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#76 2008-11-17 6:44 pm
- bratboy
- keeping the poor down
- Royal Wombat

- From: Austin, Texas
- Registered: 2003-01-19
- Posts: 34258
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
The notion that we should pay no heed to the effect our actions have upon our security is ludicrous.
"One thing we've learned is there's a difference between being disappointed and having madmen in authority."
--Paul Krugman
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#77 2008-11-17 6:47 pm
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 14619
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
No Res, I'll not concede that, since they were targeting Iraq as another godless state, much as they targeted the Saudi Government. Iraq was a secular state, a nationalistic state, not an Islamic State. Thus they and Al Queda had no common goals. And since it was a dictatorship, Saddam wasn't interested in letting armed groups that he didn't control into the country. Pure politics.
I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."
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#78 2008-11-17 6:57 pm
- JakeTheTall
- Cargo Cultist

- From: In Permanent Opposition
- Registered: 2003-03-13
- Posts: 10133
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
resedit wrote:
JakeTheTall wrote:
resedit wrote:
No.
Attacks those attacks were caused by radical Islamic fundamentalists.
Unless you want to argue that the wife caused her husband to beat her by not cooking the right meal.Wasp attacks are wasp attacks. Unless you want to argue that the man caused the wasps to attack him after beating their hive with a bat.
So you are conceding that Al Queda was in Iraq before we went in.
My analogy depends on the yellow-jacket insects leaving the human alone until the human uses violence on their hive. Is that so uncommon ?
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
(Also, can we bring back the Coalition of the Willing jokes ? Micronesia ! )
Jesus said to the servants, "Fill the jars with water"; so they filled them to the brim. Then he told them, "Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet." They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine. He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.
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#79 2008-11-18 5:07 am
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
yes, res, we've all been tapped. Do you know for a fact that YOU haven't been 'surveilled'?
do you know where your mouse has been?
edit:
Besides, if not already, all these keystokes 'b*mb' 'terr*r' and 'ab*rtion clinix' will trigger some algorithm, I'd bet.
Last edited by daemon (2008-11-18 5:38 am)
Brigid O'Shaughnessy: I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad, worse than you could know.
Sam Spade: You know, that's good, because if you actually were as innocent as you pretend to be, we'd never get anywhere.
http://sitruc.blip.tv/file/2661495/
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#80 2008-11-18 5:30 am
- Bat
- DOS über alles
- Royal Wombat

- From: Björk, Björk
- Registered: 2001-05-14
- Posts: 29751
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
JakeTheTall wrote:
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
Hell, as I remember it, Bin Laden only got rolling initially because we pulled our backing of the mujaheddin precipitously after the SU exited Afghanistan in, I think, '89. I'm forgetting some specifics after many years.
They were no longer needed. They were forgotten. We became the Great Satan.
Not 'right' or 'good,' but IIRC that was the catalyst. Politics of expediency; it wasn't like there would be fallout from a little group so far away.
If all economists were laid end to end, they would not reach a conclusion - George Bernard Shaw
"Fire up a colortini, sit back, relax, and watch the pictures, now, as they fly through the air."
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#81 2008-11-18 8:32 am
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 16508
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
OBL got pissed off at us just because we cut off his allowance?
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
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#82 2008-11-18 8:37 am
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 14619
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
That, and we set our unholy heathen feet upon the sacred soil of Suadi.
I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."
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#83 2008-11-18 8:55 am
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 16508
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
Yeah, but that was just what he used to rile up the idiots with. We had our heathen feet all over the place looking for oil and they were all just peachy with that.
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
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#84 2008-11-18 8:58 am
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 14619
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
Until we put 200K men and WOMEN (in pants no less) on the ground. An allowed them to operate trucks, helecopters, carry weapons, and live unescorted (scandelous) with men.
I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."
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#85 2008-11-18 9:04 am
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 16508
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
Weren't the activities pretty much confined to the base, though? Weren't female soldiers forbidden from driving off base and sitting with male personnel?
It's not like they were landing helicopters on that stupid block.
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
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#86 2008-11-18 9:08 am
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
JakeTheTall wrote:
resedit wrote:
JakeTheTall wrote:
Wasp attacks are wasp attacks. Unless you want to argue that the man caused the wasps to attack him after beating their hive with a bat.So you are conceding that Al Queda was in Iraq before we went in.
My analogy depends on the yellow-jacket insects leaving the human alone until the human uses violence on their hive. Is that so uncommon ?
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
(Also, can we bring back the Coalition of the Willing jokes ? Micronesia ! )
When we struck Iraq, it was not hitting the wasp nest.
It was taking out a dictator who no one can claim was good for his people, a dictator who repeatedly sought weapons of mass destruction, a dictator who used them in the past.
The terrorism that resulted in Iraq was terrorists trying to set up a similar system in a country that was likely to accept their rule because they had lived under brutal rule for so long before.
The future of Iraq can't be predicted, but things actually look good right now, and the people of Iraq have more of an opportunity to shape their future than they have had in a very long time - the same opportunity you and I enjoy, the same opportunity that you and I would object to having taken away from us.
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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#87 2008-11-18 9:20 am
- mo' ron
- PS3 4 EVA

- From: NC, USA
- Registered: 2002-10-15
- Posts: 14482
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
resedit wrote:
JakeTheTall wrote:
resedit wrote:
So you are conceding that Al Queda was in Iraq before we went in.My analogy depends on the yellow-jacket insects leaving the human alone until the human uses violence on their hive. Is that so uncommon ?
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
(Also, can we bring back the Coalition of the Willing jokes ? Micronesia ! )When we struck Iraq, it was not hitting the wasp nest.
It was taking out a dictator who no one can claim was good for his people, a dictator who repeatedly sought weapons of mass destruction, a dictator who used them in the past.
The terrorism that resulted in Iraq was terrorists trying to set up a similar system in a country that was likely to accept their rule because they had lived under brutal rule for so long before.
The future of Iraq can't be predicted, but things actually look good right now, and the people of Iraq have more of an opportunity to shape their future than they have had in a very long time - the same opportunity you and I enjoy, the same opportunity that you and I would object to having taken away from us.
Even if you believe this, it doesn't justify manipulating intelligence and lying to the American people as well as the rest of the world, in order to get support for a war.
Especially when you do it after the biggest terrorist attack in US history.
And the argument that we did it mainly to remove a dictator also doesn't hold water, when you consider the dictators around the world, that were killing MORE people, more brutally than Saddam.
We invaded because Iraq has oil, and we needed a sympathetic entity controlling it.
What is the difference between Vista and OSX?
- Microsoft employees are excited about OSX.
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#88 2008-11-18 9:37 am
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 14619
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
So from a gratuitous and unjustified aggression against someone who wasn't to our liking, we ended up several trillion later, over 3000 dead, over 10K wounded, ruined foriegn relations and world-wide condemnation with our goals still undefined and under-accomplished, and Al Queda is still operating without hindrance.
I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."
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#89 2008-11-18 9:40 am
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 16508
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
mo' wrote:
We invaded because Iraq has oil, and we needed a sympathetic entity controlling it.
And Iraq was isolated and vulnerable after their invasion of Kuwait was repelled (with our help). The neo-cons were upset that Poppy held to his UN agreement didn't swoop in and claim the prize of Iraq then.
Last edited by user (2008-11-18 9:42 am)
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
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#90 2008-11-18 9:52 am
- bedstuy
- Archimandrite, Eastern Elite

- From: King Cole Bar, St. Regis Hotel
- Registered: 2003-09-20
- Posts: 13884
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#91 2008-11-18 10:15 am
- JakeTheTall
- Cargo Cultist

- From: In Permanent Opposition
- Registered: 2003-03-13
- Posts: 10133
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
resedit wrote:
JakeTheTall wrote:
resedit wrote:
So you are conceding that Al Queda was in Iraq before we went in.My analogy depends on the yellow-jacket insects leaving the human alone until the human uses violence on their hive. Is that so uncommon ?
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
(Also, can we bring back the Coalition of the Willing jokes ? Micronesia ! )When we struck Iraq, it was not hitting the wasp nest.
It was taking out a dictator who no one can claim was good for his people, a dictator who repeatedly sought weapons of mass destruction, a dictator who used them in the past.
The terrorism that resulted in Iraq was terrorists trying to set up a similar system in a country that was likely to accept their rule because they had lived under brutal rule for so long before.
The future of Iraq can't be predicted, but things actually look good right now, and the people of Iraq have more of an opportunity to shape their future than they have had in a very long time - the same opportunity you and I enjoy, the same opportunity that you and I would object to having taken away from us.
Even accepting your flawed ideas, the fact that there were too few Coalition troops for years after the invasion meant Iraq was much more hospitable and likely to spawn terrorists. Fixing the problem years too late is good, but you shouldn't deny that President Bush didn't hit the wasp nest hard enough, and then occupied it incorrectly.
On top of that, don't throw your "more opportunity, don't take it away from Iraqis" stuff at me while people in Congo, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Kashmir, and Palestine (etc) could benefit more with less use of American troops and money.
Jesus said to the servants, "Fill the jars with water"; so they filled them to the brim. Then he told them, "Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet." They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine. He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.
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#92 2008-11-18 10:42 am
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
sturner wrote:
So from a gratuitous and unjustified aggression against someone who wasn't to our liking, we ended up several trillion later, over 3000 dead, over 10K wounded, ruined foriegn relations and world-wide condemnation with our goals still undefined and under-accomplished, and Al Queda is still operating without hindrance.
Yes. Well over 3000 U.S. service personnel dead.
icasualies:
U.S. Confirmed Deaths
Reported Deaths: 4201
Confirmed Deaths: 4199
Pending Confirmation: 2
DoD Confirmation List
just an update...
Brigid O'Shaughnessy: I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad, worse than you could know.
Sam Spade: You know, that's good, because if you actually were as innocent as you pretend to be, we'd never get anywhere.
http://sitruc.blip.tv/file/2661495/
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#94 2008-11-18 10:50 am
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
of course. exceptional.
Brigid O'Shaughnessy: I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad, worse than you could know.
Sam Spade: You know, that's good, because if you actually were as innocent as you pretend to be, we'd never get anywhere.
http://sitruc.blip.tv/file/2661495/
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#95 2008-11-18 11:52 am
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
JakeTheTall wrote:
resedit wrote:
JakeTheTall wrote:
My analogy depends on the yellow-jacket insects leaving the human alone until the human uses violence on their hive. Is that so uncommon ?
How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?
(Also, can we bring back the Coalition of the Willing jokes ? Micronesia ! )When we struck Iraq, it was not hitting the wasp nest.
It was taking out a dictator who no one can claim was good for his people, a dictator who repeatedly sought weapons of mass destruction, a dictator who used them in the past.
The terrorism that resulted in Iraq was terrorists trying to set up a similar system in a country that was likely to accept their rule because they had lived under brutal rule for so long before.
The future of Iraq can't be predicted, but things actually look good right now, and the people of Iraq have more of an opportunity to shape their future than they have had in a very long time - the same opportunity you and I enjoy, the same opportunity that you and I would object to having taken away from us.Even accepting your flawed ideas, the fact that there were too few Coalition troops for years after the invasion meant Iraq was much more hospitable and likely to spawn terrorists. Fixing the problem years too late is good, but you shouldn't deny that President Bush didn't hit the wasp nest hard enough, and then occupied it incorrectly.
On top of that, don't throw your "more opportunity, don't take it away from Iraqis" stuff at me while people in Congo, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Kashmir, and Palestine (etc) could benefit more with less use of American troops and money.
People are always going to be suffering. You can hardly expect an entity to take on every problem at once.
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#96 2008-11-18 12:20 pm
- DevoDoc
- Vardøger

- From: The East Wing
- Registered: 2003-05-27
- Posts: 2757
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
Steyr AUG wrote:
People are always going to be suffering. You can hardly expect an entity to take on every problem at once.
Nope. Just the ones that involve big oil reserves.
We also know how cruel the truth often is, and we wonder whether delusion is not more consoling. - Henri Poincaré

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#97 2008-11-18 12:24 pm
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
DevoDoc wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
People are always going to be suffering. You can hardly expect an entity to take on every problem at once.
Nope. Just the ones that involve big oil reserves.
Those countries are getting attention, just not as much as one which was a destabilizing force in a strategically important part of the world.
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#98 2008-11-18 1:51 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7436
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
So, Bush's policies have made for a more stable world?
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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#100 2008-11-18 2:47 pm
- JakeTheTall
- Cargo Cultist

- From: In Permanent Opposition
- Registered: 2003-03-13
- Posts: 10133
Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?
Steyr AUG wrote:
DevoDoc wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
People are always going to be suffering. You can hardly expect an entity to take on every problem at once.
Nope. Just the ones that involve big oil reserves.
Those countries are getting attention, just not as much as one which was a destabilizing force in a strategically important part of the world.
Yeah, Congo and Sri Lanka are getting attention ?
Besides, resedit's point wasn't about instability in a strategically important part of the world, it was about helping people who are suffering.
Jesus said to the servants, "Fill the jars with water"; so they filled them to the brim. Then he told them, "Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet." They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine. He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.
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