I'd believe that if it wasn't for the fact that Time printed an article supporting a terrorist whom bombed Police Stations among other things that was released much to Time's dismay on 9/11 2001.Didn't read that article. Link to it, please.
Also during World War 2, newsmen could be thrown in jail if they tried printing anything about our casualties or anything else that might demoralize the American people.And in the People's Republic of China, the latest Pirates of the Caribbean movie lacks its hilarious 10-minute segment with pirate lord Sao-Feng because the authorities believe it insults the Chinese people. And In Germany, it's forbidden and punished with jail-time to support Neo-Nazism. Censorship can be damned silly at times.
I think Saddam chose the wrong time to start posturing and wrongly assumed President Bush wouldn't do anything. Seriously, it isn't in President Bush's nature to make an idle threat or to bluff. When he says he's going to do something he'll do it.He's a politician (
http://www.50bushflipflops.com/Introduction/home.html), Garfield. To assume he is in any way honest and dependable is naпve beyond measure.
I honestly wish we could leave today, but unlike Vietnam we're fighting fanatics that will try to follow us home.So let's make it easy for them! Don't worry about finding money for your terrorist campaign in the USA, Mohammad, we'll come to you!
http://i147.photobucket.com/albums/r292/safe-keeper/Goodplan.jpg)
Face it, the reason there are madmen blowing themselves up in Iraq today is that the Coalition invaded. Not to mention, of course, that many Communists, especially a vast number of Soviets, would've loved to follow you home:p.
@ETWarrior, you can actually twist things while still stating the truth, the wording implies that there it was a failure however this was an interm report which was just to show there is progress being made which there is, but you wouldn't know it reading the AOL article.Yesh. (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Weasel_words) However, you yourself stated the report speaks of 'only mixed progress'. So yes, we'd know from reading the article.
Okay, I am overgeneralizing a bit, but the fact is we're at war. A war that could take a long time, and trying to undercut the commander in chief in the middle of it because you don't agree isn't appropriate.First a war is started illegally through bullying, attempted silencing of dissenters, and lies about the target country, then it is discovered that serious atrocities have been carried out (white phosphorous, prisoner torture, detainment without fair trial) and then you want us to shut up and support the war? Paramoron Leader Hu Jintao (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hu_Jintao) would've been proud of you.
Then there is just reporting deaths every single day, roadside bombs, etc. That isn't news, that is trying to demoralize the American people. I hate to sound cold, but it's a war and people die in war.Well, deaths are news, after all, and are thus reported. There are reports on automobile accidents every single day, too, which probably demoralizes those who seek to make the roads a safer place. Should the news stop that, too, then? After all, more people die annually in the US in traffic than from terrorist attacks.
We're at war, there are provisions in the Constitution that limits these rights during wartime. The President hasn't exerted them, but the provisions in the Constitution are there. Also thing is the Press has reported current and future operations here recently specifically ABC news. So that's why I'm so upset with the Press.What makes wars so special? Body count? Tens of thousands of people die in murders each year in mainland USA, yet no one's crying for martial law and abolishment of freedoms in a War On Murder. I won't even bring up that terrorism allegedly threatens our freedom, 'cause this can't be a concern to you after your wholesale support of the temporary abolishment of Freedom of the Press.
So... what's so damned special about a war that means the rulebook has to be thrown out the window every time it draws near? And what war are we in, anyway? As far as I can tell, we're only occupying two countries (wait, strike 'we', I think Norway chickened out of Iraq a few years ago, damn us:o).
Also the American people do not need to know the casualty reports every single day, that goes beyond reporting the news and actively trying to discourage the American people.I'm actually in agreement with you here. The media tends to 'milk' the severity of cases as much as they can to improve its ratings, and this is one of the cases in which it is a pain in the butt (see my thread on the fear-mongering about global warming (
http://www.lucasforums.com/showthread.php?t=178520) for another example).
Did you know in World War 2, the American Media wasn't allowed to print anything concerning American casualties because it was considering aiding the enemy?Er, yes. You've said it three times already in this very thread:rolleyes:.
Then there was ABC News reporting on an active CIA operation and completely blowing their covers.Idiotic, but not 'anti-American'. The media loves to blow the cover of everything from police operations to Intel operations. It seems to get them ratings and one Hell of a kick.
To be blunt, I've pretty much lost all respect for most of the Democrats in Washington DC as well as respect for a few Republicans. Trying to set up a time table for withdrawal and saying "It's a lost cause," is irresponsible to say the least.In your eyes. Please explain why.
The number of casualties in D-Day wasn't reported until long afterward, the reason for this was that it would be announcing to the enemy our losses. The American people didn't need to know at the time, and it would provide information to the enemy. If the media had acted in World War 2 like they do today, more than a few of them would have come home in body bags, probably shot by our own troops at the command of they commanding officers for treason (for things like setting up lights for cameras during the middle of a nighttime landing, broadcasting while an operation is ongoing and compromising the positions of our forces, etc.)
In all honesty, I don't appreciate you labeling President Bush as a warmonger.A warmonger is, pejoratively, someone who is anxious to encourage a people or nation to go to war. --Wikipedia. (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warmonger)
If Gee Dubya does not fit those criteria, few do.
Fact is, after 9/11 the only appropriate response was to go to war.Against the perpetrators, yes. If John Doe commits a murder, it doesn't give me reason to put his neighbor to death. Only when said brother-in-law kills someone can I put him in the chair. Revenge for 9/11-scale atrocities work the same way - you have to target the perpetrator, not his alleged buddies.
Bush told the Taliban that they needed to turn over Bin Laden and other Al Qaeda leaders in their country, or suffer the Consequences.So they did (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_in_Afghanistan_%282001%E2%80%93present%29#The_) 9-11_attacks). And then the US went to war.
Moderates within the Taliban allegedly met with American embassy officials in Pakistan in mid-October to work out a way to convince Mullah Muhammed Omar to turn bin Laden over to the U.S. and avoid its impending retaliation. President Bush rejected these offers made by the Taliban as insincere. On 7 October 2001, before the onset of military operations, the Taliban made an open offer to try bin Laden in Afghanistan in an Islamic court. This counteroffer was immediately rejected by the U.S. as insufficient. It was not until 14 October 2001, seven days after war had broken out, that the Taliban openly offered to hand bin Laden over to a third country for trial, but only if they were given evidence of bin Laden's involvement in 9/11.
Several people over several countries worked to hand over ibn Ladin. Bush turned down every proposal and then invaded, for then to invade Iraq before he was even finished with the War on Terror and ibn Ladin. Pathetic.
The difficulty with finding Bin Laden is the terrain, and it would have been the height of idiocy to send a bunch of troops stumbling blindly through the mountains, searching caves.Or perhaps accept the Taliban's offer of ibn Ladin's head on a silver plate (see link above). Problem solved.
A President shouldn't want to go to war, that's true and to be honest I don't think people realize that President Bush didn't want to go to war either. One Downing Street Memo (
http://www.downingstreetmemo.com/) says more than a thousand words (Google it for a Wiki article and other unbiased sources). Also see the many threads in the Senate Chambers where support for the invasion of Iraq has been shot down multiple times as bullocks. This post (
http://www.lucasforums.com/showpost.php?p=1434831) in particular. Also, you may be interested in the view point (
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20051114/ritter) of the leader of the Weapons Inspectors.
However, a President also shouldn't take the military option off the table and if the situation warrents it they need to be willing to use that option.Let me re-phrase that so that it serves as instructions for a certain administration: However, a President also shouldn't take the diplomacy option off the table, and if the situation warrants it he needs to be willing to use that option for as long as possible.
If Bush was really a war monger, then we would have conducted airstrikes on Iran and North Korea already.So by your definition, Clinton was a war monger for bombing Iraq? The country was bombarded non-stop from the end of the first Gulf war.
(Though we will probably have to do airstrikes on Iran, it looks like the military option won't be needed concerning North Korea at this time).First you support an invasion of Iraq because you think, with no evidence whatsoever that he has WMDs, and then you oppose an invasion of North Korea even though it is known, as opposed to speculated, that they are very close to getting their hands on nukes. You're confusing me.
I know President Bush's stance isn't popular, that many people are against the war [...]To be more specific, almost half the American people wants to see him impeached, which still is less than those who want to see Cheney impeached. (
http://www.americanresearchgroup.com/)
Re the long paragraph on the hardliner stance: The hardliner stance works in some cases and not in others. Nobody says anything but.