![]() |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
And why do you belive what US goverment is doing is actually protecting your chieldren ? I have a feeling US became less secure after this colonial war. Saddam was no danger for US as we can see now. He had no WMD and was keeping religious fanatics in check. [ July 10, 2003, 16:37: Message edited by: oleg ] |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
While it is U.S. National security that truely motivated that incusrsion (see some of my more hawkish rants in the Iraq thread), these are things that should be taken into account when one wishes to consider 'right' or 'wrong'. |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
However, waginbg war on Afghanistan/ Iraq is analogous to going out of your home, finding someone who might be an potential intruder (or a friend of a potential intruder, or someone who is rumoured to be prepared to sell burglary equipment to a potential intruder, or maybe just someone you don't like the look of), breaking into their home, killing a few of hisfamily members and smashing up their possessions. Then, when your target has fled out the back door, you award the contract for the repairs to his home to your best buddy (with the target's surviving family selling off their remaining assets to pay the bill), build a few airbases in his back garden and start threatening the neighbours. |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
I firmly believe all government comes from, and remains closely related to, organized crime. I'm not surprised the similarities show so strongly in your stretched analogy, Dogscoff. When a better solution comes along, I'll jump on it (if I don't get too old and static first), but I don't see the dove path working, I don't see the isolationist path working, and I just don't know what else to say (Pax Schmax).
One things for sure. There will continue to be terrorists, but any government is going to think twice before backing them or giving them sanctuary. Of the rest: omelets, eggs, you know the deal. |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
I see your point, but I still see that the government is protecting me and my family. I guess everyone is differnet. Quote:
[ July 10, 2003, 18:04: Message edited by: sachmo ] |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
|
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
and this is how militia Groups form. all of them, in essense, believe they are protecting there own little group. the rule of law must be upheld. everyone must receive justice.
Quote:
|
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">How nice. An either/or fallacy with cynical appeal to emotion. Not to mention a bit insulting. Shall I ask how many Iraqi children you were willing to "trade" for "keeping religious fanatics in check" or similar? If you really want to play the appeal to emotions/"what about the chiiilllldren" game, you might want to stop and think about a few things. Quote:
. o O(Why do I get the feeling someone's going to bring in the "well why didn't you go liberate some repressive nation arbitrarily chosen and preferably way out in some area that would take months to deploy to" claim? Wonder if they think WWII was illegitimate because we didn't bust open all the Gulags? Wonder if they're going to use that first claim, then say we don't have enough troops in Iraq? http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/image...s/rolleyes.gif ) |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
spanking all of Europe? After the English had proclaimed “Peace in our time.” and paid a full measure of appeasement? And the time before that when Europe took the world to war over the killing of a has-been royal that probably would have not been able to maintain his holdings for another generation. And in the process set communism loose on the world. Which America then held off at your door step for 50 years at great cost in lives and materials. And lets not forget that most of this crap in the Middle East right now is the result of French and English diplomacy at the end of world wars. IMHO it is far better to stamp the **** out of evil governments right at the start, than to wait until the situation takes on an energy of it own. You speak with the naiveté of a person who has never risked all that he had for the benefit of others. [ July 11, 2003, 00:36: Message edited by: Thermodyne ] |
Re: OT : Australian intervention in Solomon Islands
Quote:
Once something like that happens in your country, the matter becomes a lot more complicated.</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">I am a citizen of the country the Geneva convention comes from, which the US government not longer obeys when it comes to the war against terrorism. But my compassion for the victims of the terrorism is absolutely independent of their passport and I sincerely hope that my reason would still govern my emotions when a relative would be under the victims. But no matter how much I share the cry for justice, no matter how much I understand your concern for safety: the basic human rights must never never never be canceled for a human beeing, even if this human has commited the most horrible crimes. If you go over this line you will end up in tyranny and become inhuman yourself. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:31 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©1999 - 2025, Shrapnel Games, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.