... and the USA got its ass kicked. Or so sez William S. Lind:
12/4/2006 9:51:52 AM
it's over man, wormer dropped the big one.OVER? DID SOMEBODY SAY OVER? WAS IT OVER WHEN THE GERMANS BOMBED PEARL HARBOR? HELL NO. AND IT AIN'T OVER NOW.
12/4/2006 9:53:07 AM
that doesnt say we lost so much as it says "we're really afraid of casualties"that being said, im not disillusioned enough to think that the war is going well, or that we shouldnt pull out, but that guy doesnt really make the point
12/4/2006 9:54:54 AM
Yeah seriously. You'd have to be a stoner named after a dead frontman to a hippy band to think that "Considering sending more troops in" means the war is over. By that logic, D-day was like the turning point in FAVOR of the Germans or something.
12/4/2006 9:57:29 AM
^ Wow, talk about not considering context.Did you ignore this part
12/4/2006 10:10:03 AM
I don't think the scrambling for more troops is a last-ditch-effort tactic (although it might be a last-ditch-effort).The military has been calling for more troops since the beginning, the pentagon and congress just didn't want to listen. Now they've realized they shot themselves in the foot, and are trying to redo things the right way. There's no reason we should lose this war. It would be pretty pathetic, considering the ridiculous amounts of money spent on the military.
12/4/2006 10:33:53 AM
I wouldn't call it a deus ex machina, more like something that they should've done from the very beginning, but now it might be a touch too late...
12/4/2006 10:45:43 AM
Blind Hate, you're right in that the comparison isn't fully accurate. Granted.But the point is that in order for sending more troops into Iraq to fit this guy's mold, he has to prove his assertion that "the certainty of defeat looms ever more clearly"
12/4/2006 10:57:50 AM
12/4/2006 12:02:26 PM
Deus ex machina? Hell yeah. We'll send the fucking Shrike in. That'll show those terrorist pigs.[Edited on December 4, 2006 at 12:10 PM. Reason : damn]
12/4/2006 12:10:23 PM
12/4/2006 12:22:50 PM
From a purely realist, pragmatic point of view, we've long since won the war. If Iraq ends up as our puppet, yay. If it ends up as a failed state, it has no military or political apparatus and is no longer a competitor in any field.Mind you, I don't buy into realism to quite that extreme, but you get the idea.
12/4/2006 12:36:21 PM
12/4/2006 12:43:24 PM
~cut 'n run~
12/4/2006 12:53:31 PM
~wipe 'n flush~
12/4/2006 1:19:59 PM
OMGARR AMERICA
12/4/2006 4:45:42 PM
12/4/2006 6:34:51 PM
So this is Christmas....
12/4/2006 9:05:06 PM
^^I disagree.The disorganized, ill-equipped terrorist is the wave of the future. And he's scary.
12/6/2006 10:37:10 AM
^You think more scary than the organized, well equipped terrorist?
12/6/2006 10:38:44 AM
^Yes, most definitely scarier. Think about it.
12/6/2006 11:02:00 AM
I'm thinking...Shitty weapons vs. nukes...I can see the "disorganized" being scarier in the sense that there is no central command to attack, but ill-equipped is less scary than well-equipped in every scenario.
12/6/2006 11:13:30 AM
12/6/2006 12:39:18 PM
12/6/2006 1:41:11 PM
Its still ridiculous to be MORE afraid of ill-equipped terrorists because they are sometimes capable of killing thousands at one time as opposed to well-equipped terrorists that are always capable of it.Its just irrational.
12/6/2006 2:22:08 PM
won't somebody think of the children?
12/7/2006 8:28:02 AM
Bridget, read everything I said again -- I was offering a realist view. Your view is not realist. Realists aren't so concerned with how afraid you or anybody else within the state is, they're concerned with how powerful (and thus secure) the state is. Blowing up a movie theater accomplishes just about nothing towards harming a nation of 300 million people.Because Iraq has been thrown into chaos and thus has no potential to develop or employ anything significantly harmful to the state, the war has, at least from a realist perspective, been successful already.
12/7/2006 12:10:23 PM
I'm confused. Are we talking about terrorism here? Cause, yeah, how afraid we are has a lot to do with terrorism.Right?
12/8/2006 8:32:53 PM
The simple fact is fear doesn't cripple a nation. Israel isn't crippled, you know? Bombing a theater doesn't hamper our ability to interact with other countries to our advantage, and this is what a realist is concerned with.
12/8/2006 8:54:07 PM
^People in Israel have also given up personal liberties that we value here. They openly profile people by race, and it's just understood that that is what they have to do.I now get that you were speaking from a specific perspective, but I still disagree.
12/8/2006 9:49:51 PM
12/9/2006 3:58:14 AM
You win. I can't argue with some ridiculous perspective of the world without using another ridiculous perspective.Iraq wasn't a threat. But we destroyed it anyway. And that's "national survival."That's bullshit, and you know it's bullshit. But as long as you get to say outrageous things and hide behind the "from a realist perspective" preface, I'm sure you won't admit it's bullshit. After all, you probably spent a whopping whole class period learning about the international realist; it'd be a shame to let that learning go to waste.
12/9/2006 10:03:40 PM
12/9/2006 10:16:26 PM
12/10/2006 12:26:56 PM
12/10/2006 3:48:08 PM
What exactly are you basing US influence on Latin America decreasing on? [Edited on December 10, 2006 at 5:36 PM. Reason : .]
12/10/2006 5:25:55 PM
12/10/2006 5:32:57 PM
12/10/2006 6:51:23 PM
Free Trade Agreements, folks.Also known is Latin America as Trato de Libre Comercio. Lots of people know about NAFTA. There is also CAFTA...Central American Free Trade Agreement. There also exists one for the Andean countries (Ecuador, Peru, Columbia, Bolivia). In countries with 80% of the people below the poverty line like Ecuador, it is of no surprise when people see American companies coming in, gobbling up local industries and having free trade areas where the companies can effectively make their own rules, that people vote in such leaders as Chavez, Ortega, Morales and Correa. TLC also allows companies to come in and make water and electricity private. How can a poor person pay for those things? In Venezuela, if American companies take the oil without returning the profit to the country and polluting areas, of course someone like Chavez will be elected. The same occurs in Ecuador, also with oil. OXY--Occidental Petroleum, has caused a lot of problems in the country such as those mentioned above. Indigenuous tribes and fundations are always fighting against the oil companies´ intrusion into their homeland. Correa hopes to make sure more of the economic return from oil gets back to the people. Symbolism as well...in Ecuador they use American currency. How would you feel if we had to start using Canadian currency with Canadian leaders? And to top that, it made your family a lot poorer?Just an educated guess.[Edited on December 10, 2006 at 7:59 PM. Reason : .][Edited on December 10, 2006 at 8:00 PM. Reason : ..]
12/10/2006 7:58:18 PM
The Iraq War certainly isn't helping. Look at the way Chavez goes on and on about it. Also, they know the war makes it harder for us to intervene militarily in Latin America as we have in the past. Of course, I think less US influence in Latin America is probably a good thing, so I'm not really complaining.
12/10/2006 8:20:11 PM
By contrast, keep in mind that Peru chose to elect Garcia (the same guy who was president during a period when they had a 2.5 million percent inflation rate) over a Chavez-aligned candidate. Not to mention, take a look El Salvador, which is currently rotating out a brigade of troops in Iraq.
12/10/2006 10:00:48 PM
Garcia is still a leftist, though, even if he is considerably friendlier than Chavez.
12/10/2006 10:17:34 PM
12/10/2006 10:49:40 PM
12/11/2006 12:11:31 AM
12/11/2006 3:32:58 PM
Hey, at least we got rid of a bunch of arabs
12/11/2006 3:58:05 PM
12/11/2006 4:00:36 PM
do you hate me yet?
12/11/2006 4:01:56 PM
Kyle, I hated you at pretty much the exact second that the word "anime" came out of your mouth. Just kidding. Or am I? We'll never know.Look, I've said all along that I don't agree with this point of view entirely. I'm not willing to write off Iraq as a failure, because I'm pretty sure we'd have been forced to go into it sooner or later for some reason, only against a stronger enemy, and that the postwar scene would be pretty much identical to what it is now. So, to me, it was inevitable that we invade, and inevitable that the country go all to shit as a result. I say better now than later.
12/11/2006 4:41:50 PM
I don't buy that the war couldn't have been avoided. I certainly don't buy that the war as we waged it couldn't have been avoided. But I also don't buy that, now that we're there, we can write it off as a failure.We need a solution from someone a lot smarter than me. Because all I can come up with is going ahead and telling Iraq that it can be 3 different countries and we'll drop bombs on the first one of the three that doesn't play nice.
12/11/2006 4:44:52 PM