Jordan hangs 2 in response for pilot's burning

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Comments

  • I dont think in this day and age that we will ever fully stop or eliminate terrorism. Bombing, ground forces, and military intervention will only squash terrorism and keep them at bay but only for so long. Why do we get involved and attack certain terrorist and not all?? Well, we are going after the terror organizations that have a direct and immediate threat to our citizens and security. These ISIS fucks are using religion as a cover to do whatever they want. Their crimes against humanity rival concentration camps of WWII. You can debate anything and everything about this but my view is that they should all die. All die a death that is slow painful and violent. The same mercy should be allowed to them as they gave to their hostages and people who resisted their warped beliefs.
  • BS44325
    BS44325 Posts: 6,124
    "So I ask, where does it end?"

    It ends with victory or defeat
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,671
    Everything everybody here has said about taking an aggressive stance, taking military action, invading other countries makes sense on two levels: 1) That gut instinct to be angry at an abominable act such as the subject of this thread and 2) As a way to support the military industrial complex status quo. But it doesn't make sense on any other level. Sooner or later we humans need to learn to curb our emotions or vent them in an appropriate manner. Saying, "let's drop guys out of an airplane" might help (that was kind of funny in a bizarre way and I get the emotion, bb, haha!) but doing it of course won't accomplish anything. And invading another country- we'll look what that's gotten us so far. Yeah... right.

    So how about some useful ideas that might work?

    I'm working on one: Hemp.

    Stay tuned. :-D

    (Damn, where'd the smiley button go?)

    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • JWPearl
    JWPearl Posts: 19,893
    dont need to do that, its not the only way
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,671
    edited February 2015
    JWPearl wrote: »
    dont need to do that, its not the only way

    What's not the only way, JWP?

    Post edited by brianlux on
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • JWPearl
    JWPearl Posts: 19,893
    sorry wrong thread, someone was mentioning the isis droping from the sky, and i was implying its not the only way
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,671
    JWPearl wrote: »
    sorry wrong thread, someone was mentioning the isis droping from the sky, and i was implying its not the only way

    No worries.

    But oh my, this got mentioned elsewhere as well? A lot of heavy emotions on these threads lately!

    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • I don't think that there will ever be an end. An end would require an end to evil.
  • JWPearl
    JWPearl Posts: 19,893
    there will be end end to evil for a thousand years but then it will come back out again and then destroyed again for good
  • Last-12-Exit
    Last-12-Exit Charleston, SC Posts: 8,661
    Stickman12 wrote: »
    I don't think that there will ever be an end. An end would require an end to evil.

    I think there could be an end. But that end would require an incredible act of evil.
  • badbrains
    badbrains Posts: 10,255
    Are we talking ALL evil? Or just the selective few?
  • mickeyrat
    mickeyrat Posts: 44,767
    It ends when the last 2 humans on the earth kill each other.
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  • Jason P
    Jason P Posts: 19,327
    mickeyrat wrote: »
    It ends when the last 2 humans on the earth kill each other.
    It will be glorious ...

    Rocky-001.jpg
    Be Excellent To Each Other
    Party On, Dudes!
  • rgambs
    rgambs Posts: 13,576
    The last two humans won't kill each other, they will fuck and start the mess all over again! Still glorious lol :bee:
    Monkey Driven, Call this Living?
  • rgambs
    rgambs Posts: 13,576
    BS44
    "It ends with victory or defeat"

    And is there no collateral damage that is too great? What if it takes decades and costs millions of lives? Have we learned NOTHING from Vietnam?
    Monkey Driven, Call this Living?
  • rgambs
    rgambs Posts: 13,576
    Aside from that, you yourself said it doesn't end there, we utterly defeated Japan and Germany and now generations later, and billions spent, we are still there and there is still no end in sight.
    Monkey Driven, Call this Living?
  • BS44325
    BS44325 Posts: 6,124
    This is not Vietnam. NATO appreciates the American presence in Germany...it is valuable to remain with very little cost. Presence in Japan provides security for Asian-Pacific allies including Vietnam which amazingly now sees the US as a protector from a possible expansionist China. I am not sure why you want to see an end to these positive regional presences.

    Lastly rgambs you are arguing against a solution. You are not arguing for a solution. You are arguing for the status quo or worse. Complete withdrawal is a fair option but recognize that disaster awaits.

    http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-02-06/obama-s-middle-east-fantasy-in-the-national-security-strategy
  • rgambs
    rgambs Posts: 13,576
    "This is not Vietnam. NATO appreciates the American presence in Germany...it is valuable to remain with very little cost. Presence in Japan provides security for Asian-Pacific allies including Vietnam which amazingly now sees the US as a protector from a possible expansionist China. I am not sure why you want to see an end to these positive regional presences.

    Lastly rgambs you are arguing against a solution. You are not arguing for a solution. You are arguing for the status quo or worse. Complete withdrawal is a fair option but recognize that disaster awaits."

    I would like to see an end to the US outspending almost the entire rest of the developed world in war. That's why I would like to see Germany and Japan handle their own regions, as they are quite capable of doing. We have huge deficit problems, a shrinking middle class, an economy perpetually on the brink of collapse, and you are worried about NATOs soft appreciation? China is buying our country out from under us, and you are worried about protecting Vietnam from Chinese expansion?

    Many would counter that you are not arguing for a solution either, only an entrenchment of current crises. Can you provide any historic evidence that this sort of action will succeed?
    Many would argue that you need to recognize that disaster awaits in either scenario.
    Monkey Driven, Call this Living?
  • badbrains
    badbrains Posts: 10,255
    I think RGambs has been pretty clear on his stance.
  • benjs
    benjs Toronto, ON Posts: 9,391
    BS44325 wrote: »
    This is not Vietnam. NATO appreciates the American presence in Germany...it is valuable to remain with very little cost. Presence in Japan provides security for Asian-Pacific allies including Vietnam which amazingly now sees the US as a protector from a possible expansionist China. I am not sure why you want to see an end to these positive regional presences.

    Lastly rgambs you are arguing against a solution. You are not arguing for a solution. You are arguing for the status quo or worse. Complete withdrawal is a fair option but recognize that disaster awaits.

    http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-02-06/obama-s-middle-east-fantasy-in-the-national-security-strategy

    I wonder if, at the onset of the Iraq War, you ever might have said "intervention is a fair option but recognize that disaster awaits", as was forecast by several prominent thinkers of the world at the time. The divisiveness brought upon by a nationalist entity appearing to fight an unjust war in a region that only understands sectarian rule, was all but certain to amount to civil strife. Anger at the sect allowing entrance, anger at the USA, anger at the rest of the world (and non-Muslims most likely) for standing by and allowing America to even put one ground troop in the region.

    It seems to me you come down with a heavy hand and perpetrate a notion of certain doom-and-gloom when it comes to anything pacifism-related, and cheer enthusiastically when the proposal to "obliterate all evil" (again, not the clearest of so-called road maps) is thrown around. Naturally, someone brings up Vietnam and you opt to differentiate the scenario of 'then' vs. 'now': probably because Vietnam was the living proof that pacifism can "win" a "war", if you're to insist on your binary thinking which you've been called out on but never responded to reasonably.

    Oh, and by the way, if you've ever been to Vietnam, the government may see the US as a protector (I can't vouch for the authenticity of that statement, but sure, let's go for it and say it's factual for now), but the people certainly don't. The nicest thing a Vietnamese ever said to me about America (by the way, I thoroughly represent myself as a Canadian when travelling) was that he hated them previously, but doesn't want to hold a grudge because it was his parents who witnessed the suffering and not him. That was in three weeks, making talks with locals from the northernmost point (Sa Pa, by the Chinese border) to the moderate south of the country. And here's the thing about the Middle East: since you've stated that intervention is necessary, I assume that comes with a sentiment that the government is largely ineffective. This leaves the onus on the people to welcome America with open arms (or condemn them for their constant meddling - I find this more likely).

    Finally, to address your point about rgambs - us on the team which proposes retreating (either partially or fully) are arguing for a solution no more or less than you are. We present a roadmap that says "our retreat will allow the balance of power to shift, righting wrongs perpetrated by American leaders, letting every single person in the region to become empowered by freedom of political or military decision-making, and allowing those feeling the heat of the furnace to embrace attempt to put out the fire". Alternatively, you present a roadmap that says "our continued presence will reduce hostility in the region through force, at economic and human cost to both America and the local innocent population (this part is true), which will lead to stability (this is the massive assumption made) and our babysitting of the region in perpetuity, so that the locals remain powerless as Papa America likes it best (this part is true)". To deny any validity to an alternative to what you have to suggest is incredibly close-minded, and naturally doesn't help your case. You also have already stated the dangers of retreat, so what about the dangers of retreat followed by re-entry into hostile zone? What's our body of evidence look like on this one? "Okay guys, we're out. Nah, fuck it, let's go back in, I hear Iraqis love America these days". Why does this hold such allure and certainty for success to you?
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