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The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

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  • joecct
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Kepler View Post
    How dare you insult the Red State piece it's copied almost verbatim from!

    The amazing thing about the GroupThink of the right is it doesn't even occur to them they've been exposed. These guys have been forwarding the same Old Man Shouts At Cloud chain emails since 2008, continually re-indoctrinating one another. When they step outside their bubble the exchange goes like this:

    RWNJ: x
    World: {points out 12 logical errors}
    RWNJ: No, no. x!
    World: {points out 5 citations back to sources which have been rebutted, including many that are known to simply be lying}
    RWNJ: You guys are so ignorant, and I can prove it. x!!!
    World: I give up. Just stay away from sharp objects.
    Repeating from an earlier post:

    LWNJ: BUTITSFORTHECHLDREN!!!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Kepler
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Rover View Post
    Fishy your whole premise is nonsense.
    How dare you insult the Red State piece it's copied almost verbatim from!

    The amazing thing about the GroupThink of the right is it doesn't even occur to them they've been exposed. These guys have been forwarding the same Old Man Shouts At Cloud chain emails since 2008, continually re-indoctrinating one another. When they step outside their bubble the exchange goes like this:

    RWNJ: x
    World: {points out 12 logical errors}
    RWNJ: No, no. x!
    World: {points out 5 citations back to sources which have been rebutted, including many that are known to simply be lying}
    RWNJ: You guys are so ignorant, and I can prove it. x!!!
    World: I give up. Just stay away from sharp objects.

    Leave a comment:


  • ScoobyDoo
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    You're simply claiming the charge has been disproven over and over again? Sorry, that's not a take down. That's just saying you disagree.

    Again, you're better than to carry water for the trolls around here, even if they agree with your liberal leanings.
    Fair enough.

    I don't believe for a minute it would be any better if we followed what you or any right wing pundit is saying. The place is a cesspool and will always be a cesspool. You want to stay clean, stay out of the pool.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rover
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by FreshFish View Post
    The one area in which the President made a huge foreign policy mistake, and one fervently hopes non-lethal mistake, came very early in his first term. At that time, I still had hopes that Obama would govern as he described himself during his campaign. Then came the Green Revolution in Iran.

    I am sure that the US intelligence apparatus has informed both the prior and current President that, were the mullahs in Iran ever able to develop nuclear weapons, it would have a hugely destabilizing effect throughout the entire Middle East. The Saudi royal family and the mullahs of Iran have been conducting proxy Shia - Sunni wars in the Middle East for decades (and before that it was Saddam's Iraq vs the mullahs, they fought an eight-year long war from 1980 through 1988!). If one side had nuclear weapons in that conflict, the other side would surely feel an existential threat, and purchase / develop their own instantly. The chances of Israeli entanglement in an armed conflict were this to happen would be pretty high as well.

    Here were everyday Iranians saying they were tired of rule by the mullahs and wanted change, perhaps the initial germination of a popular movement that could overthrow the mullahs and replace them with a government that enjoyed broad-based popular support. The chances of that kind of Iranian government agreeing to dismantle the nuclear weapons program would be pretty high, IMHO: there are widespread reports of how miserable life is in Iran, most people surely would prefer an increase in material well-being from peaceful coexistence than a fanatical fundamentalist pursuit of destruction.

    And the President sat idly by and did, and said, nothing. I was shocked, almost horrified. How could he do this? I'm sure the popular movement was inspired in part by an assumption that the USA, the bastion of freedom and human rights worldwide, would at least provide moral support and covert assistance. What better way to defuse the Middle East than to have the Iranian people themselves overthrow the mullahs? You could not have dreamed a better scenario for long-term peace!

    Complete, utter silence, bordering on the disinterested. I kept raging whenever he deflected or dodged a question, "what is wrong with him? can't he see what an opportunity this is? and even beside that, has he no heart, no feeling? people are getting brutalized and he can at least provide moral suasion against it, and he says nothing at all? A few supportive words might have made a difference, who knows? there'd be no bombing, no troops, not even any shipping of arms and munitions.

    Utter silence.



    Indefensible as well, IMHO, no matter what perspective you examine it from, be it moral or practical.

    Fishy your whole premise is nonsense. What influence do you expect the United States to have in Iran, at the drop of a hat no less after 30 years of isolation, that would have made any difference to internal Iranian politics? More likely US influence is used against the reformers if we tried any token intervention.

    In fact, this idea of yours is so absurd even Fox News hasn't picked it up!

    Leave a comment:


  • joecct
    replied
    Originally posted by Kepler View Post
    I think we've now got Far Left, Center-Left, Center, Center-Right. Far Right, anyone? Pio? Bob? (Bob is somewhere between Center-Right and Far Right but I guess he counts.)
    Wonderful! Now if we could just get our political masters to agree. We'd still keep the industry busy supplying bombs, bullets and guns to our good guy of the week. We just wouldn't do the dying.

    What could be wrong with that? (sarcastically)

    Leave a comment:


  • FreshFish
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    What's your take on Obama's policies in the Middle East and how effective or not effective they've been and what he could have done better/different?
    The one area in which the President made a huge foreign policy mistake, and one fervently hopes non-lethal mistake, came very early in his first term. At that time, I still had hopes that Obama would govern as he described himself during his campaign. Then came the Green Revolution in Iran.

    I am sure that the US intelligence apparatus has informed both the prior and current President that, were the mullahs in Iran ever able to develop nuclear weapons, it would have a hugely destabilizing effect throughout the entire Middle East. The Saudi royal family and the mullahs of Iran have been conducting proxy Shia - Sunni wars in the Middle East for decades (and before that it was Saddam's Iraq vs the mullahs, they fought an eight-year long war from 1980 through 1988!). If one side had nuclear weapons in that conflict, the other side would surely feel an existential threat, and purchase / develop their own instantly. The chances of Israeli entanglement in an armed conflict were this to happen would be pretty high as well.

    Here were everyday Iranians saying they were tired of rule by the mullahs and wanted change, perhaps the initial germination of a popular movement that could overthrow the mullahs and replace them with a government that enjoyed broad-based popular support. The chances of that kind of Iranian government agreeing to dismantle the nuclear weapons program would be pretty high, IMHO: there are widespread reports of how miserable life is in Iran, most people surely would prefer an increase in material well-being from peaceful coexistence than a fanatical fundamentalist pursuit of destruction. They were saying so, loudly and clearly!

    And the President sat idly by and did, and said, nothing. I was shocked, almost horrified. How could he do this? I'm sure the popular movement was inspired in part by an assumption that the USA, the bastion of freedom and human rights worldwide, would at least provide moral support and covert assistance. What better way to defuse the Middle East than to have the Iranian people themselves overthrow the mullahs? You could not have dreamed a better scenario for long-term peace!

    Complete, utter silence, bordering on the disinterested. I kept raging whenever he deflected or dodged a question, "what is wrong with him? can't he see what an opportunity this is? and even beside that, has he no heart, no feeling? people are getting brutalized and he can at least provide moral suasion against it, and he says nothing at all?" A few supportive words might have made a difference, who knows? there'd be no bombing, no troops, not even any shipping of arms and munitions. Maybe rally other nations to express their outrage as well. After all, even the most cynical part of me thought, Obama loves to make speeches, and here is a natural opening for him to make a stirring speech that could change the course of history!





    Utter silence.



    Indefensible as well, IMHO, no matter what perspective you examine it from, be it moral or practical.
    Last edited by FreshFish; 10-03-2014, 12:06 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rover
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    So...if I have this correct, what some conservatives would do differently is essentually nothing (disengage until we're absolutely needed....kinda like what we did with ISIS), or kiss Bibi's @ ss more (Bob's opinion summed up neatly ). Is that about right?

    Middle East is a mess. Its always been a mess. I'm happy to support the Prez bombing ISIS, but this needs to be handled Bosnia style. Someone else has boots on the ground while the US uses its unmatched air capabilities to turn the tide. Beyond that, after throwing off aging tyrants in Libya, Tunisia, Egypt, etc - residents of those countries need to decide for themselves how they want to live - in anarchy or a civilized society. The ability of the US to influence that is limited to say the least.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kepler
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    You're simply claiming the charge has been disproven over and over again? Sorry, that's not a take down. That's just saying you disagree.
    That's fair. There is no other way to engage with your statement because (1) it has so many hidden premises, and (2) it's not a logically-checkable statement.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kepler
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    Again, you're better than to carry water for the trolls around here, even if they agree with your liberal leanings.
    Yeah that sounds so like me...

    Leave a comment:


  • Kepler
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by MattS View Post
    Add me to this contingent. The whole Middle East (our "allies" included) is once huge ****sandwich that the US needs to get away from.
    I think we've now got Far Left, Center-Left, Center, Center-Right. Far Right, anyone? Pio? Bob? (Bob is somewhere between Center-Right and Far Right but I guess he counts.)

    Leave a comment:


  • MattS
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    I didn't say that we had turned allies into enemies, but that our relationships with traditional allies in the region have been undermined. The two most obvious are Israel, which I had already mentioned, and Saudi Arabia.
    You sound like this is a bad thing? I think it is a great thing. Israel needs to learn to stand by itself with the US holding it's hand all the time. And SA is just a bad country that is doing a horrible job of paying us lip service while really supporting hard line Islamics. (read: enemies of the US)

    Leave a comment:


  • unofan
    replied
    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    You're simply claiming the charge has been disproven over and over again? Sorry, that's not a take down. That's just saying you disagree.

    Again, you're better than to carry water for the trolls around here, even if they agree with your liberal leanings.
    Because you've conveniently ignored his and my posts refuting your premise. And I know you saw mine even though I'm on ignore because someone else quoted it.

    Two legitimate responses, but you're right. None have responded to you seriously.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bob Gray
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Kepler View Post
    I was referring to my take down of your argument, which you have not responded to presumably since it does not fit your narrative.

    I know, I know, I'm just whining about Bush...
    You're simply claiming the charge has been disproven over and over again? Sorry, that's not a take down. That's just saying you disagree.

    Again, you're better than to carry water for the trolls around here, even if they agree with your liberal leanings.

    Leave a comment:


  • MattS
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by joecct View Post
    Stay on the sidelines. If we feel it is in the national interest to get involved, do so by proxy.
    Originally posted by Kepler View Post
    Hear, hear. I second this as a bipartisan solution.
    Add me to this contingent. The whole Middle East (our "allies" included) is once huge ****sandwich that the US needs to get away from.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kepler
    replied
    Re: The Global War on Terror 5.0: Putin on the Risk

    Originally posted by Bob Gray View Post
    Glad you like pie. So do I. Pumpkin in particular. I now prepare for people to moan about pumpkins.
    Weird thing about pumpkin pie. I hate the smell of pumpkins (don't ask, some deep-seated Halloween anxiety or something, I dunno either) and I have assiduously avoided pumpkin pie all these years because of it. But I just had pumpkin pie for the first time last year and I LOVE it! It doesn't taste anything like pumpkin smells at all. On the scent/taste dichotomy scale it has to be second only to vanilla extract.
    Last edited by Kepler; 10-03-2014, 11:43 AM.

    Leave a comment:

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