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Mr. President, Democratic Leadership: There Is No Such Thing as Iraq
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/9/13/214325/233
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Amen. |
So, the opposition has whipped The Daily Kos, and by extension, you.
:rotflol: Just another reason that pack of antidemocracy browneyed shit-pitchers shouldn't be given serious regard. They don't want us to win, and never did. So, a puppet regime centered around Basra and the mouth of the Euphrates, the strings being pulled by the mullahcracy in Teheran -- a good thing, on balance, or a bad thing? It does mean a major petroleum field controlled by unfriendlies, after all. How much of the world's petroleum do we want controlled by unfriendlies? |
...So what you're saying is that the whole piece is bullshit?
You, sir, are the REASON we're losing over there. Because you think this is yet another example of righteous america coming as the heroes. You probably agreed with the administration that they'd greet us as liberators, with parades in the street, rather than the occupying oppressors we are. Until you understand that, UG, we are doomed to defeat in Iraq. We've already lost the war; let's not lose the withdrawal too. |
We are not "occupying oppressors," and in that regard I know better than either you or Kos. Accept it, and you'll be saner than eighty percent or so of the Kos crowd.
Now how about the longer range outlook I'm mentioning and you're not, son? The Stateside opposition has wasted years looking and looking for some -- for any -- substitute for victory. For them our victory would be unconscionable. Fine: we should win, and these people with no faith in democracy should writhe in agonies of shame. They deserve that, and have worked diligently to get it, and they should have all that shame and more. No one's ever been able to justify the shameful ones' point of view. It's all just fascist sympathy. The Islamofascist opposition is banking on outlasting us. We should deny them any least hope of doing that, by scourging them over and over and over again until they no longer exist and can't generate any new ones. They have to be made discouraged, and I do not shrink at having to discourage them a lot, or for a couple of centuries. They have to be made discouraged, and it doesn't matter how much discouraging is needed. Simply attend to supplying the need. The antidemocracy, and therefore antihuman, fanaticism must be a way to a too-young death and a certain one. |
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The only outcome that will not end in wholesale genocide is american-facilitated partition and subsequent withdrawal. And that will still probably end in massive sectarian violence, as it did in India/Pakistan. Truly, now that we've broken it, there's nothing we can do to fix it except install a military dictatorship every bit as bad as saddam's.
What would you have us do, UG? Sit there in Iraq for another generation or two, until every single person that hates america for it gives up and dies of old age? Our staying doesn't help a single iraqi, and our leaving won't hurt a single american. There will be civil war, already is civil war, whether we stay or not. Our leaving won't change that. It may get worse, but it will happen either way. We need to look out for america's interest in this case, as much as I hate to say it. I have no love for america, no more than I have for every other place - but I'm still more pro-america than you are on this, UG. You want us to stay, to no positive end, spending countless dollars and ending the lives of many of america's finest men and women in uniform. We must leave, now. |
I'd like to point out, for the record, the few errors in the Kos blog. A) There are many Kurds that consider themselves Iraqi. They can be compared (amongst these Kurds) to Texans. They're very prideful of their own people, but that doesn't mean they want nothing to do with Iraq. That being said, there are plenty that would like their own country.
B) There are in fact multi-ethnic units in the Iraqi army, bunches of them. Everything I've seen or heard shows me that the Iraqi army functions pretty well (far better than they should, considering how we've "trained them"). The police force is swiss cheese, with a large number of units owing almost no loyalty to state, only to their tribe or militia (usually Jaysh al-Mahdi), but the army's pretty unaffected on the whole. Aside from that, most of the other things he wrote are true. Not that I agree with it's conclusion, or much of what Kos writes, I think he's inflammatory at best and doesn't do much good except preaching to the converted. And UG, which of the hundreds of groups that are vying for power, the majority of whom who could give two shits about the US, is the ominous 'Islamofascist enemy' that you keep referencing? This is one of the biggest mistakes you can make about this war. There is not one single enemy that can be defeated with firepower. If we want to be successful at our self-appointed job of nation building, then we'll need the military, but there is not some big enemy we can shoot at, there are almost a dozen major players, and hundreds of minor ones all vying for national or local power. They're not 'the Islamofascists' and they're not all terrorists, they're each trying to get their piece of the pie. Contrary to popular opinion, for most that pie has almost nothing to do with the US. |
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We will probably leave Iraq with a dictator.
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People, the overall necessary strategy is to reduce the number of Gap nations, evolving them into "seam" nations and in due course into the New Core -- or the Newer New Core if there is some necessity for partitioning degrees of globalization development to keep things straight in the observer's mind. The troubles for the Core nations (North America and Europe -- the developed nations), sayeth Thomas P.M. Barnett, will come from out of the Gap nations -- the largest swath of which are much of the Islamic world and the bulk of Africa, with South Africa being the notable exception, and I think some non-Gap pockets here and there like the environs of Mombasa, Kenya. He calls this the "Gap" because it's not at all well connected informationally nor economically with the global economy and the developing global culture. He speaks of the Old Core nations (as above) and the New Core nations (Russia, China, India, Brazil), these being the nations and economies that are strongly developing and unlikely to stop or be stopped in their growth and improvement. Part of the Gap's overall troubles are political -- there are just about no genuine democracies in it, just lousy governance that runs the gamut from autocracy to kleptocracy, and mixtures of these may be found in any one country. The symptoms of these undemocratic societies are pretty common and easily observed: unresponsive governments that take no interest whatsoever either in good stewardship or sound national economy, lack of secure property rights, scant education and what there is is often sex-specific -- men only, no public health, damned little public life, and all the rest of the ills the wealthier nations try to address with foreign aid and charitable work and works. You want less trouble in the world, you remove the political-cultural impediments to repairing all this, and one thing that means is devouring the terrorists, the fascists, and the obstructionists, alive or dead. Conversion of such troublemakers is to be preferred of course, and will happen in many cases -- but the ones immune to reason are not immune to the knife. This is all I ask. It's all I ever ask. Some jackanapes will tell me I'm a terrible person for asking it. I know what to think of those people. |
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...And can I get an amen for cognitive dissonance. There's that college edjukayshun. |
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Just an irrational one.
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Oh I think he's on a very high plane indeed. Very fucking high.
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I'd bang her nose crookeder. I loves me some verboten 'tang.
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When you behave like a fool and talk like a fool, I reserve the right to condescend to you. I prefer posters who are using all three digits of their IQ simultaneously and continuously. Buuut, help and salvation are at hand, in the Zen-like idea that a thing implies its opposite: if you don't like being condescended to (though I can think of one veteran poster who might, though perhaps subconsciously), what do you do? And is there any question as to whether you can do that?
Bruce in particular lacks grounds to say anything my moral plane, what with his altogether undue degree of fascist sympathy -- which he seems to be in denial about. See "Politics ad Absurdam," the last few pages. Quite, as I've said there too, the absurd position for someone of his solid understanding of human rights and liberties to take. He's got some of the fundamentals, but won't apply them to dealing with misgovernance, which is where the crying need is. |
Cognitive dissonance is a psychological term describing the uncomfortable tension that may result from having two conflicting thoughts at the same time, or from engaging in behavior that conflicts with one's beliefs, or from experiencing apparently conflicting phenomena.
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Cognitive dissonance? Oh that's what's wrong with Bush's face. I always notice there is something off about it and actually whenever I look at someones photo and they have 'that look' my stomach does a sick turn every time. |
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[edit: replaced nappy with diaper....] |
How tiresome it is to abuse the undeserving of abuse.
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It clearly pains you to do so... yet, somehow, you carry on.
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Me? I suppose you have some examples in mind -- I can't think of anyone undeserving that I would abuse. Not off the top of my head.
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Did you not comment "how tiresome it is to abuse the undeserving of abuse" ???
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We want you to be independant, but we have these "benchmarks" here that are mandatory.
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Exactly.
Yaaaayyyyy you voted your own government in so we can go now... waiiiit a min. we don't like these guys... (plus we have not secured this oil we came for) |
We stay until the vote is more powerful than the mobsters.
Oh, let me put that in a way you understand. We stay until the vote is more powerful than the mobsters, LOL!!! |
We don't do that here.
So it never ends I guess. |
What if they keep voting for mobsters?!
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In truth, the min. we secure the oil fields in western hands we are out of there, except for a perimeter around the oil district.
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If they throw out Blackwater, they've actually stood up. Then we should be able to blow the joint, yes?
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Zing!
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Not zing. Tw cannot zing me on his best day. He can, however, blather.
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The bottom line is this. Most of what comes out of Daily Kos is crap. They are a mouth piece for Soros and the Huffington assholes.
Given that, going into Iraq was a huge frigging mistake and I said so from day one to my wife as we sat in a food establishment on vacation as it went down. I was still on active duty. I remember distinctly telling my wife that they had better be sure that WMD's exist or we were going to lose a bunch of folks for no good reason. When we took the eye off the ball, Afghanistan, we began the slow spiral losing the game in the long run. We are stuck now. We have bought much of it with our blood. So here are the options, tell me what you would do: 1) Pull out, lock stock and barrel and accept the ascension of Iran into the Iraqi power struggle and impending genocide of the Suni by the Shia, and potentially the invasion of Kurdistan by the Turks and possibly the Iranians and potentially a separate genocide. 2) Stay and try to help keep the place stabilized losing more Americans in the mean time with no end in sight. All the while continuing to poor money into the pit of corruption of Iraqi officials and big business interests. |
Yeah, blackwater not only provides security for just about every civilian leader that goes to Iraq, but they do security on a large number of our civil projects, etc. No to mention how tight they are with the military because, well, they're 99% ex-military. Usually career types or SF.
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http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/9/19/18384/0637 |
there are thousands of users, and many many thousands of posts, at Daily Kos. It is impossible to make any kind of blanket statement about the posts there, except that they're of a progressive bent.
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And more importantly, how was his article received? His tip jar got more than twice as many downvotes as upvotes, and only four people recommended the diary. What point are you trying to make with that example? |
Daily Kos-crap is well know for it's positions on a host of subjects. The backers and supporters of the website are well known. It is far from non-partisan and neutral. I just call it like I see it. But let's not pretend it is something it is not.
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I didn't say it wasn't partisan. And you are pretending it's something it's not.
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On the topic of the original post,
Joe Biden and the Senate told them to divide Iraq in three and, as a result, today the Iraqi parliament meets to figure out how to best politely tell the US Senate to fuck off. Quote:
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The Maliki response is a surrogate response from the White House. There is no ongoing solution to Iraq. Even the White House does not want one. White House strategic objective: make sure "Mission Impossible" is not lost on George Jr's watch. At this point, the only hope Iraq may have for a settlement without overt civil war may simply be sovereignty of the provinces. However that can only happen if insurgent armies want it. The US can only obstruct solutions - not impose one. Kurdistan is all but separate from Iraq already. Only reason that Kurdistan is not a separate nation is the political cover afforded by a Baghdad government. The only way that Iraq can resolve their differences (aggravated and ignored by the mental midget) may be an overt and deadly civil war. But then nations often must suffer accordingly before any serious form of democracy can take hold. Not that any real democracy is even realistic. Bottom line point made by Biden - and on this he is 100% correct: Iraq must do something to resolve their problems or be completely abandoned. Currently we have no interest in forcing Iraq to do any solution. Currently, America's only agenda is to make sure "Mission Impossible" is not lost under George Jr's watch. George Jr's legacy is massively more important than a solution in Iraq or America's interests. Biden made the mistake of actually demanding a solution. Even the America public has deceived themselves so as to deny the quagmire. Notice then latest need for cash is not $60billion for the next few months. We must now authorize another $200billion in short term emergency spending for an unwinnable war that will already cost $1trillion. As long as the massive resulting recession will occur many years later, then Americans will do exactly what we did 30 years ago in Nam - when another president was concerned for his legacy at the expense of all Americans. Amazing how so many deny what is really the strategic objective: protect the legacy of George Jr. |
My definition of "sovereign nation" is...
http://cellar.org/2007/purplefinger.jpg ...it's what the people vote for. |
George W. Bush is clearly working on shrinking that Barnettian Gap, tw. Rumsfeld perhaps even more so, during his time in office. You yourself seem, I think, to consider shrinking the Gap a good thing in principle at least. Am I mistaken here?
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It's like we made a bigger, more violent, DC. |
@Undertoad: okay, what happens if the people vote to close down future democratic processes and move to a monarchy or theocracy?
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At that point it becomes an unrepresentative government. There are degrees of how representative a government is, and it would seem that this one becomes much less representative on day one, and slowly even less representative over time after that.
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If a non-representative government is the democratically achieved decision of a people, who are we to say they shouldn't have that form of government?
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At least the S Vietnamese government was protected by Vietnamese - not by Americans. At least the S Vietnamese government - president and parliament - did not hide out in American bases. But that too was an elected and American puppet government. This current Iraqi government gets respect because so many parties (the Kurds, al Sadr, some Sunnis, etc) need the central government as cover or as a channel to work with their otherwise adversaries. The only reason this Iraqi government can remain in existence is completely dependent on the largest military and financial power to protect and finance it. Today an Iraqi government official was burned in a car bombing. Who was his security, who extracted him from the burning car, and who arranged to have him flown safely back into the American green zone? Blackwater – paid for by the US government. This Iraqi government is independent of America? Hardly. |
We don't "have a say" D, but we treat the situation very differently before and after. It's a different situation for a leader who knows there is no end-of-term, and no power to be lost due to bad choices. Whole different chess game.
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*nods* fair point.
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