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#31 |
Elminster
![]() Join Date: October 2, 2001
Location: Icewind Dale
Age: 47
Posts: 432
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some people won't be happy no matter what wellard
it will alway's be "well this is still around" or "that group is still alive" They just can not give credit. Watching the now free people is enough to satisfy me. Is there more work to do? sure but at least it is getting done |
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#32 | |
Banned User
Join Date: September 3, 2001
Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Age: 63
Posts: 1,463
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Quote:
Yes indeed, punishments for crimes were certainly severe by our standards. Yes indeed they refused to accept our social values - I mean, you could never buy a good porn mag in Kabul and hell, these toads would not allow you to watch a movie with blood and gore. But the people *did* have freedom from bullets and freedom from terror, provided that they didn't challenge the system - the Taliban had ultimate control over the warlords. Today, there is nothing that they can do to avoid the terror as brutal warlords fight for petty gain and the people are caught in the middle. Our improvements have included doubling the number of people at risk from starvation, massive casualties from unexploded ordinance, a million extra refugees and absolute lawlessness outside Kabul, where those with a gun have more rights than those without. Nice going. You are right - we've had 18 months to sort this mess out - but we've forgotten Afghanistan in that time - a very short time to forget so many. Some people do indeed have a very short memory - allow me to remind you that the Afghan situation is far from resolved: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/...p?story=389803 http://news.independent.co.uk/world/...p?story=391773 http://www.developmentgateway.org/no...w?docid=428104 http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?R...n=Central_Asia and even Kabul has major problems not seen under the Taliban: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?R...n=Central_Asia 18 months is a short time to forget the mess we left behind... |
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#33 | |
Gold Dragon
![]() Join Date: March 29, 2002
Location: Canada
Age: 53
Posts: 2,534
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Quote:
Let me start from scratch here. I have no love for Saddam, and I am quite happy to see him go, although I do not agree with the US method's of doing so. I have made my point on that subject several times in various different threads and have no desire to dig it up again. Once again, I suggest you re-read my original post in this thread. I hope we can have a discussion regarding this matter once all is said and done, but in the mean time, I see no reason for anybody to refer to anyone in Iraq in a disrespectful manner nor judge them based upon a religion or beliefs that nobody on this forum fully understands. As for the removal of Saddam from power, do not make the mistake of assuming it is over the supposed WoMD that Saddam posses or his proven crimes against humanity. The western propaganda is as guilty of falsehoods as much as Iraq is.
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It\'s all fun and games until somebody loses an eye...then it becomes a sport.<br /> [img]\"http://members.shaw.ca/mtholdings/bsmeter.gif\" alt=\" - \" /> |
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#34 | |
Gold Dragon
![]() Join Date: March 29, 2002
Location: Canada
Age: 53
Posts: 2,534
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Quote:
During my tenure here in the war forum, I have had seem heated debates with various different people, but none have gotten to me quite like this. Is the United States that perfect that they can decide for the rest of the world what they can and cannot do? You talk about the treatment of women in Iraq. I ask you this...do you know exactly how many women are beaten each day in the US or Canada or Britain or Germany or France, or any western culture because the men have the freedom to go out to the bar and get pissed each night, come home and beat the living crap out of their girlfriends or wives? Before the US, or any other nation for that matter starts passing judgement, they need to take a long hard look at their own culture. How many women in the United States are being beaten tonight? We have no right, NO RIGHT, to pass judgement on Iraq, when we are no better than they are.
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#35 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Since the U.S. was responsible for putting Saddam into power in Iraq, don't you think they they should hold some responsibility in taking him out?
Yes, the abuse of mankind against mankind/womankind is a world-wide plague but how many countries will go around killing the wives and children of men who will not take up arms to kill for them? Giving people the option to "do what I tell you to do or die"? |
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#36 | |
Drow Priestess
![]() Join Date: March 13, 2001
Location: a hidden sanctorum high above the metroplex
Age: 55
Posts: 4,037
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We are not, however, deciding what the rest of the world can or cannot do, because we certainly didn't force anyone to join the Coalition. True, decisions have been made that have an effect on the entire world, but we didn't force anyone's individual choice. "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone" has an inherent flaw. If my neighbor is beating his wife and I know about it (let's say I can hear them fighting and I see the bruises on her) then not only is it a crime to fail to report this activity it is a moral failure on my part. I am no better than the abusive neighbor; in fact, I would be just as bad as he for allowing the beating to continue when I could help stop it. It is a moral failure on the part of both the US and the entire world for not stopping Saddam Hussein sooner. As a nation we are not passing judgement on the Iraqi people, only on a government that has failed to follow "generally acceptable behavior" for responsible governments. I think any sane person would agree that the Iraqi people deserve more decent treatment than they have received. The best way to accomplish this is to remove Hussein and allow the Iraqi people to rebuild their country the way they wish with a goverment they have themselves chosen. ********** My goodness! This topic certainly brings out the feistiness in our nature. At least those on both sides of the fence are not apathetic.... [img]graemlins/petard.gif[/img]
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Everything may be explained by a conspiracy theory. All conspiracy theories are true. No matter how thinly you slice it, it's still bologna. |
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#37 | |
Banned User
Join Date: September 3, 2001
Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Age: 63
Posts: 1,463
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Quote:
In my own opinion, the United States war on Iraq was unavoidable because the US was set upon removing what it perceived to be a threat to its security and interests, both in the middle east and at home. There was nothing that the international community (or indeed the Iraqi government) could do to prevent the conflict. The threat to US security was seen to be real and the belief in Washington was that Saddam could never be trusted (not without justification). **It had nothing to do with weapons of mass destructions, helping the 'oppressed people of Iraq' or profit. Those are merely additional secondary benefits of the action.** However, the *rest of the world* (and by this I mean the majority of the population, rather than merely the governments of various regimes are far more cynical (esp. in the ME). Anyway, back to the wife-beating analogy as posed in the Saudi based Arab News: "Take the apparently unobjectionable statement that, by opposing a US invasion of Iraq, you are effectively supporting the regime of Saddam Hussein. Perhaps it is better to explore this by way of an analogy. Suppose you know of a family who live on a farm. You know for a fact that the husband is a brute who rapes his wife and regularly beats his children. You also know of a notoriously unscrupulous multinational corporation, which wants to purchase the farm and use any means necessary to get rid of the brute. It is using the excuse of “liberating” the mother and children to achieve those ends. Suppose further that, under pressure from the community, the husband has allowed the social worker into his house, and denies the presence of a belt on the premises. The social worker has not been able to get his hands on the belt. Perhaps the husband has hidden it. Perhaps the social worker, a pusillanimous individual, has simply overlooked it. In any case, you are not satisfied that things do not return to normal as soon as the social worker goes home. Do you therefore help further the ends of the immoral multinational in order to bring the suffering of the beaten wife and abused children to an end? If you say yes, you do so in the knowledge that such an organization can only cause suffering in other ways, as the vehicle for exploitation there and elsewhere. But if you say no, you are in effect saying that you accept that this poor woman and her children could be black and blue for the rest of their lives. That is not an easy thing for any decent person to live with... ...In the end, perhaps turning a blind eye would have been the moral thing to do. After all, many beaten women, despite everything, keep on loving the brute who beats them, as do their children. Ultimately, it is their choice, and to go knowingly against their wishes by jumping on the back of the multi-national corporation, which pretends to be helping them only to get their land, is really only to sink further into the moral quagmire." [ 04-05-2003, 10:40 AM: Message edited by: Skunk ] |
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#38 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Turning a blind eye to women and children being abused is NEVER the moral thing to do.
You can always put a corporation out of business...you can never bring back the lost life of a woman or child beaten to death, shot, or used as a shield by a cowardly soldier in his fight to keep the abusive man in power...you pay more to reverse the damage done to the children when they are turned into killers, addicts, wife beaters, whatever, as a result of the abuse they suffered growing up with it...you don't allow a legacy of hate to pass on to the next generation as something that is acceptable. [ 04-05-2003, 10:26 AM: Message edited by: Lil Lil ] |
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#39 | |
Elminster
![]() Join Date: October 2, 2001
Location: Icewind Dale
Age: 47
Posts: 432
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Quote:
This whole idea that due to religion or culture it is acceptable to allow women and children to be abused and treated like slaves is garbage. That we should be "understanding" of radical Islam and the sensitivity of the male/woman relationship is the kind of mindset that allow's abuse to continue. It is never ok. Oh and I don't care if it is a Iraqi or Bob down the street. If it is religion or caused by substance abuse. [ 04-05-2003, 10:41 AM: Message edited by: Mordenheim ] |
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#40 | |
Elminster
![]() Join Date: October 2, 2001
Location: Icewind Dale
Age: 47
Posts: 432
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Quote:
During my tenure here in the war forum, I have had seem heated debates with various different people, but none have gotten to me quite like this. Is the United States that perfect that they can decide for the rest of the world what they can and cannot do? You talk about the treatment of women in Iraq. I ask you this...do you know exactly how many women are beaten each day in the US or Canada or Britain or Germany or France, or any western culture because the men have the freedom to go out to the bar and get pissed each night, come home and beat the living crap out of their girlfriends or wives? Before the US, or any other nation for that matter starts passing judgement, they need to take a long hard look at their own culture. How many women in the United States are being beaten tonight? We have no right, NO RIGHT, to pass judgement on Iraq, when we are no better than they are.[/QUOTE]Oh give me a freaking break Animal. We have law's against not that allow you to beat you're wife or child. We have centers for anger control and we do EVERYTHING possible to prevent it. We have shelters for abused women and children to try to hide at. We have program after program. Do not try that here. You can not stop abuse totally but we damn sure try. Our culture does not in ANY way condone such behavior. Find another nation that tries harder to stop abusive behavior. Give me a break. It is a big difference from SANCTIONED, LEGAL, RELIGIOUS, allowance of. A man has to hope his wife don't call the police here. A woman in Iraq and other radical Islamic countries are lucky if they do not get raped by their husband AND police. Rape is a VERY serious crime here. It will ruin you're life. It should and I am glad we take it very serious. To even compare makes me sick. If you can not see the vast difference of ILLEGAL abuse and SANCTIONED/RELIGIOUS right to make you're wife a slave then... friend I wonder if there is ANY hope |
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