11/24/2009 9:22:17 PM
^ Well, pardon me for stepping on your toes, sir. But concerning the "war tax," how is it fair that "the rich" and "high-earners" (someone please define both) pay five percent while others pay less? Is the war in Afghanistan being waged mostly in the name of the rich and high-earners and not in behalf of the whole of the United States? This. . .
11/24/2009 10:26:07 PM
COMING SOON!Obama's Speech on Afghanistan to Envision Exit November 29, 2009
11/30/2009 5:14:07 AM
Are any Obama-supporters out there going to bother defending his decision, or are we going to chalk this up to "just another Washington politician."
12/2/2009 3:12:20 PM
*crickets
12/2/2009 3:16:36 PM
^^ Why defend it? It's pretty clear that we're wasting our time in Afghanistan nowadays. Maybe if we still had the initiative, like during the months after 9/11, but we don't anymore. Any decision to draw back and move on is probably better at this point. Let's direct some more attention towards making ourselves safer, rather than continuing to look under every rock.[Edited on December 2, 2009 at 3:17 PM. Reason : interrupted]
12/2/2009 3:17:34 PM
another case of Obama trying to please everyone. There was literally a talking point from every possible side in that speech. Sending in 30,000 troops to begin coming home? what a concept. At least we have a 100:1 ratio to al qaeda in Afghanistan now
12/2/2009 7:17:31 PM
12/2/2009 7:49:01 PM
^ I will say that's one thing to somewhat admire about the Democratic caucus... they really do exhibit a lot of the "big tent" ideals that you're suggesting here. There are, admittedly, factions that are trying to pull the agenda in one direction or another, but at least those voices are getting heard, and not purged.What happened in NY23, and now with the "Reaganesque" purity test is pretty disheartening for anyone that believes there's a place for honest intellectual debate. When you decide to "weed out" the pragmatists, you miss out on opportunities to change people's views through dialogue and merit-based critique. The more purges you see, the more shrill debates will become. Or, rather, they'll stop being debates, and start being "who can shout the loudest" contests.
12/2/2009 7:57:56 PM
I think having the timetable is a good idea. I don’t see any other way forward regarding afghanistan or iraq, or at least the way we’re taking is better than completely indefinite timetables.
12/2/2009 8:13:08 PM
12/2/2009 8:45:58 PM
Sarah Palin commenting on foreign policy is like a retarded puppy trying to chase its tail until it falls into a muddy ditch.
12/2/2009 8:48:47 PM
12/3/2009 7:56:36 AM
12/3/2009 8:49:16 AM
So do you guys think obama pleased everyone or pissed everyone off?I think he backfired and pissed everyone off because I'm not pleased with more troops going at all, mccrystal aint pleased because he didn't get the 40,000 he said would be needed and people in favor of a pullout aren't pleased either. Lose lose? now obamas rating has fallen below 50% quicker than anyones. He'll be poweless in a year.
12/6/2009 1:07:20 AM
polls show more people supporting the move than opposing it… 51/40 IIRC
12/6/2009 1:07:53 AM
^ Argument to numbers. About 52 percent of Americans believe that there is "significant disagreement within the scientific community over global warming," and an even higher percentage believes that "scientists have falsified research data to support their own theories and beliefs about global warming"--you cool with this, too? Americans Skeptical of Science Behind Global WarmingThursday, December 03, 2009
12/6/2009 1:30:38 AM
^ haha, am I cool with people having opinions? yes.Most people in The Soap Box think you’re an idiot, are you cool with that?
12/6/2009 2:22:25 AM
^ Argument to numbers.[Edited on December 6, 2009 at 7:11 AM. Reason : And if you can't see the analogy, YOU are the idiot. ]
12/6/2009 7:09:48 AM
Considering you couldnt see that i was answering mambagrl’s question on peoples’ opinions, you are the idiot (which we all knew anyway).
12/6/2009 11:09:36 AM
i'm so glad we fought this war so we won't have any terrorists coming over to the us....whew!
12/25/2009 9:42:06 PM
It's time to fight them in Nigeria so we don't have to fight them in Detroit.Who's going with me right now to enlist? Our country is under attack!Pssst! They have oil! And practice Shraria Law(the savages!) Apparently their president is about to croak anyway, so that'll save a bullet.[Edited on December 25, 2009 at 10:09 PM. Reason : .]
12/25/2009 9:57:14 PM
12/25/2009 11:24:40 PM
I have my own ideas for an Afghanistan strategy, but nothing we've done there even remotely resembles the soviet approach.Bump by request.
6/1/2011 7:27:26 PM
^Thanks theDuke866I think now that bin Laden is dead, we should pull out ASAP.
6/1/2011 7:54:31 PM
I think that you should just be upfront about your views and not try to pretend that the bin Laden hit had anything to do with your stance on the issue.
6/1/2011 7:59:41 PM
I think the original invasion of Afghanistan was warranted and legit. Time to leave.
6/1/2011 8:02:16 PM
It was unwarranted, heavy handed, and costly. Plus, Osama wasn't even there.
6/1/2011 8:13:50 PM
The initial invasion was barely an invasion. It was mostly spec ops and the northern alliance, with a few air strikes. Not heavy handed at all.OBL was definitely there. He likely slipped away at Tora Bora.I don't know how in the hell you could call it unwarranted.^^ what I mean is that I don't buy that you were ok with OEF until a couple of weeks ago, and did a 180 because of the OBL hit.
6/1/2011 8:19:10 PM
The point is we didn't catch him with this operation that we wasted our future on. We caught him in Pakistan without a mass invasion we could've done the same thing in Afghanistan from day one. Its what John Kerry wanted to do. Casualties in Afghanistan:Afghan troops killed [1] 8,587 Afghan troops seriously injured [2] 25,761 Afghan civilians killed [3] 8,813 Afghan civilians seriously injured [4] 15,863 U.S. troops killed [5] 1,140 U.S. troops seriously injured [6] 3,420 Other coalition troops killed [7] 772 Other coalition troops seriously injured [8] 2,316 Contractors killed [9] 298 Contractors seriously injured [10] 2,428 Journalists killed [11] 19 Journalists seriously injured [12] unknown Total killed in Afghanistan 19,629 Total injured in Afghanistan 48,644 I don't know how in the hell you could call it warranted.[Edited on June 2, 2011 at 1:33 AM. Reason : those are numbers from a year ago]
6/2/2011 1:32:41 AM
How many violent deaths would have occurred had the civil war between the Taliban, the Northern Alliance, and Pashtun dissidents continued without US intervention? It's hard to imagine a scenario in which the number deaths not only matches, but exceeds, the totals you've posted. If there is going to be a war, in which it is the stated goal of one side to enslave one half of a country's population (among a myriad of other gruesome designs), and the other side is considerably more liberal (or less barbaric, as the case may be), then I think it is the moral responsibility of the US (and any other self-respecting democracy) to choose sides in the matter. The extent to which our involvement is feasible is an open question worthy of much debate and reflection, but the idea that joining in a fight against Fascist thugs is somehow immoral or imperial is absurd. No, it's sinister.[Edited on June 2, 2011 at 9:26 AM. Reason : ]
6/2/2011 9:08:35 AM
So thats what this is about
6/2/2011 11:31:31 AM
I wouldn't bother, he's pretty set in his ways. I've explained that, by that logic, we should invade every country that isn't free (according to whoever is in power at the time). We should start by toppling our own government, of course, as the United States is not free. lazarus also believes that we have a right to disagree with his foreign policy views, but we do not have a right to resist taxation to pay for it; we should all be forced to pay for these humanitarian missions. If you don't want to pay for them, you should be put in jail or killed. Also, we've established that while lazarus is personally unwilling to fight on behalf of these noble causes, he is willing to have others be sent off to their deaths. They'll be remembered as heroes.
6/2/2011 11:57:37 AM
just vote for me in 2024 and the iron fist of capitalism will give the world a reacharound itll never forget.
6/2/2011 12:03:38 PM
6/2/2011 12:33:35 PM
6/2/2011 1:19:46 PM
6/2/2011 1:35:08 PM
6/2/2011 1:42:19 PM
6/2/2011 1:58:05 PM
6/2/2011 2:11:38 PM
6/2/2011 2:18:58 PM
6/2/2011 11:33:47 PM
One more thing...As we've seen before, my views on foreign policy are significantly different from lazarus, and this case is no exception.That said, his assertion that we are obligated to choose sides in a conflict like this one is not the same thing as saying that we should then go fight in every instance like this. Now, I think that his personal inclination would generally be to do exactly that, but he's very specifically and rightfully presenting those as two separate issues.needMy own opinion is that we should give strong consideration to moving back to the model of the CIA and special forces hunting terrorist leaders and important enemies of the U.S. in Afghanistan and wherever else need be, but moving away from lots of conventional forces as heavy of a nation building effort that we currently are engaged in. I think that Afghanistan may be "winnable" in the conventional sense of totally neutralizing the Taliban and fostering the formation of a Western-friendly, benevolent government...but even if we do that, I don't see how it's that great of a victory in the grander scheme of national security in terms of counterterrorism. If we "fix" Afghanistan, those types will just pop up in some other failed Muslim or Muslim-sympathetic state, and there are plenty of them. The "whack-a-mole" approach is the only way I know of to deal with it, but doing it with large-scale warfare followed by a long-term nation building effort isn't really sustainable. Even if imperialism isn't the intention, that's the direction it effectively moves in. I think that making a few strikes to destroy facilities like training camps, and making hits on important leaders, etc more or less keeps them on the run and fairly ineffective, which is really all we need. If a government is complicit in harboring them, as was the Taliban, then target them in the strikes, too...once you go in and wreck shop in a couple of fucked-up countries, then just give them the middle finger and walk off, I suspect that you at least then limit the problem to completely lawless, failed states, because any marginally functionally government will rightfully view militant Islamists as an intolerable liability.Now...the above is referencing Afghanistan's face value of counter-terrorism, and why I don't really think the juice is worth the squeeze in that regard. From a standpoint of state-actor geopolitics, a full-up nation building approach in Afghanistan makes complete sense. We're well on our way to having a client state in Iraq, and there is certainly no love lost between them and our mutual enemy, Iran. If we could turn Afghanistan into a pro-Western country, Iran would be jammed right in the middle. Afghanistan also has a history of functional relations with Iran, which might prove useful. Moving on to the subject of two-faced, nuclear, unstable Pakistan, they would then be jammed right between Afghanistan and an increasingly pro-Western/America, nuclear, meteorically-rising, Pakistan-hating India (who, in turn, is a hedge against a rising China on their other border, but I digress).
6/3/2011 12:02:26 AM
6/3/2011 12:18:48 AM
6/3/2011 12:22:58 AM
i think all he's saying is don't use saving lives and delivering freedom to foreigners as justification for spending billions when there are opportunities to save lives and extend our own freedom back home for free
6/3/2011 6:52:15 AM
6/3/2011 9:38:12 AM
6/3/2011 11:53:43 AM
I lean a little toward the hawkish side, for sure, but definitely nothing like the neocon wing of the GOP, for example. I'm much more restrained than that. I think what made your statement totally not make sense at all to me is that I don't view OIF or OEF as about defending or securing freedom for oppressed people. I mean, that's great to think about, and I'm glad we've done it to the extent that we've accomplished that, but I view wars for what they are: advancement of American interests. We just use the feel-good, tertiary (or lower) priority stuff like that to sell it to the average American who is too poorly informed and frankly too dumb to understand the geopolitics.
6/3/2011 11:28:55 PM
How absurd. You think the average American gives a shit about the welfare of Afghans? You have it exactly backwards. When politicians want to sell unpopular wars, geopolitics and national security is almost always the route they choose.
6/4/2011 7:32:03 AM