definitely the most blood-pressure-raising thread I've read in a LONG time so, for the sake of my health, I won't comment on most of it. BUT, why is it that people continue to claim that this is one man's personal agenda and that he alone is responsible for us being there? Seems to me that congress authorized the attack through normal protocols. You can debate all day long whether or not the information that was presented turned out to be accurate but hindsight is always 20/20.
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In all likelyhood, we could argue this till the thread reaches 200 pages, but I don’t feel it is necessary to debate this anymore. I respect you for the fact that you can have a civilized conversation without resorting to infantile behavior like a lot of users in the politics board seem to do quite often. But it is for the most part useless to continue this. |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
How does fighting for a cause that you don't neccesarily believe in make someone a coward? AND more than 40% of the country still agrees with the war in Irag; Does that mean that they are all brainwashed because they do not hold the same opinion as you? Quote:
2. I can appreciate your feelings of being unable to kill another person, however I have a hard time with not having a problem with it when someone else is doing it. From a moral standpoint how can you justify something as "right" when you are unable to carry out the same action? If you can't bring yourself to do it personally, is it still "right"? Quote:
Quote:
And for this one time under this topic I will agree with you Rdr4evr, there is no sense arguing a point that we will never agree on so I'm done. |
Quote:
Quote:
You do not feel the Iraq war is just yet you go fight because of a commitment? You should stand up for what you believe in and not go to an unjust war, that will make you a true hero. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:32 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project