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#26 2008-07-15 3:01 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30659
Re: So long, soldier ...
And lest we forget the concrete example of this particular case:
Mr. Long, who fled to Ontario in 2005, had signed up to join the U.S. Army in July, 2003. He believed at that time that his country was justified in going to war in Iraq
He can even take his son with him into the shower, where the boy cannot help but notice that Dad has a penis
- Dr. James Dobson, on "preventing" homosexuality
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#27 2008-07-15 3:03 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30659
Re: So long, soldier ...
matt wrote:
Chickenhawk wrote:
They cannot afford to have scores of soldiers deserting them at the onset of war.
Why should the needs of the military be considered?
Wow, what a great, unanswerable question! Why indeed should the needs of the military be considered when discussing a contract with the military?
He can even take his son with him into the shower, where the boy cannot help but notice that Dad has a penis
- Dr. James Dobson, on "preventing" homosexuality
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#28 2008-07-15 3:28 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40399
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
I guess what really strikes me about this issue is the absence of sympathy for these guys. The legal issues are window-dressing, I think -- there's something emotional happening here. I just don't see what it is.
The military isn't just a job so you can't compare that to McJournalism or McFactory.
You willingly make an obligation that goes beyond 9-5 and includes willingly giving up freedom and risking your life when called upon.
A-ha.
"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief." -- Alan Greenspan
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#29 2008-07-15 3:44 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16679
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
I guess what really strikes me about this issue is the absence of sympathy for these guys. The legal issues are window-dressing, I think -- there's something emotional happening here. I just don't see what it is.
The military isn't just a job so you can't compare that to McJournalism or McFactory.
You willingly make an obligation that goes beyond 9-5 and includes willingly giving up freedom and risking your life when called upon.A-ha.
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#30 2008-07-15 3:52 pm
- Freakout Jackson
- Deeply satisfied elitist

- From: 10.0.0.5
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6172
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Even if your superiors lie through their teeth.
"Perhaps if there were more Americans who had the courage to stand up to idiocy maybe we wouldn't have such an awful country." ~ VegasACF
I couldn't deal with a clone of myself. I would probably kill him inside a week, and tell the police it was justifiable homisuicide, and tell them to sit around and hang out with me for a week to show them why. ~ Dan
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#31 2008-07-15 3:55 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16679
Re: So long, soldier ...
Freakout Jackson wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Even if your superiors lie through their teeth.
yes
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#32 2008-07-15 4:07 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 5669
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
I guess what really strikes me about this issue is the absence of sympathy for these guys. The legal issues are window-dressing, I think -- there's something emotional happening here. I just don't see what it is.
The military isn't just a job so you can't compare that to McJournalism or McFactory.
You willingly make an obligation that goes beyond 9-5 and includes willingly giving up freedom and risking your life when called upon.
Yeah. If your boss says that you've got to sodomize that prisoner, you sodomize that prisoner. Use a toilet plunger if you have to, but don't you dare question a lawful order.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#33 2008-07-15 4:10 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40399
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
Freakout Jackson wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Even if your superiors lie through their teeth.
yes
Even if you end up being part of a grotesque criminal enterprise.
"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief." -- Alan Greenspan
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#34 2008-07-15 4:11 pm
- Ribtorus
- Member

- Registered: 2002-07-11
- Posts: 13272
Re: So long, soldier ...
If the government crosses a line of legality or morality and if my commander in chief establishes himself as a drooling moron operating under dubious influences, then I certainly would be prepared to consider my contract with these people void. I'm no statist.
It's not a movie.
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#36 2008-07-15 4:15 pm
- Ribtorus
- Member

- Registered: 2002-07-11
- Posts: 13272
Re: So long, soldier ...
It might be part of a solution.
I'm not defending any particular soldier's or deserter's actions.
It's not a movie.
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#37 2008-07-15 4:19 pm
- Goat on Parade
- Member
- Registered: 2004-08-11
- Posts: 492
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
The military isn't just a job so you can't compare that to McJournalism or McFactory.
You willingly make an obligation that goes beyond 9-5 and includes willingly giving up freedom and risking your life when called upon.A-ha.
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.
Perhaps shnicky's problem is that in the Canada one cannot legally give up their rights that are guarantied under the charter. The fact that in the US that doesn't seem to be the case could be mind boggling.
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#38 2008-07-15 4:22 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40399
Re: So long, soldier ...
Ribtorus wrote:
If the government crosses a line of legality or morality and if my commander in chief establishes himself as a drooling moron operating under dubious influences, then I certainly would be prepared to consider my contract with these people void. I'm no statist.
That's interesting.
After all, the burden of this debate is on the individuals who violate the terms of their contract. But is there anything the government can do to render the contract null and void?
"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief." -- Alan Greenspan
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#39 2008-07-15 4:23 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40399
Re: So long, soldier ...
Goat on Parade wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
A-ha.Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.Perhaps shnicky's problem is that in the Canada one cannot legally give up their rights that are guarantied under the charter. The fact that in the US that doesn't seem to be the case could be mind boggling.
Whaddaya mean? I thought kev was kidding about giving up one's rights.
"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief." -- Alan Greenspan
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#40 2008-07-15 4:35 pm
- JakeTheTall
- Cargo Cultist

- From: In Permanent Opposition
- Registered: 2003-03-13
- Posts: 7900
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
The military isn't just a job so you can't compare that to McJournalism or McFactory.
You willingly make an obligation that goes beyond 9-5 and includes willingly giving up freedom and risking your life when called upon.A-ha.
Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.
To reiterate what others have said: you can't change your mind when the lies you were told unravel ?
“I don’t see (subprime mortgage market troubles) imposing a serious problem. I think it’s going to be largely contained” -- U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, April 2007
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#41 2008-07-15 4:38 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
Goat on Parade wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
A-ha.Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.Perhaps shnicky's problem is that in the Canada one cannot legally give up their rights that are guarantied under the charter. The fact that in the US that doesn't seem to be the case could be mind boggling.
No one is giving up any rights, just the freedom to give up and go home when someone asks you do to do the job you are paid for.
Just a little part of what makes the US .mil the most effective in the world.
A Little C4 Knocking at Your Door
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#42 2008-07-15 4:39 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
JakeTheTall wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
A-ha.Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.To reiterate what others have said: you can't change your mind when the lies you were told unravel ?
In this situation such a response is a convenient excuse for not wanting to do the job.
A Little C4 Knocking at Your Door
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#43 2008-07-15 4:39 pm
- Freakout Jackson
- Deeply satisfied elitist

- From: 10.0.0.5
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6172
Re: So long, soldier ...
JakeTheTall wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
A-ha.Yes, and you don't get to change your mind.
Don't like it, don't sign up.
It's not a draft.To reiterate what others have said: you can't change your mind when the lies you were told unravel ?
Nope...and best stfu and get over it.
The people who lied us/him into it will get theirs.
......or not
"Perhaps if there were more Americans who had the courage to stand up to idiocy maybe we wouldn't have such an awful country." ~ VegasACF
I couldn't deal with a clone of myself. I would probably kill him inside a week, and tell the police it was justifiable homisuicide, and tell them to sit around and hang out with me for a week to show them why. ~ Dan
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#44 2008-07-15 5:42 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16679
Re: So long, soldier ...
No soldier is required to carry out illegal actions.
There are avenues to take besides running away.
Read those words Tallgeese wrote and decide if this individuals actions showed honor and duty or just plain cowardice.
(and I don't believe for a moment Ribby or Geese or Sty would run but stay and fight the command structure using everything at their disposal with full knowledge they could well pay a steep price)
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#45 2008-07-15 6:44 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
Q. Why do they build fences around military bases?
A. Because people are dying to get out.
Anyway, if he was national guard, I'd sympathize.
...having nothing in them of the feelings or principles of '76, now look to a single and splendid government of an aristocracy, founded on banking institutions and moneyed incorporations under the guise and cloak of their favored branches of manufactures, commerce and navigation, riding and ruling over the plundered ploughman and beggared yeomanry. -- TJ
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#46 2008-07-15 6:59 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40399
Re: So long, soldier ...
Farmerkev wrote:
No soldier is required to carry out illegal actions.
There are avenues to take besides running away.
I ask again: what if those avenues lead nowhere?
"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief." -- Alan Greenspan
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#47 2008-07-15 7:20 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 5669
Re: So long, soldier ...
Spread the news far and wide: Don't even think of joining the armed forces.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#48 2008-07-15 7:22 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
Rights are either always yours or a state sponsored illusion, which as such, you are free to ignore their right to govern them anyway since they dont exist. If you are willing to take consequences for the choices you make and are always in a position to continue making, then there should be no crying whatsoever. Join the army, leave the army, serve a term in prison, live life on the run, etc, what ever you want. The world aint your oyster but your choices are yours regardless of what ever rubric you want to use to pretend you had no choice.
How can a person still have any hopes
who is addicted to what's superficial,
who grubs with greedy hand for treasures
and then is happy to discover earthworms! - Goethe
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#49 2008-07-15 7:42 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16679
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
No soldier is required to carry out illegal actions.
There are avenues to take besides running away.I ask again: what if those avenues lead nowhere?
Read what I already said in what you cut from the quote.
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#50 2008-07-15 7:59 pm
- Jdude
- Surfing on waterboarders

- From: Home is where the war is
- Registered: 2003-02-03
- Posts: 2169
Re: So long, soldier ...
Freakout Jackson wrote:
Jdude wrote:
There is even a box you can check if you are a consciencetious objector so they can put you in some lame job like cook or seamstress.
I hope the guys that feed you and shovel your smurf go awol
KBR is doing the feeding these days and the suckers put on the smurf burning details are whomever responds to "Hey you! yeah you, the one that looked!"
Farmerkev wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Farmerkev wrote:
No soldier is required to carry out illegal actions.
There are avenues to take besides running away.I ask again: what if those avenues lead nowhere?
Read what I already said in what you cut from the quote.
Then tell it to a Bush hating newspaper. Running away and not pointing fingers is not a solution. It is cowardice. Hell if he detailed the war crimes he is aware of while attempting asylum, even then I would give him the benefit of the doubt. But as I see it there is some slacker who wants to put his head down and say 'nuh uh' to everything and be left alone.
The problem I have with discussing freedom is that people have been conditioned to expect "of me to tell you what to do" to follow it... inevitably they notice I don't ever get to that part, and they feel like I am trying to trick them.
Sometimes before replying to a topic, I think to myself: I am just so original!
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