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Old 07-18-2005, 02:58 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Terrorist

terrorist

adj : characteristic of someone who employs terrorism (especially as a political weapon); "terrorist activity"; "terrorist state" n : a radical who employs terror as a political weapon; usually organizes with other terrorists in small cells; often uses religion as a cover for terrorist activities


OK....before this entire board is pissing in the wind over this .....heres the freakin definition for you. Use this thread to complain over the arbitrary nature of the term.....and call each other names if you feel the need.

From this point on....I am deleting anything in the board that goes in this direction.....unless it is in here.
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:04 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Insurgent

n. 1: a person who revolts against civil authority or an established government; esp: a rebel not recognized as a belligerent. 2: one who acts contrary to the policies and decisions of his political party.

adj. rising in opposition to civil authority or established leadership
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:07 PM   #3 (permalink)
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With you permission Tec, I have added the definition of an insurgent. The two definitions are dramatically different, but perhaps not that easily distinguished from a political framework.

For example: Was Timothy McV and insurgent or a terrorist?
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:35 PM   #4 (permalink)
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in regards to the war in iraq, it's quite simple to differentiate between the terrorists and freedom fighters. coalition = terrorists (distributing fear and death to innocent civilians for unjust causes), iraqi resistance = freedom fighters (fighting the terrorists whom illegally invaded their soil obliterating their children to regain what’s rightfully theirs).
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:36 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Sure glad I made this place for these comments.......its gonna get nasty

please consider the above as opinion....and react accordingly

I really dont want to Ban anyone

But thats about as inflamatory as you can get Rdr4evr
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:37 PM   #6 (permalink)
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just to clarify, are you saying you don't want people arguing that Bush is loosely defining terrorists so that he can have terrorists to fight whereever it's convenient for him? Because if that's the case you would seem to be attempting to slant discussion to the right. . .
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Old 07-18-2005, 04:38 PM   #7 (permalink)
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To answer my own question, I believe Timothy McV to be a terrorist. I will grant that he attacked a Federal building because of some beef with the government that I don't fully understand. That building was also occupied by civilians and children.

We have a nun in Washington state, that has been jailed and imprisoned for civil disobedience due to her protests against nuclear weapons. She more closely fits the term of "insurgent" in my opinion.

If it is difficult to distinguish among our "home grown", I doubt that we can claim certain knowledge of terrorists vs. insurgents in another country.
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Old 07-18-2005, 05:20 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rdr4evr
in regards to the war in iraq, it's quite simple to differentiate between the terrorists and freedom fighters. coalition = terrorists (distributing fear and death to innocent civilians for unjust causes), iraqi resistance = freedom fighters (fighting the terrorists whom illegally invaded their soil obliterating their children to regain what’s rightfully theirs).
While I can agree with you to a point, I don't think that it is correct to call the coalition forces terrorists... they are invaders or an occupying force but they can hardly be seen as terrorists as long as they continue to be in uniform and act as openly as they have been.

That said, as an occupying force they are terrifying.


As for the Iraqis opposition... I am not convinced they are all acting as one. I believe there are some who are clearly insurgents, upset that their nation has been invaded by an opposing force. *Some* of those insurgents have resorted to terrorist activities to achieve their goals.

My question for those who oppose seeing the opposing Iraqis as insurgents... if they spared the lives of civilians would that make them less terrorists in your eyes OR would it make a difference?

Does it make a difference to you that the coalition forces have killed civilians in their efforts or are they *just* collateral damage in your eyes.

To me these are questions not easily answered. But then I don't see things in black and white, good vs. evil, etc.
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Old 07-18-2005, 05:29 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rdr4evr
in regards to the war in iraq, it's quite simple to differentiate between the terrorists and freedom fighters. coalition = terrorists (distributing fear and death to innocent civilians for unjust causes), iraqi resistance = freedom fighters (fighting the terrorists whom illegally invaded their soil obliterating their children to regain what’s rightfully theirs).
You're saying what other leftists want to say. At least you're honest about it.

However, tecoyah is right in saying it's an immflamatory remark, for we're trying to maintain a level of discourse in here thats above the moveon.orgs and the freerepublics.orgs.

On a personal note, it's absolutley insulting as a veteran who has actually served in a TofO that you demean the same people who protect the freedoms that you refuse to fight for. [/rant]. Carry on
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Old 07-18-2005, 06:17 PM   #10 (permalink)
 
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i dont recall the dictionary definition of the term "terrorist" ever being in question. but ok...if you want to play this game, at least use a decent dictionary.

this from the oed:

Quote:
1. As a political term: a. Applied to the Jacobins and their agents and partisans in the French Revolution, esp. to those connected with the Revolutionary tribunals during the ?Reign of Terror?.

1795 Hist. in Ann. Reg. 169 The terrorists, as they were justly denominated, from the cruel and impolitic maxim of keeping the people in implicit subjection by a merciless severity. 1795 BURKE Regic. Peace iv. Wks. IX. 75 Thousands of those Hell-hounds called Terrorists..are let loose on the people. 1818 HERVE Beauties of Paris II. 296 (Jod.) He assisted La Fayette in endeavouring to defend the king from the terrorists. 1877 MORLEY Crit. Misc. Ser. II. 83 That pithy chapter in Machiavelli's ?Prince? which treats of cruelty and clemency..anticipates the defence of the Terrorists.

b. Any one who attempts to further his views by a system of coercive intimidation.
In early use also applied spec. to members of one of the extreme revolutionary societies in Russia. The term now usually refers to a member of a clandestine or expatriate organization aiming to coerce an established government by acts of violence against it or its subjects.

1866 FITZPATRICK Sham Sqr. 180 Miss G, the daughter of a Wexford terrorist, directed many of the tortures which were so extensively practised. 1883 Harper's Mag. Jan. 315/2 To [Russian] Terrorists it guarantees..security on condition of a..pledge to abandon.. the revolutionary party. 1905 Westm. Gaz. 20 Sept. 2/1 Several notables are believed to be more or less implicated in the actions of the Terrorists. 1947 Ann. Reg. 1946 60 The latest and worst of the outrages committed by the Jewish terrorists in Palestinethe blowing up of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. 1956 H. NICOLSON Diary 29 Oct. (1968) 311 When people rise against foreign oppression, they are hailed as patriots and heroes; but the Greeks whom we are shooting and hanging in Cyprus are dismissed as terrorists. What cant! 1969 E. J. HOBSBAWM Bandits viii. 101 The war between police and terrorists is one of nerves as well as of guns. Whoever is more frightened has lost the initiative. 1977 P. JOHNSON Enemies of Society xviii. 240 The Baader-Meinhof gang of ultra-Left terrorists. 1979 Spectator 20 Oct. 20/1 (Advt.), In this enthralling autobiography the author of Maquis..retravels the course of his life from his childhood to his war-time exploits as a terrorist in the Resistance.



2. Dyslogistically: One who entertains, professes, or tries to awaken or spread a feeling of terror or alarm; an alarmist, a scaremonger.

1803 SYD. SMITH Wks. (1859) I. 26/1 The terrorists of this country are so extremely alarmed at the power of Bonaparte. 1805 W. TAYLOR in Monthly Mag. XIX. 570 Some book of the religious terrorists, which tended to infuse the alarm of foul perdition. 1861 GEN. P. THOMPSON Audi Alt. Part. III. clxxv. 209 What becomes of the pretended terrorists at home who affect to be alarmed for the condition of every white female in the Antilles?



3. attrib.

1801 HEL. M. WILLIAMS Fr. Rep. I. xi. 113 The defeat of the terrorist-party. Ibid. xvi. 194 Under the terrorist government of France. 1856 GOLDW. SMITH in Oxford Ess. 295 An advanced and slightly terrorist school of philanthropists. 1884 in Pall Mall G. 11 Sept. 7/2 In the struggle we are engaged in with the terrorist and autocratic Governments of Europe, and especially with that of Russia. 1937 KOESTLER Spanish Testament vi. 132 The civilian population...whose sympathies they could but alienate by terrorist acts. 1955 Britannia Bk. of Year 263/2, 756 Africans executed..incl. 219 for Mau Mau murders and 508 for other terrorist crimes. 1979 R. PERRY Bishop's Pawn viii. 130 We weren't dealing with ordinary kidnappers. We were faced by a relatively sophisticated terrorist organization. 1983 Listener 19 May 8/1 Terrorist theory..says that the brigades should be subdivided into tight terrorist cells.



Hence terroristic, -ristical adjs., characterized by or practising terrorism; also terroristically.

1850 Bentley's Miscell. XXVIII. 407 This was the Government styled ?terroristical? by the Austrians! 1875 POSTE Gaius I. Comm. (ed. 2) 81 This terroristic law..was not abrogated till the time of Justinian. 1884 STEPNIAK in Contemp. Rev. Mar. 327 The gradual progress of the terroristic tendency under the influence of Government repression. 1887 Century Mag. Nov. 54 The leaders of the ?terroristic? or extreme revolutionary party. 1919 M. BEER Hist. Brit. Socialism I. II. ii. 103 The terroristic acts and wars into which that social earthquake had degenerated. 1945 R. HARGREAVES Enemy at Gate 308 The terroristic procedure associated in these days with Nazism, Fascism and Bolshevism. 1951 MCWHINEY & SIMKINS in A. Dundes Mother Wit (1973) 590/2 The klansmen used the methods of violence as extensively as any of the other white terroristic organizations. 1972 Econ. & Polit. Weekly 1 Apr. 692/1 Consisting almost exclusively of guerilla squads, they [sc. the Naxals] moved secretively and acted terroristically. 1977 Time 26 Sept. 9/1 The background of terroristic acts is connected with a deep hatred of bourgeois society.
a better defintion generates some surprises...

first the term has a long long history of being applied to people who work from the left. not necessarily from a left position that i would endorse (bader-meinhoff? i dont think so)--but it originated in bourgeois hysteria directed in particular at the left.
you could argue that the term is about bourgeois hysteria from the outset. and it remains so now.

maybe this is why the reagan administration made such extensive use of it--the term carries with it the illusion of continuity with previous formations that were feared and fought (often with extraordinary and self-righteous violence) by the bourgeois order. "terrorism" makes the post soviet world safe for the right, helping it to stabilize itself by enabling it to pretend it still operates in a bipolar world.

second: fearmongering is also defined as terrorism (definition 2)---this quite apart from tactics involving violence. if you take that one seriously, then the bush administration would in fact be terrorist in its usage of the term.

see the definitions slide around...assigning it to a (in this case more or less fictional to the extent that the idea of a unified movement is a fiction) movement is a political act. what was being discussed was the politics of that assignment, and the politics of its effects.

in the hands of the bush administration, the notion of terror functions to imply an adversary that is symmetrical with the united states. on equal footing logistically, a real and present danger--except that you are far more likely to be hit by a car than fall victim to an attack---except for the overwhelming organizational assymetry that seperates the united states from any series of small militant organizations--except for the reality the administration purports to describe by using the term, in short.

the term is used to structure fear.

it names nothing, it locates nothing, it helps nothing.

having dispensed a priori with any question of political motivation, it groups together actions by their surface features. it is analytically worthless.
"terrorism" is not descriptive: it is a mobilizing tool being played for every last drop of juice by the right: it is a politial weapon the primary target of which is the american people, the aim of which is to force support for otherwise unjustifiable policies, like the war in iraq.
it is the signifer around which the adminstration's politics of impunity has been legitimated.
it describes the world as this administration prefers to see it: what more could a reactionary administration like this one hope for than a reason for a state of emergency? what better culprit to pin the causes of a state of emergency on than one which is everywhere and nowhere, omnipotent (capable of striking anywhere, any time) and impotent (small groups scattered around the world...)
it is a militarized fantasy without a referent that is coherent--it refers to the phantom of alqaeda--it refers to all of islam--it refers to arbitrary "radical" sectors of islam---it refers to all and none--which makes it little more than license for racism (witness the many many posts from people on the right who make no coherent distinction amongst muslims when they get up in a righteous lather about their fear of death).
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Last edited by roachboy; 07-18-2005 at 06:47 PM..
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Old 07-19-2005, 09:45 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Good job, Roachboy....and excellent analysi of the true etymology of the word. And I agree, the word has been twisted for political purposes through many decades of history to the point where it has very little meaning, anymore.
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Old 07-19-2005, 11:14 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Roachboy,

Unfortunately one must agree with your assumptions at the start to agree with your conclusion, and I don't really see that you have supported your assumptions with anything substantive other than your personal opinion.

This isn't an attack on you, just my own observation on your post.

Like all words, the word "terrorist" has evolved in meaning and whether you or I like it (or not), it has a commonly accepted meaning today and that is what we must deal with.

In my mind, a reading of the History of the Jacobians and what they did during the French revolution would actually support the current common understanding of the word as first set forth by Tecoyah. Thousands of people were murdered by them for the slightest offense and most dubious reasonings during the post revolutionary years. Indeed, they seem almost Stalinistic in their purges.

I do understand your viewpoint on the current use of the word, but again I disagree with your conclusions (surprise! ) I still say that the bombings that plagued US bases and buildings and the killings of Western tourists during the 80's and 90's falls very well under the word "terrorism" even as I can understand the different motivations for the "terrorists". Some of those motivations I can somewhat sympathize with (fear of western cultural contamination, anger over Western policy in the middle east) without actually supporting the methods they use (flying planes into civilian buildings, shooting up buses, blowing up discoteques).

Note that Bush was not even in the picture during many of these episodes. So I think that the charge that Bush is somehow manipulating the word is misguided at best. Could he be making political hay from it? Almost certainly. But I don't think anyone can honestly say that Kerry or Clinton or Bush Sr. or Reagan or any other politician doesn't do the same.

No, the question becomes, is the threat still real? And perhaps that is where our opinions make our conclusions different on the relevancy of the word "terrorist". To me, recent history clearly tells me that the word is relevant. And given that it is irrefutable that those events did take place, I honestly cannot understand your conclusion that it isn't a relevant term.
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Old 07-19-2005, 11:54 AM   #13 (permalink)
 
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ok so maybe i should be clearer about why i posted the oed defintion in the first place: i understand this entire thread to be rooted in a misunderstanding of what was being debated in other threads on more or less the same topic. the question of basic definition was not in question, and i think it a willful misreading to see that as having been at issue. the question was the politics of its usage. i made the argument here and elsewhere that the cateogry terrorism as the bush administration uses is it worthless analytically. i did not say there were no threats--but that this term says nothing about them and allows you to say nothing about them. the conversation about this has continued in one of the other threads. so your basic objection was already being discussed there. sorry if that was confusing--i imagine it was after a hiatus.

2. the post above was written as if it was continuous with others in the threads that were cut into by this one, so i didnt present everything i had to say on the matter here (another way of saying the same thing).

3. on the terror. i actually took a bit longer than usual on the above post because i was considering whether to say something about that or not. first thing is that many contemporary accounts of the period were written by royalist/conservative opponents of the revolution who understood it as following logically from the execution of louis 16 as a kind of cosmic demonstration of just how bad a thing that was. i could provide you with a long long list of citations for this if you;d like. the revolution freaked out lots of conservative folk. it was also seen quite otherwise by thos who supported the ideals or the policies of the revolution. the question of naming particular phases gets to the politics of writing history.
at the same time, you can see the terror as it actually unfolded as an extreme example of what happens to a state when it decides that it is beset by enemies real and imagined--you could argue that the terror followed from an early variant of the structured paranoia that is central to the administrations politics of "terrorism"---and the revolution was in fact threatened by real enemies--which it supplemented with a healthy dose of imagined correlates. every single revolutionary organization since the jacobins have tried to learn from this period what not to do. the right, which understood the whole of this as Evil from the outset, learned almost nothing from it.

the equation of the jacobin terror to stalin is not good. i dont know if this is a good place to continue this particular line of argument--i could do it at ridiculous length--maybe pm me if you want.

Quote:
I do understand your viewpoint on the current use of the word, but again I disagree with your conclusions (surprise! ) I still say that the bombings that plagued US bases and buildings and the killings of Western tourists during the 80's and 90's falls very well under the word "terrorism" even as I can understand the different motivations for the "terrorists". Some of those motivations I can somewhat sympathize with (fear of western cultural contamination, anger over Western policy in the middle east) without actually supporting the methods they use (flying planes into civilian buildings, shooting up buses, blowing up discoteques).
we are close to agreement here, actually. i would still maintain that the category "terrorism" allows you to understand almost nothing about any of the attacks you talk about here. it lumps them together without any grounds to do so and gets in the way of trying to understand what might prompt someone to undertake such an action.

when i talk about the bush administration's use of the term, i refer specifically to their reponse to 9/11/2001, which has continued to shape its discourse. i would have hoped that i made it clear that i did not think that bush and his entourage had invented this--they didnt. they just ran with it, when presented with a chance to do so. i dont think this was something they planned--i think they simply found themselves in a position that enabled a particular set of aspects of their inclinations to unfold. the contemporary usages of the notion "terror" developed mostly under reagan--there is abundant material out there you can read on this history, should you be so inclined. have a look at "the real terror industry" sometime for a carefully documented study of this---and of the rise of the system of rightwing think tanks--and so the early phases of the formation of the contemporary right medai apparatus. edward herman and gerry o'sullivan wrote it.
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Old 07-19-2005, 08:46 PM   #14 (permalink)
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You're saying what other leftists want to say. At least you're honest about it.
He isn't saying what other leftists want to say, he's saying what he wants to say, and what almost everyone who thinks that has no problem saying directly to everyone but the target of their slanderous accusations.
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Old 07-19-2005, 09:10 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rdr4evr
in regards to the war in iraq, it's quite simple to differentiate between the terrorists and freedom fighters. coalition = terrorists (distributing fear and death to innocent civilians for unjust causes), iraqi resistance = freedom fighters (fighting the terrorists whom illegally invaded their soil obliterating their children to regain what’s rightfully theirs).
Please become active in democrat politics.

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Old 07-20-2005, 11:27 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by NCB
You're saying what other leftists want to say. At least you're honest about it.
Geez... that is a very big brush you have there... are you sure you have enough paint on it?

Nothing like meeting inflammatory speech with more inflammatory speech.


Quote:
Originally Posted by NCB
On a personal note, it's absolutley insulting as a veteran who has actually served in a TofO that you demean the same people who protect the freedoms that you refuse to fight for. [/rant]. Carry on
This too misses the point. Regardless of how one feels about troops on the ground it doesn't change the fact that your troops are killing civillians... of course the politically correct way to argue this is to place the blame where it belongs... on the administration.

Raider's post was careful not to implicate the soldiers directly and your knee jerk defense of "people who protect the freedoms that you refuse to fight for" is just an emotional distraction from the central argument.
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Old 07-20-2005, 11:32 AM   #17 (permalink)
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This too misses the point. Regardless of how one feels about troops on the ground it doesn't change the fact that your troops are killing civillians.
Horseshit, Charlatan and you know it. Our military goes thorough great lengths to not kill innocents. However, it is war and sometimes innocents get killed. It sucks, but to infer that our (Amercian that is...Canadians have long lost their will to fight) troops are intentionally killing is outragous
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Old 07-20-2005, 11:38 AM   #18 (permalink)
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You're saying what other leftists want to say. At least you're honest about it.

However, tecoyah is right in saying it's an immflamatory remark, for we're trying to maintain a level of discourse in here thats above the moveon.orgs and the freerepublics.orgs.

On a personal note, it's absolutley insulting as a veteran who has actually served in a TofO that you demean the same people who protect the freedoms that you refuse to fight for. [/rant]. Carry on
Please explain who you presume is "protect[ing] the freedoms", where (geographically speaking) "they" are "protect[ing] the freedoms", and who you are presuming, is the "you" who you presume in your "you refuse to fight", statement.

What are the "freedoms", as you refer to them, and how can they be inventoried today, compared to their status on January 19, 2001? Is there enough left of them to determine if they are "worth fighting for"? Have we brought "the freedoms" to Iraq? Where ? How?

Are you simply engaging in sloganeering with vitriol?
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Old 07-20-2005, 11:39 AM   #19 (permalink)
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Emotions are starting to run high.

I totally understand.

But it would be better for people to bow out of the discussion before things are said that could get them banned for a week or more.

It's up to you all now.
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Old 07-20-2005, 12:02 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Horseshit, Charlatan and you know it. Our military goes thorough great lengths to not kill innocents. However, it is war and sometimes innocents get killed. It sucks, but to infer that our (Amercian that is...Canadians have long lost their will to fight) troops are intentionally killing is outragous
I think again you are missing the point... I don't see anywhere in Raider's post where he says the troops are "intentionally killing".

What he said was:
Quote:
coalition = terrorists (distributing fear and death to innocent civilians for unjust causes
Yes the military takes great care to not kill innocents. BUT, they do kill innocents. AND you have to remember that this war gets spun in a different way on the ground in Iraq. To many there (and here) the coalition forces are engaged in an unjust invasion of their nation.

To many Iraqis who have lost loved ones or seen their nation torn apart by war (yet again) can you blame them for seeing the coalition troops in a negative light? Can you blame them if they were to take up arms against an invader?

Right or wrong, I am sure that many of the insurgents *believe* they are doing the right thing just as fervently as you believe your troops are doing the right thing. Ideology is a bitch.
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Old 07-20-2005, 01:45 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Please become active in democrat politics.

We need another Republican in 2008.
I know you like pushing the limits, but this really wasn't necessary.
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Old 07-20-2005, 03:11 PM   #22 (permalink)
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I know you like pushing the limits, but this really wasn't necessary.
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OK....before this entire board is pissing in the wind over this .....heres the freakin definition for you. Use this thread to complain over the arbitrary nature of the term.....and call each other names if you feel the need.

From this point on....I am deleting anything in the board that goes in this direction.....unless it is in here.
What our little raiders fan said is basically hate speech. I think you know what I want to say to the [explicative deleted] and know that I used great restraint.
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Old 07-20-2005, 06:00 PM   #23 (permalink)
 
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you cannot be serious, ustwo.
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Old 07-20-2005, 06:15 PM   #24 (permalink)
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On a personal note, it's absolutley insulting as a veteran who has actually served in a TofO that you demean the same people who protect the freedoms that you refuse to fight for. [/rant]. Carry on
Who again is presently securing the freedoms I refuse to fight for? Not a single grunt killing in iraq is or ever was responsible for protecting this mythical “freedom” that seems to be exclusive to the states, and nor will they ever be as my life doesn’t lay in their hands. It’s the same “freedom” rhetoric that’s brought up anytime negativity towards military personnel arises, and as usual it holds little water. We are all human beings given the right of choice, be it whatever consequences, and we were all put on the same planet, same dirt as one another, and the day I accept my life as privilege given to me by someone who can pick up a gun and murder his fellow man, is the day I no longer want to live. The planet is a huge place with plenty of areas to reside, and if a situation arises in which my life is in jeopardy due to unavoidable circumstances in terms of war, then I will simply leave and let the failures kill each other for some false ideals. If a time comes when the whole planet is a war zone, then I will only fight to protect myself and loved ones, not a country or piece of cloth.


Quote:
Horseshit, Charlatan and you know it. Our military goes thorough great lengths to not kill innocents. However, it is war and sometimes innocents get killed. It sucks, but to infer that our (Amercian that is...Canadians have long lost their will to fight) troops are intentionally killing is outrageous
Goes out of their way to not kill innocents? Good one. I bet you think all of them are not capable of war crimes either. There are more than enough troops intentionally killing civilians. Don’t think because the media doesn’t report something, or the crime is not leaked into mainstream media, that it doesn’t happen often. Not all soldiers are as inept as the soldiers in Abu ghraib to pick up a camera and tape their atrocities. You don’t know a thing unless you’ve discussed the situation with Iraqis living it. Nothing. Once you’ve been fed so much patriotic propaganda, you no longer have ability for independent thought, and it is at that point where you are willing to go to any lengths to protect your imaginary ideals, whether you have to kill civilians or not.

There is no such thing as “accidentally” killing civilians. Was it a accident when the signed up with the armed forces knowing that a circumstance could arise in which they would be sent into battle and possibly kill civilians? No, therefore it’s not a accident. And even if it were, it wouldn’t make them any less inhumane. They are and were always prepared for such events to occur, and gladly continued their mission regardless to fight whatever propagandist cause they were fed.

Quote:
Yes the military takes great care to not kill innocents. BUT, they do kill innocents. AND you have to remember that this war gets spun in a different way on the ground in Iraq. To many there (and here) the coalition forces are engaged in an unjust invasion of their nation.

To many Iraqis who have lost loved ones or seen their nation torn apart by war (yet again) can you blame them for seeing the coalition troops in a negative light? Can you blame them if they were to take up arms against an invader?

Right or wrong, I am sure that many of the insurgents *believe* they are doing the right thing just as fervently as you believe your troops are doing the right thing. Ideology is a bitch.
This is the key charlatan. In a situation of war, both perspectives are never viewed and in turn, this leads to delusional racism and unwarranted labels to the supposed “enemy”. Although the brave Iraqi resistance is doing the right thing, and doing what any nation wrongfully invaded would do given the situation. They were a simple people residing under great oppression to begin with, and to be invaded and have loved ones killed is all the fuel they need to fight back, be it in Iraq or otherwise, and I don’t blame them in the least. Although you do see some of their actions as terrorism, I do not, nor will I ever. If one puts aside the politics and views the very basic situation, you will understand the resistance. I commend each and every one of them for their bravery and courage to face the “greatest” military force on the planet, with what little they have to work with. If all they have are IED’s and small arms, then more power to them, it has worked greatly thus far. To take on the American force with so little is truly heroic and deserves a great deal of respect. The Americans on the other hand are cowardly fighters, useless without their countless arms and protection. Perhaps soldiers of past, distant past, had some honor and courage, and abided by the rules of war, but today’s soldiers are an embarrassment to humanity, a disgrace to all things good.

Below I have provided links to various incidents and situations in Iraq including videos, pictures and stories.


http://www.infovlad.net/?page_id=161 (numerous footage shot from the resistance destroying the enemy)
http://www.jihadunspun.net/home.php
http://www.dawah.tv/broadcast/iraqfree/iraqfree2.ram (video I posted in one of my threads several weeks back depicting American war crimes and general harassment, murder and abuse to innocent men, women and children.)

death toll up to 35,000-100,000, and these are older links, the present number could be significantly greater.

http://baltimorechronicle.com/oct03_DC
http://mindprod.com/politics/iraqatrocities.html (imagery, may contain gore)
www.iraqibodycount.com

Quote:
Every day, US military forces in Iraq are attacking civilian populations in a calculated effort to drown a growing popular insurgency in blood. But one would hardly know the dimensions or brutality of the atrocities being carried out in the name of the American people from the sparse and sanitized coverage provided by the major press and broadcast outlets that purport to disseminate “the news.”
The US media—owned and controlled by a handful of huge corporate conglomerates—play an indispensable role in the mass murder of Iraqi men, women and children. Together with the Bush administration and the two major parties of US imperialism—the Democratic Party and its presidential candidate John Kerry, no less than their Republican rivals—the media are complicit in a crime against humanity of immense proportions, one that dwarfs any crimes committed by the various political leaders who have been targeted for destruction by the American ruling elite in recent years: from Panama’s Noriega, to Serbia’s Milosevic, to Saddam Hussein himself.
One can stare at the 24-hour cable news networks from sunup to sundown and get no sense of the carnage in towns and cities from Baghdad, to Fallujah, to Ramadi, to Hilla in the south and Tal Afar in the north that is left in the wake of US rockets, bombs, tank shells and sniper rounds. The evening news reports of the major networks provide at most a fleeting image of the death and destruction, inevitably hedged with absurd avowals from the US military that “precision” attacks were carried out against “terrorist” and “anti-Iraqi” targets.
As for the press, one day’s front-page report of US helicopter attacks on unarmed civilians or air strikes against urban centers is eclipsed the next day by the latest hurricane threat or new poll numbers on the upcoming election—an election in which no discussion of the legitimacy of the US subjugation of Iraq or the real war aims behind the bogus ones used to promote the war is permitted.
No country’s media is more cowardly, or more artful in churning out the official line and excluding any serious criticism or analysis, than that of the USA. It would be absurd to hold up the British media as a model of conscientious and objective reporting, but even there, articles occasionally appear that provide some insight into the reality of the situation in Iraq.
The Guardian newspaper, for example, on Tuesday carried an eyewitness account on its front page of the American helicopter attack on unarmed Iraqis that occurred Sunday in central Baghdad. Thirteen Iraqis were killed and dozens were wounded when US copters repeatedly fired rockets into a crowd that had gathered around a disabled American armored vehicle on Haifa Street, near the Green Zone that houses the US and British embassies and the offices of Washington’s puppet government.
For the benefit of our readers around the world, and especially in the US, we give here some excerpts from the chilling and tragic account provided by Guardian columnist Ghaith Abdul-Ahad, who was himself wounded while covering the US assault.
Abdul-Ahad describes at least four separate rocket strikes by American helicopters against the unarmed Iraqis—documenting that the helicopters returned several times to fire on those seeking to remove the dead and wounded from the first missile strike.
“When I was 50 m away I heard a couple of explosions and another cloud of dust rose across the street from where the first column of smoke was still climbing,” he writes. “People started running towards me in waves. A man wearing an orange overall was sweeping the street while others were running. A couple of helicopters in the sky overhead turned away.”
He runs for cover, and then: “A few seconds later, I heard people screaming and shouting—something must have happened—and I headed towards the sounds, still crouching behind a wall. Two newswire photographers were running in the opposite direction and we exchanged eye contact.
“About 20 m ahead of me, I could see the American Bradley armoured vehicle, a huge monster with fire rising from within. It stood alone, its doors open, burning. I stopped, took a couple of photos and crossed the street towards a bunch of people. Some were lying in the street, others stood around them. The helicopters were still buzzing, but further off now.”
The reporter continues: “I felt uneasy and exposed in the middle of the street, but lots of civilians were around me. A dozen men formed a circle around five injured people, all of whom were screaming and wailing.”
Abdul-Ahad’s belief that the presence of so many unarmed civilians afforded protection from a further US strike was shattered in short order. “I had been standing there taking pictures for two or three minutes when we heard the helicopters coming back. Everyone started running, and I didn’t look back to see what was happening to the injured men. We were all rushing towards the same place: a fence, a block of buildings and a prefab concrete cube used as a cigarette stall.
“I had just reached the corner of the cube when I heard two explosions. I felt hot air blast my face and something burning on my head. I crawled to the cube and hid behind it. Six of us were squeezed into a space less than two metres wide. Blood started dripping on my camera but all that I could think about was how to keep the lens clean. A man in his 40s next to me was crying. He wasn’t injured, he was just crying.
“I was so scared I just wanted to squeeze myself against the wall. The helicopters wheeled overhead, and I realised that they were firing directly at us.”
The helicopters moved away, and the reporter went back onto the street to record the carnage and help the wounded and dying. Then: “More kids ventured into the street, looking with curiosity at the dead and injured. Then someone shouted ‘Helicopters!’ and we ran. I turned and saw two small helicopters, black and evil. Frightened, I ran back to my shelter where I heard two more big explosions.... I reached a building entrance when someone grabbed my arm and took me inside. ‘There’s an injured man. Take pictures—show the world the American democracy,’ he said.”
It is hardly necessary to point out that no major US media outlet has taken note of the Guardian’s damning account of Sunday’s bloodletting in the center of Baghdad. Most US newspapers on Tuesday relegated to their inside pages news reports of yet another round of US air and artillery attacks on Fallujah, carried out Monday.
The Iraqi Health Ministry said 20 were killed and 39 wounded in the strikes. Aljazeera reported that those killed included the driver of an ambulance and six passengers, whose vehicle was struck by a jet-fired missile near the northern gate of the city. “Every time we send out an ambulance, it gets targeted,” the director of the Fallujah hospital told the Arab newspaper.
Aljazeera also reported that US missiles destroyed three homes in the city’s al-Shurta neighborhood, American shells hit a market place, and US tanks fired on homes in the al-Jughaivi neighborhood near the city’s northern gate.
The Washington Post, in a page-19 article, noted the attacks on Fallujah neighborhoods and the ambulance fatalities, but reported without comment the official US line that the attacks were directed against a “suspected hideout” of associates of Abu Musab Zarqawi. It printed the Goebbels-like handout from the US military: “Based on the analysis of these [intelligence] reports, Iraqi Security Forces and multi-national forces effectively and accurately targeted these terrorists while protecting the lives of innocent civilians.”
The New York Times ran a front-page commentary focused not on the death and suffering being inflicted on the Iraqi people, but rather on the danger that the US military’s bloodletting against insurgent towns could backfire. It warned of the “classic dilemma faced by governments battling guerrilla movements: ease up, and the insurgency may grow; crack down, and risk losing the support of the population.”
This description is itself a cynical deception, as the Times well knows. The very fact that the US feels obliged to step up the slaughter and target civilian populations testifies to the fact that Washington and its stooge government are hated and despised by the Iraqi masses. Talk of a risk of “losing the support of the population” is an attempt to maintain the myth that the anti-US resistance is the work of a small minority of Baathist “hard-liners” and foreign terrorists, and the equally absurd claim that the US is in Iraq to establish “democracy.”
In reality, the US media’s disinformation operation is among the most striking and significant expressions of the collapse of American democracy.
See Also:
A daily toll of US atrocities in Iraq
[14 September 2004]
US military launches bloody attacks on rebel strongholds in Iraq
[11 September 2004]
The US sinks deeper into the Iraqi quagmire
[7 September 2004]
New York Times and Washington Post remain silent on murder allegations against Iraqi Prime Minister Allawi
[19 August 2004]

Last edited by Rdr4evr; 07-20-2005 at 06:21 PM..
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Old 07-20-2005, 06:26 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Rdr4evr
Although the brave Iraqi resistance is doing the right thing, and doing what any nation wrongfully invaded would do given the situation.
Just out of curiosity, are you a US Citizen? And if you are, have you read Article 3 § 3 of the US Constitution?
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Old 07-20-2005, 06:35 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by tecoyah
Use this thread to complain over the arbitrary nature of the term.....and call each other names if you feel the need.

From this point on....I am deleting anything in the board that goes in this direction.....unless it is in here.

I don't want to get banned, and so am asking for clarification. According to the first post starting this thread, it sounds like we can actually tell people what we think of their positions in this thread without fear of being banned. Is this correct?
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Old 07-20-2005, 10:54 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by moosenose
Just out of curiosity, are you a US Citizen? And if you are, have you read Article 3 § 3 of the US Constitution?
Careful, Rdr4evr....this is the intro to a moosenose attempt to intimidate you. It is quite ominous, and apparently viewed, in some quarters, as quite effective...it keeps happening here, and in this country. Remember Ari Fleischer? After the attempt to intimidate Bill Maher....to take away his TV show, to turn his audience against him? moosenose and Fleischer....intent on reminding us that the "freedoms" NCB is so committed to fighting and dying for....have become such fragile and elusive things. The sad irony is that time reveals moosenose to be wrong. Wrong about accusations that Rove leaked secret information, wrong about who the war criminals are, wrong about the U.S. waging unprovoked, illegal, pre-emptive war.

Dissent is the paramount crime, Rdr4evr, moosenose will tell you that. It is always inappropriate. It is okay to answer the questions, ("are you a US Citizen? And if you are, have you read Article 3"), Rdr4evr, just think about them the next time you speak to contribute to the body of opinion that is against the atrocities committed in the name of Bush's pre-emptive war.
We live in an upside down world, when we are "cautioned', "warned", "intimidated", into not sharing our objection to murder, destruction, deceit.

How dare you, moosenose? How dare you Ari Fleisher?
Quote:

Q As Commander-In-Chief, what was the President's reaction to television's Bill Maher, in his announcement that members of our Armed Forces who deal with missiles are cowards, while the armed terrorists who killed 6,000 unarmed are not cowards, for which Maher was briefly moved off a Washington television station?

MR. FLEISCHER: I have not discussed it with the President, one. I have --

Q Surely, as a --

MR. FLEISCHER: I'm getting there.

Q Surely as Commander, he was enraged at that, wasn't he?

MR. FLEISCHER: I'm getting there, Les.

Q Okay.

MR. FLEISCHER: I'm aware of the press reports about what he said. I have not seen the actual transcript of the show itself. But assuming the press reports are right, it's a terrible thing to say, and it unfortunate. And that's why -- there was an earlier question about has the President said anything to people in his own party -- <h4>they're reminders to all Americans that they need to watch what they say, watch what they do. This is not a time for remarks like that; there never is.</h4>


http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:y...leischer&hl=en
Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...ed#post1823205
Saddam was not a nice man. Your defense and support of his rule is duly noted. "Aid and comfort", "aid and comfort", my "friend"...

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...0&postcount=10
I'm thinking that a whole shiatload of people are about to get sued BIGTIME. And remember, while the reporters can not say "So and so gave us Plame's name" without setting a terrible precedent and violating their ethics code, they CAN say "Karl Rove did NOT give us Plame's name" WITHOUT violating their ethics or setting a bad precedent, if in fact he did not.

I'm popping popcorn and waiting for the Judicial Smackies to be administered. Can you say "Malice Aforethought"?

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...&postcount=107
..........My presence here is not part of my job description. I have never, EVER accessed this site from work, because to do so would be a violation of my agency's internet use policy. I'm not a Federal LEO. And I doubt VERY seriously that you live within my jurisdiction. So I'd postulate that I am NOT any more of a "threat" to your dissenting in this forum than any other person with email or a telephone would be, unless you should consider my "personal network" of friends and professional associates to be a "threat" to you, which I don't think a rational person would. In fact, as I discussed above, I'm far less of a "threat" to you than any of the mods or admin are, since they have a very large vested interest in keeping you from posting illegalities here, and I do not.
Please, moosenose, stop trying to intimidate people who post ideas and opinions that you disagree with.
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...2&postcount=19

Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...&postcount=107
Personally, I'd think you would be more concerned about the mods or admins than me. After all, if you post something illegal (like, after explaining how you had broken the law as an act of civil disobedience, and then spent six or seven years as a fugitive from justice before being pardoned, and then encouraged others to commit what some would call "acts of civil disobedience" and the rest of us would refer to as "felonies"...) THEY are the ones with an incentive to report you, if for no other reason than to avoid criminal liability for themselves. Take, for example, if somebody repeatedly posted pictures in the EZ of a 30 something year old man having sex with an obviously very underage female. That would obviously be a criminal act, yes? What do you think their response would be? After all, the record of the criminal act would be on their servers, so just deleting the posts without reporting it to the appropriate authorities could be construed as obstruction of justice or various other charges of a similar nature depending on the locality. They obviously couldn't legally leave the posts up, either, lest they become guilty of distribution of child pornography. So what would they do? I haven't spoken with them about such a scenario, but I think it is a virtual given that they would do the right thing and report it to the appropriate authorities................
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Old 07-20-2005, 11:01 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Just out of curiosity, are you a US Citizen? And if you are, have you read Article 3 § 3 of the US Constitution?
Do you mean this?

Quote:
Section. 3.

Clause 1: Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on Confession in open Court.

Clause 2: The Congress shall have Power to declare the Punishment of Treason, but no Attainder of Treason shall work Corruption of Blood, or Forfeiture except during the Life of the Person attainted.
I fail to see your point. Do I have the wrong part?? The only connection I see to the Consitution in raider's post is it's connection to the First Ammendment.

I sure don't agree with everything he says, but it gets real old to keep reading "you're a traiter" as a respone to a post. That's the gist I got from your post, Moose. If you are angling for something else, I didn't see it.

How about some actual debate?
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Old 07-20-2005, 11:04 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Personally, I think this entire thread is flamebait. And as such, I won't add my opinion to it.

Why did tec start this thread if he knew damn well that there would be heated discussion and that someone would end up having to be banned?
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Old 07-21-2005, 12:52 AM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
With you permission Tec, I have added the definition of an insurgent. The two definitions are dramatically different, but perhaps not that easily distinguished from a political framework.

For example: Was Timothy McV and insurgent or a terrorist?
An insurgent SURELY has to in-surge? T McV was already form the US, and therefore whether e was a terrorist or not, he wasn't in my book an insurgent.

I'd say he was not a terrorist, because he wasn't trying to create terror in general, e was trying to protest about what he claimed was a corrupt govt.

Seems to me he was an ANARCHIST.
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Old 07-21-2005, 06:40 AM   #31 (permalink)
 
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the collapse into paroxym above--that is hate speech harumph harumph...treason harumph harumph....just absurd.
attempts to shut down debate, nothing more.

here is a definition of hate speech:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech

you can see in it indications of the running tension between accusations of hate speech and problems of censorship.
in this case, the accusation thrown about by ustwo is so wholly without foundation that one can really only interpret it as an attempt to effectively censor the debate by trying to have it shut down. unless ustwo views himself as being victimized by red4ever's post--in which case i woudl have to step past the boundaries i draw for myself in playing the tfp game and speculate about psychological state--which i cannot do (no information)

the treason tack is more typical--in the hands of the right, this term effectively applies to anyone who disagrees with conservative positions on questions that pertain to the military in the broadest possible sense it has all the semantic range and potentially the dangers of the notion of the hitlero-trotskyite wrecker in stalin's "short course"---which was the principal signifier deployed to designate the principle of everything that can go wrong in an otherwise uniform and perfect order (like the fiction of hayek-style market capitalism in america would be for the right, or within the fantasy of a monolithically conservative american "nation")--and to legitimate the purging of these elements.

this kind of irrational namecalling is an index of the really authoritarian side of conservative politics--absolute intolerance of those who disagree, absolute refusal to consider information that falls outside what the right is told is the legitimate way of thinking---the ease with which the right collapses back onto hysteria, given certain triggers, and the more or less inevitable intertwining of this hysteria with a discourse of violence....within this you can see--clearly--the affect structure that right ideology mobilizes and structures--fear and hatred of that which is other, that which is not conservative---which in turn opens onto the centrality of the group hate (in orwell's terms) in structuring a conservative sense of community--which in turn opens onto the discursive function of the category "terrorist"--the undefined and undefinable phantom Enemy and its correlate in the fifth column.

it is not rocket science to see this fear and hatred of that which is outside the boundary that distinguishes conservativeland from its enemies a displacement of anxiety about social and economic instability. if capitalism is an unqualified good, but the effects of this type of capitalism is the rapid undermining of the types of social position that folk think themselves and their place in the world through, then displacement or sublimation are the only alternatives. and that is the way right ideology has chosen to go over the past 15 years. and in this one can see the gap that seperates this populist right ideology from older types of conservatism, which were largely based on a defense of a social order understood as stable in itself mounted largely by or in the interest of those who materially benefitted from that order.
this is a different space, contemporary populist right ideology.
for older school conservatism--which was capable of great brutality--fear was generated by violation of hierarchy--the "unwashed" were forgetting "their place" and had to be stopped.
in populist right ideology these days, the fear is much less directed.

it is not always the case that discourses structured in this manner result in the kind of violence that one associates with radical right discourse historically. but it is the case that discourses structured in this manner create the possiblity of such violence by making it very very easy to see those who fall outside the community as evil, as less than, as traitors, as persecutors. particularly if you couple these patterns of discourse with ideologically generated problems with self-reflexivity.
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Old 07-21-2005, 07:23 AM   #32 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Just out of curiosity, are you a US Citizen? And if you are, have you read Article 3 § 3 of the US Constitution?
Are you for real? Please try to get some perspective on this discussion. Idle threats are a waste of everyone's time and it does nothing to bolster your position in this discussion other than to suggest that you are either:

a) relying on rhetoric that is rather like an old saw.
or
b) trying to be a bully to those who see things differently than you.

I may not completely agree with Raider's point of view on the soldiers on the ground but his position is FAR from Treasonous...
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Old 07-21-2005, 09:43 AM   #33 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by boatin
Do you mean this?



I fail to see your point. Do I have the wrong part?? The only connection I see to the Consitution in raider's post is it's connection to the First Ammendment.

I sure don't agree with everything he says, but it gets real old to keep reading "you're a traiter" as a respone to a post. That's the gist I got from your post, Moose. If you are angling for something else, I didn't see it.

Try looking up the definition of "adhere". Then apply that definition to raider's post. The First Amendment has NEVER covered criminal acts of speech like fraud, perjury, or treason. That's why you can't "falsely yell fire in a crowded theater", to quote OWH.

Last edited by moosenose; 07-21-2005 at 09:51 AM..
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Old 07-21-2005, 10:00 AM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Your posts on this board certainly would satisfy the low standards of proof required to satisfy probable cause. Certain three letter agencies seem to take this kind of thing very seriously, and people have already gone to jail over voicing support for the insurgents in Iraq.
Ahh, America, the land of the free!


I'm sorry, moosenose, but I can't take you seriously anymore after that!
 
Old 07-21-2005, 10:01 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Raider, It must be nice for you to spew your crap behind the saftey of a computer screen.
If you were to spout that shit to me in person I would stick my retired Marine Corps boot so far up your ass you would need surgery to get it removed, and i would gladly deal with the assualt charges afterward.

Believe it or not you are living in a free country, protected by better men than yourself, try ranting that way whilst living in say; China, Iran, Cuba, and I am sure I could make this list 4 or 5 lines long if need be.
What would happen to you? imprisionment? Probably worse.

But how dare you call anyone a failure for defending something they believe in?
But then again this world is really a xanadu that has yet to be discovered

And if this post gets me banned, so be it but I am not standing by and watching inflammitory words spoken about troops who are doing what they believe is right.
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Last edited by reconmike; 07-21-2005 at 10:04 AM..
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Old 07-21-2005, 10:10 AM   #36 (permalink)
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(Ok, now I'm posting my opinion...)

From what I've seen and read, there are troops out there that can't stand being in the desert and want nothing more than Bush to admit his mistake and bring them home. Some of them feel that this is a senseless war and they have no business being there. But I'm not going to try and change the opinion of someone who advocates violence to solve any type of problem (you wanna stick your retired boot up my ass too for voicing my opinion that happens to disagree with yours?) because you will obviously go along with anything that Bush says or does no matter what contradictory evidence is place in front of them.

And yes, Bush is a failure. he's failed the troops, he's failed the citizens of America, and most of all he's failed himself in the way he's conducted himself as president.

Last edited by Hardknock; 07-21-2005 at 10:12 AM..
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Old 07-21-2005, 10:13 AM   #37 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
Try looking up the definition of "adhere". Then apply that definition to raider's post. The First Amendment has NEVER covered criminal acts of speech like fraud, perjury, or treason. That's why you can't "falsely yell fire in a crowded theater", to quote OWH.

BTW, Host, if I was trying to intimidate you or Raider, I would have reported you to the appropriate authorities, and you'd have been visited already. Your posts on this board certainly would satisfy the low standards of proof required to satisfy probable cause. Certain three letter agencies seem to take this kind of thing very seriously, and people have already gone to jail over voicing support for the insurgents in Iraq.
moosenose, I notice now that you edited your last post between the time I was composing my reply to it, and the time that you posted your edit. Does this mean that you changed your mind, and you have decided to "report us"?

I quote and link your other post....from last week.....to remind you and to alert "others" that this is the second time that you've "let me slide". On the one hand, I'm grateful to you, relieved in fact....but also, I'm troubled. I'm troubled because I mourn about what is happening to my country. My government has apparently opened, created, facilitated a channel for you to threaten me, at your whim. You've told me twice now that you haven't "reported" my subversion, my dissent....you haven't "turned me in".....(not yet, anway). What is it you want, moosenose? Is it money? Can I pay you to continue "not" reporting me? Has even asking this, "set you off"?

Does everyone see where we are heading? "Closing the thread" in response to moosenose's "assurances" that he has "not reported" anyone yet, is one response to this, exposing it for what it is, is another.)

I read and I copied and pasted what you originally posted moosenose. Sure....you edited it, but I read it before you did. Shame on you. It is called "abuse of power"; what you are doing here. You are the subversive influence here, the dissident against decency.
Quote:
Originally Posted by moosenose
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...&postcount=130
There are many ways to be an employee of the Federal Government other than being a LEO, and there are many ways to be an LEO without being "Federal". Many people have "jurisdictions" that are not "Federal LEOs". I'm sure that on your six or seven year oddessy prior to being pardoned, you found many "friends and professional associates" while tooling around in the underground. I'm sure that some of them were there for more than what you did. Does that make them a threat to me? You speak of "resources at their disposal", to "deal with the likes of you". Have you ever heard the phrase "Duty, Honor, Country"? They use their resources to deal with people who break the law, because that is their duty. They do not misuse their authority (be it Constitutionally or Statutorily provided) because to do so would be a stain upon their collective honor. And they put themselves in harms way to do their jobs because they love their country. They sure as hell don't do it for the money. And I certainly haven't talked with them about you.............


.....Ah. Now we're back to the Left's favorite Mantra: "Free Speech for Me, But None For Thee!" Remember how "First Amendment Zones" came into existence? That wasn't the RIGHT trying to muzzle the Left....

You have a point of view. So do I. That's the great thing about America....people can and do have different points of view. It's only when a person's point of view crosses the line from being a "point of view" and turns into a "crime" that there is a problem. This happens more frequently than you might think. For example, I heard on NPR yesterday about one of the so-called "Paintball Jihadists". The person in question expressed his "point of view" to his friends. His friends took action based upon his "point of view" as he expressed it to them. They are all in federal prison now, his friends for going to Pakistan and training for Jihad, and him for inciting and encouraging them to break the law by expressing his "point of view" about how they should go to Pakistan and train for Jihad. Basically, he said "Go break the law". They did. And he went to jail for it.
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Old 07-21-2005, 10:24 AM   #38 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hardknock
(Ok, now I'm posting my opinion...)

From what I've seen and read, there are troops out there that can't stand being in the desert and want nothing more than Bush to admit his mistake and bring them home. Some of them feel that this is a senseless war and they have no business being there. But I'm not going to try and change the opinion of someone who advocates violence to solve any type of problem (you wanna stick your retired boot up my ass too for voicing my opinion that happens to disagree with yours?) because you will obviously go along with anything that Bush says or does no matter what contradictory evidence is place in front of them.

And yes, Bush is a failure. he's failed the troops, he's failed the citizens of America, and most of all he's failed himself in the way he's conducted himself as president.
He wasn't talking about you or to you. And reconmike wasn't saying that because rdr disagrees with him. he said it because he was insulted, like many people are when vile filth is thrown in your face. And to top it off thee isn't anything anyone can do about it because he hides behind a computer screen using the freedom of speech soldiers have sacrificed their lives for. So chill out hardknock, nothing he said was directed toward you or even against someone with a differing opinion. Only a response to a personal insult.
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Old 07-21-2005, 10:30 AM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
using the freedom of speech soldiers have sacrificed their lives for
Those poor soldiers have not sacrificed their lives for freedom of speech, who told you that?
 
Old 07-21-2005, 10:34 AM   #40 (permalink)
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I wasn't directly referring to our current brothers and sisters in iraq, but I was referring to those who have gone before them and died as a direct result of defending our freedoms such as WW2 for example.
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