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#151 2008-07-17 7:14 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
I have a question: if somebody wants out of the mafia, should our law enforcement agencies tell them, "Hey, sorry, but you have a contract with them. Have you no honor?"
...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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#152 2008-07-17 7:23 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
davic3 wrote:
Yes I understand this war is terribly wrong on many different levels.
However when you are in the military you give up the right to pick and choose your job.
If you feel so strongly against the refuse to deploy and face the music
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/0 … -iraq-war/
This I can respect and sympathize with
Once again, you're refusing to differentiate between the larger issues of whether a war is wrong -- which I think we can all agree, except in the most extreme circumstances, a soldier doesn't have a right to judge -- and whether the war is being conducted in a brutal, illegal manner on a day-to-day basis. That is to say, the soldier's role is unacceptable, rather than the issue of whether or not he's a soldier.
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
"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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#153 2008-07-17 7:26 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16592
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
davic3 wrote:
Yes I understand this war is terribly wrong on many different levels.
However when you are in the military you give up the right to pick and choose your job.
If you feel so strongly against the refuse to deploy and face the music
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/0 … -iraq-war/
This I can respect and sympathize withOnce again, you're refusing to differentiate between the larger issues of whether a war is wrong -- which I think we can all agree, except in the most extreme circumstances, a soldier doesn't have a right to judge -- and whether the war is being conducted in a brutal, illegal manner on a day-to-day basis. That is to say, the soldier's role is unacceptable, rather than the issue of whether or not he's a soldier.
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
Your word means nothing does it.
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#154 2008-07-17 7:51 pm
- Jdude
- Surfing on waterboarders

- From: Home is where the war is
- Registered: 2003-02-03
- Posts: 2152
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.
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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#155 2008-07-17 8:07 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30563
Re: So long, soldier ...
Metacell wrote:
I have a question: if somebody wants out of the mafia, should our law enforcement agencies tell them, "Hey, sorry, but you have a contract with them. Have you no honor?"
I'm surprised it took seven pages for this nonsense to come up.
QUESTION: What did Iraqi have to do with that?
BUSH: What did Iraq have to do with what?
QUESTION: The attacks upon the World Trade Center.
BUSH: Nothing
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#156 2008-07-17 8:11 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
Jdude wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.
Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
"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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#157 2008-07-17 8:17 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30563
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Jdude wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
It's so odd to see you arguing like this since nothing else really would suggest to me that you're a coward. If there is illegal abuse or, say, massacre going on - running your craven ass to Canada is supposed to be the right thing to do instead of, say, doing everything you can conceivably do to stop the lawless killing??
QUESTION: What did Iraqi have to do with that?
BUSH: What did Iraq have to do with what?
QUESTION: The attacks upon the World Trade Center.
BUSH: Nothing
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#158 2008-07-17 8:38 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
Tallgeese wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Jdude wrote:
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
It's so odd to see you arguing like this since nothing else really would suggest to me that you're a coward. If there is illegal abuse or, say, massacre going on - running your craven ass to Canada is supposed to be the right thing to do instead of, say, doing everything you can conceivably do to stop the lawless killing??
Farewell, Tallgese's rationality. Nice knowing you.
"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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#159 2008-07-17 8:49 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30563
Re: So long, soldier ...
Nice canned response. Care to refute my post at any point?
QUESTION: What did Iraqi have to do with that?
BUSH: What did Iraq have to do with what?
QUESTION: The attacks upon the World Trade Center.
BUSH: Nothing
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#160 2008-07-17 9:03 pm
- Jdude
- Surfing on waterboarders

- From: Home is where the war is
- Registered: 2003-02-03
- Posts: 2152
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
What would you do?
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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#161 2008-07-17 9:03 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
Tallgeese wrote:
Nice canned response. Care to refute my post at any point?
Refute what? Your embarrassing and repeated use of the label "coward?"
"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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#162 2008-07-17 9:11 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30563
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Nice canned response. Care to refute my post at any point?
Refute what? Your embarrassing and repeated use of the label "coward?"
It's a pretty apt word for someone who runs away from his problems.
It was an answer to your question. Mutiny against an illegal order is courageous. Running to Canada is cowardice.
Not sure what's so embarrassing about calling a spade a spade.
QUESTION: What did Iraqi have to do with that?
BUSH: What did Iraq have to do with what?
QUESTION: The attacks upon the World Trade Center.
BUSH: Nothing
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#163 2008-07-17 9:12 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 16592
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Nice canned response. Care to refute my post at any point?
Refute what? Your embarrassing and repeated use of the label "coward?"
a person who lacks courage, esp. one who is shamefully unable to control fear and so shrinks from danger or trouble
Seems he knows the definition.
Minithink isn't a "to the death" cage match.
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#164 2008-07-17 10:03 pm
- Freakout Jackson
- Deeply satisfied elitist

- From: 10.0.0.5
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6166
Re: So long, soldier ...
Tallgeese wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Nice canned response. Care to refute my post at any point?
Refute what? Your embarrassing and repeated use of the label "coward?"
It's a pretty apt word for someone who runs away from his problems.
It was an answer to your question. Mutiny against an illegal order is courageous. Running to Canada is cowardice.
Not sure what's so embarrassing about calling a spade a spade.
Oh, man, this is richer than tiramisu. 
"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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#165 2008-07-17 10:29 pm
- Chickenhawk
- Friends don't let friends hunt drunk

- From: The bad air state
- Registered: 2005-06-01
- Posts: 4874
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Jdude wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
For example, someone can sign up, decide it sucks, but be stuck. But if he signs up, does his part, but finds he's being expected to participate in illegal actions, and I KNOW you're going to say "report it," but we're talking about stuff the officers know about and condone -- why should he be expected to just suck it up? What about the contract overrides legality and morality?
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
Its not mutiny if they're opposing unlawful orders and command.
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#166 2008-07-17 10:36 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
ShnickyShnack wrote:
LLEVIATHANN wrote:
The Army really doesn't want people who don't want to be there.
That's a joke, right?
There are legal pathways to get out.
And if those legal pathways fail?
Just walk down to the shrink and say "Shrink, I wanna kill. I mean, I wanna, I wanna kill. I wanna, I wanna see, I wanna see blood and gore and guts and veins in my teeth. Eat dead burnt bodies. I mean kill, Kill, KILL, KILL."
That should do it.
The real reason that we can’t have the Ten Commandments posted in a courthouse is this: You cannot post “Thou Shalt Not Steal,” “Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery,” and “Thou Shall Not Lie” in a building full of lawyers, judges and politicians. It creates a hostile work environment. -- George Carlin (I think)
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#167 2008-07-17 10:46 pm
- Chickenhawk
- Friends don't let friends hunt drunk

- From: The bad air state
- Registered: 2005-06-01
- Posts: 4874
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#168 2008-07-17 11:21 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
Chickenhawk wrote:
Or kiss a dude.
That might actually get you a special assignment in a congressman's office.
The real reason that we can’t have the Ten Commandments posted in a courthouse is this: You cannot post “Thou Shalt Not Steal,” “Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery,” and “Thou Shall Not Lie” in a building full of lawyers, judges and politicians. It creates a hostile work environment. -- George Carlin (I think)
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#169 2008-07-18 2:19 am
- everlong554
- Member
- Registered: 2003-12-24
- Posts: 6865
Re: So long, soldier ...
resedit wrote:
Chickenhawk wrote:
Or kiss a dude.
That might actually get you a special assignment in a congressman's office.
only if you're in the page program.
I kid.
"YOU DISGUST ME!!!!"
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#170 2008-07-18 6:19 am
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
Chickenhawk wrote:
ShnickyShnack wrote:
Jdude wrote:
Nothing in the contract does.
So, a person sees abuse, reports it. the report fails.
He sends pictures to the news. Nobody cares.
He calls his congressman, who says "you are registered for the other party. F off."
Are we to believe that the person has gone through all of these steps and that they have all failed?
I doubt it.
But if they all fail, or there is no other choice due to the immediacy of the situation- that soldier can resort to the threat or force of arms, like the helo pilot did in Vietnam to stop a massacre of a village.Jesus, so it's okay to mutiny but it's not okay to desert?
Its not mutiny if they're opposing unlawful orders and command.

"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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#171 2008-07-18 7:01 am
Re: So long, soldier ...
Tallgeese wrote:
Metacell wrote:
I have a question: if somebody wants out of the mafia, should our law enforcement agencies tell them, "Hey, sorry, but you have a contract with them. Have you no honor?"
I'm surprised it took seven pages for this nonsense to come up.
But why is it nonsense? We all know from history that the militaries of all nations are guilty of far worse crimes than any racketeering outfit. Is the badge of state all it takes to distinguish the path of valor from that of profiteering?
...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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#172 2008-07-18 7:25 am
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
Metacell wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Metacell wrote:
I have a question: if somebody wants out of the mafia, should our law enforcement agencies tell them, "Hey, sorry, but you have a contract with them. Have you no honor?"
I'm surprised it took seven pages for this nonsense to come up.
But why is it nonsense? We all know from history that the militaries of all nations are guilty of far worse crimes than any racketeering outfit. Is the badge of state all it takes to distinguish the path of valor from that of profiteering?
That's a completely separate issue. Comparing the mafia to the military in the context of this thread is pretty outrageous.
"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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#173 2008-07-18 9:23 pm
Re: So long, soldier ...
Metacell wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
Metacell wrote:
I have a question: if somebody wants out of the mafia, should our law enforcement agencies tell them, "Hey, sorry, but you have a contract with them. Have you no honor?"
I'm surprised it took seven pages for this nonsense to come up.
But why is it nonsense? We all know from history that the militaries of all nations are guilty of far worse crimes than any racketeering outfit. Is the badge of state all it takes to distinguish the path of valor from that of profiteering?
I have a question too: if you get out of the mafia, what moral logic does one use to deal with the people sent out to snuff you? Lets say you are a really small fish, not too much to offer in any way that your testimony is valuable for the government to deal for it, but pretty bad enough that your absence is definitely noticed.
"You cant shoot me- I am a free moral agent!!"
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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#174 2008-07-18 9:26 pm
- ShnickyShnack
- Commander of Insurgent Cell "Dreamboat"

- From: Amidst a superiority complex
- Registered: 2001-05-25
- Posts: 40180
Re: So long, soldier ...
sigh
"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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#175 2008-07-18 9:32 pm
- Tallgeese
- Arugula-eating Elitist

- From: Fake America
- Registered: 2000-10-17
- Posts: 30563
Re: So long, soldier ...
StaticAge wrote:
Metacell wrote:
Tallgeese wrote:
I'm surprised it took seven pages for this nonsense to come up.But why is it nonsense? We all know from history that the militaries of all nations are guilty of far worse crimes than any racketeering outfit. Is the badge of state all it takes to distinguish the path of valor from that of profiteering?
I have a question too: if you get out of the mafia, what moral logic does one use to deal with the people sent out to snuff you? Lets say you are a really small fish, not too much to offer in any way that your testimony is valuable for the government to deal for it, but pretty bad enough that your absence is definitely noticed.
"You cant shoot me- I am a free moral agent!!"
Heh, I hadn't thought of that response. Also, I was more expecting this to come in the form of an Al Qaeda member surrendering to U.S. forces and being told to get back and finish his obligation to Al Qaeda...
In either case, it's stupid. A more apt comparison would be if the wise guy were to come to the police and say "I want out! I was fine being a hit man, running numbers, helping with the prostitution ring... but my next hit was going to be Charlie up the street and I used to get the best sandwiches at his deli!" or the terrorist to say "I was okay in Al Qaeda as long as I was just blowing up the white devils but now they want me to blow up the mosque where my friend Ahmed goes!"
If the mafioso were to come to the police and renounce organized crime, he should be accepted. If the mad bomber were to come to the U.S. forces and renounce terrorism that would be a moral act.
...just like if an American soldier were to become a conscientious objector, renouncing the morality of serving in the military, he would be allowed to and it would be a moral position to take.
QUESTION: What did Iraqi have to do with that?
BUSH: What did Iraq have to do with what?
QUESTION: The attacks upon the World Trade Center.
BUSH: Nothing
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