Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-25 Thread J.A. Terranson

On Sun, 24 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:

 The ICC and the world court have a track record that resembles
 the lowest common demoninator of the governments that sponsor
 it - They support tyrrany, terror, and slavery, and shattering
 confiscation of property.

Agreed.


 For all that is wrong with the US government, remember the
 condition  of people under the great majority of the world:
 poverty and fear, where the political privilege of a few
 shatters the economy and forces the vast majority into poverty,
 for example India, Burma, Nigeria, Vietnam, Pakistan, Cuba
 Indonesia, and all the rest.

You forgot to list the US.

 If we were subject to the power of those governments that
 compose the majority of the world's governments, we would be as
 poor, unfree, and frightened as the subjects of those
 governments.

And we are not?

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

An ill wind is stalking
while evil stars whir
and all the gold apples
go bad to the core

S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-25 Thread James A. Donald
--
James A. Donald
  For all that is wrong with the US government, remember the 
  condition  of people under the great majority of the
  world's governments: poverty and fear, where the political
  privilege of a few shatters the economy and forces the vast
  majority into poverty, for example India, Burma, Nigeria,
  Vietnam, Pakistan, Cuba Indonesia, and all the rest.

J.A. Terranson:
 You forgot to list the US.

You have shown many signs of psychotic loss of contact with
reality.  The proposition that the government of the US causes
similar effects to the government of Burma is over the top even
for you.

James A. Donald
  If we were subject to the power of those governments that 
  compose the majority of the world's governments, we would
  be as poor, unfree, and frightened as the subjects of those
  governments.

J.A. Terranson:
 And we are not?

Uh, no. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 e0paVHj/6w7mGUq7SxSrbVSLTQLi5dWgOYMAlHSF
 4w1k4b0rDwMkdMVwrQc2sFCweO4HqwGhhOQDKA3Q7



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-25 Thread James A. Donald
--
Adam:
 This brings up thoughts of prior debates on whether or not US 
 citizens are subject to the International Court. We (the US) 
 are making a habit of forcing our laws on other countries, 
 but yet we are not subject to the laws of an established 
 INTERNATIONAL court; one who's laws are created from a 
 consensus of people of many nations and backgrounds. The 
 hypocrisy of the Bush Doctrine is simply mind-boggling.

The same consensus as runs the international human rights 
commission that condemns Israel while blessing Sudan?

The ICC and the world court have a track record that resembles 
the lowest common demoninator of the governments that sponsor 
it - They support tyrrany, terror, and slavery, and shattering 
confiscation of property.

For all that is wrong with the US government, remember the 
condition  of people under the great majority of the world: 
poverty and fear, where the political privilege of a few 
shatters the economy and forces the vast majority into poverty, 
for example India, Burma, Nigeria, Vietnam, Pakistan, Cuba 
Indonesia, and all the rest.

If we were subject to the power of those governments that 
compose the majority of the world's governments, we would be as 
poor, unfree, and frightened as the subjects of those 
governments. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 FIkvqRtdx4mKda8MY0+7FCzRw09CvdTSH2IjDCV3
 4H7vUDccMZaaLjHdsx+DkMirimYrUgLbOx8ZpmAjm



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-24 Thread Adam
This brings up thoughts of prior debates on whether or not US citizens
are subject to the International Court. We (the US) are making a habit
of forcing our laws on other countries, but yet we are not subject to
the laws of an established INTERNATIONAL court; one who's laws are
created from a consensus of people of many nations and backgrounds. The
hypocrisy of the Bush Doctrine is simply mind-boggling.

-Adam


On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 06:31:16 -0500 (CDT), J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
 On Tue, 19 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:
 
  ... but Bin Laden's indictment
  not only mentions US troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the
  reconquest of Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
  Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah law.
 
 Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?  The US can go
 after BL for not following US [constitutional] law, so why can't he come
 after us for not following Shariah (or any other) law?
 
 This is but one of the many fatal flaws in the Bush Doctrine of
 nation-building.
 
  --digsig
   James A. Donald
 
 -- 
 Yours,
 
 J.A. Terranson
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 0xBD4A95BF
 
   An ill wind is stalking
   while evil stars whir
   and all the gold apples
   go bad to the core
 
   S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-24 Thread Adam
The problem is, of course, that the US simply cannot keep their dicks
out of the affairs of other countries. We are obsessed with controlling
how the world develops, so as to guarantee to force countries to evolve
in such a way that is beneficial to the US. Such is an inevitable hazard
of becoming the last remaining super-power; we know we can control the
world, and have now (with the declaration of war in Iraq) let the world
know that there's nothing anyone can do about it. 

The US wants the world to operate like a giant corporation run by old
white fudge-packers who smile on TV and fuck us all behind closed doors.
Terrorism, as you say, is the response of other countries who violently
resent American involvement in affairs that, at their core, have nothing
to do with the US. Unfortunately, the US's war on terror completely
misses this point, and only serves to further the problem. 

Sure, we might kill a few existing terrorists, but where do
terrorists come from? Won't these actions create a larger and more
hostile breeding ground for more people to lash out at US involvement in
foreign affairs? The US government just doesn't understand, or just
doesn't care.

-Adam

On Tue, 19 Oct 2004 13:21:06 -0400, Tyler Durden
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
 War is dangerous to freedom, but we do not have a choice of peace.  The 
 question is where the war is to be fought - in America, or elsewhere.  War 
 within America will surely destroy freedom.
 
 So. Why don't we see terrorist attacks in Sweden, or Switzerland, or
 Belgium 
 or any other country that doesn't have any military or Imperliast
 presence 
 in the middle east? Is this merely a coincidence?
 
 What I strongly suspect is that if we were not dickin' around over there
 in 
 their countries, the threat of terrorism on US soil would diminish to
 very 
 nearly zero. In other words, we DO have a choice of peace, and our choice 
 was to pass on it.
 
 -TD
 
 From: James A. Donald [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Airport insanity
 Date: Tue, 19 Oct 2004 09:39:05 -0700
 
  --
 Thomas Shaddack:
  It isn't a problem for you until it happens to you. Who
  knows when being interested in anon e-cash will become a
  ground to blacklist *you*.
 
 James A. Donald:
 I know when it will happen.  It will happen when people
 interested in anon ecash go on suicide missions.   :-)
 
 Bill Stewart
   More likely, when anon ecash money-launderers start being
   accused of funding terrorist activities.
 
 When e-currency handlers (cambists) are accused of money
 laundering terrorist's money, the feds steal the money, but
 they do not obstruct them from travelling, or, surprisingly,
 even from doing business - well, perhaps not so surprisingly,
 for if they stopped them from doing business there would be
 nothing to steal.
 
 When the state uses repressive measures against those that seek
 to murder us, there is still a large gap between that and using
 repressive measures against everyone.
 
 We are not terrorists, we don't look like terrorists, we don't
 sound like terrorists. Indeed, the more visible real terrorists
 are, the less even Tim McViegh looks like a terrorist and the
 more he looks like a patriot.
 
 When people are under attack they are going to lash out, to
 kill and destroy.  Lashing out an external enemy, real or
 imaginary, is a healthy substitute for lashing out at internal
 enemies.  We do not have a choice of peace, merely a choice
 between war against external or internal enemies.   Clearly,
 war against external enemies is less dangerous to freedom.
 
 War is dangerous to freedom, but we do not have a choice of
 peace.  The question is where the war is to be fought - in
 America, or elsewhere.  War within America will surely destroy
 freedom.
 
 What we need to fear is those that talk about the home front
 and internal security, those who claim that Christians are as
 big a threat as Muslims - or that black Muslims are as big a
 threat as Middle Eastern Muslims.
 
  --digsig
   James A. Donald
   6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
   cGrCJvmIhJnYLWO2RB3qmnqijcHlOOsA7iklRoZD
   4Ar75eLN10XbfJw/mqPpGQeUW0SzMlz4CLrpHIeEe
 
 _
 Get ready for school! Find articles, homework help and more in the Back
 to 
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Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-21 Thread James A. Donald
--
James A. Donald wrote:
  ... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US 
  troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of 
  Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in 
  Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey
  Shariah law.

J.A. Terranson
 Whats good for the goose is good for the gander,
 right? The US can go after BL for not following US 
 [constitutional] law, so why can't he come after us
 for not following Shariah (or any other) law?

James A. Donald:
But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.
The US goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin
Laden goes after us for not accepting second class
citizenship under Muslim rule.

J.A. Terranson
   No. He goes after us for the very same reason: for [our] 
   murdering of *hundreds of thousands* of people, both
   directly (Iraq) and by proxy (Israel).

James A. Donald:
  What then is the reason for the murder of Afghans and
  Sudanese?

J.A. Terranson
 My enemy's friend is my enemy.

But Al Quaeda and like groups were murdering Afghans in large
numbers long before the US renewed their old alliances. *

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 VeAfgPXsu8hMd159ebYkMe4IMwec2ScP1h/9frn/
 40jZWcrteGmlLGXGPABh60Da4xPqu9PUZow53bsJs



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread J.A. Terranson

On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:

 James A. Donald wrote:
   ... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US troops
   in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of Spain, the
   massacre committed by the crusaders in Jerusalem, and the
   failure of Americans to obey Shariah law.

 J.A. Terranson
  Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?  The
  US can go after BL for not following US [constitutional] law,
  so why can't he come after us for not following Shariah (or
  any other) law?

 But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.  The US
 goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin Laden goes
 after us for not accepting second class citizenship under
 Muslim rule.

No. He goes after us for the very same reason: for [our] murdering of
*hundreds of thousands* of people, both directly (Iraq) and by proxy
(Israel).

 --digsig
  James A. Donald

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

An ill wind is stalking
while evil stars whir
and all the gold apples
go bad to the core

S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread Bill Stewart
At 11:25 AM 10/19/2004, Dave Howe wrote:
TBH the UK *did* have a major terrorist threat for decades -
because we were dicking around in *their* country :)
Do you mean the terrorists who raised their funding in
bars in Boston and San Francisco?  They haven't been
doing much active terror lately, though they still
try to raise funds in the bars on Geary Street.
The Bush Administration says that they'll go bomb any country
that harbors anti-US terrorists, but if the UK felt the
same way and bombed Boston I bet they'd be a bit upset.
(Bombing San Francisco wouldn't bother the Bush League as much.)



[2] Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread J.A. Terranson

On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:


 James A. Donald wrote:
 ... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US
 troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of
 Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
 Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah
 law.

 J.A. Terranson
Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?
The US can go after BL for not following US
[constitutional] law, so why can't he come after us for
not following Shariah (or any other) law?

 James A. Donald:
   But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.  The
   US goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin Laden
   goes after us for not accepting second class citizenship
   under Muslim rule.

 J.A. Terranson
  No. He goes after us for the very same reason: for [our]
  murdering of *hundreds of thousands* of people, both directly
  (Iraq) and by proxy (Israel).

 What then is the reason for the murder of Afghans and Sudanese?


As much as I hate to followup to myself, I can't help this one: I just
fucked up.  In my earnest to provide a timely answer (at a moment when I
am precisely *out* of any time whatsoever), I made the wrong choice by
trying to reply at all.  What came out was a single line of words which
had concepts so compressed that they were lost amongst the very bits
surrounding them: my one line flippant and idiotic looking answer is just
meaningless, and pointless.  I should not have given in to the urge to
reply *now* just because I wanted to put *something* on the record before
I could approach this properly (read: at lengths I didn't have available
at this moment).

I both apologize for this idiocy, and retract that crap answer I just
foisted upon you and the rest of the readers - that I spewed it at all is
embarrasing enough!

I promise to answer this properly, but I'm afraid it'll have to wait till
saturday for me to have the time to do it right (the way I *should* have
done it three minutes ago, or else STFU).

Sorry - you (as in the cosmic you as well as in JAD) deserved better.
Hell, so did I.

Barf...

 --digsig
  James A. Donald

Did that make any sense to anyone but me?

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

An ill wind is stalking
while evil stars whir
and all the gold apples
go bad to the core

S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread James A. Donald
--
James A. Donald wrote:
  ... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US troops 
  in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of Spain, the 
  massacre committed by the crusaders in Jerusalem, and the 
  failure of Americans to obey Shariah law.

J.A. Terranson
 Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?  The 
 US can go after BL for not following US [constitutional] law, 
 so why can't he come after us for not following Shariah (or 
 any other) law?

But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.  The US 
goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin Laden goes 
after us for not accepting second class citizenship under
Muslim rule. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 TwiD9R90EdvKqsjuevEp63cmJRnD0ia7+K9+fllS
 4NIKSw8Ax0afFEysgsliifJiwl/5SxotTzQc3ZPe3




Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread J.A. Terranson


On Tue, 19 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:

 ... but Bin Laden's indictment
 not only mentions US troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the
 reconquest of Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
 Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah law.

Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?  The US can go
after BL for not following US [constitutional] law, so why can't he come
after us for not following Shariah (or any other) law?

This is but one of the many fatal flaws in the Bush Doctrine of
nation-building.

 --digsig
  James A. Donald

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

An ill wind is stalking
while evil stars whir
and all the gold apples
go bad to the core

S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread J.A. Terranson

On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, James A. Donald wrote:

 James A. Donald wrote:
 ... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US
 troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of
 Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
 Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah
 law.

 J.A. Terranson
Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right?
The US can go after BL for not following US
[constitutional] law, so why can't he come after us for
not following Shariah (or any other) law?

 James A. Donald:
   But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.  The
   US goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin Laden
   goes after us for not accepting second class citizenship
   under Muslim rule.

 J.A. Terranson
  No. He goes after us for the very same reason: for [our]
  murdering of *hundreds of thousands* of people, both directly
  (Iraq) and by proxy (Israel).

 What then is the reason for the murder of Afghans and Sudanese?

 --digsig
  James A. Donald

My enemy's friend is my enemy.

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

An ill wind is stalking
while evil stars whir
and all the gold apples
go bad to the core

S. Plath, Temper of Time



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-20 Thread James A. Donald
--
James A. Donald wrote:
... but Bin Laden's indictment not only mentions US
troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the reconquest of
Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah
law.

J.A. Terranson
   Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, right? 
   The US can go after BL for not following US
   [constitutional] law, so why can't he come after us for
   not following Shariah (or any other) law?

James A. Donald:
  But these laws are not as like as geese and ganders.  The
  US goes after Bin Laden for murdering people.  Bin Laden
  goes after us for not accepting second class citizenship
  under Muslim rule.

J.A. Terranson
 No. He goes after us for the very same reason: for [our]
 murdering of *hundreds of thousands* of people, both directly
 (Iraq) and by proxy (Israel).

What then is the reason for the murder of Afghans and Sudanese? 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 k+G5vLtBGRUbtmGjb+iAoDxnN3CsLibGbd6SVq/s
 4caCsK9kczuZW8ZoOGyjeQwD2fLxwUImuZ05kSJrK




Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-19 Thread Dave Howe
Tyler Durden wrote:
So. Why don't we see terrorist attacks in Sweden, or Switzerland, or 
Belgium or any other country that doesn't have any military or 
Imperliast presence in the middle east? Is this merely a coincidence?

What I strongly suspect is that if we were not dickin' around over there 
in their countries, the threat of terrorism on US soil would diminish to 
very nearly zero. In other words, we DO have a choice of peace, and our 
choice was to pass on it.
TBH the UK *did* have a major terrorist threat for decades - because we 
were dicking around in *their* country :)



Re: Give peace a chance? NAH...

2004-10-19 Thread James A. Donald
--
James A. Donald:
  War is dangerous to freedom, but we do not have a choice of 
  peace. The question is where the war is to be fought - in 
  America, or elsewhere.  War within America will surely 
  destroy freedom.

Tyler Durden wrote:
 So. Why don't we see terrorist attacks in Sweden, or 
 Switzerland, or Belgium or any other country that doesn't 
 have any military or Imperliast presence in the middle east? 
 Is this merely a coincidence?

In fact we have seen Islamic terrorist attacks in Sweden and 
Switzerland, particularly Switzerland.  Don't know about 
Belgium.

Doubtless keeping US troops in Saudi Arabia was a bad idea,
since it enabled Saudis to blame the evil of their government
on the US, rather than themselves, but Bin Laden's indictment
not only mentions US troops in Saudi Arabia, but also the
reconquest of Spain, the massacre committed by the crusaders in
Jerusalem, and the failure of Americans to obey Shariah law. 

--digsig
 James A. Donald
 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
 /ocDcxC+cUo2DuIZWmQPcxCdoBKzBv64t/JGFD/n
 4HbLfMXzuc00iivMRHO8xd9PCitZawSai9lJGyfi3