Harper is nothing but a total contradiction!

Said1

Hubba Hubba
Apr 18, 2005
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Das Kapital
All politicians are not the same Said1. I'm surprized, pleasently, that they all suck. I'd like to meet some of them.:lol: even conservatives


Are you arguing with moi?

But you're right. I always like Bryan Tobin, one of my favs. I had the pleasure of meeting Ed Broadbent several times, seemed like a nice enough guy. His press conference annoucing his retirement made me tear up a bit '
"I simply cannot continue in the future with all the work expected of an M.P. and meet my deeply felt obligations to the person who is the love of my life," he said at an emotional press conference in May 2005.' She didn't live to long after that.

I bet you'd like to meet our dear Bryan. Have a few drinks, find out where he stashes all that cash. It's GOT to be around the house somewheres.
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
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Are you arguing with moi?

But you're right. I always like Bryan Tobin, one of my favs.

I bet you'd like to meet our dear Bryan. Have a few drinks, find out where he stashes all that cash. It's GOT to be around the house somewheres.

I can't recall ever hearing Mr. Tobin add anything of value to any debate that he engaged in. From watching him on Report On Business Television's (Now BNN, I believe) Squeezeplay, I couldn't help but notice that he had a knack for stating the obvious. I never got much value from any of his comments, observations, or insights. But that's just me.

I notice he didn't last long at Magna either. Did he quit or get fired? He didn't appear to be terribly competent from my ignorant perspective. But then, what politician is?
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
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Backwater, Ontario.
All politicians who suck and do it well, are welcome at my house.

Problem is they try to suck and blow at the same time.

Through both sides of their mouths.

Quite fun to watch eh.

If it only didn't cost us so much to watch.

:reindeer:(ho ****ing ho)
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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I'm in no way demeaning the ideology of the mission, nor am I belittling the capability of our Canadian troops. I'm just looking at the big picture. And the big picture says, in my view, that a structured, disciplined, and law-limited military force cannot expect victory over a foe who shares none of these impediments. Yes, you heard it here first, structure, discipline, and the law are impediments in fighting the war on terrorism*. The irony is that our forces can never fight on a level playing field without jeopardising the entire reason for being there.
Actually...and with no offence, I made the mistake of stating that the 'war on terrorism' and specifically the conflict in Afghanistan is not going to be won while our Troops are handcuffed by the ROE or the QR&O, quite a while ago on this board.

It garnered me nothing but scorn and ridicule.

Apparently, violating the sanctity and civility of the arm chair 'generals' in this country, is not tolerated...lol.

Hey Worrior thank you for your deep analysis.
plain and simple it appears you love Harper his ideas and you would probably have your kids serve for him and if they die HAAAARPER will tell you that we will not pay or negociate the funeral costs.
A tad bit of a gross over exageration there eh???

Canada pays, what is a pitance of, but it does and will pay a set amount for the cost of internment.

Now, that's not to say the amount could not be redressed and increased. But your claim is highly inflamatory and smacks of blind ideology, as apposed to any factual context.
As for the enemy in North American there is foreign hate that has made North America their home and waiting for the perfect sucker punch day for supporting lies and deceit. And if you thing for a minunute this is not possable than boy, happy sweet Torry dreams....
Hmmm, you knock the CPoC and yet you make assertions that the enmey is inside the gates and by virtue of accepting that fact, is contray to the ideology of the left. Which you seem to embrace.

You seem full of contradictions yourself.
The anger and hate out there between the have and the have not around the world has grown to a height, I hope Canada will never face a 911 and your dissection of my non war liking only explains that you love Harper the German General. It's allowed!
"German General"???!!!

More blind ideology, I'll assume that you are using this label as an insult. Even though the tactics of many German Generals are tought in aclaimed institutions such as the RMC. Try reading about some of the German Generals that didn't agree with the homeoffice and were quite excellent military men. Just because one is the enemy, does not make them any less a man or someone to be respected. That's how you lose wars.
Scum Osama has an ax to grind and the sparks will hit Canada one day if we don't stop kissing Busses ass, like SS General Harper dose, while sacrificing bright young people on an unwindable stupid war.
Kissing Bush's ass???

How?

By living up to international obligation under NATO?

Read up a bit on the facts. You do your nic no service with such drivel.
;-) Merry Christmas my friend not Warrior may I sagest the name Warrior implies hostility, unless you are a member of the Osama group, ha hah just kiting. No pun intended through our deep emotional political interaction. I wish you well! ;-)
Umm, ya...Read up on the word.
Dark Beaver I never said anything about Hillier all I said was SS General Harper he looks and acts like a Nazi General, the sick part aboutit is that behind closed doors the common man is taking it up the ass with out being able to say yes or no, and as you know that sucks and instead of oppression we have severe suppresion.
Man...used loosely...take the blinders off, use reason and intellect and drop the name calling of people you obviously have misplaced issues with.

All politicians who suck and do it well, are welcome at my house.

Problem is they try to suck and blow at the same time.

Through both sides of their mouths.

Quite fun to watch eh.

If it only didn't cost us so much to watch.

:reindeer:(ho ****ing ho)
Now that's funny, sadly true though.
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
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Actually...and with no offence, I made the mistake of stating that the 'war on terrorism' and specifically the conflict in Afghanistan is not going to be won while our Troops are handcuffed by the ROE or the QR&O, quite a while ago on this board.

No offense taken.

Apparently, violating the sanctity and civility of the arm chair 'generals' in this country, is not tolerated...lol.

Huh? That line throws me for a loop. Particularly the trailing 'lol'. My experience has been that violating the sanctity and civility of the 'armchair general' is much tolerated and seemingly encouraged. I assume you were being sarcastic.
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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Has anyone, anywhere been entirely satisfied with any fork-tongued politician? Even you left-leaning free thinkers? I doubt it.

These elected politico-crooks are like the weather. They give us reason to yap and rant.

They're all pretty much the same. Some just leave more of a disagreeable aftertaste.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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No offense taken.
Cool...



Huh? That line throws me for a loop. Particularly the trailing 'lol'. My experience has been that violating the sanctity and civility of the 'armchair general' is much tolerated and seemingly encouraged. I assume you were being sarcastic.
Oh some of the folks about these parts don't see the difference between the cold hard facts of combat and the streets of Tdot.

Seems Troopers should be social workers and Police Officers as apposed to Soldiers.

Unfortunetly, the fog of war just won't let that happens and the old saying..."Shyte happens" is quite aprepeau for discussions on death of civilians in combat zones.

My orginal assertion on the Canadian Armed Forces ROE and the QR&O was that when fighting against a cowardly, un-uniformed militia. That not only uses human shields, but values the lives of those they claim to be fighting for, less then that of a dog, one can not bring to the fight the rules of the Marquis du Queensberry to the feild of combat. It gets good men, my brothers and friends, killed.

Those that bleat on endlessly "Bring our boys home"...are for all intents and purposes the same that cringe and wail at the colateral damage that takes place in areas of conflict.

Especially when our Troopers inflict it.

They demand greater restrictions, tighter ROE, and more leway given to the enemy. And by extention thereof, cause the death of Troopers.

You see, when you place greater restrictions and tighten the codes of conduct within the confines of a combat situation (Just for those of you that didn't get that, within the confines of combat!!!), you create an atmosphere of doubt and second guessing. Not only in the Troops, but in the higher levels of the chain of command, right up to and including the PMO.

The upper chain of command and the Gov't in general are to gun shy as it is. The added effect of 'armchair generals' and the loud whiners, only makes those with the power to do so, not do it so well.

Our Troops would be better served with greater air mobility, but allas, the powers that be are to afraid at the added cost of the mission and the amunition it would give the beeding hearts and second guessers.

The majority of deaths in Afghanistan are directly related to mobility and the fact that the majority are occuring on the return from battles, where our losses are nil, should give anyone with half a brain cell (which excludes the majority of all Gov't officials, and the whole of the left)a clue that the enemy knows not which way we are leaving, but the central location of our return. Thusly creating a tactical advantage for those willing to be patient and use any and all means to inflict damage.

These are the results of foot dragging, which is the result of second guessing ones policy and tactical choices, because of backlash on the homefront, from those that claim they know better and that they are for saving our Troops, more so then those of us that rail against them.

There is a game at foot that is well beyond the comprehention of the average 'armchair general', it would serve them well to learn more before further pediacal consumption.

The war is winable...the rules need to be changed to do so and those that would hold our Troops to some ideological candle, need to rethink what it is they spew.
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
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The war is winable...the rules need to be changed to do so and those that would hold our Troops to some ideological candle, need to rethink what it is they spew.

The war is not winnable by my best estimation. And it certainly is a war of ideology. We weren't "attacked", if you will. We were not responding to a real, or even imagined, threat. We began the effort by being the agressors. You cannot defend such an action without some form of ideology... Some sense that a greater good is beng served.

Ironically, the people you are fighting are unwilling to deny the ideology of the war. And because of this, your enemy is winning support and their supporters are unswayed by western propaganda and justifications.

Using Al Qaeda as an example, it is easy to use political propaganda and western ideology to cast Osama Bin Laden and his followers into a bad light here in the west. In Pakistan, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, etcetera, it is much more difficult and all but impossible to do likewise. The reason, of course, being that the peoples in those countries know the truth of Al Qaeda. There's a reason for Bin Laden's popularity in the Middle East.

I admire your optimism, but I really don't see this war as winnable. We really don't belong over there... And we're really not wanted over there. And you haven't any hope of ever changing that.
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
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Seems Troopers should be social workers and Police Officers as apposed to Soldiers.

You're right. Soldiers should not be social workers or police officers. Unless, of course, it's their job to be social workers and police officers. Which is part and parcel in a peacekeeping mission.

Unfortunetly, the fog of war just won't let that happens and the old saying..."Shyte happens" is quite aprepeau for discussions on death of civilians in combat zones.

Granted.

My orginal assertion on the Canadian Armed Forces ROE and the QR&O was that when fighting against a cowardly, un-uniformed militia.

Your description of your enemy is anything but true. For a person who is so adamnat about sticking to fact, you tend to deviate from the facts quite frequently.

The fact of the matter is that our soldiers face an enemy that is far fewer in number, far less armed, and exceedingly less equipped in terms of body armour, etcetera. To label them cowardly for refusing to stand up and say, "Here I am brave Canadian soldier with the big gun, body armour, and multi-national coalition... Here I am, an unarmed, undefended, patriotic defender of my own country... Shoot me without cause and show how brave you are," is absurd.

If our Canadian (Or American) forces were in the same circumstances, we would not be so quick to apply such demeaning and false allegations against them. And we wonder why the 'Coalition of the Arrogant' aren't winning the 'hearts and minds' of the folk living in occupied territories.

Those that bleat on endlessly "Bring our boys home"...are for all intents and purposes the same that cringe and wail at the colateral damage that takes place in areas of conflict.

Let's not forget that our nations are the aggressors. We've invaded countries without cause... We've endeavoured to tell them that their way of life is wrong and that they should be more like us... We've denied them the means to adequately defend themselves and conduct themselves in a manner that we deem appropriate... We label them cowards for defending themselves in the only means available to them... And we expect them to throw down their arms, end their resistance, and concede that their country is no longer their country.

And to add insult to injury... We actually have the arrogance and eqo to think that we're actually going to succeed in convincing them that they really don't need or want their own country, values, and culture. :roll:

They demand greater restrictions, tighter ROE, and more leway given to the enemy. And by extention thereof, cause the death of Troopers.

So what do we do... Do we weaken the rules of engagement, declare countries like Iraq and Afghanistan lawless territories ushered into chaos as a result of their own doing? Do we give our invading forces the power and authority to engage in torture and other crimes against humanity? Do we create a fancy superlative to disguise what can only accurately be described as genocide? Or do we just acknowledge that we were wrong to have interfered in their affairs, concede that we probably provoked attacks like 9/11, and get out of their country?

You see, when you place greater restrictions and tighten the codes of conduct within the confines of a combat situation (Just for those of you that didn't get that, within the confines of combat!!!), you create an atmosphere of doubt and second guessing. Not only in the Troops, but in the higher levels of the chain of command, right up to and including the PMO.


But we're the aggressor. We went in there under the veil of bringing peace, democracy, and rule of law. We were met with heavy resistance and the war has dragged on for far longer than even World War II. We have had little to no success in winning the hearts and minds of the people we're allegedly there to help, and you seem to be suggesting that our troops be permitted to destroy whatever accomplishments we have made in the Middle East, and effectively become the people the propaganda says we are there to eradicate.

 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Has anyone, anywhere been entirely satisfied with any fork-tongued politician? Even you left-leaning free thinkers? I doubt it.

These elected politico-crooks are like the weather. They give us reason to yap and rant.

They're all pretty much the same. Some just leave more of a disagreeable aftertaste.

Yes I am 100% satisfied with Castro.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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The war is not winnable by my best estimation. And it certainly is a war of ideology. We weren't "attacked", if you will. We were not responding to a real, or even imagined, threat. We began the effort by being the agressors. You cannot defend such an action without some form of ideology... Some sense that a greater good is beng served.
I never said it wasn't a war of ideologies. In fact I've said the opposite everytime I've been asked. They see no problem running a country under the banner of Islam and where killing is a form of negotiation.

But there is one small detail that you've over looked...I'll touch on that when the appropriate time comes.

Ironically, the people you are fighting are unwilling to deny the ideology of the war. And because of this, your enemy is winning support and their supporters are unswayed by western propaganda and justifications.
No...they win support when reactionary western journalists think they're doing the world a favour as they blow the lid off the next big Abu Graeb story...wrong.

They gain support everytime a unit of insurgents uses a school to mount an attack and drastic measures must be taken and innocent children are killed. Great photo ops for the journalists that care more for ratings then the cause.

They gain support when they flick on the telly or the puter and point out to all that congregate around the only one in town...Look, even their own people, they're own politicians, say they are wrong.
Using Al Qaeda as an example, it is easy to use political propaganda and western ideology to cast Osama Bin Laden and his followers into a bad light here in the west. In Pakistan, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, etcetera, it is much more difficult and all but impossible to do likewise. The reason, of course, being that the peoples in those countries know the truth of Al Qaeda. There's a reason for Bin Laden's popularity in the Middle East.
I rarely speak of either anymore, I have very lil interest in either and they have become quite irelevant to the war in Afghanistan.
I admire your optimism, but I really don't see this war as winnable. We really don't belong over there... And we're really not wanted over there. And you haven't any hope of ever changing that.
Agian, I'll get to this in a minute.
You're right. Soldiers should not be social workers or police officers. Unless, of course, it's their job to be social workers and police officers.
But of course.

Which is part and parcel in a peacekeeping mission.
And take a good, hard, long look at the Soldiers in the wake of the Combat variety. Though there are combat operations ongoing, one can not rebuild while one is under fire. Speaking of absurdity.

Engineers, medics, Doctors, nurses, and so on.

These people can not work, when the Taliban hold the town.

Are you followin' me here?

Your description of your enemy is anything but true. For a person who is so adamnat about sticking to fact, you tend to deviate from the facts quite frequently.
Ummm, ya...

Since this is the first time you've pointed out what you percieve as 'deviating from fact', you'll have to excuse me, if I call BS.

Anyone...and I mean anyone, no matter what nation they serve, ours, theirs or US, if you use people...civilians, as human shields, you are snailshyte, pure cowardous.

That's not to say it isn't tactical geneous, look at the support the world gives the Hezbollah over lil babies they made sure ended up dead and on the 6 o'clock news. Pure tactical geneious.

The war on the homefront is raging and folks like yourself are the casualties. No offence.

I know, you think I'm brainwashed by the media and Gov't spin, but you'ld be wrong, you'ld be hard pressed to find a post where I agree with the Gov't in general. I just know better of the situation, the people involved and the intricacies of combat and of course the law pertaining to the whole of the situation. Most people just know how they feel and run with that. A lil research goes a long way.

The fact of the matter is that our soldiers face an enemy that is far fewer in number, far less armed, and exceedingly less equipped in terms of body armour, etcetera. To label them cowardly for refusing to stand up and say, "Here I am brave Canadian soldier with the big gun, body armour, and multi-national coalition... Here I am, an unarmed, undefended, patriotic defender of my own country... Shoot me without cause and show how brave you are," is absurd.
Ahhh, you see, you just assumed I ment one because of the other. You shouldn't make such assumptions. And for the record, before you accuse me, I have a great deal more respect for those that dawn their nations uniform, then that of the 'insurgent', which is just a negative spin word that means the same as 'freedom fighter'. But and I do mean BUT here, I have stated to many a folk here and elsewhere, that if you fail to give the enemy respect, you will lose. Just look back through the posts of mine in this thread, I made reference to WWII German officers. Though my Nation stood in opposition the the German machine, and they were the enemy, I still respect the men that performed their asigned duties with tactical knowhow.

Cowardous comes when you deviate from a military code and begin to use people as weapons, shields, fodder and no amount of grandstanding behind comments like "an enemy that is far fewer in number, far less armed, and exceedingly less equipped in terms of body armour," will change that fact. But then again, I was trained to be a 'civil' Soldier.

I know serveral men in Afghanistan, served with some, trained some, back when they were green as green can be, there is a reason we don't loose men in battles. We lose good men when cowards use roadside bombs and cars packed with kids as shields. Knowing we are less likely to or second guess, firing on a car full of kids...

While of course, they wouldn't hesitate to do so.

You following me here?
If our Canadian (Or American) forces were in the same circumstances, we would not be so quick to apply such demeaning and false allegations against them. And we wonder why the 'Coalition of the Arrogant' aren't winning the 'hearts and minds' of the folk living in occupied territories.
Speaking of deviating from the facts. First you make an assumption, then you just make stuff to bolster it?

From the stories and communications I heard from the feild, we are do quite well with the IP's of Afghanistan.
Let's not forget that our nations are the aggressors. We've invaded countries without cause... We've endeavoured to tell them that their way of life is wrong and that they should be more like us... We've denied them the means to adequately defend themselves and conduct themselves in a manner that we deem appropriate... We label them cowards for defending themselves in the only means available to them... And we expect them to throw down their arms, end their resistance, and concede that their country is no longer their country.
OK, for the last time...here goes the explaination of an act of war, for those of you who obviously have no idea what you are talking about.

9/11...Had the planes hijacked by a terrorist organisation been directed solely at and hit solely, civilian targets, it can and could only be considered an act of terrorism. A nation would have had to be complicit to make it an act of war. Remember that. Especially the word "complicit".

The fact that the Pentagon was targeted, a military installation, makes it a bonified act of war, between the US and a the nation that launched the attack, again, a nation would have to be complicit to have war declared upon them in the aftermath.

The Nation of Afghanistan, knew of the organisation, harboured and protected it. Refused to allow the group to be taken into custody, acting as their protectoret. Thus acting as an accomplice.

Guess what that means?

Under the UN's definition of a failed state, and as Afghanistan is a signatory member of the UN since 19 November 1946 and well aware of UN regulations and international law, specifically pertaining to what is a 'failed state', and specifically the section that reads...

And I quote facts here.

Wiki said:
A state could be said to "succeed" if it maintains a monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force within its borders. When this is broken (e.g., through the dominant presence of warlords, militias, or terrorism), the very existence of the state becomes dubious, and the state becomes a failed state. The difficulty of determining whether a government maintains "a monopoly on the legitimate use of force" (which includes the problems of the definition of "legitimate") means it is not clear precisely when a state can be said to have "failed." This problem of legitimacy can be solved by understanding what Weber intended by it. Weber clearly explains that only the state has the means of production necessary for physical violence (politics as vocation). This means that the state does not require legitimacy for achieving monopoly on the means of violence (de facto) but will need one if it needs to use it (de jure).
The term is also used in the sense of a state that has been rendered ineffective (i.e., has nominal military/police control over its territory only in the sense of having no armed opposition groups directly challenging state authority; in short, the "no news is good news" approach) and is not able to enforce its laws uniformly because of high crime rates, extreme political corruption, an extensive informal market, impenetrable bureaucracy, judicial ineffectiveness, military interference in politics, cultural situations in which traditional leaders wield more power than the state over a certain area but do not compete with the state, or a number of other factors.

Please note the hilighted portions, all of which apply to the Talibans actions and their control over the state. Not to mention the evidence of 'indicators' which are easily accessed via the net, if you so choose to look them up.

Now, the Nation of Afghanistan did not actually attack the US, but it did and continued to allow "Traditional leaders" to thwart the intervention of justice, contrary to Afghanistans mandates as a UN member state. Thus being 'complicit' in an act of terrorism and by defacto complicit in an act of war.

Thus leading us to...The acts of NATO. (If you are not familiar with them, please feel free to look them up and the rules pertaining to the mandates thereof of NATO's signatory membership.) You attack one, you attack all. We, Canada, are a signatory NATO Member and thusly obligated to act accordingly.

A NATO Nation was attacked, the perpetrators acted with and by the protection and authority of the Gov't of Afghanistan. Thus the invasion of said nation, only after all 'reasonable' diplomatic means had been exhausted. Iraq is a totally different set of curcumsatnces that I really think was misguided, so I will not discuss them here, as they do not pertain to a Canadian perspective on the conflict in Afghanistan.
And to add insult to injury... We actually have the arrogance and eqo to think that we're actually going to succeed in convincing them that they really don't need or want their own country, values, and culture. :roll:
I actually agree, if that were our goal.

The Canadian Forces mandate under the UN's ISAF operation, is not to turn Afghanistan into a western style nation, but to return the nation to a 'sucessful' state. Run with a code of conduct that does not foster or bolster military activities beyond its borders in any other manner then self defence.

I have stated several times around this board and others, that to force western democracy on any nation is eronious at best. It is not for all. A nation should be allowed to choose it's own course and pick its own rule of law, without outside interference. So long as in doing so, it does not suborne terrorist or militia activities that directly affect other nations without provokation.

So what do we do... Do we weaken the rules of engagement, declare countries like Iraq and Afghanistan lawless territories ushered into chaos as a result of their own doing?
Again, I am not discussing Iraq.

Perhaps you are not aware of what the ROE or QR&O are.

These are the set rules of combat engagement that the Canadian Armed Forces ostencably fight and/or operate by and/or under, in combat.

Do not fire unless fired upon and what not.

My issue is with the use of human shields and the Guerilla tactics of our foes. It is one thing to stand and face off with a uniformed lorce, but it is an entirely different animal we hunt here.

It is far to complicated to fully explain in the character constraints of this boards filters, but sufice it to say, my ideas are ugly, but tactically sound. Sure, the loss of civilians will grow, but that battle would be won.

Are you aware that during WWII, the Dutch absolutely hated the Allied Forces?

They were quite happy with the Nazi trains running on time, minus the the 2000 Dutch per day sucoming to the ordinance of the Allied bombers.

Yet today, 60 plus years after the fact, the Dutch honour the Canadian Vetrans and war dead of WWII and the Canadian Armed Forces and people in general, moreso then our own nation. It is no lie, that a Canadian flag in Holland is worth more then the weight of its posessor, in gold.

Why do you think that is?

Does the word 'liberation' mean anything to you?

Even the indoctrinated can one day see the light, once the bombs stop falling.

Do we give our invading forces the power and authority to engage in torture and other crimes against humanity?
In certain situations, yes. But then again, you would have to have an understanding of what it measn to be in combat and what it means to be standing with your men in the thick of it.

Would it thoroughly disgust you to know that I would kill a child with very little hesitation, if my men or my mission were in jeapordy?

If it does, you're thinking like a civilian. Sometimes things are ugly, but the greater good demands us to run on instinct and do things that we wouldn't otherwise do or be something we are not. It is in how one goes on after the fact, that defines the honour in the action.

Ugly things should cause one to reflect, not rejoice.
Do we create a fancy superlative to disguise what can only accurately be described as genocide?
Again, I think your 'deviating' from facts here, if not reality.
Or do we just acknowledge that we were wrong to have interfered in their affairs, concede that we probably provoked attacks like 9/11, and get out of their country?
Though I would support the US's past 'Manifest Destiny' policy in the middle east as the sole cause of 9/11, I would hardly advocate the fact that it justified the acts of 9/11.

But since you 'went there', if the foriegn policy of the US was the likely cause of said events, then the policy of the Taliban and Al Qeada are the direct cause of the woes of Afghanistan today. You can have your cake and eat it to.

But we're the aggressor.
Sometime the best defence, is a wicked offence...lol. But you;ld be wrong at any rate. They drew first blood.We merely upheld our obligations and reacted to their actions.

We went in there under the veil of bringing peace, democracy, and rule of law.
Actually, no.. we didn't. We went in under the pretence of securing a pipeline route, everything else is just icing and spin.

We were met with heavy resistance and the war has dragged on for far longer than even World War II. We have had little to no success in winning the hearts and minds of the people we're allegedly there to help, and you seem to be suggesting that our troops be permitted to destroy whatever accomplishments we have made in the Middle East, and effectively become the people the propaganda says we are there to eradicate.
We were met by a battle hardend group, convinced they are holy warriors.

We have won the hearts and minds of those not steeped in the indoctrination of the fanatic extremists.

And no, I am not saying we should destroy what we have accomplished that you just said we haven't.

I'm saying that when in combat with a snake, one must become a snake. The Australians did it in Veitnam, with great success. It was only the bleeding hearts and the whiners back home that had them removed from combat operations in southeast asian.

Had they been allowed to stay, they would have won the war in that quaint lil piece of jungle real estate.
 
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darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Profit is the only justification capitalism requires, in fact nothing else matters, get the primer, The Little Bank That Could. Harpers got a bad case of Capitalitus, he's covered in investment boils.
 

Said1

Hubba Hubba
Apr 18, 2005
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Das Kapital
I can't recall ever hearing Mr. Tobin add anything of value to any debate that he engaged in. From watching him on Report On Business Television's (Now BNN, I believe) Squeezeplay, I couldn't help but notice that he had a knack for stating the obvious. I never got much value from any of his comments, observations, or insights. But that's just me.

I notice he didn't last long at Magna either. Did he quit or get fired? He didn't appear to be terribly competent from my ignorant perspective. But then, what politician is?


How come you can see my posts?
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
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How come you can see my posts?

Want the truth? I saw the reputation you gave me. I went looking for a post of yours so that I could give you some bad rep too. But I thought better of it and just posted a civil reply instead. :p
 

warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
415
2
18
They see no problem running a country under the banner of Islam and where killing is a form of negotiation.

Nor do we, if you do your research. Have you researched the tactics employed by the U.S. in the Middle East over the last half century? The western world has no qualms about killing as a form of negotiation. We've been doing it for decades. Why do you think these nations hate us so much?

No...they win support when reactionary western journalists think they're doing the world a favour as they blow the lid off the next big Abu Graeb story...wrong.

They gain support everytime a unit of insurgents uses a school to mount an attack and drastic measures must be taken and innocent children are killed. Great photo ops for the journalists that care more for ratings then the cause.

They gain support when they flick on the telly or the puter and point out to all that congregate around the only one in town...Look, even their own people, they're own politicians, say they are wrong.

Like I said, we're doing just as the people we're condemning. They do it because they don't want us screwing around with their politics, culture, values, and people. We do it because we want the oil. You're not going to convince me that we're on higher ground than organizations like Al Qaeda.

I rarely speak of either anymore, I have very lil interest in either and they have become quite irelevant to the war in Afghanistan.

I beg to differ. Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world. They're so poor in fact, that the World Bank doesn't even bother to estimate their GDP.

The CIA has estimated Afghanistan's GDP to be about $800 per capita. Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda have been a most benevolent and relevant benefactor in the economy of Afghanistan. He's said to have employed as many as 15,000 Afghani citizens. I fail to see the irrelevance here.


And take a good, hard, long look at the Soldiers in the wake of the Combat variety. Though there are combat operations ongoing, one can not rebuild while one is under fire. Speaking of absurdity.

One is under fire because one is not wanted there.


Anyone...and I mean anyone, no matter what nation they serve, ours, theirs or US, if you use people...civilians, as human shields, you are snailshyte, pure cowardous.

You apparently missed my point. The point is that their alternative is what? Unadulterated submission?

That's not to say it isn't tactical geneous, look at the support the world gives the Hezbollah over lil babies they made sure ended up dead and on the 6 o'clock news. Pure tactical geneious.

Fighting to survive is not tactical genius. It's kill or be killed. Under the circumstances, you do what you have to.


I know, you think I'm brainwashed by the media and Gov't spin, but you'ld be wrong, you'ld be hard pressed to find a post where I agree with the Gov't in general. I just know better of the situation, the people involved and the intricacies of combat and of course the law pertaining to the whole of the situation. Most people just know how they feel and run with that. A lil research goes a long way.

Enlighten me. I've never been to either of these countries. I've not spoken to these people. I've not witnessed the hell they're obviously living through. I've not attended the funerals of their lost friends and family members. I know only what I read on the Internet and see on television or in the newspapers. My eyes and ears are the media. I'm cognizant of the fact that they are not giving me the whole story, but a bit of the story is better than none of the story. Which is what you appear to be advocating.

Tell me, why do people in the Middle East hate western culture so much? Is it our capitalism? I don't think that's it. I think it's something else. What do you think that something else is?

...




I'll reply to the rest of your post later... It's quite long. ;-)
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,888
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We do it because we want the oil. You're not going to convince me that we're on higher ground than organizations like Al Qaeda. Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world.
Afghanistan doesn't have oil yet we are there. Perhaps you should move to Afghanistan or Iran, you obviously don't enjoy our way of life.
 
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warrior_won

Time Out
Nov 21, 2007
415
2
18
Afghanistan doesn't have oil yet we are their. Perhaps you should move to Afghanistan or Iran, you obviously don't enjoy our way of life.

Not that this should be dignified with a reply, but you're pretty much making the case for those you call your enemy. We are in Afghanistan because we do not want them to have "their way of life". We want them to have "our way of life."

We want Iran to have our way of life.
We want Iraq to have our way of life.
We want Afghanistan to have our way of life.
We want Saudi Arabia to have our way of life.
We want every country everywhere around the world to have our way of life.

And what do we say about them if they don't want our ideals, values, and culture imposed upon them? We say that they are anti-freedom. We call them the "axis of evil".

Funny thing of it is, they're not telling us how to live. They're just telling us to stop telling them how to live. And we take offense to that. We hold the view that we are justified in invading their countries, manipulating their politics, and killing their people, because.... Well, because they don't want to be the people we want them to be and do the things we want them to do.

Sounds to me like it is us who are anti-freedom... Not them!
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
Nor do we, if you do your research. Have you researched the tactics employed by the U.S. in the Middle East over the last half century? The western world has no qualms about killing as a form of negotiation. We've been doing it for decades. Why do you think these nations hate us so much?
I have no need to research the tactics of the US, I've been witness to them for the past 20 years. I did'nt disagree with your assessment on why the US is low in the polls in the ME.

But where yours and my views deviate is, I'm looking from the ground, you're looking at the top.

You're thinking about policy and such, while I'm all about the ground effect and how that pertains to minute by minute warfare.
Like I said, we're doing just as the people we're condemning.
The point you fail to see is, we do not and will not directly target civilians.

You see any major differences yet?

They do it because they don't want us screwing around with their politics, culture, values, and people.
Then they shouldn't have harboured criminals.

Seems pretty simple to me.

Now...Had the Taliban handed over the perpetrators, and the US lead NATO in anyways, I'ld be standing along side you.
We do it because we want the oil. You're not going to convince me that we're on higher ground than organizations like Al Qaeda.
I'm not trying to convince you otherwise.

I think we should be more like them and put less value on human life, so as to win this war by crushing every and all obstacles in our way.

I beg to differ. Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world. They're so poor in fact, that the World Bank doesn't even bother to estimate their GDP.
Your point?

I was poor once too, even opressed, but I didn't join a militant organisation and plot to kill civilians in other nations...I'm Native btw, and by your logic, it would seem to be ok for me and my people to launch terrorist attacks against the occupeirs of my homeland...non?
The CIA has estimated Afghanistan's GDP to be about $800 per capita. Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda have been a most benevolent and relevant benefactor in the economy of Afghanistan. He's said to have employed as many as 15,000 Afghani citizens. I fail to see the irrelevance here.
The CIA made Osama the leader he is, talk about an ungrateful bitch.

One is under fire because one is not wanted there.
Ummm, have you missed all the kidnappings of foriegn aid workers?

It does matter if you're there in peace and trying to assist, if you aren't just like them, you must die!

Ya pickin' up what I'm throwin' down here?

And please don't try and tell me, we are acting the same way, that is so far removed from reality, as to bring new meaning to the word absurd.

You apparently missed my point. The point is that their alternative is what? Unadulterated submission?
I think your ideology is blinding you to the facts.

Though I disagree with installing a form of Goverance that is not in accord with their way of life...Afghanis are running the nation, albeit they are puppets, but that is an opinion, not based on fact.

Fighting to survive is not tactical genius. It's kill or be killed. Under the circumstances, you do what you have to.
BS, Canadian Soldiers do not shot first and ask questions later. In this particular field of combat, their orders are to exhaust all measures of verbal or negotiated disarmament, if that is met with hostility, and that hostility must be from the barrel of a weapon, then they are allowed to use deadly force.

Enlighten me. I've never been to either of these countries. I've not spoken to these people. I've not witnessed the hell they're obviously living through. I've not attended the funerals of their lost friends and family members. I know only what I read on the Internet and see on television or in the newspapers. My eyes and ears are the media. I'm cognizant of the fact that they are not giving me the whole story, but a bit of the story is better than none of the story.
Mark Twain once said, and I quote...

Mark Twain said:
It has become a sarcastic proverb that a thing must be true if you saw it in a newspaper. That is the opinion intelligent people have of that lying vehicle in a nutshell. But the trouble is that the stupid people{And no, I am not calling you, nor insinuating that you are stupid, it's just the quote and the general influence of the media, on those not willing to dig deeper}--who constitute the grand overwhelming majority of this and all other nations--do believe and are moulded and convinced by what they get out of a newspaper, and there is where the harm lies.
- "License of the Press" speech

and...

Mark Twain said:
Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.
He also said something to the effect of...

"If you do not read the news, you are uninformed, if you read the news, you are misinformed'

I just can't find the exact quote at the moment.

And there lies the error of following media, without checks, balances and supporting documentation.

Which is what you appear to be advocating.
Actually, I would be advocating the exact opposite.
Tell me, why do people in the Middle East hate western culture so much?
Beyond political interference...

Our 'liberalism'.

Our 'secular' ideology.

The presence of 'infidels' on 'Muslim' land.

All of which are no justification for wholesale slaughter, nor the fanaticism that they(The extremists) espouse so viamently.

These are even confirmed by their own rantings, stating as such in their own words.

Is it our capitalism?
More what capitalism has done to them, then for them. Lets not forget that the west built the ME and that the Sultans of old were well on their way out when the west made them filthy rich again with oil money.

Again, talk about ungrateful pricks.

I don't think that's it. I think it's something else. What do you think that something else is?
I have no idea wht you are thinking, but I am quite interested to find out. I find your input stimulating and this converstation refreshingly mature.

Thank you.

I'll reply to the rest of your post later... It's quite long. ;-)
Yes, please do. I am sorry old chap, I do get a tad long winded at times.
 
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MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
4,612
63
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A difference in perspective

CdnBear:“But where yours and my views deviate is, I'm looking from the ground, you're looking at the top”
“The point you fail to see is, we do not and will not directly target civilians.”

“Then they shouldn't have harboured criminals.”


“I think we should be
more like them and put less value on human life, so as to win this war by crushing every and all obstacles in our way.”

“I was poor once too, even opressed, but I didn't join a militant organisation and plot to kill civilians in other nations...I'm Native btw, and by your logic, it would seem to be ok for me and my people to launch terrorist attacks against the occupeirs of my homeland...non?”


The arrival of Europeans to North and South America marked a major change in Native society. Millions died due to sickness, programs of slavery, and extermination. 4 Europeans and their Christian missionaries generally looked upon Native Spirituality as worthless superstition inspired by the Christian devil, Satan.
During the late 19th century and much of the 20th century, the Canadian and American governments goal for their Native populations was assimilation. Sometimes this is referred to contemptuously as "Making apples" -- changing the culture and religion of Native peoples so that they become "white" on the inside, even as their skin remained red. The goal was to force Natives to disappear within the larger, predominately white, society.

http://www.religioustolerance.org/sch_resid.htm


It certainly appears that this agenda was realized so far as CdnBear is concerned…

European values and European morality made all the difference to North American Indians… Now these pagan barbarians live in the lap of luxury enjoying the education wealth and prosperity of their conquerors….

Yeah listen to Bear…he knows….