CameronPoe wrote:
If you efficiently searched people boarding planes to the US/within the US for box-cutters then you wouldn't need to care what happens to the freed ones once you dump them back in Afghanistan. Just amke sure they never get back in again. I think you'll find Clinton fired missiles at Osama - I don't think any 'lack of evidence' gave cause for restraint.
Not everything is on the planes. We have hundreds and thousands of tourist overseas everyday and these people are exposed outside of our border security and would be at a higher risk. No I am not saying hold them indefinately, but if they were picked up in a battle ground where insurgents fired on US troops and there is reasonable suspicion that they were involved then hold them for a while, in country. Gitmo should be used for the ones that we have evidence for and can try in a court of law or an international court of law.
It's funny because I know for a fact we had feet on the ground within visual sight, several times with sights set on Osama and the call went up stairs to Bill Clinton at least twice and they didn't kill him or grab him. Firing missiles is all great and all, but I can fire a missile at the Middle East and say that I shot it at Osama. Missiles are PR, bullets are results.
CameronPoe wrote:
Why are guys always so concerned about other peoples resources? That's why bottom-up global opinion has turned anti-US. "..other nation states that will then use the Iraqi land and oil fields". The US is another 'nation state'. The hypocrisy is overwhelming. It's essentially - "It's our oil, not anyone elses". That is one of the core things acting against the US in terms of world opinion - it is seen as the most opportunistic and imperialistic power on earth at the moment: willing to ruthlessly use force to stack the cards of global free market capitalism in their favour. It's bending the 'rules' of fairplay to well beyond breaking point. That's the difference between you and me: I idealistically would like to see a world where countries defend their own domestic economic interests without resorting to force, each fairly trading with each other as they see fit. For me military might is about DEFENCE, not about expansionism or imperialism. For most of the rest of the world that is the case also - hence global opinion currently being in anti-US mode.
Not claiming the oil, technically don't really need the oil. We have enough trade with other countries and mining of our own. Conducting a war has increased our gas prices two and three fold from pre war prices. The oil can go rot in hell. What I was talking about and you took out of context is if Iran gets ahold of more power in the Middle East you will start seeing one bloc controling all of the area after a (relatively) short period of time. This whole you're fighting for land and oil crap is utterly stupid. It is costing the United States more money to be there then the country could possibly profit by. What is happening is the prevention of a Middle East super power that can dominate the region's oil and other trades.
And yes we are different I cannot say that I am idealistic in the least. Sure not having to rely on having a strong military to protect your economic interests. And fair trade is probably, unfortunately, never going to happen. The United States has been trying to have fair trading throughout the world according to it, which means that the money in and out are equal. Sometimes this isn't possible with 3rd world countries, other times the supply and demand for products pushes it one way or another or lastly, as is the cause with China, the other country only sees it as a fair trade when they export a significant amount more then they import.
CameronPoe wrote:
Or some radical assassinates Yitzhak Rabin. Or some radical war criminal visits the third holiest shrine in Islam. Or some radicals decide to continue building houses on land that does not belong to them under international law. Or some radicals decide to build a wall that does not belong to them under international law. Israel's right to defend itself does not extend to the wholesale slaughter of civilians and the creation of what are essentially large open air concentration camps.
PS It's anti-Israel not anti-Jewish - I struggle to think what impact any of these UN resolutions would have on a Jew living in Coney Island, NY or in Tehran, Iran.
The area is filled with people too filled with their perverted idealistic hopes and dreams of either no Israel or no Palestine or what not that peace is going to be hard. Espically when you have terrorist attacks and very heavy handed responces. I don't agree with attacking civilians, espically a nation state doing that, but when your enemy hides behind the civilians what are they suppose to do? Sugerical strikes and raids? Thats even more bad PR. The house building and living on the wrong side of the line is wrong, and I thought that the Israel military went in and bulldozed many of those houses to force them back out. And I love that refugee camps are now considered concentration camps world wide now, it's the case in Africa too. What the actual term concentration camp means is that it is a concentration of people, hence the name. It got a bad rap from the Germans in WWII and sense is populary used as a negative term while the media will use it as another name for the camps. Some of the camps, the ones for the 9,000 prisoners would better be described as internment camps.
You praise this wall later in your post. Just pointing that out.
CameronPoe wrote:
What the fuck does socialism have to do with this?
A small rant.
CameronPoe wrote:
I think you need to read up about socialism. Europe is socialist and has 100% press freedom, exactly like the US. I wouldn't have done anything with Latin America. Why? BECAUSE IT'S NONE OF MY FUCKING BUSINESS. You see I'm an idealistic true democrat. I believe people should determine the nature of their government/nation without external interference. We in Ireland suffered at the hands of British interference for many centuries, which might explain my ardour for true and actual democracy.
Why when someone explains why the US is not well like across the globe at the moment must you try to turn this into a criticism of the EU, as if two wrongs make a right? I'm well aware of EU flaws. But we're not talking about the EU are we??? Do you think everyone in the world loves the EU? Hell no. Are you aware of the kind of atrocities the French, Brits, Belgians and Spanish are responsible for over the years?
Someone sanctioned taking those photos on MILITARY PROPERTY (generally adorned everywhere with 'No Photography' signs). Those pictures were meant to get into the public eye by the powers above to 'strike fear' or whatever into the 'enemies of the US'. It's a shame now because when footage of imprisoned Americans gets broadcast people are less sympathetic as a result.
The reason why I bring up the EU is because it is a political and ideological difference and an example to be used of another international power. Socialism is not something I will be wanting any time soon. Free health care that takes 2 or 3 times longer then private care here. Sure free health care for those that can't afford anything else would be great, but taking the money from private citizens is uncalled for. And as far as I can tell is that the EU press generally is hard left leaning, compared to the US it is very hard left. Free but highly biased.
Yes it would be great to let every country mind its own business, be isolated from the rest of the world and not interfer with any other nation on the face of the world. Hmm that country has been invaded by Nazi Germany but we shouldn't do anything they'll be fine and resist and win in a few years. OH SHIT WE"RE BEING INVADED BY THEM NOW! Or should I bring up the genocide in Uganda I believe it is currently, Rwanda before, or Somilia, or one of dozens of other African countries. Oh and the Colombian drug empires extensive reach and influence in Latin America to influence, buy, and corrupt governments? Sure freely elected governments shouldn't be messed with, I'll concede that, but what about the ones that were won through drug money funding?
CameronPoe wrote:
It is not the business of external parties to subvert the political process in another country unless that regime is a very real, meaningful and imminent threat to the homeland. One can facilitate change by exercising your right not to trade with them or by funding NGOs in a principled and not in an underhanded manner. That is it as far as I'm concerned. It is the PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY of those living under a dictatorship or rigged regime to agitate for political change. Not anyone else. Ukrainians came out in their thousands to protest rigged elections there and affected change. When the CIA plotted a coup against the democratically elected leader of Venezuela the people turned out in their millions to demand justice and duly received it. Do you think that any Latin American country can possibly trust US motives given its unbridled desire to undermine left wing regimes there - regimes chosen by the people for the people in free and open elections? It's a case of 'chicken and egg, which came first' - the anti-US rhetoric or the CIA-plotted coups/exploitation by external parties. If and when Chavez actually does away with democracy I fully expect the people of Venezuela to rise up in disgust. Interventionism generally always draw ire and suspicion - hence global opinion being now firmly anti-US.
So we are to sit back and watch as millions (maybe billions suffer) like we do in Africa? Just sit back and watch as millions are slaughtered in genocide? Or thousands who speak out disappear?
CameronPoe wrote:
Northern Ireland peace process. Battle for independence in India. Egypt-Jordan-Israel peace agreement. Hand of strength works against a conventional army. Against terrorism it doesn't work and all I need do is direct you towards literature on the past 30 years in Northern Ireland to enlighten you.
So basically what is going to happen is give up and give in to the terrorist? I'm sorry but I fail to see anything here that would help. I know Northern Ireland had a really tough time, I mean really bad. But in two of those cases presented I do believe that the UK
lost land, production, GDP, population, etc. I'm not trying to say that you are saying to give in to terrorist but it just seems to be the viable solution you are looking at.
CameronPoe wrote:
OK then just give up on border security....
I wouldn't care about global opinion when it comes to domestic affairs - I'm an isolationist remember? The rest of the world could go fuck itself as far as I'm concerned. Most of the enlightened world believes in strong borders - something the US seems to pay a woeful lack of attention to. This is about taking the tough decisions to ensure real and meaningful security.
Yes and many Americans believe in strong borders, I'm one of them. Only we have a large problem with that here as well, its called the illegal workers that crossed and now protest routinely anytime a border issue is brought up. Sure I would love to have a strong border North and South, East and West. And expand the Coast Guard to were it can effectively do its job.
CameronPoe wrote:
Illegal? If so then I don't agree with that. The fact of the matter is that one cannot ensure security from terrorism through military might so it's up to you: infiltrate or prepare to get blown up.
Opponents to such measures over here see it as tiptoeing the line towards becoming a big brother nation and will not give in to such measures. The reasoning is a little insecurity is worth the extra freedom. The only problem is that we always profile a race as a subhuman in the United States and pin all worries, warrents of fear etc. on them. First Irish, then Blacks, now Middle Easterns, oh and Jews to moderation throughout all of US history.
CameronPoe wrote:
I don't see the relevance of your example in the context of global opinion. If someone sees the US acting underhandedly that will shade their opinion. Simple as.
The relevance is that if a group doesn't have someone watching the interests in something that some people see as shady (IE lobbying in Washington, D.C. to some is just a way to buy votes and interest to some) then you can bet that someone else in the shady business will take full advantage and try and dismantle the success.
CameronPoe wrote:
Suicide bombings/terrorist attacks cannot be prevented by conventional military force or occupation of a foreign culture and land. When the enemy doesn't wear a uniform an army is about as much use as a used piece of toilet paper. The reason the suicide bombings have dropped to nearly nil is because they have built a ruddy great wall to hem the Palestinians in: border security. Their greatest military efforts haven't managed to dent the onslaught of mortar attacks in the least.
And that wall hasn't been caste as the Berlin Wall internationaly? It hasn't brought ire and disdain down on them? It hasn't made people look at the Israelis with some not so good feelings has it? I know what you are saying about when the enemy doesn't wear a uniform, it doesn't take a genius to figure it out. But with the way international opinion goes it is nearly impossible to combat it without getting very negative press.
CameronPoe wrote:
I come from Ireland. We don't have a military. We're a militarily neutral country, as defined in our constitution. We have no capacity or desire to exercise our influence on the people of another country where their will has little or no impact on us. When I was young I admired the US greatly, almost everyone I knew did. The American flag was looked on favourably and in admiration then. Many of my fellow countrymen emigrated there and even joined the US navy.
Something changed somewhere along the line though. On September 11th 2001 the US suffered an horrific tragedy and the whole world came together in sympathy. But strangely the following years exposed the rest of the world to things they had long turned a blind eye to when it came to America. The Bush administration started to take actions that were not what the rest of the world would associate with 'American Values'. The American dream was shattered for many of us spectators in this whole 'war on terror' fiasco.
The difference between you and me is that I believe in principles, in maintaining the moral high ground, in minding my own business unless threatened in a real and meaningful manner and in free market capitalism played by the rules with fair trade (protectionism) not free trade.
I would prefer not to see the EU exert influence outside its borders by military means under any circumstance. So to suggest that I'm 'jealous' or whatever of some 'top dog' status enjoyed by the US which is maintained through military endeavour is fatuous.
Never said jealous did I? If I did I'm sorry. I know that wealth has nothing to do with your life, coming from the small stone shack and now making a lively fortune. Your economic interest, forgien and domestic are protected by the EU am I correct? So even if N.I. is a neutral country when it comes to the military they are still protected by its allies and neighbors. Unless Ireland has absolutely zero forgien trade then I doubt that its interest aren't protected by if not the EU then NATO forces either directly or a by product of one of those two organizations having a trading partner in the same region.
And don't try and act like you have the moral high ground in all of this. If it were possible to do everything on the moral high ground and a country not be torn apart that would be great. But it comes down to fighting fire with fire truthfully. If you could get rid of all of the scum and villianly across the globe then we all could stay on the moral high ground and not have to worry about petty things. Free trade would be fair trade and it would be a collective interest. But as long as there is a single person that wants to "win" or be the top dog then it is an impossibility.
I'm not a small guy, 6'2" 190 lbs roughly. My size gives me an advantage in a fight usually, but because of my rasing I try and avoid fighting, in fact the last 'fight' I was in, I put the guy in a headlock until he quit trying to hit me and then walked away. Why did he want to fight me? I don't know, it got us both fired and quite literally pissed me off more then. For several weeks he had been trying to pick his way up the ladder, he was at the bottom. Constantly starting rumors, talking trash, saying he could beat me or any of the other big guys in a fight. When it came down to it he picked me and loss but I still got in trouble because I responded in like force instead of just letting him swing away.
It is kinda like international relations today.