Thu Sep 13, 2007 4:14 am
TheMC5 wrote:I feel much more outraged that the American gov't KNEW it was going to happen and LET it happen than I do sympathy for those who died. Nonetheless, I do feel sympathy for them and their families, just to a lesser degree than the outrage.dramacydal wrote:The lives of the victims of 9/11 weren't of higher value than the lives of the people who - for example - died during the genocide in Rwanda. What makes those who died on 9/11 so special that they're constantly remembered while others aren't?
Seriously? It's because the people who died in 9/11 were (relatively) wealthy, affluent Americans, not poor, uneducated Africans. Not saying it's justified, just saying how it is.
Thu Sep 13, 2007 4:34 am
el badman wrote:Yeah, that's definitely the way to go
Thu Sep 13, 2007 6:03 am
Yeah, do not root out rogue states and dismantle violent ideologies, just let them be.
Thu Sep 13, 2007 6:34 am
Bet you hated the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the toppling of Hitler too.
9/11, Bali, Madrid, London, these should have been the final straw for the West. But we still have people who would rather score political points against Bush or America than defend their way of life and crush the plague from the East.
When there's a serial killer loose, or crime is rampart, or old men talk to young kids online, or people smoke or eat fatty foods people scream for something to be done. When someone threatens to destroy the West, drop nukes on neighbors or re-establish a Caliphate they respond "Yeah, well, America/Bush sucks. We should just ignore it."
Thu Sep 13, 2007 9:44 am
"Remembering" 9/11. Reflecting only on that day. Holding memorials and rememberances. Calling it a "tragedy", these all serve to trivilize the events, make them seem "natural" like hurricanes or tsunamis. We ignore WTC93, Bojinka, The Embassies, USS Cole, we've moved on from those. We ignore events after, Bali, Madrid, London, they were elsewhere.
Condolences and "RIP" are trivial. Vengence is not.
We are a society paralyzed by "tragedy" and so we stayed silent. The anniversaries of 9/11 should not be packed with rememberences and memorials if we want them to mean something. They should be packed with hellfire over Waziristan.
Yeah, do not root out rogue states and dismantle violent ideologies, just let them be. You do not take care of diseases, you let them fester. Storm brewing? Just ignore it, it might not hit your house after all.
Thu Sep 13, 2007 10:26 am
You may want to see the end of the West, convert to Islam and live under a Caliphate, but I do not.
When I responded to your pro-terrorism/anti-Westernism philosophy
Thu Sep 13, 2007 12:57 pm
Thu Sep 13, 2007 1:03 pm
Thu Sep 13, 2007 1:42 pm
This threat calls for prevention from the root of the cause, stopping them from feeling so isolated and agitated, which would stop them turning to religion and violence (n.b. turning to religion is one of the last steps in the process, they are often feeling outcast and angry much earlier than this).
But the concept that bombs and bullets are going to end the threat of terrorism is naive, with Iraq and Afghanistan being the true cases in point. Both those theatres of war have become training grounds for Middle East (and beyond) terrorist groups.
Military repsonses to terrorism aren't solving the problem.
This is shown clearly by one fact: since the 'War on Terror' began terrorist attacks in the world as a whole have increased dramatically, and each individual attack has become more fatal.
It is important to understand that al-Qaeda poses a similar threat that Communism/Fascism did. It is a foreign concept that is difficult to understand from a Western perspective
The moderate Muslims don't support the al-Qaeda message, but they do get pushed closer to the cause every day way in Iraq continues.
We need to empower these people
I know you mean the states that are helping terrorists, but maybe they need aid and guidance rather than military intervention to oust the terrorists there.
So someone who strongly disagrees with everything the US have been doing about terrorism for the last few years is necessarily an Islam lover who adheres to anything the Koran says?
Not that I'm expecting anything better from you...I'm either with you or against you, right?
I think we should have pulled out a while ago but I completely agree that it was right to declare war in the first place.
Thu Sep 13, 2007 5:24 pm
benji wrote:This threat calls for prevention from the root of the cause, stopping them from feeling so isolated and agitated, which would stop them turning to religion and violence (n.b. turning to religion is one of the last steps in the process, they are often feeling outcast and angry much earlier than this).
And how do you do that? You can't stop someone from feeling "isolated", so you destroy their sources of support.
benji wrote:But the concept that bombs and bullets are going to end the threat of terrorism is naive, with Iraq and Afghanistan being the true cases in point. Both those theatres of war have become training grounds for Middle East (and beyond) terrorist groups.
They are flocking to strike at our most powerful, instead of our weakest. I prefer that.
benji wrote:Military repsonses to terrorism aren't solving the problem.
They aren't the only thing happening...as you well know...
benji wrote:This is shown clearly by one fact: since the 'War on Terror' began terrorist attacks in the world as a whole have increased dramatically, and each individual attack has become more fatal.
In a hot war, the enemy does more to try and kill you. That's why they pour so many resources into Iraq. If we leave dishonorably, they win.
benji wrote:It is important to understand that al-Qaeda poses a similar threat that Communism/Fascism did. It is a foreign concept that is difficult to understand from a Western perspective
Um, Communism and Fascism were both Western spawned political philosophies. And much of Islamist thought comes from Western educated Muslims.
benji wrote:And. Neither one fell from being nice to them. War ended them.
benji wrote:The moderate Muslims don't support the al-Qaeda message, but they do get pushed closer to the cause every day way in Iraq continues.
Or, they realize they don't like it when Muslims kill other Muslims for not being extreme enough, and start working with Allied forces to clean up their local areas. Like they have been doing in various locations.
benji wrote:We need to empower these people
And removing their authoritarian states probably helped.
benji wrote:I know you mean the states that are helping terrorists, but maybe they need aid and guidance rather than military intervention to oust the terrorists there.
Right, all that billions of aid that's been given since the 60s sure has turned everyone over there into our best buddies. Destroy the support network, militarily and financially, and the swamp begins to drain.
Fri Sep 14, 2007 2:11 am
Fri Sep 14, 2007 2:31 am
Ty-Land wrote:They have organised pool (billiards) nights where they play together.
Sorry, I don't understand this response. My argument was that al-Qaeda has taking on board similar systems of fear and propaganda to spread the ideology, especially those of Soviet Russia.
But I don't think that this always require a military intervention to overthrow these regimes.
this problem is much bigger than the way is it depicted
Fri Sep 14, 2007 10:58 am
You may disagree with how WE are dismantling their ideology.
But you have to agree it must be dismantled, or you effectively support its existance.
Since you refuse to provide any alternative plan, since you say we should just ignore it, since you spend all your time attacking those who actually do something,
in my mind that makes your "support" of the West quite questionable.
You are trying to score political points attacking a target that will never attack you back. You feel guilty for everything you have, so you have to turn to attacking the society that has given you everything.
The West is great, and you do everything you can to point out it's flaws endlessly to make yourself seem superior. You're the same as all the Useful Fools of the past.
I think, that in the case of Iraq, full military use was required.
The reason I believe we need to act, especially militarily today, is because if there is another 9/11, it will be far worse in the wake. Civil liberties will definately be curbed, not faux-curbed as with the PATRIOT Act.
Fri Sep 14, 2007 12:38 pm
el badman wrote:Yeah, I must admit that your plan of nuking any place that might possibly shelter terrorist cells definitely beats anything I could come up with...There was plenty of alternatives before getting into this, if only your government hadn't forgotten the meaning of diplomcy (and common sense), but now I'd readily admit that there's no miracle solution to the solution.
Fri Sep 14, 2007 1:14 pm
Fri Sep 14, 2007 1:59 pm