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Invelos Forums->General: General Discussion |
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Why Liberals Just Lovve Obama |
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| Dan W | Registered: May 9, 2002 |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 980 |
| Posted: | | | | Snark,
I never suggested that gun control or leaving Iraq as soon as possible is the singular reason you choose to back Obama. I just said that if I believed the way you do, I would buy all the ammo I could get my hands on. | | | Dan | | | Last edited: by Dan W |
| Registered: June 3, 2007 | Posts: 333 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dan W: Quote: I never suggested that gun control or Iraq is the singular reason you choose to back Obama. I just said that if I believed the way you do, I would buy all the ammo I could get my hands on. Sorry Dan, I didn't mean to suggest that you saw it that way. I've been framing the discussion in terms of why I'm going the way I am. (So far, like I said I am open to change) And no matter who is elected, a big pile of ammo won't go amiss. It's going to be a rocky few years if we're lucky. |
| Registered: June 3, 2007 | Posts: 333 |
| Posted: | | | | And to make it clear, I am 100% for stomping terrorists into a greasy smear. But I do not, and have never thought that we could achieve a net win such that our effort would be paid off as a benefit to the US. No slight is intended to the troops (I love one of 'em) but the cost paid in terms of destabilizing the middleeast and loss of international stature in pushing the attack is unlikely to bear any positive dividends.
It's a question of how best to absorb the downside of this approach and to balance the books as best we can under the circumstances. |
| | Dan W | Registered: May 9, 2002 |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 980 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: And to make it clear, I am 100% for stomping terrorists into a greasy smear. But I do not, and have never thought that we could achieve a net win such that our effort would be paid off as a benefit to the US. No slight is intended to the troops (I love one of 'em) but the cost paid in terms of destabilizing the middleeast and loss of international stature in pushing the attack is unlikely to bear any positive dividends.
It's a question of how best to absorb the downside of this approach and to balance the books as best we can under the circumstances. Care to elaborate on that? | | | Dan |
| Registered: June 3, 2007 | Posts: 333 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dan W: Quote: Care to elaborate on that? Love to When the subject is terroism, the US has been hopelessly naive for years. With the huge stores of potential energy in planes, chemcals (fertilizer?), germ warfare, etc we need to deal with the reality that a few madmen can wreak disproportionate havok on the world. When the planes hit the towers I wasn't suprised. It had been tried before. (I don't have the cite in front of me but I can dig it up. During the Regan administration a man attempted to hijack a plane out of Baltimore with the intention of plowing it into the Whitehouse) As much as we might like a real enemy to fight against we don't have one here. This is not a country or even an organizd force. it's a bunch of loosely orgainized criminals. They should be ground into the dirt and their graves despoiled. BUT... Iraq had nothing to do with it. We went in under false pretenses (objectively) and destabilized the one secular regime in the area. It cost us money, international prestige and gave the enemy a recruiting banner. Binladen was looking for a way to drag the US into a war in the Middle East and Bush salivated when the bell rang. (Pavlov's president) Rather than run the crimiinals to ground he put the real mission aside to pursue a neo-con fantasy where we make a happy democracy and the neighbors go "Oh wow! Gotta get me one!" The middle east is not going to be a happy democracy anytime soon. That requires a population ready to accept the responsibility. It's not there yet. So for our troubles we've given alqueda a recruitment poster (we invaded without obvious provocation. Sure, you can make an argument that it was justifed, but to those in the country...? When the WMD evidence did not come out on our side...?)... we've given them a training ground (Saddam would NOT have tolerated this, despite being a blackhearted scumbag. His interest was in Iraq, not Islam)... we've squandered a great deal of international good will by virtue of being wrong about the WMDs... and to top it off, the goerment we're putting into place is sympathetic to Iran. It's simply NOT a winning proposition no matter how you spin it. We can't put the genie back into the bottle and should attempt to minimize our losses but this is not and never will be a "victory" scenario. Even when you grant credence to the curent administration and their "surge" strategy... It was a means to an end. To give room for political reconcilliation. And it ain't happening. In abundance. And the worst of it is that this quagmire is reducing the effective force that we can bring to bear on those acutallly responsible for 9/11. We cannot muster enough troops to deal with Afghanistn or Pakistan if necessary. We ABSOLUTELY need to take retaliation against those who harm the US, but we need to keep our efforts focussed. By allowing the degree of collarterall damage we have here (effectively a country) we only benefit the end goals of the terrorists. Binladen is a cave dweller. By pretending he is an enemy worthy of war we have conferred on him a stature he does not deserve. he's a criminal, end of story. By treating him like an actual threat we're helping to make him one. In todays world any creative individual has the ability to disproportionately cause havok. We need to cope with it, because it won't change. (think McVeigh... Did we declare war on Michigan? Or perhaps a better parallel would be Ohio) |
| | Dan W | Registered: May 9, 2002 |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 980 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: Quoting Dan W:
Quote: Care to elaborate on that?
Love to
When the subject is terroism, the US has been hopelessly naive for years. With the huge stores of potential energy in planes, chemcals (fertilizer?), germ warfare, etc we need to deal with the reality that a few madmen can wreak disproportionate havok on the world. When the planes hit the towers I wasn't suprised. It had been tried before. (I don't have the cite in front of me but I can dig it up. During the Regan administration a man attempted to hijack a plane out of Baltimore with the intention of plowing it into the Whitehouse)
As much as we might like a real enemy to fight against we don't have one here. This is not a country or even an organizd force. it's a bunch of loosely orgainized criminals. They should be ground into the dirt and their graves despoiled.
BUT...
Iraq had nothing to do with it. We went in under false pretenses (objectively) and destabilized the one secular regime in the area. It cost us money, international prestige and gave the enemy a recruiting banner.
Binladen was looking for a way to drag the US into a war in the Middle East and Bush salivated when the bell rang. (Pavlov's president) Rather than run the crimiinals to ground he put the real mission aside to pursue a neo-con fantasy where we make a happy democracy and the neighbors go "Oh wow! Gotta get me one!"
The middle east is not going to be a happy democracy anytime soon. That requires a population ready to accept the responsibility. It's not there yet.
So for our troubles we've given alqueda a recruitment poster (we invaded without obvious provocation. Sure, you can make an argument that it was justifed, but to those in the country...? When the WMD evidence did not come out on our side...?)... we've given them a training ground (Saddam would NOT have tolerated this, despite being a blackhearted scumbag. His interest was in Iraq, not Islam)... we've squandered a great deal of international good will by virtue of being wrong about the WMDs... and to top it off, the goerment we're putting into place is sympathetic to Iran.
It's simply NOT a winning proposition no matter how you spin it.
We can't put the genie back into the bottle and should attempt to minimize our losses but this is not and never will be a "victory" scenario.
Even when you grant credence to the curent administration and their "surge" strategy... It was a means to an end. To give room for political reconcilliation. And it ain't happening. In abundance.
And the worst of it is that this quagmire is reducing the effective force that we can bring to bear on those acutallly responsible for 9/11. We cannot muster enough troops to deal with Afghanistn or Pakistan if necessary.
We ABSOLUTELY need to take retaliation against those who harm the US, but we need to keep our efforts focussed. By allowing the degree of collarterall damage we have here (effectively a country) we only benefit the end goals of the terrorists.
Binladen is a cave dweller. By pretending he is an enemy worthy of war we have conferred on him a stature he does not deserve. he's a criminal, end of story. By treating him like an actual threat we're helping to make him one. In todays world any creative individual has the ability to disproportionately cause havok. We need to cope with it, because it won't change. (think McVeigh... Did we declare war on Michigan? Or perhaps a better parallel would be Ohio) Wow!!! I wish I could afford such a simplistic and rose-colored view of the situation. To be brief, I take issue with your comparison of Osama Bin Laden to Timothy McVeigh. While their tactics share a certain similarity (attack a large building to cause as many civilian casualties as possible) they are hardly in the same class. McVeigh did not have the political and financial support of any government. When a government supports the attack on the World Trade Center that government is a real enemy. Granted, Iraq and your “black-hearted scumbag”(Saddam Hussein) wasn’t that enemy but to say we have no “real” enemy is an astounding misrepresentation of facts. Hussein was a murdering dictator who killed thousands of his own people and overplayed his political hand due to a vast miscalculation of, “Dubya”. I’m very happy that Kim Jong-Il did not make the same mistake. You and Obama make the mistake of not relating Iraq to the current situation in the Middle East if you believe that leaving Iraq in the manner he proposes is the best method. Anyone who believes that the situation in Iraq is so isolated that you can abandon the mission there is overlooking the cultural similarities and diversity of the entire region. Clearly, Obama is your man. | | | Dan | | | Last edited: by Dan W |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting bbursiek: Quote: Rico,
There is not going to be a "smoking gun" here and no outright "proof" whatever that would constitute. The issue is what are Obama's true feelings about the US, Capitalism etc. and are they quite a bit different than what he's presenting. You say "guilt by association" - this is not a criminal trial where Obama is entitled to proof beyond a reasonable doubt this is an election to decide who will become leader of the most nation on earth during very trying times.
I say his past associations, friendships, and connections are very relevant to this election and whether he is who he says he is. The evidence presented in the article(s) isn't "conclusive" nor can it be realistically but it does raise questions about his radical past and whether the smooth talking seemingly moderate uniter he claims to be is a fraud.
Of course you are entitled to your own view of the material and I respect you for reading it and coming up with a thoughtful response. As I well know (and you pointed out) AIM has a spotty history but does that mean they are wrong or offbase 100% of the time? I don't think so...
Brian Excellent points, Brian. Consider also that the left has been trying for the last 18 months to dig up some dirt on McCain and has failed utterly. They tried to smear Sarah Palin with the vilest innuendo and failed utterly. The reason people keep after Obama and all these various accusations is that there is something there that he hasn't adequately answered, or nobody would keep dragging this junk up into the light of day. When even the Democrats are saying things that are less than complimentary about Obama, you have to wonder just what the truth is, and so far, they haven't offered any good explanations. | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: This is getting pretty funny. Even if we take the article at face value... so what?
He knew a socialist therefore he is one? That kind of logic doesn't pass the laugh test.
I've known a number of racists in my life... does that make me a racist?
As far as endorsements go... Anyone in politics is going to get an endorsement from someone they would rather have just kept their mouth shut. With our system being what it is, endorsements are not always given to someone who shares all your values but to the person who's values are less odious then the other guys. Sorry, but we're not talking about the odd whacko who endorses a candidate out of the blue. We're talking about 20 year associations in the case of Wright, and less than satisfactory answers as to why it took him so long to denounce the man's racism, anti-semitism, and blatant hatred of America. I don't give a damn how reluctant the media is to cover it, or that the Dems think we are persecuting Obama, it is still a legitimate question. If the situation were reversed, and it was McCain in the same situation, the hue and cry would be thunderous coming from the left and their media cronies. Anybody who can't see that is being less than honest with themselves, and that is being very charitable. | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
| Registered: June 3, 2007 | Posts: 333 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dan W: Quote: Wow!!! I wish I could afford such a simplistic and rose-colored view of the situation. To be brief, I take issue with your comparison of Osama Bin Laden to Timothy McVeigh. While their tactics share a certain similarity (attack a large building to cause as many civilian casualties as possible) they are hardly in the same class. McVeigh did not have the political and financial support of any government. When a government supports the attack on the World Trade Center that government is a real enemy. Granted, Iraq and your “black-hearted scumbag”(Saddam Hussein) wasn’t that enemy but to say we have no “real” enemy is an astounding misrepresentation of facts. Hussein was a murdering dictator who killed thousands of his own people and overplayed his political hand due to a vast miscalculation of, “Dubya”. I’m very happy that Kim Jong-Il did not make the same mistake.
You and Obama make the mistake of not relating Iraq to the current situation in the Middle East if you believe that leaving Iraq in the manner he proposes is the best method. Anyone who believes that the situation in Iraq is so isolated that you can abandon the mission there is overlooking the cultural similarities and diversity of the entire region.
Clearly, Obama is your man. Well Dan, I'm not going to spiral down into name calling. But I don't think it's it's a question of rose-colored vision as much as a rejection of the simplistic premisse that we can pretend that the sitution can be called as black or white. Whether McVeigh had the backing of a governemnt or not he was a clear illustration of the power of the deranged few to exert disproportionate harm on the many. I saw this (OK city and 9/11) coming long before it hit and frankly and distressed that my fellow citizens were not only suprised but gave these pathetic twits any form of stature. Binladen got a degree of support from a government, yeah. But we kicked them out of office when we hit the Talaban in Afghaniistan. Their support wasn't particularly relevent in any case. Learning to fly a plan into a building (With BOX CUTTERS) is up there with flopping a bike into the asphalt. No assistance needed. Given motivation, it's ALWAYS possible for the lunatic to harm the many. This is not a post 9/11 philosophy. I saw this coming long before hand. Unlike many I refuse to be afraid. The reality is that if al-queda and friends disappeared tonight the threat would remaiin. As long as the potential exists, someone will exploit it. Anything else is fantasy. (Admittedly I'm cherry picking you're response at this point. it's late) Going back to your Iraq argument ("You and Obama make the mistake of not relating Iraq to the current situation in the Middle East if you believe that leaving Iraq in the manner he proposes is the best method.")... I don't believe Obama's withdrawl plan is the best. The next president is going to pick up a losing hand (overall) and I don't think anyone can spin this into a victory. Hussien was a scumbag, but world wide he was a piker. Anyone can make an argument that as a scumbag (avoiding the filter) he should be removed. But that's a particularly democratic argument and on the list he was several scumbags down. I have yet to hear of an argument that supports the current US action. The problem is that we're down to a small set of bad options. If we didn't mess this up to begin with it would not be an issue. But here we are. The current "situation" in the middle east did not exist in Iraq prior to our invasion. And yeah, Hussein is a scumbag. So what? As far as scumbags go he's a piker. if we're going to go after arguments along that line he doens't merit a blip on the schedule. We've got countries promoting genocide in africa and they present the same threat (didly squat) In any case, the Iraqis have made iit clear they want us out. So we can play our weak hand for what little we can get or not. The threat of terrorism will be with us for the rest of our lives. You can accept it or not. The question is will you let a few deranged lunatics dictate your life? Even peripherally? |
| Registered: June 3, 2007 | Posts: 333 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Rifter: Quote: Sorry, but we're not talking about the odd whacko who endorses a candidate out of the blue. We're talking about 20 year associations in the case of Wright, and less than satisfactory answers as to why it took him so long to denounce the man's racism, anti-semitism, and blatant hatred of America. I don't give a damn how reluctant the media is to cover it, or that the Dems think we are persecuting Obama, it is still a legitimate question. If the situation were reversed, and it was McCain in the same situation, the hue and cry would be thunderous coming from the left and their media cronies.
Anybody who can't see that is being less than honest with themselves, and that is being very charitable. Sorry Rifter, but if you read Wright's quote in context they're simply not as outrageog as the right would love to pretend. Do I subscrbe to them...? No. But if we're going to read them honestly it doesn't take much to bring our good friend google into play. |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 2,394 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting sugarjoe: Quote:
You can red arrow me as much as you like but this is by far the most stupidest post I have ever read in this forums. Don't be so quick to accuse people of giving red arrows. Because if you got any red arrows they weren't from me as I have given one. Well, that's not strictly true. I did give one once (to a person who voted no for a contribution because he thought the movie was bad -- the movie, not the contribution) and I took it back within 5 minutes. Although I strongly disagree with just about every word you posted, I don't see a single one of them as warranting a red arrow. I can't speak for everyone else, however. I got a red arrow on my original post, too. Was that from you? Are you accusing me of retaliation? But, yes I can read, and if you think what I sais was the most stupid post you have ever read in these forums you only prove my point abut refusing to accept evidence when it is presented to you. And you want to talk about "stupid" posts! Sheesh! Quote: Can you read? Can you understand? Of course I can read and understand. Sometimes I can't spell correctly, but reading comprehension isn't one of my inadequacies. I'm not sure you can say the same for yourself, however. Quote: I did (1), but (2) and (3) never happened. Are you dreaming? Are you high? I am not dreaming, I am not high and they most certainly did happen. That's precisely the point I was making. You demand proof, but when it's given you claim "it never happened." That's a convenient way to avoid having to deal with things. But if that makes you feel better, go ahead and think so. You are only confirming what I said about refusing to accept proof when it is presented. | | | Another Ken (not Ken Cole) Badges? We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges. DVD Profiler user since June 15, 2001 | | | Last edited: by kdh1949 |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: Quoting skipnet50:
Quote: I can only right now make one comment, Snark. While I understand what you are saying about the courts. I apply a totally different standard. We have something called the Constitution and it is the Courts job to interpret that document, NOT to legislate and create rights out of whole cloth for anyone which are not there, and in many cases cannot even be interpreted to be there...but that too is whole nuther story.
Snark, I am not worried about you having a membership in the thought police, you and have agreed and disagreed many times over the years and i always enjoy a discussion with you.
BTW, Let me repeat, I am no fan of John McCain, he was not my first or my second choice, BUT I believe him to be preferable to the alternative. You haven't lived until you have been the target of John's temper, but when all is said and done he listens, he may not agree but he listens.
Skip
Well Skip, the problem is that both sides legislate and create rights out of whole cloth. The right has made a cottage industry out of their "activist judge" story but both sides are guilty in this. (An "activist judge" is someone who disagrees with the speaker)
For my part a huge temper is a serious reason to disqualify a cantidate. Some of McCain's behavior has been reprehensibe when his dander is up. With Obama at least I believe that he'll think things through before making a decision.
I have no confidence that either will come to the right one at the end, but angry decisions are almost NEVER right. Sometimes when thought through you get to the right decision, even if for the wrong reasons. Sorry, but the standard by which the right views judicial appointments is that of strict constructionism; that is that the judge interprets the Constitution in the strictest possible way when applying the law. To the left, that is viewed as "activisim" by conservatives. Tain't no such thing. Democrats, on the other hand, are fond of finding penumbras within the Constitution, of calling it "a living document," whatever the hell that is supposed to mean. What it boils down to, is that the Constitution laid down certain criteria for making changes to that document, and it did not give judges the ability to "create" new rights or legal precedents from it out of whole cloth. | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: Quoting skipnet50:
Quote: I have known John, for many years now, I have seen him get angry, I have been the target of his anger, one thing I can state factually and with no equivocation, I have NEVER seen him make a decision in anger or based on anger. I would guess that John and i agree only about 50 to 60% of the time, which I consider low. I agree with myself 97% of the time and you should my arguments with myself, whew.
I have learned far more than i care to know about Senator Obama, I have even read his wife's thesis while she was at Princeton. I can only say that they scare the bejesus out of me, more so than anyone that i have ever seen run for the office. In some respects he reminds me of Jimmy Carter, for whom I voted as young man, much to my chagrin, the difference between them is that I VIEWED (past Tense) Carter as an honest man, I can't say the same for Obama. Carter does hsare one trait with obama, in retrospect, I think while he was an honorable decent man, he simply did not have the cojones to be President. You step in that office you better have a pair.
I can't support any candidate for the Office that believes the collective is the answer.
Skip
Well Skip, I have read Obama's book and I didn't take away the same message you did. I don't think he's a classic Marxist, and if he was, I don't think there's any possibility that he get to implement those ideals. And if he was able to garner the support to do so... we DO live in a democracy... right? :
As far as McCain making decisions in anger... His outbursts have been well dolcumented for a long period time prior to this run for office. Enough so that I have serious concerns. Whether HE makes decisions in anger if he loses it in a disucssion with other leaders he might not get the luxury of choice.
Can you honestly look at his campaign to date and say that he has leadership qualities? He's been all over the map and I can't imagine that his presidency would be much different. And what exactly has Obama put forth beyond platitudes and vague promises of "change." Why is it that nearly every major economist has expressed reservations about his proposals for the economy, particularly in the wake of the market meltdown? And even among them, many are saying that his proposals would likely push us over the edge into a full blown depression. Obama hasn't answered the questions put to him about details for his so-called agenda. The numbers simply don't add up. | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dan W: Quote: Quoting Snark:
Quote: Quoting Dan W:
Quote: Your statement implies that you have seen McCain make decisions in anger. Which ones?
Heya Dan,
His temper is fairly well documented at this point. There's enough evidence in that direction that I have no serious reason to doubt that it's an issue and his current behavior (look at the last debate performance) is surely in line with what's been reported.
I can identify with that. I have one hell of a temper as well. But I have the luxury of waiting till the next day before dealing with most of the situations that anger me. The president doesn't necissarily get that chance.
And as I said to Skip... given his campaign... does he really appear to have the leadership qualities or the temperment necessary for the job?
On some level I would be more confortable with somene I disagree with that is reasoned in their approach than someone with my values who acts without considering consequences...
"The road to hell..." etc I guess temperament is as good a reason as many I have heard for voting against someone. Especially when that decision is based on one's own experiences with one's self. Personally, I have never know McCain to act without considering the consequences and I believe any review of his record will reflect my belief in this matter.
I will say that I feel I'm likely to buy larger amounts of ammo in the near future than I normally pruchase. You, too, eh? | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
| | Dan W | Registered: May 9, 2002 |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 980 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Snark: Quote: Quoting Dan W:
Quote: Wow!!! I wish I could afford such a simplistic and rose-colored view of the situation. To be brief, I take issue with your comparison of Osama Bin Laden to Timothy McVeigh. While their tactics share a certain similarity (attack a large building to cause as many civilian casualties as possible) they are hardly in the same class. McVeigh did not have the political and financial support of any government. When a government supports the attack on the World Trade Center that government is a real enemy. Granted, Iraq and your “black-hearted scumbag”(Saddam Hussein) wasn’t that enemy but to say we have no “real” enemy is an astounding misrepresentation of facts. Hussein was a murdering dictator who killed thousands of his own people and overplayed his political hand due to a vast miscalculation of, “Dubya”. I’m very happy that Kim Jong-Il did not make the same mistake.
You and Obama make the mistake of not relating Iraq to the current situation in the Middle East if you believe that leaving Iraq in the manner he proposes is the best method. Anyone who believes that the situation in Iraq is so isolated that you can abandon the mission there is overlooking the cultural similarities and diversity of the entire region.
Clearly, Obama is your man.
Well Dan, I'm not going to spiral down into name calling. But I don't think it's it's a question of rose-colored vision as much as a rejection of the simplistic premisse that we can pretend that the sitution can be called as black or white.
Whether McVeigh had the backing of a governemnt or not he was a clear illustration of the power of the deranged few to exert disproportionate harm on the many. I saw this (OK city and 9/11) coming long before it hit and frankly and distressed that my fellow citizens were not only suprised but gave these pathetic twits any form of stature.
Binladen got a degree of support from a government, yeah. But we kicked them out of office when we hit the Talaban in Afghaniistan. Their support wasn't particularly relevent in any case. Learning to fly a plan into a building (With BOX CUTTERS) is up there with flopping a bike into the asphalt. No assistance needed. Given motivation, it's ALWAYS possible for the lunatic to harm the many.
This is not a post 9/11 philosophy. I saw this coming long before hand. Unlike many I refuse to be afraid. The reality is that if al-queda and friends disappeared tonight the threat would remaiin. As long as the potential exists, someone will exploit it. Anything else is fantasy.
(Admittedly I'm cherry picking you're response at this point. it's late)
Going back to your Iraq argument ("You and Obama make the mistake of not relating Iraq to the current situation in the Middle East if you believe that leaving Iraq in the manner he proposes is the best method.")...
I don't believe Obama's withdrawl plan is the best. The next president is going to pick up a losing hand (overall) and I don't think anyone can spin this into a victory. Hussien was a scumbag, but world wide he was a piker. Anyone can make an argument that as a scumbag (avoiding the filter) he should be removed. But that's a particularly democratic argument and on the list he was several scumbags down. I have yet to hear of an argument that supports the current US action.
The problem is that we're down to a small set of bad options. If we didn't mess this up to begin with it would not be an issue. But here we are. The current "situation" in the middle east did not exist in Iraq prior to our invasion. And yeah, Hussein is a scumbag. So what?
As far as scumbags go he's a piker. if we're going to go after arguments along that line he doens't merit a blip on the schedule. We've got countries promoting genocide in africa and they present the same threat (didly squat)
In any case, the Iraqis have made iit clear they want us out. So we can play our weak hand for what little we can get or not.
The threat of terrorism will be with us for the rest of our lives. You can accept it or not. The question is will you let a few deranged lunatics dictate your life? Even peripherally? I’m glad you don’t wish to resort to name-calling. I haven’t and I don’t take kindly to it. Of course if you are implying that I have, the implication is unwarranted. You said that you do not believe Obama’s exit strategy is the best method. Do you believe he will alter his plan once he is in office or that he will change his mind? McCain has an exit strategy that does not include a pre-determined time line. Are you saying that a time line is more important to you than an effective exit strategy? How does an immediate exit strategy exploit our “weak hand” for our best interests? You seem to feel that having “a big pile of ammo” on hand is a prudent thing. I agree that the realities of terrorism are with us to stay but I don’t subscribe to the idea that combating them in our streets is inevitable. If you do, how can you support a man who’s voting record and policies would take your handguns and almost all of your ammo? Sorry, I’m not following your logic. | | | Dan |
| | Dan W | Registered: May 9, 2002 |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 980 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Rifter: Quote: Quoting Dan W:
Quote: Quoting Snark:
Quote: Quoting Dan W:
Quote: Your statement implies that you have seen McCain make decisions in anger. Which ones?
Heya Dan,
His temper is fairly well documented at this point. There's enough evidence in that direction that I have no serious reason to doubt that it's an issue and his current behavior (look at the last debate performance) is surely in line with what's been reported.
I can identify with that. I have one hell of a temper as well. But I have the luxury of waiting till the next day before dealing with most of the situations that anger me. The president doesn't necissarily get that chance.
And as I said to Skip... given his campaign... does he really appear to have the leadership qualities or the temperment necessary for the job?
On some level I would be more confortable with somene I disagree with that is reasoned in their approach than someone with my values who acts without considering consequences...
"The road to hell..." etc I guess temperament is as good a reason as many I have heard for voting against someone. Especially when that decision is based on one's own experiences with one's self. Personally, I have never know McCain to act without considering the consequences and I believe any review of his record will reflect my belief in this matter.
I will say that I feel I'm likely to buy larger amounts of ammo in the near future than I normally pruchase.
You, too, eh? I hate to say it but if we go by what Obama has done rather than what he says he will do, he will make every effort to take our handguns and our ammo from us. | | | Dan |
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Invelos Forums->General: General Discussion |
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