Well, I respect your in-depth answer Seeker, but I refuse to argue this
while you are still in the military. I know that you personally and
thousands like you are doing good, but I don't see the big picture that
way. In my mind America created 9/11 by all the interference in the
middle east for decades.
We have different views, and we will just have to agree to disagree.
The bottom line is, that every time you say that grotesque and
unnecessary violence is wide-spread in these places, and that America is
not as dangerous a place, you forget that I see the mass killings of
innocents by the US military as being the same thing. Bush is a mass
murderer in my eyes and a wanted criminal. You say it is not as violent
in America as these places, but that is because America has exported its
violence on a much larger scale -- abroad.
3,000 Americans died in 9/11.
Estimates are that in Afghanistan and Iraq hundreds of thousands of 
innocents - that's iINNOCENTS - either as a direct kill, or as a result
of the ensuing violence and displacement and disease, have been killed
by the warmongers.

"An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind" -- Mahatma Gandhi

Just tell your superiors to learn TM and teach the Sidhis to their
troops. Don't take no for an answer.

OffWorld


--- In [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> , "seekliberation"
<seekliberat...@...> wrote:
>
> Offworld,
>
> For the sake of simplicity, I deleted a lot your comments to make this
an easier read.
>
> Re: our alliance with Saudi, and our backing of other countries
>
> Our alliance with Saudi Arabia started with Franklin Roosevelt.  He
felt whoever has the strongest alliance would eventually be the world's
economic superpower, and he was right.  But he also put us at the mercy
of a region that is unstable, and a culture that is unreliable and for
the most part hates our culture.  Regarding Osama Bin Laden, he did not
build the Taliban.  He built Al Qaeda.  The Taliban only gave Al Qaeda
refuge because they were pissed at Hillary Clinton and Margaret Thatcher
for pleading to the UN council regarding the Taliban's treatment of
women.  The Taliban didn't necessarily like Bin Laden, but they rather
saw him as a bartering element.  The Taliban wanted the UN and USA off
their backs.  So they allowed Bin Laden to stay.  It didn't end up
working out to well for them in the long run.
>
> You also claimed that USA built the Taliban.  I'm not trying to win an
argument here, but rather communicate & inform, since I had no choice
but to learn a lot of this over the last 4 years.  USA helped support
the 'Mujahedeen', but we didn't 'build' them.  They were already
together and built to fight the Soviets, we just armed them with
anti-aircraft weapons.  After the Soviet occupation, the Mujahedeen
became very corrupt and that's when the Taliban were formed.  USA had
nothing to do with it.
>
> > Just like Kansas. Perhaps you are not aware of this, but numerous
people
> > have been killed for seeking medical care in America, and recently a
> > doctor was murdered in Kansas for practicing medicine.
>
> Yes, there are some dipshits in America.  Percentage wise, I doubt
it's nearly as bad as the rest of the countries i've been to (not
including Europe).   I would have to read the news and check the
internet to find names of people killed for such things.  In some
countries i've been to, I could walk into any village and talk to a
village elder and hear plenty of stories about local militias committing
atrocities towards civilians.  It is becoming a lot less common in the
middle eastern countries that are moving towards being a 1st world
country, which i'm glad for.   But it's common in the 2nd/3rd world
countries in the middle east.
>
> Besides, in America, it's usually a nut case or psychopath that
commits some of these ridiculous murders.  In some of the Middle Eastern
countries where this occurs, it is implied policy.
>
> >   <<I've heard from someone overseas now that they tried to blame
> > civilian casualties on American aircraft bombings somewhere out
west,
> > problem is they were killed by Chinese grenades, which no NATO
forces
> > carry at all.  They will kill civilians to make it look like us.>>
>
> > Yes, American forces can drop bombs on houses and kill rebels and
spare
> > the women and children in there. They have smart bombs.
>
> This is obviously sarcasm, but still there seems to be no
acknowledgement that Taliban are killing their own civilians
'INTENTIONALLY', whereas if civilians are killed by Americans it is due
to a firefight breaking out in the midst of civilians.  There seems to
be this thought going around in the minds of 'Michael Moore' type people
that want to believe that Soldiers and Marines are intentionally killing
women and children.  What they fail to understand is the luring of US
forces into villages and towns with the intention of civilian casualties
taking place.
> Also, don't get me wrong, there have been a few cases of us making big
mistakes in the past.  But I have been in the presence of some of the
most ignorant redneck type Marines out there, and I can assure you that
not even the most ignorant US soldier/Marine has any desire to kill
women or children in another country.
>
> > << It's often times their best chance of victory.  >>
> >
> > There is no victory in these wars. There never was, and there never
will
> > be. No-one will be victorious or claim victory. This Bush/Cheney
debacle
> > will drag on for 30 years (unless there is some massive change in
world
> > consciousness that completely re-arranges matter itself.
>
> Yes there is victory, but not for us.  The Taliban may be able to
claim victory after this is all over.  Al Qaeda is still recovering from
being hit hard during the Bush/Cheney period, but they'll rebound.  I
have argued this with many soldiers and Marines that we are going to
lose this war, most likely.  Iraq is negotiable whether we won or not,
and for now leans towards losing unless the Iraq Army becomes fully
established.  We are losing in Afghanistan now, and the troop surge
Obama approved of will not solve the problem.  America had little or no
idea what they were getting into when this whole thing started.  The US
armed forces are simply not willing to go the same distance that our
declared enemies are willing to go.  If our economy was kicking ass
right now, we'd stand a chance.  We have played right into Bin Laden's
trap.  He wanted us to get over-committed in war to the point where our
economy goes to shit.  It worked.  What's next, I have no idea.
>
> > <<I also remember a village about 30-40 miles from where I was based
> > that a 15 year old boy was hung to death for carrying American
> > currency.>>
> >
> > The accusations about the practices of SOME American soldiers in
Iraq
> > and elsewhere are just as brutal and more widespread.  That doesn't
mean
> > everywhere American soldiers go are like that does it? or that that
is
> > representative of the whole US military?
>
> There is a rather big difference between Taliban and US soldiers.  For
the Taliban, such actions are allowed and often encouraged if done for
the right reason (in their minds).  In America, if someone is caught
doing something like that, they will spend the rest of their life in an
orange jump suit, regardless of any reason.  In other words, it's
Taliban policy to allow such things, and US policy against it.
>
> Also, the 'some' American soldiers being more brutal, or more
widespread isn't really true.  It just gets 100 times the amount of
publicity when it does happen, and it's not anywhere close to being as
brutal as things i've seen or heard of (chopping off heads, arms,
ligaments, public hangings etc...), it's usually a gunshot in the wrong
direction from someone who's nervous behind the gun.
>
> > Yes, you are right, they are not safe places. If only America had
not
> > ignored world opinion and international law and sent Iraq back to
the
> > stone age, and if only they had let the international community
focus on
> > Afghanistan, then the world would be a better place.
> >Unfortuantely it will take decades to mend the mess that Bush/Cheney
made.
>
> We're on the same page regarding Iraq....well sort of.  I personally
feel that Bush felt he was doing the right thing.  Bush was too stupid
to have a truly evil plan.  Now Cheney on the other hand I don't
necessarily trust.  It did turn out that Saddam wanted us to believe he
had WMD's, and he thought Bush would do the same thing Clinton did (he
was obviously wrong).  I don't know for sure, but I believe Cheney
wanted to go to war to find out, and he advised Bush in this way.  Colin
Powell was supposedly skeptical, but jumped on board in the end.
>
> I don't however see Iraq as a black/white situation.  People in Iraq
hated Saddam for a reason, and from all the villagers I spoke to, I
understand why.  So i'm glad to see the Baath Party and Fadayeen Party
removed.  However, I see an inconsistency in policy here.  If it's our
policy to remove corrupt dictators, why Saddam?  There are much worse in
this world than Saddam, especially in Africa and some places in South
America.  So IMO, it was either ignorance or ulterior motive that took
us to Iraq.
>
> Last but not least, I remember somewhere in your comments about women
being allowed freedoms very easily in many Middle Eastern countries. 
This is true, especially in Jordan and UAE (United Arab Emirates) which
are very Americanized countries.  I remember going to a mall in UAE, and
some women wore the traditional conservative dress that covers
everything but their eyes, while others dressed just like American
women.  I consider this a very good sign that their region is evolving. 
I've also heard that Iran is very similar.
> But what many people don't know is that there are still fundamental
groups out there in these countries that are trying to reverse this
trend.  And these groups are not small, like the KKK in America.  They
are rather vast and have a very powerful influence on government in that
region.  I could go on for a while, but to be short.....there are groups
out there who feel they should declare war against this trend.  Some of
these groups keep the war close to home, while other groups see Europe
and USA as the enemy and try to bring the war to them.  I'm sure you're
aware of the problems that England, Denmark, and Australia are having
with some of these groups.  The answer to the problem is unknown at this
time (well, some people know an answer, but it'll get yours and my
country in hot water with the UN); USA, Britain, Australia and Denmark
are all caught between a rock and a hard place.  We can't sit around and
do nothing about the problem, but at the same time anything we do will
be percieved as inhumane or politically incorrect.
>
>
> Respectfully
> seekliberation
>


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