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Author Topic:   Health care reform almost at the finish line... correction: it's finished
dronestar
Member
Posts: 1417
From: usa
Joined: 11-19-2008
Member Rating: 6.5


Message 166 of 174 (556401)
04-19-2010 4:24 PM
Reply to: Message 165 by Rahvin
04-19-2010 2:54 PM


Re: more death, less health?
Hey Rhavin,
Good post #165. Some nit-picking to come, I ran out of time today . . .
d

This message is a reply to:
 Message 165 by Rahvin, posted 04-19-2010 2:54 PM Rahvin has not replied

  
dronestar
Member
Posts: 1417
From: usa
Joined: 11-19-2008
Member Rating: 6.5


Message 167 of 174 (556532)
04-20-2010 9:36 AM
Reply to: Message 165 by Rahvin
04-19-2010 2:54 PM


Who'd thunk it?
Morn'ng Rhavin,
I am nearly agreeing with most of your post. I too was unsure that invading Afghanistan was FULLY wrong back THEN. But, evidence before us, who can argue it was the right course NOW. But here are some nitpicks that stick with me:
Rhavin writes:
The Afghan government was a well-known state sponsor of an established terrorist group
Hmmm. Before accepting that statement, a closer look at WHO is calling Afghanistan a sponsor of terrorism should be reviewed.
A little history . . .
The Reagan Doctrine
Following the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Carter administration began providing limited covert military assistance to Afghanistan's mujahideen. This strategy was later expanded under Reagan to openly oppose the global influence of the Soviet Union and continued into the administration of George H. W. Bush. By facilitating the transfer of weapons and by training military leaders, the Reagan Doctrine actually contributed to "blowback" by strengthening some political and military movements such as al-Qaeda.
Reagan Doctrine - Wikipedia
By America supporting/training a known VIOLENT FANATICAL group, the mujahideen, America helped spawn Osama Bin Laden. It is important to remind Americans that America has a propensity to back the wrong horse with catastrophic consequences. When Americans blindly point their fingers at other countries, it acknowledges America still haven't learned the lesson that will prevent the next 9/11.
Fast forward to 1997. . .
Taleban in Texas for talks on gas pipeline
A senior delegation from the Taleban movement in Afghanistan is in the United States for talks with an international energy company, Unocal, that wants to construct a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/west_asia/37021.stm
In 1997, Enron [another energy company], announced that it was going to spend over $1 billion building and improving the lines between the Dabhol plant and India's network of gas pipelines.
There was one gotcha: It looked like the trans-Afghan section of the pipeline might never be built. Afghanistan was controlled by religious extremists who didn't want to cooperate.
From 1997 to as late as August 2001, the U.S. government continued to negotiate with the Taliban.
The company hired for studying the pipeline construction was Enron. If that pipeline were to be constructed, it would be built by Bechtel and GE Capital Services.
Alternet.org - 404 Not Found
From 1974 to 1982 George Schultz, former United States Secretary of Treasury and future Secretary of State, was president and director of Bechtel. The late former U.S. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger was general counsel for Bechtel in the late 1970s. Former deputy Secretary of Energy W. Kenneth Davis was Bechtel's vice-president. Riley Bechtel, the company's chair, was on President George W. Bush's Export Council. Jack Sheehan, a former senior vice-president of Bechtel, was a member of the U.S. Defense Policy Board. The Clinton Administration also appointed senior Bechtel managers to senior positions.
Bechtel - Wikipedia
Enter George W. Bush. Bush's long and personal relationship with Enron's former CEO Kenneth Lay is now well known.
Enter Dick Cheney. Vice President Cheney has his first [among many others] secret meeting with Ken Lay and other Enron executives. A chief benefactor in the trans-Caspian pipeline deal would have been Halliburton, the huge oil pipeline construction firm which was previously headed by Cheney.
The U.S. tried to negotiate the pipeline deal with the Taliban as late as August, 2001. The Bush Administration attempted to get the Taliban on board and believed they could depend upon the regime to stabilize the country.
The Taliban had demanded that the U.S. should also reconstruct Afghanistan's infrastructure and that the pipeline be open for local consumption. Instead, the U.S. wanted a closed pipeline pumping gas for export only and was not interested in helping to rebuild the country.
In turn, the U.S. threatened the Taliban during the negotiations. The directive of "we'll either carpet you in gold or carpet you in bombs" was bantered about in the press to underscore the emerging willfulness of the U.S.
Alternet.org - 404 Not Found
Re-read the last paragraph above and then juxtapose it with any of your terrorism definitions you last supplied. At this point, which country is acting most like a terrorist?
Rhavin writes:
When the international community agrees that a given state poses a threat to international security and diplomatic tactics are having no effect, military force is an option."
Hmmm. So just what "diplomatic tactics" have American governments been practicing on Afghanistan for the past 30 years? How has American humanitarianism been extended to the Afghan people for the last 30 years? Please be specific.
Rhavin writes:
Even without evidence specifically linking bin Laden or AQ to 9/11, a reasonable request for extradition for even past terrorist activity (which should have been well documented) should have been honored.
Why should Afghanistan be honor-bound when the US isn't honor-bound . . .
The US refuses to extradite terrorists even when their guilt has been well established. One current case involves Emmanuel Constant, the leader of the Haitian paramilitary forces that were responsible for thousands of brutal killings in the early 1990s under the military junta, which Washington officially opposed but tacitly supported, publicly undermining the OAS embargo and secretly authorizing oil shipments. Constant was sentenced in absentia by a Haitian court. The elected government has repeatedly called on the US to extradite him, again on September 30, 2001, while Taliban initiatives to negotiate transfer of bin Laden were being dismissed with contempt.
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/200205--02.htm
Rhavin writes:
I don't necessarily disagree with the invasion of Afghanistan in principle, as I still think the Taliban had demonstrated themselves as a real danger to international security.
Again, I nearly agree, but moral truism demands you FIRST ask how your own country demonstrates itself to be or not to be a danger to international security.
Rhavin writes:
but the fact remains that our legally elected representatives legally voted to legally spend that money,
Wait a second, was there fraud/lies/propaganda in getting the "legal" votes? I am NOT a lawyer, but I tend to remember that you cannot create a legal contract based on illegal actions (like fraud or diress). Let's revisit Kucinich's articles of impeachment against GW Bush. Please be aware we are mostly talking about Iraq right now, but for the sake of this argument . . . :
Article I: Creating a Secret Propaganda Campaign to Manufacture a False Case for War against Iraq.
Article II: Falsely, Systematically, and with Criminal intent Conflating the Attacks of September 11, 2001, With Misrepresentation of Iraq as a Security Threat as Part of Fraudulent Justification for a War of Aggression.
Article III: Misleading the American People and MEMBERS OF CONGRESS to Believe Iraq Possessed an Weapons of Mass Destruction, to Manufacture a False Case for War.
Article IV, Misleading the American People and MEMBERS of CONGRESS to Believe Iraq Possessed an Imminent Threat to the US.
kucinich.us/impeachment/articles.pdf
Bottom line: our legally elected representatives legally voted to legally spend money on ILLEGAL/FALSIFIED information. I understand you may still assert that this is all perfectly acceptable, and I am still incorrect about this. Ok.
Rhavin writes:
But that doesn't mean that tax dollars spent on programs you or I disagree with constitutes theft.
Again, not so quick. I am not a lawyer, so again, I won't press my assertions/evidence, but . . .:
Article V: Illegally Misspending Funds to Secretly Begin a War of Aggression
Article XVI: Reckless Misspending and Waste of US Tax Dollars in Connection With Iraq and US Contractors.
"Waste, fraud, and abuse appear to be the rule rather than the exception". "A waste of taxpayers money" In all of these actions and decisions, President G W Bush has acted in a manner contrary to his trust as President, and subversive of constitutional government, to the prejudice of the cause of law and justice and to the manifest injury of the people of the United States. Wherefore, G W Bush, by such conduct is guilty of an impeachable offense warranting removal from office.
kucinich.us/impeachment/articles.pdf
Per articles of impeachment, these "misspending" actions are clearly illegal. But I'll concede to you that the term "theft" or "stealing" may not be the very best way to describe them.
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, represents, in the final analysis, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
34th president of US
Note the word "theft"
Rhavin writes:
I don't think that invading Afghanistan was necessarily unjustified.
To conclude: In light of American policies/interference in Afghanistan for the past 30+ years, I am in less agreement with you that invading Afghanistan was possibly justified. At the very least, the UN alone should have pushed for the invasion, not a highly biased, mentally-slow, and immorally-driven Bush Jr Adm. This all but guaranteed that more innocent Afghan civilians would ultimately suffer.
Really, with Bush Jr. in charge, who couldn't have predicted that civilian lives would be targeted and the entire invasion would turn into a debacle? . . .
I invite you to read articles from zcommunications.org - zcommunications Resources and Information.. Every other week it reports human right atrocities perpetrated by American soldiers in Afghanistan like: zcommunications.org - zcommunications Resources and Information.. Really, is anyone surprised by these stories? This is exactly what one expects when frustrated soldiers are put into an environment where friend or foe are difficult to tell apart. I believe, this reason alone, is sufficient reason against invading Afghanistan based on a "terrorist" charge.
Edited by dronester, : fixed/clarified quotes
Edited by dronester, : added "theft" quote

This message is a reply to:
 Message 165 by Rahvin, posted 04-19-2010 2:54 PM Rahvin has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 168 by Rahvin, posted 04-20-2010 12:21 PM dronestar has replied

  
Rahvin
Member
Posts: 4042
Joined: 07-01-2005
Member Rating: 8.0


Message 168 of 174 (556579)
04-20-2010 12:21 PM
Reply to: Message 167 by dronestar
04-20-2010 9:36 AM


Re: Who'd thunk it?
Hi Dronester,
I think I can wrap up most of my reply with something uncharacteristically brief:
My opinions do not need to be consistent with previous or even present US policy. I need only be self consistent. Don't think for a moment that I approve of all of the various American atrocities, or the funding/training of the Mujahideen, etc.
A good rule of thumb? If a military policy was established during the Cold War (which would include the massive ramp-up of "peacetime" military spending post-WW2, the policies of interventionism to prevent the spread of Communism, the entirety of the War on Drugs...), I disapprove. If a policy was enacted by Ronald Reagan for any purpose military or otherwise, chances are good that I disapprove as well.
I am stating only that I think military action beyond only Special Forces missions may have been justified in Afghanistan, because AQ and bin Laden were well-known internationally to be a terrorist group with an extensive presence in Afghanistan, and the Taliban government refused to meaningfully act to police that threat to international security themselves.
I am not saying that the US is not hypocritical given past policies. I am not saying that Bush's cavalier attitude was a net positive. I am not suggesting that I approve of the limited involvement of the UN. I am most especially not saying I approve of the specific execution of military action in the Afghan conflict.
Remember, I'm not a right-winger claiming the US is some unspoiled innocent virgin whose honor was besmirched on 9/11, and who was completely justified in taking unilateral military action. You and I seem to agree to a significant degree in the big picture, and have only small-scale, slight disagreements over specifics.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 167 by dronestar, posted 04-20-2010 9:36 AM dronestar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 169 by dronestar, posted 04-20-2010 12:45 PM Rahvin has not replied

  
dronestar
Member
Posts: 1417
From: usa
Joined: 11-19-2008
Member Rating: 6.5


Message 169 of 174 (556586)
04-20-2010 12:45 PM
Reply to: Message 168 by Rahvin
04-20-2010 12:21 PM


Umm, the topic can now be fully returned to health care, sorry OP
Hey Rahvin,
Rahvin writes:
I think I can wrap up most of my reply with something uncharacteristically brief:
Uncharacteristically brief?
Gee wiz, I stayed up all night and morning working on my post, even missed television's special anniversary eight-hour "Golden Girl" marathon on nickatnite. (included the rare episode when Bea Arthur has a sex change into a woman). All for just a brief reply? Sigh.
Rahvin writes:
You and I seem to agree to a significant degree in the big picture, and have only small-scale, slight disagreements over specifics.
Ok.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 168 by Rahvin, posted 04-20-2010 12:21 PM Rahvin has not replied

  
Taz
Member (Idle past 3317 days)
Posts: 5069
From: Zerus
Joined: 07-18-2006


Message 170 of 174 (557957)
04-28-2010 8:47 PM


Glenn Beck at it again
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qkataAlImU
For those who are lazy, Glenn Beck is blasting the democrats for introducing a bill that would allow Puerto Rico to become a state if the populace of Puerto Rico decides to. What the morally superior Glenn Beck doesn't tell you is that this issue comes up every other year. It came up several times during the Bush administration. It's come up so many times that the press doesn't even cover it anymore.

Replies to this message:
 Message 171 by onifre, posted 04-29-2010 6:29 PM Taz has replied

  
onifre
Member (Idle past 2977 days)
Posts: 4854
From: Dark Side of the Moon
Joined: 02-20-2008


Message 171 of 174 (558084)
04-29-2010 6:29 PM
Reply to: Message 170 by Taz
04-28-2010 8:47 PM


Re: Glenn Beck at it again
For those who are lazy, Glenn Beck is blasting the democrats for introducing a bill that would allow Puerto Rico to become a state if the populace of Puerto Rico decides to. What the morally superior Glenn Beck doesn't tell you is that this issue comes up every other year. It came up several times during the Bush administration. It's come up so many times that the press doesn't even cover it anymore.
He's also a moron because Puerto Ricans are usually conservative, very religious and would vote Republican.
- Oni

This message is a reply to:
 Message 170 by Taz, posted 04-28-2010 8:47 PM Taz has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 172 by Taz, posted 04-29-2010 9:47 PM onifre has replied

  
Taz
Member (Idle past 3317 days)
Posts: 5069
From: Zerus
Joined: 07-18-2006


Message 172 of 174 (558121)
04-29-2010 9:47 PM
Reply to: Message 171 by onifre
04-29-2010 6:29 PM


Re: Glenn Beck at it again
Why do you suppose minority groups tend to vote republican even though it's clearly not in their best interest? I have always wondered about this. Particularly the hispanic population. They know that republicans support policies that would put a strangle hold on their people. And yet they keep voting republican. Same thing with blacks.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 171 by onifre, posted 04-29-2010 6:29 PM onifre has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 173 by hooah212002, posted 04-29-2010 9:59 PM Taz has not replied
 Message 174 by onifre, posted 04-30-2010 2:37 AM Taz has not replied

  
hooah212002
Member (Idle past 827 days)
Posts: 3193
Joined: 08-12-2009


Message 173 of 174 (558123)
04-29-2010 9:59 PM
Reply to: Message 172 by Taz
04-29-2010 9:47 PM


Re: Glenn Beck at it again
Well, I assure you minorities in AZ will NOT be voting (R) this next go 'round.

"Some people think God is an outsized, light-skinned male with a long white beard, sitting on a throne somewhere up there in the sky, busily tallying the fall of every sparrow. Othersfor example Baruch Spinoza and Albert Einsteinconsidered God to be essentially the sum total of the physical laws which describe the universe. I do not know of any compelling evidence for anthropomorphic patriarchs controlling human destiny from some hidden celestial vantage point, but it would be madness to deny the existence of physical laws."-Carl Sagan
"Show me where Christ said "Love thy fellow man, except for the gay ones." Gay people, too, are made in my God's image. I would never worship a homophobic God." -Desmond Tutu

This message is a reply to:
 Message 172 by Taz, posted 04-29-2010 9:47 PM Taz has not replied

  
onifre
Member (Idle past 2977 days)
Posts: 4854
From: Dark Side of the Moon
Joined: 02-20-2008


Message 174 of 174 (558166)
04-30-2010 2:37 AM
Reply to: Message 172 by Taz
04-29-2010 9:47 PM


Re: Glenn Beck at it again
Why do you suppose minority groups tend to vote republican even though it's clearly not in their best interest? I have always wondered about this. Particularly the hispanic population. They know that republicans support policies that would put a strangle hold on their people. And yet they keep voting republican. Same thing with blacks.
Well, I'll give you two answers/personal theories:
1) Religion. Hispanics are very religious. And, anti-gay for some reason, maybe latin machismo. Dunno. They side with republicans on many "morality" issues. I assume this too for blacks - and judging by the Prop 8 deal in Cali, where religious black people were a strong influence in that vote, I'd say I'm pretty accurate in that opinion.
2) This goes for cubans only, which is where I have my personal understanding of the reason why, having talked to many, many (almost to the point of being obnoxious) family and friends on why I should vote republican each time - regardless of who's running against them. (Except for one time, which made me laugh my ass off, when a local cuban guy, Alex Penelas, was running against a black guy. The cuban happened to be running as a democrat. Lol. Guess which way every cuban voted that time?).
Most of the time cuban's vote republican, one because of all the reasons I state above, and two, because of Kennedy and the Bay of Pig's deal. My dad, having been there, with a few brothers and many friends, etc., will NEVER vote democrat because of it. That's why most republican candidates, when they campaign in Miami, they push for tougher embargo enforcement. To get the support of the cuban community who hates Castro.
This is my opinion on it, but I think these are the reasons why.
- Oni

This message is a reply to:
 Message 172 by Taz, posted 04-29-2010 9:47 PM Taz has not replied

  
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