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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

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quote:
What about a recent study showing there was a negligible genetic difference between most Israelis and Palestinians? Are you backing up that statement with anything more than your ability to more readily identify with Israelis than Palestinians?

And are you saying people waring over religious differences is only a big deal if it's in a well-to-do country?

The United States was largely colonized because of religious differences. Get a clue Mikey, neighboring ideologies don't get a long, they remind a group that there god is just as imaginary as the next.


I think you like to argue for the sake of argument.

I am saying religious differences are even more ridiculous than skin color differences. Get a clue, try reading my posts. I am saying that there are religious factions in civilized countries, and on thew whole, civilized countries seem to be able to function without giant religious wars. America was colonized by religious differences, yes, but how fucking long ago was that? Jesus, you're an obtuse son of a bitch, MaKK. What I am saying is that it is a goddamn shame that there have to be ANY conflicts of this nature. It's bad enough we've got people killing each other over something as trivial as skin color, and religious ideological differences is fucking ridiculous. Stop looking for a fight everywhere, you maniac.

Also, MaKK, there are studies that say ANYTHING, so don't throw that shit at me unless you're going to post the statistics.

Furthermore, the Palestinians have been getting shafted for years, by both Israel and their own leader, 'Yessir' Arafat. You presume too much, Mr. BeNN.

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The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-18-04 6:43am (new)
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MaKK_BeNN
VOTE JEB BUSH 2008

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So your remark that "I guess there are a bunch of white people in Israel" is a lot more scientific than a study? Ok, I am noting that in my log.

Also what about your remark that "oh that's in the third world, it's different"?

So there are no violent crimes in the U.S. motivated by religion? Interesting. Because I think there's a study done on that that could disprove it. Course, any college boy can come up with a "study" right? You just know it's true cuz you ain't never seen any. Also all the jews what you've met are white so them boys must all be white, right?

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Vote Jeb Bush 2008

2-18-04 2:17pm (new)
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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

Member Rated:

Heh heh. Nice try.

The U.S. may be in a war, but it is not a war-torn country. Israel IS.

Crimes and war are two different things, genius. Did you take a hit of something heavier than usual recently?

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The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-18-04 2:29pm (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

quote:
quote:

It's possible that once the war train came in, the INC got on board. I mean, you'd just about have to, if you had any brains.

Even though "opposition leaders stressed that a large-scale offensive by Washington and its allies would not be supported by opponents of the Baghdad regime, either inside or outside Iraq", according to the Indie?


Yes: It's possible, even though, according to the indie, opposition leaders said that. Maybe they changed their minds after the USUK came in, guns blazing. So maybe they did support the war, after it already started. Maybe you were sorta right. Jeez, don't concede so fast.

quote:

They did support US military action to remove Saddam, though. Okay, my language was careless and misleading.

Hey, take it easy.

quote:
I'm not taking your position to be that inaction was the best possible course: just that it would have been preferable to what did happen.

Only if we find that, on balance, this war did more harm than good. I have a high degree of confidence that this will be the case, but I don't think all the evidence is in. I mean who knows? Maybe the war will bring liberation and peace to the beleaguered Iraqi people. Or something. We'll see. My point is, we can't just go, "Saddam's gone, that's a plus, therefore the war is a plus."

Furthermore, I don't know that I could support this war (or any violence) based on the contention that it's better than doing nothing, unless those are the only two choices. And there are a lot of "third choices" here.

quote:

I don't know how long it takes to bring a devastated country back from the brink (it was in ruins even before the invasion) but I don't think any sensible person could've expected it to take under a year.

No sensible person, or me either.

"His own people" meaning mostly the Kurds, who are Saddam's own people in the same sense that the Native Americans were General Custer's "own people." (BTW, how come so few complain about Saddam's gassing of Iranians?) But yes, we should be very interested in what HRW has to say about Saddam's genocidal behavior, particularly because it bears on Saddam's disposition as a POW and his possible liability for war crimes. We should also note that the Geneva Conventions provide that all persons implicated in war crimes must be prosecuted for their actions, and ask ourselves what the US's response was to Saddam's genocides and pogroms. (Calls for increased aid in view of the 1988 slaughter of Kurds? Lifting of no-fly zones during the 1991 uprisings? Hmmm.) Then we should ask why the US is just this moment acting in such a way as to avoid Saddam's prosecution under international humanitarian law, pushing instead for some kind of Special Tribunal within Iraq.

Of course, you know about all this already if you follow Human Rights Watch, which you appear to.

But back to our argument. I threw out a number: 10,000 civilians dead from this war. (Never mind the previous one, and the ensuing embargoes.) You threw back a number: 300,000 that Saddam killed, plus many more in adjacent countries. (Iran, mostly. Civilian casualties in Kuwait were more in line with those in Panama when we invaded.) But when did he kill all these people? In Iran, 1980-88. The Anfal campaign against the Kurds, 1988. Kuwait, 1990. The rebellions, 1991. So. Of course he should be brought to justice for this. But did the current USUK invasion stop any ongoing genocide or slaughter? No. So is it really appropriate to counterbalance the civilian casualties we are causing right now against those Saddam caused a decade or two ago? I don't quite see how.

In short, we didn't invade to stop 300,000 people getting killed, because that happened a long time ago. But those deaths are very interesting to discuss, and we should.

An interesting juxtaposition, considering that the US supported Saddam through his worst crimes, as it did many others. I've mentioned Suharto, Pinochet, Marcos, Somoza, and so on. To spell it out for you, I don't think the US's record is all that great.

Maybe. Maybe not. I mean, by itself, losing weight is an improvement. But not if you do it by chopping the fat guy in half.

No. My objection is, you said something better would follow. I can understand your logic-- "Iraqis say it was worth the pain to get rid of Saddam; therefore, Iraqis believe something better will replace him." I just don't think it follows. I mean, you see right there in the polls we're discussing (not to mention the resistance) that Iraqis don't trust the USUK to improve their lot. Second, even if they did, I wouldn't think that to be the likely outcome.

Really? I thought it was mostly the pocket-stuffing. In the case of France, it was less about rebuilding than reasserting dominion over its previous subject realms in Indochina. That turned out great, didn't it?

I guess we're not so far apart in our analysis of these things. What I don't get is that you think pocket-stuffing and war and all this cynical power-grabbing can have a "happy side-effect." I just think it's appalling. I mean why don't we cut out the lies and thievery and violence and just go for the "happy side-effect?" Wouldn't that be better? To put it another way: Wouldn't that be the absolute minimum required of decent people?

I think every war whips up authoritarianism here. Or maybe vice-versa. It's like they go together. But you're right that this one is different, and we have Atta to thank. This one is different because someone has committed atrocities against us, right here on our soil. That has amplified the usual frenzy to... I don't know-- what's the next notch up from frenzy?

Anyway, I think we both agree that supporting democratic insurgencies inside Iraq would have been preferable to supporting Saddam, then smashing the country, then imposing embargoes that made the people dependent on Saddam, then smashing the country again. Which is all I'm trying to say, really.

---
What others say about boorite!

2-18-04 3:53pm (new)
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andydougan
Film critic subordinaire

Member Rated:

quote:
Only if we find that, on balance, this war did more harm than good. I have a high degree of confidence that this will be the case, but I don't think all the evidence is in. I mean who knows? Maybe the war will bring liberation and peace to the beleaguered Iraqi people. Or something. We'll see. My point is, we can't just go, "Saddam's gone, that's a plus, therefore the war is a plus."

Furthermore, I don't know that I could support this war (or any violence) based on the contention that it's better than doing nothing, unless those are the only two choices. And there are a lot of "third choices" here.


So we keep hearing. I think you said something about how continuing the sanctions would have been the kinder thing.

"His own people" meaning mostly the Kurds, who are Saddam's own people in the same sense that the Native Americans were General Custer's "own people."


An interesting point, parroted straight from Chomsky (it'd be nice if you could cite these things as most high schools teach people to). Maybe this is the case, but it's as relevant to the argument as making fun of typos. Are you saying Saddam isn't as bad as everyone makes out or what?

Presumably because Rumsfeld and co don't want to end up in gaol for war crimes. I don't think I would in his shoes, either.

quote:
Of course, you know about all this already if you follow Human Rights Watch, which you appear to.

But back to our argument. I threw out a number: 10,000 civilians dead from this war. (Never mind the previous one, and the ensuing embargoes.) You threw back a number: 300,000 that Saddam killed, plus many more in adjacent countries. (Iran, mostly. Civilian casualties in Kuwait were more in line with those in Panama when we invaded.) But when did he kill all these people? In Iran, 1980-88. The Anfal campaign against the Kurds, 1988. Kuwait, 1990. The rebellions, 1991. So. Of course he should be brought to justice for this. But did the current USUK invasion stop any ongoing genocide or slaughter? No. So is it really appropriate to counterbalance the civilian casualties we are causing right now against those Saddam caused a decade or two ago? I don't quite see how.


Because his record shows that he's keen on murdering tens of thousands and will do it the next time the fancy takes him. Why would he stop?

An interesting juxtaposition, considering that the US supported Saddam through his worst crimes, as it did many others. I've mentioned Suharto, Pinochet, Marcos, Somoza, and so on. To spell it out for you, I don't think the US's record is all that great.


I never accused it of being!

No. My objection is, you said something better would follow. I can understand your logic-- "Iraqis say it was worth the pain to get rid of Saddam; therefore, Iraqis believe something better will replace him." I just don't think it follows. I mean, you see right there in the polls we're discussing (not to mention the resistance) that Iraqis don't trust the USUK to improve their lot.


I didn't see that in the poll.

Really? I thought it was mostly the pocket-stuffing. In the case of France, it was less about rebuilding than reasserting dominion over its previous subject realms in Indochina. That turned out great, didn't it?


No, but it was better than another World War. Which is what might have happened otherwise.

I guess you just have a sunny view of human nature. People in the western world walk on the backs of the poor whenever they go to the bank, whenever they fill their petrol tank, whenever they buy a Nestle bar. It's easy to see how most people, given the power, would care very little about the deaths of thousands if it meant they could improve their own comfort slightly.

2-18-04 4:17pm (new)
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Spankling
Looking for love in ALL the wrong places, baby!

Member Rated:


From http://store.yahoo.com/fridgedoor/wausmycili.html

Finally! Someone remembers!

---
"Jelly-belly gigglin, dancin and a-wigglin, honey that's the way I am!" Janice the Muppet

2-18-04 9:09pm (new)
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MaKK_BeNN
VOTE JEB BUSH 2008

Member Rated:

So you admit the current war in Iraq is not a crime. Thanks! Welcome to the winning team.

You still haven't answered for your racist and derogatory claims about the plight of third world citizens, MikeyG.

Also what civil liberties are being taken away? The god-given right to carry pocket knives onto planes? The right to meet up with Al-Qaeda agents in a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan and then come to the United States? The right to enter the country on falsified visa information?

Yeah, I wasn't using any of those rights anyway.

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Vote Jeb Bush 2008

2-18-04 9:19pm (new)
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Spankling
Looking for love in ALL the wrong places, baby!

Member Rated:

snerk. Moran.

---
"Jelly-belly gigglin, dancin and a-wigglin, honey that's the way I am!" Janice the Muppet

2-18-04 9:20pm (new)
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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

Member Rated:

We haven't discussed WAR CRIMES, buddy. Have you met Dr. Pedantic?

Well, nobody else seems to be pointing that out, so it seems like you've decided to manufacture it. My guess is you're desperate for something to throw at me.

---
The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-19-04 6:20am (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

quote:

So we keep hearing. I think you said something about how continuing the sanctions would have been the kinder thing.

Depends on which sanctions you mean.

Actually, Chomsky's analogy was to Andrew Jackson and the Cherokees, but it's the same point. And there is no need to cite the form of an argument. I mean, wouldn't our conversation look even more stilted if we appealed to authority at every turn: "As Lao Tse says, blah blah blah." Now-- findings, assertions of fact, and so on call for citation. I haven't noticed this stopping you from making bald assertions, which is actually what they teach you not to do in high school.

So, am I saying Saddam is not as bad as everyone says? Well, let's see. Did I say that? No, I didn't.

You're engaging in diversionary tactics. None are necessary, as I think our points of agreement are many and our disagreement is simple.

quote:

Presumably because Rumsfeld and co don't want to end up in gaol for war crimes. I don't think I would in his shoes, either.

Very perceptive. See, I knew we were on the same page.

To repeat, you know about all this already if you follow Human Rights Watch, which you appear to.

Why would he? Don't know. Why did he?

The point, which you have chosen to ignore, is that Saddam was not in the process of slaughtering 300,000 of his own people when the US-UK bombed and invaded. This was not a war to stop some genocide that in fact ended over a decade ago-- genocide that was carried out with (as you scrupulously omitted) US support. Those would seem important facts to note when you are recounting Saddam's crimes and using them as justification for our going in and smashing up the place and killing another 10,000 civilians. Don't you think so?

And as you recognize, above, the effect of the US capture of Saddam is not that he will be brought to justice under international humanitarian law, but quite the opposite. You say yourself that US officials are averting Saddam's prosecution in order to protect themselves. So I am glad you brought up Saddam's monstrous record, although in view of the facts we both know, I can't see how they justify the US-UK war. Quite the opposite (as I'm fond of saying).

An interesting juxtaposition, considering that the US supported Saddam through his worst crimes, as it did many others. I've mentioned Suharto, Pinochet, Marcos, Somoza, and so on. To spell it out for you, I don't think the US's record is all that great.


I never accused it of being!


I know that. We agree on that. We both know that the US (as it has done with many dictators) all but installed Saddam and then supported him through his worst crimes, in which the current administration is heavily implicated. So isn't it odd that you would juxtapose Saddam's record in Iraq with ours? I mean, it's the same record! ...at least with respect to those 300,000 victims you're referring to.

quote:
quote:

...you see right there in the polls we're discussing (not to mention the resistance) that Iraqis don't trust the USUK to improve their lot.

I didn't see that in the poll.


I hate cutting and pasting. Read it this time, OK?

"Only 5 percent of those polled said they believed the United States invaded Iraq 'to assist the Iraqi people,' and only 1 percent believed it was to establish democracy there.

"Three-quarters of those polled said they believed the policies and decisions of the Iraqi Governing Council -- whose members were appointed in July by Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator L. Paul Bremer -- were 'mostly determined by the coalition's own authorities,' and only 16 percent thought the council members were 'fairly independent.'

"....'most [Iraqis] are deeply skeptical of the initial rationale the coalition has given for its actions'...

"Forty-three percent of the respondents said they believed that U.S. and British forces invaded in March primarily 'to rob Iraq's oil.' While 37 percent believed the United States acted to get rid of the Hussein regime, only 5 percent thought it did so 'to assist the Iraq people'..."

So maybe, from these quotes, you can't see that Iraqis don't trust the US-UK to improve their lot. I mean, it doesn't say that in so many words, so maybe the Iraqis do trust the US-UK to make things better. But to me, it looks pretty clear that they don't trust anything about the Coalition's motives, or its intent to help the people of Iraq. That seems important.

quote:
quote:

I thought [the Marshall Plan] was mostly the pocket-stuffing. In the case of France, it was less about rebuilding than reasserting dominion over its previous subject realms in Indochina. That turned out great, didn't it?

No, but it was better than another World War. Which is what might have happened otherwise.


Destroying Indochina averted another World War? That's a new one on me. Forgive my thickness if that's not what you're saying.

Anyway, here again is another example of how your logic escapes me. Bombing the fuck out of 3 countries and killing millions of people was "better than another World War." Jesus. I mean even if we take it to be true, so what? Is carpet bombing and poisoning a helpless country the best that's expected of us, because it's better than Hitler? I'm speechless. I just don't know what to make of a remark like that.

I guess you just have a sunny view of human nature. People in the western world walk on the backs of the poor whenever they go to the bank, whenever they fill their petrol tank, whenever they buy a Nestle bar. It's easy to see how most people, given the power, would care very little about the deaths of thousands if it meant they could improve their own comfort slightly.


I don't see how I have a sunny view of human nature, because I sympathize with much of the rest you say here. Right, then. The question is, in view of all this, how again do you defend this attack on Iraq on moral grounds? If you see it as part of a pattern of violent exploitation on which our very economy is founded, then how can it be right? Wouldn't the right thing be to let Iraq and the rest of the Middle East up for air and get our own damn oil and chocolate bars?

I'm not sure, btw, that people in general care as little about widespread death as you say, or that it's really for the sake of their own comfort (although they may even perceive it that way). That's a whole other topic we can get into if you like.

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What others say about boorite!

2-19-04 8:47am (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

All this said.... I still can't get over this remarkable train of thought that goes, "yes, it's lies and thievery and murder, but just look at the happy side effect!" Seriously, I'm dumbstruck. It's like Dave, with the dead whore in his cave-- "just think of the money he saved!" Good lord, I have to resort to limericks to get a handle on the absurdity of it.

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What others say about boorite!

2-19-04 8:55am (new)
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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

Member Rated:

I, for one, care about widespread death.

My problem, it seems, is the inability to remove how I feel from the topic in order to accurately describe the reasons for my feelings. This allows me to make passionate speeches, but sometimes deters the recipient from understanding my point of view. This is why boorite generally represents my views.

War is wrong. I know most people feel it is necessary in some cases, and there is a giant, swirling gray area that encompasses that argument. I concede that in some cases it MAY be necessary, although I dispise it and will seek any alternative to it. But THIS war, this Iraqi slaughter, which it has definitely become, was not a necessary one by any way, shape, or form.

Forget the humanitarian argument, because boorite just outlined exactly why that reason doesn't wash. The WMD/Imminent Threat theory? Recent news should help squash that particular argument. Terrorist harboring/training? Pakistan harbors quite a few terrorists. Saudi Arabia trains them. Plus, Baghdad is more dangerous now than it has been in a very long time. And the terrorist threat in the U.S. spiked drastically after we attacked Iraq. Anything else?

---
The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-19-04 9:28am (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

quote:

A Flash piece to defend your assertion we want the democracy in Iraq to fail?

A Flash piece reciting the facts. They're the same facts, whether they come from a flash movie, a comic book, an NGO website, a newspaper, or declassified US documents. And you would dismiss them just the same.

The facts show that the US has not ever backed democracy in Iraq. But instead of addressing the facts, you impugn the source. Do you offer any facts of your own? Of course not. You say, "That's just a flash movie!" Argument over.

Yep, I am. How else will we get our grubby mitts on all that Iraqi oil? But Hell, maybe you're right, and it's gonna be Iraq for Iraqis, and democracy for everyone, including the Kurds and Shiites, and we'll just get on out of there and leave them to mind their business on their own terms. I don't think that's likely though. In fact, the US plan is quite the opposite.

Don't take my word for it. Look it up. As for our custody of Saddam, please see my discussion with andy, where we talk about Human Rights Watch and Saddam's crimes (or I could cut n paste it again if you want to be thick). It's mighty fishy that Washington is acting to avert Saddam's prosecution under international humanitarian law. Andy hit it right on the head as to why. Anyone who's watching closely knows exactly what it's about. Do you?

Oh, I see. Every time the US or any other global power has done this in the past, it's been antidemocratic, but it's different now. I guess Washington's magnificence is so self-evident that we should take its rhetoric about democracy at face value, although this requires us to disregard every fact before us.

Who would profit "if democracy fails in Iraq?" I don't know how to answer that, because democracy can't "fail" if it isn't tried. A more sensible question is, who profits from tyranny in Iraq (and many other places where we have supported it)? One answer is the energy lobby, a.k.a. "big oil." Hardly "a political enemy of Bush."

How about that staunch Bush/Cheney opponent, Halliburton? OH THAT'S RIGHT! CHENEY'S THICK AS THIEVES WITH HALLIBURTON! AND HALLIBURTON IS CHORFING UP MONEY OVER THERE LIKE NOBODY'S BUSINESS! HOW SILLY OF ME!

Sorry, I've lost patience with the grossly obvious nature of this whole war scam, and with anyone who seriously expects us to believe it's for the sake of "democracy."

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What others say about boorite!

2-19-04 2:15pm (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

quote:

And boorite, I always give everyone, including MaKK, you, and everyone else, the courtesy of reading their posts, so at least I can respond using all the data available in this argument. I have to say I am slightly insulted by your inability to do the same for me.

Feel insulted, if that's what it's about for you. I have read your posts, but apparently haven't paid enough attention to get bent out of shape about any "moronic" remarks andy noticed. That's just the truth. If someone demands, why didn't you refute these moronic comments, I think it's ok to reply that you didn't notice any. Why should you be insulted?

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What others say about boorite!

2-19-04 2:26pm (new)
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MaKK_BeNN
VOTE JEB BUSH 2008

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I did address the point. AFTER I said that (which you have conveniently left out) I said even if it was true some past administrations purposely did not support democracy in Iraq, I don't know how you can argue it is of political benefit to anyone, except maybe to see the current administration tarnished.

Way to SELECTIVELY LEAVE OUT THE FACTS.

Taking valuable oil field out of Saddam's control and erroding the hegemony of OPEC is important. It's not like we're oil vampires, drinking the delicious and valuable oil.

I'll believe in the subversion when I see Saddam getting a lenient, innapropriate sentence. Washington might be delaying justice so that the Iraqi people can appropriately try him, but I really doubt they are subverting justice. Again, how would that possibly look good upon the administration, and why would they do so on purpose? I am seriously at a loss here to see what you seem to suggest is so obvious.

If we just flat out invaded Iraq before the Persian Gulf War the Middle East would have exploded, because there was not enough cause to do so. But there wasn't enough political cause at that time to put sanctions on the Saddam regime. That doesn't make our current intentions undemocratic, now that there is enough political justification to go after Saddam.

Here's an example.

We still work with Saudi Arabia and no one is up in arms about it. (They are obviously not a free healthy democracy). If tomorrow they launched missiles at Israel it would be a different story. And we might then invade them, and we might then push for a new democratic government after we took out the old one. Our past relationship wouldn't make those intentions to install a democracy less real. But I'm sure you and your ilk would drag up pictures of Bush meeting with their leaders in Arab headress and go "AH HA! Bush meets with the 'enemy'!" (You know, like the picture of Rumsfield with Saddam that totally "proves a conspiracy").

And yes we'd have to somehow then manage the ownership of the new oil fields -the reason Saudi Arabia has the importance it does, the reason they have so much wealth, and the reason they would be a threat with military capabilities and a loose cannon mentality at the top of their government. But I'm sure once we started to figure out how they should be managed you would say "Ah ha! That's why we're there. Makes sense now. It was never about them firing missiles at Israel."

Then you just yammer on about Haliburton. Yes, if this situation above happened, and no other nation wanted to help us fight the Saudis, we'd again have to use our own Haliburton company to rebuild the nation. Just because someone benefits because of an event doesn't mean they were part of a conspiracy to make those events happen. Office space prices going up in lower Manhattan post 9-11 doesn't mean Donald Trump crashed the planes into the World Trade Center towers.

That's funny, I thought France, Germany, and Russia all were profitting from tyranny in Iraq. If the "energy lobby" so benefits from tyranny in Iraq, why did we uninstall the last tyrant?

Even if they are in league with the administration, how would they benefit if the government we are trying to construct is destoyed, and the U.S. is run out of Iraq? Not much profiteering to do then.

You bore me with your stupidity, and your suggestion of conspiracy in lieu of the time it would take to fomrulate well-thought-out logical arguments.

---
Vote Jeb Bush 2008

2-19-04 3:27pm (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

No conspiracy necessary, MakK. Just looking at what's right in front of you. Sorry to bore you. You just go right on believing in that democracy we're bringing to Iraq. Can't even feel Cheney's big fat-clogged fists in your pockets, can you? You pay to smash Iraq, pay to rebuild it, pay again at the gas pump, and even get taxed on that. Ah yes, I must be the stupid one, because it looks to me like we're all getting fucked on this deal.

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What others say about boorite!

2-19-04 3:53pm (new)
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MaKK_BeNN
VOTE JEB BUSH 2008

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First it's about oil, now I'm paying at the gas pump? What's the deal.

Sorry but buzzwords don't persuade me.

Halliburton, Halliburton, Halliburton, Oil, Oil, Oil, Oil? Halliburton Halliburton Halliburton.

You didn't address any of my points, nor have you explained how Cheney is digging into my pockets at the gas pump or via taxation.

We didn't rebuild Afghanistan after 1989 and look what happened. We didn't go after the Taliban and look what happened. I think spending money to secure Iraq is money well spent, and long over due.

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Vote Jeb Bush 2008

2-19-04 4:52pm (new)
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fuzzyman
Alpha Geek

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The thing I have a problem with is the Administration lying about why we went in there. Was Saddam a bad guy? For sure. Is the Middle East important to us? Of course. Should we go after all the bad guys around the world, or promote democracy in the Middle East? Perhaps, but let's have an open debate about this. Let's talk about our goals, the benefits, and what the cost in lives and dollars might be. But don't go preying on our fears after 9/11, telling us that Saddam is some kind of threat me and mine, and that he links to Al Qaeda when it just ain't so.

Maybe it's about oil. Maybe it's about contracts for Halliburton. Maybe it's about promoting U.S. hegemony in the Middle East. Maybe it's because Saddam tried to kill GWB's Daddy. You know something? I don't give a flying fuck. The fact is, the reasons presented were not the reasons we went to war, and that's reason enough to throw the rascals out.

---
...Trot and Cap'n Bill were free from anxiety and care. Button-Bright never worried about anything. The Scarecrow, not being able to sleep, looked out of the window and tried to count the stars.

2-19-04 8:06pm (new)
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DragonXero
I'm Here, You're Queer, Get Used to it

Member Rated:

*looks around a bit*

There's talks of reinstating the draft.

*leaves and watches the chaos from afar*

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Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants.

2-19-04 9:50pm (new)
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MaKK_BeNN
VOTE JEB BUSH 2008

Member Rated:

There's always talk of reinstating the draft. No one is going to commit political suicide short of World War III happening.

I agree fuzzyman, as I've said for a while, they shouldn't have even made the WMD claim. They didn't even sound convinced when making the arguments, and the could have made the argument for war without spinning what little WMD evidence they did have.

Remember though your congress approved this war, and don't make airs that they were tricked, everyone knew what they were voting for. Some members of Congress might even be trying to run for President as we speak..

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Vote Jeb Bush 2008

2-19-04 11:17pm (new)
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jes_lawson
I don't know what I'm doing either

Member Rated:

quote:
*looks around a bit*

There's talks of reinstating the draft.

*leaves and watches the chaos from afar*


Not that I'm discounting there may be a grain of truth in any rumour but what are your sources on this?

---
Please replace the handset, and try again.

2-20-04 2:57am (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

quote:

We didn't rebuild Afghanistan after 1989 and look what happened. We didn't go after the Taliban and look what happened. I think spending money to secure Iraq is money well spent, and long over due.

Actually, I have said the same thing, almost verbatim, so we should pause now for celebration.

(A brief pause ensues.)

Now, you've asked me to explain how you, an American taxpayer, are paying for this catastrophe coming and going and every which way while Cheney's friends get rich off their ass. I suppose I could spend the next 6 months and 66 pages of this thread resurrecting everything from the Communist Manifesto to Eisenhower's warnings about the military-industrial complex to internal Reagan-Bush-Clinton-Bush-era planning documents, in order to try to convince you of something that follows in a perfectly obvious way from facts that we already agree on. And you still wouldn't see how you're getting hosed, and all for the sake of stomping some poor bastards on the other side of the globe. Because according to you, no matter what Washington does, it is protecting the world for democracy. Such is your worship of your government, demonstrated these last 66 pages.

Good for you. Vote Republican in November. Hell, vote Democrat-- Kerry's not going to be much different. Just go on telling yourself that your government, alone among all great powers in the history of the world, uses violence not for selfish, criminal reasons, but to make the world a better place. And be sure to pat yourself on the back for being part of it all. It couldn't happen without people like you, MakK.

Same as it ever was.

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What others say about boorite!

2-20-04 7:06am (new)
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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

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I misunderstood your intentions. Apologies.

---
The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-20-04 7:18am (new)
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MikeyG
Shoots the shit and often misses

Member Rated:

quote:
Good for you. Vote Republican in November. Hell, vote Democrat-- Kerry's not going to be much different. Just go on telling yourself that your government, alone among all great powers in the history of the world, uses violence not for selfish, criminal reasons, but to make the world a better place. And be sure to pat yourself on the back for being part of it all. It couldn't happen without people like you, MakK.

Same as it ever was.


Well-said. Same thing I've been saying for however many pages have been dedicated to the upcoming election.

MaKK has conceded that the WMD story was garbage. So right there, we've got some people spinning some bullshit story to make their actions more palatable. Which we all have done, right? I'm sure somewhere in their lives everyone has spun a little white lie to allow them to do something unappealing to others with less personal guilt involved. Like, for example, you may have told your wife that there was some really important photo shoot or business venture you had to attend down in [insert location here], only to go there and mostly party with your friends, or worse.

But you also weren't trying to justify killing and uprooting a bunch of already despirited, oppressed people. The lies of this administration are applicable to a situation where complete honesty and forthcomingness were in dire necessity. This administration has had a unique ability to emotionally connect with people, and it is despicable that they would be so blatant about the lies and deceit.

Please, do not throw that 'Politicians are all liars anyway' argument at me, because it's bullshit. They shouldn't be, plain and simple. The fact that anyone can be that complacent where they accept deceit from their leaders as a given is also despicable. It should NOT be that way, and acceptance of this is laying down like a good sheep.

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The giant three-phallused phallus of Uzbekistan will one day squirt the cosmic jizz of revenge all over Canada.

2-20-04 7:44am (new)
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boorite
crazy knife lady

Member Rated:

MakK:

quote:

You didn't address any of my points...

Yeah, about that: I find the mountain of absurdities you call "points" a little daunting. Where would I start? Picking out any one or two crucial ones for a full appreciation of their fucked-upness usually just invites you to accuse me of nitpicking and ignoring your REAL argument. On the other hand, responding to all of them would take hours and hours and hours, and for what? This is how you convince yourself you've won: Bury the thread in obvious utter crap and then cry victory if we don't pick through every speck of corn in it. Hell, you've done that even when I have picked through every speck. And then you've complained the thread is too long, too technical, too wordy.

Let's see that in action again, shall we? A few of the "points" I failed to address, and my replies, numbered for easy reference:

quote:
I did address the point. AFTER I said that (which you have conveniently left out) I said even if it was true some past administrations purposely did not support democracy in Iraq, I don't know how you can argue it is of political benefit to anyone, except maybe to see the current administration tarnished.

Way to SELECTIVELY LEAVE OUT THE FACTS.


1. False. I did not leave that point out. I left it in. I quoted it in full and responded to it. You cannot even pay attention to the post you're replying to. I can't tell if you're lying or just mentally challenged. I pick the latter, because no one would tell a lie this obvious.

2. Eroding the the hegemony of OPEC. What an astounding phrase. We have to take the "valuable oil field" from the oil-producing Eastern country, because otherwise the Oil Producing Eastern Countries will have "hegemony" over the oil... that they produce...

I can only stand in awe of the mentality that enables you not only to think like this, but to set it in writing and hit "send." I really don't see a way to address a "point" like that, so I prefer to let it stand on its own.

3. Speaking of not addressing the point! Let's see, I asked why the US is avoiding Saddam's prosecution under international humanitarian law, and speculated (along with andy) that it is because the US is heavily implicated in his past crimes. And your response is that all is well as long as Saddam is punished.

4. You'll "believe in subversion when...?" You've already stated that you see perfectly well how the US is subverting international law, and said you don't give a damn.

5. Yours is a remarkable version of history. Not only did Bush I (and previous administrations) "not put sanctions on the Saddam regime" before the first Gulf War-- they supported Saddam in full view of his crimes. How can I address your "point" that we didn't invade or sanction Saddam because we didn't have cause, when in fact we were aiding the monster? It doesn't even make sense.

6. Where the hell do you get this stuff? That's just flat-out false. In fact, the opposition to the war emphasizes US support for undemocratic regimes like Saudi Arabia. It's one of the reasons I've offered for disbelieving that the US wants to support democracy in the region. Tell me how I'm supposed to address a "point" that proceeds from such an idiotic statement.

7. Absolutely right. You asked who could possibly benefit from the failure of democracy in Iraq. I said: "A more sensible question is, who profits from tyranny in Iraq (and many other places where we have supported it)?" [MAKK! ALERT! THIS WOULD INCLUDE SAUDI ARABIA!] "One answer is the energy lobby, a.k.a. "big oil." Hardly "a political enemy of Bush."

One answer is "big oil." You're right-- another answer is Europe-- more precisely, "big oil" in Europe. That you think this "point" somehow refutes mine is bizarre.

8. Also, this is precisely where I addressed your question, "I don't know how you can argue it is of political benefit to anyone, except maybe to see the current administration tarnished"-- which you falsely accused me of leaving out and not addressing. See point 1, above, if you've already forgotten that you did this.

9. We didn't. As you note, many tyrannies (such as Saudi Arabia) survive with enthusiastic US support. We got rid of Saddam for the reasons you've noted: France and Germany, i.e., our competitors, were profiting from access to his oil market. Again, you have said this yourself.

10. You can't suppose we ousted Saddam for his invasion of Kuwait, because that happened over 10 years ago, and Bush left him in there.

11. And, as you've noted, big oil does profit from its relationship with tyrannies. You provided the example of Saudi Arabia. Thank you.

---
What others say about boorite!

2-20-04 8:08am (new)
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Stripcreator » Fights Go Here » Did someone mention politics?


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