![]() |
SVX Network Forums Live Chat! SVX or Subaru Links Old Lockers Photo Post How-To Documents Message Archive SVX Shop Search |
IRC users: |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I can see that you chose the lesser of two evils, especially when forced into the military, but it still achieves similar results, and you're not much different from anyone else that was out there. You were still one cog supporting a killing machine. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
![]()
__________________
Chris SVX World Network Administrator -1993 Subaru SVX LS-L, Barcelona Red, #46, 160,000+ Miles (Sold to SomethingElse ![]() -2011 Toyota Sienna SE, Black, 30,000+ Miles (Swagger Wagon ![]() -2002 BMW R 1150R ABS, Black, 26,000+ Miles (Daily Driver ![]() SVX Owner from February 1997 to March 2008 SVX Online Community Member since February 1998 SVX World Network Member since February 2002, Member #520 Life is a game. Play to win. The world belongs to those who can laugh at it. |
#33
|
||||
|
||||
I think any of us that have served in the military, especially those from Vietnam, can tell you the media is the worst thing in the world. We now have a military that is afraid to look bad on the 6 o clock news. Can you imagine fighting WWII with today's media coverage? The country would flip at the number of casualties. I have a book from just after VJ day that has all the front pages from the Philadelphia Bulitan, I believe, during the whole war. None of the pages I saw list casualty numbers. It's a different world, one our enemy uses against us. Look at Vietnam. We also didn't have the media hinting at upcoming offenses in WWII like now. Anyone with access the CNN can figure out where the troops are and what direction they were last heading. The German would have stomped us in Normandy with that information. "Live from the deck of the USS Akron, we have just turned south and no longer appear heading to Calis. Word on the ship seems like Normandy might be our destination. We'll be back live in 3 hours when we hit land, back to you." The media should be 2 days behind the actual events minimum.
|
#34
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In short...YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY FRIGGIN OUT-OF-YOUR-MIND INSANE IF YOU REALLY BELIEVE THAT SADDAM NEVER HELPED AL-QUEDA. Ok that should cover it. |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I think after this whole Iraq thing is over, we need to invade the media. |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Quote:
Really? I didn't know you and Shadow served in Vietnam. Where were you guy's stationed? Last edited by SVXtra; 09-13-2005 at 08:58 PM. |
#37
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
1993 25th Anniversary Edition # 156 of 301 ~ 121, 488 miles ( SOLD TO svxfiles 8/6/06) 2006 Subaru Impreza 2.5i....5spd ![]() 2006 Subaru Legacy 2.5i -7k miles..Mom's daily driver 2,543 Member of the SVX World Network |
#38
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Quote:
Todd
__________________
Down to none ![]() |
#39
|
||||
|
||||
Right after 9/11 happened i distinctly remember hearing on the news that at least 3 of the hijackers on those planes were in Iraq for some reason or the other a few weeks before the attacks. Gee i wonder what they were doing?
![]()
__________________
1993 25th Anniversary Edition # 156 of 301 ~ 121, 488 miles ( SOLD TO svxfiles 8/6/06) 2006 Subaru Impreza 2.5i....5spd ![]() 2006 Subaru Legacy 2.5i -7k miles..Mom's daily driver 2,543 Member of the SVX World Network |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Since you wish to bring up the question again. How about George H.W. Bush. He oversaw two major U.S. military deployments. He ordered the invasion of Panama. Which I believe was the largest airborne assault since World War II. I also believe his approval rating was around 80% after that war. And how about George W.Bush's easy reelection while fighting two wars. He moped up the floor voter wise using John Kerry as a mop. Last edited by SVXtra; 09-13-2005 at 09:40 PM. |
#41
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 2005 RX-8 Grand Touring 2005 Outback 2002 Mercedes-Benz E320 wagon END OF LINE |
#42
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Won't go into lots of detail, but Osama initially saw the CCCP as being the greater threat, and having been strongly influenced by his cleric teachers, he went to Afghanistan to join the mujahideens. In the 1980's, Osama formed an organization called Maktab al-Khidamar, which together with the other mujahideen groups, were covertly being supported by the US/CIA in the fight against the Soviets in Afghanistan. It is estimated that the CIA funnelled over $3 Billion over the course of the war to fund anti-Soviet fighters, which included Osama. By 1982, they were receiving $600 million per year from the CIA and the same from the Gulf states. (Gilles Kepel, Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2002), 143 When that war ended in 1989, Osama had not just his family wealth, but very good training and weapons - mostly supplied by the USA, and a vast interconnecting network of fellow guerilla fighters. On his return to Saudi Arabia, he continued to be disillusioned by the activities of the royal Saudi Family, which he viewed as dissolute and degenerate. He was also against the increasingly close ties between the Saudi Royal Family and the USA, which he saw as contributing to the downfall of traditional Saudi moral values. In 1988, Osama left the Maktab al-Khidamar along with a group of other like-minded extremists to form a new organization: al-Qaida. So it could be argued that the whole situation is a problem step-child of the USA and CIA. Seems that history repeats itself continuously as there are many similar examples of USA backed individuals and groups later returning to bite the hand that fed them. The USA isn't actually Osama's primary target. He sees the USA as enabling and contributing to the liberalization of Saudi Arabia. In simple terms, he sees the Saudi's as having a bad drug habit, and the USA is the supplier. He's decided to cut off the supply of "drugs". Not a new concept. And that's the short version of how "All of a sudden, this organization "magically" gains the resources it needs to go to work on it's goal very efficiently." (your words) Quote:
I assume you are aware that Osama was extremely upset when the Saudi's "invited" the infidel US Armed Forces to use Saudi Arabia as a base in 1990 for the first Iraq war. He wanted the Saudi's to instead invite only true-believers - i.e. former Afghan mujahideens, who would not pollute Islam by their very presence. He perceived Saddam as a threat not only to Saudi Arabia but also to Islam in general. Saddam did not have clerics in high government positions and was extremely secular in nature. He allowed women unprecedented freedom for an Arab society, among other things. Saddam did not follow the strict conservative interpretation of Islam which Osama believes is the only true path. So considering the well-known fact that Osama was ready and willing to use his former Afghanistan network against Saddam for the protection of Saudi Arabia, and given their diametrically opposed beliefs, I see no way that they could ever cooperate. In fact, Osama kicked up such a fuss about US presence, that finally in 1991 he was "asked" to leave the country. They actually stripped him of his Saudi citizenship in April, 1994. Once Saddam was gone, and the mainly US forces were occupying Iraq, it was only natural and to be expected that the Islamic conservatives, both Osama's group and others (for example Iran) would view this as a opportunity to change a secular, fairly modern country into a conservative, Sharia based Islamic state. The struggle within Islam between the rationalists (the champions of ijtihad), and the followers of tradition (taqlid), has been going on since the 10th century. Ijtihad takes a very different view of the Quran. There is no Compulsion in Religion (Quran; 2:156) is a favourite quote of theirs. Followers of ijtihad seek to promote freedom of thought (hurriyah al-ra'y) and independent thinking (Ijtihad) among Muslims everywhere. For more info, please see http://www.ijtihad.org/ Taqlid, however, literally means "to follow (someone)", "to imitate". In Islamic legal terminology it means to follow a mujtahid (expert of Islamic jurisprudence) in religious laws and commandment as he has derived them. There is no standard set of legal codes, but it is mainly dependent upon the opinions, beliefs and personal interpretation of the individual mujtahid. There are various schools of thought - some more radical, some more flexible. For more info, I recommend http://www.al-islam.org/beliefs/practices/taqlid.html Quote:
![]() Last edited by Bipa; 09-14-2005 at 01:16 AM. |
#43
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
I actually pretty much agree with you. I'm just not certain why you think the media would want to purposely shoot America in the foot. I don't think they're that bright ![]() Quote:
![]() ![]() Quote:
My biggest problem is with how the target for this pre-emptive strike was chosen. I think we should be much more selective, and not hold to account 26 million people* for the actions of a few. It is equivalent to throwing all of Chicago in jail because a small group of gangsters are operating out of there, and we don't have the time or inclination to figure out the bad guys from the good. (*CIA factbook July, 2005 estimate of Iraq's pop.) I also must admit that after reading Bob Woodward's "Plan Of Attack", I have severe doubts about how great a threat Saddam actually posed to the world in general, and the US in particular at the time of the 2nd Iraq war. It was a fascinating read, and I highly recommend it to anyone interested. Quote:
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The truth shall set you free. I've always liked that saying. But it can also get you in trouble. I doubt that Ms. Sheehan is actually responsible for any deaths. She's speaking her mind, and it is up to the individual to listen or refuse to hear, to agree or disagree. That's the American way. She isn't saying anything particularly original. Others have been saying the same thing since the war's beginning, and more joined in once casualties started to mount. I don't mean to sound disdainful, but could you explain to me how a mother protesting her son's death can actually get soldiers killed? She might act as a trigger for a large populist movement, but surely then the whole movement is to blame for influencing government actions, as opposed to the lone individual whose call was heard and heeded. And if the government acts in some way that later results in unecessary deaths, then the gov't is responsible since they made the actual decisions. Quote:
Quote:
![]() |
#44
|
||||
|
||||
Bipa
![]() ![]() |
#45
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
-Jason (8/23/07-Present) 1995 Subaru SVX LSi (197k) Polo Green (#1102) 03/95 Mods: DDM Tuning 4500k 35w Low Beam HID, 100w H3 Bulbs, Extra Ground Cables, 15 minute $12.96 mod, svxfiles designed transmission mount ( ![]() silver BBS rims, custom power steering cooler (one that doesn't dump ATF constantly), new negative lead cable, no more third or fourth gear ![]() (1977-Present) 1977 Chevrolet Corvette (81k) Silver (12/01/2011-Present) 2005 Subaru Outback 2.5i Limited 5MT (97k) I have a bad feeling about this. -Obi Wan Kenobi |
![]() |
|
|