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Author | Topic: where are the WMD? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
Hey Schraf.
If Bush doesn't find those WMD after all, I'll let you explain those thousands of gas masks, nerve gas antidotes, and documents in Arabic explaining how to wage chemical warfare. I know you and your fellow supporters of Saddam think you smell blood. We'll see. But at least I wasn't doing everything I could to keep a tyrant in power.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: You can if you're a convicted felon. Saddam signed a peace fire agreement requiring disarmament.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: America doesn't have to send aide to Africa, we can divert funds anywhere we like because it is our money.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Hey Wj, if an army were preparing to defend itself against chemical weapons, don't you think they would have broadspectrum antidotes instead of thousands of injectors filled with only one antidote (atropine)?
quote: Nope.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: What? That we can decide where we send our money? Do you think America owes you something? Right now Bush is in the process of signing off on $15 billion USD to help save foreigners from AIDS. Why? Because we are a compassionate nation. You think we have to do this? No, we can stop handing out checks any time we like. I know for a fact that there are lots of ways we could spend that money on ourselves.
quote: Actually, if you were better informed, you would know that France and Russia are the nations that profitted off Iraq for thirty years. No wonder they opposed the war...
quote: Personally, I don't care what other countries think about the US. They're pretty much irrelevant to my daily life. The United States will continue to prosper regardless of what some pissed off French (or a few disgruntled Australians) think of us. [This message has been edited by gene90, 05-02-2003]
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Actually, I think the 9/11 attacks were precipitated by the fact that the US is an obstacle to a fundamentalist Islamic state in the Middle East as envisioned by Osama bin Laden, and because bin Laden was pissed at the Western Devil placing troops in Holy Saudi during the first Gulf War. And also because we are allies of Israel. So, maybe you can explain to me your theory on the motivations behind the Bali bombing? Since Australia supposedly has such a clean record?
quote: I think the rebound here is against the terrorists. When bin Laden attacked us on 9/11, we have responded by invading and toppling two Arab governments hostile to the US, including the fundamentalist one that was giving him shelter. We have the other terrorist-supporting gov'ts in a tough diplomatic situation (ie, Syria, with the Fourth Infantry Division on one border and Israel on the other, and Iran, with American troops in Afghanistan on one side, and Americans in Iraq on the other) and we have a president that talks hard and has no problem with sending troops into battle, and is currently telling us that there are more military actions ahead in his War on Terror. Almost 50% of al-Qaeda's leadership has been captured or killed, including their main planner, "sleeper" cells in the United States are being rounded up, their international banking accounts are being frozen left and right, and yesterday Pakistani police foiled their next attack, hijacking a Pakistani airliner and flying it into the US consulate. Where were they going to make their attack? Pakistan, not the US. It seems that they have had to retreat back into the Middle East and in all probability they are going to be retreating even further back in the months ahead. But I personally don't think we are being aggressive enough in the War on Terror. I think we should extend our attacks at least to Hamas.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Ahhhhhhhhhh. So as long as they buy our goods, we don't need to call to them to task on nasty things they do like cut tongues out, or gas their towns. Do you have a clue how hypocritical you sound? And by the way, we're the biggest economy in the world right now. I think the the 'economic persuasion' is actually working in the opposite direction. If our trade with France were suddenly cut off who did you think would feel it worse, us or them? No contest!
quote: Personally, Schraf, I suspect some of the families of 9/11 victims might like to have "a few words" with you. You could bring your soapbox and educate them on how our foreign policy killed their loved ones, how we shouldn't be proactive in toppling terrorists and their sympathizers, and how we have no right to go around telling other countries what to do and why we shouldn't wave our flags and support the president in the war in Iraq. I would rather just wait outside the door and casually wander off. Quickly. [This message has been edited by gene90, 05-05-2003]
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Somebody got worked up. Let's use some critical thinking. Bush asks Saddam to leave. Saddam tells Bush where to go. Bush threatens to send 4ID in to get rid of Saddam. Anti-war crowd wants to stop war. Stopping war would result in Saddam remaining in power in Iraq. Because the consequence of no war = more Saddam: Anti-War = Pro-Saddam The very act of protesting the war is endorsing the regime of Saddam Hussein and prolonging the torture of the Iraqi people. Do you challenge that view? While I believe I made this connection independantly, I'm not the only one who formed this opinion. NapaSentinel.com is for sale | HugeDomains http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-2-88-983.jsp
quote: I cannot change the implications of your political beliefs.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Why? We are not *obligated* to help anyone outside our borders. That we do is a demonstration that we are a kindhearted people. But we could choose not to.
quote: Perhaps you mean, how much is going to American contractors? My answer: ideally, all of it. Not only does the United States have the right to decide whether or not to send aide outside its borders, the US has the right to determine how that aide is distributed. Because the ultimate source of that aide is coming out of the wallets of American citizens, which are wearing a little thin right now, as much of that as possible should go to American companies, which is then used to thicken the pocketbooks of investors and the common American worker. Better to fill American coffers with American money than those of foreign corporations.
quote: Again, we reserve the right to distribute our aide however we please. With Bush that probably means a lot of abstinence education, which of course the left has a problem with.
quote: Good.
quote: That's a valid point. I agree that the gov't should try to find a way to make pharmaceuticals cheaper.
quote: You too huh? Good luck.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Feel free, it's beyond mine...
quote: I know. But that doesn't particularly bother me. More than three thousand people died on 9/11. What does a family consist of? Five people? More? Less? You could generate an opinion pool as large as you wanted. I'm sure with enough people you could find at least one that was pro-al-Qaeda and thought 9/11 was a great thing. Granted you might have to visit funny farms to find one but I'm sure you could find just about any opinion any human being is likely to come up with somewhere in that pool.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: I disagree that that fallacy applies, because as you pointed out, there were no alternatives. Saddam was offered asylum in various nations, he didn't go. I agree with you on the rest. Oh sure Saddam and his sons might have died in a car accident next week and the next in line might have been a closest pro-democracy, pro-human rights (Dare I say it?) liberal. ![]() But it's terribly unrealistic and the anti-war protestors marched their signs around with full knowledge that without the war Saddam would remain in power and would continue to do unspeakable things to the helpless Iraqi public. This is hypocrisy because the Left usually claims to be pro-human rights, and even openly attacked Bush time and again for his support of the death penalty. But somehow they wanted to do anything they could to keep "nice guy" Saddam in power and Bush was the one that actually did something about it.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: It is when the government wants to go oust Saddam militarily because then you are opposed to a war that will result in Saddam's removal. Because the consequence of the war is the ousting of Saddam and the consequence of no war is more Saddam, if you are anti-war then you are promoting Saddam. And if you are promoting Saddam, you are pro-Saddam, because you are deliberately, and consciously, promoting an action that will keep Saddam in power.
quote: You did not say that you necessarily hold this view, Mr. Pamboli. You left that ambiguous. However, I wish to respond to it for the crowd and whoever therein that my hold that view: Was it wrong for Lincoln to wage war against the Southern States to end slavery and reunite the Union? Or should he have capitulated after Bull Run I, ending the war with unconditional Southern sovereignty? Would it have been morally right for the United States to sign a peace treaty with Hitler that allowed him to continue with his Final Solution? Is it always wrong for an individidual to kill in self-defense? Or in the defense of others? Had there been an air marshall on any of the 9/11 hijacked jets, would it have been wrong to use lethal force against the hijackers? No, no, no, and no. Killing is permissable when inaction brings about the greater evil. And there are worse things in the world than war. [This message has been edited by gene90, 05-06-2003] [This message has been edited by gene90, 05-06-2003]
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: What are those alternatives, what is the the probability of success, and how long would it take? If you remember, we tried alternatives to war. Twelve years ago sanctions were imposed. Saddam flourished while the people fell even further into poverty. Months ago Saddam was offered asylum. He refused. Bush gave him a 48 hour deadline. He still refused. Alternatives failed. War succeeded. By the way, I never saw any protestors on TV with signs presenting alternatives. They all said things like "no war" and "no blood for oil". The party line was that the point of the war was to obtain cheap oil, not to topple Saddam's regime. Therefore alternatives were not presented--the closest they came to actual alternatives were UN WMD inspections, which do nothing for human rights. The protestors were clearly happy just to let Saddam continue in power. By the way, I believe the US tried for years to get rid of Castro without a full scale assault by American armed forces. Guess who's still running things down there?
quote: Actually Holmes, I wanted Saddam gone in 1991, and in 1998. I wanted the Taliban ousted when they began destroying artifacts (which is when I first heard of them) and I think we should have declared war against al-Qaeda immediately following the bombing of the Cole. I was pro-war before Bush came into office.
quote: Probably not. I know Clinton would not have. But Clinton's bin Laden blunders are a topic for another time.
quote: No actually that's not my definition. People who don't agree with Bush but don't try to persuade others aren't necessarily pro-Saddam. They're just not doing as much as they should to get rid of him (And I openly agree that neither Bush did enough nor did Clinton). The people who make signs and go march, and worse block traffic, were actively supporting Saddam Hussein, just as the US once did.
quote: Bush didn't make his opponets sit on glass bottles until their intestines were slashed into bleeding rags, holmes. You will never be able to compare a republic with a bill of rights and constitutional limits to Saddam's regime. To even try would be offensive but I'm not surprised that would do so.
quote: Perhaps so. Or maybe just a weak ruler who bowed to international pressure when he should not have. We don't know what he actually would have liked to have done. Which makes this an interesting point. Do you admit that the primary reason Saddam was still in power is because of the UN?
quote: ROTFLMAO. I've been on this board a heck of a lot longer than you (are you even a member yet?) and it is not "dominated" by Christian theology. It has evolved into a big, continuous, anti-Christian smear. Last week somebody mentioned they were starting a prayer circle and there were two pages of personal abuse and good old fashioned religious hatred in response.
quote: I haven't heard of any Amish protests. They may not agree with war even in principle but they are not actively supporting dictators by opposing liberation.
quote: You speak for Christ?
quote: No for the Amish because they aren't bothering anyone. No for Christ because he is not necessarily anti-war. (Lots of non-Christian members of the Left like to call him a warmonger, now you are tryingto make him a hippie? He was a liberal for his time but I *think* he would be a moderate who would want to liberate Iraq.) By the way, I think if Saddam were allowed to stay in power, he would kill a heck of a lot more Iraqis deliberately than we did accidentally during the campaign.
quote: What? Surely you're kidding. You think that if American troops are in Iraq and there is a fledgling Iraqi democracy in power, Saddam is somehow going to keep his WMD program running full throttle there? And you think the terrorist camps would continue running? Please!
quote: Actually I think that would be pro-manslaughter as it would not be deliberate. Now tell me, do you think that Lincoln should not have fought against the Southern States? Do you think we should have signed a peace treaty with Hitler?
quote: Actually, last I heard, we were still at war with al-Qaeda, rather than "supporting" them.
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
quote: Wait a minute, are you saying that the invasion of Afghanistan was not linked to al-Qaeda? And you seem to have overlooked my point: that you can probably find a family member of a 9/11 victim with any opinion humanly possible, if you look hard enough. I think 9/11 is a clear indicator that the US MUST be proactive in toppling threats. And when we topple dictators like Saddam and bring democracy to the Middle East, all the better. [This message has been edited by gene90, 05-06-2003]
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gene90 Member (Idle past 4150 days) Posts: 1610 Joined: |
I agree with your opinion on Bush. I don't worship the man or agree with *everything* he does. I'm sure any minute now he's going to try sneaking Creationism into public schools if he hasn't already been at it and I didn't know. I also remember the first controversey of his administration, the reduction in arsenic standards which I was rather concerned about. What about his handling of North Korea? I have problems with it. Notably his apparent double-standards with Iraq and what apparently started the whole problem, his termination of fuel-oil shipments in violation of a treaty we signed with them.
But so far he has toppled regimes that needed toppling? Without another Vietnam or the start of WWIII? Yes, and for that I am rather pleased.
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