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Old 07-03-2005, 06:02 PM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Under UN mandate.
That would be incorect.
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Old 07-03-2005, 06:07 PM   #82 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mantus
That would be incorect.
There do seem to be multiple interpretations of the no fly zones.

GHB decided to put some teeth in resolution 688 which I can understand would be debated by members of the UN and international community that only like the UN to sound like it does something rather then actually do it, but I stand corrected that it was not a mandate. That was an error on my part.
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Old 07-03-2005, 06:12 PM   #83 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Where have I advocated that? If the people there are willing to live as slaves, what business is it of mine? It just means I will not move there (or intentionally visit there). And I understand that they are very NICE manacles....gold-plated, and lined with fake fur...
ha ha ha ha ha ha hhhaaaaaaa. I hardly rate the non ability to own a gun as equaling slavery. I can't say I'm unhappy about you never visiting Australia.
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Old 07-03-2005, 07:32 PM   #84 (permalink)
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I want to interject that there is more than an "us vs. them" in US politics, or at least there should be in any reasonable discussion. There is a Republican party that isn't supportive of the Neocons of the present administration. There is a Democratic party that is moderate (ala Clinton) that furthers fiscal responsibility and cuts welfare fraud. We, on the forum seem to have chosen the two extremes of our political parties when in fact a moderate middle is present for both parties.

Would it be too naive and pollyanna-like of me to ask that extreme positions take one small step toward the middle when posting to this forum?
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Old 07-03-2005, 07:38 PM   #85 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
I want to interject that there is more than an "us vs. them" in US politics, or at least there should be in any reasonable discussion. There is a Republican party that isn't supportive of the Neocons of the present administration. There is a Democratic party that is moderate (ala Clinton) that furthers fiscal responsibility and cuts welfare fraud. We, on the forum seem to have chosen the two extremes of our political parties when in fact a moderate middle is present for both parties.

Would it be too naive and pollyanna-like of me to ask that extreme positions take one small step toward the middle when posting to this forum?
You are asking people to water down their own opinions and pretend to be something they are not?
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Old 07-03-2005, 07:49 PM   #86 (permalink)
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**If you two can't play nicely, I'll just remove your posts.** - analog.

Last edited by analog; 07-03-2005 at 11:26 PM..
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Old 07-03-2005, 08:15 PM   #87 (permalink)
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**If you two can't play nicely, I'll just remove your posts.** - analog.
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Last edited by analog; 07-03-2005 at 11:26 PM..
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Old 07-03-2005, 11:29 PM   #88 (permalink)
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**There are (including the two I just killed) 4 inappropriately personal comments made in this thread. It stops now, or the thread goes away.**

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Old 07-04-2005, 11:35 AM   #89 (permalink)
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Why don't you just go ahead and kill it then since the children are being so bad. Or don't you have the balls? I'm sick of having to watch over my shoulder everytime I post on this board for fear of the all mighty "ban button." That's the only kind of power you have and you absolutely get off on it. This is why I won't give up cash for this site. I can pay money and be regulated and babysat like I'm a child somewhere else. I can even do it for free. And even no one else will say it for fear of being alienaited, I'm not the only one who thinks this way.

Go ahead and ban me, have a good jolly doing it, as I've been lurking for a while, but I've grown tired of the back and forth bickering and "moderation."

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Old 07-04-2005, 11:35 AM   #90 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Mephisto
And people were compensated. You're arguing pedantics.
Then let's rephrase it. I'll be the government. I'd like to buy your house. I'll decide what to pay you for it. You won't be allowed to buy another.

Was your house confiscated, or not?



Quote:
And, as I said before, I am not adocating confiscation of guns in America. You guys can shoot the fuck out of each other and anything that moves for all I care.

What I AM advocating is that you stop trying to recommend the reintroduction of privately held firearms into the UK, Ireland and Australia (the three countries mentioned by myself) against the wishes of the vast majority of people.

Mr Mephisto
Let's analyze that statement, too.

What is being advocated is that defenseless people be allowed to protect their lives and property against the (well documented) increase in crime brought about by gun confiscations.

It is neither moral nor proper for the wishes of the majority to endanger the lives and property of the minority.
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Old 07-04-2005, 11:50 AM   #91 (permalink)
lascivious
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
I want to interject that there is more than an "us vs. them" in US politics, or at least there should be in any reasonable discussion. There is a Republican party that isn't supportive of the Neocons of the present administration. There is a Democratic party that is moderate (ala Clinton) that furthers fiscal responsibility and cuts welfare fraud. We, on the forum seem to have chosen the two extremes of our political parties when in fact a moderate middle is present for both parties.

Would it be too naive and pollyanna-like of me to ask that extreme positions take one small step toward the middle when posting to this forum?
I think it would be more ideal to ask people to shift their opinion of others on this forum a small step towards the middle.
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Old 07-04-2005, 01:05 PM   #92 (permalink)
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Agreed, and that had been my intention, though not stated clearly enough. Taking a small step in the shoe's of another, if you will.
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Old 07-04-2005, 04:59 PM   #93 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Ohh, yay. I feel special. And NO, NOT in a "short bus" sense.


Quote:

actually, I was leaning more towards their FOREIGN policy. I don't give a rat's ass about their DOMESTIC policy, unless it affects their FOREIGN policy and how it applies to us.
This is a topic for another debate, but with globalization I personally think it's rather a mistake to have such a big distinction between the two anymore. Our domestic policy of minimum wage effects Japanese businesses that build factories here, for instance. But that's for another thread.

Quote:
If the goverment is domestically encouraging their people to chant "Death to America" while domestically providing shelter and funding for terrorists whose goal is to attack the US, THEN it's something that we should be concerned about.
I agree with you that if their government is harboring and funding terrorists who intend to attack our country, we should do something about it.

But I don't agree with you that Iraq fit that criteria. And even if it sorta did, there are plenty of other targets that fit it better. Saudi Arabia for one.

So while I agree that we need to stop those who would hurt us, I disagree with your idea that we are currently doing that.


Quote:
Annoyed? Sure, they can be annoyed. If you're annoyed, you don't send people Christmas or Hannukah or Ramadan or Whatever cards. Being "annoyed" does NOT encompass threatening the US. That's no longer "being annoyed", that's "committing an act of war". Subtle distinction there.
Need I remind you that our whole conflict with Hussein started when our current president's dad got annoyed with Iraq for invading Kuwait?





Quote:
We have a right to become highly pissed when they commit an act of war against us.
Again, no argument there. But Iraq hadn't done that. And that crap about shooting at planes in the no fly zones is NOT an act of war against us. That's a retaliation to an act of war on our part. Look at it this way. If Russia started overflying Washington DC with MiGs and backfire bombers, don't you think we'd probably be inclined to shoot at them? We first invaded Iraq, decimated its military, then proceeded to fly our war machines over their soil. They had every right to retaliate, futile though the gesture might be.


Quote:
So, by singling out me specifically at least four times before this comment, you're NOT singling out me? Why am I reminded of an Orwell quote here?
A careful read of my post will tell you that I was making it clear that YOU are not the only one using this tactic, that you did not invent it, and in fact that you are merely parroting it. In other words, I'm deflecting most of the blame off of you and on to the leaders of your party.
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Old 07-07-2005, 06:48 PM   #94 (permalink)
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I'm not sure this is the right topic to place this article, but it is a liberal summation of our current state of affairs. I would agree that if we blink we may miss something.

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/070705Y.shtml

Interesting Times
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Thursday 07 July 2005

Many an ancient lord's last words have been, "You can't kill me because I've got magic aaargh."
-- Terry Pratchett

The British are getting ready to evacuate their military forces from Iraq and send them to Afghanistan. Anyone who thinks the Afghan war has been won and is over needs to think again. 54 American soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan in the last six months alone, compared to 52 in all of last year. While this number does not compare to the 1,748 US troops killed in Iraq, the two-fold increase in casualties over half a year is noteworthy. Taliban and al Qaeda fighters occupy caves, villages and mountain passes along the Pakistan border, and regional experts believe their presence will require an indefinite American military presence in that country.

Meanwhile, the war in Iraq burns on while Bush's biggest ally is preparing to haul stakes. US military forces are so stretched that Reservists who last saw action in Vietnam are being called back into service. Poverty within the Iraqi populace has become so severe that citizens are selling their kidneys on the black market for long dollars. It is a booming trade; some 5,000 Iraqis suffer from a variety of renal diseases caused by decades of sanction-created dirty water and lack of medicine, so kidneys are worth their weight in gold on the Iraqi street.

Alberto Gonzales looks to be the next Supreme Court Justice, a choice that will cause progressives to grind their teeth because he argued in favor of torture, and will cause the Evangelical Right to lose its collective mind because he is not "solid" on the issue of abortion. If Gonzales does in fact become the nominee, the stage will be set for a two-pronged assault on the White House from the Left and, more importantly, from the far Right.

Matthew Cooper is going to testify, and Judy Miller is going to jail. Cooper, the reporter from Time Magazine who received the leak regarding CIA agent Valerie Plame, was staring down the barrel of confinement until he folded and agreed to cooperate with Patrick Fitzgerald's investigation. This comes on the heels of the revelation that White House consigliore Karl Rove was one of Cooper's sources on this matter. Rove's attorney has claimed Karl did not "knowingly" expose Plame, but Cooper's testimony may rip that shroud down the middle.

Miller, a reporter for the New York Times, is being fitted for a prison jumper and will sit in a cell until she changes her mind about cooperating with Fitzgerald. Miller, it should be noted, is being touted as some kind of martyr for the First Amendment and the need for journalists to protect their sources. She is, to be blunt, a crappy poster-child for this all-important requirement, and this situation augers toward the creation of odd legal precedent. Miller is not merely protecting a source, but is protecting a criminal who violated national security in order to exact political revenge ordered by the White House. The lawyers involved are certainly going to earn their fees trying to thread this particular needle.

One thing is sure: Whoever leaked Plame's name is having a bad day. Be it Rove or Cheney confidant Lewis Libby or some other unknown actor, the fact that Cooper is singing to a Grand Jury raises the specter of charges coming down for perjury and obstruction of justice at a minimum, with treason lurking at the far side of things.

The fellow on the arm of Ms. Plame, Ambassador Joseph Wilson, smells the brimstone on the wind. Reached for comment regarding the imprisonment of Miller, Wilson stated, "The sentencing of Judith Miller to jail for refusing to disclose her sources is the direct result of the culture of unaccountability that infects the Bush White House from top to bottom. President Bush's refusal to enforce his own call for full cooperation with the Special Counsel has brought us to this point."

"Clearly," continued Wilson, "the conspiracy to cover up the web of lies that underpinned the invasion of Iraq is more important to the White House than coming clean on a serious breach of national security. Thus has Ms. Miller joined my wife, Valerie, and her twenty years of service to this nation as collateral damage in the smear campaign launched when I had the temerity to challenge the President on his assertion that Iraq had attempted to purchase uranium yellowcake from Africa. The real victims of this cover-up, which may have turned criminal, are the Congress, the Constitution and, most tragically, the Americans and Iraqis who have paid the ultimate price for Bush's folly."

Indeed.

Maybe ten thousand times in the last few years, someone has stated with profound assurance that the Bush administration is in trouble, that the hammer is coming down, that some form of accountability is in the offing. Maybe ten thousand times, these predictions have turned out to be wrong. Nowadays, it takes a special kind of fool to think this White House can be easily cashiered for its gross violations, lies and flat-out crimes.

But it is getting awfully crowded around here. Bush's numbers are still cratering, the nation has stopped buying into the idea that he is some kind of Great Protector, the Brits are bugging out of the chaos in Iraq, Afghanistan is heating up, the Jesus Brigades on Bush's right flank are preparing to wig out unless they get some kind of Falwell clone onto the court, and one of the journalists used to destroy the career of a CIA operative who worked to rid the world of weapons of mass destruction is cooperating with a prosecutor.

And then there's this from Dan Froomkin, published by the Washington Post: "More than four in 10 Americans, according to a recent Zogby poll, say that if President Bush did not tell the truth about his reasons for going to war with Iraq, Congress should consider holding him accountable through impeachment ... The impeachment question was part of a Zogby International poll conducted early last week, and released on Thursday. It found that Bush's job approval ratings had slipped a point from the previous week, to 43 percent. But the jaw-dropper was that 42 percent said they would favor impeachment proceedings if it is found that the president misled the nation about his reasons for going to war with Iraq."

Don't blink this week. You might miss something.
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Old 07-08-2005, 03:50 AM   #95 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
And then there's this from Dan Froomkin, published by the Washington Post: "More than four in 10 Americans, according to a recent Zogby poll, say that if President Bush did not tell the truth about his reasons for going to war with Iraq, Congress should consider holding him accountable through impeachment ... The impeachment question was part of a Zogby International poll conducted early last week, and released on Thursday. It found that Bush's job approval ratings had slipped a point from the previous week, to 43 percent. But the jaw-dropper was that 42 percent said they would favor impeachment proceedings if it is found that the president misled the nation about his reasons for going to war with Iraq."
Oh my. Couldn't happen to a nicer fellow. Coming on the heels of the whiff of the ghost of the possibility of Karl Rove in an orange jumpsuit, that may be the first morale booster for the left since before the media slaughtered Howard Dean and someone posted www. johnkerryisadouchebagbutimvotingforhimanyway.com.

Maybe, just maybe, next mid terms....

Well, like I said about Rove, I'm not going to heat the tar up yet, but it's definitely time to start stocking up on feathers.
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Old 07-08-2005, 12:33 PM   #96 (permalink)
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Location: Olympic Peninsula, WA
Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
The British are getting ready to evacuate their military forces from Iraq and send them to Afghanistan. Anyone who thinks the Afghan war has been won and is over needs to think again. 54 American soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan in the last six months alone, compared to 52 in all of last year. While this number does not compare to the 1,748 US troops killed in Iraq, the two-fold increase in casualties over half a year is noteworthy. Taliban and al Qaeda fighters occupy caves, villages and mountain passes along the Pakistan border, and regional experts believe their presence will require an indefinite American military presence in that country.

Don't blink this week. You might miss something.
I certainly must have blinked because this is the first I have read of the Brit's pulling out of Iraq to shore up Afghanistan. Has anyone else heard of this?

(If this is drifting too far off topic, please let me know).
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Old 07-08-2005, 01:10 PM   #97 (permalink)
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Elphaba,

I posted these in my looooong post on pg.2 in the "attack in London" thread as
support for my theory that it was "time" for a domestic "terrorist" attack to restore the "resolve" of constituents increasingly unhappy with Bush and Blair's 'war"..............
Quote:
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/a1384df4-ec...00e2511c8.html
MoD plans Iraq troop withdrawal
By Jimmy Burns and Peter Spiegel
Published: July 4 2005 22:02 | Last updated: July 4 2005 22:02

The Ministry of Defence has drafted plans for a significant withdrawal of British troops from Iraq over the next 18 months and a big deployment to Afghanistan, the Financial Times has learnt.

In what would represent the biggest operational shake-up involving the armed forces since the Iraq war, the first stage of a run-down in military operations is likely to take place this autumn with a handover of security to Iraqis in at least two southern provinces.

Defence officials emphasised that all plans for Iraqi deployments were contingent on the ability of domestic security forces to assume peacekeeping duties from UK troops. Iraqi forces have so far proven unable to take over such roles in areas where the insurgency is most intense, and progress has disappointed coalition officials.

But senior UK officers believe the four south-east provinces under UK command, which are largely Shia and have not seen the same violence as more Sunni-dominated areas north of Baghdad, may be ready for a handover earlier than those under US command.

Any reduction of UK troops could be timed to coincide with plans being developed to deploy a total of up to 3,000 troops to Afghanistan before the end of next year. This deployment would take the lead in a Nato force to take over from US troops in the south of Afghanistan......
Quote:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...E28737,00.html
Just not enough force
Patrick Walters, National security editor
June 18, 2005

DOUGLAS Wood's extraordinarily fortunate rescue this week continues Australia's incredible run of good fortune in Iraq. Wood, the only Australian to be held hostage for a lengthy period by Muslim insurgents, escaped with his life thanks to the efforts of a dedicated multinational hostage relief effort and, not least, to a successful house raid conducted by the fledgling Iraqi army.

In 28 months of military operations in Iraq, the Australian Defence Force has not lost a man or woman on active service, although the army has suffered several seriously wounded from car and roadside bombs in Baghdad.

The army's 500-strong deployment to al-Muthanna province in southern Iraq is going well, with Lieutenant-Colonel Roger Noble's troops quickly establishing a good rapport with the local community in Samawah and surrounding villages.

Australia's military contribution to the war on terror continues to be notable, not just for the professionalism of our defence force but also for the paucity of the numbers involved.

But within the next few months the Howard Government must ponder tough questions about our future contribution to the Iraq and Afghanistan theatres, still the front line of the global effort against Islamist terrorism. For all the Government's rhetoric, our contribution to US-led coalition efforts at a critical time for both countries remains largely a token effort.

The insurgency in Iraq remains potent, with violent attacks on Iraqi security forces and stretched US forces in northern and central Iraq occurring every day.

In Afghanistan the Government of Hamid Karzai is still struggling to establish the rule of law in the face of stiff opposition from tribal warlords and attacks mounted by heavily armed Taliban and al-Qa'ida elements.

We have fewer than 1000 defence personnel inside Iraq and only a single army mine clearance expert in Afghanistan. This compares with US military forces of 139,000 in Iraq and about 10,000 in Afghanistan, and Britain with 10,000 in Iraq and about 1000 in Afghanistan.

A fortnight ago tiny New Zealand dispatched 50 Special Air Service troops to Afghanistan, a force now on its third rotation. In addition, the Kiwis have a 120-strong contingent working on provincial reconstruction tasks in Bamiyan province.

"The trouble is we believe our own propaganda," observes one senior Australian government source. "We have a contradiction at the heart of our policy. This is a desperate time for the US in Iraq. They are critically short of troops. The fact is the UK is the only country fighting and dying with the US."

..........With Britain set to take over the running of the UN-backed International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan next year, the pressure on the Howard Government will be to match rhetoric with action. The NATO-led ISAF troops will be boosted to more than 10,000 in the run-up to parliamentary elections in September. The US and British military would like to see the Australian army play a bigger role in Afghanistan..........
Quote:
http://www.conservatives.com/tile.do...&obj_id=123359
http://theconservativevictory.blogsp...or-troups.html

Government must explain plans for massive British troop deployment to Afghanistan

Following press reports today that the UK has been asked to provide an additional 5,500 troops for operations in Afghanistan, Shadow Defence Secretary Michael Ancram, has written to Dr John Reid asking for clarification as to how this deployment would affect British operations in Iraq. He wrote: "There have been reports in the media this morning that the UK has been asked to provide an additional 5,500 troops for the operations in Afghanistan. It is my understanding that the offer was made at last week's NATO meeting in Brussels. According to the same reports 5,500 troops will be pulled out of Iraq within the next 12 months, reducing the British presence there by almost two thirds. "I would be grateful if you could clarify several issues:When was a decision on deploying additional troops to Afghanistan made?What is the exact nature of the deployment? What is the composition of the troops designated for the deployment? How many reservists will be deployed? When do you expect the first contingent to be deployed? Has the U. S. approached any other of our allies? Have any other Coalition partners indicated that they may want to commit additional troops to Afghanistan?"Finally, are you satisfied that Iraq's own security forces will be able to take on a greater burden of the struggle against the insurgency there? Are you confident that Iraq will have calmed down enough by the spring next year to allow resources to be switched to the new campaign?.......
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Old 07-11-2005, 02:55 PM   #98 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Marvelous Marv
Then let's rephrase it. I'll be the government. I'd like to buy your house. I'll decide what to pay you for it. You won't be allowed to buy another.

Was your house confiscated, or not?
That analogy is complete nonesense.

Quote:
Quote:
And, as I said before, I am not adocating confiscation of guns in America. You guys can shoot the fuck out of each other and anything that moves for all I care.

What I AM advocating is that you stop trying to recommend the reintroduction of privately held firearms into the UK, Ireland and Australia (the three countries mentioned by myself) against the wishes of the vast majority of people.
Let's analyze that statement, too.

What is being advocated is that defenseless people be allowed to protect their lives and property against the (well documented) increase in crime brought about by gun confiscations.

It is neither moral nor proper for the wishes of the majority to endanger the lives and property of the minority.
No. It is neither moral nor proper that the selfish interests of the minority go against the public will of the MAJORITY.

Or have you forgotten or abandoned the concept of democracy?


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