Mission creep like a motherfucker...
10/30/2015 5:18:50 PM
I don't know enough about the history of syria or the factions involved to have a real opinion... but this does seem to suck.Waiting for Russia to drop a bomb on American forces and the fallout (non literal hopefully) that would ensue.
10/30/2015 5:25:38 PM
O I'm not talking about the whole thing in Syria, theres another thread for that. This is specifically about our (the u.s.) unconstitutional involvement in the war.
10/30/2015 5:48:52 PM
No one. No one wants to talk about it.It's a god damned tragedy and it's got every possibility of escalating into an even bigger one. Libya and Syria are fucking embarrassing for the Obama administration, embarrassing for Hilary, and no one in congress outside of a handful of "fringe" party guys like Paul and Sanders can stand up and object to our involvement, which is why no one is really talking about it.Fuck, I posted almost this same thing a year ago and got crickets in response.message_topic.aspx?topic=642850&page=6#16135561[Edited on October 30, 2015 at 7:05 PM. Reason : khlhk]
10/30/2015 6:47:56 PM
^^^Do you honestly think this administration will do anything to Russia if they drop a bomb on our troops? Russia will claim it was an accident, and we'll be all like
10/30/2015 9:07:42 PM
Then we have to pay again to build it all back
10/31/2015 8:32:19 AM
^^ maybe inside of your bubble in which logic and critical thinking skills don't existbut not in the real world
10/31/2015 9:31:51 AM
10/31/2015 10:04:35 PM
Looking like a trillion dollar bill through 2020. and they tell progressives we think money grows on trees
9/2/2016 1:29:50 AM
Yeah, still nobody really wants to talk about it.The bipartisan consensus on foreign policy may be the single worst thing to come about in American politics over the last 40 years.
9/2/2016 3:02:09 AM
I would love to talk about it. Please tell me what your specific objections are, starting with how you have reached the conclusion that it is illegal.
9/2/2016 9:31:03 AM
^congress never declared war obama seems to think he can bomb whatever country he wants if he claims his target was an Islamic extremist
9/2/2016 9:41:46 AM
So basically like every other president post 19th century.
9/2/2016 9:54:37 AM
The moment we made it official US policy to destroy ISIS, it made no sense to respect a border that they were ignoring and no one else was defending. Besides that, we've taken no direct military action against the Syrian regime nor have we provided lethal aid to groups fighting them. We have roughly 300 special forces operators in Syria, all under CIA command, which is perfectly legal by US law. Bombing terrorists anywhere they are has been legal since 2001.[Edited on September 2, 2016 at 10:04 AM. Reason : .]
9/2/2016 10:01:59 AM
so if obama can bomb whoever he wants his victims can too right
9/2/2016 10:05:41 AM
9/2/2016 10:21:52 AM
9/2/2016 10:23:35 AM
9/2/2016 10:29:14 AM
9/2/2016 10:40:49 AM
9/2/2016 11:58:50 AM
beatsunc is conflating legality and morality, he needs to clarify which one he is asking about
9/2/2016 12:15:12 PM
9/2/2016 12:27:23 PM
9/2/2016 12:40:47 PM
9/2/2016 12:47:50 PM
9/2/2016 12:55:08 PM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authorization_for_Use_of_Military_Force_Against_Terroristscongress passes unconstitutional crap all the time. obama cant commit acts of war without a declaration of war plus he has tried and failed to get new auth recently. once he realized he couldnt not get the new auth he should have stopped
9/2/2016 1:15:14 PM
^ members of Congress have specifically cited the aumf as a reason for not needing to vote on further authorization.
9/2/2016 1:17:58 PM
that's only because they are worthless, using the AUMF for military action against all terrorists shouldn't be allowed, ISIS is not al-queda
9/2/2016 2:04:07 PM
Yeah. I don't have some objection to attacking ISIS based on the awful things they've done, but using the 2001 aumf to justify it is pure bs. To say that ISIS is al queda in Iraq is incorrect. There's no moral equivalence to be drawn between what we're doing and what ISIS is doing, but we have armed terrorists, we are killing way too many people as a result of collateral damage. Our allies are fighting groups we've armed and groups we've armed are fighting each other. We've also backing a Turkish invasion of northern Syria. There are a lot of things happening that could easily be prosecuted as war crimes.Here's a decent little opinion piece fromy Rand Paul who has been incredibly consistent on this issue. http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2016/09/02/sen-rand-paul-president-obama-what-on-gods-green-earth-is-our-policy-in-syria.htmlThe other problem we have is that Afghanistan is in really bad shape, possibly as a result of our focus on Syria/ISIS. Even if we demolish ISIS in Syria a new group will form in Afghanistan. The last thing I'll say is that we shouldn't be surprised if a foreign country conducts a drone strike on US soil or US territory in the near future. We've opened the door to this and at some point it's going to happen. Honestly, if Turkey had decided ton drone Gullen following themail coup attempt a few months back we wouldn't have a lot of room to complain. Based on precedent we set one merely needs to declare someone a terrorist and you can then kill them with impunity regardless of where they are.
9/2/2016 3:37:38 PM
AUMF is unconstitutional. Congress has the responsibility of declaring war. They can't just delegate it to the executive.
9/2/2016 5:32:27 PM
9/2/2016 5:44:38 PM
9/2/2016 6:28:32 PM
Lindsey Graham is a piece of shit warmonger.
9/2/2016 6:49:23 PM
I agree, but I think that quote speaks to GrumpyGOP's point, that Congress clearly is in favor military action against ISIS and believe they are an "imminent threat", but they are too cowardly to own it by authorizing a new war resolution.
9/2/2016 6:55:53 PM
We've been involved in the war on terror for a good 14 years now, kids entering college will not know a country where politicians didn't talk like we weren't in a state of emergency. There doesn't seem a clear end in site now with ISIS. It would be nice if there were an endgame in sight. Assuming it's not propaganda that Isiss goal is a global war, once they're gone, then what? Do we let Russia and Iran and the Saudis put their pawns into play for control, and let the chips fall?Literally by definition a "war on terror" can't be won. Hillary almost seems like the exact wrong side of this, and trump allying with people like John Bolton would probably be happy for a world war to break out.
9/2/2016 9:13:04 PM
9/3/2016 8:56:35 AM
the ol' "commander in chief" argumentthe guys who wrote the Constitution didn't interpret it that way. there were folks at the convention who suggested giving the executive the power to wage war. the motions didn't pass.https://www.libertyclassroom.com/warpowers/i mean, if the "he's commander in chief" argument held water, why did congress even have to pass AUMF?[Edited on September 3, 2016 at 10:40 PM. Reason : afds]
9/3/2016 10:39:43 PM
you can interpret and twist the document however you like, but there is not really any room to debate what the original intent was with regards to war powers. there is nothing in the convention debates, ratifying debates, or federalist papers to support your interpretation.
9/3/2016 10:52:31 PM
I have enormous respect for the founders, but their interpretations and intentions are not law. Nor are the debates, nor are the Federalist Papers -- and I say this as someone who has been a Hamilton devotee since the Chernow book first came out.The AUMF and the War Powers Act are perfectly compatible with the "commander in chief argument," as you call it. For one thing, the President's command of the armed forces runs up against Congressional control over the budget and various other government apparatuses essential for the military to function. So Congress gets a say, and laws like these help streamline and formalize that process.More importantly, it is perfectly reasonable to believe that Congress should wield some authority in waging conflicts, even if those conflicts are not the declared wars over which they are given control by the Constitution.
9/6/2016 4:23:20 PM
US just partnered with Russia to coordinate their Syrian hospital bombing campaign.Which is strange because the DNC has been redbaiting telling me for months how the Russians are nothing but election sabotaging communists.
9/9/2016 9:56:30 PM
We work with bad regimes and bad people to accomplish things deemed important. We have literally since before our country was founded.Doesn't make Russia's appalling human rights record, neo-colonialism and free press violations any less appalling.
9/10/2016 6:39:34 AM
Well fuck. Looks like we just bombed Assad's forces. This could get even uglier.
9/17/2016 3:50:21 PM
Its becoming more and more apparent that the US is working on behalf of ISIS. https://www.rt.com/news/359686-un-security-urgent-meeting/
9/18/2016 3:53:26 AM
^Annnddddd E Man has officially crossed into tinfoil hat territory. The line hath been crossed.
9/18/2016 9:01:19 AM
Well thats what happens to people who have open minds. As someone with an open mind, I won't reject an explanation until evidence proves it wrong. Theres really three types of people. Type 1: The tinfoil hat people are the type of people who said 9/11 was an inside/saudi job in 2001. Type 2: The open minded people are the people who didn't initially believe that but waited on evidence and now, since the recent report has swayed the evidence in the direction that the saudi government was actively helping, we can lean towards that being the most plausible story.Type 3: Then there are the sheep who will believe what the media/government says no matter what even when all of the evidence suggests otherwise. Most people are this way which makes it super effective in a democratic society.I've been seeing the attack distraction theory for a while now and never considered it until this year. The last 3-5 big leaked pieces of information or government scandals that have occurred have been immediately followed by terrorist attacks. it could just be coincidence but I will consider it. It wouldn't grab my attention if the media covered both but the fact that the media never fails to completely ignore the bigger story makes me keep the possibility of conspiracy open. As for ISIS, its not far fetched that we would support ISIS. We've supported all sorts of ugly groups in the past including al qaeda. Of course we are helping ISIS but the only thing up for debate is A. Are we intentionally helping ISIS. or B. Are we just so completely incompetent that we continue to accidentally help ISIS while we are trying to destroy them. I think its far fetched to believe that the CIA and US military are completely incompetent. They have a history of being extremely efficient, precise and calculated in their moves. I challenge everyone to look at the facts instead of dismissing everything you don't see on CNN as some wild conspiracy theory.
9/18/2016 10:57:08 AM
9/18/2016 12:38:09 PM
9/18/2016 1:13:05 PM
I don't have a list but heres where I would start. Basically every mass shooting and terrorist attack has occured right after a huge leak, military blunder or story of systemic fraud. I realize it because I want to show my friends the leaks and complain about them and then i feel like its an inappropriate time to talk about corruption because a ton of people just died. Its probably a coincidence but the media doesn't do any favors by failing to cover the stories. heres where the conspiracy theories all startedSeptember 10th, 2001: Rumsfield blows the whistle on 2.3T in military waste. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xU4GdHLUHwUI remember clearly Nice happened just as the Saudi 9/11 connection was confirmed and media never got to it.
9/20/2016 1:05:20 AM
9/20/2016 9:13:35 AM
9/20/2016 10:50:35 AM