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#21
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![]() OM wrote: That was the joke, yes. But right now, we have to fart. Ha-ha! I don't watch that show. It's toilet humor. I don't like toilet humor because I'm superior to that. Hmmm. Have they ever taken on "Classical Liberals"? "Classical Liberals"...who **** their uncles? Hah-hah! B-R-A-A-P! T&P |
#22
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jonathan wrote:
No, they think this way. They worship the tactic of using as a 'force multiplier' or terrorist weapon, the random attack against innocent civilians. The biggest bang for the buck ever invented, and quickest way to destroy a society. So that they can inherit the rubble and enslave who is left alive. They have come nowhere near "destroying" our society, or even putting a dent into it really. 9/11 was bad, but "our society" has moved on and has even released two major motion pictures this year about 9/11! "Our society" has prospered just fine since 2001, although it would have done far better without the pointless Iraqi diversion. What "they" have managed so far are just nuisance attacks, which any society could endure, and even adapt to, for decades or even millennia. It would be easier if they used WMD to destroy a city or two. Then we would have no reason not to use our full arsenal against targets of our choosing to depopulate a sizable chunk of the planet's surface, an act requiring the immolation of the innocent along with the guilty. This is something the U.S. has done before without even flinching - it just depends on the circumstances. - Ed Kyle |
#23
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In article . com,
"Ed Kyle" wrote: jonathan wrote: No, they think this way. They worship the tactic of using as a 'force multiplier' or terrorist weapon, the random attack against innocent civilians. The biggest bang for the buck ever invented, and quickest way to destroy a society. So that they can inherit the rubble and enslave who is left alive. They have come nowhere near "destroying" our society, or even putting a dent into it really. 9/11 was bad, but "our society" has moved on and has even released two major motion pictures this year about 9/11! "Our society" has prospered just fine since 2001, although it would have done far better without the pointless Iraqi diversion. On the other hand, the terrorist attacks (and other hints at same) have put into power, and kept in power, the most authoritarian government the U.S. has ever seen [1]. Police states always begin by frightening the populace into thinking they need a "strong" government to protect them. One can hardly find a better example of people supporting the trampling of their own personal freedoms and those of others, in the name of "national security." (Unless, dare I say it, one thinks back to Germany in the 1930s.) So while the terrorist attacks cannot destroy our society, they may well (indirectly) destroy our democratic system. Best, - Joe [1] See for example _Worse_than_Watergate_ by John W. Dean, http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-031600023x-3. |
#24
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On Fri, 11 Aug 2006 11:39:23 -0600, in a place far, far away, Joe
Strout made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: They have come nowhere near "destroying" our society, or even putting a dent into it really. 9/11 was bad, but "our society" has moved on and has even released two major motion pictures this year about 9/11! "Our society" has prospered just fine since 2001, although it would have done far better without the pointless Iraqi diversion. On the other hand, the terrorist attacks (and other hints at same) have put into power, and kept in power, the most authoritarian government the U.S. has ever seen [1]. Oh, please. Read a little history. Particularly on the Civil War. |
#25
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Joe Strout wrote:
On the other hand, the terrorist attacks (and other hints at same) have put into power, and kept in power, the most authoritarian government the U.S. has ever seen... Maybe, maybe not. But the end of this particular regime (the Congressional part of it) will come soon enough. The election is only three months away, and Americans of both parties can't wait to punish those responsible for the Iraq fiasco. They voted the first one out in Connecticut this week. - Ed Kyle |
#26
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On 11 Aug 2006 12:45:02 -0700, in a place far, far away, "Ed Kyle"
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Joe Strout wrote: On the other hand, the terrorist attacks (and other hints at same) have put into power, and kept in power, the most authoritarian government the U.S. has ever seen... Maybe, maybe not. But the end of this particular regime (the Congressional part of it) will come soon enough. The election is only three months away, and Americans of both parties can't wait to punish those responsible for the Iraq fiasco. They voted the first one out in Connecticut this week. laughing Those were rabid Democrats in a primary, not the American people. And half of the Democrats voted for the pro-Bush candidate. Do you really fantasize that Lamont is going to win the Senate seat? I predict that Joe Lieberman will not be "voted out." He was simply voted out as a Democrat, a party that seems to be trying to return to the good old days of George McGovern. Good for him. |
#27
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In article .com,
"Ed Kyle" wrote: On the other hand, the terrorist attacks (and other hints at same) have put into power, and kept in power, the most authoritarian government the U.S. has ever seen... Maybe, maybe not. But the end of this particular regime (the Congressional part of it) will come soon enough. The election is only three months away, and Americans of both parties can't wait to punish those responsible for the Iraq fiasco. They voted the first one out in Connecticut this week. Yes, it's entirely possible we'll weather this spell and come out just fine -- possibly even the stronger for it. There is definite resistance (though mostly unsuccessful, so far) to the executive branch's power grabs; maybe after the elections, some real checks & balances will be restored. |
#28
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![]() Ed Kyle wrote: Maybe, maybe not. But the end of this particular regime (the Congressional part of it) will come soon enough. The election is only three months away, and Americans of both parties can't wait to punish those responsible for the Iraq fiasco. They voted the first one out in Connecticut this week. Unless of course there is a national emergency of some sort that means those elections have to be put off for a while... say crazed Islamic fascists set fire to the Senate and House, and martial law had to be declared. You know what would have to happen then, don't you? All of America's Muslims would have to be resettled to the east. ;-) Pat |
#29
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Rand Simberg wrote:
Unfortunately, it seems that we're going to have to bomb Londonistan... Or the Brits are going to have to do some mass deportations (a disturbing number of British Muslims believe that the July 7th subway bombings were justified). There are no pretty solutions. Yes, this is unfortunately very true. When a crime is committed, what we naturally wish to do is: - punish those who are responsible, in order to - protect those who are not culpable. This means protecting us from terror - and protecting those Muslims who are innocent of terrorist ambitions from discrimination or other consequences of things which are not their fault. There is nothing wooly-headed or bleeding-heart liberal about wanting to do what is right and just. Where the wooly-headed liberalism comes in is if we decide to include a big chunk of "bad Muslims" in what we treat as "good Muslims". The only thing missing from my brilliant, incisive political analysis is that we haven't yet learned how to read minds. Different mainstream news media outlets are presenting divergent perspectives on the current conflict raging in southern Lebanon. Some show Israel as indiscriminately attacking the civilian population, as well as hampering aid efforts and preventing evacuation of civilians from the areas of fighting. Others note that Israel is fighting in areas that were effectively under the control of Hezbollah, a terrorist group that has killed Americans, not the Lebanese government, and that Israel is taking scrupulous care to avoid civilians, and current civilian casualties are only what is to be expected from a major war such as Hezbollah has unleashed. I have always feared that the unity of the democratic world, already badly strained by the war in Iraq, could be shattered by new events. For example, if China were to do something stupid with respect to Taiwan, so that the U.S. would need to take action - and one of the indirect consequences of that action would be the collapse of Chinese central authority, with an ensuing famine in which millions starve. Given the way the conflict in Lebanon is being presented in non-U.S. media, and the U.S. support of Israel, forces are at work to isolate the United States now. If the European news media is handling this so as to put Israel and the United States in an unfavorable light, how is the news media of the Arab world doing? What we want is simple. No more terrorism. A world in which Israel has the same peace and security as the United States, and where that is the level of peace and security we *thought* we had before 9/11. Consistent with that, the United States must be respected, admired, and loved, by all the world's people. But it is difficult to stir a warm glow of approval in people's hearts if you have to subject them to a harsh military occupation to keep them from doing you violence. The long-term objectives and the short-term objectives are at war with each other. It was possible to turn around Germany's thinking at the end of the Second World War. This was for a number of reasons. Nazi rule, being twelve years old, had shallow roots in German society. The threat of the Soviet Union, against which the United States was the only bulwark, was clear and obvious. The Holocaust gave Germans reason to be ashamed of their country's past. Can we achieve a similar turn-around in the thinking of the Muslim world? What I want to see for the world's majority Islamic nations is: - full equality for non-Muslim minorities, - an absence of pressures to be or remain a Muslim, to concur in criticism of Israel and yet, a foreign presence or threat is just what solidifies group identification. And increased wealth, while it has centrifugal tendencies, also brings increased power to make trouble. It would make things simple if we could clearly and obviously point out that terrorism is utterly antithetical to Islam. Being more Islamic than the next guy is the one and only 'safe' form of political protest in most of the Muslim world. Surely that isn't hard! Religion is about doing good and being nice to people. Terrorism is the opposite of that. Back during the Iran hostage crisis, it was noted that the Quran said something about respecting envoys. During the anti-Danish demonstrations that raged through the Muslim world, I looked up information on the life of Muhammad. On two occasions, he led forces against Jewish communities on the basis of specious justifications. On both occasions, he captured the civilian survivors, *including women*, and sold them into slavery. In each of these cases, he kept one of the women for himself. Also, one of his devoted disciples divorced a Coptic Christian woman that he had obtained through slavery to present her to Muhammad as well. There are, very definitely, "good Muslims". The Amahdiyya Muslims, for example, have tolerance as a basic, intrinsic part of their religion. Unfortunately, they are not part of mainstream Islam, for much the same reasons that Mormons and Christian Scientists are not part of mainstream Christianity. But with the example of the Prophet, and a glorious past based on spreading Islam by fire and sword, it would seem that there is too much risk that terrorism could appeal to unstable minds in that faith community, and too little hope that we could feel secure, safe, and confident in the peaceful intentions of the Islamic world after being menaced by terrorism. How can we, without openly restricting life for the Islamic world, instead enhance it, and turn that world into a maze of feel-good New Age religions, Christianity, Judaism, and Buddhism - a vibrant Buddhist community in Afghanistan would solve the "Disneyland" problem with respect to an ancient monument there destroyed by the Taliban that it has been proposed to rebuild, although many Americans would resist what they would see as spending taxpayer dollars on idols - as well as moderate Islamic movements and related faiths like Baha'i? John Savard |
#30
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LooseChanj wrote:
Oh, btw, you think *exactly* like those fundies you love to hate so much. Pot, kettle, etc. Not really. After all, the Islamic fundamentalists *started it*. What? When two small children are fighting, each one says the other one started it? Didn't Palestine belong to the Arabs before it was taken from them and given to the Jews? One *could* point out that Britain had as much right to admit Jewish immigrants to Palestine as it did Tamils to Sri Lanka or East Indians to Fiji and Uganda. But that sounds so colonialist. Or, one could point out that Jews were living in Palestine before Zionism, even, and they were cruelly persecuted there with the tacit acceptance of the Arab Muslim population - hence they really did start it, and they deserved to be displaced. But that sounds so hypocritical from people who haven't yet given Canada and the United States back to the Indians. Okay, then, how about this? The people of the United States of America, Canada, Australia, Britain, and Western Continental Europe, have enjoyed, for some decades now, an unprecedented level of human freedom, material prosperity, and personal security. (And, incidentally, Israel is another country that shares their democratic values and cultural heritage.) If someone proposes to take this away from us, whether by high oil prices or by terrorist attacks, they ought not to act surprised when they find out we are not disposed to give it up without a fight. The cheapest way to modify the behavior of others is to threaten retaliation for misbehavior, since it costs nothing if it achieves its result, and is relatively cheap to implement if it fails. Promising rewards for good behavior is more expensive to deliver, and watching over or guarding someone every second to stop him from misbehaving is more expensive yet. Unfortunately, terrorism, unlike open warfare, doesn't leave us with handy targets for retaliation - except innocents. And I *do* agree with you that this would be wrong. But it's such a natural temptation in the current situation that I find it hard to completely condemn those whose sentiments lapse. John Savard |
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