the point of the war is to save more lifes than it expends, right?
look what I just found https://www.spikedhumor.com/articles/16266/YAAFM_12_Muslims.html... :O
So not right and so naive. I suggest you try reading a bit of Clausewitz.War is about expending the maximum amount of force, killing the most people, inflicting the most damage on another nation, aka "the enemy", in order to impose your will for the purpose of domination, wealth, power. Condoleeza Rice once used the quaint term "coercive diplomacy" to describe war. Clausewitz said it's diplomacy by another means.Get real and forget about the phoney altruism. War isn't about doing good. Anyone who thinks so is buying the tiredest propaganda line in the book.
but still, whatever the motives, the result is more important-if the war has saved more lives than it has expended, then it was a good thing.
How on earth has it saved lifes
ummm, by removing a blood thirsty despot...And ending the sanction regime that hurt Iraqis and left Saddam in control.
I'm starting to believe that the Americans hurt more Iraqis than Saddam :\ .
The US will withdraw before the next presidential elections.
The problem is, we didn't just "remove" him. One of the fallacies of the Bush administration is the illusion that you can just "remove" somebody, and there are no consequences. They DID think that they would remove Hussein, replace him somebody else, and things would just continue as though nothing had happened. Which, frankly, is one of the STUPIDEST and most delusional foreign policy moves EVER in the History of the United States. Everyone but THEM knew that deposing Saddam Hussein would have serious consequences. EVERYONE.We didn't "remove" him. It isn't like you had Saddam, and now you have NO Saddam and nothing else changes. We REPLACED Saddam Hussein with Al Qaeda, with Terrorists flooding the country, with Suicide Bombings, and with an oppressive theocracy and with incipient civil war. We also removed the ONLY check on Iran in the Middle East, and Iran was ALWAYS a bigger problem than Iraq. And now they have nuclear capability. And that is DIRECTLY related to the fact that Iraq - their enemy - has been completely destabilized.Saddam Hussein was an evil brutal dictator. But you could walk the streets in Iraq, bombs weren't going off right and left, and you didn't have fundamentalist Islam enforced by law.What does it say about OUR incompetence to say that Iraqis now appear to be WORSE off under US than they were under Saddam Hussein?I mean, how bad is THAT?
No, I don't think that they will. Bush's "plan" is to stay there until it's someone else's problem. And to declare that his political opponents have no plan.
Zheer, America doesn't rape and torture civilians.
Come on dont turn a blind eye, unless you find it too disturbing to deal with.
Or because I haven't seen any good evidence of widespread abuses.
I'd say that the fact that political opponents don't have to worry about having their wives and daughters being raped in front of them or worry about being fed through an industrial plastic shredder, is a good sign of improvement.
They have to worry about watching their wife and daughter get blown up in front of them, or beheaded.You had Saddam Hussein. Now you have Al Qaeda. Keep in mind that Zarqawi was NOT IN IRAQ before we invaded. We opened the borders, we left them unguarded, and the biggest scum on the planet came flooding in. Now Al Qauda has a beachhead in the Middle East that they didn't have before; they have a terrorist training ground that they didn't have before; they have a recruiting tool that they didn't have before. Bush has take the scum that caused 9/11 and made them stronger than ever.And really - democracy? They can sometimes cast a ballot. It makes no difference. It's lipstick on a pig. "Look - we voted" and things keep blowing up. No matter who they vote for, things keep blowing up.
Hmmm, i remember from a while back,this was on the news, that some iraqi detainees's were being "abused" by some americans troops.They were stripped nude then piled the iraqi men on top of eachother and then took pictures of it,quite disturbing.Also i remember they were put on leashes naked like dogs,and they took pics of that too.There was more stuff but i can't remember it.
That would be Abu Graib, but noe that I said widespread abuse. A couple squads of bored soldiers humiliating prisoners(humiliating not torturing) is not the same as saying that Americans are raping and torturing Iraqis.
Yes, not widespread, but i would have to disagree about the torture part.It may not be physical torture but i'd say mental torture.I say that because:your put on aleash with a bag over our head,what could going thru his mind,am i going to be strangled? And the part with being naked and piled with other men,thats very indescribable on how a person would feel. They will have those memories of what has been done to them forever,scared for life as to say.I think that is torture
Mental torture is just as destructive as physical torture. Maybe even more so.
Putting men in a naked pyramid is not mental torture.
You don't understand how it works. It is about systhematical humiliation, dehumanisation. A human is a social animal and the position it has in a group is very important. If the position and the role of a person is to be a prisoner that is to be humiliated then the person will be mentally destoyed.Also, those reservists have been told by people knowledgable in arabic culture what to do to them to humiliate them. Like you say, what's so bad about being a naked pyramid? Normal american people, or maybe rather the average reservist, wouldn't come up with the idea to humiliate people in such a way. But to an arab this is actually very humiliating; different culture. Normal people don't know this. Interrogation experts do.
Indeed
Humiliation=/=tortureIt's fun to watch all you guys point out the specks in the US's eyes and ignore all the logs in the eyes of despots.
There are things in life (such as freedom) that are worth dying for.
And stuffing the pockets of war profiteers and Bush's cronies isn't one of them.
It's not as simple as this. There are things in life (such as freedom) that are worth dying for.
Quite right. Japan and Germany are nothing alike. My point was that the argument is made that one cannot force democracy in Iraq and/or Afghanistan. And that this argument is countered with the cases of Germany and Japan. Just like Germany and Japan are nothing alike. So are Japan and Afghanistan/Iraq not alike. Actually even Iraq and Afghanistan differ.The japanese people, at least most of them, were willing to absorb western culture. Why this is exactly is still a mystery to me. But the attitude from the people in the middle east is way way different.As for Germany, I guess it only came to exist as it is now when Germany was united in 1990. What is now germany has existed in different countries and different feudal areas if you go back even further.I guess one can say the same thing about the US. First off, the US isn't a country like most countries. They are a unified group of states. The borders of the US have also changed. Part of Mexico has been annexed, Alaska has been bought. Hawai has been annexed. Philiphines has been annexed and given back. Oceania has been fought over against Japan. Etc etc. But all this is irrelevant for the point made, whoever made it I forgot. Surely Charlemange has his german empire, or rather holy roman empire , before the new world was officially discovered. But like Voltaire said: "The Holy Roman Empire is neither Holy, nor Roman, nor an Empire." So I guess you are right after all...
i wouldnt die for someone's freedom, because i wouldnt be around to feel the gratitude of those ive freed.
It's sickening to watch you indulge in the same old smear tactics where you claim that pointing out the wrongs done in the name of the United States is somehow "ignoring" the stuff done by by other people. That's transparent garbage and it fools nobody. Nobody is ignoring anything. But Al Qaeda is not claiming to act in my name or on my behalf. They don't represent ME. The United States DOES. And the actions of the United States reflect on ME. And I never thought I would see the day when THIS COUNTRY would defend the torture of prisoners, and when our ATTORNEY GENERAL publicly tried to claim that that the Geneva Conventions were "quaint." I don't what YOU were taught, but I was taught that that sort of heinous crap was done by our ENEMIES, and that was WHY they were our enemies.I don't "IGNORE" atrocities done by others.Why are YOU ignoring atrocities, whitewashing atrocities and DEFENDING atrocities?And PROJECTING your behavior onto others?
Yeah, this is true, but you're digressing. Whatever relevancy this has to our imperialist policy in Iraq is mitigated by flaunting historical trivia.
seeing as how Mr. Hussein wasn't exactly a Nelson Mandela in his own country.
Maybe. But I was refuting a point made by someone.Do you know who Nelson Mandela was? He wasn't some male South African mother Theresa. He was a terrorist leader. The ANC fought an armed conflict against the South African apartheid government. He wasn't put in jail for nothing. So yes, he is unlike Saddam Hussain. But I guess not in the way you meant.Nelson Mandela was the first representative democratic elected SA president.
Nelson Mandela was not a terrorist leader. This moniker could be applied to anyone fighting against a cruel regime.
Modern historians would sooner refer to Nelson Mandela as a "freedom fighter" than a "terrorist leader,"
Isn't that the point?Isn't the difference just in sly use of language?You assume that the fact that I call him a terrorist leader mean I don't think it was justified what he has done. You are wrong. Terrorism can be justified.This just shows the meaning the word 'terrorist' has been given. It is quite Orwellian.Just look up some definitions used to define 'terrorism'. What Mandela did would fit the definition. What I would have done, hopefully, if I lived 66 years earlier would also fit that definition. If you fight for freedom using violence you are a terrorist by definition.Terrorist isn't synonym to 'bad guy'.
This is completely untrue. Terrorists DO NOT fight for freedom, they fight to impose their will, be it social, cultural, political, and what not.
Not per definition. But freedom is both a social and a political goal. So if you fight for freedom you use violence to achive goals of social and political nature.