Kmarion wrote:
Turquoise wrote:
If you really hold the lives of children to be that sacred, where is your outrage at the jack shit we're doing for Darfur?
Gee I havent heard that before. I've talked about darfur numerous times. Stop reading from your playbook and pay attention to who you are talking to.(The devil came on horseback comes to mind)
Touche... I'll give you that one.
Kmarion wrote:
Turquoise wrote:
There are numerous other tragedies throughout this world that happen everyday that are far worse than Iraq. So don't give me that humanitarian line.
It's not a line. I see how you can think that it is. You have absolutely no trust in anything.
Eh.. let me rephrase. When most people bring it up, it's a line, but yeah.. I realize you are different from most people.
Kmarion wrote:
No, you focus on economics in nearly everything you voice your opinion on. I see the problems also, but I don't allow my discontent to influence my morals. Apparently you do. $>Children= clear conscience. The good people do is rarely reported. It's not nearly as entertaining as corporate scandals though. Broaden your intellectual horizon and try to understand the world might not be as crappy as you allow yourself to believe. And if it is, be the change you wish to see in it. Don't submit and convince yourself that it's not worth the effort. I swear I hear a violin playing in the background every time I read one of your replies.
So you choose to completely toss out the moral implication because of the cost involved. I've never said money isn't involved. Your not telling any of us something we don't know. It's unfortunate that it is often the initial motivation. But if along the way the Average Joe Marine can provide a safe route for children to get home from school than I think that's something worth fighting for. That is what separates them from the those making money off the war. You sound more like the profiteers when you say it's always about money. Most soldiers believe in what they are doing. They have far more ground knowledge than you or I could ever obtain in a url. They don't risk their lives for corporations, they know what they are doing and see it first hand. You make your calls about moral implication while sitting behind your keyboard balancing your checkbook.
Indeed I do. Look, I think we can agree there are many virtuous people out there like those you mentioned. I respect the sense of sacrifice people like soldiers have, but I definitely can't relate to it.
And, as you've pointed out, I resemble the war profiteers in my focus on money. However, there's no denying that the path I've chosen is far safer than that of the soldier. I firmly believe that this is the only life we have, so I'm doing everything I can to avoid death when possible. This is why I can't relate to the self-sacrifice thing. But, given my focus on money, I'm pretty pissed that all this money is going to war, since it really doesn't benefit me (or most of our people for that matter). So, this is why I don't want our economy to collapse from the immense amount of debt we've been incurring from the Iraq occupation.
For me, it comes down to a conflict between our economy and the lives of the Iraqi people. I would rather save our economy than save the Iraqis. Sorry, but that's just how I feel, and I believe if you forced the average American to pick between those 2 things, they'd go with our economy. Am I wrong?
Kmarion wrote:
That kinda brutal honesty lost it's "shock value" when the first wave of emo's hit the internet. I don't see you as an asshole. If anything it's just depressing.
H.L. Mencken is one of my idols because of his volatile cynicism. Pat Condell and George Carlin are up there too. But if you really think I resemble emos in any way, I'll gladly change my tact. Emos disgust me in more ways than I can explain....