Yellow card for Harper over Afghanistan.
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Yellow card for Harper over Afghanistan.


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January 30th, 2008, 04:34 PM

Quoting Cobalt_Kid
Open door policy, what a joke. The local human rights monitoring agency is funded by the Afgan government, if they actually do their job and find out how prisoners are treated they'll get shut down. You're living in a fantasy world if you think there's any real democracy and accountability in the Karzai government. Bull**** propaganda from the Bush and Harper governments aside, we're talking about a former CIA bagman supported by some of the most brutal warlords and drug dealers you're ever likely to run into. It's no surprise that most of the heroin on our streets comes from Afghanistan now. Wonderful job we're doing making the world safe for scum like that.
Perhaps you missed the part about the fact that it would be Canadians doing the checking in...don't worry, I know how difficult it is to see through the ideology blinders.

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Most of the European nations weren't stupid enough to by into Bushs moronic "War on Terrorism". You ever study the US School of the Americas and the devastating effect it's had all across Latin America. It makes Al Qaeda look like a debating society by comparison. And besides most of the money and personel that went into the 9/11 attacks are from Saudi Arabia, why the hell are we pounding the crap out of some dirt farmers in southern Afghanistan while we ignore the Wahabi pricks who spend millions each year funding the madrasa schools that are training the young people who attack us.
Ya that's it.

btw, I probly know more about South America then I know about the Balkans, hence my several threads on US interferance and corruption there.


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Bet I know more than you when it come to the Balkans. It's the worlds mixing pot, both for religion and ethnically. After the fall of Constantinople much of it came under the control of the Turks which set the ground for the fighting in Bosnia Hercegovinia. It's also where the Slavic world meets the west, many Serbs indenitfy more closely with Russians than they do with the Europe. It's one of the reasons Milosevic felt he had so much power, his big brother to the east was always there to back him up. Hell, it's one of the reasons WW I started, the Serb Black Hand society was trying to gain independence from Austro-Hungary and was bumping off people who stood in the way. When they assassinated the Austrian heir to the throne it was the final straw, the Austrians declared war on Serbia, the Russians delcared war on the Austrians to protect the Serbs, the Germans delcared war on the Russians to back their allies and on and on. I could go on but what the point, you've got it all figured out, why bother with annoying things like facts.
Ya all those annoying facts that half the counrty got in highschool history class.

You da bomb.

And again, what you know about the last conflict in the Balkans (which was the spirit of the conversation) wouldn't sink a thimble in a pool of propane.


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Again, it's enough to know when I'm being screwed and that's exactly what the Harper government is doing to Canadians in general by not being honest about...well almost everything. We're experiencing government by stealth and it has no place in a western democracy. Especially when the lives of our troops are at stake in a dirty war that has no end in site.
I'm guessing it's to much of a stretch to ask you if you remember Cretien's Gov't.
And no you're not a Nazi.

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My grandfather was a Canadian vet from both WWs and I used to have a very high regard for our men and women who are and have served. The way they're allowing themselves to be used now by a Conservative government that has no respect for the people of this or any other country for that matter saddens and shames me.
I've seen you say lots of things that you should feel shame for. This silly statement being one such example.
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January 30th, 2008, 05:20 PM

Quoting CDNBear
Perhaps you missed the part about the fact that it would be Canadians doing the checking in...don't worry, I know how difficult it is to see through the ideology blinders.
We have a hard enough time keeping things in check in our corrections system here in Canada, what are the chances we'll ever be able to effectively monitor the Afghani system that's based on corruption and intimidation through violence. You're the one who needs to take his blinders off and look at just what kind of people we're backing in Afghanistan. The same warlords who backed the Taliban are getting rich while our troops die. Hell some Taliban leaders simply changed sides so there is no real difference, it's all just smoke and mirrors so some politicians can claim we're making a difference.


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Ya that's it.

btw, I probly know more about South America then I know about the Balkans, hence my several threads on US interferance and corruption there.
Great so you know about the School of Assassins and how much of the violence in Central and South America was paid for with US tax dollars. Even prominent figures like Archbishop Romero weren't safe from men trained in torture and assassination at US facilities. Kind of puts this "War on Terrorism" in a different light doesn't it.


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Ya all those annoying facts that half the counrty got in highschool history class.

You da bomb.

And again, what you know about the last conflict in the Balkans (which was the spirit of the conversation) wouldn't sink a thimble in a pool of propane.
I know more than I want to, some of the stories my Bosnian friend told me about being gang raped by ****ing Serbs as a girl make me physically ill. It truly pisses me off that we're supporting the same kind of assholes in Afghanistan just so Harper and his buddies can look good.


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I'm guessing it's to much of a stretch to ask you if you remember Cretien's Gov't.
And no you're not a Nazi.
Sure I remember Cretien, his arrogance was a constant source of annoyance to me, but he was nothing compared to Harper, who's done everything he can to shut down access to information on what our government is truly up to and concentrating power in the PMO in ways King Jean never did.


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I've seen you say lots of things that you should feel shame for. This silly statement being one such example.
Call me human, I do care about others and have no time for soul dead politicians who only want more power and wealth no matter the body count at the end of the day, both ours and there's. You tell me where's there's any sanity in waging a counter-insurgency in one of the worst places in the world to do so in support of a government that has no real credibility both at home and abroad. Like the Yanks in Vietnam, we could win every tactical battle and still come up empty at the end of the day. In the end it doesn't matter at all what we're doing in Afghanistan as long as Pakistan is in chaos and the Taliban have a safe home. Enough with the rhetoric, enough Canadian lives have been lost so that Harper and Co. can wrap themselves in the flag and trumpet what super-patriots they are. They can make their trips to Kandahar and claim how much they care about our brave men and women. In the end they're asking them to do the impossible all so they can get a few more votes back home. They don't give a damn what happens to the men and women after they've been used up, just like the DoD doesn't.
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January 30th, 2008, 05:33 PM

Quoting Cobalt_Kid
We have a hard enough time keeping things in check in our corrections system here in Canada, what are the chances we'll ever be able to effectively monitor the Afghani system that's based on corruption and intimidation through violence. You're the one who needs to take his blinders off and look at just what kind of people we're backing in Afghanistan. The same warlords who backed the Taliban are getting rich while our troops die. Hell some Taliban leaders simply changed sides so there is no real difference, it's all just smoke and mirrors so some politicians can claim we're making a difference.
Nope, no blinders there.

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Great so you know about the School of Assassins and how much of the violence in Central and South America was paid for with US tax dollars. Even prominent figures like Archbishop Romero weren't safe from men trained in torture and assassination at US facilities. Kind of puts this "War on Terrorism" in a different light doesn't it.
Great so I know about the complicity of the Church, the coup's that never were, the death squads, the over throws.

Ya I think I got a lock on it skippy.


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I know more than I want to, some of the stories my Bosnian friend told me about being gang raped by ****ing Serbs as a girl make me physically ill. It truly pisses me off that we're supporting the same kind of assholes in Afghanistan just so Harper and his buddies can look good.
Well there ya have it!

Your BOSNIAN friend filled you right in.

No other side to the story at all.

Good call.

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Sure I remember Cretien, his arrogance was a constant source of annoyance to me, but he was nothing compared to Harper, who's done everything he can to shut down access to information on what our government is truly up to and concentrating power in the PMO in ways King Jean never did.
Whatever, blinders skippy, blinders.



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Call me human, I do care about others and have no time for soul dead politicians who only want more power and wealth no matter the body count at the end of the day, both ours and there's. You tell me where's there's any sanity in waging a counter-insurgency in one of the worst places in the world to do so in support of a government that has no real credibility both at home and abroad. Like the Yanks in Vietnam, we could win every tactical battle and still come up empty at the end of the day. In the end it doesn't matter at all what we're doing in Afghanistan as long as Pakistan is in chaos and the Taliban have a safe home. Enough with the rhetoric, enough Canadian lives have been lost so that Harper and Co. can wrap themselves in the flag and trumpet what super-patriots they are. They can make their trips to Kandahar and claim how much they care about our brave men and women. In the end they're asking them to do the impossible all so they can get a few more votes back home. They don't give a damn what happens to the men and women after they've been used up, just like the DoD doesn't.
Nope, no blinders there either.

I see you have a lock on truth, thanx for participating, I won't waste anymore of your time.
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January 30th, 2008, 07:10 PM

Quoting CDNBear
Nope, no blinders there.

Great so I know about the complicity of the Church, the coup's that never were, the death squads, the over throws.

Ya I think I got a lock on it skippy.
Names not skippy, do you really understand? How about the 30,000 or so people that were disappeared in Argentina. Abducted and tortured by the military (mostly naval officers) then drugged, zipped into sleeping bags loaded into Herks then dropped into the Atlantic outside the territorial boundary. How about that nasty chainsaw massacre in southern Mexico where over 100 died. All this and so much more including the death squads was the responsibility of graduates of a US school for Paramilitaries. Funded by a nation that's now going to erradicate terrorism in the world? Maybe they should shut the school down for starters.

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Well there ya have it!

Your BOSNIAN friend filled you right in.

No other side to the story at all.

Good call.

Whatever, blinders skippy, blinders.
I didn't need to be there to know how brutal a war it was, the Muslims got their asses kicked because we wouldn't let them have heavy arms while the Serbs could get whatever they needed from the old Yugoslavian army stocks or from the Russians. Sounds fair to me.

The UN set up safe zones for the Bosnians then bugged out whenever things got too hot. How many were massacred at Screbrenica again, 7,000? People with AKs and molotov cocktails going up against Soviet era MBTs and Hinds with heavy artillery backup, sounds pretty onesided to me. How about Serb deathcamps too, anything else you want to inform me on, you seem to think you know so much.


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Nope, no blinders there either.

I see you have a lock on truth, thanx for participating, I won't waste anymore of your time.
It's called a viewpoint, I don't care if you agree with me or not. And I'm sure as hell aren't going to be TOLD how to think by you or a government that doesn't give a damn about my rights or opinions anyway.

Until the next election, that is one nice thing about living in a democracy.
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January 30th, 2008, 09:34 PM

There has to be corruption going on in Afghanistan!! All those bumper crops of opium year after year despite massive crop-destroying efforts by NATO forces are a phenomenon!

I have tried to find out more about Hamid Karzaid's brothers, who are supposedly heavily involved in drug dealing! Whenever I type a question about drugs and Afghanistan into google, it tells me "Server not found". That is strange!
This is the only site I could access, seems to be from Russia, and describes the drug dealing going on in Afghanistan. I'll post it here for what it's worth, but it does confirm some of Cobalt_kid's view.

http://enews.ferghana.ru/article.php?id=2246
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January 31st, 2008, 12:09 AM

I've got a lot of my information from CBC radio and TV news, they're much more credible than the government who only really seem to want to hide the reality of what's going on over there.

According to some reports on CBC the head of the Afghani ministry responsible for controlling the drug trade is the biggest drug lord. This is from people who have been part of the government.

I'll look around online for some information, maybe the CBC archives have the story links.

I don't have any illusions about the situation, I realize the Taliban are hardly preferable to the Karzai government. It's ridiculous to claim we're working to support a western style democracy in Afghanistan though. Or that there's any real chance of peace in the region as long as the Pakistanis don't want Karzai and the Northern Alliance running Afghansitan. It was under Bhutto that the Pakistanis set up the Taliban to remove the same group that is sitting in power in Kabul right now, and Karzai was one of them at the start. We ignore the regional politics at our own peril, many Canadians will die and be injured before we finally figure out the futility of a mission that isn't dealing with the realities of the land. Bush and his people have shown with spectacular stupidity how little they understand the Muslim world, they've taken a dysfunctional Iraq and turned it into a slaughter house. Karzai is their man in Kabul and there's no way the surrounding Islamic states are going to allow him and his supporters to rule Afghanistan in peace. Especially not after all that has gone down in Iraq.

We're dealing with a religion that has resistance against outside threats as part of it's core beliefs, that's what Jihad is. We're not going to intimidate the Taliban into laying down arms, all further combat in Afghanistan is going to do is make the fundamentalists even more determined to fight back.

Look at Basra as an example, since the British have pulled out the fighting has gone down to almost nothing. These are old cultures that don't want to be told how to live by outsiders, it's only ignorance and arrogance that makes our leaders here in the west think we can impose our way of life on them.
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January 31st, 2008, 12:47 AM

Here yah go bear, why don't you tell me how I need to be proud of a military that's into this sort of behaviour.

http://www.geocities.com/~virtualtruth/soa.htm

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The United States Army School of the Americas, located at
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Fort Benning, adjacent to Columbus, Georgia, trains commissioned and non-commissioned officers from Latin American militaries. Many of its graduates have returned to their home countries and committed such atrocities as rapes, disappearances, torture, and assassination; they have organized death squads and paramilitaries to counter insurgencies and maintain power. The SOA is accused of including torture in its curriculum, an accusation its defenders deny, although such a torture manual released to the public in 1991. The "Hall of Fame" at the SOA includes dictators and human rights abusers, and a number of guest instructors were invited to the school's faculty after they had committed atrocities.
The US militray has a long history of contempt for the rights of non-combatants going back to the erradication of the native Americans. I'm sorry to say that one of my ancestors who was half native himself participated in that. Or the Phillipines geurilla campaign where one US commander ordered that "all males over 12 are to be killed". Even in Korea there was little concern for the civilians. During the rapid advance by the north in 1950 US forces killed many fleeing Korean civilians for fear some were infiltrating communists. Or how about Vietnam where over 1 million civilians were killed as the US tried to prop up succeedingly more and more corrupt regimes, much in the same way it has tried in Iraq and Afghanistan.

And go ahead and accuse me of being anti-American, I don't care. My roots there go back to before the nation even existed on my white side and thousand of years on my native American side. I know it can be a better place, but not as long as the people who think they have the right to decide if others have the right to exist or not are allowed to lead. Like the US is doing now in Iraq and in Afghanistan with our help.

So blow your horn buddy, just stick it in your own ear next time not mine.
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January 31st, 2008, 02:20 AM

Quoting Cobalt_Kid
I've got a lot of my information from CBC radio and TV news, they're much more credible than the government who only really seems to want to hide the reality of what's going on over there.
You believe our government knows as much as we folks do here at the forum? I keep thinking there must be a hidden reason why Harper pushes to renew our contract there, something we don't know. Otherwise it doesn't make sense to drain our resources there for what? The reason given to us to help the Afghanis out of the stone age I can't believe.
One of our military bosses said once, we could be there for decades. At this rate I believe him.
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According to some reports on CBC the head of the Afghani ministry responsible for controlling the drug trade is the biggest drug lord. This is from people who have been part of the government.
Yes, I read that too, some time ago. Also two ministers got murdered. It is still a very shaky, slightly corrupt and inefficient apparatus. Karzai himself is an oil man, coming from UNICAL, which in turn is one of the main bidders for building that pipe line to the Gulf.
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I'll look around online for some information, maybe the CBC archives have the story links.
If it is not too much trouble, that would be nice and appreciated.
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I don't have any illusions about the situation, I realize the Taliban are hardly preferable to the Karzai government. It's ridiculous to claim we're working to support a western style democracy in Afghanistan though.
The reasons given to the common "Volk" are usually never the actual ones. With us they play on our sympathies for the poor Afghans, the poor Iraqis etc. Most of us fall for it, that's the sad part.
I read a report in German recently that stated the Afghans are a very proud, self-reliant people... they don't like and don't want to be taken care off by us Westerners. Why must the whole world be modeled to western societies? Cultural diversity is the salt of the world. If I was to travel to Afghanistan, I don't want to see a Walmart or MacDonald or modern sky scrapers there!
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Or that there's any real chance of peace in the region as long as the Pakistanis don't want Karzai and the Northern Alliance running Afghanistan. It was under Bhutto that the Pakistanis set up the Taliban to remove the same group that is sitting in power in Kabul right now, and Karzai was one of them at the start.
I don't know any of that... am relatively new at politics, although I find it fascinating.
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We ignore the regional politics at our own peril, many Canadians will die and be injured before we finally figure out the futility of a mission that isn't dealing with the realities of the land.
I agree wholeheartedly! We are fools to be thinking we can fix their problems. What puzzles me is that our Generals are all for it! That fact makes me wonder and ponder over the question WHY? What do they see and know I don't? And so we are back at the beginning of this thread. Our feeling is that the politicians are not open and honest with us. To say, it's up to the military to tell us about the Afghan prisoners, is ridiculous! Harper and company is just yawning and pretending the whole thing is passe, unimportant. No, it isn't to a lot of us citizens.
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Bush and his people have shown with spectacular stupidity how little they understand the Muslim world, they've taken a dysfunctional Iraq and turned it into a slaughter house. Karzai is their man in Kabul and there's no way the surrounding Islamic states are going to allow him and his supporters to rule Afghanistan in peace. Especially not after all that has gone down in Iraq.
The Americans know only one thing, and that is brutal force! Their war machine can plow anything over and under! Lives don't matter! They themselves have never experienced a devastating war on their own soil... they simply cannot feel empathy for and with the enemy, because they don't know what it feels like to be trampled on.
Honestly, Cobalt Kid, I do not know what drives them, what satisfaction do they get out of it? I hope it's not pride!
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We're dealing with a religion that has resistance against outside threats as part of it's core beliefs, that's what Jihad is. We're not going to intimidate the Taliban into laying down arms, all further combat in Afghanistan is going to do is make the fundamentalists even more determined to fight back.
Yes, and more and more countries get drawn into it. We already have a wildfire out of control. I know, I'm powerless to stop the war trend, but I will at least not support it with my voice.
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Look at Basra as an example, since the British have pulled out the fighting has gone down to almost nothing.
Good! That proves we should leave, too!
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These are old cultures that don't want to be told how to live by outsiders, it's only ignorance and arrogance that makes our leaders here in the west think we can impose our way of life on them.
Well stated! We only need to turn the poker stick around and have the Afghans come and tell us what music to play!

P.S. There is something wrong with my server! It's not the KGB up the street!! I hope it will fix itself by tomorrow..
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January 31st, 2008, 05:57 AM

Quoting darkbeaver
So why are we there protecting the rest of them?
Being in Afghanistan is dangerous, not being in Afghanistan is more dangerous
Ban Ki-Moon

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon writes of the the achievements and challenges facing NATO and the UN in their Afghan mission.

Afghanistan is a potent symbol of the costs inherent in abandoning nations to the lawless forces of anarchy. That alone justifies international efforts to help rebuild the country. Lest there be any doubt, remember Sept. 11, 2001, and its worldwide reverberations. We learned then how a country, shorn of its civic institutions, becomes a vacuum to be filled by criminals and opportunists. In its chaos and poverty, Afghanistan became a home base for terrorism.
Must we learn that lesson all over again? The past six years have seen a massive international partnership to rebuild Afghanistan's state institutions. A modern constitution was adopted after widespread popular consultations. Presidential and parliamentary elections were held. Three million refugees returned from decades of exile. Clearly, a large majority of the population supports the international community's efforts on Afghans' behalf.
Yet, this progress is in jeopardy. Once again, the opportunists are on the rise, seeking anew to make Afghanistan a lawless place — a locus of instability, terrorism and drug trafficking. Their means are desperate: suicide bombs, kidnappings, the killing of government officials and hijacking of aid convoys. Almost more dismaying is the response of some outside Afghanistan, who react by calling for a disengagement or the full withdrawal of international forces. This would be a misjudgment of historic proportions, the repetition of a mistake that has already had terrible consequences.
The United Nations has been in Afghanistan for many decades. Our institutional memory stretches back to the traumas of the Taliban, and beyond to the era when rival militias battled one another for the meagre spoils of a country broken by civil war. Our hopes for the future look to a day when Afghan state institutions stand on their own, able to tackle with dignity the difficult tasks of reconstruction and development while providing security and justice within secure borders.
I believe that day is within reach. We cannot let it be lost to the inhuman violence of today's insurgents.
For all the frustrations and periodic setbacks, I am heartened by the strong and sustained international support given to Afghanistan. Security concerns notwithstanding, there has been obvious progress. Girls' school enrolment has increased dramatically in the past five years. Six million children are in schools today, compared to less than a million under the Taliban. More than five million children have been immunized against polio, crucial not only for them, but also for our fight to eradicate polio worldwide. Half a million Afghans have gained access to safe water.
New roads are helping farmers get produce to markets. Afghan farmers are meeting 95 per cent of the country's grain needs; in 2001, the figure was less than 50 per cent. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, created following the 2001 Bonn Agreement, now has nine provincial offices, actively promoting human rights. Under the Taliban, women's participation in public and political life was non-existent. Today, 28 per cent of the seats in parliament are held by women.
The United Nations, alongside national and international counterparts, non-governmental organizations and Afghan civil society, will continue to provide the Afghan government whatever assistance it needs to build on these achievements. Our collective success depends on the continuing presence of the International Security Assistance Force, commanded by NATO and helping local governments in nearly every province to maintain security and carry out reconstruction projects.
In December, the Afghan National Army, supported by ISAF forces, reclaimed the town of Musa Qala in the southern province of Helmand, occupied by insurgents since February of 2007, and a major poppy-growing area. Significantly, it was led by the Afghan army and carried out at the request of the local population. At long last, development work can begin anew in Musa Qala.
The Afghan government has far to go before it regains control of its own destiny. But that day will come. It is hard work. There is little glory. It requires sacrifices. And that is why we are there.
Ban Ki-moon is Secretary-General of the United Nations.
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January 31st, 2008, 05:58 AM

Quoting darkbeaver
3.5 million dead Afghans since the American invasion because of direct and indirect warfare.
I thought there were more dead.
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January 31st, 2008, 06:03 AM

Quoting EastSideScotian
they use to play how long can you hold a set grenade before throwing it. Pull the pin latch the spoon and hold it as long as they could before they had to throw it and it blew up. Thats nuts...
Reminds me of a Simpsons episode.
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January 31st, 2008, 06:12 AM

Quoting Cobalt_Kid
The US militray has a long history of contempt for the rights of non-combatants going back to the erradication of the native Americans. I'm sorry to say that one of my ancestors who was half native himself participated in that. Or the Phillipines geurilla campaign where one US commander ordered that "all males over 12 are to be killed". Even in Korea there was little concern for the civilians. During the rapid advance by the north in 1950 US forces killed many fleeing Korean civilians for fear some were infiltrating communists. Or how about Vietnam where over 1 million civilians were killed as the US tried to prop up succeedingly more and more corrupt regimes, much in the same way it has tried in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Every country's military has participated in atrocities whether we know about them or not, this is why enlightened countries have civilian powers in control of the military.
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January 31st, 2008, 11:31 AM

Quoting Walter
Every country's military has participated in atrocities whether we know about them or not, this is why enlightened countries have civilian powers in control of the military.
Thank you, Walter, for your contributions to this subject. Especially, I appreciate the speech by Ban Ki-Moon you shared with us. I respect and trust him more than our own government. His explanation, why we should be there does have some validity and makes sense. That has always been my stumbling block - to see a good reason - not a reason to enhance Western interests and greed. Unfortunately, it does look like an American enterprise for gain! And it also looks like Canada is there, because we are an ally of the Americans and are afraid of possible retaliations, if we weren't. Being directly next door to the mightiest nation on earth right now, it would bring their wrath down on us, if we decided to stay neutral.
So... caught between a rock and a hard place, Harper has decided to follow the Americans.

Walter, I now wish you could in a kind and understanding way show me how wrong I am in my suspicious thinking. Please! I want to be in harmony with my country's leadership, ... want to know our young soldiers are being sacrificed for a noble cause, as they keep telling us, and not for corporate greed. Tell me and convince me that there is no other way than war!
If you yourself in your heart know better than I do.... share that knowledge with me, please.
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February 3rd, 2008, 08:48 AM

Quoting Cobalt_Kid
Names not skippy, do you really understand? How about the 30,000 or so people that were disappeared in Argentina. Abducted and tortured by the military (mostly naval officers) then drugged, zipped into sleeping bags loaded into Herks then dropped into the Atlantic outside the territorial boundary. How about that nasty chainsaw massacre in southern Mexico where over 100 died. All this and so much more including the death squads was the responsibility of graduates of a US school for Paramilitaries. Funded by a nation that's now going to erradicate terrorism in the world? Maybe they should shut the school down for starters.
I have an ex Argentine Army Office as a close friend, you don't suppose he might have filled me in on what made him abandon his post and move to Canada do you?

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I didn't need to be there to know how brutal a war it was, the Muslims got their asses kicked because we wouldn't let them have heavy arms while the Serbs could get whatever they needed from the old Yugoslavian army stocks or from the Russians. Sounds fair to me.
Who fed the Croats arms when 1.8 million Serbs fell under their boots?

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The UN set up safe zones for the Bosnians then bugged out whenever things got too hot. How many were massacred at Screbrenica again, 7,000? People with AKs and molotov cocktails going up against Soviet era MBTs and Hinds with heavy artillery backup, sounds pretty onesided to me. How about Serb deathcamps too, anything else you want to inform me on, you seem to think you know so much.
Here'e the difference between you and me, I don't think I know more then you, I know I know more then you.

But since the truth has already revealed itself to you, is there a point to this conversation?

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It's called a viewpoint, I don't care if you agree with me or not. And I'm sure as hell aren't going to be TOLD how to think by you or a government that doesn't give a damn about my rights or opinions anyway.
I didn't think I had told you how to think, I think I might have insinutaed you needed to some of your own though. If not, please do.
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Until the next election, that is one nice thing about living in a democracy.
Quoting Cobalt_Kid
I've got a lot of my information from CBC radio and TV news, they're much more credible than the government who only really seem to want to hide the reality of what's going on over there.


That explains everything.


Quoting Cobalt_Kid
Here yah go bear, why don't you tell me how I need to be proud of a military that's into this sort of behaviour.

http://www.geocities.com/~virtualtruth/soa.htm



The US militray has a long history of contempt for the rights of non-combatants going back to the erradication of the native Americans. I'm sorry to say that one of my ancestors who was half native himself participated in that. Or the Phillipines geurilla campaign where one US commander ordered that "all males over 12 are to be killed". Even in Korea there was little concern for the civilians. During the rapid advance by the north in 1950 US forces killed many fleeing Korean civilians for fear some were infiltrating communists. Or how about Vietnam where over 1 million civilians were killed as the US tried to prop up succeedingly more and more corrupt regimes, much in the same way it has tried in Iraq and Afghanistan.

And go ahead and accuse me of being anti-American, I don't care. My roots there go back to before the nation even existed on my white side and thousand of years on my native American side. I know it can be a better place, but not as long as the people who think they have the right to decide if others have the right to exist or not are allowed to lead. Like the US is doing now in Iraq and in Afghanistan with our help.

So blow your horn buddy, just stick it in your own ear next time not mine.
You might want to take a big old step closer to that horn, it might just wake ya up.

I think we're talking about Canada, in Afghanistan, not the US in South America, Vietnam or anywhere else for that matter.

Really though, this conversation is an exercise in futility, some people told you what to think, the left leaning MSM told you they were right and poof, here you are.

I see I'm out gunned by someone who thinks he thinks and therefore is.
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February 3rd, 2008, 09:02 AM

You aren't SERIOUSLY trying to defend Serb actions on the grounds that in the Balkans everyone has history of murdering everyone else are you CNDBear?

Regardless of who started it, the serbs were the one caught with their hand in the genocide jar. Maybe the Ethnic Albanians started it, who cares. Still not an excuse for death camps, if anything it solidifies that the nation needs to be carved into pieces if they can't play nice. Why are they even a nation? Why do you want to rule over someone you want to murder?
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February 3rd, 2008, 09:24 AM

Quoting Zzarchov
You aren't SERIOUSLY trying to defend Serb actions on the grounds that in the Balkans everyone has history of murdering everyone else are you CNDBear?
ABSOLUTELY NOT!!!!

My point is everybody seems to take a side and negates the evils of others, blinded by either the ilusions foisted by the MSM or some bent ideology.

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Regardless of who started it, the serbs were the one caught with their hand in the genocide jar. Maybe the Ethnic Albanians started it, who cares. Still not an excuse for death camps, if anything it solidifies that the nation needs to be carved into pieces if they can't play nice. Why are they even a nation? Why do you want to rule over someone you want to murder?
I agree.

Let me explain this to you, like is was explained to me by Zoran the Serb as he looked at his home razed by a fire set by his neighbours and once close friends...

"If I don't get along with, I don't kill you, I don't try to destroy you, I walk away. Why can't everybody do that, what did * I * do to them?"

Seems not all the Serbs wanted to taste blood.

Now, how about the other ugly that took place at that time that the world wanted to ignore. Romeo Dallaire is my personal hero. I shook his once and it still makes me cry.

Z, the world is filled with ugly. No one side is free of evil. The very people Cobalt defends, like the French played a huge role in what happend in Rwanda, yet they chose not to participate in Iraq. Big fricking deal. Oh how Saintly they are. That must surely obsolve them of their complicity to genocide.
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