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Old 07-10-2005, 02:51 PM   #121 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dlishsguy
a little over 57 years ago, i do remember the arabs and jews living together in harmony in a place called palestine, until the colonialists came through and divided the people and religions.

the arabs would rather live with the jews and have been for many centuries, and in relative harmony at that. but for an outside power to come in, support another race though monetary and military means, no wonder the arabs turned on their cousins. its this meddling in middle east affairs that ive been saying that turn ordinary people into terrorists. all they need is an excuse, and the west provides this to them.

obviously this is also the case in iraq, where the islamists needed an excuse to start a holy war, and bush and rummy gave them the green light.
Uh, no. Palestine was controlled by Britain for many years before Israel came into existence. Relations between Jews and Palestinians and the British weren't great, all the way around. In fact, they were downright awful.

And I find it difficult to believe that West + "meddling in middle eastern affairs" = terrorists. Islamic terrorism is vastly more complicated than that. Believe me - I think that pretty much everything Bush has done has worsened the situation - but Osama and many Islamic terrorists are just as interested in overthrowing what they perceive as illegitimate regimes in the Middle East, such as the Saudi regime.
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:01 PM   #122 (permalink)
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Again, I point to Iraq. We DID do away with a tyrant. And yet there's still a great amount of anger, supposedly because of the very actions that eliminated said tyrant.
its not about giving gratitude for doing away with a tyrant that they help put it. its the misery and suffering of a nation you help and continue to help plunder. regardless of whether you help take someone out of power, the us is still responsible for the political upheaval it has caused..pre-saddam, during the saddam era, and post saddam.

Quote:
So bombing trains=bad, but destroying skyscrapers=good because arabs and muslims haven't had skyscrapers destroyed?
no, this isnt what i said. i was merely stating that to some, the pentagon and twin towers were considered legitimate military targets beacause of what they stood for, whereas the trains and buses are not seen as target for obvious reasons.
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:05 PM   #123 (permalink)
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For everyone reading. Here's a helpful flash guide from the Guardian which briefly explains the history of the Arab - Israeli conflict. Before anyone thinks this is off topic, the British figure greatly into this story:

Arab - Israeli Conflict
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:09 PM   #124 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
in a very cold light, i think the best summation that can be made of that argument is that he beleives some of us have failed nationalism.

the idea that there is joy to be had in human death, is of course only possible through some sort of us/them dichotomy and nationalistic ideology. so perhaps a lack of enthusiasm for america's death dealing is processed as rooting for the other team, since to the national...it is "obvious" that one would cheer for death, one side or the other.

No, my argument stood on it's own. I said exactly what I meant to. It has nothing to do with my supposed nationalism. It is a fact that in many places around the world, the news of the 9/11 attacks was greeted with celebration. It is also a fact that many people are trying to direct blame and focus away from the people who actually commit terrorism, and at the victims of terrorism. And some of these people feel terrorists to be justified in their acts.
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:20 PM   #125 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by guy44
Uh, no. Palestine was controlled by Britain for many years before Israel came into existence. Relations between Jews and Palestinians and the British weren't great, all the way around. In fact, they were downright awful.

And I find it difficult to believe that West + "meddling in middle eastern affairs" = terrorists. Islamic terrorism is vastly more complicated than that. Believe me - I think that pretty much everything Bush has done has worsened the situation - but Osama and many Islamic terrorists are just as interested in overthrowing what they perceive as illegitimate regimes in the Middle East, such as the Saudi regime.

i'd have to say that i'd agree wit most of you said. but the jews and palestinians werent at each others throats like that until the brits came into the picture. sure theres always tension and rivalry. besides, there wasnt the hatred that existed today. id agree that the brits were around for a few years, but they were the cause of the problem, by double dealing both sides and promising each side their own independant state, both of which happened to be the psame peice of land.

id agree that OBL would like to see the end of the saudi regime in no uncertain terms. but what fuelled his fire was the us having troops in saudi. you can still be an extremist and not be a terrorist. he gave himself an excuse.

when some say that terrorism is spawned by poverty, lack of education etc etc.. that may be true, but OBL definately did not fit this criteria. coming from an affluent and well respected family, he had an education, he was well spoken, he also had an extremist bent on religion. that doesnt make you a terrorist. what set him off what what he percieved as wrongs that he thought he could right..first the red threat in afghanistan and then the troops in saudi. like i said, all the need is an excuse, and political meddling is the perfect example.
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:23 PM   #126 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dlishsguy
alansmithee



its not about giving gratitude for doing away with a tyrant that they help put it. its the misery and suffering of a nation you help and continue to help plunder. regardless of whether you help take someone out of power, the us is still responsible for the political upheaval it has caused..pre-saddam, during the saddam era, and post saddam.
Why is this? Don't maybe, oh, the people living there share some blame? If I remember, the people of Iran got sick of what they saw as meddling, and they overthrew him. Why not overthrow Saddam? And how is the suffering after-Saddam the US's fault? It isn't US citizens or soldiers planting roadside bombs targetting their own people.

No, the US is just a big, easy target. That's why the rest of the Western world is carefully left out of blame for situations like this. The US is the last superpower, and hence is an easy target.



Quote:
no, this isnt what i said. i was merely stating that to some, the pentagon and twin towers were considered legitimate military targets beacause of what they stood for, whereas the trains and buses are not seen as target for obvious reasons.
What are the obvious reasons that trains and busses aren't the same type of target? What about the planes used to target the WTC and the Pentagon? Are planes somehow a more military target? I might even give you the Pentagon being a somewhat military target, but how is attacking the WTC any better than attacking trains and busses?
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Old 07-10-2005, 03:40 PM   #127 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
No, the US is just a big, easy target. That's why the rest of the Western world is carefully left out of blame for situations like this.
Not in my book! The U.S. is only the most powerful of all the imperialist countries, the rest of which I will NOT leave out of "blame" for situations like this.

However, my definition of "blame" is different than yours, so take it as you will. I've already tried to explain.
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Old 07-10-2005, 09:50 PM   #128 (permalink)
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And how is the suffering after-Saddam the US's fault? It isn't US citizens or soldiers planting roadside bombs targetting their own people.
if you dont see the death and suffering of thousands in iraq as the fault of the US, i really dont think its worth my time. more people have died after the invasion and at a higher rate than during the saddam regime. yes, the political upheaval caused by this illegal invasion IS the fault of the US. anything after that is collaterally the fault of the invading army. there were no roadside bombs prior to the invasion. so ok, saddam ruled with an iron fist, but there wasnt the anarchy that exists today. how can the US not be to blame? and yes, the iraqis are partly to blame for those deaths through roadside bombs, but to wash the US's hands clean and call it collateral damage and blame it on the iraqis themselves is unequivocally wrong.

p.s. and its not just people dying caused by roadside bombs. how many innocents have been slain by indiscriminate US bombing or carelessness.



Quote:
I might even give you the Pentagon being a somewhat military target, but how is attacking the WTC any better than attacking trains and busses?
its not. and im not justifying the use of planes, nor the attack on the towers. im just letting you know that these people justify the attack on the towers because the WTC stood as a symbol of american might and monetary control over the entire world, as well as working with the "the zionists' plot to rule the world". although even within their own circles, this whole idea of killing innocents is questionable. for this reason, some islamic groups hesitated in condemning the 911 attacks initially, whereas the 7/7 attacks were condemned instantly by every islamic society and nation that i know.
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Old 07-11-2005, 12:42 AM   #129 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dlishsguy
if you dont see the death and suffering of thousands in iraq as the fault of the US, i really dont think its worth my time. more people have died after the invasion and at a higher rate than during the saddam regime. yes, the political upheaval caused by this illegal invasion IS the fault of the US. anything after that is collaterally the fault of the invading army. there were no roadside bombs prior to the invasion. so ok, saddam ruled with an iron fist, but there wasnt the anarchy that exists today. how can the US not be to blame? and yes, the iraqis are partly to blame for those deaths through roadside bombs, but to wash the US's hands clean and call it collateral damage and blame it on the iraqis themselves is unequivocally wrong.

p.s. and its not just people dying caused by roadside bombs. how many innocents have been slain by indiscriminate US bombing or carelessness.
And here we see how people can sympathize with terrorists. By this reasoning, if I get laid off at my job and go on a killing spree, I should be absolved. All GM execs should be arrested, because it was their policies that led to the rise of crime in Flint and Detroit. It wasn't the people commiting the crimes fault, they are apparently innocent.




Quote:
its not. and im not justifying the use of planes, nor the attack on the towers. im just letting you know that these people justify the attack on the towers because the WTC stood as a symbol of american might and monetary control over the entire world, as well as working with the "the zionists' plot to rule the world". although even within their own circles, this whole idea of killing innocents is questionable. for this reason, some islamic groups hesitated in condemning the 911 attacks initially, whereas the 7/7 attacks were condemned instantly by every islamic society and nation that i know.
There is no proof for anything you say here. It's obvious through even the mildest application of logic that in their circles, killing innocents isn't questionable. And I have yet to see any major country condemn the recent attacks, and very few who condemed the 9/11 attacks, even 4 years later.
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Old 07-11-2005, 05:43 AM   #130 (permalink)
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And here we see how people can sympathize with terrorists. By this reasoning, if I get laid off at my job and go on a killing spree, I should be absolved. All GM execs should be arrested, because it was their policies that led to the rise of crime in Flint and Detroit. It wasn't the people commiting the crimes fault, they are apparently innocent.
i quite clearly do remember saying that insurgents were NOT free of blame, but also that we cannot make the US free of guilt.

this nonesense about killing sprees is an overkill. but if you want to play that game......if the GM went into your office, slapped you round a bit, gave you a bit of a beating and told you u were fired for no apparent reason except that one of ure superiors was a total dick, and because of that you went home and went a killing spree, i'd say that the GM would have some onus of responsibility..yes



Quote:
There is no proof for anything you say here. It's obvious through even the mildest application of logic that in their circles, killing innocents isn't questionable. And I have yet to see any major country condemn the recent attacks, and very few who condemed the 9/11 attacks, even 4 years later.
well you obviously do not care to listen enough to these condemnations. i also rekon you cant off the top of you head name the 3 top muslim organisations in the US or any of the top US muslim scholars. (no google) so its obvious as to why you havent heard any condemnations..4 years later.

as for any major country condemning the recent attacks.. try egypt, palestine, lebanon, saudi off the top of my head. maybe try the english al jazeera website if need be. ignorance is not bliss.

as for the killing of innocents, i reiterate that the killing of innocents IS in fact questionable within muslim fundamentalists circles. being of a muslim origin myself, i have come across the whole spectrum of what is out there. and i have debated with most about these issues. some fundo's think its ok, other fundos do not. and there have been numerous internal debates about this issues within muslim organisations, families and individuals. you may not be privy to such information, but its happens. you can try and meet some muslims one day..you might surprise yourself.
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Old 07-11-2005, 06:24 AM   #131 (permalink)
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Could we get this discussion back on topic?

Somehow people seem to think that this is about apportioning blame, and the rights and wrongs of George. W. Bush.

Yes there is a context in which these attacks have occured, so it is probably reasonable to refer to that context - but please start a new thread if you want to bounce this pointless American Party politics bollocks around.

We still don't know who was responsible for the London bombings, or exactly what the attacker's mode of operation was.

I heard someone come up with an interesting idea: Take out a full page ad in each of the daily papers, spelling out a message for those responsible for these attacks asking whoever is responsible to send a letter explaining just exactly what the fuck they want that will be printed in the same paper the very next week.
 
Old 07-11-2005, 06:47 AM   #132 (permalink)
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come on folks

I just think its sad that the terrorist win... every time this happens, they blow up a couple of bombs and ruin the lives of some many people, and what’s the first thing we do.... blame each other, not morn, not sympathize, not even revenge which I wont condone but would at least see as a rational response, we bicker amongst ourselves, who are all in some small parts victims and in a greater part targets to these people. Don’t think pre George Bush, pre Clinton, pre 9/11 anybody that had anything to do with the London bombings wouldn’t gladly place a bomb in anyone of your houses and watch you and your family die. We should be sad for those you were effected and glad it wasn't us.... instead we let there rage and hatred spark ours.... and if you don’t think that’s part of there big plan your dead wrong.
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Old 07-11-2005, 07:06 AM   #133 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by joecool
I just think its sad that the terrorist win... every time this happens, they blow up a couple of bombs and ruin the lives of some many people, and what’s the first thing we do.... blame each other, not morn, not sympathize, not even revenge which I wont condone but would at least see as a rational response, we bicker amongst ourselves, who are all in some small parts victims and in a greater part targets to these people. Don’t think pre George Bush, pre Clinton, pre 9/11 anybody that had anything to do with the London bombings wouldn’t gladly place a bomb in anyone of your houses and watch you and your family die. We should be sad for those you were effected and glad it wasn't us.... instead we let there rage and hatred spark ours.... and if you don’t think that’s part of there big plan your dead wrong.
Ah, Joe you are so right, but neither side listens they are so damned sure that they are right and that the other is the one that is the reason for the bombs.

They refuse to see we live in the same house and while the terrorists maybe playing with matches trying to start a fire.... we're soaking the house in gasoline and filling the rooms with dynamite.

Just a matter of time before the terrorists hit the right spot and unless we start working together and throw water on the matches..... it's all going to blow up.
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Old 07-11-2005, 07:28 AM   #134 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dlishsguy
i quite clearly do remember saying that insurgents were NOT free of blame, but also that we cannot make the US free of guilt.

this nonesense about killing sprees is an overkill. but if you want to play that game......if the GM went into your office, slapped you round a bit, gave you a bit of a beating and told you u were fired for no apparent reason except that one of ure superiors was a total dick, and because of that you went home and went a killing spree, i'd say that the GM would have some onus of responsibility..yes
All I can say to this is two words that liberals (and yourself whatever your political alignment) seem to have a problem remembering and using: personal responsibility.

Quote:
well you obviously do not care to listen enough to these condemnations. i also rekon you cant off the top of you head name the 3 top muslim organisations in the US or any of the top US muslim scholars. (no google) so its obvious as to why you havent heard any condemnations..4 years later.

as for any major country condemning the recent attacks.. try egypt, palestine, lebanon, saudi off the top of my head. maybe try the english al jazeera website if need be. ignorance is not bliss.

as for the killing of innocents, i reiterate that the killing of innocents IS in fact questionable within muslim fundamentalists circles. being of a muslim origin myself, i have come across the whole spectrum of what is out there. and i have debated with most about these issues. some fundo's think its ok, other fundos do not. and there have been numerous internal debates about this issues within muslim organisations, families and individuals. you may not be privy to such information, but its happens. you can try and meet some muslims one day..you might surprise yourself.
You just proved exactly what I was saying. Civilized nations/people aren't debating if killing innocents is fine. This isn't something that any rational person needs to debate about.

And also, I checked al jazeera, and there was no mention of any arab nation condemning the London attacks.
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Old 07-11-2005, 07:48 AM   #135 (permalink)
 
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i marvel at your busby berekeley argument each time you make it.
come on everyone, let's put on a musical. pull together as a team, etc.
in the interest of national unity....

but what are you really asking us to do?

the fact is that folk who are not conservative are listening to the conservative arguments--they simply do not accept them. what you find is almost no reciprocity--conservatives do not appear to take critiques of their positions seriously. ever. particularly not on this matter.


on the question of terrorism--whatever that is--you have alansmithee as the self-appointed representative of the "to attempt to work out why an attack might have happened is to sympthatize with terrorists" school.

among other things, in this thread he has tried to argue that "lifestyle" is not linked to the economy. he has tried to argue that the "motive" for this type of tactic is jealousy. he has tried to argue that if you link american policies--state and economic to name just two--to the causes for such attacks you are a effectively a sympathizer.

the prescription that we are offered--what should "we" do if any attempt to understand why this sort of thing happens means that we are sympthizing with the attackers?
kill em all let god sort em out.

the fact is that this kind of position heads off trying to understand what is happening around you.
it prevents coherence--it does not inform it--it is an obstacle.
it seems a perfect example of the mode of argument that i have tried to isolate several times in various threads of late: contemporary conservative argument is not about the world--it is about the individual conservative first, the mode of identification between the individual conservative and a sense of him or herself as articulated through the conservative media apparatus. features or claims about the world resonate primarily with a sense of self-identification as conservative, are legitimated that way--they are not about a coherent description of the world itself, they have nothing to offer anyone who does not identify as conservative a priori.

conservative argument is also about border generation and border patrol.
if folk from the right devoted anywhere near the intellectual energy to trying to work out why things are as they are that they expend on trying to distinguish an us from a them, the whole of political debate would be much better for it. but i think there is little chance of that happening until this ideology grinds itself to powder--which is a process that is well under way. but you never know with this kind of thing, really, until the process is over.

so most conservative argument on the question of "terrorism" are more about "i am conservative and you are not" than about anything approaching a coherent relationship to the question at hand.

where is there any room in this for compromise with people who do not identify as conservative? theirs is a kind of battle ideology. we who are not conservative are the primary enemy. the discourse of "terrorism" quickly devolves into a kind of running litmus test: are you for us or against us?
think about the implication of how alansmithee's arguments have run out here (he is not alone,,,there are others...i simply use his posts here as an example)...those of us who do not agree with me ARE terrorists. what the fuck is that? how do you expect there to be any room for compromise? even if i were personally to find compromise desirable, where would i start if by virtue of not accepting the right line, i am defined a priori as part of a fifth column?

but you claim, pan, that we should compromise?

how?
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Old 07-11-2005, 08:26 AM   #136 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
pan:

i marvel at your busby berekeley argument each time you make it.
come on everyone, let's put on a musical. pull together as a team, etc.
in the interest of national unity....

but what are you really asking us to do?

the fact is that folk who are not conservative are listening to the conservative arguments--they simply do not accept them. what you find is almost no reciprocity--conservatives do not appear to take critiques of their positions seriously. ever. particularly not on this matter.
You can't seriously believe this. You don't take any critique as serious. If someone disagrees, they are labeled conservative, and anything they say is quicky dismissed. This is shown by your obvious disbelief that anyone could actually not accept your arguments-anyone who doesn't accept them is clearly not listening. There is no room in that reasoning for accepting criticism.


Quote:
on the question of terrorism--whatever that is--you have alansmithee as the self-appointed representative of the "to attempt to work out why an attack might have happened is to sympthatize with terrorists" school.

among other things, in this thread he has tried to argue that "lifestyle" is not linked to the economy. he has tried to argue that the "motive" for this type of tactic is jealousy. he has tried to argue that if you link american policies--state and economic to name just two--to the causes for such attacks you are a effectively a sympathizer.

the prescription that we are offered--what should "we" do if any attempt to understand why this sort of thing happens means that we are sympthizing with the attackers?
kill em all let god sort em out.
Where did I say that lifestyle has nothing to do with economics? Again, by dismissing what I say as a conservative argument, you save yourself the trouble of having to actually listen and try to understand what I am saying. Maybe if I were to fly a plane into your house you would sympathise and try to understand better.

As to the rest, you don't look into the cause of cancer when you have cancer, you just eliminate it. Afterwards is the time for looking into reasons and assigning blame, and working on prevention if it was your actions at fault. But it doesn't do any good to know that your smoking was to blame while you lay dying of lung cancer.

Quote:
the fact is that this kind of position heads off trying to understand what is happening around you.
it prevents coherence--it does not inform it--it is an obstacle.
it seems a perfect example of the mode of argument that i have tried to isolate several times in various threads of late: contemporary conservative argument is not about the world--it is about the individual conservative first, the mode of identification between the individual conservative and a sense of him or herself as articulated through the conservative media apparatus. features or claims about the world resonate primarily with a sense of self-identification as conservative, are legitimated that way--they are not about a coherent description of the world itself, they have nothing to offer anyone who does not identify as conservative a priori.

conservative argument is also about border generation and border patrol.
if folk from the right devoted anywhere near the intellectual energy to trying to work out why things are as they are that they expend on trying to distinguish an us from a them, the whole of political debate would be much better for it. but i think there is little chance of that happening until this ideology grinds itself to powder--which is a process that is well under way. but you never know with this kind of thing, really, until the process is over.
You could replace liberal, and that section is just as valid. You are just using conservative as a label for those who don't agree with you. And obviously, if someone doesn't agree with you, it's because of a personal failing of theirs and not the ridiculousness of your argument, right?

Quote:
so most conservative argument on the question of "terrorism" are more about "i am conservative and you are not" than about anything approaching a coherent relationship to the question at hand.

where is there any room in this for compromise with people who do not identify as conservative? theirs is a kind of battle ideology. we who are not conservative are the primary enemy. the discourse of "terrorism" quickly devolves into a kind of running litmus test: are you for us or against us?
think about the implication of how alansmithee's arguments have run out here (he is not alone,,,there are others...i simply use his posts here as an example)...those of us who do not agree with me ARE terrorists. what the fuck is that? how do you expect there to be any room for compromise? even if i were personally to find compromise desirable, where would i start if by virtue of not accepting the right line, i am defined a priori as part of a fifth column?

but you claim, pan, that we should compromise?

how?
Your whole viewpoint boils down to this:

I have discovered everything living in my ivory tower, and any intellectual inferior (aka conservative) who disagrees with me is obviously wrong, so why should I try to understand anything they might say?

Why are they wrong? Because they're conservative and don't agree with me.

And why should I compromise when I'm obviously so right and they're obviously so wrong?
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Old 07-11-2005, 08:42 AM   #137 (permalink)
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That's just it Roach, both sides are so freaking stuck with their views and unwilling to budge at all that there is nothing but animosity and hatred being spewed.

I mean, when on Thursday, the GOP talking heads spewing hate filled monologues how the bombings were the Left's fault..... that leaves very little to negotiate compromises with.

It's not a "let's do a musical..... Pollyanna...... etc" type attitude I am trying to convey. It is reality.

We are feasting on each other and so busy attacking the other because "they started it and they want it all their way" that the big picture seems to elude everyone. We cannot keep being divided and blaming each other. It's suicidal.

The economy is going into the shitter, we have massive debts, we have an infrastucture and tax base falling apart and we have terrorists feasting on our hatreds of each other.

Goddamn people wake the fuck up. We're in serious trouble and all we can do is point fingers and refuse to even try to negotiate compromises.

Hell, when Voinivich, Dewine and the other senators tried the GOP called them turncoats and are trying to find people to run against Voinivich and Dewine so they won't get re-elected. I mean come on.... we are in some serious shit when a party decides that if one of theirs tries to compromise and that person needs to be run out of office..... some serious warning bells should go off.

We are one serious tragedy away from watching ourselves totally go berserk and destroy each other. And for what? What the fuck is so important that one side feels the need to destroy the country. Abortion? The 10 Commandments being hung in public? Gay Marriage?

What we are doing to ourselves and our nation is far worse than ANYTHING the fucking terrorists can do to us.

When you have Rove or McCain or Limbaugh or Moore spewing nothing but hatred and demanding that we destroy the other side without so much as listening to them, nor can we give them acknowledgements of their good points (AND BOTH SIDES DO HAVE GOOD STANCES ON SOME ISSUES) nor can we even think of trying to compromise..... we are done.

Regardless of what the idiots on the Right say, regardless of what the morons on the Left want to preach........... this country was founded on compromise between the majority and minority and has compromised for the good of the country ever since..... well until now.

Perhaps it's because we are the lone super-power and there is no more boogey-man USSR to hate. Perhaps, because we have no true equal enemy outside we feel the need to feed within.

Heaven forbid both sides agree and work to better the country...... Heaven forbid one side takes the high road and says "fuck it you want to show hate and spew shit.... we won't, we'll be positive and ignore your games. We'll stick to issues and we'll get our fat lazy asses out of the office and into the townhalls and the village squares and maybe we won't have much of an audience at first but when people hear that we have positive ways and we don't use negativity and we don't go down to their level because we BELIEVE in what we say and our issues"..... the people will start coming.

Instead, both sides spew hatred and what that tells me is that neither side truly believes in what they are fighting for..... they are fighting just to be right and prove the other side wrong..... That's fucking insane.... no side is 100% right and no side is 100% wrong and to not even listen to what others say is ridiculous and suiciudal to our society as we know it.

I fucking give up.... if the Right wants to fucking destroy the Left and vice versa and destroying each other is more important than truly bettering the nation..... then fine destroy each other, kill each other off...... maybe in the end the terrorists will show mercy and realize nothing they can do will be worse than what we are doing to ourselves.
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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?"
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Old 07-11-2005, 08:45 AM   #138 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
You can't seriously believe this. You don't take any critique as serious. If someone disagrees, they are labeled conservative, and anything they say is quicky dismissed. This is shown by your obvious disbelief that anyone could actually not accept your arguments-anyone who doesn't accept them is clearly not listening. There is no room in that reasoning for accepting criticism.




Where did I say that lifestyle has nothing to do with economics? Again, by dismissing what I say as a conservative argument, you save yourself the trouble of having to actually listen and try to understand what I am saying. Maybe if I were to fly a plane into your house you would sympathise and try to understand better.

As to the rest, you don't look into the cause of cancer when you have cancer, you just eliminate it. Afterwards is the time for looking into reasons and assigning blame, and working on prevention if it was your actions at fault. But it doesn't do any good to know that your smoking was to blame while you lay dying of lung cancer.



You could replace liberal, and that section is just as valid. You are just using conservative as a label for those who don't agree with you. And obviously, if someone doesn't agree with you, it's because of a personal failing of theirs and not the ridiculousness of your argument, right?



Your whole viewpoint boils down to this:

I have discovered everything living in my ivory tower, and any intellectual inferior (aka conservative) who disagrees with me is obviously wrong, so why should I try to understand anything they might say?

Why are they wrong? Because they're conservative and don't agree with me.

And why should I compromise when I'm obviously so right and they're obviously so wrong?

Some great points.

Alan, I may not agree with you much politically but I deeply respect that maybe you are seeing my point, as you see that it is both sides and "conservative" is simply replaced by "liberal" in the hatemongering. I truly hope so and I truly pray more do before it is too late.
__________________
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?"
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Old 07-11-2005, 09:28 AM   #139 (permalink)
 
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alansmithee:
here is your post from a couple days ago:

Quote:
You are blaming the west for having a desirable lifestyle. Their gov'ts better enable people to achieve a comfortable lifestyle than the generally more autocratic governments in the Middle East, yet somehow it's the fault of western nations that they are resented. Those oil-rich countries in the area could be using their wealth to improve the living conditions of the citizens, but instead they line the pockets of a few high placed individuals. Yet I'm supposed to be to blame for their poor life because I bought some CD's yesterday and ate out?

I personally find it somehow offensive how these horrendous attacks are being hijacked by some as a way to promote their hatred of western society, by making that society somehow to blame for these acts of terrorism. I just hope that if these people are ever the victims of a tragedy, they will face the same blame as the cause of their own misfortune.
i dont know, maybe you write in some code that i cant decipher--but all the appearances that your actual writing gives would lead me to think that you do, in fact, assume that the motive for "terrorism" is jealousy over lifestyle.

when i responded with what i assumed was obvious irony (maybe not--my apologies if i was obscure) that you were making a ridiculous seperation between "lifestyle" and what that "lifestyle" requires for support, you simply reiterated your argument that things were as you said they were.

the only way i would know whether you in fact think this way would be if we were to be able to sit around having a few beers in 3-d life and talk.
which would be fine...i hope that i do not give the impression that i would treat you as a human being the way i treat the arguments you make here.
we are on a messageboard...what is written is what i react to.

as for my inability to take your arguments seriously: well, i dont.
this has nothing to do with "hatred" or any of the other cliches that you might toss about to rationalize the fact that people simply do not agree with you. if anything, i assume that you--and most of the folk with whom i argue here who position themselves on the right--are more intelligent and flexible in your thinking than the arguments you run out let you appear to be.

i have assumptions about politics and its relation to trying to understand why the world in which we live is as it is--so do you. we disagree--and fundamentally disagree--about what constitutes basic data. what you tend to rule out seems to me important more often than not.

this is important because i do not think that politics is a simple question of opinion--i do not think that all positions are equivalent because folk happen to believe them.
this is not a question of religious committment--on those grounds, you would be right in your assumptions that there is a requirement that one simply allow others to believe as they like simply because they do so.

but if you conflate the two registers, debate is pointless. and maybe it is.
but if this is an index of how the political climate in the states is moving--then, brother, we are all fucked.
and whether we do or do not pay attention to exhortations to pull together as a team will make no difference whatsoever.

i do not see debate like arm wrestling--i am not interested in the illusion of winnning or losing arguments, really. what i am interested in is trying to argue that there is a wealth of material--of data--information--available that enables you to see the question of "terrorism" in different ways---what i am interested in, on this score, is trying to force a different set of assumptions about what is and is not relevant into the conversation. in the end, it may well be that you see this as an attempt to win some match with you--and while i do think that your politics would collapse if you looked at things differently, whether you as a name that tracks across the green box that is any given post agree or do not is not really that big a deal to me.

and no, alansmithee, i have not figured everything out. and i am not a particularly "ivory tower" sort--if i was, what would i be doing here? if what you say was true, why would i talk with you? what would be the point? i would simply assume that you and everyone else here was probably an idiot and go do something else. and so i find your argument on this count to not only be wrong but personally offensive. because, at bottom, you do not know me and so do not know what you are talking about.

i do see conservative ideology as dangerous. dangerous for anything approaching a democratic polity, dangerous as a logic for thinking about the world, dangerous as a politics for thinking about domestic issues.

if you want to have an actual debate about the types of assumptions that shapes how you or i might view the question of terrorism, then let's do it: all assumptions on the table..let's go. i would enjoy it coming from someone on the right for once--but i doubt you'll take me up on it. in the end, you find yourself backed into an uncomfortable place and you cop out by trying to present yourself as some kind of victim. your choice: just dont expect that it will have much in the way of positive impact on how seriously i take you. which does not, i suppose matter much.

there are perfectly legitimate reasons for anyone to not accept conservative ideology. this whole discourse within rightwingland that characterizes anyone who disagrees with you as motivated by hatred is a declaration of intellectual vanity that far outstrips anything you impute to me. yours is the position that works from the assumption that your arguments are above reproach. if you did not assume was much, why would the only recourse you have to explain differences of views is the empty dicourse of "hatred"? there are no rational grounds for not agreeing with conservative ideology: all dissent is equally irrational. how much more vain could you possibly be? seriously...i dont see how you could go any further in that direction. but in this case, the problem is not yours--it is the ideolgical structure you adhere to--these arguments circulate endlessly in conservative media orf all types. but it is vanity, alansmithee.
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Old 07-11-2005, 09:57 AM   #140 (permalink)
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count me on the side of wanting to see a structured debate between roachboy and alansmithee!!

i've often wished we could have a moderated 'debate' type of format - people answering questions others asked, and not just dancing around where they want to go...

although we might have to get past each side thinking the other is too stuck up to talk
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Old 07-11-2005, 09:59 AM   #141 (permalink)
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I would love to see a true debate of the issues, but my honest beliefs are that both sides hate each other so much and refuse to admit that the other may have a good idea that they have lost sight of what they truly stand for and how to achieve it.
__________________
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?"
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:07 AM   #142 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
alansmithee:
here is your post from a couple days ago:



i dont know, maybe you write in some code that i cant decipher--but all the appearances that your actual writing gives would lead me to think that you do, in fact, assume that the motive for "terrorism" is jealousy over lifestyle.

when i responded with what i assumed was obvious irony (maybe not--my apologies if i was obscure) that you were making a ridiculous seperation between "lifestyle" and what that "lifestyle" requires for support, you simply reiterated your argument that things were as you said they were.

the only way i would know whether you in fact think this way would be if we were to be able to sit around having a few beers in 3-d life and talk.
which would be fine...i hope that i do not give the impression that i would treat you as a human being the way i treat the arguments you make here.
we are on a messageboard...what is written is what i react to.

as for my inability to take your arguments seriously: well, i dont.
this has nothing to do with "hatred" or any of the other cliches that you might toss about to rationalize the fact that people simply do not agree with you. if anything, i assume that you--and most of the folk with whom i argue here who position themselves on the right--are more intelligent and flexible in your thinking than the arguments you run out let you appear to be.

i have assumptions about politics and its relation to trying to understand why the world in which we live is as it is--so do you. we disagree--and fundamentally disagree--about what constitutes basic data. what you tend to rule out seems to me important more often than not.

this is important because i do not think that politics is a simple question of opinion--i do not think that all positions are equivalent because folk happen to believe them.
this is not a question of religious committment--on those grounds, you would be right in your assumptions that there is a requirement that one simply allow others to believe as they like simply because they do so.

but if you conflate the two registers, debate is pointless. and maybe it is.
but if this is an index of how the political climate in the states is moving--then, brother, we are all fucked.
and whether we do or do not pay attention to exhortations to pull together as a team will make no difference whatsoever.

i do not see debate like arm wrestling--i am not interested in the illusion of winnning or losing arguments, really. what i am interested in is trying to argue that there is a wealth of material--of data--information--available that enables you to see the question of "terrorism" in different ways---what i am interested in, on this score, is trying to force a different set of assumptions about what is and is not relevant into the conversation. in the end, it may well be that you see this as an attempt to win some match with you--and while i do think that your politics would collapse if you looked at things differently, whether you as a name that tracks across the green box that is any given post agree or do not is not really that big a deal to me.

and no, alansmithee, i have not figured everything out. and i am not a particularly "ivory tower" sort--if i was, what would i be doing here? if what you say was true, why would i talk with you? what would be the point? i would simply assume that you and everyone else here was probably an idiot and go do something else. and so i find your argument on this count to not only be wrong but personally offensive. because, at bottom, you do not know me and so do not know what you are talking about.

i do see conservative ideology as dangerous. dangerous for anything approaching a democratic polity, dangerous as a logic for thinking about the world, dangerous as a politics for thinking about domestic issues.

if you want to have an actual debate about the types of assumptions that shapes how you or i might view the question of terrorism, then let's do it: all assumptions on the table..let's go. i would enjoy it coming from someone on the right for once--but i doubt you'll take me up on it. in the end, you find yourself backed into an uncomfortable place and you cop out by trying to present yourself as some kind of victim. your choice: just dont expect that it will have much in the way of positive impact on how seriously i take you. which does not, i suppose matter much.

there are perfectly legitimate reasons for anyone to not accept conservative ideology. this whole discourse within rightwingland that characterizes anyone who disagrees with you as motivated by hatred is a declaration of intellectual vanity that far outstrips anything you impute to me. yours is the position that works from the assumption that your arguments are above reproach. if you did not assume was much, why would the only recourse you have to explain differences of views is the empty dicourse of "hatred"? there are no rational grounds for not agreeing with conservative ideology: all dissent is equally irrational. how much more vain could you possibly be? seriously...i dont see how you could go any further in that direction. but in this case, the problem is not yours--it is the ideolgical structure you adhere to--these arguments circulate endlessly in conservative media orf all types. but it is vanity, alansmithee.
This is a very well-written post that says nothing more than what I said before: Anyone who you disagree with is wrong, and not to be taken seriously. These people are considered conservatives. Conservatives are wrong, because they don't agree with me.

And somehow you don't see yourself doing the same thing that these shadowy conservatives are considered doing? You have described conservatives as people who force an us vs. them mentality, yet you do the very same thing. You believe your assumptions are right, and there's no other way of seeing the world. And anyone who doesn't fall into lockstep with your beliefs is inherently dangerous. You don't give any reasons why, you just constantly trot out conservative, because it's easier to deal with as a monolithic block. It requires less questioning from you-instead of trying to understand and deal with how you might be wrong, or at least re-examine your beliefs, labelling someone a conservative easily gets them out of the way. Because everyone knows that conservatives, are dangerous, divisive, illogical people, right? You don't even bother to say why conservative arguments aren't to be taken seriously, or why they are dangerous, or any other reason for what you claim.


I would take you up on your challenge about assumptions. I would be more than willing to. Because I AM willing to listen to a valid argument. I think you would be more likely to be "backed into a corner" simply because your dogmatism. I am more willing to be right, even if that means I have to change an opinion. You seem most worried about YOUR views being right, and protecting your world view from anything that might challenge it. That's why any compromise is so odious to you-it implies that there might be something wrong with how you see the world.

I only hope that the Republicans (or whoever is in power) are as right as most seem to believe they are, because I see more and more people like the above gaining voices in politics-people who aren't open to any new or differing ideas, and dogmatically follow whatever side they've allied themselves with, without examining WHY they believe the way they do.
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:40 AM   #143 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
This is a very well-written post that says nothing more than what I said before: Anyone who you disagree with is wrong, and not to be taken seriously. These people are considered conservatives. Conservatives are wrong, because they don't agree with me.

And somehow you don't see yourself doing the same thing that these shadowy conservatives are considered doing? You have described conservatives as people who force an us vs. them mentality, yet you do the very same thing. You believe your assumptions are right, and there's no other way of seeing the world. And anyone who doesn't fall into lockstep with your beliefs is inherently dangerous. You don't give any reasons why, you just constantly trot out conservative, because it's easier to deal with as a monolithic block. It requires less questioning from you-instead of trying to understand and deal with how you might be wrong, or at least re-examine your beliefs, labelling someone a conservative easily gets them out of the way. Because everyone knows that conservatives, are dangerous, divisive, illogical people, right? You don't even bother to say why conservative arguments aren't to be taken seriously, or why they are dangerous, or any other reason for what you claim.


I would take you up on your challenge about assumptions. I would be more than willing to. Because I AM willing to listen to a valid argument. I think you would be more likely to be "backed into a corner" simply because your dogmatism. I am more willing to be right, even if that means I have to change an opinion. You seem most worried about YOUR views being right, and protecting your world view from anything that might challenge it. That's why any compromise is so odious to you-it implies that there might be something wrong with how you see the world.

I only hope that the Republicans (or whoever is in power) are as right as most seem to believe they are, because I see more and more people like the above gaining voices in politics-people who aren't open to any new or differing ideas, and dogmatically follow whatever side they've allied themselves with, without examining WHY they believe the way they do.
Is this the real Alansmithee ????? Would you stop making sense already....... damn agreeing with you too much in 1 day will make my head hurt.
__________________
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?"
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:52 AM   #144 (permalink)
 
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how would be set this up so it did not devolve in to more of this kind of nonsense?

you insist on reducing the various points of dispute to questions of prior disposition on my part--this will get us nowhere.
you act as though you can speak to grounds for arguments that you have no way of knowing about.

so let me be clear:
i fundamentally disagree with your politics.
period.
the reasons i have for doing so do not correspond to your assumptions about why i disagree--if i felt conservative ideology provided an adequate description of the world, i would in all probability be a conservative.
but i dont.
how do we talk across this kind of basic disagreement?

well one way of trying would be to stop reducing my position to a cartoon and stop imputing ridiculous motives to me.

because your response above seems to me a kind of tedious exercize in projection on your part, alansmithee--again---this has happened over and over here----it is like you have to jam me into some tiny little box to explain to yourself why i do not see things as you do. and when it comes down to it, you simply invert the whole process and project all this back onto me.

when i post here i try to be quite specific: i try not to go after personal motivations and instead talk about types of argument, types of logic, that i see shaping what the poster is trying to say. i think i can talk about that and push it quite far without having to revert to speculations about motive. i can see why you might take it otherwise--but there is nothing i can really do about that, given that over and over i have tried to be as clear as i can that i see in your arguments, and in the arguments of other conservative folk who post here, particular patterns. and i talk about those patterns. you do not do me the same courtesy. if you want to continue anything like a dialogue, you have to do me that. on this point, i see no need to compromise. think of it as a ground rule. you agree to continue, you agree to that. they are, in a way, the same thing.

in conversation/debate on this board that has involved me with folk who are conservative, there has been a range of interactions--with artelevision, for example, things went in an interesting direction because despite the fact that we do not agree politically we could still talk. because we did not patronize each other up front by imputing goofy shit to each other, we have even been able to become friends. there is another type of argument that i run into here that has not offered the same kind of space--the ustwo model--sometimes your posts run into that place. i find him patronizing and uninformed--he finds me arrogant. and that is where things remain. nowhere to go, no real discussion to be had. i think that each of us has located a particularly effective way to irritate the other. so it is not that i will not listen--it is that i find myself sometimes being accorded some respect and according it in turn--and other times that respect is not forthcoming and things devolve quickly. and this particular type of devolution, because it follows the same pattern every time, is not interesting to me. i have alot going on in 3-d life and am increasingly feeling that i need not bother with it.

just so you know. i expect that you feel a parallel way about my posts--if so we push each other into these stupid places. it is not necessary--but you have to stop the kind of stuff i noted above or you will never know whether this particular type of conversation is the only one possible across political positions. maybe i'm wrong, but i take some of the more aggressive aspects of my posts to be reactive. one way to find out though: grant me this up front and if afterward i turn out to be an asshole, tell me. and i'll try to back off.

so there we are.
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Old 07-11-2005, 11:48 AM   #145 (permalink)
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alansmithee, I hope that you, Pan, and roachboy will forgive me for "barging" in on your "back and forth", but I would like to satisfy my curiousity, and maybe reach a greater understanding about my inability to understand how you, and say... Marvelous Mary, gain and hold your convictions.

The following is a post from Marvelous Mary, which is a response to zen_tom:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...t=91489&page=2
(Near bottom of page)

zen_tom makes (IMO, anway) the easily defended statement that ,"Iraq didn't have any weapons of mass destruction and the US waging a war based on that issue", and Marvelous Mary countered with a reference to "UN SCR 687", and an article from a consrvative Harvard student periodical that offers it's own analysis of Charles Duelfer's 10/2004 WMD report, that is intended to persuade that the U.S. was justified in invading Iraq, and that Bush did not mislead, because.....only the U.S. administrations reaction to 9/11 intervened to blunt Saddam's "waiting game", whereby, when the U.N. sanctions ended, he would have put his dormant WMD programs in high gear, and emerged as a
menace to the world.. ... (my comments continue below MM's post....)
Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
Good call Seaver - I'd like to see evidence of that treaty, please post a link.

Either way, considering that Iraq didn't have any weapons of mass destruction and the US waging a war based on that issue, subsequently using them themselves, doesn't make the action any less hypocritical does it?
Quote:
Oh, please.

Google "United Nations Security Council Resolution 687."

You also might read The Harvard Salient

The Harvard Salient
October 22, 2004

Misreporting Duelfer
Although proving no WMD's did exist, report provides verification of weapons program
By Andrew M. Trombly, Staff writer

If news headlines were the standard by which we judged truth, President Bush would be sitting in The Hague right now awaiting his war crimes trial. After all, the blurbs that appeared from the major media outlets concerning the recently released final report on Saddam’s programs for the development of weapons of mass destruction seemed to unequivocally verify the popular criticisms of the war in Iraq. “US Report Finds Iraqis Eliminated Illicit Arms In 90’s,” blared the New York Times on October 6, while FOX News followed close behind with “No Iraq WMD’s Made After ‘91” on October 7. Before we start picketing outside the White House, though, we would do well to analyze the actual report, released by chief U.S. weapons inspector Charles Duelfer and his multinational team after an exhaustive period of investigation in Iraq. In reality, Duelfer’s report provides more verification of the need for action against Saddam Hussein than it does criticism.
Before delving into the report’s content, however, let us dispense with the obvious: Duelfer and his team indeed found no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Though this finding seems to confirm Saddam’s acquiescence to his international commitments, it is not as transparent as it might seem. For there are two types of disarmament, each with directly opposite intentions even as they display similar outward characteristics. The first is that in which a nation’s leadership is genuinely interested in complying with its obligations and makes every reasonable effort to do so. The second, however, is that in which the leadership is primarily concerned with assuming a deceptive facade of compliance when its true objective is to rid itself of international observation, opening the door for further procurement of weapons.
Duelfer’s report places the designs of Saddam’s regime squarely within the realm of this second variety. Indeed, the very first line of the report seems to be the report’s most significant finding: “[Saddam Hussein] wanted to end sanctions while preserving the capability to reconstitute his weapons of mass destruction when sanctions were lifted.” Unfortunately, however, our nation seems so focused on justifying the war merely on the basis of whether or not Saddam possessed stockpiles of illicit weapons that the critical importance of this finding seems to have been overlooked.
If the war were only a Boolean matter of “weapons” or “not weapons,” then no impetus for the war would have existed in the first place. As we so often hear, North Korea, Iran, and other rogue states also have weapons of mass destruction, and many of these nations are suspected of having connections with terrorist organizations. That is deplorable, but it is also irrelevant. Many point to these examples as further evidence that Bush’s policy is misguided, but they ignore the uniqueness of Iraq’s situation. These nations did not annex their neighbors, lose a war, and agree to a cease-fire that forced them to unconditionally and absolutely abandon their weapons development programs. Iraq did.
United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 – the official version of the ceasefire that ended the 1991 Persian Gulf War – was a solemn and significant commitment on Iraq’s part to disarm or else. (Recall that the elder George Bush selected this alternative over marching U.S. troops into Baghdad during the first Gulf War, hoping that Saddam would come to his senses.) It was not drawn up between two parties with similar security interests; rather, it was the set of terms of surrender that was mandated by the victors to the losers. Saddam played a malicious gamble when he illegally invaded Kuwait, and he lost.
The resolution demanded some very specific actions from Saddam. First and most immediately, he was required to “unconditionally accept the destruction, removal, or rendering harmless, under international supervision, of [its weapons of mass destruction].” As we have now discovered, Saddam seems to have satisfied that end of the bargain, even if he did so covertly and deceptively. Resolution 687, however, made an additional and equally compelling demand: for Saddam to “unconditionally undertake not to use, develop, construct or acquire any [weapons of mass destruction.]” In short, the Iraqi dictator was expected to divorce himself from any and all weapons programs he was executing, irrevocably and permanently. There was no room for haggling on this issue. What is the point, after all, of forcing a vicious dictator solely to destroy his existing weapons if he is simply going to rebuild them within a few months or years?
It is this second stipulation that makes Duelfer’s report vindicate the present Administration’s perception of the security threat that Saddam’s Iraq posed. If Saddam were truly committed to obeying the terms of his cease-fire commitment, he would have absolutely abandoned his programs of weapons procurement. The report paints a very different picture of his true strategy. For example, Duelfer’s team concluded, “Based on available chemicals, infrastructure, and scientist debriefings, that Iraq at [the time of the 2003 U.S. invasion] probably had a capability to produce large quantities of sulfur mustard within three to six months.” Furthermore, reports Duelfer’s team, “Senior Iraqis – several of them in the Regime’s inner circle – told ISG [Duelfer’s organization] they assumed Saddam would restart a nuclear program once UN sanctions ended.” Such discoveries demonstrate Saddam Hussein’s blatant disregard for his cease-fire obligations and his persistence in pursuing options that would threaten global security.
Perhaps the scariest point to ponder, though, is how close Saddam came to blindsiding the world with his strategy of deception. Says the report, ““Iraq was within striking distance of a de facto end to the sanctions regime . . . by the end of 1999.” Simply put, the world was ignoring the perpetual complaints of inhibition and obstruction from the UN inspectors in Iraq in favor of brushing the whole matter under the carpet. To those who claim that sanctions “were working” to keep Saddam at bay, consider the number of countries that remain under foreign sanctions permanently; there are none. Saddam knew that the will of the world would be drained if he temporarily placed his weapons programs in a dormant state. It was only a matter of time, and he had all the time in the world.
It took the shocking tragedy of September 11 to expunge the complacency and apathy of the 90’s from the world’s consciousness. Certainly, it is unfortunate that the path to war was laden with such inaccuracy, but much of this can be attributed to the hide-and-seek games that Saddam played with the inspectors during the last decade, culminating in the four years after the 1998 expulsion of the weapons inspectors in which the world hadn’t the faintest notion of what he was up to. Many of the surface points that the Administration presented were either exaggerated or false, an unacceptable fact with which the nation must come to terms. Surface points do not form the central justification for war, however. Instead, the main justification – which Duelfer’s report verifies – was the intolerable threat that Saddam Hussein posed to global peace. He was given more than a decade’s worth of second chances to change his ways. He refused, and regime change was the only option left.
Marvelous Mary ended her response to zen_tom with:
Quote:
But still, we hear the mantra: Bush lied! Bush lied!
alansmithee, as the self appointed, repetitive poster of the overwhelming evidence that Saddam did not possess WMD, and that key members of the Bush administration were either reported, in 2001 and 2002, to either agree
that he had not reconsituted his WMD programs, or are directly quoted as saying that, along with WH press secretary McClellan's Jan. 12, 2005 admission to the press that Bush agreed that no WMD were found, or were likely to be found, based on the Duelfer report, in areas outside of Iraq, such as Syria, and my recently posted quotes from Bush and Rice that:

Quote:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/relea...0010916-2.html

...........Never did anybody's thought process about how to protect America did we ever think that the evil-doers would fly not one, but four commercial aircraft into precious U.S. targets - never.............

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/...in509471.shtml
'99 Report Warned Of Suicide Hijacking

WASHINGTON, May 17, 2002

Former CIA Deputy Director John Gannon, who was chairman of the National Intelligence Council when the report was written, said U.S. intelligence long has known a suicide hijacker was a possible threat.

(AP) Exactly two years before the Sept. 11 attacks, a federal report warned the executive branch that Osama bin Laden's terrorists might hijack an airliner and dive bomb it into the Pentagon or other government building......
(Edited to add lil "dots" between the quoted article segments.)

......"I don't think anybody could have predicted that these people would take an airplane and slam it into the World Trade Center, take another one and slam it into the Pentagon; that they would try to use an airplane as a missile, a hijacked airplane as a missile," national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said Thursday.
and that Bush had claimed that:
In late January 2003, in his SOTU address, more than a month after Iraq had presented it's data and inventory of WMD and WMD programs to the U.N.,
Bush claimed that Iraq's WMD inventory, as a justification for war, included:
Quote:
1. 25,000 liters of anthrax
2. 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin
3. 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agent
4. 30,000 chemical munitions
5. several mobile biological weapons labs
6. advanced nuclear weapons development program
7. a design for a nuclear weapon
8. five different methods of enriching uranium for a bomb
9. high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production
.....I am confident that it diminishes the credibility of any individual of any ideology to disagree that Bush misled and exaggerated to the point that he either could be called a liar, or incredibly misinformed to the degree that he was incompetent or inept.

Even with this body of formidible evidence, I still find myself having to post it again and again on these threads. The trend is that resistance to the evidence is shrinking.

My question to you is, in the face of this evidence, why do people still defend Bush with such anger, as MM did, and what do you think that it will take, as
far as evidence, if an admission from Bush himself is not sufficient enough for posts such as MM's to cease here? Why is is so difficult to process such straightforward, well documented arguments?
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Old 07-11-2005, 01:14 PM   #146 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
alansmithee, I hope that you, Pan, and roachboy will forgive me for "barging" in on your "back and forth", but I would like to satisfy my curiousity, and maybe reach a greater understanding about my inability to understand how you, and say... Marvelous Mary, gain and hold your convictions.

The following is a post from Marvelous Mary, which is a response to zen_tom:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...t=91489&page=2
(Near bottom of page)

zen_tom makes (IMO, anway) the easily defended statement that ,"Iraq didn't have any weapons of mass destruction and the US waging a war based on that issue", and Marvelous Mary countered with a reference to "UN SCR 687", and an article from a consrvative Harvard student periodical that offers it's own analysis of Charles Duelfer's 10/2004 WMD report, that is intended to persuade that the U.S. was justified in invading Iraq, and that Bush did not mislead, because.....only the U.S. administrations reaction to 9/11 intervened to blunt Saddam's "waiting game", whereby, when the U.N. sanctions ended, he would have put his dormant WMD programs in high gear, and emerged as a
menace to the world.. ... (my comments continue below MM's post....)


Marvelous Mary ended her response to zen_tom with:

alansmithee, as the self appointed, repetitive poster of the overwhelming evidence that Saddam did not possess WMD, and that key members of the Bush administration were either reported, in 2001 and 2002, to either agree
that he had not reconsituted his WMD programs, or are directly quoted as saying that, along with WH press secretary McClellan's Jan. 12, 2005 admission to the press that Bush agreed that no WMD were found, or were likely to be found, based on the Duelfer report, in areas outside of Iraq, such as Syria, and my recently posted quotes from Bush and Rice that:



and that Bush had claimed that:
In late January 2003, in his SOTU address, more than a month after Iraq had presented it's data and inventory of WMD and WMD programs to the U.N.,
Bush claimed that Iraq's WMD inventory, as a justification for war, included:

.....I am confident that it diminishes the credibility of any individual of any ideology to disagree that Bush misled and exaggerated to the point that he either could be called a liar, or incredibly misinformed to the degree that he was incompetent or inept.

Even with this body of formidible evidence, I still find myself having to post it again and again on these threads. The trend is that resistance to the evidence is shrinking.

My question to you is, in the face of this evidence, why do people still defend Bush with such anger, as MM did, and what do you think that it will take, as
far as evidence, if an admission from Bush himself is not sufficient enough for posts such as MM's to cease here? Why is is so difficult to process such straightforward, well documented arguments?

Now I'm a supporter of the war?????? Because I am speaking out against the fucking partisanship that is destroying us faster than the terrorists could ever dream of?

That's a new one.

I'm very vocal against the war in Iraq. Have been. But I am also a realist and if we are going to be there then let's do what we can to end it as quickly and with as few as possible casualties.

This fucking bickering over who is fucking right and who is fucking wrong has been getting us nowhere and is destroying us from within.

If some of you who choose to continue arguing your side and putting down the other without even so much as a legitimate civilized debate then you are the problem.

I was. I admit it, and there are issues I will still argue, but I have come to the conclusion that where the left and the right extremists see compromise and trying to work with each other as weakness, it's wrong. We share this country and our lives and happinesses are dependant upon this country moving forward. The only way we will ever move forward is to stop this "Fuck you I'm right and you're wrong" attitudes.

It's dividing the nation and right now we are about as divided as we have ever been since the Civil War.

When talking heads of 1 party sit and trash their political rivals on a horrendous day and blame the other side for allowing it to happen while the terrorists laugh at the fact we are feasting on each other and destroying ourselves far worse than they ever could....... something is seriously wrong here.

When days after the attackl people are pointing fingers and grandstanding and turning the horrendous event into a political attack....... something is seriously wrong.

When sides refuse to talk civilly and instead become more polarized..... something is seriously wrong.

Whether we like it or not, whether we deserve it or not, whether we want to believe it or not...... there are fucking people out there that have the sole intention in life to KILL us. And they are eventually going to become more dangerous and threatening unless we do something to stop them.

It's not a question of whether they will ever get "dirty bombs", "suitcase nukes" or viral diseases to spread true anguish and pain.......

It's a question of when.

And if we stay at each other's fucking throats and pay more attention to trying to win political brownie points.....WE WILL FUCKING DIE!!!!!!!

So grow the fuck up, get your shit together and start fucking getting along or we're dead. It is that plain and simple.

Do you think these terrorists give 1 iota who is right over here and who is wrong???????

No, they're laughing their asses off because they know the more we fight within, the more divided our house is..... the less we pay attention to what they are doing and they can plan their attacks and pull them off with little resistance.

I'm not going to sit here and watch fucking partisan assholes destroy my country, destroy what I love because they are too fucking arrogant and ignorant to listen to anyone that doesn't agree with them.

And if you disagree with what I say..... hey great that's what this country is about...... but YOU tell me how divisive partisan politics is helping us to beat the terrorists and not destroy the country.

I appologize for the language and the temper..... but people wake up and see that we are so divided we are truly destroying ourselves.
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Old 07-11-2005, 04:42 PM   #147 (permalink)
 
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but pan--there are fundamental diagreements between positions.
i dont now what you have in mind when you complain about fragmentation--that is the nature of the democratic beast, even in its watered down american form. the only problem with fragmentation is when it reaches the point of impasse--and even that would only be a problem in a direct democratic system. right now, you have an extreme rightwing administration. you have supporters of that administration. you have lots of people who oppose both, and quite strongly.

fact is that i think, and will continue to think, that within this the problem is that the right is trying to shift the basis for political committment away from anything approaching a conventional standard for politics, toward a type of religious committment. bitch all you want about the result of that, but let's not pretend that the cause is other than it is. i do not know why you prefer to see the problem as being generated by all sides of the debate, when it is pretty obvious that there is one side whose positions are routinely floated as nonfalsifiable, and that side is the right.

i think that is the main point host was trying to make.
it is the same kind of point that i have been trying to make.
it is the same point that alansmithee tried to dodge by simply turning the argument around. if this debate ever transpires, i expect it will become pretty clear pretty fast where the limitations are, what their source and what their implications.

where do you get the idea that there is anything like a bloc parallel to the american right that opposes it? there is a vast diversity of positions that agree amongst themselves only about their opposition to this administration and the politics is embodies. to pretend that there is a fight between two symmetrical blocs is delusional--a delusion that suits the right just fine because it is one of their main tactics--to pitch their aggressive actions as responses, to confuse offense and defense in the minds of their loyalists. but it is wrong empirically, and will do you no good to hold onto conceptually.

maybe you are right that the good of this nation thing you refer to alot would be better served if it was less polarized--but the idea that this is simply something that happens because people are snarky and not a response to a concrete political situation created in large measure by the rise and consolidation of extreme right politics in the states is useless.
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Old 07-11-2005, 05:55 PM   #148 (permalink)
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I chose this topic to share conversations between myself and a friend in London. We have shared political opinions for approximately three years. I consider him my mentor in getting me involved in politics, but we have disagreed often. (He was correct 9 out of 10 times). He offered this article in describing the differences between our press and his.

http:www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat?bid=1&pid=5323

BLOG | Posted 07/11/2005 @ 2:52pm
Bugged by the Brits


Conservative radio and television personalities in the United States were unsettled after last week's bombings in London -- not because of the terrorist attack on a major western city, but because too few Londoners were willing to serve as props to support the right-wing ranting of the Americans. After one stoic Brit, who had blood on the side of his face, calmly described climbing out of a smoke-filled subway station, a Fox anchor exclaimed, "That man's obviously in shock."

Actually, the man appeared to be completely in control of his faculties, as did the British journalists who appeared that evening on Fox's "The O'Reilly Factor." Host Bill O'Reilly, the king of the hysterics, had a hard time with the Brits, who simply were not as feverish as he had hoped -- and who were genuinely bemused when he started ranting about how much he hated Britain's highly regarded Guardian newspaper.

O'Reilly, like too many other American radio and television commentators, expected the British attacks to provide a new opportunity to hype support for the war in Iraq, gripe about "open borders" and generally spin sorrow and fear into political gold for the conservative cause.

It didn't happen, though not for lack of trying by the folks at Fox.

The Fox commentary following the London bombings was surreal. Brit Hume babbled about how the dip in stock values after the attacks meant it was "time to buy," Brian Kilmeade suggested that a deadly terrorist attack on a country where the G8 leaders were meeting "works to our advantage," and John Gibson bemoaned the fact that the bombs hit London and not Paris. "They'd blow up Paris, and who cares?" chuckled Gibson, the host of one of the network's "news" shows.

But the Fox personalities and their allies in right-wing talk radio found few takers among the British for their efforts to politicize the gruesome developments in the British capital.

Try as American conservative commentators did to get Londoners to echo their pro-Bush, pro-war line, the British generally refused to play along.

This does not mean that most Brits who were interviewed embraced calls for the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq or other alternatives to the Bush administration's misguided approach to the so-called "war on terror." But it does mean that, instead of parroting propaganda, the Brits preferred to engage in thoughtful discussions about what had happened, why the terrorists targeted London and what ought to be done to prevent future attacks. Few topics were off limits.

Veteran journalist Gary Younge suggested that the attacks were "Blair's blowback" -- the bloody wages of British Prime Minister Tony Blair's decision to back President Bush's disastrous decision to invade Iraq. Some members of parliament called for Britain to quickly withdraw its troops from the quagmire. Others suggested that Britain needs to get more engaged in promoting the Middle East peace process. There was no single response, no lockstep approach, because the Brits were angry enough -- and determined enough -- to put everything on the table.

Unfortunately, a thoughtful, nuanced discussion that was focused on finding solutions -- rather than merely venting or promoting a particular political agenda -- didn't fit into the Fox format.

The inability of American right-wing media to recognize honest discourse prevented most U.S. media outlets from recognizing that which was genuinely meaningful and moving about the British reaction.

For instance, U.S. media pretty much missed the one truly Churchillian response to the attacks -- that of London Mayor Ken Livingstone, a committed socialist and anti-war activist, who issued the following statement on the day of the attacks.

Snip: The mayors statement has been submitted to tfp before; see link.
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Old 07-11-2005, 05:59 PM   #149 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
but pan--there are fundamental diagreements between positions.
i dont now what you have in mind when you complain about fragmentation--that is the nature of the democratic beast, even in its watered down american form. the only problem with fragmentation is when it reaches the point of impasse--and even that would only be a problem in a direct democratic system. right now, you have an extreme rightwing administration. you have supporters of that administration. you have lots of people who oppose both, and quite strongly.

fact is that i think, and will continue to think, that within this the problem is that the right is trying to shift the basis for political committment away from anything approaching a conventional standard for politics, toward a type of religious committment. bitch all you want about the result of that, but let's not pretend that the cause is other than it is. i do not know why you prefer to see the problem as being generated by all sides of the debate, when it is pretty obvious that there is one side whose positions are routinely floated as nonfalsifiable, and that side is the right.
Where's the proof? This is the problem with all of your arguments, they are all begging the question. Unless you already believe that it's just the right that is the problem, there is no proof.

Quote:
i think that is the main point host was trying to make.
it is the same kind of point that i have been trying to make.
it is the same point that alansmithee tried to dodge by simply turning the argument around. if this debate ever transpires, i expect it will become pretty clear pretty fast where the limitations are, what their source and what their implications.
How did I try to dodge anything? Again, there's no proof of this.

Quote:
where do you get the idea that there is anything like a bloc parallel to the american right that opposes it? there is a vast diversity of positions that agree amongst themselves only about their opposition to this administration and the politics is embodies. to pretend that there is a fight between two symmetrical blocs is delusional--a delusion that suits the right just fine because it is one of their main tactics--to pitch their aggressive actions as responses, to confuse offense and defense in the minds of their loyalists. but it is wrong empirically, and will do you no good to hold onto conceptually.

maybe you are right that the good of this nation thing you refer to alot would be better served if it was less polarized--but the idea that this is simply something that happens because people are snarky and not a response to a concrete political situation created in large measure by the rise and consolidation of extreme right politics in the states is useless.
Again, unless you believe already that the right is unopposed, no evidence will support your claim. And hence, your claim is not sound.

You talk repeatedly about the conservative us vs. them menality, yet someone hardly conservative above just said that pan somehow supported the war. Because pan dared to disagree (that dissent thing you seem to find so great), he/she was instantly able to be labelled a war supporter (and probably also the dreaded conservative).

Again, if you fail to see the opperation of a liberal bloc in opposition to the neocon bloc, it is because you are purposely keeping your eyes closed.

(and btw, if asked for proof, I can actually provide this).
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Old 07-11-2005, 06:01 PM   #150 (permalink)
Junkie
 
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Location: Indiana
Here's is a video that admits there were bombing drills on the very day of the bombings, as well as the exact locations. For me its difficult to believe this coincidence. Is it unreasonable to belive that this spin off of Al Qaeda is not the prime suspect? Please take a look and tell me what you think.

Video: Bombing Exercises In London Underground
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Old 07-11-2005, 06:11 PM   #151 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
I chose this topic to share conversations between myself and a friend in London. We have shared political opinions for approximately three years. I consider him my mentor in getting me involved in politics, but we have disagreed often. (He was correct 9 out of 10 times). He offered this article in describing the differences between our press and his.

http:www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat?bid=1&pid=5323

BLOG | Posted 07/11/2005 @ 2:52pm
Bugged by the Brits


Conservative radio and television personalities in the United States were unsettled after last week's bombings in London -- not because of the terrorist attack on a major western city, but because too few Londoners were willing to serve as props to support the right-wing ranting of the Americans. After one stoic Brit, who had blood on the side of his face, calmly described climbing out of a smoke-filled subway station, a Fox anchor exclaimed, "That man's obviously in shock."

Actually, the man appeared to be completely in control of his faculties, as did the British journalists who appeared that evening on Fox's "The O'Reilly Factor." Host Bill O'Reilly, the king of the hysterics, had a hard time with the Brits, who simply were not as feverish as he had hoped -- and who were genuinely bemused when he started ranting about how much he hated Britain's highly regarded Guardian newspaper.

O'Reilly, like too many other American radio and television commentators, expected the British attacks to provide a new opportunity to hype support for the war in Iraq, gripe about "open borders" and generally spin sorrow and fear into political gold for the conservative cause.

It didn't happen, though not for lack of trying by the folks at Fox.

The Fox commentary following the London bombings was surreal. Brit Hume babbled about how the dip in stock values after the attacks meant it was "time to buy," Brian Kilmeade suggested that a deadly terrorist attack on a country where the G8 leaders were meeting "works to our advantage," and John Gibson bemoaned the fact that the bombs hit London and not Paris. "They'd blow up Paris, and who cares?" chuckled Gibson, the host of one of the network's "news" shows.

But the Fox personalities and their allies in right-wing talk radio found few takers among the British for their efforts to politicize the gruesome developments in the British capital.

Try as American conservative commentators did to get Londoners to echo their pro-Bush, pro-war line, the British generally refused to play along.

This does not mean that most Brits who were interviewed embraced calls for the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq or other alternatives to the Bush administration's misguided approach to the so-called "war on terror." But it does mean that, instead of parroting propaganda, the Brits preferred to engage in thoughtful discussions about what had happened, why the terrorists targeted London and what ought to be done to prevent future attacks. Few topics were off limits.

Veteran journalist Gary Younge suggested that the attacks were "Blair's blowback" -- the bloody wages of British Prime Minister Tony Blair's decision to back President Bush's disastrous decision to invade Iraq. Some members of parliament called for Britain to quickly withdraw its troops from the quagmire. Others suggested that Britain needs to get more engaged in promoting the Middle East peace process. There was no single response, no lockstep approach, because the Brits were angry enough -- and determined enough -- to put everything on the table.

Unfortunately, a thoughtful, nuanced discussion that was focused on finding solutions -- rather than merely venting or promoting a particular political agenda -- didn't fit into the Fox format.

The inability of American right-wing media to recognize honest discourse prevented most U.S. media outlets from recognizing that which was genuinely meaningful and moving about the British reaction.

For instance, U.S. media pretty much missed the one truly Churchillian response to the attacks -- that of London Mayor Ken Livingstone, a committed socialist and anti-war activist, who issued the following statement on the day of the attacks.

Snip: The mayors statement has been submitted to tfp before; see link.
The bolded section is mine. In essence, what you are saying here is that if someone designated as "right" says something, it's "merely venting or promoting a particular political agenda". But when a "veteran" journalist said the bolded section, it's "a thoughtful, nuanced discussion that was focused on finding solutions".

And after doing a search and perusal of some of Mr. Younge's previous articles, it's obvious he would be the last one to vent or promote a particular political agenda [/sarcasm].

But hey, why let a perfectly good tragedy go to waste when political capital can be mined from it?

Last edited by alansmithee; 07-11-2005 at 06:14 PM..
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Old 07-11-2005, 06:31 PM   #152 (permalink)
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I have been in the north woods for the last week, I only heard about this, very briefly (10 seconds), on the one working radio in camp.

On the long drive back to civilization I pondered what the reaction on the TFP boards would be. There is obviously no surprise in that the usual posters were very predictable in their reaction to the attacks.

This predictability makes posting anything pointless.

So I will simply state my heart goes out to the families of the dead and maimed and I hope the terrorists come get brought to justice swiftly.
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Old 07-11-2005, 07:58 PM   #153 (permalink)
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Quote:
You just proved exactly what I was saying. Civilized nations/people aren't debating if killing innocents is fine. This isn't something that any rational person needs to debate about.
issues are discussed and conclusions are based. most muslims (99.5%) disagree with the killing of innocents. just because a few crazy fundo's think its ok does not mean that the majority condones it. debate is also used to try and change and convince them to think otherwise. its not healthy to have a shoot 'em down attitude like yourself..but each to his own.

'civilised/nations and people' ARE debating the killing of innocents in iraq btw.


Quote:
And also, I checked al jazeera, and there was no mention of any arab nation condemning the London attacks.

i meant check aljazeera/arabic media outlets....aljazeera is synonymous for arabic news outlets...but i did some reserach for you...

Quote:
muslim organisations that condemned the attacks
AMP Report – July 7, 2005
http://www.amperspective.com/html/london_bombings.html

American Arab and Muslim organizations
condemn London bombings

July 7, 2005: American Arab and Muslim organizations today unequivocally condemned the explosions this morning in central London’s public transportation system that killed scores of people and injured hundreds more.

The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

“The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) is horrified by the series of bombings that rocked London’s public transportation earlier today.

”Information as to who is responsible for these latest bombings in London has yet to be confirmed. Regardless of the identity of the perpetrators of this terrible crime, ADC condemns this heinous act in the strongest possible terms. ADC urges the public and the media to proceed with caution.

”ADC believes that the best plan of action to such an appalling attack is for all Americans to come together and offer support to the English people.”

The American Muslim Alliance (AMA)

"We join all people of goodwill in condemning these utterly immoral and heinous crimes. We extend our heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and the British people.

"We're shocked and horrified by what has happened in London and condemn this wanton massacre of innocent civilians in the strongest possible terms.

"While we call for the swift apprehension and punishment of the perpetrators, we also join the Muslim Council of Britain in urging Muslims to help in the recovery effort."

American Muslim Voice (AMV)

The American Muslim Voice (AMV) vehemently condemns the barbaric bombings in London causing death and injuring to score of innocent people.

We reaffirm our principled position towards acts of terror, regarding them as cowardly acts of violence irrespective of the identity of the perpetrators or their motives.

Islam holds the sanctity of human life as Qur'an clearly states: "If anyone slays a human being, it shall be as though he had slain all mankind" (5:32).

Those who commit these heinous crimes are not following any religion or acting as human beings.

Our heart goes out to the families and friends of those who were the innocent victims of today's terrorist attacks.

We truly need to walk away from violence and start moving towards a different path by creating a culture of peace, understanding, acceptance, mutual respect and harmony. We should do everything in our power to break down all barriers and form lifelong friendships.

We all desire world peace and we can achieve it only if all of us start feeling the pain of others. John Wooden says it best, "Consider the rights of others before your own feelings, and the feelings of others before your own rights."

Let us use this tragedy to stand united and say no to the terrorists irrespective of their identity.

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

"We join Americans of all faiths, and all people of conscience worldwide, in condemning these barbaric crimes that can never be justified or excused. American Muslims offer their sincere condolences to the loved ones of those who were killed or injured in today's attacks and call for the swift apprehension and punishment of the perpetrators."

”The Muslim Council of Britain and other British Islamic groups issued similar condemnations of the attacks and urged Muslims to help in the recovery effort.

”In 2004, CAIR launched an online petition drive, called "Not in the Name of Islam," designed to disassociate Islam from the violent acts of a few Muslims. SEE: http://www.cair-net.org/asp/article.asp?id=169&page=AA

”The "Not in the Name of Islam" petition states: "We, the undersigned Muslims, wish to state clearly that those who commit acts of terror, murder and cruelty in the name of Islam are not only destroying innocent lives, but are also betraying the values of the faith they claim to represent. No injustice done to Muslims can ever justify the massacre of innocent people, and no act of terror will ever serve the cause of Islam. We repudiate and dissociate ourselves from any Muslim group or individual who commits such brutal and un-Islamic acts. We refuse to allow our faith to be held hostage by the criminal actions of a tiny minority acting outside the teachings of both the Quran and the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him."

The Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago (CIOGC) Chairman, Abdul Malik Mujahid:

"We condemn this brutality in the strongest terms. These attacks are an affront to Islam and to Muslims all over the world including Muslim in America. They are in no way a reflection of Islamic teachings, which order Muslims to preserve and protect life.

“This is why I would like to request all mosques in North America, England and the world to pray for the victims of this tragedy during Friday prayers tomorrow. We would also like to request that Imams offer Friday sermons about the sanctity of life in Islam and the heinousness of terrorism.”

(The Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago is a federation of organizations serving over 400,000 Muslims throughout Chicagoland.)

The Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA)

“The Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) is shocked and horrified at the several attacks on the people of London during the rush hour mass transit. We join everyone in condemning such acts of terror and senseless violence. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their loved ones at this tragic moment. We trust that the authorities will determine those responsible for these barbaric acts and bring them to justice quickly.

“Islam holds the sanctity of human life at the highest regard, and shedding the blood of innocent people is considered most heinous crime. As Muslims we condemn the killing of innocent people for any reason. This is an attack on all of us, and all communities of faith need to stand together in calm and resolute purpose against terrorism, hatred and extremism. We urge the people of England to remain calm. As citizens we also hope innocent people will not be targeted in backlash following this terror attack. Learning from experience after 9/11, we also express the profound hope that civil liberties will not be a further casualty of this tragic event, in the Great Britain or around the world.

“Here in the US, we urge Muslims to remain cautious and in communication while continuing their daily work, to avoid fear and confusion and remain measured in response, and above all, to put our trust in the Mercy of Allah, All-Mighty, which will sustain us during the coming days, Insha Allah.”

The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)

“The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) expresses its strongest condemnation of the horrific bombings in London today. We abhor these acts of mindless violence that violate all Islamic principles regarding the sanctity of life and the safety and security of innocent civilians. ISNA urges the swift apprehension of those responsible and offers condolences to those who have lost their loved ones.

”Irrespective of the sociopolitical implications, this act violates the Islamic principles of the sanctity of life and the safety and security of innocent civilians.

“Attacking civilians who are going about their daily business is a criminal act that violates Islamic principles, and must be condemned by all Muslims. Our hearts go out to the victims and their families.”

The Muslim American Society (MAS)

“The Muslim American Society (MAS) utterly condemns the heinous acts of terror that rocked the London transit system and killed and injured scores of innocent people. Our most heartfelt condolences and sympathies are extended to the bombing victims and their families.

“We reiterate our consistent and principled position towards acts of terror, regarding them as cowardly acts of violence irrespective of the identity of the perpetrators or their motives. Islam holds the sanctity of human life in the highest possible regard, and the shedding of blood of any innocent person is considered a repulsive crime.

“MAS believes that relationships between people and nations should be governed by universal brotherhood, compassion, tolerance, fairness and mutual interests.

“MAS therefore joins hands with all people of faith and conscience to work for a more just and peaceful world and to condemn, oppose, and overcome those who would spread fear, hatred, and death.

“We call upon our fellow Muslims in Great Britain to provide any and all assistance and support to the much-needed emergency and aid services required for the people of London in their time of hardship. We call upon our government and all Americans to remain extra vigilant, and call upon the Department of Homeland Security to ensure the safety and protection of all Americans from such atrocities.

“We also call upon all Americans, media outlets and government officials to continue to be clear and careful in seeing these crimes for what they are, and not link, nor associate them, with any faith or religion. These are crimes against humanity perpetrated by evil individuals and have absolutely nothing to do with any religion or faith.

“We call upon the Muslim community to join us in our resolve in condemning such brutal acts and to remain steadfast, patient, and take the higher road in face of any possible misguided reactions.

“We again call upon our government to address the scourge of terrorism through a comprehensive approach where the root causes are addressed and eliminated, without unduly relying solely on the use of force.

“MAS and Muslims in America remain steadfast and ready to work hard in order to rid the world from the scourge of terrorism, and are ready to serve as a bridge of goodwill and outreach between our country and the greater Muslim world, where the spread of freedom and human rights will eliminate the space within which terrorism festers and grows.

“In the meantime, our thoughts and prayers remain with those killed or injured in London. We pray to the Almighty to bring peace and tranquility upon all who are in distress or hardship, to grant mercy to those killed, and bring swift forthcoming health and prosperity upon all affected.”

The Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC)

“Islam considers the use of terrorism to be unacceptable for any purpose. Any individual or group that claims that these heinous actions serve as a redress for legitimate grievances is dreadfully mistaken. MPAC condemns the exploitation of people and issues, regardless of the perpetrators and their justifications. This assault is unmistakably an act of terrorism, an attack against humanity.

“We at the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) extend our heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and the British people. As Americans, we are familiar with the imminent and the long-term repercussions of terrorism. Here at home, we stand in solidarity with law enforcement to maintain security, and we have every reason to believe that similar cooperation will take place in London.”


Quote:
Leaders of Arab Countries Condemn the Bombing

http://www.memri.de/uebersetzungen_a..._09_07_05.html

Many Arab leaders condemned the London bombings. Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad sent a letter to British Prime Minister Tony Blair expressing his condemnation of "these abhorrent operations that we condemn in the most serious manner possible." [4]

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) issued a communiqué in which he said that he "harshly condemns the abhorrent crimes that caused the death of innocent civilians, and sends condolences on his behalf and on behalf of the Palestinian leadership and the Palestinian people to the families of the victims, and to the people and government of Britain." [5]

Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ahmad Qurei (Abu Alaa) also issued an announcement: "Whoever is behind the planning and execution of the explosions does not have the right to carry out this kind of crime against humanity. It is inconceivable that there [would be] a logical justification that the human mind can accept for the harming of innocent civilians." [6]

Saudi Ambassador to Washington Prince Bandar bin Sultan also condemned the attacks, and noted that the Saudi people had also "been the victim of terror operations" and that "this criminal attack is a reminder to us all that no country is immune to terrorism." [7]

The media advisor to the Saudi Embassy in London, Jamal Khashoggi, gave a phone interview to Al-Arabiya TV on July 7, 2005 to discuss the attacks. During the interview, he was asked: "Do you feel that people rush to point an accusing finger at Al-Qa'ida, at extremist Islamic organizations, as happened... For instance, if you remember, in Madrid, people there were quick to accuse the ETA?"

Khashoggi answered: "So far, no senior British official has accused anyone. They just mentioned the statement that appeared on a website. But the fingerprints of Al-Qa'ida are clear, particularly given what was said about a suicide bomber. Unfortunately, no one carries out these cowardly acts in their resistance... I mean, we Muslims admit this. Those who belong to Islam nowadays commit these suicide operations. This has been the case in Iraq, in Riyadh, and now we see them in London, after Washington, New York, and Madrid. Al-Qa'ida's fingerprints are clear. Unfortunately, this is Al-Qa'ida's agenda, but once again I want to say that this is the agenda of a minority, and not of the majority, and we cannot let them drag all of us into their agenda."

Islamic Leaders Condemn the Bombing

Quote:
http://www.memri.de/uebersetzungen_a..._09_07_05.html

Condemnation of the bombings was also heard from senior clerics and officials in the religious establishments in Arab countries. Al-Azhar Sheikh Muhammad Sayyed Tantawi denounced the bombings, telling www.islamonline.net [8]: "Those responsible for London attacks are criminals who do not represent Islam or even truly understand (its message)." He also condemned the killing of civilians, including women and children, "without differentiating between combatants and non-combatants."

On the possibility that the attacks were an attempt to press British Prime Minister Tony Blair to withdraw his troops from occupied Iraq, Tantawi said: "This is illogical and cannot be the motive for killing innocent civilians."

Sheikh Yousef Al-Qaradhawi, spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood movement and the head of the European Council for Fatwa and Research, told www.islamonline.net [9] that he condemned the bombings in London: "We were dumbfounded by the grave news which surprised us, and all the world today, about the bombings that took place in the city of London, that killed dozens and wounded hundreds of innocent people who attacked no one and had committed no crime to remove the immunity of their blood."

Al-Qaradhawi described the bombings as "cruel and barbaric black actions that Islam harshly condemns." He also said, "[Even] In an official war, when state armies battle face to face, Islam does not permit the killing of women, children, elders, priests, farmers and merchants, and those like them, who are non-combatants, and whom nowadays we call civilians."

Al-Qaradhawi offered his condolences to the families of the victims, and sent a special letter of condolence to the mayor of London, which stated: "We express our condolences to our dear friend, London Mayor Ken Livingstone, a man of justice who always defends Arab and Muslim causes."

Leading Lebanese Shiite scholar Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah told Reuters: "These crimes are not accepted by any religion. It is a barbarism wholly rejected by Islam." [10]

The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood movement, [11] Muhammad Mahdi 'Akef, condemned the London bombings, calling them "a criminal act that no law, and even no religion, recognizes." The communiqué stated, "The spread of the culture of violence and terror, and the increase in pressure on the international level, are the direct consequence of the lawbreaking, violation of treaties and international conventions, and repression of the peoples by the American leadership and the British government."

The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood movement in Syria, 'Ali Sadr Al-Din Al-Bayanouni, condemned the London bombings: "These are terror operations that harm innocent civilians and constitute a crime against humanity, and we condemn them. Islam completely forbids harm to a life, and sees it as harm to all humanity. The Muslim Brotherhood movement in Syria strongly condemns these bombings, and their perpetrators, whoever they may be, and demands that their identity be exposed and that they be given the most deterring of punishments. The movement calls on the Arab and Islamic community in Britain to awaken and to cooperate in preventing crimes like these, which harm all of society and arouse fear and concern within it." [12]
footnote: it should be noted that al qardawi and tantawi are considered the highest and most respected and well known scholars in the islamic world today.
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Old 07-11-2005, 08:00 PM   #154 (permalink)
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Old 07-11-2005, 08:05 PM   #155 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
The bolded section is mine. In essence, what you are saying here is that if someone designated as "right" says something, it's "merely venting or promoting a particular political agenda". But when a "veteran" journalist said the bolded section, it's "a thoughtful, nuanced discussion that was focused on finding solutions".

And after doing a search and perusal of some of Mr. Younge's previous articles, it's obvious he would be the last one to vent or promote a particular political agenda [/sarcasm].

But hey, why let a perfectly good tragedy go to waste when political capital can be mined from it?
Alan, this is the view of a Londoner I know that shared this article. Respectfully, we of the US with only two parties (that don't have a dime's worth of difference) really don't understand what is right or left in British politics. We are somewhat slightly right (centrist by British standards), and you have no idea about "left" if you haven't studied politics outside of the US.

The article is presented as a different view of the media between the US and Britain. But, once again... dialogue about the content is not possible. You attack the source, without offering a reasonable discussion.

Shall we just dispense with further comment? You will always be right, anyone that doesn't agree with you is wrong, in any possible way you wish to choose. You have chosen sarcasm, and cherry picked a single comment in the entire article and twisted it to suit your politics.

I continue to hope that reasoned discussion can occur in this forum.
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Old 07-11-2005, 09:00 PM   #156 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
.......You talk repeatedly about the conservative us vs. them menality, yet someone hardly conservative above just said that pan somehow supported the war. Because pan dared to disagree (that dissent thing you seem to find so great), he/she was instantly able to be labelled a war supporter (and probably also the dreaded conservative).

Again, if you fail to see the opperation of a liberal bloc in opposition to the neocon bloc, it is because you are purposely keeping your eyes closed.

(and btw, if asked for proof, I can actually provide this).
alansmithee, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt that it was not clear to you that the questions and examples in my last post here were directed solely at you, with a "courtesy" comment that was directed to three of you, influencing Pan, I'm presuming, to misunderstand that I was posting to you.
I have now quoted my comments in my last post, and removed all quote boxes that were included in my previous post, and marked your name with "BOLD" html tags. Kindly re-read it and respond in the interest of providing your insight. My experience is, that by re-posting the links and excerpts that
are displayed in my post, near the bottom of this page:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...t=91489&page=2

I am able to discourage further assertions by the same poster, anyway, that Saddam possessed WMD and had operational WMD programs in early 2003, and that Bush and members of his administration did not lie to or mislead the American people to an extremely troubling degree, about the WMD threat, and about what the administration knew pre-9/11 about even the idea that terrorists had the potential to hijack airliners and fly them into buildings.

alansmithee, the bottom line is: does the "quality" of an argument, i.e., posting linked quotes from the White House that the president no longer believes that WMD will be found in Iraq or in places like Syria, quotes from Powell and Rice two years before the invasion of Iraq, that Saddam has "not reconstituted WMD programs", and that the "no fly zones" were successful in preventing Saddam from even posing a "threat to his neighbors", have the effect that I perceive, by at least diminishing assertions similar to the ones that Marvelous Mary made in her post in my linked example page, just a day or two ago?

If you agree that it has that effect. is that the extent of documentation that you believe it will take to influence people who are more "Bush" than Bush, about these issues, to at least "stand down" ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by host
<h3>alansmithee,</h3> I hope that you, Pan, and roachboy will forgive me for "barging" in on your "back and forth", but I would like to satisfy my curiousity, and maybe reach a greater understanding about my inability to understand how you, and say... Marvelous Mary, gain and hold your convictions.

The following is a post from Marvelous Mary, which is a response to zen_tom:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...t=91489&page=2
(Near bottom of page)

zen_tom makes (IMO, anway) the easily defended statement that ,"Iraq didn't have any weapons of mass destruction and the US waging a war based on that issue", and Marvelous Mary countered with a reference to "UN SCR 687", and an article from a consrvative Harvard student periodical that offers it's own analysis of Charles Duelfer's 10/2004 WMD report, that is intended to persuade that the U.S. was justified in invading Iraq, and that Bush did not mislead, because.....only the U.S. administrations reaction to 9/11 intervened to blunt Saddam's "waiting game", whereby, when the U.N. sanctions ended, he would have put his dormant WMD programs in high gear, and emerged as a
menace to the world.. ... (my comments continue below MM's post....)


Marvelous Mary ended her response to zen_tom with:

<h3>alansmithee,</h3> as the self appointed, repetitive poster of the overwhelming evidence that Saddam did not possess WMD, and that key members of the Bush administration were either reported, in 2001 and 2002, to either agree
that he had not reconsituted his WMD programs, or are directly quoted as saying that, along with WH press secretary McClellan's Jan. 12, 2005 admission to the press that Bush agreed that no WMD were found, or were likely to be found, based on the Duelfer report, in areas outside of Iraq, such as Syria, and my recently posted quotes from Bush and Rice that:



and that Bush had claimed that:
In late January 2003, in his SOTU address, more than a month after Iraq had presented it's data and inventory of WMD and WMD programs to the U.N.,
Bush claimed that Iraq's WMD inventory, as a justification for war, included:

.....I am confident that it diminishes the credibility of any individual of any ideology to disagree that Bush misled and exaggerated to the point that he either could be called a liar, or incredibly misinformed to the degree that he was incompetent or inept.

Even with this body of formidible evidence, I still find myself having to post it again and again on these threads. The trend is that resistance to the evidence is shrinking.

My question to you is, in the face of this evidence, why do people still defend Bush with such anger, as MM did, and what do you think that it will take, as
far as evidence, if an admission from Bush himself is not sufficient enough for posts such as MM's to cease here? Why is is so difficult to process such straightforward, well docum
ented arguments?
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:33 PM   #157 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
The article is presented as a different view of the media between the US and Britain.
Different in what way?

I'd be curious as to how you would find this article to read...how would you characterize it, politically speaking, as being different from the US media 'viewpoint'?

Last edited by powerclown; 07-11-2005 at 10:44 PM..
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:34 PM   #158 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alansmithee
You just proved exactly what I was saying. Civilized nations/people aren't debating if killing innocents is fine. This isn't something that any rational person needs to debate about.

And also, I checked al jazeera, and there was no mention of any arab nation condemning the London attacks.
From what I have been able to understand from the news and reading this forum, there are groups of people in the world who believe they are in a holy war (a religious jihad) with the U.S and the west (the great satan). They feel justified in bombing and killing civilians just as many nations at war have done in the past.

I don't think it will be possible to appease this religious fanaticism with what they percieve as good actions and understanding from the west. The only way to keep from getting killed is to declare all out war against this stealth enemy. I am not smart enough to know how to do this but I think it would probaby involve much clandestine activity with some very talented people working as spys. Surely we in the west can muster up some people capable of taking the war to the groups responsible. Something like some well placed bombs of our own placed in their training camps, etc..

Just like any other war the decision as to who the enemy is and which targets to hit will necessarily have to be made by the military. I have a hard time believing that Great Britain and the U.S. are in the dark as much as it appears in the news reports in regards to who is responsible for these attacks.

Last edited by flstf; 07-11-2005 at 10:46 PM.. Reason: spelling
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Old 07-11-2005, 10:58 PM   #159 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dlishsguy
issues are discussed and conclusions are based. most muslims (99.5%) disagree with the killing of innocents. just because a few crazy fundo's think its ok does not mean that the majority condones it. debate is also used to try and change and convince them to think otherwise. its not healthy to have a shoot 'em down attitude like yourself..but each to his own.
I find anyone who would actually resort to the actions these terrorists takes to be people that no amount of convincing will work. So the best thing to do is make it sure they don't hurt anyone else.

Quote:
'civilised/nations and people' ARE debating the killing of innocents in iraq btw.
There is no debate. The civillians aren't the intended targets, and nobody thinks its good that they die. You can't say the same about terrorists and their mindset/tactics.



Quote:
i meant check aljazeera/arabic media outlets....aljazeera is synonymous for arabic news outlets...but i did some reserach for you...








Islamic Leaders Condemn the Bombing



footnote: it should be noted that al qardawi and tantawi are considered the highest and most respected and well known scholars in the islamic world today.
I'll bow to your knowledge about the islamic community on this, and say that anything I said about muslim org's and leaders not condemning these recent attacks was wrong. I also think it would help if statements like these were brought to the attention of more people, as it would probably (hopefully) lessen some of the anti-muslim sentiment found in the US.
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Old 07-11-2005, 11:11 PM   #160 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
Alan, this is the view of a Londoner I know that shared this article. Respectfully, we of the US with only two parties (that don't have a dime's worth of difference) really don't understand what is right or left in British politics. We are somewhat slightly right (centrist by British standards), and you have no idea about "left" if you haven't studied politics outside of the US.

The article is presented as a different view of the media between the US and Britain. But, once again... dialogue about the content is not possible. You attack the source, without offering a reasonable discussion.

Shall we just dispense with further comment? You will always be right, anyone that doesn't agree with you is wrong, in any possible way you wish to choose. You have chosen sarcasm, and cherry picked a single comment in the entire article and twisted it to suit your politics.

I continue to hope that reasoned discussion can occur in this forum.
As I just admitted above, I'm not always right, and if compelling evidence is brought to bear showing how I'm wrong, I'll gladly correct myself. So that's now out of the way.

As to the claim of "attacking the source and not the content", I was discussing the content. The content of the article is supposedly about how biased US media is, and the US media's inability to deal properly with tragedy. I was showing that the very comments that the blogger was using to supposedly show the levelheadedness and clear thinking of British media were, just maybe, as politically motivated as the comments attributed to the right-leaning portions as the US media. And how I "twisted" a comment that WAS DIRECTLY QUOTED IN THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE is beyond me.

And you are fooling yourself if you expect anyone to believe that the purpose of you posting that was to show some sort of unbiased account of the difference between British and US media. Us "conservatives" aren't as stupid as you'd like to believe.
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