9/4/2013 8:47:42 PM
Chicken hawks on both sides are talking about the “ground situation.”But the sitrep is this: Both sides are hell bent on fighting to the last man in a sectarian civil WAR.The most we can do in my opinion is follow the UN's advice and search for diplomatic resolution. AND in the mean time aid refugee displacement which would involve proxy transportation pickups and provisional camps. That is the MOST we can do and is the only responsible path we can take as a world power. Anything else is whimsical sabre rattling.
9/4/2013 9:35:50 PM
This is some fucked up shit.Us citizen caught in FBI trap trying to help terrorist group fighting against Assad in Syria, the SAME terrorist group the US is aiding with money and weapons. That's some rich shit.http://www.filmsforaction.org/news/fbi_entraps_us_citizen_attempting_to_join_usfunded_al_qaeda_in_syria/
9/4/2013 9:41:53 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLrGUXk-h0MIm not sure what the cost of these are now as they've been out for quite some time, but they are a great way to ensure a stable provisional camp for refugees.If you need to put in air condition or utilities all you need is a drill and a saw.
9/4/2013 10:54:55 PM
Obama says its our moral obligation to save lives.26000 people died of hunger today25 million dollars could have saved them alltomahawk missiles cost 1.4 million dollars eachYOU DO THE MATH
9/4/2013 11:45:28 PM
Its funny watching the president request a political mandate from Congress by paying superficial tribute to the constitution, only to know that those congressman will then go against the overwhelming popular will of their constituents.It's a clever little way of pretending that the American people have some sort of way of controlling our foreign adventures, even though we totally don't.All the politicians get to cover their asses, and the American public is on the hook for whatever colossal fuckup this inevitably becomes.Democracy, bitches.[Edited on September 5, 2013 at 12:33 AM. Reason : well played, establishment. well played.]
9/5/2013 12:29:38 AM
more like republic, bitches
9/5/2013 1:14:37 AM
http://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsroom/news/?id=efa542de-3059-4bd6-a05f-f74d0e1771a3
9/5/2013 9:43:38 AM
Agreed.However, another part of me is thinking along the lines let's just cut the fucking pretense and start taking over countries and have an official American Empire but I'm not sure that the problems we'd inherit wouldn't outweigh the resources.Granted our de facto empire is giving us the problem with very little resources....
9/5/2013 9:54:22 AM
Congress is there to follow the will of the American people. The American people in this instance are overwhelmingly against any action in Syria. So why is there even a debate?
9/5/2013 10:24:57 AM
^ America is a plutocracy. Corporations, the wealthy elite, and the bloated defense/surveillance/intelligence/security apparatus determine our true policy.
9/5/2013 10:55:11 AM
9/5/2013 11:30:48 AM
9/5/2013 11:54:31 AM
[Edited on September 5, 2013 at 12:00 PM. Reason : .]
9/5/2013 12:00:09 PM
^^ military industrial complex?
9/5/2013 2:12:49 PM
^^^ They do it all the time. Sometimes for better, sometimes for worse, such is the nature of a republic.
9/5/2013 3:38:37 PM
Holding on to the minor distinction between democracy and a republic is pretty weak.If elected officials rarely voted against the will of their constituents, then you could say, "such is the nature of a republic."But when they do so, over, and over, and over again, then you have to question the very legitimacy of of the system. Simply dismissing it and saying, "welp, thems the breaks" is a surefire way to enable authoritarian rule.
9/5/2013 3:55:21 PM
Free of meddling influences such as cronyism and lobbyist bribery, it would be a self-correcting system...you could diverge from the will of constituents to an extent, but too much and you'd lose your seat.On the other hand, the system is designed that way largely for the exact purpose of not giving the common, unintelligent and/or ignorant voter what he wants.
9/5/2013 4:04:44 PM
Agree with the first part, not with the second.To think that the system is designed to remove "the unintelligent" or "ignorant" from policy and decision making is a romantic view of representative democracy at best. The far more likely reason is to remove the "weak" and "powerless" from decision making. Wars would be fought a lot less often if the sons and daughters of the rich and powerful were asked to "defend freedom." I'm certain that you are aware of this.
9/5/2013 4:12:13 PM
actually, thats exactly why they did it. the founding fathers were terrified of direct democracy and we know this because they said so in their writing.
9/5/2013 4:37:37 PM
^^ In addition to ^, the sons of the rich and powerful used to be pretty routinely involved in the fighting. The CIA was almost exclusively an Ivy League institution until fairly recently, and our military's officers were drawn fairly heavily from the wealthy and successful classes as well. The military now is far from a bunch of uneducated rubes, but there has been a relative divorce of military service from the more priveliged classes.http://www.amazon.com/AWOL-Unexcused-Absence-Americas-Military/dp/B001OW5NDWthat's an OK book that discusses the history of that divorce and divide. I don't agree with all of their conclusions (most of all, with respect to compulsory national service), but it is decidedly non-partisan and tries to be pretty clear with what's objective and what's subjective/opinion.
9/5/2013 6:09:55 PM
9/5/2013 6:20:19 PM
9/5/2013 7:02:50 PM
9/5/2013 9:16:56 PM
This may be completely irrelevant, but I'll post it anyway (from 2010).http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/toxic-legacy-of-us-assault-on-fallujah-worse-than-hiroshima-2034065.html
9/6/2013 12:56:54 AM
Didn't you already post that in another thread?[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 8:44 AM. Reason : k]
9/6/2013 8:16:35 AM
it's been posted in this threadhere's more for anyone interested:[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 8:47 AM. Reason : .]
9/6/2013 8:24:24 AM
^^^ so we developed a very effective weapon? sweet
9/6/2013 8:39:42 AM
you're a psychopath if that is really your takeaway from that post
9/6/2013 8:48:40 AM
really shitty trolli doubt he'll be laughing if/when he or his fellow veterans develop cancerhttp://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/05/130521105557.htm
9/6/2013 10:00:42 AM
^^^^
9/6/2013 11:10:49 AM
^what do you expect from a congressman? i didn't post the video for his chemical engineering expertisesomething has caused ridiculous levels of cancer and birth defects in Iraq, and DU makes the most sense out of what we know. is it 100% proven? no.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depleted_uranium#Chemical_toxicityi'd like to hear your explanation of why it's so stupid.[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 11:33 AM. Reason : .]
9/6/2013 11:33:26 AM
if you don't like what a congressmen said (who either misunderstood the science, or was trying to simplify them for the purpose of explanation and did a poor job), what do you think about the story in The Independent on the last page, or how about the Science Daily article posted above or the Journal it references:Riyad Abdullah Fathi, Lilyan Yaqup Matti, Hana Said Al-Salih, Douglas Godbold. Environmental pollution by depleted uranium in Iraq with special reference to Mosul and possible effects on cancer and birth defect rates. Medicine, Conflict and Survival, 2013; 29 (1): 7 DOI: 10.1080/13623699.2013.765173I'm trying to take you seriously, but can you not realize that more than that congressman think its bad? I mean really people. its bad shit[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 11:51 AM. Reason : i actually don't try to take mrfrog seriously. i mean really people]
9/6/2013 11:50:36 AM
How does it make sense to you that vaporizing Uranium in the middle of the desert in batches of 1 kg or so (for a single shell) affects health?Uranium as a gas is quite heavy. It doesn't go far. Where were the tanks relative to those communities with birth defects when they were actively firing shells?How could these activities possible even have a prayer's chance of putting more Uranium into clouds and the environment than a coal plant?How does an armor piercing round get vaporized within an Iraq community? None of it ever made any sense.
9/6/2013 11:59:24 AM
uranium gas, lol[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 12:05 PM. Reason : i mean seriously people]
9/6/2013 12:01:43 PM
It has to be in some compound. What? I don't know. It doesn't easily convert into a gas. And it starts out in a ceramic form. Ceramic Uranium is perfectly safe. Even Yellowcake isn't very hazardous if there's nothing causing you to actively inhale it, which you should not do.But I looked at that paper. It seems to make some crazy reference to the US more-or-less dumping buckets of nasty stuff on cities in the Persian Gulf war (NOT Iraq War). I don't have the actual paper and the abstract wasn't very convincing on the details, even for those distinctly different claims.
9/6/2013 12:19:01 PM
9/6/2013 12:41:50 PM
Sorry I read "Gulf War" and didn't get the "2003" after it.But you still remain extremely disingenuous about this point
9/6/2013 12:58:19 PM
9/6/2013 1:07:11 PM
^^http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/apr/25/internationaleducationnews.armstrade
9/6/2013 1:13:13 PM
9/6/2013 1:39:45 PM
aerosolized is the word you are looking for
9/6/2013 1:44:29 PM
9/6/2013 1:47:32 PM
9/6/2013 1:49:11 PM
why did you post that link? I understand what aerosolized means, you are the one who keeps using vaporized and uranium gas incorrectly when you probably mean aerosolized.[Edited on September 6, 2013 at 1:54 PM. Reason : also, again, its not only in tank-to-tank rounds. hell, it was even in hand grenades for awhile. ]
9/6/2013 1:52:54 PM
I'm pretty sure inhaling ANY metal particles into your lungs will lead to very bad things. Depleted Uranium is used as a weapon b/c it is extremely dense. It's no more of a radiation threat than the bricks that houses are made of.It's also amusing to see everyone clowning on the one guy here that actually works in the nuclear industry.
9/6/2013 2:35:25 PM
9/6/2013 2:42:36 PM
working in the nuclear industry doesn't have anything to do with this. if mrfrog was an industrial hygienist he would have credibility, but from what he was written about uranium gas and vaporization its pretty clear that he is not an industrial hygienist. i'm actually trained professionally to deal with radiological contaminants such as DU, but I'm not basing anything off of my own personal knowledge or experience (I have never been involved in a project remediating DU), everything I've said is what has been said in the peer-reviewed journals and media that has been posted. (by that I mean that I was previously aware of the different types of radiation, exposure pathways, PPE required, and remediation methods)It is true that DU is used because its dense, but that doesn't mean its not a threat. It is an absolute fact that it is more dangerous than the bricks houses are made of, you can argue about the level to which it is more of a threat but it is absolutely incorrect to say that it poses no more risk than a clay brick. i have a brick house and you won't find any radiation in my piss, but you will in the people who live in those areas and even in veterans (even years after the exposure ended, some veterans have uranium levels 10-100 times above safe levels in their urine)look, its understandable to not fully understand exposure pathways and risks, but dismissing the large amount of empirical evidence because you don't understand the risks or have been told its safe is just dumb. i don't understand TKE-Teg's continual denial of any issue he personally disagrees with, regardless of evidence, simply because he doesn't agree with it. [Edited on September 6, 2013 at 3:01 PM. Reason : .]
9/6/2013 2:52:18 PM
politics aside (yes i know this situation by definition makes this an impossibility), does anyone ACTUALLY want the US to take military action in Syria at this point (besides politicians)??It just seems to me like a really bad move as there isn't any real effect that our missiles would have to prevent or stop the killing going on... in fact our missiles would make the region less stable (in my opinion).
9/6/2013 3:22:29 PM
It looks like Tarpon wants to
9/6/2013 3:32:43 PM