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Bush supporters' aftermath thread

 
 
Foxfyre
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2005 11:27 pm
Both of my kids completed their undergraduate degrees at Wichita State and we lived a long time in Salina. I have a very warm spot in my heart for that part of the world and miss the people there very much. But Kansas can be one of the hottest, most humid places on earth in the summer and colder than a witch's elbow in winter not to mention wind, hail, blizzards, ice storms, black ice and occasional tornadoes. God I loved it there. Heaven on earth.

I love New Mexico too.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2005 11:37 pm
dyslexia wrote:
yeah right, you read it? I thought not.


Nope. I saw the author speak on television. He's an idiot.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2005 11:43 pm
Foxfyre wrote:
Both of my kids completed their undergraduate degrees at Wichita State and we lived a long time in Salina. I have a very warm spot in my heart for that part of the world and miss the people there very much. But Kansas can be one of the hottest, most humid places on earth in the summer and colder than a witch's elbow in winter not to mention wind, hail, blizzards, ice storms, black ice and occasional tornadoes. God I loved it there. Heaven on earth.

I love New Mexico too.


Shockers are having a pretty good start to their basketball season this year. :wink:

Glad to hear you're a former Kansan. Yes, we do have weather here. But it's not as humid as Texas, nor as cold as Minnesota. And the tornados only come during a month or so a year.Laughing
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 12:08 am


Quote:
Sen. Boxer Quits 'Flawed' Political System
by Scott Ott

(2005-01-06) -- Just minutes after failing to halt the certification of President Bush's electoral victory, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-CA, announced her resignation from the Senate today, saying she is "wracked with doubt" about the precise margin of her own victory in November.

While the official vote count showed that Mrs. Boxer trounced Republican Bill Jones by nearly 2.4 million votes, she said today that if even one voter was disenfranchised in California, then her "election is tainted and American troops in Iraq are dying in vain."

"I feel dirty," she said at a hastily-called news conference. "I'm leaving the senate so I can sleep at night and face myself in the mirror. If I stayed, I would be no better than George W. Bush."

Former Sen. Boxer encouraged her Democrat colleagues to "follow my principled leadership and abandon your ill-gotten seats of power."

President George Bush, when told of the resignation, said, "Sen. Boxer has fought for years to make America better. Today, she has won that fight, and deserves the gratitude of all Americans."
0 Replies
 
Foxfyre
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 01:19 am
Tico posted
Quote:
In a drama that was historic if not suspenseful, Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, and Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., formally protested that the Ohio votes "were not, under all known circumstances, regularly given." That, by law, required the House and Senate to convene separately and debate the Ohio irregularities.


I heard it theorized on the radio today that this was the ploy to show again how the 'election was stolen' by the Republicans. For four years we heard the mantra that Bush was selected, not elected and that he stole the election that was never legitimate. Now, could it be that the losers will have a new drum to beat proclaiming that the Republicans in Congress refused to allow an honest vote in Ohio and thereby stole the election again?
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DontTreadOnMe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 02:33 am
DrewDad wrote:
Ann Coulter wrote:
(And Franken is the world's largest donor of mentions of his own USO tours.)


yeah, franken does do a lot of uso tours.

something that uber-patriots like coulter, hannity, et.al, just can't find the time for.

might cut into their book promotions and speaking fees.

how 'bout toby keith ? he done any ? anybody know ?
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 04:37 am
Ticomaya wrote:
nimh wrote:
So unless you want to start comparing apples (Norway's government-dispensed development aid) with oranges (America's government-dispensed development aid PLUS Americans' private contributions), you're not going to get away with just that.

Let's do... you got the numbers?

No I don't. Do you? Coulter doesn't, apparently, in any case. Which means she hasn't got much of a point to make. Which was mine.

She's making a bogus argument, which seems to be pretty typical for conservatives when it comes to this topic. "Oh yeah? You're saying we give less in government aid than you do? Well we give more if you count our, but not your, private donations / logistical support / etc". Yeah, well, duh.
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 04:47 am
That Boxer resignation story is just the weirdest. She overworked?

Foxfyre wrote:
I heard it theorized on the radio today that this was the ploy to show again how the 'election was stolen' by the Republicans.
0 Replies
 
Foxfyre
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 07:48 am
And perhaps you should consider that not everything you read that somebody said is either 1) heartfelt or 2) accurately or completely reported, Nimh. I was reporting what was actually being said on talk radio. Perhaps you presume too much that I was "going by it" unless you can find something I said that I didn't say. Or perhaps you have some inside information that it wasn't been theorized on talk radio?

However, giving you the benefit of the doubt, please explain how my post was less rational than yours?

I did hear, from her own mouth, the drivel, much of which has already been investigated and found to be bogus or errors that were investigated and corrected, Barbara Boxer was spouting on the Senate floor yesterday and she spoke for quite a long while. It was unbelievable. But then Barbara Boxer is often unbelievable.
0 Replies
 
Moishe3rd
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 08:25 am
nimh wrote:
Moishe3rd wrote:
The only unsettling part of this equation may be the hard necessity of Iraq (under a religious Shia government) going to war against Iran and Syria.

Why would a religious Shia government in Iraq have to go to war with Iran? That would make two of 'em right - I mean, they'd both be religious Shia governments?

I think what the Sunnis are afraid of is rather that those ShiĆ­tes will wanna merge with Iran, eventually ...

Iran also poses a good example of how Shi'ites will not necessarily be any less anti-Israel than Sunnis ...

What I'm interested in, is:

If Iraq becomes a democracy, but the democratically elected government turns out to be hostile to the US, would America have won or lost this war?

And vice versa, if Iraq eventually gets a US-friendly government, but one that is not by any means democratic, would America have won or lost this war?

And how would your answer to those questions relate to the rationale given by the government for starting the war?

First of all, the Shia in Iran are suffering under a new Shia religion (cult) invented by Khomeini called (literal translation) "Rule of the Jurist."
Translated into Western thought, Shia Islam is a somewhat 'messianic" form of Islam. It has been splitting and changing for 1,200 years. For instance, the Druze; the Allawites; the Assassins; etcetera were all originally new Shia cults.
Mullah Rule in Iran is a new Shia cult. The Iranians don't even believe in it.
As the Iraq Shia own and control the Shia Holy sites, it would be self-defeating; counter-intutive and religiously counter-productive to surrender power to the Iranian cultists.
It would be as if the Pope decided that the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs should have control of the Vatican and make the decisions on how to run the Catholic Church.
Hey, they're all Christians, right. Why shouldn't the Pope do that? Rolling Eyes

The Iranian model is a cultic model. It has no relevance to whatever new democratically elected Shia government will do in Iraq. It is quite possible that will continue to be hostile towards Israel and perhaps the U.S., but not because of Iran...

If Iraq is hostile towards the U.S., then we will definitely have to rethink this war. Because the way things could go in that case - the United States might be facing a Muslim Europe armed with nukes in twenty years or so...
This is not good.
If Iraq is friendly towards the US, then it is an excellent building block in this war against Islamic fascist death cults.
It will help destabilize the facist death cults in Iran; Saudi Arabia; and Syria.
This is good.
The battle of Iraq is just one front in the war against Islamic fascist death cults.
I do not rationalize the reasons we went into Iraq.
Just as I do not rationalize the reasons we cut off Japan's oil or supported England against Nazi Germany before the US formally declared war after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
It needed to be done.
And, unless you think you might have preferred Nazi rule to that of your government, I suspect you might be happy that the US went to war against Germany, under false pretenses, long before the United States declared war.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 09:34 am
And, on the other hand...
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17591
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georgeob1
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 09:59 am
I don't know where Tico's story about Barbara Boxer's supposed resignation came from. So far I can find no mention of it on the web. It certainly doesn't seem credible - however delightful the prospect might be.

Barbara Boxer is living proof that short people should be shot.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 10:01 am
It's satire.
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JustWonders
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 10:40 am
She compared people who can't balance their checkbooks to Hitler when she was discovered passing bad checks during the big scandal.

Even the Democrats think she's dumb.
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 11:27 am
Moishe3rd wrote:
First of all, the Shia in Iran are suffering under a new Shia religion (cult) invented by Khomeini called (literal translation) "Rule of the Jurist."
Translated into Western thought, Shia Islam is a somewhat 'messianic" form of Islam. It has been splitting and changing for 1,200 years. For instance, the Druze; the Allawites; the Assassins; etcetera were all originally new Shia cults.
Mullah Rule in Iran is a new Shia cult. The Iranians don't even believe in it.
As the Iraq Shia own and control the Shia Holy sites, it would be self-defeating; counter-intutive and religiously counter-productive to surrender power to the Iranian cultists.
It would be as if the Pope decided that the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs should have control of the Vatican and make the decisions on how to run the Catholic Church.

Thanks for the explanation Moshe. Although I knew that the Iraqi Shia and the Iranian Shia have different religious leaders, who do not necessarily need or want to answer to one another, I wasn't aware that we're basically talking wholly different religions, as you seem to be saying with your comparison with Catholics vs Eastern Orthodox.

It certainly seems logical, as you say, that the Iraqi Shia have little to gain by accepting some sort of Iranian-based authority over the holy sites they now control themselves. (It's probably childish to point out here that I only raised the possibility of the Iraqi and Iranian Shia merging as something the Sunnis would be afraid of, which I think is true enough.)

Although you made a clear case that there's not necessarily any incentive for the Iraqi Shia to co-operate all too closely with the Iranian religious leaders, let alone accept their authority, I'm still not quite sure how you came to your conclusion about "the hard necessity of Iraq (under a religious Shia government) going to war against Iran", though. (I know we're off-topic here, but it's interesting.)

Moishe3rd wrote:
The Iranian model is a cultic model. It has no relevance to whatever new democratically elected Shia government will do in Iraq. It is quite possible that will continue to be hostile towards Israel and perhaps the U.S., but not because of Iran...

Fair enough, but I didnt say it would be because of Iran - merely that Iran posed an example of how a Shi'ite regime can be just as hostile to Israel as a Sunni one. Have you heard Sistani or other Iraqi Shi'ite leaders say things that make you think they propose a more Israel-friendly position? Like what?
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 11:50 am
Moishe3rd wrote:
If Iraq is hostile towards the U.S., then we will definitely have to rethink this war. Because the way things could go in that case - the United States might be facing a Muslim Europe armed with nukes in twenty years or so...
This is not good.
If Iraq is friendly towards the US, then it is an excellent building block in this war against Islamic fascist death cults.
It will help destabilize the facist death cults in Iran; Saudi Arabia; and Syria.
This is good.
The battle of Iraq is just one front in the war against Islamic fascist death cults.

I'm not quite clear here about what your answer to my question is - am I correct in interpreting that if Iraq becomes a democracy, but the democratically elected government turns out to be hostile to the US, you would consider America to have basically lost this war?

What about if Iraq eventually gets a US-friendly government, but one that is not by any means democratic? Would the US have won, then? Which of the two would you prefer? I seem to be getting that you would prefer the latter - that you consider it more important that Iraq be US-friendly than that it be democratic - in that you consider this war to really be about the battle against Islamofascism, rather than about spreading democracy?

I mean, in the optimistic vision, of course, I understand the two should go hand-in-hand: democracy will bring about the defeat of Islamo-fascism, period. I kinda agree there actually - in the long run anyway - if the democracy survives the initial win for Islamic hard-liners I'm expecting in either of the first two upcoming elections. But I'm pretty sure, on the other hand, that truly democratic elections are highly unlikely to yield a pro-American, let alone pro-Israel government.

That, though, is because I can well imagine a government that itself isn't pro-American either, while not immediately being in the throes of "Islamic fascist death cults". Can you - or would you perceive any new Iraqi government's anti-Americanism as the proof that the "Islamo-fascist death cults" had won? Can there be such a thing, in your perception, as a US-hostile democracy in the Muslim world? (I'm not quite sure whether you're saying there couldn't be one, it being some sort of contradiction-in-terms, or there could well be one but it would be a bad thing, one that a US-friendly dictatorship would be preferable over.)

That brings me back to my basic question: what's more important about this war? Installing democracy in Iraq, even if it may turn out to yield a government hostile to America, or installing an America- (and possibly Israel-)friendly regime, even if it may require stifling democracy? I mean, assuming there is a fair chance that you might not be able to have both.

This kinda seems, to me, the question I see many conservatives here ducking, which is creating a lot of the confusion about their motivations and the allegations that they're being disingenious. There's a few posters here of whom I think I know what their answer would be - O'Bill would go, bottom line, for a democracy over a strategic ally, while George would probably argue that the strategic interest angle is overriding. But most here seem to be avoiding the question.

It's not necessarily an either/or question, mind you. You could answer, for example, that you'd prefer a democratic government even if it may be hostile to America - as long as it wasn't actually controlled by the "Islamic fascist death cults". (If you can perceive of such a thing, of course.)

From what you wrote about the analogy with WW2, when America went to war "under false pretense" (too?), I am almost guessing you mean to be saying that the "spreading democracy" case was more or less a false pretense as well, because the only thing that really counts here is getting an Iraq in place that "is friendly towards the US [and thus] an excellent building block in this war against Islamic fascist death cults". But I don't want to just make an assumption like that here.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 11:59 am
http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20050106/capt.dcgh10201061945.electoral_votes_dcgh102.jpg

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., wipes away a tear as she announces with Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, that they will object to the certification of Ohio's electoral votes during a joint session of Congress today Thursday, Jan. 6, 2005. It would be only the second time since 1877 that the House and Senate were forced into separate meetings to consider electoral votes. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050106/480/dcgh10201061945
0 Replies
 
JustWonders
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 12:03 pm
What a pathetic phoney Babs is Smile

<Playing world's tiniest violin>
0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 12:43 pm
To Moishe e.a.:

nimh wrote:
This kinda seems, to me, the question I see many conservatives here ducking, which is creating a lot of the confusion about their motivations and the allegations that they're being disingenious. There's a few posters here of whom I think I know what their answer would be - O'Bill would go, bottom line, for a democracy over a strategic ally, while George would probably argue that the strategic interest angle is overriding. But most here seem to be avoiding the question.

Since I realised it's a question I wanted to ask all of you, and it's a bit much to all delve into in a thread that was meant for something else altogether, I made this question into a thread of its own. Hope to see you there!
0 Replies
 
HofT
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2005 02:44 pm
"ALLY" means a country with which we have a Treaty of Alliance, or a Defense Pact. That's the NATO countries and Japan - period!
0 Replies
 
 

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