The jasmine revolution spreads?

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Shock223
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Post by Shock223 »

philip_hughes wrote:Does democracy have to be the ideal here?

What we need for the people are a government who is able to bring about economic growth and secure rights for the people. If this can be done another way then so be it. Admittedly democracy is the best way to achieve such things, but its not beyond reason to see other government styles do it.
ideally, any government would be good when it looks out for the people instead of it's self. hell, the original term of Tyrants came from Athens who describe people who took over during chaos, looked out for the people, and solved the issues without bloodshed.

the problem is that you factor greed and pride into the leaders of the governments instead of service and protection for the people. so instead of leaders thinking they service the people, they (delusionally) think that the people serve them and that goes for any government.
BeidAmmikon
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Post by BeidAmmikon »

We have decided to move forward with unilateral sanctions
Guess who.
I see... I see... I see a helping hand over the Ocean... for the country with the largest oil reserves in Africa...
No body bags this time, please.
For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against Principalities, against Powers,
against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places
Rive
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Post by Rive »

BeidAmmikon wrote:No body bags this time, please.
Erm...

What's happening now IS the worst case, with lots and lots and lots of body bags.

If the western world wants a reminder how a war looks like without western-like control then just sit and watch - and deal with THAT sin.
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mrbadger
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Post by mrbadger »

Something happened today that's been on my mind since, and I thought I'd share.

Without being specific, I encounter people of lots of different nationalities each day. Today I was working with a group that included some Libyans. One in particuler was looking a bit, well, dazed, so I asked him if he was ok.

His answer was to look at me with what I can literally only describe as haunted eyes and say "he wants to murder everyone".

I tried to show that I was concerned, offer some support, but frankly I didn't have a clue what to say, the best I can do is feel sympathy. I think I managed to get that across at least.

I quite literally cannot imagine what kind of mental torture he's going through, being here while this is happening to his family and people he knows back home.

To be honest I don't know much about the underlying politics, but I just got a breif look at one small aspect of the human cost, and it wasn't good.
If an injury has to be done to a man it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared. ... Niccolò Machiavelli
BeidAmmikon
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Post by BeidAmmikon »

Rive wrote:If the western world wants a reminder how a war looks like without western-like control then just sit and watch - and deal with THAT sin.
Every time I feel like searching for examples of "western-like" control, it's enough to look at Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan.
Besides, as I suppose we all know the "western" world is not able to look for itself these days anyway, and its their body bags I was speaking about.
I for one, do not want another interventionist war like in Serbia where civilians died at the hands of NATO, too. Best to let them Arabs and Africans and whatever sort it out by themselves, see what gets.
For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against Principalities, against Powers,
against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places
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Incubi
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Post by Incubi »

Rive wrote:
BeidAmmikon wrote:No body bags this time, please.
Erm...

What's happening now IS the worst case, with lots and lots and lots of body bags.

If the western world wants a reminder how a war looks like without western-like control then just sit and watch - and deal with THAT sin.
So long it is not America who is the filling the body bags, no one will care... if it is americans in the Bodybags you may just hear some cheers.
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Post by BeidAmmikon »

"the widespread and systematic attacks currently taking place in Libya against the civilian population may amount to crimes against humanity."
Enfin, there they go (my nerve approaches an all-time high, most probably following the price of oil.) And I was wondering what's happened to their entry, in the warmongering dictionary, for "Milosevic", have they overlooked it with all the ruckus, lately? To ensure stability and peace and democracy, all Western of course, we'll probably see Western Libya - Eastern Libya, like we've seen Serbia - Kosovo, Northern Sudan (oil pipelines) - Southern Sudan (oil extraction), India - Pakistan, North Korea - South Korea, Northern Yemen - Southern Yemen and so on and so forth, until Time will come to an end and all the names will be forgotten and covered in filth.
8)
For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against Principalities, against Powers,
against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places
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philip_hughes
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Post by philip_hughes »

Its an early call, but I am tipping the regime will go.

I have no real power

I never thought I would see stuff like this in my lifetime.

Sooo... what will become of colnel gadaffi? Will he be caucescaued? imprisoned? exiled? For him, the best case scenario is him exchanging asylum in some far flung country for an instant end to the violence.
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Post by Aye Capn »

Rive wrote:
BeidAmmikon wrote:No body bags this time, please.
Erm...

What's happening now IS the worst case, with lots and lots and lots of body bags.
Rwanda was worse. Not that what's happening in Libya isn't bad enough, but Rwanda was worse.

@Ammo:
How deep does your negative opinion of American intervention go?
Would Libyans be worse off under an American interdiction of military aircraft (the so-called "no-fly zone")?
Do you think Rwanda would've been worse off if America had interceded during the genocide there?
Do you think America's intervention in Kosovo made that situation worse?
Should we have allowed Kuwait to hang? Would Kuwaitis have been better off under Saddam Hussein?

Just curious.
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Usenko
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Post by Usenko »

Aye Capn:

I would accept that the Americans intend the best to happen, and it's always hard to know what WOULD have happened. But it is distinctly possible that where the USA did not intervene, intervention would at best not have helped and at worse harmed; and where they did, it's at least possible to imagine scenarios where the locals would be better off without US intervention.
Morkonan wrote:What really happened isn't as exciting. Putin flexed his left thigh during his morning ride on a flying bear, right after beating fifty Judo blackbelts, which he does upon rising every morning. (Not that Putin sleeps, it's just that he doesn't want to make others feel inadequate.)
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Post by Aye Capn »

Usenko wrote:Aye Capn:

I would accept that the Americans intend the best to happen, and it's always hard to know what WOULD have happened. But it is distinctly possible that where the USA did not intervene, intervention would at best not have helped and at worse harmed; and where they did, it's at least possible to imagine scenarios where the locals would be better off without US intervention.
Anything is theoretically possible, but do you realistically think American intervention would've made Rwanda worse?
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Usenko
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Post by Usenko »

Granted that it's hard to imagine a scenario worse than what happened. But . . depends how an intervention was done. I've seen American interventions that were brilliant, and I've seen some shockers.

So if they'd gone in line with their worst - think Vietnam - then yes, it would have been worse.

Please understand that I want to give the Americans full credit. I think that usually your intentions are good. Just . . think a good natured bull in a china shop, and you have the general view of America we've seen over the years.
Morkonan wrote:What really happened isn't as exciting. Putin flexed his left thigh during his morning ride on a flying bear, right after beating fifty Judo blackbelts, which he does upon rising every morning. (Not that Putin sleeps, it's just that he doesn't want to make others feel inadequate.)
Rive
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Post by Rive »

Aye Capn wrote:Rwanda was worse.
Yes. Especially because of Rwanda I thought that some lessons might be learned for now.
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Tracker001
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Post by Tracker001 »

dbl post :oops:
Last edited by Tracker001 on Sat, 26. Feb 11, 09:42, edited 1 time in total.
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Tracker001
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Post by Tracker001 »

With all the >"It's Americas fault" for everything bad in the world . (ie American Bashing ) .Why should the U.S. inforce a no-fly zone or do anything short of medical help and food supply help for the general public .
No need to show a hint of U.S. medleling . Might get blamed for the latest sand storm or some such . :P

Besides the "anointed one" just spent last year traveling the world apologizing for America being a bad boy .Why evan suggest that America might be meddleing again ?

There are other countries that have been dealing with the Middle Eastern Countries alot longer than the U.S. has.

On one hand it's kinda nice to have a President with NO-Balls for a change. On the other .........


S/A mode off . :P
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philip_hughes
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Post by philip_hughes »

I kinda feel the frustration of the Americans here. This is a job that a large well equipped conventional army would be able to handle. Not gonna happen though, although there are rumours of british special forces getting ready for something...
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mrbadger
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Post by mrbadger »

philip_hughes wrote: although there are rumours of british special forces getting ready for something...
It's to rescue any british nationals that are left. Anything else and it wouldn't have been mentioned at all.
If an injury has to be done to a man it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared. ... Niccolò Machiavelli
Aye Capn
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Post by Aye Capn »

@Usenko:
You do always try to be fair. I think you're way off base thinking we wouldn't have made Rwanda better -- we're not that incompetent that we can't consistently do better than genocide. I would enter into evidence the fact that we've never intervened in a way that has caused genocide, and if we'd stayed in Vietnam we may well have stopped the Khmer Rouge from killing so many in Cambodia.

Libya is also a fairly simple problem: the military is slaughtering protesting civilians. That's the sort of problem we're good at solving.

The whole world excoriated us -- and President Clinton even apologized -- for not intervening in Rwanda. If we're not capable of stopping a genocide without making things worse then we have a ready excuse for the next mass slaughter. What if it's your country that encounters a genocidal upheaval? Do you still want us sitting on our hands claiming we'd only make it worse if we tried to stop the killing?

I'm not an interventionist because I believe America has some special responsibility to the world. Every country has a duty to safeguard its citizens and protect their interests, and that duty is compromised by some larger mission to save the world.
However, intervention in Libya could yield huge dividends if America gets credit for stopping the slaughter and bringing democracy. Rwanda had we intervened wouldn't matter to us economically or politically for the next hundred years. Libya, on the other hand, has oil, and that makes them important, not because we want the oil but because oil makes them wealthy and wealth makes countries powerful. A democratic Libya that owes its freedom to us could make them as strong an ally as Poland.

I believe in intervention where we have a realistic chance of getting something back. Rwanda we could've had on the cheap, and maybe in a hundred years we'd get something back, so maybe we should've gone in. "We'd only have made it worse," is a silly reason not to go. Nothing in our recent history suggests American intervention is worse than genocide.
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Post by RegisterMe »

Aye Capn wrote:@Usenko:
You do always try to be fair. I think you're way off base thinking we wouldn't have made Rwanda better -- we're not that incompetent that we can't consistently do better than genocide. I would enter into evidence the fact that we've never intervened in a way that has caused genocide, and if we'd stayed in Vietnam we may well have stopped the Khmer Rouge from killing so many in Cambodia.

Libya is also a fairly simple problem: the military is slaughtering protesting civilians. That's the sort of problem we're good at solving.

The whole world excoriated us -- and President Clinton even apologized -- for not intervening in Rwanda. If we're not capable of stopping a genocide without making things worse then we have a ready excuse for the next mass slaughter. What if it's your country that encounters a genocidal upheaval? Do you still want us sitting on our hands claiming we'd only make it worse if we tried to stop the killing?

I'm not an interventionist because I believe America has some special responsibility to the world. Every country has a duty to safeguard its citizens and protect their interests, and that duty is compromised by some larger mission to save the world.
However, intervention in Libya could yield huge dividends if America gets credit for stopping the slaughter and bringing democracy. Rwanda had we intervened wouldn't matter to us economically or politically for the next hundred years. Libya, on the other hand, has oil, and that makes them important, not because we want the oil but because oil makes them wealthy and wealth makes countries powerful. A democratic Libya that owes its freedom to us could make them as strong an ally as Poland.

I believe in intervention where we have a realistic chance of getting something back. Rwanda we could've had on the cheap, and maybe in a hundred years we'd get something back, so maybe we should've gone in. "We'd only have made it worse," is a silly reason not to go. Nothing in our recent history suggests American intervention is worse than genocide.
I'm wary of putting words into anybody's mouth, and Usenko is at the top of the list of the people I am wary of doing so for. Mainly because he is more than eloquent enough on his own :-).

I suspect he was talking to much the same that you are Aye Capn - limited realpolitik upside, and much realpolitical downside (the spelling difference is deliberate). The global jaundice, about the US, that sets in is because of the percieved double standards:-

* intervene when it's in our interest - the Gulf, regime change, protect the Marsh Arabs, or not etc, and don't intervene when there's no perception of upside for the US vis Rwanda

Picking and choosing your intraventionist outrage is only going to lead to more cynicism.

I am cynical enough to see that it isn't always straightforward, and old enough enough to know that there isn't always a "right" decision. But that is not how the US is perceived by the disenfranchised of the world.

The disenfranchised of the world see the US through a prism of its cultural exports, combined with the restrictions of their current existance, and merged with the hard realities of what does happen on the ground, and what is reported.

Why isn't Tom Cruise coming to rescue them? Preferably with a sexually licentious Cameron Diaz riding side-sadle?

Instead their family is blown up by a Predator firing a Hellfire missile.

That's what you do right?
I can't breathe.

- George Floyd, 25th May 2020
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Tracker001
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Post by Tracker001 »

RegisterMe
Instead their family is blown up by a Predator firing a Hellfire missile.

That's what you do right?
So RegisterMe you are saying that the U.S. intently targets civilians .

Statement like that is why the U.S. should just leave the rest of the world to itself .

Besides Europe has been in Africa alot longer then the U.S.


Why isn't Tom Cruise coming to rescue them? Preferably with a sexually licentious Cameron Diaz riding side-sadle?
Contact thier Publicist and ask !

I find it funny that the hollywood types bitch moan and complain about the poor around the world ,while they have multi-million dollor house's around the world. (Hypocrite's)
Last edited by Tracker001 on Sat, 26. Feb 11, 23:10, edited 1 time in total.

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