Our dear Imam said this regime occupying Jerusalem must be wiped off the screenour dearl beloved Imam.
11/15/2011 11:54:05 AM
11/15/2011 8:41:39 PM
I wish these countries would not be so cavalier with war and hostility.
11/15/2011 10:11:17 PM
11/15/2011 10:25:09 PM
Lets play "I'm thinking of a regime"...I'm thinking of a regime:-the leader murders his own citizens-citizens are not allowed to peacefully protest in public-the regime operates beyond sovereign borders without permission-the regime sponsors terrorists and hitmen to carry out assassinations abroad-attacks nations without provocation-has an elaborate nuclear program and willingly trades nuclear technology to rouge nations-is largely made up of a population of religious extremists that believes the holy land must be secured to allow salvation and damns all non-members
11/16/2011 12:36:22 AM
^ http://occupation101.tv/A pretty interesting documentary about the Israel/Palestine conflict.
11/16/2011 1:00:07 AM
i'm sure most will dismiss it as propaganda though. whatevs.[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 1:37 AM. Reason : wouldn't let me edit]
11/16/2011 1:37:14 AM
i want to repost this from the previous page, so pack bryan can see what his beloved leaders have said in the past. he is judging iranian leaders on their own [misquoted] words, so i would like him to also judge his dear beloved peaceful leaders on their own words:i see your simple debate stragety pack_bryanfor clarity and truth:David Ben GurionPrime Minister of Israel1949 - 1954,1955 - 1963
11/16/2011 3:34:44 AM
Regardless of whether Iran has nuclear weapons or has a right to own them, the fact that they are pursuing them is something we have to consider. The only reason why we have to consider it is because we have strategic allies that go far beyond military applications. We have good relations with Saudi Arabia (who is pretty hostile with Iran) and the greater part of the Arabian peninsula. They may not like our freedom of religion in the US, but they love our business. Obviously we have Israel which is actually extremely strategic for the US regardless of whether we are "looking after them" or not.The thing the left always complains about is how bad the US looks in the eyes of the international community. What looks worse: getting involved in other people's business or building relationships with foreign nations then idly standing by while their enemies build weapons to harm not just us, but their people as well? One of them makes us a meddling, imperialist power (not a good thing). The other makes us a lying, deceitful, and abusive superpower (not a good thing either). Pick one.---No one has said it in this thread (at least not that I saw), but I've heard some people mention 'going into Iran'. Bad idea. China is very involved with Iran. Russia is only economically involved with Iran so they don't concern me as much. If we get involved with Iran on the ground, expect a lot of Chinese gear in the field to appear. Iran would be very well set for a strategic air campaign. Establish a missile shield over the region using our mobile Aegis platforms (something Obama embraced when he came into office... great decision) and launch a strategic air campaign to cripple their military facilities and research facilities. Iran doesn't have this rabid manufacturing capability so destroying existing resources would be pretty effective for halting research (you can't rebuild and research at the same time).
11/16/2011 11:38:37 AM
Do you understand why there isn't peace in Middle East? It's because there's no incentive on the part of anyone to make peace. A lot of this stuff would work itself out if we weren't there.Imagine a standard, schoolyard fight between kids. The basic disagreement is between two boys, but one boy has the backing of a massive bully. The kid with the back up has no reason to make peace, because he can win any fight with the help of his friend. The kid without back up is perpetually hostile, feeling that he's up against all odds and has no choice but to stand his ground and bluff.What happens when you take the bully out of the equation? Suddenly, it's not such a lopsided confrontation. It suddenly makes a shit ton of sense, for both parties, to just shut the fuck up and trade with each other.
11/16/2011 11:53:18 AM
11/16/2011 12:02:10 PM
11/16/2011 12:12:19 PM
11/16/2011 12:33:07 PM
11/16/2011 12:35:25 PM
11/16/2011 12:37:36 PM
Emoticons are a lot easier than actually challenging your own beliefs, as they were handed down by government schools. Abraham Lincoln was not a hero, he was not a champion of civil rights, he was a racist person, and we should not honor him. To concede that so many had to die to eliminate slavery is to assert that history unfolded in an optimal way, which is beyond absurd.
11/16/2011 12:57:33 PM
11/16/2011 1:03:43 PM
11/16/2011 1:05:55 PM
You can't drop your little pro-Confederacy rant for long enough to see you aren't even talking about the same thing as what I was referencing. My point..... and only point... was that once the Civil War had already started, it was bloody because of advancing technology and an idealistic will to fight a bloody war. That's the same situation the Middle East is in (which much different ideals). Again, you don't fucking read because I already stated this. Maybe if you read you would see why I brought up the Civil War.Good grief.
11/16/2011 1:07:02 PM
11/16/2011 1:19:42 PM
You are so convinced you "know what I'm talking about", then continue to go on these utterly unrelated tangents. Makes replying easier because I just don't have to respond to the crap, I guess.I'm curious, do you actually have any "skin in the game", or are just you just trailer-park historian that believes every crack-pot book about 'the truth behind the Civil War'?
11/16/2011 1:23:39 PM
11/16/2011 1:49:05 PM
11/16/2011 2:09:08 PM
11/16/2011 5:49:32 PM
yeah this thread has gone further beyond retarded than most
11/16/2011 8:37:16 PM
bin Laden was a Saudi businessman who was kicked out of his country, because he pissed off the princes.
11/16/2011 9:18:29 PM
^, et al...Bin Laden considered himself "a close part of the royal family" and was part of a well-known construction outfit in Saudi Arabia. Because of his close ties to the royal family and his belief that he had already been robbed out of his family business by his brother, Salim, the whole "prince" claim has come up a few times......but you're right, it's not accurate to claim he "is" a prince.
11/16/2011 9:54:46 PM
"is"?he was NEVER a prince, and neither is any member of the expansive bin laden family. the bin laden family has no blood ties with the royal family. the bin laden family is from yemen, whereas the royal family is from the heartland of saudi arabia, hijaz.wth are you are trying to say? what claim, and where has this claim come up?
11/16/2011 10:16:58 PM
^You're playing a semantics game, OEPII1. I was admitting that saying he's a prince was incorrect. Stating the facts that he resented not being the heir to his family's business, his family's relationship to the royal family, et al....... the point is that he acted like a prince. I read something in the Early Bird that a profiler did a study on him and he had made some kind of claim that he was more deserving of the authoritative positions than the royal family, but I don't have access to Early Bird on my home computer.Either way, chill down, hoss. It was a poor choice of words and I admitted it. I'm not sure what else you're looking for.
11/16/2011 10:49:47 PM
11/16/2011 11:01:17 PM
^We do business with them, they help keep the region stable, and having access to their land, sea, and airspace is crucial for logistics of our own military forces and for trade.There are so many reasons why we have legitimate interests in Saudi Arabia that have nothing to do with Imperialism. I've liked your posts on the subject, Duke.
11/16/2011 11:05:52 PM
Thanks.Add "intelligence cooperation", too.
11/16/2011 11:25:10 PM
Definitely. Interestingly enough, I know some people would LOVE to argue the value of their intelligence. IIRC, they were big on "Saddam has WMDs." Some of the conspiracy theorists ITT could have a hay-day with making something out of that. I can just hear it now: "Saudi Arabia fabricated the WMD intelligence so that the United State would eliminate someone that rivaled their authority in the region."I have to admit, so far as conspiracy theories go, that one does have a nice ring to it.
11/16/2011 11:44:37 PM
whoa, this thread got weird.Is Iran already under covert attack?
11/17/2011 12:40:19 AM
I suspect that both of you (NCStatePride and theDuke866) are biased on this topic. You've been (or are) in the military, so you have a tendency to be concerned with things as they are on the ground today, while skimming over or flat out ignoring historical context since it's not that relevant to your mission/tasks.The impression I've gotten in the past is that yes, you admit we did some fucked up things and meddled in the region, but what's done is done and we should do whatever it takes to "keep things stable". I'm actually arguing that the United States is the primary destabilizing factor in the Middle East. It's not ideology. It's not even religion. It's that there are a bunch of white people with guns and bombs trying to micromanage a culture that is vehemently opposed to being controlled.
11/17/2011 10:11:10 AM
11/17/2011 10:51:28 AM
11/17/2011 11:39:10 AM
First of all, thank you; that was much better.
11/17/2011 1:12:34 PM
11/17/2011 5:12:03 PM
^Glad I read that second paragraph. That's 99.9% of the point. If hostilities break out between Saudi Arabia and Iran due to whatever, both countries will start stockpiling their oil supplies and prices will skyrocket. I think the last report I saw from the speculators was something like $8-$10/gal if we got in a fight with Iran. If we engaged Iran, we could always work a deal with the rest of OPEC because supply wouldn't obviously get choked to death and even though they are gutting our wallets, they only want to piss us off so much.The other aspect is military and trade access to the waters in those areas. A large part of the Navy's mission is FOT (Freedom of Transit) which includes anti-piracy and just simply discouraging harassment from foreign nations. If we were to give the big F.U. to any allies we had in the middle east, you are causing a potentially sticky situation the next time we need to run merchant ships through the Red Sea.There is also the fact that Iran is running ships through the Suez canal. While their ships aren't anything too frightening, they could do some damage to an American merchant vessel, or a foreign flag vessel transporting American goods, if they knew there were no other nations in the region who really had an interest in protecting our assets (as Saudi Arabia currently does).------I know that response kind of wondered around a lot, but I'm thinking about five things at once right now. Hopefully that expands a little on why "Johnny Tax Payer" should care.
11/17/2011 6:06:47 PM
still seems like that money would be better spent on public transportation, urbanization, and infrastructure. but, whatever.
11/17/2011 8:21:01 PM
^^ See also: Straits of HormuzNow, I think that we should be looking to become much more energy independent, so that we can eventually tell that entire section of Asia to go get fucked, we don't care anymore. You can all kill each other, fight all you want, and just generally be a pain in the ass, but you'll be pretty much like Africa, and nobody will care. The only difference is that Africa, collectively, is more geographically isolated and therefore would still be even more irrelevant. Even then, I wouldn't be OK with Iran having nukes. I don't think further proliferation with almost any country is good, and I sure as shit don't think it's good for Iran to have them under any circumstances.On the other hand, if we just ignored them and didn't pressure them, because we had little or no interest in most Middle Eastern affairs, maybe they wouldn't want them so badly to start with....but I'm afraid that even if we came up with some magic energy source, the rest might still be a pipe dream. It's tough, these days, to just totally leave any region totally to its own devices and not have any consequences. I mean, we have all kinds of low-grade involvement in Africa, killing terrorists and pirates and stuff. That's been going on for a loooooong time. Now, more than ever, it's a rare scenario where any region of the world can really be truly irrelevant for long.^ SS and Medicare/Medicaid dwarf what we spend on any given little foreign action. Full-scale wars are expensive, but some foreign aid here and some intelligence collection, covert actions, and airstrikes there are a drop in the bucket. Hell, even maintaining a base in a country is a drop in the bucket. It's not that I'm saying you're wrong--I'm just saying that I don't really wanna hear it unless you're also willing to cede the 800-lb gorilla issues. [Edited on November 17, 2011 at 8:42 PM. Reason : ]
11/17/2011 8:39:13 PM
I'm talking about the money spent on defense contracts, size of the military, and domestic infrastructure waste that's spent sustaining (or trying to sustain) suburban sprawl. I'd even be willing to drill baby drill (within reason) if it meant a comprehensive and diverse domestic energy policy.But the main point I was getting at was that our energy demands are outrageous because of our suburban lifestyle. If we had to pay the real cost for our 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath homes with the white picket fence and 2 cars, 40 minutes away from work on top of cramped 8 lane highways, I think more people would realize that we can't fucking afford it.I'm getting pretty off topic, but this is a major part of the problem:Spreading people as far out as we do comes at a major cost, and it gets us involved in the middle east more than we need to be. If the US had more condensed cities, less people would be so energy dependent, in my opinion.[Edited on November 17, 2011 at 10:05 PM. Reason : ]
11/17/2011 9:55:28 PM
I don't think those pictures are really very meaningful, but yeah, we're partly saying the same thing.The arrival of a second kid doesn't mean you need a fucking Suburban. A moderately sized sedan should still work just fine for most people.Sprawl is bad, kind of, but trying to have everyone live in dense cities in a country like America with shitloads of land just waiting to be used is also kinda dumb. Like, I don't care for how Raleigh is laid out where you have to drive all over the world to get to something across town, but neither would I want the other extreme.[Edited on November 17, 2011 at 10:07 PM. Reason : ][Edited on November 17, 2011 at 10:17 PM. Reason : so yes, we need to use a lot less gas; no, America is not Europe and can't totally be compared.]
11/17/2011 10:06:24 PM
The point of the picture was to give an idea to how sprawl could impact gas dependency. You cannot live in Raleigh without a car. Many US cities are like this. Something like 60% of cities in the US are car-dependent cities. This obviously drives our policy when it comes to our energy needs.I'm not saying that every US city should be like Paris. Just saying that transportation plays a major role in energy consumption, and to ignore our transportation and urban needs when discussing foreign policy seems misguided.And filling in our land with suburban sprawl and housing also hurts when you start taking away land that could be better used for other uses (like farming, or energy harvesting, for example).And every city doesn't have to be mega-dense either. Portland, Oregon is an interesting example. They put forth an urban growth boundary and preserved farm areas. They have a mix between densities and have controlled their growth and have transportation diversity as well.[Edited on November 17, 2011 at 10:49 PM. Reason : but yeah, Ahmedinijad.]
11/17/2011 10:30:19 PM
oh yeah, i mean i agree that there is an inseparable link between our approaches to transportation and our foreign policy. I was trying to say the same thing.I think that driving smaller, lighter cars (collectively) is a much easier first step towards putting a dent into the problem.I do disagree that building denser cities would free up land for agriculture. We already have plenty of land for agriculture, and we're already paying farmers not to grow stuff. Also, I don't think the big obstacle to alternative energy harvesting is a lack of (and therefore effectively cost of) land.
11/17/2011 11:01:22 PM
...and you also have to keep in mind that the type of urban reform you are talking about is a long-term change. You aren't going to change the current culture of development anytime in the next election cycle or two... or three.Iran, on the other hand, is becoming a problem with massive destruction capability now. If you think we can't support infrastructure now, just wait until fuel surges to $8/gal, then we can see how much transportation comes to a screeching halt, including the transportation of good and services that fuel our economy and provide maintenance to our mass, public, and automotive transit.I guess what I'm getting at is that your objection and the Iranian issue are on two different timeframes. In Enterprise Architecture, it's similar to using a "To Be" architecture to address an "As Is" problem. Future problems must involve strategies that are flexible enough to deal with the problems of today. Today's problem is Iran. Our domestic plan to help our infrastructure must be able to allow flexibility to deal with these problems.
11/18/2011 1:12:06 AM
zerohedge is talking up some iran/terrorism charges -> imminent military action stuff.
11/20/2011 6:30:14 PM
11/20/2011 9:17:26 PM
^^ I find any link between this event and Iran highly suspect, it simply doesn't fit their M.O.
11/20/2011 9:46:00 PM