Muhammad Cartoon Controversy (1 Viewer)

Not-That-Bright

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Whats so unique about the Iraqi fascist regime? There are many worse ones around the world. The media has painted the Iraqi people and its dictatorship in such a way as to justify the war, but I think youll find poverty, education, life expectancy etc. were all much higher in Iraq than in many Aftrican and south American nations. And yet, I dont hear you calling for US military occupation of those nations? Why is that?
Personally I do support a world-wide military/economic effort to help these nations.

Just think logically about this for a second, ideology aside. Why would the US spend more then 50% of their total fiscal spending, amounting to billions of dollars a day on a war where they have nothing to gain themselves? It just doesnt make sense. Especially in the context of US hegemony and imperialistic tendences post world war II throughout the Americas and the Middle East.
Are there positives however to the US having more control of middle-eastern oil if you are a westerner? Can I ask why if you're living in the US you should be upset about the US using such tactics to secure their future?
 
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davin

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And yet, what you fail to recognise is that Iraq and Afghanistan would be peaceful nations if it werent for US foreign policy. As such it cannot be asserted that either of the two countries are any less peaceful than the US. I think you will also find that many western nations would still be fighting over territory if it werent for a backlash from the populace. Remember who the most imperial nations of the 20th century were. The US and Britain.
yes why was iraq like that in the first place, it was because of america,
I think youll find the central reasonm has less to do with Saddam Hussein and more to do with protecting the interests of the Israeli state and, of course, oil.
i) Iraq had no weapons of mass-destruction or the capability to create them.
ii) The US attacking Afghanistan and Iraq has, in fact, further proliferated arms in many nations. I mean, why wouldnt you want to arm yourself after seeing the examples of Iraq and Afghanistan. Non-UN backed. Pre-emptive. Etc.
regarding iraq...first of all, saddam was executing hundreds of thousands and there was genocide. how is that peaceful, exactly?
and if the point of Iraq was oil, then why is America getting NO BENEFIT of oil? prices for gas have increased significantly.

Here's why the U.S. went into Iraq... (and i'll say now...bush handled much of this horribly)
After 9/11, the threat from terrorism has been focused on. it was very clear groups like al-queda would be looking for more ways to attack the u.s., and a weapon of mass destruction, be it biological, chemical, or nuclear would be a clear next step up. At that point there were some regimes that very likly might turn a nuke or some other WMD over to terrorists...North Korea is unpredictable and was threatening the U.S. with nukes at that point in time, and Saddam has had weapons of mass destruction in the past, wanted them again soon, and has a history of supporting terrorism.
Of course, the door was still open to get rid of Saddam. The Gulf War never officialy ended, and on top of that, Saddam was very clearly defying the UN, with weapons inspections that should have taken a few months being stretched into taking years due to non-compliance. Plus, by getting rid of Saddam, the message was able to be sent "don't mess with us, or you will regret it"
Saddam was removed, and the country now has been having elections, which i think everyone can agree is very good for te future of the country, because they've got control. I agree that there's some other stuff in there that isn't good...just that going from no elections to elections is good. Now, beyond that, North Korea sort of shut up about having nukes and Libya TURNED OVER a weapons program that they'd been denying they had. When the Cedar revolution happened in Lebanon, Syria pulled out troops. Syria's normal plan was to level a town prior to that.
It created a fear, to some level, that if you look like you're working with terrorism or oppressing people and generally becoming a threatening country, then the U.S. will make you regret it. The U.N. has refused to act, so some countries have opted to instead.


and to add, i was VERY opposed to the war as of 2003 because I wanted more honesty from Bush about reasons (or better reasons, one of the two) and I felt that there were better countries to focus on. Though I think removing Saddam is a very good thing. However, now that there are forces in there, the focus should be on repairing the country so its self-sufficent...continuing to debate "IF" does nothing to help Iraqis, and simply pulling out troops before the infrastructure is ready will just leave the country to be controlled by terrorists. A unified front to get rid of the terrorists in Iraq means that foreign forces are out of Iraq sooner as well.
 
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lala2

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I say that the cartoonist had a point. But I also say that the Muslims had a point. It's really hard to say.
 

absolution*

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Not-That-Bright said:
It seems to me the only option is to leave the country to have democratic elections and vote in some theocratic government that'll probably end up being worse than saddam.
Well it wouldnt serve in US interests to solve the problem. But i would implement a majoritative-based two-tier system of government where there is no majority and the numbers reflected the population. That would be true "democracy". Although, I would also implement a collectivised, socialist based, re-working of export trade and production. That wouldnt be so democratic. Why? Because its not neo-liberal. And we all know that you have to be neo-liberal to be democratic. *spits*
 

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Not-That-Bright said:
Personally I do support a world-wide military/economic effort to help these nations.

Are there positives however to the US having more control of middle-eastern oil if you are a westerner?
1) Would you like to justify your stance. Recognise that it doesnt mean a whole lot otherwise.

2) I dont think there are advantages to the US having more control over anything. Hegemony and monopoly are completely anti-capalist economic mores and would lead to total and utter economic depravity.
 

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ymyum
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davin said:
regarding iraq...first of all, saddam was executing hundreds of thousands and there was genocide. how is that peaceful, exactly?
and if the point of Iraq was oil, then why is America getting NO BENEFIT of oil? prices for gas have increased significantly.

Here's why the U.S. went into Iraq... (and i'll say now...bush handled much of this horribly)
After 9/11, the threat from terrorism has been focused on. it was very clear groups like al-queda would be looking for more ways to attack the u.s., and a weapon of mass destruction, be it biological, chemical, or nuclear would be a clear next step up. At that point there were some regimes that very likly might turn a nuke or some other WMD over to terrorists...North Korea is unpredictable and was threatening the U.S. with nukes at that point in time, and Saddam has had weapons of mass destruction in the past, wanted them again soon, and has a history of supporting terrorism.
Of course, the door was still open to get rid of Saddam. The Gulf War never officialy ended, and on top of that, Saddam was very clearly defying the UN, with weapons inspections that should have taken a few months being stretched into taking years due to non-compliance. Plus, by getting rid of Saddam, the message was able to be sent "don't mess with us, or you will regret it"
Saddam was removed, and the country now has been having elections, which i think everyone can agree is very good for te future of the country, because they've got control. I agree that there's some other stuff in there that isn't good...just that going from no elections to elections is good. Now, beyond that, North Korea sort of shut up about having nukes and Libya TURNED OVER a weapons program that they'd been denying they had. When the Cedar revolution happened in Lebanon, Syria pulled out troops. Syria's normal plan was to level a town prior to that.
It created a fear, to some level, that if you look like you're working with terrorism or oppressing people and generally becoming a threatening country, then the U.S. will make you regret it. The U.N. has refused to act, so some countries have opted to instead.


and to add, i was VERY opposed to the war as of 2003 because I wanted more honesty from Bush about reasons (or better reasons, one of the two) and I felt that there were better countries to focus on. Though I think removing Saddam is a very good thing. However, now that there are forces in there, the focus should be on repairing the country so its self-sufficent...continuing to debate "IF" does nothing to help Iraqis, and simply pulling out troops before the infrastructure is ready will just leave the country to be controlled by terrorists. A unified front to get rid of the terrorists in Iraq means that foreign forces are out of Iraq sooner as well.

:wave:

Thanks for stopping by! Please come back when they let you out of the retard school for retards.

Ps. You watch too much tv. Go outside. Get some fresh air.
 

davin

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control over oil really doesn't make a difference in a commodity market. oil from anywhere is the same price.
 

Not-That-Bright

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1) Would you like to justify your stance. Recognise that it doesnt mean a whole lot otherwise.
Ok, without going into it to the point where I write an essay to attempt to justify my stance, I do believe there are problems around the world which can only be solved by military intervention against oppressive / murderous groups which are not serving the greater good of the populace. Alot of these problems have spawned through economic inequality which also would need to be eleviated.
 
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davin said:
control over oil really doesn't make a difference in a commodity market. oil from anywhere is the same price.
You are a fucking idiot. Control of oil means controlling supply and demand which means fluctuations in volumes and prices.
 

davin

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i watch about an hour a day....i've not watched news tv in years.
its more based on reading, reading from media there, reading from iraqis living in iraq, from soldiers serving in iraq, etc.
 

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davin, correct me if om wrong, but iran has now gotten more deadly than iraq was. at least saddam allowed weapon inspectors to search for the non-existent weapons. would we be able to predict bush entering iran from your thread? im asking you because you knew what you meant, whereas i dont, or not to your extent anyway.
 

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Not-That-Bright said:
Ok, without going into it I do believe there are problems around the world which can only be solved by military intervention against oppressive / murderous groups which are not serving the greater good of the populace. Alot of these problems have spawned through economic inequality which also would need to be eleviated.
But do you understand that the US government is no a charity case. It operates according to hegemonic and economic imperatives. There is no good will. Now surely, the flaw that leads to economic inequality cannot be solved via miliatry means, but rather, by a re-thinking of capitalism, neo-liberalism and globalisation of corporations.
 

Not-That-Bright

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absolution* said:
But do you understand that the US government is no a charity case. It operates according to hegemonic and economic imperatives. There is no good will. Now surely, the flaw that leads to economic inequality cannot be solved via miliatry means, but rather, by a re-thinking of capitalism, neo-liberalism and globalisation of corporations.
I don't mean that the flaw that leads to economic inequality can be solved by military means, I see them as somewhat two separate fronts to the same issue that are somewhat intertwined. What I am talking about with the military, is the need to protect whatever "re-thinking" takes place from those whom would attempt to stop it in africa and elsewhere for their own selfish purposes - as well as already established despots who are not willing to co-operate.
 

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You are a fucking idiot. Control of oil means controlling supply and demand which means fluctuations in volumes and prices.
yeah, but iraq alone isn't enough to really have a sizeable effect on that. heck, if america just wanted the oil, they could've supported saddam like france and russia did.

davin, correct me if om wrong, but iran has now gotten more deadly than iraq was. at least saddam allowed weapon inspectors to search for the non-existent weapons. would we be able to predict bush entering iran from your thread? im asking you because you knew what you meant, whereas i dont, or not to your extent anyway.
at this point, yeah...iran is concerning. of course, practically speaking, theres no way the u.s. will be putting many forces toward anything in any additional countries in near future. also, iran is different in that it does at least have a democratic framework, although its so heavily tied to a theocracy that its not functioning as one, really. however, it also is enough that iranians have more effect on the country's direction, as i've not heard of any mass killings coming out of iran of people taht don't support the gov't. hopfully with iran stuff gets worked out before it gets to the same level of iraq.

granted, right now, its very concerning about if iran will be getting nukes soon. and remember, saddam threw inspectors out, and really dind't comply.
 

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veterandoggy said:
davin, correct me if om wrong, but iran has now gotten more deadly than iraq was.
Iran has always been more deadly than Iraq. After the Iran and Iraq war and US military intervention in the early 90s, the Iraqi military was decimated and economically barren. You see, the way to wage war, is to only attack countries that you know you can defeat. Combined with an ultra-sophisticated propaganda exercise, of course. The longer war drags on the more dangerous it is for the aggressor. As such, the underhandedness and pompousity os the US has really come to bite them in the arse in underestimating the Iraqi resistance.
 

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Not-That-Bright said:
What I am talking about with the military, is the need to protect whatever "re-thinking" takes place from those whom would attempt to stop it in africa and elsewhere for their own selfish purposes - as well as already established despots who are not willing to co-operate.
Yes, but where is the motive for any nation to provide militairy assistance?
 

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absolution* said:
Iran has always been more deadly than Iraq. After the Iran and Iraq war and US military intervention in the early 90s, the Iraqi military was decimated and economically barren. You see, the way to wage war, is to only attack countries that you know you can defeat. Combined with an ultra-sophisticated propaganda exercise, of course. The longer war drags on the more dangerous it is for the aggressor. As such, the underhandedness and pompousity os the US has really come to bite them in the arse in underestimating the Iraqi resistance.
i agree completely, and i (along with many muslims and arabs no doubt) believe that iraq was just the first bite that bush will take into the middle east.
 

Not-That-Bright

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Good will? I think generally human beings are empathetic to other human beings by our very nature - you don't think they are so enough to militarily assist a country they know they'll never gain anything from?
 

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veterandoggy said:
i agree completely, and i (along with many muslims and arabs no doubt) believe that iraq was just the first bite that bush will take into the middle east.
there's no way he has the power to
 

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davin said:
yeah, but iraq alone isn't enough to really have a sizeable effect on that. heck, if america just wanted the oil, they could've supported saddam like france and russia did.

.
You are grossing underestimating:
i) The amount of oil in Iraq (2nd largest resource in the Arab world)
ii) Effectiveness of controlling supply and demand of oil

I mean, Hurricane Katrina boosted oil prices by $US 5-10 a barrel. And the US doesnt produce a balls twat of oil compared to the Arabs.
 

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