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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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So opposition to Bush for the sake of his party is nonsense. Opposition to the individual though, is entirely true and entirely valid and justified: He has the world's only superpower at his command and he doesn't care what or who he f**ks up in order to make money. Sure, the world is full of politicians like that, but it's not often you see one taking it to these extremes. I'm not sure what he's got that lets him get away with it (although I think his manipulation of 9/11 has a lot to do with that) but there are plenty of people in this world who see him as a monster that has to be stopped. We've already seen the parallels drawn between Bush and 1930s Hitler. I really hope they turn out to be nothing more than a coincidence. Here's something to think about: I wonder if this was inevitable after the fall of the Soviet Union- does anyone think that without a balancing force to keep it in check, the US was bound to go on the rampage like this? [ April 16, 2003, 16:13: Message edited by: dogscoff ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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If these positions are held by more than a handful around the world then that is some scary sh**, and doesn't bode well for the future of the planet. I admit I haven't read all 95 pages of this thread, but I really can't imagine a defensible argument saying that Bush and Hitler are moral equivalents. A couple of points: 1) Motivation of individuals is both impossible to determine and largely irrelevant. There are plenty of situations where good motivations have led to evil actions or policies (communism), or selfish motivation has lead to good results (capitalism). I happen to believe that Bush is motivated by a desire to protect the US of today and for our children from terrorism and WMD, and a desire to rid the world and the Iraqi citizens of an evil oppressive regime. You don't belive that to be true, but as I said motivation is not the key issue. 2) The ACTIONS of the US now and throughout history is what needs to be judged--and I'm the first to say that our record isn't spotless. But I definitely agree with the following address by Colin Powell: (in response to a question by the former Archbishop of Canterbury, George Carey, about the US relying too much on "Hard Power" of military might vs the "Soft Power" of diplomacy") Quote:
My views: Oil $$: the Iraqi oil $$ will be used to rebuild that country, and may not be sufficient to do so. We have already spent billions, and the US taxpayers will likely pour billions more into Iraq in aid, rebuilding, and keeping the peace while a leadership structure is determined. This is not and cannot possibly be a profitable action for the US. US Occupation: We will be there as long as we need, and no longer. We will likely maintain a military base in Iraq indefinitely, but certainly you don't view that as "occupation of the country", otherwise we'd be "occupying" many dozens of countries throughout the world. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Hmmm...
Seems to me that Jesus was born into a war-torn and forcibly occupied land - sort of like Iraq, Palestine (though it's not a country yet), Afghanistan, Liberia, etc etc. Isreal had been undergoing civil unrest since the military conquest of the land by the Greeks right up until the Maccabees, and then went to war when the Romans arrived. Having been under various foreign dictators for a good long time, it has been estimated that at the time of Jesus birth a good 20% of capable men had been killed by foreign occupiers in one way or another (via out-and-out war, uprisings, civil disobedience, etc) Then there were the ones who continued to want to overthrow the Romans, the Zealots. Jesus had at least one (two I think) of this political persuasion in his closest knit group, but yet he consistantly avoided proclaiming for or against the Romans. Instead he stressed the need for internal spiritual renewal, which could only be brought about by (i) repentance from sin, (2) acceptance of himself, and (3) worship of God. So what would Jesus do? He'd likely move to a smaller outlying town outside of Baghdad and proclaim that, regardless of the circumstances, every member of humankind is duty bound to turn back to God. Would he pretend to like Sadam? No, I doubt this, because Jesus mocked the political leaders of his time. Would he encourage revolt? I think he wouldn't, because another rebellion - the one in people's hearts - was more important to him. Now that's what I think Jesus would do. Does that mean that no followers of Jesus should ever enter politics or pursue positions of power? I personally don't think that Jesus would have a problem with people choosing one of these "lesser careers" vs. what he and his cousin did (essentially evangelism). There is at least one example of a Roman centurian coming to Jesus for help, and Jesus helped him. At no point did Jesus tell him to leave the army though... Well, that's my biblical scholarship for the day http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif Take it for what it's worth, I'm a microbiologist, not a priest. Edit: OOOPS. I was a little behind and reading on page two, then decided to post a reply. I didn't realize that the discussion had moved on from WWJD and back to the evil that is Bush. Sorry if my "out of the blue" response confused anyone. Edit2: and Askan, I'm sorry about your alergic reaction to anything g*d related. You really should see a specialist about that http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon12.gif [ April 16, 2003, 17:18: Message edited by: jimbob ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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But yes, a pretty well established law of psychology is that you become what you dwell on, and whether you dwell on it in admiration or opposition does not matter. After more than 2 decades of fear and loathing of 'communists' prior to WW II and then a bit more than 4 more decades of direct opposition in the 'Cold War' we do have a pretty well entrenched habit in the US institutions (and society! http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/tongue.gif ) of viewing the external world in a militaristic way as something needing to be controlled. But even before this, as the Central Americans will tell you, we already had pretty noticeable Imperialistic tendencies. So on the one hand, I'd say yes it was fairly predictable that the US would become more difficult to live with once the 'Big Enemy' was gone and all that energy was freed up from opposition to one target. But on the other hand we were never a very good neighbor, and advanced technology has made everyone neighbors in the contemporary world. But you seem to have ignored my earlier question about the direction of British politics. Do you really think Britain is more strongly allied with Europe than the US? (The French bashing in the UK was certainly not any less than it was here.) Or is it just possible that the 'far right' segment of the British political spectrum wants ro reclaim Imperial glory by proxy, in alliance with the US? Under a similar 'rationalization' of defending against those evil terrorists, of course. This seems to be a phenomena sweeping the English speaking world. There are major anti-immigrant sentiments in Australia as well. And they were one of very few nations other than the US and Britain to send actual combat troops to Iraq. We may see the development of a US/British/Australian axis along the lines of George Orwell's Oceana... [ April 16, 2003, 17:33: Message edited by: Baron Munchausen ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Waaayyy OT but,
Seems to me that Florida has a pretty dumb voting system. We've got a "complete the arrow" system in Canada. The poll-operators give you a pencil, you go to the booth, and then select your candidate by filling in the correct broken arrow with said pencil. No hanging chits, no accidental chit removals, etc. That said, a teacher in Florida made a test for grade 1 students in which they identified their favorite cartoon character using the chit system, and not a single error in his class! Does this indicate that the problem isn't with the system, but with the voter? Perhaps the "debacle" isn't with the system or the electee, perhaps the debacle is the electorate. [ April 16, 2003, 20:01: Message edited by: jimbob ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Well the whiners were mostly complaining about senile old people that couldn't figure out how to use the self-explanatory ballot...
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
I don't think you can take a single class that most likely is composed of less than 100 children and say that that is proportional to bad election results in an state of millions where only thousands of ballots where off. Percentage wise the number of off ballots was quite small. The problem was that the race was so damn close that those small numbers off could throw it one way or another.
People put way too much emphasis on the whole ballot thing. Missed results etc happen everywhere at almost every election, but it only gets attention when the election is decided because of it. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
But those small numbers ALWAYS threw it TOWARD Bush and not Gore. EVERY vote count and re-count that was done, including by different media outlets at later times said that BUSH was the victor.
And I shudder to think what it would have been like with Gore in the White House after September 11. |
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