Paying other countries is a valid foreign policy strategy, and has a better cost/benefit than either an all out war, or letting them run amok against you.
2/13/2011 8:25:52 PM
Not when your own country is hopelessly in debt.The only way to win the middle east is not to play.
2/13/2011 8:38:43 PM
We're not "hopelessly" in debt.And we have to play, we need stability in the energy market, and we have obligations to our allies in the region. Not to mention that there are emerging markets there that we can't just cede to china.It would be the great if the world were as simple as you seem to think it is, but sadly that's not the case.
2/13/2011 8:41:26 PM
The world, and your place in it, is as simple as you make it. I'm willing to sacrifice "energy stability" to put our own affairs in order. Call me simplistic if you will, but I'm the type that prefers real money in the bank to a high credit line. Desperate decisions can be more easily avoided with the former.And yes, we are hopeless. The solutions being proposed by even the most radical tea baggers are mere drops in a flood. Austerity is inevitable.[Edited on February 13, 2011 at 8:48 PM. Reason : .]
2/13/2011 8:45:42 PM
You're not simplistic, that would be generous. You're short-sighted.Your strategy would lead to the ruination of the US.Just like merely balancing your own personal checkbook doesn't guarantee your success, our gov. has to make the right moves on multiple fronts. And contrary to what some people like to think, the budget obviously isn't the most crucial of those fronts.It doesn't make any sense to push budget issues to the detriment of all other issues, including the broader economy, our safety, scientific progress, maintaining our technological lead, social progress, and a host of other issues.
2/13/2011 8:52:43 PM
NOW we're getting somewhere! I won't stop until I squeeze the ad hominem out of you. You're so very close already.In the last decade we spent 20 Trillion Dollars on war, and quite a bit less, insignificant really, on ... the broader economy(after-the-fact sky is falling bailouts don't count), our safety(as in my personal, walk to the store at midnight, safety), scientific progress, maintaining our hahahaha lead, social progress I'm sorry I can't keep typing this I'm laughing so hard.[Edited on February 13, 2011 at 9:07 PM. Reason : .]
2/13/2011 8:59:18 PM
Ad hom? What ad hom?
2/13/2011 9:02:48 PM
Ah, see I've spoiled the mood. Drats. I was so close to climax, too. Please, continue.I find it interesting that the police are now protesting, claiming mistreatment by their employer and the mobs, being named a scapegoat for the country's ills. "We were just following orders!" comes their desperate cry.[Edited on February 13, 2011 at 9:16 PM. Reason : .]
2/13/2011 9:13:04 PM
^ All they have to do is balance their budget and tame their debt, and they'll be all peachy, right?
2/13/2011 9:23:26 PM
2/13/2011 9:28:54 PM
^umm... you realize we give money to LOTS of countries around the world? Did you not see any of the wikileaks memos regarding this? Mubarak actually worked out really well. We'll probably continue to pay the next guy too.And you're suggesting there is some way to deal with a country to develop a "lasting relationship"? LOL. Is that like "true love" on the international politics stage? haha...It doesn't make any sense for a country as big and powerful as the US NOT to pay other countries to be on our side. This is in the foreign policy 101 handbook, and has be SOP for at least 3000 years (they recently incorporated this mechanism into the most recent CIV game too, fyi).[Edited on February 13, 2011 at 9:34 PM. Reason : ]
2/13/2011 9:33:18 PM
2/13/2011 9:34:38 PM
actually, it does make sense not to. when you meddle in the affairs of other people, they come to hate you. That's simply how it is. Paying to have friends doesn't really give you friends. It just gives you people who want to suck at your teat.
2/13/2011 9:35:24 PM
2/13/2011 9:40:07 PM
2/13/2011 9:53:11 PM
2/13/2011 9:54:14 PM
2/13/2011 9:58:14 PM
2/13/2011 10:09:30 PM
And you don't think that paying to keep a dictator in power is "picking sides"?
2/13/2011 10:10:05 PM
Are you talking about egypt? Because we weren't paying to keep him in power, we were paying for his cooperation (and probably also to let us torture people in egypt). We weren't paying Mubarak, we were paying Egypt.
2/13/2011 10:11:30 PM
and who do you think ended up getting all of that money? let me give you a hint: it wasn't the Egyptian people. And what do you think he ended up doing with that money? let me give you a hint: it probably helped him stay in power.]
2/13/2011 10:12:22 PM
haha are you kidding? You realize Mubarak just stepped down...? He lost? And we really don't care? We are just hoping the next guy is on board with our plans, and we'll pay them too if we have to.
2/13/2011 10:14:44 PM
yeah. he stayed in power for 30 years. he really "lost." he has billions of our dollars in his bank account. he really "lost."]
2/13/2011 10:15:16 PM
Yeah, he lost. And now it's on to the next guy.
2/13/2011 10:20:42 PM
yep. all that crack-head needs is another rock
2/13/2011 10:58:55 PM
Are suggesting the United States introduced crack to keep the (muslim) brothers down?
2/13/2011 11:05:20 PM
I think it'd be better for everyone involved if, instead of the United States borrowing money from China and then passing it out to various countries, China gave them that money directly. You eliminate the middle man, and everyone wins.
2/14/2011 2:02:21 AM
There was a small protest again in Iran today.
2/14/2011 9:27:09 AM
Anti-government demonstrations swell in Iran; clashes reportedhttp://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/02/14/iran.protests/index.html?hpt=T2
2/14/2011 3:13:29 PM
Stay classy, Egypt.http://www.wusa9.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=136238CBS Correspondent Attacked, Sexually Assaulted
2/15/2011 4:16:25 PM
woah, some reports that Mubarak is dead[Edited on February 15, 2011 at 5:09 PM. Reason : rumors itt]
2/15/2011 4:31:43 PM
yep. i wonder if she will be stoned to death for being raped...
2/15/2011 7:21:42 PM
Egyptian men in general are notorious for sexual harassment and assaults on women in public. There was a BBC article a couple of years ago which mentioned some horrible statistics on the percentage of women in Cairo who have been sexually harassed.During the recent protests, one CNN commentator was talking about why there were no women in the streets (but there were in protests in Iran last year). He said during similar anti-government protests several years ago, women DID come out onto the streets as well, but they were groped and assaulted by the police and MUBARAK SUPPORTERS ---> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4600133.stmSad.According to this video, 60% of all women face harassment DAILY in Cairo.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvNoOmSUHaghttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7514567.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8314091.stm
2/16/2011 5:36:20 AM
Looks like Libya is brewing:http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110216/wl_nm/us_libya_rioting_benghazi
2/16/2011 9:48:32 AM
$70 billion?
2/16/2011 12:40:16 PM
I wonder why Lara Logan was targeted: http://www.zimbio.com/Lara+Loganhttp://celebgalz.com/lara-logan-34d-swimsuits/
2/16/2011 3:28:59 PM
Arabs have been emboldened. Good for them. Perhaps they can get their rights which have been trampled upon by dictators and kings who have held back on giving them their rights by keeping them busy in rhetoric about Israel and Zionists for several decades.Next in queue:BahrainLibyaYemenOmanIranAlgeriaMauritaniaAnti-government protests are brewing in all those countries.Eventually, hopefully, one day:Saudi ArabiaUAEQatarKuwaitSyriaJordanMorocco
2/17/2011 4:12:54 PM
^^Surely it has nothing to do with religion.
2/17/2011 4:35:07 PM
^^^She was asking for it, right? I'm sure it has nothing to do with the culture or the fact that they were chanting "Jew! Jew!" and had accused her of being a spy previously.
2/17/2011 5:36:16 PM
The Common CitizenAmazing how quickly a single desperate act of frustration by a common citizen can drastically and somewhat peacefully reshape the destiny of an entire region. Perhaps the entire world.Today, I almost feel inspired as I imagine my parents did during the fall of the Berlin Wall. Today, there is hope for the Middle East. Tangible hope. And it's all because of a simple man's justifiable contempt for the inexcusable actions of his government.Who would believe that the unforgiveable and illegal harassment by a Tunisian government official of Mohamed Bouazizi would lead to all this? That Tunisia's government would soon crumble under the weight of massive peaceful demonstrations sparked by his self-immolation?Or that Bouazizi’s imitators in Egypt would lead to a popular uprising and today’s outcome only weeks later? Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have overthrown a superpower and crucial US-ally eight times Tunisia’s size with an economy five times as large. It has taken weeks, but they have done it without ammunition. Without bombs. At times, without communication. Only an abundance of determination.And hardly a shot was fired.Why be inspired?Because besides Pyramids, Egypt controls the Suez Canal. They border Israel. They’re infinitely valuable in Risk, but I digress a bit. For my entire lifetime they have been ruled by a US-supported dictator who has maintained stability in the region, but has filched BILLIONS from his people and institutionalized the practice of TORTURE. Torturing local dissidents, innocents, even the terrorists suspects we captured and extradited abroad to be “questioned.”Despite former Head of State President Hosni Mubarak’s unquestionably brutal and greedy past, and his government’s attempts to incite the protestors to violence (a tactic used to make a hard-line government crackdown necessary), the old man did not order his police or army to fire indiscriminately on his rivals. Even as they angrily marched on his palace by the thousands. Perhaps these men DO respect the lives and wills of their people after all.Though Vice President Biden declared scarcely a week ago that Mubarak was not a dictator, the Swiss have frozen his and his family’s accounts already. That's reason enough to be inspired, but it isn’t the day to celebrate his restraint or struggles at the ATM. No, Egypt’s people are rushing our reporters at Tahrir Square today with an incredible message.They want us to know that they want what they have never had: a democracy. Freedom and self-determination. Jobs to match their educations. To live on more than $2 per day. Simple human dignity from their government.The calls for our destruction or that of Israel are absent on the Arab Street. If you listen closely, you will hear that they have rebelled only to demand what most of us take for granted; a will of their own.Who knows what the future holds for the emerging Egyptian republic now led by the head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and head of the Supreme Court. Or what will become of the North African region at large. But what we do know sounds like a good start. And we know who started the historic pan-Arab movement, though he is not around to witness the fruits of his sacrifice.Fate and chance remain ever alive as significant factors in our world's great history. That is the inspiring lesson from the accomplishments of this young, leadlerless, and largely peaceful movement. One common citizen's frustrated act of protest can still lead to historic and unprecedented change in a region's political order. Butterflies in Africa eat your hearts out.Other Arab nations have made quick democratic reforms or even bribed their people with food and grants to prevent the same outcome as similar events continue to rock other nations on the Arabian Peninsula. Will Bouazizi’s Revolution spread to Bahrain or overtake Yemen? Will it continue to Iran?The common citizens of the world wait with baited breath to find out.tl;drYo Tunisia, I'm really happy for you and I'mma let you finish, but Egypt had one of the best popular revolts of all time![Edited on February 17, 2011 at 10:16 PM. Reason : late to the party]
2/17/2011 10:16:09 PM
I appreciate the solidarity with the common man but it's a bit early for all that rainbows and happiness stuff.Like you said, all we've got is a good start. There's a lot of room for a bad finish, and a lot of history to suggest it.They have seen now what massive protests can accomplish even in the face of a strong-willed dictatorship. When one or two years down the line their economic situation is not remarkably better, will they show restraint in using the same methods to topple a democratic regime? Will the regime, thus threatened, abandon democracy in favor of harsher measures? Or, when elections occur, will groups now seemingly moderate or marginal come to the fore?You say that calls for the destruction of the US and Israel are absent from the "Arab Street." I say you've got not good reason to think that they're absent from anything other than the news.I'm hopeful. This could be the start of a beautiful thing that more or less peacefully brings freedom to a large swath of the world, and not just freedom but stability and prosperity. But I'm also wary. It could be the start of other things, less pleasant things. I'm glad Mubarak's gone but I'm not about to start ringing the bells yet.
2/17/2011 10:44:30 PM
Those are definitely some grab-able tits.
2/17/2011 11:18:11 PM
2/17/2011 11:47:49 PM
Bahrain and Libya beat and kill the shit out of protesters Obama condemns the violence.Protests in Bahrain were extremely peaceful. Still, the police and military descended upon the tents and beat them with truncheons and shot them with birsdshot. At least 4 dead and dozens injured. Oppressors.As for Libya, I don't know how peaceful they were being, but several dozen are dead
2/19/2011 2:32:35 AM
2/19/2011 5:16:37 AM
2/20/2011 10:48:34 PM
^^ I seriously doubt that those fine Islamic courts would care about it either way.she had some kind of sexual contact with someone other than her husband. stone that whore, right Trap?[Edited on February 20, 2011 at 11:23 PM. Reason : ]
2/20/2011 11:15:49 PM
^ I strongly protest your insinuation that I would like her to be punished for what happened to her.Perhaps you should read my post where I exposed (to TWW) and condemned the extremely widespread prevalence of sexual harassment in Egypt.Don't you dare do that again.
2/21/2011 2:26:28 AM
I, however, would like those barbarians who sexually molested her to be punished by hundreds of lashings, as per Islamic law.
2/21/2011 6:48:04 AM
What do people mean when they keep talking about "sexual harassment"? The term is vague but it keeps getting used over and over again. I understand for the case of the journalist (due to privacy), but what form of sexual harassment is common in Egypt in general? Surely we should now more specifically than what the term indicates.I mean, are rapes a problem? Is grabbing a problem? Are taunts and cat-calling a problems? I mean, is it like free grabs all over the place? Hands up the clothes? Really, there's some social connection that we are all missing by the S.H. term which doesn't tell us much.
2/21/2011 11:31:13 AM