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Blogger burnout: it’s the end of the beginning — 247 Comments

  1. Well I’m just protecting you Sally. You know that talking with foreigners is fraught with danger. Wouldn’t want the NSA to be sifting your rubbish now would we?

  2. ‘Zounds! I missed one!? Are you sure?

    When you wrote: “Besides which he’s an American, not a dirty foreigner”, wasn’t the “dirty foreigner” referring to yourself rather than nconned?

    There’s that coyness again, though: I’ve no idea, or interest in, where you are, it’s your country of origin that I was referring to.

    And yes, this is to much fun.

  3. Oh dear, you missed one there Silly. I actually said that you were insulting neoconned’s intellect, not mine. Silly you.

    Isn’t this just too much fun?

    And I am not in Australia,

  4. Confud: Please post a pointer to said shame.

    Well, there was the “dirty foreigner” bit, and your obvious coyness about revealing said country — but if you’re not ashamed of it, glad to hear it. Austrailia’s doing a very creditable job in the global war on Islamism, after all.

    Night, night, confud.

  5. Stevie: This one is hilarious

    This one’s even better, but you have to be able to see a bald-faced lie as funny:

    I did not SELECT those passages, I posted the official Duelfer report summary, as you would’ve known had you bothered to follow the link I provided.

    (Here’s that link again, for anyone who’d like to look for themselves, and compare with Stevie’s comment at 9:38 above: http://www.cia.gov/cia/reports/iraq_wmd_2004/Comp_Report_Key_Findings.pdf.)

    Oh, and “STUPID & IGNORANT”?? You used to be able to do better than that, Stevie. Why not work on your pimp imitation some more?

  6. Well, it is one thing to type non sequiters (sic) but it is quite another to point them out and prove them as such.

    Your statement that am ashamed of anything is fantasy. Please post a pointer to said shame.

    No one can claim to know all about m e “politics” Silly, it is labyrinthine. Even terming it politics doesn’t adequately describe the dynamic of m e power broking.

    I do try though when time allows. You should try it. Read someone who you’d probably term a leftie for an insight into the complexity. I note that you have skirted the Mossad-Hamas relationship. How odd! (Scratches chin)

    Being called an idiot by a 12 year old whose best friend thinks he is Luke Skywalker and has another ally who is devoted to Korean sex robots isn’t going to lose me much sleep. Tally ho.

  7. SALLY: Here’s what Stevie carefully selected:

    Dear STUPID & IGNORANT,

    I did not SELECT those passages, I posted the official Duelfer report summary, as you would’ve known had you bothered to follow the link I provided.

  8. Confud, believe me, your intelligence couldn’t possibly be insulted — and I say that with all due respect. The series of non sequiters in your attempt to “analyze” MidEast politics would make Homer Simpson look insightful.

    By the way, I don’t think you need to be ashamed of your own country — most Aussie’s might be a tad embarrassed by you, however.

  9. Sloppy says…

    “Whenever you get stuck, you can always crank out some more insults!

    Or, and this is just some unsolicited advice, you could take a leaf from your clone, nconned, and throw in the occasional bit of sense and rationality just to change things up a bit, and maybe fool the unwary.”

    Actually Silly, it was your 5th column and apologist attempts to insult me (they were insults to my intelligence) that dumbed everything down. I’ve posted several uncomfortable for your line pieces that you’ve chosen either not to respond to or in one case posted a boy’s own brown shirt mini drama piece to “debunk” my statement of fact.

    Are you 12?

    And BTW neoconned is obviously way smarter than I am, so its a bit of an insult to call him my clone. Besides which he’s an American, not a dirty foreigner. That still counts for brownie points on your planet doesn’t it?

  10. Likely true, but he doesn’t think to ask why Iran might be the principal enemy in the region. The answer, of course, is that Iran constituted the principal rival to his own plans to dominate the region — after which, as most understood very well, the “secondary” and even tertiary considerations would assume much greater importance.

    Thats a big leap and very sloppy actually. “Of course” doesn’t really cut it and displays your sneering pomposity with ignorance. You don’t think that Iran may have been a bit sore and jumpy due to Saddam’s waging an 8 year war against Tehran with massive loss of life (800,000 to 1 million) and huge economic ramifications for the state and the citizenry do you?

    Saddam’s arms and munitions (conventional, biological and chemical) were paid for by the good old freedom lovers at Uncle Sam’s ranch and their whacky pals the House of Saud.

    More than that, the US directly struck Iranian civilian targets, blasted a civilian aircraft on a scheduled daily flight out of the sky and blockaded its oil exports for Ronnie Raygun’s “rock in the middle east”.

    And you wonder why they don’t like you and they feel a touch threatened by the western world.

    You see Sally, it is way more complex than you can grasp. In the face of the horrors that these people (and they are human beings not demons) you can’t forgive them their distrust but you blandly seek the boo hoo vote because a lunatic (not connected with either of these nations) organized a few planes flown into New York and Washington. Your trauma is reason enough to unleash war on civilians no closer to Bin Laden than you or I. But in the face of their losses you can feel no empathy or reason to clearly analyse this non crisis.

    And, don’t mention selling oil in Euros for gawd’s sake. That, would be way beyond you.

    And please, don’t mention the pipeline through Afghanistan. That may look bad too.

  11. Confused: I’m struggling to convince myself this is fun anymore 🙁

    What, troll burnout!?? Oh, say it isn’t so, confud! Come on, it’s always darkest before the dawn, it’s the end of the beginning, every cloud saves two in the bush, and all that. Whenever you get stuck, you can always crank out some more insults!

    Or, and this is just some unsolicited advice, you could take a leaf from your clone, nconned, and throw in the occasional bit of sense and rationality just to change things up a bit, and maybe fool the unwary.

  12. Ah, Stevie — finally had to skim the actual report did you? Looks like you can read, alright, however slowly, but reading comprehension is another matter. But let’s take a quick look:

    Here’s what Stevie carefully selected:
    Saddam wanted to recreate Iraq’s WMD capability–which was essentially destroyed in 1991–after sanctions were removed and Iraq’s economy stabilized, but probably with a different mix of capabilities to that which previously existed.
    Here’s the very next sentence, which he carefully left out:
    Saddam aspired to develop a nuclear capability–in an incremental fashion, irrespective of international pressure and the resulting economic risks–but he intended to focus on ballistic
    missile and tactical chemical warfare (CW) capabilities.

    Here’s where we see Stevie’s inability to understand what he reads:
    Iran was the pre-eminent motivator of this policy. All senior level Iraqi officials
    considered Iran to be Iraq’s principal enemy in the region. The wish to balance Israel and acquire status and influence in the Arab world were also considerations, but secondary.

    Likely true, but he doesn’t think to ask why Iran might be the principal enemy in the region. The answer, of course, is that Iran constituted the principal rival to his own plans to dominate the region — after which, as most understood very well, the “secondary” and even tertiary considerations would assume much greater importance.

    And so he goes, somewhat desperately trying to cherry pick his way through the report in order to find anything that, in or out of context, might help to absolve that old sweetie, Saddam Hussein — like all his ilk, he’d rather put his trust in the islamofascists than in a Republican (gasp!) administration.

    Maybe you should stick to your one-liners, Stevie. When you’re stuck, you can always profess your love for the troops.

  13. You know something Steve?

    I’m struggling to convince myself this is fun anymore 🙁

  14. Sally. I don’t expect semi-literate people to be know how to read or write. So that doesn’t surprise me.

  15. CONFUD – All that animosity between Assad and Saddam for all those decades was a blind…

    Yup, just like an earlier version of wingnuttery claimed that the USSR and China were pals depsite the USSR keeping 100 divisions on the Chinese border.

  16. SALLY –

    GET SOMEONE TO READ THIS TO YOU:

    DUELFER REPORT SUMMARY
    http://www.cia.gov/cia/reports/iraq_wmd_2004/Comp_Report_Key_Findings.pdf

    Saddam wanted to recreate Iraq’s WMD capability–which was essentially destroyed in 1991–after sanctions were removed and Iraq’s economy stabilized, but probably with a different mix of capabilities to that which previously existed.

    Iran was the pre-eminent motivator of this policy. All senior level Iraqi officials
    considered Iran to be Iraq’s principal enemy in the region. The wish to balance Israel and acquire status and influence in the Arab world were also considerations, but secondary.

    ISG uncovered Iraqi plans or designs for three long-range ballistic missiles with ranges from 400 to 1,000 km and for a 1,000-km-range cruise missile, although none of these systems progressed to production and only one reportedly passed the design phase.

    Iraq Survey Group (ISG) discovered further evidence of the maturity and significance of the pre-1991 Iraqi Nuclear Program but found that Iraq’s ability to reconstitute a nuclear weapons program progressively decayed after that date.

    While a small number of old, abandoned chemical munitions have been discovered, ISG judges that iraq unilaterally destroyed its undeclared chemical weapons stockpile in 1991.

    In practical terms, with the destruction of the Al Hakam facility, Iraq abandoned its ambition to obtain advanced BW weapons quickly. ISG found no direct evidence that Iraq, after 1996, had plans for a new BW program or was conducting BW-specific work for military purposes. Indeed, from the mid-1990s, despite evidence of continuing interest in nuclear and chemical weapons, there appears to be a complete absence of discussion or even interest in BW at the Presidential level.

    Addendum to the Comprehensive Report

    http://www.odci.gov/cia/reports/iraq_wmd_2004/index.html

    Based on the evidence available at present, ISG judged that it was unlikely that an official transfer of WMD material from Iraq to Syria took place. However,ISG was unable to rule out unofficial movement of limited WMD-related materials.

  17. But Steve J these mensa candidates on here will no doubt spring a huge surprize on you (I can feel a factoid ticking through their little brains as we speak) Baathists!!

    They was both Baathists!!!

    All that animosity between Assad and Saddam for all those decades was a blind for when the freedom lovers rolled in to wreck the WMD party. And, undeniably they were both Muslim….islamists…(you see where this is heading yet?…..islamofascists. Hurrah, we made it. Praise the lord and pass the tissues. Lap shandies all round.

  18. YMAR: The Leftists should get on their knees for supporting the Confederation from European strongholds..

    WTF are you taking about?

  19. YMAR: What does stevej expect me to say…

    I expect you to say that you’ve finally made an appointment with a psychiatrist.

  20. YMAR: Demands loyalty to a single leader, often to the point of a cult of personality.

    What does that have to do with bush?

    Pres. Fredo values personal loyalty above competence.
    E.g., Harriet Miers, Michael Brown.

  21. YMAR –

    Read the Duelfer Report and LEARN.

    You’re constant prattling from an alernative universe is no longer amusing.

  22. KCOM: That you can’t see or acknowledge the bigger picture others see…

    Morons like this guy don’t have a bigger picture:

    We have no idea what kind of ethnic strife might appear in the future, although as I have noted, it has not been the history of Iraq’s past.

    PAUL WOLFOWITZ, FEBRUARY 27, 2003*

    http://tinyurl.com/exk73

  23. Demands loyalty to a single leader, often to the point of a cult of personality.

    What does that have to do with bush?

    So, the feisty, tough little investment banker has to rely on the police to get rid of pesky loud teenagers.

    It’s better than going over there in the middle of the night to pick a fight with a bunch of drunken teenagers. Less fun, but sometimes it is wise to avoid too much fun.

    All talk, all bluster, all scared, all want someone else to do their dirty work and want someone else to pay for their sweaty little waking terror.

    You should write for Hollywood, they need script writers like you.

    YMAR: Both Blackfive and Michael Yon, believe they got shipped to Syria

    Both are wrong.

    What does stevej expect me to say, stevej is wrong? Again, we get the feeling we’re back at Kindergarten again going back and forth about who did it. He did it, no she did it.

    You gotta feel sorry for people with that level of competition.

  24. YMAR: There is no limit to what humanity can achieve or how many we can kill. The universe is the limit,

    You are insane.

  25. YMAR: Both Blackfive and Michael Yon, believe they got shipped to Syria

    Both are wrong.

  26. GRACKLE: One wonders what happened to them? Where did they go?

    Read the Duelfer Report and find out.

  27. nyomythus said…
    SARAH

    MANNERS. I grump when six under 30 types revel on a balcony at three on a Wednesday morning and wake up an entire condominium unit of over 500 people. My friend says I should have just joined the party.

    Do what I do — simply call the police. This happen to me from time to time. If they have no respect for you, then return the favor — I keep the number posted on the kitchen door.

    So, the feisty, tough little investment banker has to rely on the police to get rid of pesky loud teenagers. And so often that he has the number on his kitchen door.

    Heehee, you couldn’t make this up. Advocates nuclear strikes on civilian targets but calls the cops on a regular basis. Classic.

    I think this tells us a lot about the collective courage of the neocons. All talk, all bluster, all scared, all want someone else to do their dirty work and want someone else to pay for their sweaty little waking terror.

    Post traumatic stress disorder.

  28. Fascism is associated by many scholars with one or more of the following characteristics:
    1. A very high degree of nationalism,
    2. Economic corporatism,
    3. A powerful, dictatorial leader or ruling cadre who portrays the nation, state, or collective as superior to the individuals or groups composing it.

  29. Fascism exalts the nation, state, or race as superior to the individuals, institutions, or groups composing it.
    Fascism uses explicit populist rhetoric; calls for a heroic mass effort to restore past greatness;
    Demands loyalty to a single leader, often to the point of a cult of personality.

  30. Because in the real world there is a limit to the losses we can take. or is there?

    There is no limit to what humanity can achieve or how many we can kill. The universe is the limit, parochial Leftists disagree however. Their horizons are a bit limited.

    What would history have made of abe lincoln if the south had been murdering each other for years after the end of the civil war and if union troops and remained taking steady losses for years.

    See, this is why I don’t like idiots who paint themselves as multicultural experts(They’re in Europe, they travel, dontcha know) and Americans as ignoramus fools. They don’t even have enough brain cells to rub together to realize the crap they are putting out. If they were aware of the low-intensity terrorism going on in the South with the KKK lynching freed slaves so that they don’t vote *gasp* Republican, they wouldn’t make a fool out of themselves trying to claim that after the American Civil War, everything was peaceful and safe in the South.

    President Grant sent in National Guards to crush the KKK, and it worked, up until the time appeasement orientated Presidents reversed it, and then the Democrats gained power throughout the South, and that has been sustained until only recently when the South shook off the shackles of Democratic racism and Robert Byrd KKKness.

    When Sherman torched Atlanta, and put the fear of God into those plantation owners, their will was broken. America does not have the benefit of having a Sherman destroy Fallujah, Baghdad, and any other Iraqi city that resisted the Coalition and the banning of Baath party loyalists.

    The Leftists should get on their knees for supporting the Confederation from European strongholds, they should get on their knees and beg forgiveness for supporting Democratic terrorism and racist policies. But they won’t, just as they won’t beg for forgiveness when they tried to prop up a corrupt dictatorship feeding off of Iraqi children and women, just cause of spite.

  31. right then kcome so you can see the bigger picture….

    well i am willing to agree with you that Bush was probably making up the rationale behind his strategy as he went along and that some of that is just the nature of things. But at what point will the thing be declared a success? or will he just keep changing the rationale. As it stands it looks very scary to me. Increasingly seems like some low level civil war. The daily death rates of iraqi’s has got to be worrying to all concerned. Also at what point will it be delared a failure and the troops withdrawn? Because in the real world there is a limit to the losses we can take. or is there?

    What would history have made of abe lincoln if the south had been murdering each other for years after the end of the civil war and if union troops and remained taking steady losses for years. If illegal imprisoned cobatants had been doing their level best to kill themselves while abe sat home and planned his next war?

    The only reason you wish to drag the civil war in, or any other war is to cover up the shaky basis on which this one was fought.

    so not a bigger picture sunshine….just another little neo-con one

  32. One wonders what happened to them? Where did they go?

    Both Blackfive and Michael Yon, believe they got shipped to Syria during the time we were pocking around in the UN based upon Blair’s “advice”.

    Look, it isn’t too much of a stretch. The reason why we haven’t found WMDs is because they are in a country Bush has decided not to blow up. Osama is in Pakistan, and we can easily grab his ass with Spec Ops and JDAMs support, but that would have to mean invading Pakistan and destabilizing ONE HUNDRED twenty million Muslim fanatics… That big war.

    Just to put things into perspective. Iraq has 25 something million….. Afghanistan has FREAKING 29,928,987!!! Both Iraq and Afghanistan combined wouldn’t make one dent in Pakistan’s population. Now do you know why Osama is hiding out in the Pakistani mountains and why Bush likes Mushareff? You should, 120+ million is A LOT of pocking suicide bombers.

    Still, there is no assurance that Bush would go into Pakistan even with the pop, because obviously Bush has not wiped Syria off the map, and Syria’s a push over.

    Nice argument, well laid and persuasive kcom. Too bad only people like me will appreciate it, and not steve j. Steve j doesn’t have the mental patience to come up with complete sentences for god’s sakes, I find it extremely doubtful he can comprehend basic logic, let alone advanced reasoning. For some reason, he has chosen the simple expedient of disconnected argumentation. OH, well, his loss.

  33. Steve J: Pay attention because I’m only going to do this once!

    That’s very nearly once too many because it doesn’t really address the point I made. No war in the world is or has ever been fought for one reason and one reason only. Just like no space shuttle has ever blown up for one reason and one reason only. It’s a whole train of things that leads to something as complex as either of those events.

    As oft-sited as it is, I’ll still bring up the case of the US Civil War because it’s appropriate. Pay attention, because I’m only going to do this once. (Wait a minute, strike that, since it’s incredibly patronizing and pathetic.) Anyway, I think it’s pretty clear that the consensus among historians (note: I am not one) is that Abraham Lincoln went into the Civil War with one overriding goal – to preserve the union. Well, guess what. By the time it was over that was not his only goal and it certainly was not the only achievement of the Civil War.

    By the time the fighting was over (and the immediate legislative repercussions of the war were over), slavery had been abolished and many other aspects of American life and the American constitutional system had changed profoundly. I believe I’m right in saying most people alive today believe those changes were much for the better. And I also believe I’m right in saying that there were large numbers of people supporting the Civil War from the very beginning because they believed it would bring an end to slavery, whether that was Abraham Lincoln’s initial intention or not. Life is always more complex than your simple distillation would acknowledge.

    Now, as to whether giving the Iraqis the opportunity to speak for themselves was a goal of the Bush administration at the beginning or not (and I would argue that it was a goal), the fact is that some number of people, and I would say not an insignificant number of people, supported the war because they could see the big picture and could see not just the primary purposes of the war, the tactical ones, but also the long-term strategic ones. They knew it would bring change, both predictable and unpredictable, and have consequences beyond merely the WMD question, just as the Civil War brought changes beyond merely the preservation of the Union.

    That you can’t see or acknowledge the bigger picture others see, and can’t adjust your thinking to the complexities of real events and the motivations behind them, speaks more about your ability to accurately view the world than it does the people you are criticizing with such a narrow, pedantic, unrealistic view of something as complex as the events we are discussing. Despite the quotes you cited, if the result of the war is that the Iraqi people (and I’m talking about the everyday voters) have a say in their government and their future and are able to provide themselves with a better life than that under Saddam then the war will have accomplished a goal that was the motivation for many people supporting it in the first place. And it won’t just be a lucky coincidence. It will be the result of that support and a logical consequence thereof, just as the Emancipation Proclamation was a logical consequence of on-going political developments and Abraham Lincoln’s evolving political consciousness.

    So, to put it plainly, there was not a simple, single reason for the war, there was not a simple, single type of person who supported it, there was not a simple, single expectation of the consequences thereof, and there is not a simple, single criterium on which to judge its success or failure. The war involved many players, positions, and judgments (none of which meshed exactly with each other) and the fact that you can only see an extremely limited subset of them is limiting your ability to even see the arguments others are making. You’re stuck “inside the box”. Think bigger. You can still disagree, that’s your prerogative, but at least look at the whole picture.

  34. Thank you, Sally. The anti-war crowd conveniently overlooks the fact that Saddam had a WMD arsenal at the end of Gulf1 and was required by the terms of his defeat to account for those weapon systems — which he never did. One wonders what happened to them? Where did they go?

    The anti-war folks also make much of the fact that Saddam never kicked out the weapons inspectors. The inspectors were recalled by the UN a couple of times because Saddam would not allow the inspectors to inspect. Even the corrupt UN, which we now know parts of which were in criminal collusion with Saddam, wouldn’t willingly participate in such a farce.

  35. Steve J: Try reading the Duelfer Report instead of wingnut agit-prop.

    Have a look in a mirror, Stevie, and repeat the sentence above.

    Duelfer Report, Key Findings:

    Saddam Husayn so dominated the Iraqi Regime that its strategic intent was his alone. He wanted to end
    sanctions while preserving the capability to reconstitute his weapons of mass destruction (WMD) when
    sanctions were lifted.

    Saddam wanted to recreate Iraq’s WMD capability–which was essentially destroyed in 1991–after sanctions
    were removed and Iraq’s economy stabilized, but probably with a different mix of capabilities to that
    which previously existed. Saddam aspired to develop a nuclear capability–in an incremental fashion,
    irrespective of international pressure and the resulting economic risks–but he intended to focus on ballistic
    missile and tactical chemical warfare (CW) capabilities.

    By 2000-2001, Saddam had managed to mitigate many of the effects of sanctions and undermine their
    international support. Iraq was within striking distance of a de facto end to the sanctions regime, both in
    terms of oil exports and the trade embargo, by the end of 1999.

    And much more in that vein.

    Ho, ho, ho!

  36. SARAH

    MANNERS. I grump when six under 30 types revel on a balcony at three on a Wednesday morning and wake up an entire condominium unit of over 500 people. My friend says I should have just joined the party.

    Do what I do — simply call the police. This happen to me from time to time. If they have no respect for you, then return the favor — I keep the number posted on the kitchen door.

  37. GRACKLE:Steve, given that it is an undisputed fact that Saddam had WMD(because he gassed the Kurds with it), what do you suppose happened to the facilities that produced the nerve agent, the records of its manufacture, the scientists and technicians that produced the gas and the specially modified munitions used to deliver the gas? These are material things and people that all existed. What in the world happened to them, Steve?

    Hehehehee! YOU haven’t been paying attention. Here’s what happened:

    Gulf 1, inspections, sanctions, Operation Desert Fox.

    Try reading the Duelfer Report instead of wingnut agit-prop.

  38. Only the Enlightened Progressives are allowed to answer questions which explains why you never answer any questions just rant madly away

  39. What in the world happened to them, Steve?

    How dare you ask your betters questions. You don’t ask the questions, you answer them. And you better not lie again about your answers, either. Only the Enlightened Progressives are allowed to answer questions, don’t step out of line again or we’ll find you in contempt of court.

  40. Steve, most of us pro-war types already know that the administration thought they were going to find WMD in Iraq. Most of us do not dispute that.

    But why would the administration believe such a thing? One reason would be that Saddam had already used WMD on the Kurds. Another would be that the UN weapons inspectors were prevented access and foiled at every turn by Saddam. Still another was that intelligence estimates by intelligence gatherers in other countries thought Saddam had WMD hidden away.

    Steve, given that it is an undisputed fact that Saddam had WMD(because he gassed the Kurds with it), what do you suppose happened to the facilities that produced the nerve agent, the records of its manufacture, the scientists and technicians that produced the gas and the specially modified munitions used to deliver the gas? These are material things and people that all existed. What in the world happened to them, Steve? Did they just disappear — poof! — into a black hole?

  41. A friend of mine calls me a grumpy old woman. Mind you, I am still in my 30s and I hardly feel old, and I probably have a few more jokes in my quiver, a few more laughs in my belly, and a few more paper umbrellas than most people because I am rather a positive, upbeat, happy, glass overflowing kind of person. But I am deeply concerned about the future of OUR country. Not Mexico. Not Zimbabwe. Not Cuba. Or even France. I am concerned about the United States of America. Yes, I am grumpy about a lot of things. I write this with PhD, 15 years international development experience and author of 7 books of which two are adpated in over 70 countries.

    MANNERS. I grump when six under 30 types revel on a balcony at three on a Wednesday morning and wake up an entire condominium unit of over 500 people. My friend says I should have just joined the party. But I remain incredulous that most people don’t send thank you notes, RSVP, or bring flowers or wine to a party. Most people dump friendships as easily as losing interest in a sitcom. Most people almost find it demeaning to hold open a door for someone or feel their personal space is invaded if some dares smile or talk to someone in an elevator. Is it just me or are we interrupting each other more? Putting each other on hold at the hint of another call coming in? Do you read your e-mail while someone is talking to you? If you don’t want to respond to someone, you don’t, right? You increasingly don’t care what another person thinks about you, do you? Do you say things that hurt others and you really don’t care? What happened to the promise?

    CELL PHONES. If you’re in a public place, don’t use your cell phone. Period. Not while standing in line or on line, not while sitting in front of a computer at an Internet cafe, not while waiting to board a plane, not while sitting in a plane, not anywhere near a train unless you are in a crowded car where they cram all of you together in one room to talk on your cell phone, not while waiting for your gynecologist, not while waiting for a movie to begin, and certainly not while waiting for a friend in a restaurant. It is rude. We can hear you. Put the phone DOWN. Didn’t you hear? Congress just passed a law that you are allowed to use your cell phone only when in a grocery store, while parked or driving with a hands-free device, or walking down the street. Oh, that’s right. You missed that. You were too busy talking on your cell phone to read a newspaper.

    CULTURE. We worship youth and ignore the wisdom of our elders. We are drawn to faux reality shows to learn how others act in completely unreal situations. We would never see someone over 30 on American Idol because anyone over 30 has no talent left, right? We think Oprah is a new religion and I have a lot of respect for Oprah but she’s just what most of us were like 30 years ago – caring, polite, warm, and wanting to help others.

    YOUNG WHITE MALES. Why are they still living with their parents well into their 20s and 30s? Do they care that GenY women are buying homes and adopting children in droves? Their college graduation rates have plummeted. They are being surpassed by girls not only in terms of college enrollment but also in academic performance. And yet they continue to wander listlessly with a straw stuck in their mouth and Razr cell phone in one ear and an iPod in another as they head toward home to plop in front of a violent video game or watch some vapid “reality” show.

    YOUNG WHITE FEMALES. Put some clothes on.

    VIOLENCE. Do you remember less violent, less corrupt times? Do you think there is a connection between the violence we see and the violence that is committed? I sure do. When are we going to step up and demand that the media stop producing television, movies, and music that is so very violent, and most of it directed at women? I’ve stopped reading articles about the latest person who was found murdered or dismembered. Of course it is tragic but it is not news. It is gruesome and should not be “reported” outside of a local community. Because the more murder and mayhem that is reported as “news”, the more we become accustomed to the violence, the more “normal” it becomes.

    GENOCIDE. I grump when our complete lack of interest in genocidal wars allows governments around the world to abuse their people under the guise of sovereign rights, and there is nothing the United Nations can or will do top stop it from happening.

    ECONOMY. Our savings rate is the lowest ever since the year before the Great Depression. Gas prices hit an all-time high a few weeks back and yet we have the technology to make alternative fuels – just as we have the technology to make runless nylons and chipless nail polish but what’s the incentive? There is genuine concern about how we are going to pay for the retirement of millions of baby boomers when the Social Security accounts don’t have enough in them. And we had a record budget surplus in 2000, and we are now facing an annual deficit of $368 billion this year and a 10-year projected deficit on $1.35 trillion.

    LIBERTIES. I’m grumpy that my e-mails are being read at work and home. I’m grumpy that a stranger could have listened to any number of my phone conversations. I’m grumpy that some low level clerk in the alumni office of where I went to any number of colleges is selling my social security number, mother’s maiden name, and my date of birth. I’m grumpy that three times last year someone tried to steal my identity. I’m grumpy that some cyber-thief in Russia can quietly go into my bank account and take a few hundred bucks without my realizing it.

    POLITICS. I’m grumpy that you never hear about how computer-based elections are stolen because techno-wizards go into a database on election night to silent and anonymously change a few votes in a few hotly contested counties to declare the winner of their choice. Not our choice. I’m grumpy that it has been proven beyond any reasonable doubt that the 2000 and 2004 Presidential elections, and yet the media won’t touch this story with gloves and a gas mask because it stinks and our very democracy is at stake on this one. Best not to think about it.

    LEADERSHIP. And I’m grumpy that the Democrats haven’t a clue about how to do anything about it, and I am fascinated how the Republicans and religious right will continue to dominate politics until this country is brought to its knees. And I’m grumpy that I’d love to step up but I didn’t go to an Ivy League school, don’t keep company at the right clubs, and God forbid that I have an opinion.

    THIRD PARTY. It is appalling that we’re all sick of the Democrats and Republicans but not one of us has the courage, creativity, and conviction to start a viable third party. Someone with courage, creativity, conviction, and about ten thousand bucks could start a third party. With the Internet, blogs, social networks, Podcasts, SMS, RSS, and AdWords, it wouldn’t be difficult to up-end the two-party system. But oh. That’s right. We’re too busy watching American Idol and talking on our cell phones at Starbucks to give a hoot about this.

    RELIGION. Speaking of God, I am grumpy that we have become so intolerant of someone’s particular brand of religion. I call them “brands” because, really, all religions teach the basic tenets of good behavior. Where are the religious leaders to help solve these problems? And who in their right mind would produce a movie that leads unknowing masses to believe that Mary and Jesus were more than Son and Mother? People are going to start believing the fiction they read and see because the DaVinci Code is just too close to promoting it as fact.

    GAY RIGHTS. Am I the only one of the planet who believes that being gay is as genetically-based as being male or female? I believe every day babies are born heterosexual, bi-sexual, or gay. Simple as that for me. So can we please conduct some sound scientific research into this so that we can allow people to live in peace and love, no matter their genetic makeup?

    HEALTH. Cancer rates at all age levels are the highest ever. Why? The food we eat, the air we breathe, and the junk we drink. One in three people will get cancer because we are drinking chemical-laden sodas, water, and coffee; eating anti-biotic laden chickens and cows; and do we even LOOK at the ingredient list of most of the things we eat? It is so sad but eating a strawberry is like eating a dollop of Draino. Don’t do it, no matter how delicious it looks. All organic all the time.

    ENVIRONMENT. Tsunamis, earthquakes, massive rainfall, hurricanes, more tornadoes than usual, warmer winters, cooler summers, huge spikes in skin cancer. Hey hey! Global warming’s here to stay!

    COMMUNICATION. It is increasingly impossible to communicate with immigrants. I don’t sense many seeming to care that they can’t communicate with us, and I don’t sense native-born Americans seeming to care to communicate with them. What is wrong with requiring that English and Spanish be required languages in school? When my brother-in-law speaks English with a heavy accent and is called a French Pig and should return to his home country, we have some serious problems.

    And our biggest problem is that not enough of us care to demand that our leaders address these issues. Oh now here’s something really important – cappucino or latte, anyone?

  42. JOE KATZMAN: To which the snarky response would be that someone has to stay home to engage the traitors like him on the home front

    That’s not snarky, that’s narcissistic delusion.

  43. KCOM: The point is, they get to speak for themselves for the first time in 50 years.

    Pay attention because I’m only going to do this once!

    “We know for a fact there are weapons there.” – Ari Fleischer, Jan. 9, 2003
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/01/20030109-8.html

    THE PRESIDENT: Our mission is clear in Iraq. Should we have to go in, our mission is very clear: disarmament.
    3/6/03
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030306-8.html

    “But make no mistake — as I said earlier — we have high confidence that they have weapons of mass destruction. That is what this war was about and it is about.” -Ari Fleischer Press Briefing 4/10/03
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/04/20030410-6.html

  44. Get in line kcom, you ain’t getting ahead of me, I got me a re se veration.

  45. What school of higher learning, logic and rhetoric did you go to, dollar? I gotta get me some of that!

  46. Wrong, wrong, wrong. All you ex-hippie born again warmongering warbloggers…kiss my ass.

  47. If the military guards us from foreign enemies, who will guard the guardians from domestic enemies?

  48. Pope Ratzo said…

    “You really think that your blogs are involved in a war? Does it somehow assuage your guilt that young men and women are actually dying while you’re writing a blog to think that you’re somehow making a contribution to the war on terror?”

    ….To which the snarky response would be that someone has to stay home to engage the traitors like him on the home front, when they try to stab the American military in the back.

    This response is not precisely true, of course – a proper response must start with the concept of ‘citizenship,’ which our friend Pope Ratzo evidently does not understand. But neither is it wholly false.

  49. A lot of people seem to think that military strength and capability is whatever they see on paper. Rather naive, you know.

    Countless times people come up to me and say China’s military is equal to becoming equal to the US, cause they got millions of soldiers.

  50. I think we – Americans – left and right – tend to idealize the little brown people to the extent that we no longer feel it’s necessary to find out what they actually think. The leftists think they want what the left wants, the rightists think they want what the right wants. The truth is often surprising – and dismaying to those who already have their minds made up.

    Ahem…I would say that’s what the elections are for. The problem in Iraq is that no one has asked the people what they wanted for the last 50 years. Saddam certainly didn’t. He told them what they wanted. For the left or the right or anyone else to say they know what the Iraqi people want is crap.

    The difference between East Germany and West Germany after World War II is that we implemented a system in West Germany where the German people got to have a say in what kind of country they lived in and the Soviet Union implemented a system in East Germany where they did not. What we did was morally right, practical, and highly effective and any comparison between West Germany and East Germany made that crystal clear. It was the difference between NATO (a voluntary organization of likeminded people) and the Warsaw Pact (a forced collective created by duress).

    Well, what I want to see is a system where the people in Iraq have a say. I want them to let us know what they think. I don’t want some leftist American or European telling me what is good for them or what they believe. I want to hear it from them. Dennis Prager often says he prefers clarity to agreement. That’s the way I see the situation in Iraq. After 50 years of Baathism, I would like some clarity. I want to know what the people of Iraq really, really think – whether it agrees with what I think or not, because then we’ll know where we stand, they’ll know where they stand, and the world will know where they stand.

    But to find any of that out there has to be a way to gauge the will and the priorities of the Iraqi people. And that’s what the last three years has been about. It’s been about setting up a system where they get to say what they think. None of us in favor of giving them that opportunity ever thought they would be in 100% agreement with us. That’s not the point. The point is, they get to speak for themselves for the first time in 50 years. And those of us who supported their right and their opportunity to do so owe an apology to no one. The ones who should apologize are the ones who would deny them that opportunity while practicing the very same right in their own countries every day.

  51. Steve J.

    “Logistics” is not the same as “Mutually Assured Destruction”. Sorry, I’m not jumping in the middle of this discussion — but that seemed a bit obvious.

    Let’s not manufacture fatigue.

  52. China’s espionage efforts

    Just to clarify something to SB about what I mean when I say that China is not a threat to the US. I mean China is not interested nor do they have the means, to destroy the US homeland territory or cause political/culture instability in the US.

    It does not mean I don’t think China’s espionage of American technolgoy or anything else, won’t kill Americans. But there is always a difference between those who die in the front lines and the safety of the country itself.

    There’s a lot higher chance for war when people have matching technologies and weaponry, but there would be if one side was outclassed by the other. But any war that would occur, would focus and disrupt China’s surrounding terrain. China does not have the logistics to reach their hand across the globe to the US, unlike the US that is.

  53. Neoconned, your posts may not be as ‘violent’ as Ymars are, but they certainly arent any more enlightened or tollerant.

  54. JASON – the original sin (private property),

    Where do you get this crap?

  55. so neo con let the comment stand as a bit of instruction….i say you associate with violent retards and are tainted by this….i say you pontificate never debate,,,,and you say?

  56. oh hell either

    1. I am as stupid as you all on here keep telling me….

    or 2. yrmdwnkr is a violent little retard

    The Left has nothing on me in terms of temper, rage, or righteous anger. They don’t know what berzerker rage really is. It truly is an insanity that eats away at your soul, and unless you break something or hurt someone, it just keeps eating and eating.

    that will be me again huh?

    neo….nice friends out their in the right wing. Do you ever condemn this stuff or just save all that passionless dry ire for democrats?

  57. China is very patriotic and nationalistic. Their civil rights is on par with Russia’s. China’s last war was WWII, which they count as a victory. Russia’s demoralized cause their last war was with us and they lost, and their current one in Chechnya is an ongoing disaster.

    China isn’t a direct threat to the US, but China is a direct threat to Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, India, and Pakistan.

    Americans don’t reflexively want to waste lives retaking Cuba cause there is no one defending it, but Chinese people will, cause it is a matter of pride and nationalism.

  58. I think we – Americans – left and right – tend to idealize the little brown people to the extent that we no longer feel it’s necessary to find out what they actually think. The leftists think they want what the left wants, the rightists think they want what the right wants. The truth is often surprising – and dismaying to those who already have their minds made up.

    I would be very interested in reading what some Chinese bloggers have to say – assuming they haven’t all been arrested already. China is presumably the only nation that can challenge American power in the future. If the Chinese themselves feel that way, I think it would be refreshing to hear their opinions. That is, I’d like to hear from someone – friend or enemy – who has the confidence not to believe that the whole world world revolves around Washington DC.

  59. I always believed that it wasn’t very multicultural to ignore the brown and midget people in the rest of the world, myself. Especially when people like Iraq the Model, Indians, Japanese, and Chinese are working so hard to learn English so they can “chat” on the internet.

  60. Y – The only thing I ever read about Indian execution techniques was in Sharpe’s Tiger by Bernard Cornwell – a work of fiction, narrated from an English point of view obviously. In it, the Tippoo Sultan had strongmen who specialized in: a) suffocating victims by squeezing them, b) breaking their necks by twisting their heads backward, and c) driving iron spikes into their heads with bare hands. Very creative…

    Interesting reading, your links. Interesting that somebody in India thinks more of the Administration than most Americans do. Context helps.

  61. To deny that the relationship between India and the United States has been transformed from the cold war suspicion to strategic partnership where the two have deepening mutual interests, as the Marxists do, may be in line with their ideology. But a little analysis would throw up the fact that for the Marxists to retain their power base in West Bengal, the vote bank politics with Muslim fundamentalism has become important. So much so the CPM bosses have turned against their own Chief Minister when Buddhadeb Bhattacharya criticized the madrasas and expressed concern at infiltration from Bangladesh especially in the border districts of his state. Sometime back, he was even forced to eat his own words on the need to reform the syllabus in the madrasas and on their proliferation and funding.

    The Left has been successful in creating an environment in this country for several decades now in which anyone who exposes their double talk or finds some virtue in American policies is dubbed a “reactionary” or a “CIA agent” or worse. This hypocrisy prompted the late Piloo Modi, the Swatantra party leader, to come to Parliament wearing a badge that “I am a CIA agent” needling the Left and some Congressmen with their own barbs. But those were days when the Left would refuse to believe that the people in the Soviet Union were resenting an oppressive regime. The overthrow of Communist regimes throughout Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union through popular uprising ought to have given the Left a lesson. But even now they refuse to read the writing on the Berlin Wall as people clawed into it and brought it down.

    The Left would have you believe that America’s beef should be localized on Osama only, not a War on Global Terror, not a war on any global scale. This shows you the lie of the Left, it is global, precisely because Marxism, Socialism, and the Left are global. transnational as den beste termed it. It transcends nations, just as jihadism transcends nations.

    I suggest you read it all, SB and others.

    India eviscerates the Left

    It was funny though, I actually came across this in my research on “Indian execution techniques” but I couldn’t find anything on google about staking. But I did on crucifixion, ain’t that funny. All the things it showed up was about American Indians, or Native Indians, or whatever. India doesn’t seem to be very um… popular to the anglo-saxon world.

    Not a very good resume for the Left’s “diplomatic, international, UN based” initiatives, now is it.

  62. Did someone say Tookie? This is bad….

    IMAGE

    Spelled his name wrong, and it’s a pitiful rendering, but if I remember correctly I just wanted to crank this out real quickly that day. Why people defend evil is amazing.

  63. Y – Not sure who I’d call the children and who the grownups in the current situation. Given that our leaders and thinkers are acting like those kids from ‘Lord of the Flies,’ I think my confusion is understandable.

    Somebody else’s blog posted the famous quotation from ‘Catch-22:’ The enemy is anybody who’s going to get you killed, no matter which side he’s on.

    That pretty much sums up my relationship with my fellow Americans right now.

  64. Btw, the Savior I am refering to is the “American” polygamist in charge of a doomsday cult.

    I’m not sure if Islam can get WORSE PR than that.

  65. Most people see polygamy and see the Savior raping little girls and boys, and then see Islam doing the same thing… it is rather hard to tell them that religious beliefs about polygamy play little part in violence.

    The exposure of Islam is all about polygamy, sexual repression. This is its images, regardless of anything else. When you say religion, or islamic religion, it means different things to different people based upon their interpretation.

    But one thing that isn’t open to interpretatin, is polygamy. Polygamy defacto causes societal destabilization and warfare, internal or external. Islam would be okay if they got rid of polygamy, but that’s not going to happen without a religous war you know.

  66. say it with me, the response to terrorism is: intelligence, law enforcement and diplomacy. it is NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world and hoping you actually kill a few terrorists (all the while creating even more).

    What makes the above a Terrorism-Is-Caused-By-Fighting-Terrorism meme is the “all the while creating even more” phrase. The reasoning goes like this: If you confront a bully you will anger the bully’s supporters, thereby causing them to become bullies as well. So it’s best to find out the bully’s schedule in order to avoid him(intelligence), call the cops who don’t have the resources to find the bully(law enforcement) and more diplomacy, the same old look-the-other-way-and-hope-for-the-best diplomacy that was tried for 30 years before 9/11.

    I would also submit that 2 deposals of terror-sponsoring regimes could hardly be accurately described as “throwing bombs blindly at the world,” but we all know about the anti-war crowd and their love of hyperbole.

    As for intelligence, the anti-war crowd, if you pin them down, concedes that it’s necessary but then will turn around and do their very best to sabotage intelligence efforts, gleefully revealing secret programs so the enemy will know exactly what the US is doing intelligence-wise. That this schizophrenic behavior could ultimately result in far more deaths than all of the US actions in Iraq put together is apparently shoved back in the recesses of their confused minds where it cannot bother them.

    Steve, would you mind explaining the significance of the Wolfowitz quote? Stupid and ignorant old me isn’t certain of your point. Are you claiming that Wolfowitz is wrong about Iraq’s past history? To refresh your memory, here’s the quote:

    “We have no idea what kind of ethnic strife might appear in the future, although as I have noted, it has not been the history of Iraq’s past.”

    BTW, here’s another link about Saddam’s terrorist connections if you’re interested: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2730253.stm

    There’s lots more; all you have to do is Google “Ansar al-Islam” and you come up with a boatload of results. Have fun.

    Also, Steve, while violence among Iraqis has recently risen(as opposed to US casualties, which have never been very high) it hasn’t yet risen to the level of civil war. It may or it may not, time will tell. Be patient and you may get your wish; I’m sure the Iranians, as well as the Syrians, are diligently working to foment a civil war, and they just might succeed. While there is certainly ethnic components(read Kurds) and political components(read domestic Baathists, Syrian and Iranian enabled outsiders) to the current flare-up in violence among the Iraqis, the violence is mostly religious in nature, as would be expected in the midst of a religion-driven World War3. It mustn’t be forgotten that the labels of Sunni and Shiite refer to members of opposing religious factions, not ethnic groups.

    I want to make it clear that I don’t believe Islam as a religion is particularly or intrinsically violent any more than other religions. Religion itself cannot be violent. But fanatics use religion for their own base purposes, although they themselves may remain blissfully unaware when doing so. Most people do what they want to do(and believe what they want to believe) and find reasons later, which is another way of saying that the human capacity for rationalization has no boundaries. Most of the leaders of terrorist organizations are religious fanatics, from bin Laden on down. It’s a religious world war, Steve, and the sooner this fact is comprehended the better it can be defended against.

  67. Y – Glad you’re able to make sense of this behavior! Maybe you sleep better at night.

    I sleep better at night because if I get into a rage, my pain tolerance thresholds increase about 5 to 10X, and things that would cripple me in normal life simply shunts so much endorphines into me I feel like I’m flying amongst the dream of ages. The Left has nothing on me in terms of temper, rage, or righteous anger. They don’t know what berzerker rage really is. It truly is an insanity that eats away at your soul, and unless you break something or hurt someone, it just keeps eating and eating. I don’t have the luxury of the Left, being enraged at every political opponent that crosses my computer LCD screen. It is a loss of control and although it gives a sense of power that is truly intoxicating, the loss of control really bugged me until I learned to control it. One of the reasons people are scared of angry people is this. When people get angry, their civilizational inhibitions like Do Not Murder, Do Not Do Violence, Do Not Violate the Law, tend to disappear. That’s what makes people scared, the idea that you are a fanatic and unpredictable and going to do things that the other person is limited from doing by law and reason. (Iran vs US, sound familiar) I truly do not understand why the Left favors holding their anger in, and using it to power their beliefs, tolerating the loss of control. That makes little sense to me. Is the intoxication of rage and anger so addictive that they are unable to let it go? Perhaps in embracing their darker side when they become enraged, fullfills some need of theirs. I’ve always been scared of that side of mine, before I learned to deal with it. It’s surprising for a liberal indoctrinated kid to learn that he finds violence against bad people fun and thinks their physical blows are just a way to get more anger, endorphines, and adrenaline into the system. Any fake liberal that finds that in him, I guarantee you will have freaked long ago. When that LT. General of the Marines in Afghanistan said that it is a HOOT to shoot muj that slaps their wives around, I was like “that’s my kind of guy”. Nothing the fake liberals taught me, told me how to deal with righteous anger, namely because the people I was angry at in 2004 were the people the fake liberals were praising as freedom fighters fighting the oppression of america. That didn’t seem exactly right, based upon the principles of kindness, compassion, and justice that the Left taught me. There is a difference between me, who gets quite angry at injustices perpetrated upon the weak and the helpless, and people like nnconned who gets angry at Americans. As I said before, I can’t afford to let anger control my actions because it tends up never letting go. For people who have a far less volcanic level of rage when they get angry, perhaps they can maintain it for years on end. That’s the difference. Some people are angry at everyone, all the time, everytime. I focus my anger on those who deserve it, and not try and bully the weak and helpless or those who don’t deserve my wrath. Because once I let the controls go, it’s going to be hard to stop. Perhaps you see that in some of the Left as well.

    I respect that you worry about future generations. I respect and appreciate my ancestors who have fought to provide me the opportunities that I have today. However, you have to let the children go eventually. You can’t always protect them, for the simple reason that they will live longer than you. It is best to prepare them for it now, than try to hide the pain of war from them. The WWII generation tried to do that, as I think all generations born and raised in war try to do, but we all know what really happens. People become spoiled if they are protected all the time. We know that in the vaccine world, and we know that in war and peace. I don’t think any one person can do much about it, personally. It is the paradox of the human condition.

    The more you provide for and protect a person like a child, the less that child is able to appreciate your sacrifices and the less the child will be able to support him or herself independently in the future. If the world really was a Socialist paradise of peace and kindness, this would not be such a problem. But we all know there are monsters and barbarians in the world, waiting to raid our village when it is defenseless.

    I can’t recall if Neo ever wrote anything about the sheer intoxication of berzerker rage, how it can fill you up with a surety of purpose and strength of will. I’m not sure if this is because it doesn’t matter to psychology what anger feels like, so long as therapists can help people control that anger. Or whether Neo never experienced anger as I do, but regardless, rage is very addictive, speaking from personal experience.

    Another reason to feel sorry for the Leftists, SB.

  68. neo-neocon at 11:53

    …reminded me of a graphic I fashioned together some short time back, ineffectual garbage I know — but having fun with Photoshop nonetheless:

    IMAGE

  69. To see you cosily agreeing with yrmdwnkr

    If Neo openly stated her disagreements whenever her beliefs came into conflict with me own, I suspect that Neo would have zero time for her own blog. This is, of course, just dealing with one person.

    One badly messed up childhood.

    my childhood is not particularly different than any other liberal indoctrinated school child of the public education system. Amanie, I believe, had a far worse childhood given that he grew up in revolutionary times and transitions of governments. You should have sympathy for people like Amanie with bad childhoods, otherwise you’re just mean.

    Talk to neo she is the therapist and can probably explain how you became such a f**k up.

    Neo learned psychology to heal people. I learned psychology to destroy them. I don’t think Neo would like comparing notes, personally. We could always switch roles, but neither of us would be comfortable with the other’s native interest.

    I’m just saying, a 12 inch wooden stake is a mercy. You should try it with a short stake. I’m just being sensitive to the Left’s disdain of torture. And given that it is not a Western execution method, like the firing squad, crucifix, and water boying I was almost sure that the Left would appreciate multicultural diversity here given their disdain of Western brutality. But it seems my efforts are futile.

    I’m not really so civilized that I feel shame for wanting to do violent and barbaric acts against my enemies. Every man, and yes woman, has a dark side. We are not judged upon what we think, we are judged upon what we do unto others, those weaker and stronger than us. I’m pretty sure terroists aren’t weaker than the women and children they kill, but I could be wrong. Sure, our civilization frowns upon vigilantism and violence, but like any compulsion it can be overwritten. The military themselves could not exist if they could not train civilians to shoot and kill on orders. The compulsions people have when they grow up in a civilized and peaceful society can indeed be overwritten and bypassed. The problem is the opposite. How do you get crazy and violent people like the rapists in Iran to stop the violence? If violence and vigilantism is always wrong, and always frowned upon, and could never be overwritten then Flight 93 wouldn’t have crashed in Pens.

    and you get trolls because it is what you deserve.

    I’ll remember that, when I see the teenaged girl hanging from the execution stand in Iran, executed for being raped. I’ll just remark to her spirit that Americans believe she got what she deserved and so did the neocons who might have saved her like we saved Raj in Afghanistan. “We don’t want to get our hands dirty executing an innocent man like Tookie”. *shakes head*

    So when you sit smugly in new england sticking up for all the

    I’m in the Bible Belt. Not with Neo in New England.

    What defines a movement like neoconservatism and marxism is who makes up the movement from the ground up to the leadership. Sure, some movements attrack rapists and people who like to have multiple wives like polygamists and Islamic fundamentalism. But even the worst philosophy can act for good ends if the people in it are good.

    It is after all not ideas and philosophies that are evil or good, but the people who live and breath and act in real life that produce good or evil. On this score, if neo-cons have enemies like nnconned, then that’s a good thing.

    When Jimmy Carter is on your side, that might not be so such a good thing though. I think Bush lost the port deal the moment Jimmy Carter supported it, personally. To many, that was just too much.

  70. Y – Glad you’re able to make sense of this behavior! Maybe you sleep better at night.

    I was raised by a classic jarhead; maybe that explains my dismay at Americans’ current behavior. I expect ‘gung ho’ in a crisis – what I see is a bunch of civilians doing what civilians do best: scampering around in all directions, gobbling like frightened turkeys. Even after more than twenty years living outside the fortress, I still have to remind myself that this is how things are really supposed to be. Democracy works, but it looks like a clusterf**k.

    On the other hand, I’m not wired tightly enough to be an Honor A type. I enjoy peace and quiet and would like to live a long and comfortable life with minimal interference from the government, religious fanatics, and fellow-citizens who think they’re better than I am and are therefore entitled to tell me how I should live. Content to work at my trade, not looking for trouble, but ready if trouble comes looking for me or my loved ones. The word “yeoman” comes to mind. Seems to express a balance between career soldier and completely hopeless chickenshit civilian. Of course, I’ll never know for sure until I’m tested – which I pray I’ll never be since in my case it would involve fighting other Americans.

    I think, though, that the real reason I feel anger and shame rather than pity for my fellow citizens is that I’m afraid their self-indulgent antics will one day lead to exactly that kind of test. Maybe not for me, but for a lot of young people who don’t deserve to pay the price for our foolishness. And the assholes who do most of the screaming just can’t see it coming.

    As usual…

  71. Jason H. Bowden: My policy is a bit different. I delete at times and allow to stand at other times. I let some of it stand to illustrate the mindset of this particular form of “opposition.” I think it can be quite instructive.

    Also, of course, I’ve never deleted real arguments, couched in a respectable and thoughtful approach, from the opposition. Anyone who reads this blog for any length of time knows I welcome that sort of commentary.

  72. In their minds, neo-cons stand for if not fascism, then at least totalitarianism. Just look at the comments talking about deleting comments. — these are the things that I loathe and can not tolerate at all and why I can not stand politically with liberals. I reference to myself sometimes in “neo-conservatism” terms because we don’t support nor enable these things.

    [I think neo-neoconservatism might be distinct from the earlier use of “neoconservatism” and how this title or description may evolve is still avant garde]

  73. Oh, but if the soldiers support the war, their views become irrelevant as well. And it doesnt stop the left from marginalizing the sacrifices of soldiers.

    And it doesn’t stop the Left from patronizing soldiers, either. Or infantilizing them. To paraphrase: they’re just dumb kids who couldn’t get a job anywhere else and don’t know any better.

    Richard Belzer

    This despite the fact that many are college graduates, many are much older than teenagers, and every last one is a volunteer.

    So to sum up: You can only support the war if you are a soldier. And once you are a soldier you’re just some dumb slob who doesn’t know any better, or is forced to toe the party line, or is a baby killer – so your views can be safely ignored.

    Wow! How convenient is that!

  74. Oops. A case of premature post-ulation. 🙂

    Anyway, to take up where I left off, I can only laugh at the aburdity of the phrase “NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world”. Because I don’t remember any bombs landing blindly in Sweden, or Uruguay, or the Dominican Republic, or Thailand or Burkina Faso, or the Maldives, or even France. Perhaps there will be a cruise missile strike tomorrow on Zambia, but somehow I doubt it. I’ll keep my eyes open, though, because I have it on good authority (or at least self-proclaimed authority) that it’s happening…

  75. say it with me, the response to terrorism is: intelligence, law enforcement and diplomacy. it is NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world and hoping you actually kill a few terrorists (all the while creating even more).

    I could say it with you, but not without breaking out laughing. Particularly the second part, “it is NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world”.

  76. neoneoconned–

    My preference is to delete morons whether I deserve them or not, but hey, this isn’t my blog, and I don’t make the rules here.

    Post on my blog again, neoneoconned, and you’ll witness the same predictable result. ZOT! Consider yourself OWNED!

    😉

  77. By their friends shall ye know them

    And neo your friends are a smug, nasty, violent little collection. To see you cosily agreeing with yrmdwnkr, an unpleasant individual endlessly advocating violence;

    Even the meanest and baddest man around will die screaming in agony if you shove a 1 foot wooden stake up his ass. nice guy huh?

    and while we are at it yrmdwnkr the weaknesses in your psyche hang all over this blog. One badly messed up childhood. Over authoritarian parents and bullying at a guess. Talk to neo she is the therapist and can probably explain how you became such a f**k up.

    and you get trolls because it is what you deserve. You don’t debate you ponitificate and all critical visitors to this site are immediately attacked as stupid, trolls, spammers etboringcetera.

    So when you sit smugly in new england sticking up for all the right wing policies of an oil driven right wing president yet claiming not to be right wing, just think about all the people you agree with….cos they all are. And so are you, it is a natural part of the aging process so don’t worry.

    Elvis Lives

    Long Live the Trolls!

    …..and they are going to

  78. Steve J–

    I agree with you 100% that socialism has all of the properties of religion. Consider the beliefs that socialism entails: self-sacrifice, personal redemption, anointed saints, the Garden of Eden (the noble savage), the original sin (private property), worship of the poor and the ignorant, sacred texts, prophecies of the always imminent capitalist apocalypse, and promises a socialist heaven on earth. Comte de Saint-Simon’s last work in favor of socialism is not surprisingly called The Last Christianity.

    Note that Intelligent Design was shot down in Pennsylvania by a Bush appointed judge. Also note that the fanatics trying to save Terri Schiavo had their case dismissed by — a Republican judge, a southern Baptist nonetheless!

    I’m sorry. I’m disrupting your fragile worldview with *facts*. Carry on sloganeering if it makes you feel good — anything but *thinking*.

  79. One of the reasons why I don’t worry about the school yard taunting is because it’s an indication that they really don’t know who they are talking to.

    The dangerous people are those who see into your soul and seek out the weak points in your psyche and technique.

    You can kill a true believer, but you can’t make him stop short of killing him. What you can do, is to destroy his internal beliefs. Once you do that, his identity matrix shatters, and then it’s all over for him.

    Senseless and random violence like what the terroists use or what mobs use, are unprofessional. They are crude, rude, implements of bludgeoning. No Art, to the Art of War. Not a big fan of art, but there’s beauty in lots of things still.

    You really have to feel sorry for people like steve j. They’re reduced to one word phrases. Look at the above recently written comment if you don’t believe me. Stupid and ignorant seems to make up stevej’s use of wording by at least 25% total. These are the people that’s going to come and assassinate my belief structure? These are the people who are going to taunt me into getting mad and showing them I’m a coward? Who are they kidding.

    *shakes head*

    It’s not even propaganda. I could respect propaganda, a good propaganda project designed to persuade people like Al Qaeda talking about the strong horse vs the weak horse. But it doesn’t even rise to the “persuasion” level.

    There’s no wall. A wall you can hit. This isn’t even an obstacle. It’s a bunch of bees that you can’t get rid of. Annoying perhaps, even fatal if you are allergic as the West is allergic to pride and patriotism in Western values.

    As Bush said, Bring it On. Bush’s polls would be a lot higher if he had kept repeating it every year and every month.

  80. Marxism is thus the most radical of all reactions against the reign of scientific thought over life and action, established by Rationalism.

    Young Earth Creationism. Intelligent Design.

  81. Ymarsakar: I agree that there’s something about the word “neocon” that’s like waving a red flag in front of a bull. The comments about deleting comments are about on the level of playground taunting, rather than anything substantive about left or right. I’m on the far right when it suits them, and on the left when it suits them. Of course, the truth is I’m neither.

  82. I think it has something to do with your name Neo, that they think you’re far right.

    In their minds, neo-cons stand for if not fascism, then at least totalitarianism. Just look at the comments talking about deleting comments.

  83. I dont care that anybody’s viewpoints are to the left of mine, just be sane. Christ, thats all Im asking.

    With some of the comments here, I can see how anybody could get burnt out. Its like talking to the wall.

  84. nyomythus: I’m an independent, too. I don’t think I’ll ever join a political party again. I consider myself liberal in many ways, but I no longer wish to align myself with what the movement has become. Of course, liberals now consider me the far right. Go figure.

  85. It was really funny remembering the promises of communism, in which they said “isn’t it worth to fight against oppression to get bread”? Well, in the end, the communists really didn’t get any bread now did they?

  86. France walks the walk of tolerance. But you tend to get jihad and riots. Britain walks tolerance, but then you tend to get home grown suicide bombers.

    Don’t think most Americans would trade their lives in for fake tolerance. It’s not even real tolerance, it’s actually fake. Most French hate the immigrants and don’t see them as French cause of whatever reasons.

  87. I’m coming from the same angle Jack. Although I have shaken the Democrat tag, I still can’t refer to myself as a Re ree rrrrrre …publican, Republican [i did it!] I’m comfortable as an Independent — straight ticket Pro-American Conservative. And personally I very liberal, I’m an artist, I work in academia — I mean gah that’s Liberal. All of our freedoms are simply best secured under a greater Conservative society. The Left talks tolerance, but they sure as hell don’t walk tolerance.

  88. FWIW, I consider myself an ex-leftist and no small part of that change was discovering how irrational and unpleasant my leftist comrades were in the face of disagreement.

    I still say I’m a liberal in the classic and dictionary senses of the word.

    I remain a registered Democrat because I can’t quite give that up yet.

  89. By the way, the Left’s reaction to what I say and have said, is like their reaction to Amanie. THey tend to think it’s some kind of propaganda trick like they would do, pure rhetoric and for show like they would do.

    Unfortunately for them, they don’t really have the multicultural understanding to comprehend true believers. Which is what Hitler, patriots, Von Stauffenberg, Amanie, Massoud in Afghanistan, and Komeini are. We are all true believers, the only difference is in what we believe in.

    It’s is incredibly amusing to hear the Left talk about religious fanaticism and how many wars were started about religions, and then you see how they walk the walk in Real Life.

  90. it makes no sense

    it is beyond mockery

    my god two lunatics

    5:26 PM, May 17, 2006

    See what I mean? Tell them the truth, from the heart, without ridicule, and you will realize the quality of difference between you and them. For people who are confident of their beliefs, their cause, and their country what need we have for lying to our enemies and opponents when they can’t even get their propaganda straight? Even if you tell the truth, they’ll never believe you. They can’t. It would terminate their identity matrix. You ever tried to terminate your identity matrix? You would get as much success as trying to choke yourself by holding your breath. Doesn’t work, based upon one principle, self-survival instinct.

    The lies and the propaganda spewed by the jihadists are necessary, because nobody would freely choose to live under them as opposed to live in the US of A. If you can’t win the argument fairly, then you bring out the baseball bats and the crow bars. Time to break a few knees and hands. The jihadists believe if you rape a few women, then hang them when they talk to the police, everything will be peachy. They got another thing coming.

    By the way. Speaking about loonies. The only loons are those who are so paranoid they will either fabricate a blogger profile link to make people think they are really registered or people who simply hide their blogger profiles out of paranoia (higher chance for this one since it is consistent).

    Here you go, nnnnnnn’s profile link.

    Nothing to see here, move along. Stage magicians might be impressive, but that doesn’t mean they can kill you with magic.

  91. No, I am not suggesting Jack or you, SB, are leftists. But it was a distinction that I felt had to be made. Regardless of your political positions or belief, I believe it is wise to exclude unintended targets from any overt incendiary statements.

    When you (I) choose selective attacks, you must also selectively choose your targets with as much care. In all honesty, I don’t have any solid beliefs about whether SB or Jack Trainor are Leftists, but I did know that what I was refering to did not include you all. I believe as Bruce Lee did, that forms and patterns are as much a hinderance as it is an aid to organization and learning.

    I have no problem with you, SB, talking to Spank. If people want to argue and debate, I can only suggest, giving a command you know won’t be followed is something you learn not to do when studying military history.

    About shame, I was just asking because I didn’t know what you were really asking. When people ask me questions, I feel it is important to know their reasoning and their beliefs that power their questions, since knowing why they ask helps knowing what to answer with.

    Like with liberal societies, I function best on maximum amount of information. A lack of such information, can cause problems for me. Not least of which is misunderstanding or jumping to the wrong conclusions.

    About the disgrace part. My sense of America is perhaps contextual. Meaning, I know there are people with this kind of honor code. They keep their word, even to those criminals who violate their word all the time. Meaning, in negotiating with hostages, Honor Type A person would keep his word even when he knows the terroists do not. Perhaps you are of that persuasion.

    Me, I operate with slightly different rules of conduct. It’s still an honor code of course, but it is contextual. Meaning, it is like the virtue of honesty. You are honest with your friends, but I see no problems lying to our enemies. As they say, the Bill of Rights is not a suicide pack.

    How this applies to this situation is rather simple. I don’t see it as disgraceful because I don’t expect dishonorable people to fit into my expectations of behavior. I expect people of honor to act with honor, and if they do not, then that is a disgrace. People who never have had any honor or loyalty in the beginning? They’re outside the social group, the statistical curve, so to speak.

    It’s a tribal behavioral pattern. Not high ideals. The French really made a big deal about high ideals being the core of honor, the Age of Chivalry. But what I’m talking about really is more like a Wild West kind of behavior. If Indians attack women and children, and mutilate the dead, well I probably wouldn’t give them Geneva Conventions protection. And the Wild Westerners did not, as you can imagine. Blood vendettas, remember.

    Do you see, most of the institutions we have in the 21st century, are conditional honor types. Not Absolute hardline honor types.

    The Honor A types featured by Honor Harrington by david weber is very rare. You’ve see it in the Belisarious series as well.

    The world would be a better place if everyone behaved according to the Type A behavioral pattersn, but everyone doesn’t do that. Not even most.

    I got nothing wrong with high expectations for America, SB. Perhaps it is because I did not grow up in your generation, my values were taught and derived from a different school of thought.

    I think my position can be summarized by the Marine Corps saying. No better friend, no worse enemy. It’s a moral recognition that some people deserve better treatment and some don’t. Others disagree, they believe human rights are eternal and apply to everyone. There’s room for disagreement of course. But this Long War or WoT or whatever you want to call it, has indeed lifted up the rock to expose the bugs and roaches hiding in the darkness of the human soul.

  92. sb to him everybody is a leftie and he wants to hurt them. a seriously disturbed young man

  93. Y, unless I misunderstood your reference to SB, it appears you have mistaken me for a leftist. Sorry if I’ve given that impression. (Maybe my interactions with Spanky – trying to entice him into a civil discussion as opposed to his usual behavior – gave you that idea. Not a sterling success, that effort – but at least I gave it a shot.)

    Anyway, thanks for excluding me from the physical-coward-left. In fact, I’m not sure whether I’m a physical coward or not. Never been tested in that way. As for joining the military – I volunteered in 1981 and received a medical discharge for my troubles. Now I’m too old and my health is even worse. So as far as Iraq goes, cowardice doesn’t enter into it in my case. As to the trolls – well, we all say things on the Net that we would dare say to each other’s faces. Wouldn’t take them so seriously.

    About the shameful behavior – If you have to ask whose standards we use to determine when it shame is approprite, then I might suggest that you weren’t raised right!

    I know – that’s not really fair. Everybody’s raised differently and one person’s shame might be another person’s pride. So maybe you can judge how I was raised when I say that I believe that our behavior as a nation since 9/11 has been shameful. We are attacked from outside, and our answer by and large has been to turn on each other. As an American, I am ashamed of that. Yes, I am also ashamed that the Iraq war didn’t turn out to be a flag-waving extravaganza of unalloyed success – as anyone is whose plans turn out to be flawed. But I am more dismayed at my fellow citizens’ treatment of each other as enemies or worse at a time when we should be working together to solve our problems as a nation. We should be exhibiting resolve, wisdom, patience, and cooperation. Instead, we’re acting like two troops of chimpanzees throwing turds at each other.

    It’s a disgrace.

  94. oh god that is ludwig von m you are quoting…..serious right wing loony. didn’t much hold with free speech but mad on the free market red in tooth and claw

    chalk up two loonies. i suspect jasonbaby is a tad more together than yrmdwnkr

  95. ah…. i get it “Marxism is indeed opium for those who might take to thinking and must therefore be weaned from it.”

    you want to force people to change their opinions…by force i presume…..you in there with the wargaming warriors then….

  96. jason baby tell me you are not serious!,,,,,,,,i mean…..the guy is bonkers…have you read it….come on i know i mocked you and the rest……but this guy wants to kill people for having different opnions…read what he writes

    it makes no sense

    it is beyond mockery

    my god two lunatics

  97. Ymarsakar, well done.

    Much of the left isn’t impervious to thought; they know what it is and are openly hostile to it.

    These two passages from von Mises’s Socialism are illuminating:

    “Marxism protects itself against all unwelcome criticism. The enemy is not refuted: it is enough to unmask him as a bourgeois. Marxism criticizes the achievements of all those who think otherwise by representing them as the venal servants of the bourgeoisie. Marx and Engels never tried to refute their opponents with argument. They insulted, ridiculed, derided, slandered, and traduced them, and in the use of these methods their followers are not less expert. Their polemic is directed never against the argument of the opponent, but always against his person.
    …….
    Marxism is thus the most radical of all reactions against the reign of scientific thought over life and action, established by Rationalism. It is against Logic, against Science and against the activity of thought itself–its outstanding principle is the prohibition of thought and inquiry, especially as applied to the institutions and workings of a socialist economy. It is characteristic that it should adopt the name “Scientific Socialism” and thus gain the prestige acquired by Science, through the indisputable success of its rule over life and action, for use in its own battle against any scientific contribution to the construction of the socialist economy. The Bolshevists persistently tell us that religion is opium for the people. Marxism is indeed opium for those who might take to thinking and must therefore be weaned from it.”

  98. sorry tagged an extra one at the end…..too much choice….so much madness

  99. fantastic….where to start? fave yrmdwnkr quotes

    the winner!
    Given appropriate death and assassination squads from the Bush Admin, I could make these people bend like cardboard and paper to whatever construct I put up.

    second place
    You are restricted from murdering or getting rid of people on the Left in America, because you’d go to jail and that is rather not worth it.

    and honourable mention
    we still have our guns. We don’t have to fight the military with them, because the military is on our side and will NEVER obey an illegal order from a Democrat President to “disperse” a peaceful protest so long as current loyalists in the military are volunteers and not forced draft or political appointees.
    Do you truly want to associate yourself with the scum of the earth, the scumbags with their soiled condoms overseeing the exploitation and torture of a great majority of the Earth’s people? Or do you want to associate with the paladins of legend,

    oh and there is more

    mad, bad and dangerous to know …stop neo con lunacy now

  100. This is a mega-comment . The quotes are only in the beginning, the rest is what I really think. Take that as you may. Addressed to those who still have an ounce of reasoning in their heads. I’m sure Spank will read it, and tell the rest of us where I went wrong, but for the rest, perhaps this might satisfy what I presume are people who want to feel a sense of victory over these other commenters. It is quite a bit more optimistic than the usual comments you may have seen in this thread.

    say it with me, the response to terrorism is: intelligence, law enforcement and diplomacy. it is NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world and hoping you actually kill a few terrorists (all the while creating even more).

    I’d really have to ask honestly and truthfully, who actually is naive enough to stake their lives and the lives of their daughters and sons upon people like Planet B’s ability with diplomacy, law enforcement, and intelligence? I’m not talking about the principle of whether law enforcement should or should not be applied to terrorism, I’m asking if you trust incompetent people like Planet B to save your family when push comes to shove. I personally think he’ll turn tail and run, leaving the mess to be cleaned up by someone else cause he’ll just save his own skin.

    elvis the bewitching said…

    you can call me wrong when Iraq ceases to be a bloody shambles.

    Since Afghanistan was a bloody shambles and when it became a success, it disappeared, there is an interesting solution Elvis uses to get out of his lies. That solution is to simply find a loophole and say “it doesn’t apply”. He will never admit to being wrong because he will never admit that Iraq has ceased to be a bloody shamble.

    Does anyone else find it funny that anons are facing off against anons like some sort of multiple-personality thing going on? Who knew that insanity would be funny…


    said…

    According to the anti-war crowd there is no bad thing happening in the world that the US is not guilty of causing — you name it, war, starvation, genocide, birth defects, riots in Europe, airplanes flying into buildings, subways being blown up in London
    You are stupid and ignorant.

    1:31 PM, May 17, 2006

    This comment by steve j is… um rather hilarious. Yes, hilarious.

    A lot of Leftists like the internet, because they can call you names and dirty your honor and reputation, and they know they’re safe from actually standing up to it physically. Most Leftists, of the brand we see here, not SB or Jack Trainor, are physical cowards or just plain panic like when faced with physical danger.

    Given appropriate death and assassination squads from the Bush Admin, I could make these people bend like cardboard and paper to whatever construct I put up. It would be even easier with the media because they’ve already been trained by the Cartoon Jihad.

    Like the boy calling his victim chicken to get the boy to bend to his will, the bully is taking advantage of the lack of self-confidence in you to take up his dare. In most cases, it is just simple manipulation to get people to do things that are dangerous to them, like diving into a river that is near frozen (or enlisting in order to get killed). The bully, the taunter, will never himself do the things he dares other people to do. He doesn’t lead by example. His whole purpose is to ridicule, to harass, and to taunt as a way to salve his own lack of courage and self-esteem. It is obvious that misery likes company. It is obvious that those with personal flaws are never as tolerable about other people’s flaws, as more content people are. People preaching hellfire and brimstone are themselves drawing you into their own personal hell and fears. People at peace with themselves and their actions have no need to bully others, to make them afraid, to acquire sustenance from fear and misery.

    I’m impressed by the lack of angry retaliations to the taunting and ridiculing. Most people, namely the younger generation, tend to have hot heads and will say things out of anger they will latter regret. Perhaps Neo is so out of the “pop culture” that her readers are either not cut from the 21 age generation and therefore can control themselves through age and experience, or perhaps Neo’s style of essay writing draws in the more thoughtful and calm persons in the blogosphere. Regardless of the facet, this is the difference you see. America has domestic enemies as well as foreign ones.

    You are restricted from murdering or getting rid of people on the Left in America, because you’d go to jail and that is rather not worth it. The Left talks about it not being worth it to stoop to the terroist’s level by torturing or killing them through execution, but I’m actually not going to get my hands dirty killing some Leftist. That’s just not a good idea. *If you analyse it closely, you’d see a distinct difference in philosophy between this and fake liberalism*

    The Left acts like they are crusading against Bush’s fascistic policies and police state infrastructure. The fake liberals may or may not know what a police state infrastructure is, but I’m pretty sure the fake liberal’s allies in Venezuela, Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Saudi Arabia do know what a Soviet styled police state is and how to build one from the ground up. For better or for worse, we have to deal with our foreign enemies before dealing with the domestic ones. And yet, here is the Catch 22, how do you deal with foreign enemies effectively with domestic enemies hamstringing you from behind?

    The answer is obvious. You need allies. True allies, comrades in arms, who will be faithful and loyal to you throughout all of your days. People you can count on, in thick or thin. People you will die and kill for, and people who will die and kill for you. Where will you find these people? We obviously find them in the US Air Force, the US Navy, the US Army, and the US Marines not to mention the exclusive and perpetually loyal and improving Special Forces community. They will deal with the back biters and the hamstringers who will cut you down in the moment of your triumph. But you need more allies if the military is fighting the foreign enemies, where will they come from?

    Do you now see a glimmer of why Iraq is important? Can you catch a glimpse of the future in which the Left has suborned the US military and uses it to enforce Political Correctness, confiscation of guns, and destructive welfare against those who disagree through peaceful protests? Our advantages are legion. The Republicans and Independents and true liberals still have the 2nd Ammendment, we still have our guns. We don’t have to fight the military with them, because the military is on our side and will NEVER obey an illegal order from a Democrat President to “disperse” a peaceful protest so long as current loyalists in the military are volunteers and not forced draft or political appointees. We need have no fear of that in the short and mid terms. However, our disadvantages are also legion. The rule of lawyers, the rule of judges, the installment of an atheist state that bans all other religious practices.

    I ask you to consider this. Do you think Ted Kennedy, Madame Clinton, John Kerry, and the Kos Kidz can treat the allies of America with the respect and honor that such blood brothers deserve? Do you think aristocrats that cut in line because they believe in their narcissistic self-importance and immunity from prosecution for murder will treat little itty bitty countries like Poland and Iraq as our equals? And how do you think our allies will act when we denigrate them and their sacrifices, treating them as slave labor as much of Hollywood treats Fly Over Country?

    Do you hold grudges for people or policemen that have allowed your family to come to harm because of laziness or corruption? Even if you don’t, ask yourself, would you kill and die for such people that allowed your family to come to harm because they had more important things to worry about?

    No, you wouldn’t. I wouldn’t either.

    The fake liberals on the Left, they are scared. What are they scared of? They are scared of the liberated majority of this world realizing that they have been lied to by the fake liberals ever since two centuries ago.

    Socialism came from aristocracy, you know. Aristocrats had patronage. You work for them, and you’ll be taken care of. Free market, fair market wages? Didn’t exist. You work and be loyal to the state, the ruler, and you will be fed and clothed. nothing more. Sound familiar? It should, it’s called welfare. And who better than the fake liberal Democrats in Hollywood to administer it.

    Think about it. What is the one thing that aristocrats and greedy merchants fear above all else? They fear fairness, because they know in their heart of hearts their comeuppance. Like bullies, they know what will happen if they were ever to lose the power over the ones they have tormented for a life time. Like dictators, petty tyrants, they know in their heart of hearts, but they will never admit such a weakness.

    So now you perhaps have a glimmering of why they are scared of Iraqis fighting back to back with American loyalists and patriots. Now you know why the thought of America dieing and killing for Iraqis, and Iraqis dieing and killing for Americans, and Americans dieing and killing for the sake of Afghanistani rural tribes means so much to the freedom loving people of this world and why it scares the shit out of fake liberals in the Democrat party.

    The National Guard. Remember, tie it in. Why do they fear it on the border? Because they fear the NG helping the immigrants from the slave raiders that would torture, rape, and kill the immigrants for profit and greed. The NG is not loyal to the rich fake liberal Foundations, the NG is not loyal to the oil tycoons or rich merchants or Hollywood millionares. The National Guard swore an oath to protect the Constitution and the American people. The domestic enemies of America has no power over the NG, especially once the draft was removed, and political patronage of generals and officers wore down (Kerry). What they do not have power over, they will destroy. Any petty dictator is required to do that, to maintain his power and hold.

    If the aristocracy in America was truly afraid of the NG raping and exploiting immigrants on the border, then ask yourself why they support the UN peacekeeping so much. They may be rapists, but at least they’re our rapists, is that the logic of people like Dean (a doctor), Kerry (a lawyer), or Chomsky (rich propagandist)?

    Do you truly want to associate yourself with the scum of the earth, the scumbags with their soiled condoms overseeing the exploitation and torture of a great majority of the Earth’s people? Or do you want to associate with the paladins of legend, Americans who will stop people from abusing the locals, Americans who have bought sex slaves from Thailand because their conscience dictated that this was the right thing to do?

    But even paladins can die, even heroes are mortal, as we see so often in Iraq. On Flight 93, we didn’t see a happy ending, what we saw was citizens doing their duty, and dieing in the fiery flames of their accomplishment. But guess what? The fake liberals and aristocrats in the Democrat party are also mortal. It’s an interesting fact you should keep in your mind, for the future. For while the terroists are our immediate enemy, they would never have come out except for the endless support from the manipulating aristocrats in America, Canada, and Europe. They are the puppet masters, not the Jews. They are the secret cabal behind all the conspiracies, even the fabricated ones.

    It is amusing, like that joke with the devil. The best trick the devil played on the world was to convince us he didn’t exist. The best trick the money grubbing rich blokes and tyrannical aristocrats did, was to make the world believe it was America that was the source of all evil, not the “tolerant liberals” living in America.

    My personal views is that of an insider looking out. The Democrat party betrayed me. They taught me kindness, compassion, to look for the downtrodden. What did I see during 2003 to 2006 Iraq? I saw the Democrat party spit upon the raped, the tortured, the victims of terror and hate. I saw the betrayal, and I will never forget. And neither will many other Americans, neither will many Iraqis or Afghanistans.

  101. woah the amateur philosopher is back….go on then how does the flight 77 nonsense work? how does that undermine steve where is your logic?

  102. Anybody who doesn’t think ideas matter should take a close look at Al Gore, who literally quotes Neibuhr, Merleau-Ponty, and Husserl in regular conversation. Gore claims to be some sort of “holist” who seeks to restore the split between mind and body caused by Cartesian logic — it dovetails with his environmentalism nicely.

    note — my last post should read ‘martyr mom’, not ‘martyr’. It reads pretty strange without it.

    Steve J

    Thanks for showing us how committed, willful, and unique you are. I’d like to see more evidence and logic from your corner, however. As I write, the “reality-based” community is out there denying Flight 77 hit the Pentagon again.

  103. You want to see a “very bloody” civil war, so you do. I don’t.

    That’s because you are stupid and ignorant. If America had the murder rate of Baghdad, we would have 720,000 murders a year.

  104. Really? Where are the refugees then?

    They are in Iran and Jordan, among other places. The professional classes of Iraq has been decimated by migration to safer areas.

  105. According to the anti-war crowd there is no bad thing happening in the world that the US is not guilty of causing — you name it, war, starvation, genocide, birth defects, riots in Europe, airplanes flying into buildings, subways being blown up in London

    You are stupid and ignorant.

  106. the vanishing commentoround….free speech huh

    At 11:31 AM, May 17, 2006, Anonymous said…
    “well you will never etc

    At 12:58 PM, May 17, 2006, neoneoconned said…
    woah all these vanishing comments…..anon has had a real discussion with himself….

    elvis lives!

    neo cons are full of it

    don’t fall for the control freakery….its only words

  107. OK why did the Iraqi secret police meet with Attah in Prague then?

    They didn’t. That was just another lie by Cheney.

    This statement is misleading because it describes a Czech government report of a meeting between Mohammed Atta and Iraq intelligence official Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani in April 2001 and states that there hasn’t been more information on that, despite the fact that Czech intelligence officials were skeptical about the report; U.S. intelligence had contradictory evidence regarding this report, such as records indicating Atta was in Virginia at the time of the meeting; and the C.I.A. and F.B.I. had concluded the meeting probably didn’t occur.

  108. LOL, I was just talking with a colleague about doing a poster session at ALA in New Orleans this summer. The working title, “De-Mything Librarian Concerns About The USA Patriot Act” — It would be cool but it’s such a PC taboo that we agreed not to discuss it any further. It was a bold idea nonetheless and thought I’d share.

  109. Right, by your arguments, it is quite apparent that you are not much interested in anything outside of your faith based world view.

    Iraq had contacts with Al Quaeda, this has never been ‘debunked’. You certainly have not demonstrated even rudimentary knowledge of the issues.

  110. At 11:34 AM, May 17, 2006, elvis the bewitching said…
    you can call me wrong when Iraq ceases to be a bloody shambles. I look forward to being wrong….but i fear it is going to be a long wait…..and i don’t relish the idea of a civil war.

    so when will you say you are wrong?

    oh and i am not much interested whether you take me seriously or not

  111. Elvis, you said this at 10:18

    “well you will never get that because you can’t even begin to consider you may be wrong. “

    I asked you whether you had ever considered the possiblity that you were wrong.

    Apparently the answer is no, so I can’t take seriously your belief that you have actually considered the issues at hand in any depth.

  112. Also, Atta’s visits to Prague, and the Iraqi secret police are not even in question, excepting the dubious and unsupported claim by the 911 commision that the April 2001 meeting did not take place.

    The commision simply ignores the other meetings, that nobody disputes.

  113. “anonymous you linked to one article about supposed AQ-Saddam connections which has been thoroughly debunked by later reporting.”

    No, I made several points, and linked to more than one article. If they have be “thouroughly debunked”, I am sure you can provide me with a link.

    After all, it is only fair to allow me to judge for myself whether the article in question, I am sure you are referring to the NYT article, has been debunked.

    Or am I simply to accept your declaration of faith that it must have been?

  114. And Elvis, I asked if you had ever considered the possibility that you were wrong.

    I guess your answer is no. Fits right in with your low IQ tactics of name-calling.

  115. does that mean you are calling me names now – – sigh – – go on then under what conditions would you admit youa re wrong about the whole iraq thing?

  116. anonymous you linked to one article about supposed AQ-Saddam connections which has been thoroughly debunked by later reporting. you’ve proven zilch. there is NO Iraq-AQ connection, and you’ve proven none

  117. “how do you respond to retarded points like these? “

    Actually, I made multiple declaritive statements of facts above.

    You could respond by showing me I am wrong on the facts. But argument by name-calling seems to be the limit of your intellectual abilities, but maybe somebody else could.

  118. “intelligence, law enforcement and diplomacy. “

    The problem with law enforcement is that one cannot excercise prior restraint. You are not a criminal until you violate the law.

    We have seen the issues with “intelligence”

    Diplomacy is needed, but look at the corruption that the UN dragged into it, which deeply involved Germany, France and Russia in perverting the sanctions.

    I have already shown above evidence of Saddam’s involvement with terrorism. You have no response, because Saddam was involved with terrorism, so don’t talk about throwing around bombs blindly.

    If anything is being thrown around blindly, it is unsupported assertions by the anti-war crowd.

  119. you can call me wrong when Iraq ceases to be a bloody shambles. I look forward to being wrong….but i fear it is going to be a long wait…..and i don’t relish the idea of a civil war.

    so when will you say you are wrong?

  120. “well you will never get that because you can’t even begin to consider you may be wrong.”

    So Elvis, Have you ever considered that you may be wrong? Anybody who doesn’t, almost certainly is.

  121. Oh my god… everything changed on 9/11!!! (yeah, like half the country got lobotomies apparently)

    say it with me, the response to terrorism is: intelligence, law enforcement and diplomacy. it is NOT throwing bombs blindly at the world and hoping you actually kill a few terrorists (all the while creating even more).

    i’ve said this since the morning of 9/11 and i’ll say it the rest of my life until you people start to understand.

  122. “lefties are like creationists? this is your idea of arguing?”

    Yeah, exactly, because you answer none of my points, but instead declare your faith in your own beliefs more loudly.

    “looks more like a very bloody civil war than your liberation in the cause of anti-terrorism.”

    Really? Where are the refugees then? You know, the kind you see in a bloody civil war? The UN had camps in Syria waiting for them.

    You want to see a “very bloody” civil war, so you do. I don’t. I see a shrinking murderous cult, capable of delivering car bombs, but not capable of threatening for control of Iraq.

  123. I see some comments have been deleted. The Chickenhawk meme, the accusation that there is a lack of feeling for the human sacrifice of war is the unkindest cut of all. My heart goes out to all who have suffered from war. Of course our military should never be expended casually. The cost of war is dear. A poem by Housman says it best:

    Here dead lie we because we did not choose
    To live and shame the land from which we sprung.
    Life, to be sure, is nothing much to lose;
    But young men think it is, and we were young.

    War should be carefully considered before engaged in and war is indeed terrible but today the alternative is even more terrible.

    Most likely Iran will be allowed to continue on the road to nukedom. No doubt other Islamic despots will obtain nukes; the anti-war crowd has won the domestic propaganda war and made it politically unfeasible to prevent Iran and the rest from getting their hearts’ desire. I think pro-war bloggers may be weary because they realize deep down that the terrorists have won a victory with the Iran situation. So give a cheer, anti-war crowd, you’re triumphed over Bush! When New York goes up in smoke be glad, because at least Bush got his comeuppance.

    When the women of Egypt’s pro-Western military élite are dressed like that, you know that the Hamas victory is not about Palestine. It’s about the entire Middle East.

    A decade later, Islamists won elections in chambers of commerce in the occupied territories and, more recently, started to win in municipal elections.

    In Jordan, too, wherever there are free elections——trade unions, student unions, professional guilds——the Islamists have the upper hand.

    Throughout the Middle East, the Muslim Brotherhood is the main power with grassroots support.

    It’s nice when one of the anti-war crowd makes my case for me. Yes, Steve, support and approval of terrorism is rife throughout the Islamic territories. This support has been in existence for many years and elections simply underscore the situation. I agree with you that the terrorists would probably be rendered relatively harmless if they didn’t have the overwhelming support of Muslims everywhere.

    In debate the anti-war crowd alternates between claiming terrorism has little support in the Muslim world and insisting that the majority of Muslims support terrorism. But why does the Muslim world support terrorism? Because the US(the Great Satan) causes them to support terrorism, naturally. According to the anti-war crowd there is no bad thing happening in the world that the US is not guilty of causing — you name it, war, starvation, genocide, birth defects, riots in Europe, airplanes flying into buildings, subways being blown up in London – for the dedicated anti-war person the US is always the cause. Malefactors never have minds and wills of their own; they are always led down the path of terror and caused to perform murder as if they were hypnotized by the Great Satan/Pied Piper America and its puppetmasters, the Jews.

    There is a war, world-wide, that has been going on since at least 1979 and it has the overwhelming support of the Muslim world. It is a religious war. Real progress cannot be made against Islamic fascism until the religious nature of Islamic fascism is finally realized by Western leaders.

  124. Yep, spanks is back. My preference is that neo turn off anonymous posting again.

    I’ve been on the progressive anti-war side since voting for McGovern, but as a broad-minded liberal I found the neocon arguments more persuasive this time around. Anti-war folks like spanks reinforce that decision.

  125. Harry said….

    Last years Memorial Day service at the local National Guard Armory was characterized as “glorifiyng war” by the anti-war types. The unit had just returned from an 18 month deployment to Iraq.

    It’s all about the communion, goofy guys beget goofy gals and so the snowball rolls — this is how Anti-War demonstrations metastasize into huge groups of people. What they scream is meaningless, and long as there’s a party afterwards.

  126. I remember reading about the Civil War. It said that the Republikkans created the KKK and oppressed the slaves, and stopped the Democrats from coming to an agreement with the South that would end slavery without war and cruelty.

    You can’t convince people unless you’re willing to destabilize their identity matrixes.

  127. Gah this is too easy. First of all “I” was not alive during slavery. Second, America did not start slavery — America ENDED slavery, remember reading about the Civil War?

  128. Sally:
    “Interesting, but there’s a simpler explanation for the lefty lock-step on this particular meme — it provides an automatic anti-war majority. This is because, according to them, only soldiers actively engaged in a war should be allowed to be supportive of the war, but anyone is allowed to be hostile to it.”

    Oh, but if the soldiers support the war, their views become irrelevant as well. And it doesnt stop the left from marginalizing the sacrifices of soldiers. Last years Memorial Day service at the local National Guard Armory was characterized as “glorifiyng war” by the anti-war types.

    The unit had just returned from an 18 month deployment to Iraq.

  129. you lifted the blacks from slavery!!!!!! are you serious….it was clowns like you who built a country whose wealth was in part based on slavery.

    i really wonder…..what would ever make you think that you might be wrong about this imperial adventurism?

  130. Correction Elvis:

    …looks more like a very bloody civil war than your liberation in the cause of anti-terrorism.

    …in the cause of “human freedom”. We liberated blacks from slavery, are Arabs not capable, not worthy of freedom?

  131. Bush is a God when it’s convenient for the Left; omniscient and all knowing — it’s really weird. It’s so desperate — you can’t understand me! That means you’re stupid and I’m not! Whatever, druidbros.

  132. lefties are like creationists? this is your idea of arguing? and you are winning the war in Iraq? you don’t even know what the war in Iraq is, or where it is going to end……looks more like a very bloody civil war than your liberation in the cause of anti-terrorism.

    and as for comparing yourselves with churchill getting tired of fighting the nazi’s…….well you will never get that because you can’t even begin to consider you may be wrong.

  133. Oh, and here is a story I never saw before, from the NYT:

    “THE REACH OF WAR: THE INTELLIGENCE; Iraqis, Seeking Foes of Saudis, Contacted bin Laden, File Says”

    http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60714FA345D0C768EDDAF0894DC404482

    I can just hear the Leftie response: “Layyeess! All LIES!”, but of course no evidence will be presented.

    Lefties on the terrorism issue with Iraq are like creationists. When you back them into a logical corner, they start thumping the Bible of their faith.

  134. “it is now more obvious than ever that Iraq had nothing to do with terrorism against the USA.”

    It is? OK why did the Iraqi secret police meet with Attah in Prague then? If you are going to say he didn’t, please provide better reasoning than, “you know he didn’t because there was no immigration record of him entering Prague, and why would he have hidden his identity since he wasn’t a criminal yet”

    The above reasoning is the basis for the 911 commissions conclusion, look it up. Despite the fact that he was seen in Prague by the Czec secret police, that he was seen on an ATM surveillance camera days before he was seen in Prague taking thousands of dollars in cash out of the bank, and that he did not turn up again on surveillance in the US til after the sighting took place.

    Also, Atta was KNOWN to be in Prague the previous year, and met with Iraqi officials, there is no doubt about that meeting whatsoever.

    And what about this report:

    “Iraqis offered to hand over fugitive terrorist Abdul Rahman Yasin — indicted for his role in the 1993 World Trade Center attacks — to US in February in return for military concessions”

    http://schumer.senate.gov/SchumerWebsite/pressroom/press_releases/PR01627.html

    That’s right, the guy behind the ’93 trade center bombing, who had an Iraqi passport, BTW.

    Abu Nidal, who killed Americans, was found there.

    You guys just keep repeating the mantra that Saddam “had nothing to do with terrorism” as if it were a fact. Go ahead, if your claim is so obvious, I am sure you can find answers for all of my points.

    You don’t have them.

    And the war is going quite well too. I know that is hard for you to swallow, since you want the US to suffer a defeat, and Iraq to fail an become another post-Soviet Afghanistan, just to assuage your BDS. But please.

  135. The reason you people are suffering from “burnout” is because you are slowly coming around to the idea that you are wrong, and have been wrong all along.
    The Bushite war in Iraq is a disaster for America. But, it is very, very good for the House of Saud and Big Oil. War in Iraq = Record oil prices. This is very good for those people.
    Did you see Bush Jr. holding hands with and even kissing the Saudi prince last year? Charming.
    And, it is now more obvious than ever that Iraq had nothing to do with terrorism against the USA.
    Yeah, your fatigue is just reality setting in.
    Yeah, Bush is bad for America and you helped him.
    You were wrong. Get over it.

  136. YMAR :We have no idea what kind of ethnic strife might appear in the future, although as I have noted, it has not been the history of Iraq’s past.

    Steve has no idea because steve is incompetent. The rest of the us competents do know what is going to happen in the future.

    Dear Stupid & Ignorant,

    I was QUOTING Wolfowitz.

  137. Sally–

    You have to admit, though, they don’t have the numbers when it comes to supporting Cindy Sheehan, Hugo Chavez, or Palestinian terror. What do all of these goons have in common? They’re willful. They struggle. They’re authentic — Sheehan had a son die; Hugo is an oppressed brown person. A martyr is proud of three sons who blew themselves up on Jews.

    Ideas work their way through society in strange ways. I encountered a creationist online a few months ago who justified his beliefs by claiming Intelligent Design represented a “paradigm shift.” That is relativist, Kuhnian nonsense taught in Academia, but somehow the ideas were transmitted to the crudest of knuckleheads.

  138. Good point Sally

    This is because, according to them, only soldiers actively engaged in a war should be allowed to be supportive of the war, but anyone is allowed to be hostile to it.

  139. johnny spammer said…

    hey crapple how come your memes are alway sso long and tedious?

    Another 70% johnny is spank, and 90% johnny is same as supertroll.

  140. Theories about being ashamed, of what though? And also by whom? SB.

    But then, as we’ve seen, these are simple, impressionable people, not the brightest bulbs….

    Cannon fodder. We all know what happens to cannon fodder.

    Al Qaeda and the Taliban seems to be running out of cannon fodder. I’m sure in a few years, more idiots will be born to the cause, but still.

    Btw. There’s a 80% chance supertroll is Spank.

  141. Y – I understand what you mean. Unfortunately, not our finest moments. Neither is this. Disgusting, in fact. And we don’t seem to be ashamed of ourselves. Wonder why. Any theories?

  142. It all stems from ideas unconsciously transmitted by Heidegger, Sartre, Nietzsche, and other thinkers adopted by thoughtful people on the left.

    Interesting, but there’s a simpler explanation for the lefty lock-step on this particular meme — it provides an automatic anti-war majority. This is because, according to them, only soldiers actively engaged in a war should be allowed to be supportive of the war, but anyone is allowed to be hostile to it. Somehow they’re under the impression that this is just the smartest, easiest, and most unanswerable objection to any war, and that no one is able to see through its ridiculous bias. But then, as we’ve seen, these are simple, impressionable people, not the brightest bulbs….

  143. There are underlying intellectual reasons why the far left likes to ask members of the right to enlist.

    It all stems from ideas unconsciously transmitted by Heidegger, Sartre, Nietzsche, and other thinkers adopted by thoughtful people on the left. By enlisting in the military, you demonstrate will to power for your perspective. You show that you are authentic, committed, and engaged.After all, evil in their eyes is not murder, or rape, or property destruction, but the inauthenticity caused by our social institutions.

    “Man is born free, but everywhere he is in chains.” This is a tradition going back to Rousseau, and we can still see it in movies like American Beauty. The heros include the man who drops his responsibilities for narcissist pleasures, the authentic gay couple, and the criminal drug dealer making crappy videos for his nihilist girlfriend. Everything else supposedly deadens the soul –the wife represents the superficiality, corruption, and inauthenticity of business. The military, represented by the neighbor, represents sadism and sexual repression.

    That’s how the left understands evil, if anyone is wondering. Getting your head blown off would show that you’re authentic, you have intellectual honesty, committed, blah blah blah.

    That’s the disconnect. We try to show the *truth* of our propositions, while they want to see authentic personalities. They’re too cool and trendy to support someone like George Bush.

  144. Just to be clear, in case anyone is still in the dark about this, but the reason why they keep goading you to enlist is because they want to see your head blown up by an IED. This gives them a sorta of visceral thrill. I suggest you avoid giving that to them.

    It’s debatable if there are any more despicable men and women, than the ones that desire to do violence, but refuse to speak about it to themselves or to their intended victims.

    They are so afraid of dirtying their hands, yet their hearts are full of fury and psychopathical urges.

    Are they dangerous? If there are 50 of them and they surround you, then ya, they are dangerous. As with rabid dogs, you either put them down, or you leave them alone. You don’t play with them, you don’t reason with them, but if you do, beware of the bite and the bark.

  145. And Neo, don’t burn out! Keep up the good work here!

    And Ymarsakar, you are right; the Left is made up of bullies—we need no further proof than the droppings left by them on this post.

    They are also growing increasingly incoherent, as again, witness their recent droppings; “YA OUGHTA ENLIST! AMURKANS LOVE WAR! HA, HA, I WIN! MICHELLE MALKIN SUX! I CAN’T SPELL, IT’S BUSHITLER’S FAULT!” This is supposed to convince us of. . . . what, exactly?

    (Aside from convincing us said posters suffer severe mental and emotional disabilities, of course.)

  146. If a Democrat ever says again that they don’t know what is the problem with “emboldening the enemy” because of Democrat propaganda or if they say that no Democrat propaganda ever emboldens the enemy, remind them of how they act when they see weakness in their enemies.

  147. My point was that Bay the Bogus is a half-wit.

    I repeat, being in the military does not make you immune to the belittling little shats that are on the Left from ridiculing you.

    The “kids” have no say in the government or anything else.

    Like the kids at Tianaman square, they have a say. It just tends to be easy to crush afterwards.

    This is not how Americans treat each other.

    Sb, remember the civil war? Remember when the KKK was terrorizing the South to elect Democrats? Remember when Grant sent the national guard to crush the KKK in Reconstruction South?

    This ain’t nothing compared to how Americans can treat each other.

    If you show weakness or fatigue to the Left, the enemy. They will swarm around you as sharks around a dead whale carcass. You ever seen a shark swarm devour a whale carcass? It’s really fast.

    We have no idea what kind of ethnic strife might appear in the future, although as I have noted, it has not been the history of Iraq’s past.

    Steve has no idea because steve is incompetent. The rest of the us competents do know what is going to happen in the future.

    It’s funny – one post complaining about feeling burned out by the WOT and you get flooded with mockery from people who have done nothing but whine for the last six years.

    It’s not strange if you understand predator and bully behavior. Bullies feed on weakness. What they aren’t very good at is combat analysis and combat gestalt. People who focus on propaganda, are obviously going to have other skills weaken and atrophy. This is true of Democrats, this is true of the immature commenters bombarding neocons, and it is true of the terroists.

    You ever see one of those anti-war protests beat up on Protest Warriors that dare to show up with different signs? They’re a mob, any disciplined force would obliterate them.

    You gotta love steve taking on the bitches, cause that’s like the manly manly thing to do, eh?

    Stab a dagger in your eye, you’re done steve j.

  148. Steve J: WAH WAH WAH!!!!!

    Put a lid on it, bitch. YOU LOST.

    See what I mean? I’ve no idea what I lost, but Stevie here has clearly lost most of his remaining marbles.

  149. Steve —

    What course of action are you recommending, and why? Are you suggesting that we install western-friendly dictators? Or do you think the Islamist movement, which has been steadily growing over the last thirty years, will dissipate if America disengages from the region?

    I’d argue from a strategic perspective that unfriendly democracies are better than friendly dictators. The reason why places like Saudi Arabia and Egypt are so messed up resides in the fact that we’ve propped up dictators who push hatred of the west to retain power. We’ve failed to see how a country’s internal affairs can have an effect on our external affairs.

  150. BAY THE BOGUS:There is also a growing awareness that Iraq’s long slog may well result in the emergence of a new, more open political system in the Muslim Middle East.

    There’s also growing awareness that this will empower the Islamic radicals:

    WATCHING HAMAS
    The New Yorker
    Issue of 2006-02-06
    Posted 2006-01-30

    Shalom Harari is a former Israeli Military Intelligence officer who has been following the rise of Hamas–the Islamic Resistance Movement–for almost a quarter century.

    Harari had tuned in to a seemingly tedious military ceremony on Egyptian state television. “Look at the wives of the generals,” he said. “Many of them are wearing traditional head scarves. This was not so ten years ago. And this tells you where we are heading. When the women of Egypt’s pro-Western military élite are dressed like that, you know that the Hamas victory is not about Palestine. It’s about the entire Middle East.”

    Harari said that he first took note of the Palestinian Islamists in the early nineteen-eighties, shortly after the Iranian revolution, when Islamists won student elections in the prestigious universities of the West Bank. A decade later, Islamists won elections in chambers of commerce in the occupied territories and, more recently, started to win in municipal elections. Now Hamas has taken control of the parliament, he said, and is sure to challenge Abbas for the Presidency.
    But look around, Harari said: “In Jordan, too, wherever there are free elections——trade unions, student unions, professional guilds——the Islamists have the upper hand. If the Hashemite kings”——Hussein and Abdullah——“had not played all kinds of tricks, the Islamists would have had a large representation in parliament as well. And when Egypt held its American-inspired parliamentary elections recently, the number of seats won by the Muslim Brotherhood rose fivefold. Throughout the Middle East, the Muslim Brotherhood is the main power with grassroots support. The Islamists are less corrupt. They are the ones with integrity and compassion. They are of the people and they speak for the people. Today in the Arab world, the choice is clear between democratically elected Islamists and Western-leaning dictators.”

  151. Chaos is a party for the Left. Everything is gratuitous — believe me I remember.

  152. Neo – time to restrict comments again?

    It’s funny – one post complaining about feeling burned out by the WOT and you get flooded with mockery from people who have done nothing but whine for the last six years.

    Only a fool fights in a burning house…

  153. “Ah, Fukuyama. Isn’t he the guy that predicted history was at an end?”

    So, you couldn’t get past the title?

    Which is a non sequiter, but what else is new?

    On a separate point, though — isn’t it fascinating to see all the left-wing spittle flying about here? There isn’t much real content (beyond a Dean-type primal scream), but you do see incoherent but repeated attempts to portray themselves as “patriots”, most likely owing to some residual sense of shame and a need to cover themselves. It’s worth noting that, for all the crocodile tears for the “poor troops”, these are the same kind of people that jeered and spat at troops coming home from a war.

  154. “I don’t get it. Why are you Amurkans tired of war? I mean, you’ve been at it for over a century, you should be used to it.”

    Uh, we have been cleaning up after the Treaty of Verseilles, “the peace to end all peace” for that time.

    I think that you can pretty much trace every war that the US has been in during the past century to that document. A document which we as a nation opposed, and which we were talked into by our European ‘betters’ who were trying to hold on to their doomed empires.

    We did the end of WWII our way, with much better results. Don’t give me this crap about the US and war. At least when we win a war, war is over in that area. The UN divided up Korea, the UN left Saddam in power to slaughter the kurds, shia and march arabs. Give me a break please.

  155. As Yippie leader Jerry Rubin once put it, “We’re gonna be adolescents forever!”

    That summarizes the Howard Dean wing of the left nicely. All I even hear from them is WMDs! Bush lied, people died! Fascist America! YEEEAGH!

    They don’t consider the proposition that there has been a growing fascist movement in the Islamic world over the last few decades, nor do they consider that we’re in serious trouble if nothing is done about this state of affairs.

    Nope, thye maintain if we get rid of Bush and the Republikkkans, the world will be a nice place, rivers will flow with chocolate, and everyone will hold hands is peace. THIS attitude is frustrating to deal with, and that’s why people are getting blogger fatigue.

  156. LOL

    I knew this would come up sooner or later and I don’t care. The Apple is free for all to use 🙂

    Those who do not want to imitate anything, produce nothing. Salvador Dali

  157. Seems to me history is replete with catastrophes started by people who were making errors, errors, moreover, which were obvious even at the time.

    Yup:

    We have no idea what kind of ethnic strife might appear in the future, although as I have noted, it has not been the history of Iraq’s past.

    PAUL WOLFOWITZ, FEBRUARY 27, 2003*

    *At that time, Wolfowitz was the Deputy Secretary of Defense

    http://tinyurl.com/exk73

  158. Ah, Fukuyama. Isn’t he the guy that predicted history was at an end?

    So, you couldn’t get past the title?

  159. What can we do to cheer everyone up. Would a “Cheetoes for Warbloggers” drive help?

    Hmmmm human freedom as oppose to the opposite of that? That would do more than cheer me up — I might get to spend some of the money I earn on my children and fulfil soem of their dreams, as opposed to paying for Kofi Annan’s salary, World defense, ummm what else? And host of 10,000 other liabilities. Let human freedom march.

  160. The world doesn’t need a superpower; only the superpower thinks the world needs a superpower.

    LOL. Yea, the world doesn’t need law and order; only the innocent think the world needs law and order.

    Beside chaos is fun, or at least sounds fun — I mean we can all eat all the ice cream we want until the freezers get to warm. Gah

  161. The ‘blind assumption’ is reason #247 why I no longer, or at this time, support the Left.

    All you woosses here, try a stint in the Marines….

    Bomb throwing statements like this give you notice, but nullify any consideration for your point of view. You might as well be farting Norse code out of a pigs ass.

    I did serve … beside as Americans, which most of us here are, we have privilege to speak freely here. This is neo-neocon property; she has the RIGHT to speak freely here. And I’m sure will be acting freely soon.

  162. It’s not the WOT that’s fatiguing – it’s the endless pissing and moaning about it, as exemplified by these comments. We’re generating our own misery, and frankly I think we deserve it.

    This is not how Americans treat each other.

  163. Grackle said earlier: The reasoning of the anti-war folks is always that the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm.

    Smijer replies: First – everyone… at least every sensible person is an “anti-war folk”. Ever read Sun Tzu? (The folks at West Point do). War is not something to rejoice in. It’s a cause for mourning when it becomes necessary. More importantly, your statement is critically wrong, and reflective of a black and white – near fundamentalist – mentality. Let me restate it for you: The reasoning of the anti-war folks is always that the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm, and has demonstrated specific intent to do so, before creating an open military confrontation.

    Such criteria as “the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm, and has demonstrated specific intent to do so, before creating an open military confrontation” was fine pre/9-11, when the enemy’s “specific intent” might result in the loss of a building or two or two or three thousand civilians. Such a loss can be withstood, as the US has demonstrated. But when a terror-sponsoring state becomes ‘nuked up’ the stakes become very much higher and the old foreign policy passivity that led to 9/11 will only lead to unbelievable carnage. We shouldn’t wait until American cities are vaporized until we act but smijer and the rest of the anti-war crowd have done their job well and it looks like nothing will be done until an American city is nuked — and even then I’m not sure but that the anti-war folks wouldn’t want to capitulate.

    smijer goes on: The guy who sleeps with his gun under his pillow and wakes up shooting at everything that goes “bump” in the night is a menace in his own right.

    Who is the “guy” menacing but some intruder that needs to be shot? All the intruder needs to do in order not to be shot is to not attack — is that asking too much? By smijer’s reasoning the “guy” should make nice with the intruder in the hopes that the intruder doesn’t murder him. Extrapolate smijer’s hypothetical with the present situation and we get the perfect representation of the anti-war crowd’s unrealistic stance.

    Grackle said earlier: That such outdated(after 9/11) foreign policy niceties could cause the loss of an American city or two the next time, instead of merely a couple of tall buildings with a couple of thousand civilians within, doesn’t seem to enter into their thinking.

    smijer replies: That such “outdated (after 9/11) foreign policy niceties could cause” such results enters our thinking just long enough for us to realize that we need to do a lot more thinking about what could cause such results. If the cause of successful terrorist attacks within the U.S. truly is to be found within our foreign policy rather than within a much wider and more complex global situation, then there are other areas of it to blame than in our sometime decision not to aggress against every perceived enemy. Yes, our foreign policy does play a role in motivating and arming terrorists, but at the end of the day changing it in favor of a cycle of escalating aggression will only lead to our demise.

    Here we go again with the America-Caused-9/11 meme. The anti-war crowd believes that the US caused 9/11. Why? Because “the cause of successful terrorist attacks within the U.S.[read 9/11] truly is to be found within our foreign policy,” meaning the US had ‘upset’ the terrorists with a too aggressive US foreign policy for smijer’s taste. I read a lot of such reasoning right after 9/11 on the Huffington blog. This feeds into more than one anti-war meme: That the US is always the bad guy and the opponent is always the good guy. That the US causes terrorism by fighting terrorism. That trying to do anything about terrorism before it happens again in the US is hopeless. That if another attack occurs it will be seen as somehow the fault of the US.

    Grackle earlier said: Iran does not have to attack the US directly to accomplish their goals. Some anti-war people seem to think that we pro-war people are worried about Iran invading the US. Since 1979 Iran has been the main employer of terrorists and they will no doubt continue in that vein. Slipping a nuke to a terrorist is so much easier than “attacking American or Israeli interests directly.”

    smijer’s reply: Easier? No. Perhaps, after spending billions of dollars and decades getting you hands on “the button” you would find it easy to give up that mega-power, and, shrugging to yourself “why not?”, hand it off to your shady pal who promised to use it only against your enemies. And, maybe Ahmadinejad would find that “easy”, too. I doubt he is that stupid or crazy, but who knows? As I pointed out, though – he lacks the unilateral power to do so.

    The anti-war crowd always claim that despots would never “give up that mega-power,” meaning a nuke out of their arsenals to terrorists. Why does the anti-war crowd think this? Because the assumption by the anti-war crowd seems to be that a despot would have to give over his entire nuclear weapons system to terrorists and be left with nary a nuke. No smijer, just one little nuke, or maybe two, that Iran wouldn’t miss at all. And smijer, Iran wouldn’t be handing a nuke to a “shady pal” so much as Iran would be giving an employee a tool for a job.

    grackle earlier said: People keep writing about a supposedly silent, young Iranian liberal segment that is supposed to somehow usher in a less distasteful regime in the future. Get it straight: Religion dictates every aspect of Iranian existence. Iran is not a democracy, it is an Islamic state. These mythical liberals have done nothing to prevent their nation from becoming the largest exporter of terrorism in the Middle East. Does the anti-war crowd really believe that a mythical liberal segment of the Iranian population could possibly prevent the mullahs from giving bin Laden a nuke?

    smijer replies: You know, this is probably also what the Mullahs are telling their people about America’s mythical liberal segment, to stir up their paranoia, too. Have you visited Iran? Do you know whether kids there are more attached to their night clubs or to their fundamentalist preachers? I haven’t visited, but it is my experience that young people have a lot in common no matter where they come from. Will those kids positively influence the government there as their generation matures? I don’t know. Do they have the greater understanding of the situation and initiative to do something about it? Yes, they do.

    smijer, THE RELIGION CONTROLS EVERYTHING. The “kids” have no say in the government or anything else. They don’t have an open society in Iran; it’s not a democracy, it’s an Islamic state tightly controlled by the mullahs. Readers, I hope, as smijer apparently does, that Iran will become less belligerent in the future but I wouldn’t bet any money on it. They’ve had 30 years to calm down but there has been no lessening of the hatred during that entire period. Meanwhile, smijer wants the US to passively wait hoping that Iran will not get really mad at us or liberalize themselves from inside or something – I don’t know what . . . .

    grackle earlier said: It’s frightening and frustrating how close this type of rhetoric is to the pre-WW2 apologies and wishful thinking about Nazi Germany.

    Smijer’s reply: Difference being that this was still going on after the Panzers crossed into Poland.

    And how is that a significant difference? Hitler was being apologized for and was the subject of wishful thinking long before he attempted aggression outside Germany, before the Panzers went into Poland. That’s the time period I was referring to, not when it was too late to prevent the disastrous carnage after the Panzers had started rolling over the European landscape. My point is that the US can’t afford to wait until threats from nuclear Islamic states come to fruition and the Panzers(or nukes in this case) start rolling because then it would be too late for millions of Americans.

    grackle said earlier: What if the Iranians believe they would be protected by anonymity if they gave a nuke to terrorists? What if they believe they are immune from retaliation…

    smijer replies: Hopefully, they would be wrong. And if wrong, then hopefully, they can be educated to the contrary. Back-channel, of course – there is no need to grandstand. I don’t believe that they are that stupid, but it wouldn’t hurt for there to be diplomatic reminders given them that there is no protection of anonymity when it goes large-scale.

    Hopefully, hopefully, hopefully, all I see is hopefully. Smijer, the US cannot base its foreign policy on hopes. And isn’t Bush trying to give reminders — which Iran just ignores and continues with their nukes and their terror sponsorship? Any diplomacy would have to be “back-channel,” as smijer puts it, since in 1979 Iran took over the US embassy and held the employees hostage for well over a year. You can’t very well be diplomatic without an embassy, now can you? I would respectively submit that if a country is at all interested in diplomacy they would not perform such an act — which is really an act of war.

    grackle earlier said: The writer finishes up with the venerable anti-war ‘be nice’ argument. If the US will only ‘be nice’ those nice young Iranian liberals will solve all our problems

    smijer replies: Let me make a correction… if the U.S. behaves responsibly (and justly), then those “nice young Iranian liberals” may have the initiative to begin solving all their problems. We have our own beefs with the Iranian government, and we should be working on them with intelligence and every resource at our disposal. But it would be unwise, immoral, and self-destructive for us to wage war on that country except in self-defense and in light of a clear and present danger.

    smijer, the US shouldn’t wait for “clear and present danger,” at least not as you seem to define it — because that would be to wait until Iran has perform some immense act of murder against the US.

    grackle said earlier: but we mustn’t do anything to make these young Iranian liberals angry, like looking out for our own interests,

    smijer replies: If we were looking out for our own interests then we would not be thought of as the “Great Satan” by the Iranians. It seems to me that meddling in Iranian politics – namely helping Britain to depose a popular leader there and install a puppet regime – was what earned us that nickname to begin with.

    I have no idea what smijer means by his reference to “a popular leader.” In WW2 Britain deposed the Shah’s father because the Shah’s father was a Nazi sympathizer – quite understandable considering there was WW2 going on. BTW, the US had absolutely nothing to do with deposing the Shah’s father. However, smijer’s underlying meme continues to be that the US caused the Iranian situation.

    smijer goes on: Looking out for our own interests will not make enemies of the Iranian people, or the youth that may bring change there. Bombing them, or their neighbors, “preemptively”, will.

    One huge, glaring fact that neocons (“neocons” because I don’t like using “pro-” or “anti-” war as broad brush pejoratives, no matter how much they may apply in individual cases) overlook is that the quickest way to eliminate an enemy is to make him your friend. Now, I know that you’re busting at the seams to ridicule the notion that we should just be friends with the evil mullahs, but if you let yourself get distracted that way, you will also miss the point.

    The global political situation is very difficult and very complex, and very full of undesirable characters. But in every nation – in every government – in every religion, and in every culture – there are people who want peace and prosperity. To reach out to them and to make common cause with them is to cement new friendships. I know that the majority of Americans want peace and prosperity. I’m not sure about the guy we, in our anxieties about foreign threats, made our president. But we can ask those in our government who share our goals to reach out to those in other governments and in other populations who are also with us. If we can convince one another that we are willing to refrain frmo killing one another and burning one another’s churches and mosques, then we can actually work together to create *real* security. And real security brings real peace. When the neocons learn this lesson, or go out of power, then we have a chance to move forward. Then, maybe we will hear no more hyping of warfare against Iran.

    It’s the same old song for the anti-war crowd. If the US will only “reach out.” The enemy just wants “peace and prosperity,” the enemy means no harm to the US, the enemy would be nice if the US was nicer. If the US would only stop burning mosques the enemy would “work together” with the US “to create real security.” It’s the same old ‘be nice,’ passive foreign policy that led to 9/11 but the anti-war crowd is adamant that more passivity would fix everything. It was a failed foreign policy before 9/11 and it will continue to beg for the same if it prevails in the post-9/11 era.

  164. Here is what most people miss

    The ability to fight and win wars is based not upon intelligence or wisdom or technology, but upon battle hardened experience. As pure and as simple as that.

    The Democrats would fight wars in the model of WWII. Basically, have a bunch of green recruits go into the meat curdler and then say afterwards “oops my bad, we didn’t know a war was going to happen” when you ask them why they weren’t prepared for it.

    The neo-cons, the Jacksonians, the so called war mongers like MacArthur and Patton. These are the people who understand that if you want to win wars future or current, you need wars to train your troops in. The combat experience level of the United States military is now greater than that of the REST of the world COMBINED.

    Back when it was just the technology that gave the US an edge over everyone, people were still talking about how the US would collapse in Somalia, urban warfare, guerrila warfare, etc.

    Now they understand the difference between a bunch of terroists jihadists in Fallujah and the US Marines in Fallujah.

    What does this mean? It means less people will die when the Democrats gain power and send the United States military to fight on 10 fronts at once against threats that have metastized due to Democrat incompetence.

    Almost as exhausting as it is to witness this great country squander it’s standing in the world, hundreds of billions of dollars, and thousands of American lives on the dreadful war the neocons chose to blindly walk into.

    Same facts, different interpretation. Glass half full, glass half empty.

  165. Someone has to check my figures, but what’s the actual death toll in Iraq as opposed to Iraq and Afghanistan both combined? I think it is under 2,000.

  166. N-NC, it must be truly exhausting to have your specious ideas be completely discredited by the reality on the ground.

    Almost as exhausting as it is to witness this great country squander it’s standing in the world, hundreds of billions of dollars, and thousands of American lives on the dreadful war the neocons chose to blindly walk into.

  167. No, you’re not. And your inflated sense of self-importance is growing by the hour.

    Unless you get off your fat butt and go “over there,” I have two words of advice: SHUT UP! You’re only making a bigger fool of yourself than anyone thought possible. You’re NOT fighting anything, you’re just giving your opinion, which no one but you really cares about.

    People like Anon here are just bullies. Why? Because.

    Go take a hike, Michael, preferably ending in death in the Iranian mountains

    Who’s the desk warrior now?

    Only retarded idiots in the enlisted ranks blog, it says so here!

    Who knew the Marines could be such idiots?

    Bloggers have no strategy!

    Being in the military doesn’t protect you from Democrat internet harassment, if you’re a guurrl

    Here comes the SF haters!!

    As you can see. It don’t matter to the Left if you’re in the military, it just makes you a bigger target. They’re bullies. They’ll take on women in the military, people on blog sites here, and so on and so forth.

    What you gonna do about it? I’ll tell you what you’re going to do about it, you’re going to avoid these people and shut up, because to say or do anything else would be to dishonor yourself.

    Unless you’re going to kill the bullies or do violence onto them, you should let them go their ways. Anything else is just meaningless.

    Ask yourself, what makes you different from those motherpockers ridiculing people who disagree with them because their shitty little self-esteem circuits got blown out?

    What makes you different is honesty, discipline, self-respect, and a little bit of the virtues called duty and loyalty. Don’t discard them against such meaningless provocation.

  168. I have two friends who hate Bush, hate what he has done to our country, and hate this sham “war.” Their son just returned last month from Iraq, where he was sent while in the Marines.

    All you woosses here, try a stint in the Marines, get sent over to be shot at, and then come back to whine. You might be forgiven for your fatigue at that point.

  169. Boo hoo. I’m sorry “talking” about iran and war is long and hard. I wonder how it feels to be in the middle of your 3rd term in Iraq? Yeah, blogging is a real bummer when the world just won’t match your expectations.

  170. We bloggers are fighting to protect our troops on the home front, against a media empire that has declared war on the very concept of military action, in order to defend the more romantic and sensational concept of terrorism.

    We’re not very good at it;

    No, you’re not. And your inflated sense of self-importance is growing by the hour.

    Unless you get off your fat butt and go “over there,” I have two words of advice: SHUT UP! You’re only making a bigger fool of yourself than anyone thought possible. You’re NOT fighting anything, you’re just giving your opinion, which no one but you really cares about.

  171. It’s usually people ignoring the problem that results in a war without cost considerations.

    There seems this belief that the black and white methodology applies to neo-cons but not to the accusors that believe neo-cons see things in black and white. But the most unsubtle and reckless belief is found in this quote.

    You really think that your blogs are involved in a war?

    Does it somehow assuage your guilt that young men and women are actually dying while you’re writing a blog to think that you’re somehow making a contribution to the war on terror?

    Such lack of self-awareness is staggering.

    Those who don’t understand this war nor how to win it, will never understand the propaganda aspects. Simply because to understand is to allow internal revolt among their basic principles of belief. That can never be allowed for those who think in the absolute context of yes and no, dogmatic or false.

    Another ignore Iran quote is this one.

    1) the capacity of Iran to do harm – most reasoned assessments are that Iran has very little capacity to make war at the present

    You could perhaps argue all day long whether Iran’s ability to do harm is this or that, but if you broaden your horizons, this is an example of people ignoring the threat of Iran. As I mentioned before, those who ignore threats have been and will be the ones inciting a warfare without consideration of the costs.

    There’s doubt about the conventional aspect of proxy-warfare.

    4) The U.S.’ self-castration. This isn’t WWII, and if you think that GWB has a 29% approval rating now, wait until he asks us to make the kinds of sacrifices it would take to join another large-scale military engagement.

    Here people don’t understand morale in war. Morale doesn’t go down with sacrifice, it goes up. Perhaps that is unintuitive to the metropolitan commuters that more traffic equals faster communte, but there’s a lot of things in the real world that are paradoxes in actuality and concept.

    So, you see… it isn’t whether we agree that Iran is “bad” and “needs to go”

    For some reason, people saying Iran has no ability to inflict harm except in annoyances such as proxy-warfare and then saying it isn’t about areeing that Iran is bad, seems rather deceptive.

    So, rather than screaming off in fifteen different directions, bombing the crap out of everything that waves a fist at you, there is a considerable amount that can be done with a strong front and some time…

    Most people can’t untangle the logic trap that people like probligo creates almost intuitively. But that’s okay.

    There’s two logic strains here, overlaid upon each other, so it is rather hard to unravel. Three would perhaps be impossible to unravel, but two is okay. The underlying premise is that probligo’s beliefs will work. The other underlying premise is that Bush Admin’s beliefs will not work. Seems simple right? So why exactly is probligo using an example of the Bush Admin’s success to justify why probligo is right and the Bush admin is wrong? We comparing Iran to Libya, probligo to Bush, or something like apples to oranges here?

    It’s a variation on the rope a dope, or maybe it’s just a simple grapple. Regardless, the Democrats are quite flexible in their ability to rationalize certain aspects of their philosophy. This has to do with quantum mechanics and history. Probligo believes you can just do a surgery on Bush’s policies toward Libya and then somehow transplant it to Iran. This runs into one problem, infection and rejection. Another problem is that how do you know that the reason it worked in Libya was because Bush was the surgeon, and now you’re replacing Bush by the probligo surgeon?

    It goes on and on, in a tangled skein.

    One more thing, killing a lot of people and violently removing poisonous regimes has turned Germany and Japan into world leaders in voluntary pacifism. Kind of ironic.
    Perhaps, but it was also intentional. MacArthur and the US pledged that never shall our former enemies become our future enemies. Whether that means total annihilation or infecting them with the disease of democratic pacifism, history has already decided for us. Both were infected with the disease of democratic pacifism and Japan barely escaped total annihilation.

    Ah, Fukuyama. Isn’t he the guy that predicted history was at an end?

    Sally, yes he was. He wrote a book about it, the End of History. David Hanson refers to it very often.

    Seems to me history is replete with catastrophes started by people who were making errors, errors, moreover, which were obvious even at the time.

    I’d like to call attention to a point that informative and curious people would benefit from. Which is the realization that this is a mirror dance. People like SM believe Neo-cons are war mongers and want to rush in and smash by grabbing money, loot, and nuking places for cash. SM states that the world is more complex and other solutions exist than the smash and grab model. However, then you have Richard’s analysis of the catastrophes started by people make errors, and people who see those errors and make more errors, and so on and so forth. How complex do you think a spy pattern is after it has been redoubled 10X? Anyone know logarithmic math? It’s a big pattern.

    So the reality is that the Left believes they understand the complexity, and the Right (people like Richard not the religious factions) believe that they understand the complexity. In both cases, the interpretation is different, but the facts they use are similar in content. I favor Richard’s interpretation, because his interpretation is actually correct, but Richard’s point to Know Thy Enemy (which SM seemed to have forgotten when reading SUn Tzu) is perhaps the most important piece in telling truth from lies. It doesn’t matter what I believe is right or not, it only matters if you actually truly know the enemy. If you know the enemy, then you will know yourself, if you know yourself, then you will also know your enemy. One is your control, the other is the experiment. But the question is, is your enemy the control or the experiment?

    Anon does a duty to defend blogging as a civic virtue in the above post. However, I could never dirty my hands by defending the obvious to a bunch of oblivious and dishonorable men and women.

    For those who don’t like the military or who don’t like neo-cons, honor is perhaps not exactly something a non Jacksonian understands.

  172. Vietnam proved that even the most powerful army in the world can be defeated, if the civilians supporting that army are deceived by propaganda into attacking their own soldiers.

    The propaganda war is as real as the shooting war. It may be a war waged with words, but it is a war that means the difference between our troops coming home as heroes, or coming home only to find themselves spat upon, jailed, or even institutionalized.

    We bloggers are fighting to protect our troops on the home front, against a media empire that has declared war on the very concept of military action, in order to defend the more romantic and sensational concept of terrorism.

    We’re not very good at it; after all, blogging is a whole new form of citizen journalism, and while we can draw lessons from the citizen journalists of the past, most of their knowledge does not apply to the internet.
    It’s uncharted territory, but it’s preferable to the territory the mainstream media has already staked out and now rules like careless, inbred aristocrats.

  173. Hastati: Excuse me, Centurion, I’m tired. May I have my break now?

    Centurion: Thwack!

  174. What a whinefest! How much self-righteousness have you guys been storing up? I laugh at your pathetic “burnout.”

    –SIGH–

    As has been observed countless times, many people simply refuse to get it.

    There are none so blind as those who will not see. I fear that many people will read your post and still refuse to see the truth that lies behind it.

    Thank you for your service, and let us hope that the rest of the readers here “catch up” soon.

  175. What a whinefest! How much self-righteousness have you guys been storing up? I laugh at your pathetic “burnout.”

    –SIGH–

    As has been observed countless times, many people simply refuse to get it.

    There are none so blind as those who will not see. I fear that many people will read your post and still refuse to see the truth that lies behind it.

    Thank you for your service, and let us hope that the rest of the readers here “catch up” soon.

  176. What a whinefest! How much self-righteousness have you guys been storing up? I laugh at your pathetic “burnout.”

    I was ON a plane on 9-11. The only thing that changed that day is that we became a nation of ‘fraidey-cats. You guys are the worst!

  177. And does venting your inner rage help your cause in the least, Papa R? I’m afraid it just makes you look like a histrionic gatecrasher. – I could say something worse, but I won’t have any part in lowering the tone of these comments… rest assured, however, that I still have the Seven Dirty Words at my beck and call.

  178. You really think that your blogs are involved in a war?

    Does it somehow assuage your guilt that young men and women are actually dying while you’re writing a blog to think that you’re somehow making a contribution to the war on terror?

    Such lack of self-awareness is staggering.

  179. Woo-hoo: LucianneLanche!

    Your Tuesday BlogTruth: A soothing voice….
    cuts through the anger and fatique in the Blogosphere. Take heed.

    You soothe, girl. 🙂

  180. If anyone just wants to forget their troubles by blogging about beer, I’m always looking for some good stories over at bloggerale.com.
    And as an added benefit, I don’t have any obviously insane liberal trolls barking their damn fool heads off.

  181. It seems at least meaningless, but more likely dangerous, to insist that another party accept our reality. And when that reality seems to be in our favor, or supports a point the speaker is making, I get concerned.

    It is better, it seems to me, to try to figure out what the other party thinks. What is their reality?

    If we use sweet reason and objective thinking, then Germany should not have–perhaps they didn’t–start either of two world wars, North Korea shouldn’t have attacked South Korea, and Argentina shouldn’t have attacked the Falklands. For starters. But they did.
    How could they possibly have been so wrong?
    Not to rehearse a bunch of boring details, but in all those cases, the deck was stacked against them in objective terms. So what were they thinking?
    Beats me. But they went ahead.
    How could they?
    Does it matter?
    They did; millions upon millions died of German judgment. Faulty judgment. To an extent, the dead could be laid at the feet of those who presumed their reality was also Germany’s reality. Reasonable. Rational.

    Is Sally correct in her prediction of what the left would do if we were nuked? I think so. More importantly, what do the mullahs think our left would do, and if they foresee the same thing Sally does, do they think it will be effective?
    Remember, Hitler, Moltke, and the Argentinian junta all guessed wrong, apparently fooling themselves by wishful thinking. They didn’t think the objecticve correlation of forces into their favor. That’s hard. Numbers and so forth. They thought their enemies into passivity. That’s easy. Nordic warrior spirit. Samurai. Effete British can’t take casualties (effete British don’t take casualties, they give casualties. )

    Seems to me history is replete with catastrophes started by people who were making errors, errors, moreover, which were obvious even at the time.

    We stand to make errors, that being the way of things, but one we should not make is to presume a bunch of certifiable wackjobs brought up in an insular culture whose impact on their personality we either don’t know or refuse on pc grounds to acknowledge will think the same way we do and for the same ends.

  182. Roberts and Alito are victories, but only after neocons shouted “enough” with the Myers nomination.

    The fact that Robert and Alito are cited as “victories” in a thread about the War on Terror should give pause to many, many posters here. Perhaps it will help you see why many Americans don’t recognize, like you do, that disagreeing with Bush on domestic issues is tantamount to siding with the Islamofasicts Jihadis against America.

    Unfortunately, there will come a time when the patriots who seek to defend American against Islamic terrorism will look at how effective Bush has been in that fight–and recognize you have been mugged by reality. It will be a painful process for you, but a necessary one.

  183. Mr. Fukuyama predicts that….

    Ah, Fukuyama. Isn’t he the guy that predicted history was at an end?

  184. Let us count the ways in which, judging by all post-Vietnam experience,…

    Start with these numbers:

    KIA 2445
    WMD 0

  185. This, of course, is the “neocon” as mythical monster of the fevered and frightened left-lib worldview.

    Mr. Fukuyama predicts that “one of the consequences of a perceived failure in Iraq will be the discrediting of the entire neoconservative agenda and a restoration of the authority of foreign policy realists.” He writes that “neoconservatism, as both a political symbol and a body of thought, has evolved into something that I can no longer support.”

    Supporter’s Voice Now Turns On Bush
    New York Times, The (NY)
    March 14, 2006
    Author: MICHIKO KAKUTANI
    America at the Crossroads
    Democracy, Power and the Neoconservative Legacy

    By Francis Fukuyama

  186. smijer: The neocon worldview seens committed to the use of military force as the only legitimate response.

    This, of course, is the “neocon” as mythical monster of the fevered and frightened left-lib worldview. In fact, anyone who’s actually been labeled a neocon, whether or not they accept the label, understand all too well that, as Neo herself has said: “Those who advocate a military solution do so because they tend to consider it the least bad of a host of possible bad solutions, and risky ones at that.”

    But what’s ironic to the point of being funny is the extent to which the current liberal-left actually counts upon just such a monster for their own short-term sense of safety — time and again they assure themselves that Iran would never actually use a nuclear weapon against anyone for fear of being destroyed itself; as smijer says, there’s no reason to worry about a nuclear-armed Iran because “…it isn’t a property of flesh and blood people to wish complete destruction on self, family, and other loved ones, as would surely be the result if Prez. A. were allowed to start a Middle Eastern conflagaration by making a serious attack on Israel or (by proxy) on the U.S.” Before 9/11, of course, it wasn’t considered to be a property of flesh and blood people to wish complete destruction on self, period, but leave that aside — the weak link here, especially coming from a left-lib, is that word “surely”, a weakness that Prez. A and cohorts are very well aware of.

    To see this, let’s imagine, just as a thought-experiment, that sometime before 2009 a nuclear device is detonated in an American city, its origin is traced to Iran, and Iranian officials issue the usual bland denials, “condolences”, and threats against retaliation (not displaying any particular worries about the dreadful “neocons” themselves). Let us count the ways in which, judging by all post-Vietnam experience, the left-lib camp rushes in to apologize, forestall, confuse, and generally kick up dust enough to prevent that very destruction:
    1) “Think of all the innocent women and children killed by a retaliatory reponse! And the leaders would just get away!”
    2) “Sanctions! Let’s use sanctions instead of bombs! (Of course, let’s be sure to allow enough exceptions that no innocent women or children, or other people, might be harmed.)
    3) “We must bring it to the UN! The World Court! NATO! Interpol!”
    4) “What about the root causes?! Isn’t it obvious that this has happened because the Iranians don’t like our foreign policy? Wouldn’t it be simpler just to change our foreign policy? (Why don’t we just ask the Iranians what they would like?)
    5) “How do we know the Iranians did it?! After all, Prez. A himself says they didn’t do it! Why should we believe our own Administration? This is probably just another Bush lie!!”
    6) “Retaliation will just make more terrorists! It’ll destabelize the Middle East! It’ll inflame the mulim world! You can’t kill everyone! We have to get them to like us, instead!”
    7) “Violence never solved anything – war is bad for children and other living things – no blood for oil – impeach Bush – …”
    Etc., etc.

  187. This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.

    To this I would like to add, “Thank you, Patrick Fitzgerald.”

  188. As Austin Bay says:

    Al Qaeda is being defeated— it’s not dead but it’s on its way to defeat.

    Al-Qaida has metastatized into 30-40 other groups. Bay the Bogus can’t be trusted to tell us the truth.

  189. “You will have to forgive me, but until the evidence shows otherwise, I am going with the observation that tax cuts appear to increase revenue. Worked for Kennedy, worked for Reagan, worked for W.”

    But the evidence does show otherwise…

  190. http://neo-neocon.blogspot.com/2006/05/blogger-burnout-its-end-of-beginning.html#c114773563470901711

    The Roman Legion was organized to fight in lines, averaging maybe 6 to 8 men deep. In battle the man at the front would fight for about 8 minutes, then move to the back of the line and the person behind him would take his place at the front. After another interval he too would then move to the back and the person behind him would take the front position. Organized in this way each man fought for about 8 minutes out of every 48 to 64. The enemies of the Romans often succomed to fatigue long before the Legionaires did.

    This is a unique perspective on the tactics of the Roman Legion. I would respectfully request a link to some authoritative source for this description.

    Thanks.

  191. “The Information Revolution and the united fist of free societies is eroding the trance of Islam from Africa to Asia.”

    This is so true. Smijer’s course of empowering the doomed minority by legitimizing them, for example the 20% Sunni part of Iraq that had ruthlessly enslaved the 80%, well, I just use the South Afric analogue.

    Smijer, a question for you. Did you support the overthrow of the black South African govt to molify a few violent white dead enders or did you think that in the long run, having the country run by the overwhelming majority was better?

  192. Don’t tell me that Europe isn’t the middle east either. I would put up Europe’s history of bloody war, brutal exterminations, and ruthless suppression of dissent against anything you can show me for the middle east.

    Europe has a capacity for pacifism because its people are grounded in the pacifism of the doctrine of Jesus Christ. On the other hand, the Middle East has Islam — which is a religion that is fundamentally based in making war. Many Muslims can ignore this fact and worship blindly and many others adhere to the core belief of that faith. The Information Revolution and the united fist of free societies is eroding the trance of Islam from Africa to Asia. Thus, the implosive response of suicidal desperation, which is the most dangerous time — we need all the hand of the world pushing down the lid on this dieing pressure cooker.

  193. One more thing, killing a lot of people and violently removing poisonous regimes has turned Germany and Japan into world leaders in voluntary pacifism. Kind of ironic.

    Don’t tell me that Europe isn’t the middle east either. I would put up Europe’s history of bloody war, brutal exterminations, and ruthless suppression of dissent against anything you can show me for the middle east.

    In 1940, where was the indication that Europe could ever be peaceful? Since at least the Seven Years war, through the Napoleonic Wars, some wars I don’t even remember what they were called in the 1870s, the Great War… etc. What indication was there that intervening was anything other than hopeless? That Europe was ready for peace?

  194. Smijer,

    Oh yeah, Hitler and Stalin were also famously interested in listening to the peaceniks in their populations.

    Orwell demonstrated that pacificists were objectively pro totalitarian, since they weakened the nation in which they resided, and were only tolerated in liberal democracies. I don’t see anything in your post to show otherwise. Why you guys continue to root for the wrong side of history, I will never know.

    Stalin, Pol Pot (I am refering to Chomsky there), Mao, Saddam, Ortega, Castro, Che (who enjoyed a personal summary execution of a dissenter as much as any of the rest of the above)

  195. Good post. Revisiting the wisdom of Churchill, Thatcher, Reagan, Kirkpatrick will help steel our resolve & refresh our spirits.

  196. “But in every nation – in every government – in every religion, and in every culture – there are people who want peace and prosperity.”

    This is so beside the point as to be utterly risable. I am sure that in Baathis Iraq there were people who wanted peace and prosperity. I am also sure that if they had opened their mouth against the regime, that they would have been dealt with rather harshly. There is actual evidence of that.

    Your ‘analysis’ is so devoid of any anchor in the real world as to be less than useless.

  197. You will have to forgive me, but until the evidence shows otherwise, I am going with the observation that tax cuts appear to increase revenue. Worked for Kennedy, worked for Reagan, worked for W.

    The real issue is the Trent Lotts of the world who are attempting to hijack Katrina relief for his buddies in the casinos. You know, pork. The Republicans are not going to stay in power in a nationalized election by selling out the nation as a whole to buy support from earstwhile Democrats.

  198. grackle….

    The reasoning of the anti-war folks is always that the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm.

    First – everyone… at least every sensible person is an “anti-war folk”. Ever read Sun Tzu? (The folks at West Point do). War is not something to rejoice in. It’s a cause for mourning when it becomes necessary.

    More importantly, your statement is critically wrong, and reflective of a black and white – near fundamentalist – mentality. Let me restate it for you:
    The reasoning of the anti-war folks is always that the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm, and has demonstrated specific intent to do so, before creating an open military congfrontation.

    The guy who sleeps with his gun under his pillow and wakes up shooting at everything that goes “bump” in the night is a menace in his own right. In fact, if he is too driven by a paranoid worldview, he becomes exactly the kind of threat that we see among some radicals in the East now. Point is, this kind of bellicose fundamentalism is the cause of what you guys call “islamofascism”, and it isn’t one that brings safety and security to a society.

    That such outdated(after 9/11) foreign policy niceties could cause the loss of an American city or two the next time, instead of merely a couple of tall buildings with a couple of thousand civilians within, doesn’t seem to enter into their thinking.

    That such “outdated (after 9/11) foreign policy niceties could cause” such results enters our thinking just long enough for us to realize that we need to do a lot more thinking about what could cause such results. If the cause of successful terrorist attacks within the U.S. truly is to be found within our foreign policy rather than within a much wider and more complex global situation, then there are other areas of it to blame than in our sometime decision not to agress against every perceived enemy. Yes, our foreign policy does play a role in motivating and arming terrorists, but at the end of the day changing it in favor of a cycle of escalating aggression will only lead to our demise.

    Iran does not have to attack the US directly to accomplish their goals. Some anti-war people seem to think that we pro-war people are worried about Iran invading the US. Since 1979 Iran has been the main employer of terrorists and they will no doubt continue in that vein. Slipping a nuke to a terrorist is so much easier than “attacking American or Israeli interests directly.”

    Easier? No. Perhaps, after spending billions of dollars and decades getting you hands on “the button” you would find it easy to give up that mega-power, and, shrugging to yourself “why not?”, hand it off to your shady pal who promised to use it only against your enemies. And, maybe Ahmadinejad would find that “easy”, too. I doubt he is that stupid or crazy, but who knows? As I pointed out, though – he lacks the unilateral power to do so.

    People keep writing about a supposedly silent, young Iranian liberal segment that is supposed to somehow usher in a less distasteful regime in the future. Get it straight: Religion dictates every aspect of Iranian existence. Iran is not a democracy, it is an Islamic state. These mythical liberals have done nothing to prevent their nation from becoming the largest exporter of terrorism in the Middle East. Does the anti-war crowd really believe that a mythical liberal segment of the Iranian population could possibly prevent the mullahs from giving bin Laden a nuke?

    You know, this is probably also what the Mullahs are telling their people about America’s mythical liberal segment, to stir up their paranoia, too. Have you visited Iran? Do you know whether kids there are more attached to their night clubs or to their fundamentalist preachers? I haven’t visited, but it is my experience that young people have a lot in common no matter where they come from. Will those kids positively influence the government there as their generation matures? I don’t know. Do they have the greater understanding of the situation and initiative to do something about it? Yes, they do.

    It’s frightening and frustrating how close this type of rhetoric is to the pre-WW2 apologies and wishful thinking about Nazi Germany.

    Difference being that this was still going on after the Panzers crossed into Poland.

    What if the Iranians believe they would be protected by anonymity if they gave a nuke to terrorists? What if they believe they are immune from retaliation…

    Hopefully, they would be wrong. And if wrong, then hopefully, they can be educated to the contrary. Back-channel, of course – there is no need to grandstand. I don’t believe that they are that stupid, but it wouldn’t hurt for there to be diplomatic reminders given them that there is no protection of anonymity when it goes large-scale.

    The writer finishes up with the venerable anti-war ‘be nice’ argument. If the US will only ‘be nice’ those nice young Iranian liberals will solve all our problems

    Let me make a correction… if the U.S. behaves responsibly (and justly), then those “nice young Iranian liberals” may have the initiative to begin solving all their problems. We have our own beefs with the Iranian government, and we should be working on them with intelligence and every resource at our disposal. But it would be unwise, immoral, and self-destructive for us to wage war on that country except in self-defense and in light of a clear and present danger.

    but we mustn’t do anything to make these young Iranian liberals angry, like looking out for our own interests,

    If we were looking out for our own interests then we would not be thought of as the “Great Satan” by the Iranians. It seems to me that meddling in Iranian politics – namely helping Britain to depose a popular leader there and install a puppet regime – was what earned us that nickname to begin with.

    Looking out for our own interests will not make enemies of the Iranian people, or the youth that may bring change there. Bombing them, or their neighbors, “pre-emptively”, will.

    One huge, glaring fact that neocons (“neocons” because I don’t like using “pro-” or “anti-” war as broad brush pejoratives, no matter how much they may apply in individual cases) overlook is that the quickest way to eliminate an enemy is to make him your friend. Now, I know that you’re busting at the seams to ridicule the notion that we should just be friends with the evil mullahs, but if you let yourself get distracted that way, you will also miss the point.

    The global political situation is very difficulat and very complex, and very full of undesirable characters. But in every nation – in every government – in every religion, and in every culture – there are people who want peace and prosperity. To reach out to them and to make common cause with them is to cement new friendships. I know that the majority of Americans want peace and prosperity. I’m not sure about the guy we, in our anxieties about foreign threats, made our president. But we can ask those in our government who share our goals to reach out to those in other governments and in other populations who are also with us. If we can convince one another that we are willing to refrain frmo killing one another and burning one another’s churches and mosques, then we can actually work together to create *real* security. And real security brings real peace.

    When the neocons learn this lesson, or go out of power, then we have a chance to move forward. Then, maybe we will hear no more hyping of warfare against Iran.

  199. I wonder where neo-con progeny Danny Krauthammer or George P. Bush are regarding WWIV (our new Great War)? Ahhhh, the first is safe and sound at Harvard while the latter stumps for LaRaza. Evidently both are “pursuing other interests” while the commoners fight, sustain injuries, even die so that Danny and Georgie won’t have to.

  200. Another strategy is “shame in advance”.

    Each and every anti-war protester should should be shamed, publicly, for UN inaction in Darfur.

    “Global Test” the Left said — and Sudan has passed the “no genocide” test. No UNSC resolutions against it.

    If the “world” can’t stop slo-mo genocide in Darfur, already after 2 years and some 200 000 – 400 000 dead, then there’s no hope of the world stopping Iran until AFTER they get a nuke and use it.

    War or genocide; war now before Iran gets a nuke or war after Iran uses one.

  201. Anonymous put her finger on the problem. There are neocons who understand what the priorities are and there are conservatives whose priorities are other stuff – tax cuts when we cannot pay for a war for our survival and the guys building the swimming pool next door don’t speak English. Unfortunately, Bush is part of this crowd. No, he’s not a Nativist or legal immigrant Nativist wannabe, but he failed from the start to make it clear that his administration’s priority is the war on terror. Bush pushed his tax cuts and an expensive new entitlement. Then he sat idly by while “conservatives” in Congress stuffed “emergency” appropriations bills with pork. There have been victories. Roberts and Alito are victories, but only after neocons shouted “enough” with the Myers nomination. Libya is a victory. Iraq is a victory in slow motion. Historians of the future will look back and say that the Middle East five years after 9/11/01 is a different place. Iran is a major problem. Too big for Israel to handle. Even if the Europeans wanted to help, and they do seem to have changed their attitudes, they have spent their economies on a bloated bureaucracy in Brussels. Unilateral action by the US might get more silent support, but the odds against success are high. Best strategy, the only strategy, is to play for time. It is easier to struggle against one country whose regime is unpopular at home than to fight a war against a remorseless band of stateless terrorists. Election of a Democratic Congress will be good for a lot of people. It will give the Democrats the maturity that comes with responsibility. Bush may suddenly discover the power of the veto. Once out of power maybe the “conservative” porkmeisters will discover maturity.

  202. smijer offers some thoughts:

    1) the capacity of Iran to do harm – most reasoned assessments are that Iran has very little capacity to make war at the present; and what capacity they have is limited to conventional direct and conventional proxy war-fare. IOW, they have no nuclear arsenal and are not close to one.

    The reasoning of the anti-war folks is always that the US must wait until a belligerent state has the capacity to do harm. That such outdated(after 9/11) foreign policy niceties could cause the loss of an American city or two the next time, instead of merely a couple of tall buildings with a couple of thousand civilians within, doesn’t seem to enter into their thinking. One of the root causes of 9/11 was a 30-year devotion to passivity in the face of terrorism sponsored by Islamic states ruled by Islamic despots; a wait and see what happens type of mentality that led directly to 9/11.

    2) the homogeny of the Iran regime – while Prez. A. and his inner circle are bellicose big-mouths, the regime consists of a number of elements and interests, many who are quite content to let the government go ballistic in rhetoric, but who threaten its power to endanger the security of Iran by attacking American or Israeli interests directly. Iran is an autocratic regime, but – unlike here (/snark) – sole power does not rest in the executive.

    Iran does not have to attack the US directly to accomplish their goals. Some anti-war people seem to think that we pro-war people are worried about Iran invading the US. Since 1979 Iran has been the main employer of terrorists and they will no doubt continue in that vein. Slipping a nuke to a terrorist is so much easier than “attacking American or Israeli interests directly.” People keep writing about a supposedly silent, young Iranian liberal segment that is supposed to somehow usher in a less distasteful regime in the future. Get it straight: Religion dictates every aspect of Iranian existence. Iran is not a democracy, it is an Islamic state. These mythical liberals have done nothing to prevent their nation from becoming the largest exporter of terrorism in the Middle East. Does the anti-war crowd really believe that a mythical liberal segment of the Iranian population could possibly prevent the mullahs from giving bin Laden a nuke?

    3) Related to 2 – the sense of personal interest within the Iran regime. Regardless of Prez. A’s sanity, the .gov of Iran consists of flesh and blood people with flesh and blood loved ones, and it isn’t a property of flesh and blood people to wish complete destruction on self, family, and other loved ones, as would surely be the result if Prez. A. were allowed to start a Middle Eastern conflagaration by making a serious attack on Israel or (by proxy) on the U.S.

    It’s frightening and frustrating how close this type of rhetoric is to the pre-WW2 apologies and wishful thinking about Nazi Germany. What if the Iranians believe they would be protected by anonymity if they gave a nuke to terrorists? What if they believe they are immune from retaliation because determining the perpetrators of such an action would not be amenable to formal, court-of-law investigation and proofs? After all, Iran has been sponsoring terrorism with impunity since 1979, so why should they be worried now?

    4) The U.S.’ self-castration. This isn’t WWII, and if you think that GWB has a 29% approval rating now, wait until he asks us to make the kinds of sacrifices it would take to join another large-scale military engagement. Dark hints of “danger” from Iran will not be enough to convince Americans – including Congress, and perhaps including sane elements in the Pentagon, that we should re-institute the draft, fuel and nylon quotas, take on major *tax hikes*(!!!!!), etc., and start another war. We might as well face it, with our military hog-tied in the fight with Iraqi insurgents, the neocons have blown their wad. We’ll need to see an honest-to-god pearl harbor before we will mobilize for a war of what will amount to global proportions.

    Here I’m afraid the writer is essentially correct. Oh, this war has already had its Pearl Harbor(it’s called 9/11) but a propaganda battle has been won by the anti-war folks. Sooner or later Iran will have to be faced but it won’t be sooner. It will only be after Iran has succeeded in doing something immense and vile.

    5) The question of what approach makes sense to deal with the threat. The neocon worldview seems committed to the use of military force as the only legitimate response. When all you have is a hammer, I suppose, every problem looks like a nail. However, there are many young Iraqis (in a nation that is very young, demographically), who don’t want more Sharia, who aren’t comfortable with a belligerent government policy toward the outside world, and who mainly desire peace and prosperity. It occurs to some of us that these are the people with the biggest stake in an Iranian regime, and with their hands closest to the machinery of power there. Chances are, these young people will, given time, solve their own problem. If we have managed to avoid making enemies of them with our conduct inside the borders of their neighbors, then their solution will bring about a good solution for us, as well. And, they may even want our help – which we would be morally obligated to provide if possible… meaning, if we have extricated ourself from the money-and-blood-pit which is Iraq, and have already met our other moral obligations alongside the rest of the world where it concerns the Sudan and other areas in much greater crisis. [Note: I suspect the writer meant “young Iranians” in the fourth sentence of the above paragraph and that “young Iraqis” is a typo.]

    So, you see… it isn’t whether we agree that Iran is “bad” and “needs to go” – it’s a matter of whether we see things in the neocon black & white. It’s a matter of whether we think “bad” and “needs to go” always necessarily means “must invade now, regardless of cost or likely outcome”.

    The writer finishes up with the venerable anti-war ‘be nice’ argument. If the US will only ‘be nice’ those nice young Iranian liberals will solve all our problems — but we mustn’t do anything to make these young Iranian liberals angry, like looking out for our own interests, or they won’t solve our problems for us — ignoring the absolute stranglehold religious-based totalitarianism has on all functions in Iran. This is the type of logic that brought on 9/11. When all you have is nails, a hammer is the best solution.

  203. “So, rather than screaming off in fifteen different directions, bombing the crap out of everything that waves a fist at you, there is a considerable amount that can be done with a strong front and some time…”

    You seriously believe that making an example of Saddam had nothing to do with the Colonel’s about face?

    That is so…sweet!

  204. “Iran is a topic I’ve tried to wrap my mind around many times, and still it looms, unresolved and seemingly–perhaps–unresolvable. All approaches seem potentially either catastrophic or ineffectual, or both.

    neo-neocon – original post.

    “So, you see… it isn’t whether we agree that Iran is “bad” and “needs to go” – it’s a matter of whether we see things in the neocon black & white. It’s a matter of whether we think “bad” and “needs to go” always necessarily means “must invade now, regardless of cost or likely outcome”. “

    smijer, just above.

    To which I would like to add –

    This is what can be achieved…
    The US said yesterday it is to restore full relations with Libya for the first time in more than 25 years, after having once branded its leader, Muammar Gadafy, as one of the world’s most dangerous men and a supporter of international terrorism.
    Washington also removed Libya from a state department list of states sponsoring terrorism.

    Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, said: “We will soon open an embassy in Tripoli. In addition, the United States intends to remove Libya from the list of designated state sponsors of terrorism. Libya will also be omitted from the annual certification of countries not co-operating fully with United States’ anti-terrorism efforts.

    So, rather than screaming off in fifteen different directions, bombing the crap out of everything that waves a fist at you, there is a considerable amount that can be done with a strong front and some time…

  205. It does get tiring reading the lefties, the Bush deranged and the irrationally angry.

    The good news is that as time goes by the Islamists are going to discover that the roots of the West are much deeper than the Koskids or Michael Moore.

    And it is starting in Europe. The Dutch, the Danes, even some of the English and a non-LePen fraction of the French, are waking up to the reality that multi-culuralism does not work with jihadis. Nor does conventional police work – pace John Kerry.

    What does work? First the gradual accumulation of successes as we are seeing in Afghanistan and Iraq. Second, an end to the so called realist posture of supporting dictatorships and doddering monarchies for the sake of a quiet life and cheap oil. Third,the willingness to engage the Muslim world in a decades long process of reform and renewal. Fourth, the capacity to reward as well as punish the various nations of that world.

    Most importantly, the WEst has to recover its own self confidence and say, “Wait a minute. We are not going to put our women in burkas, pull our girl children from school and pull down walls on our gay friends. We are not going to abandon the sole liberal democracy in the Middle East. We are not going to put up with thugs of any religion intimidating our people or our politicians. If you want to live in the 13th century we are down with that – you can go to the village of your choice in Pakistan or Yemen and fill your boots. But you are not doing it in our countries.”

    For the last fifty years the West has, under the tutorship of leftish intellectuals who hated every value the pre-WWII West had, adopted a post colonial cringe. We accepted that the ills of the world were somehow our fault.

    Well, no more.

  206. I think Iran is indeed one of the biggest causes of blogger fatigue, combined with our lack of agreement on the seriousness of the problem–if we can’t agree on the vicious intent and dangerousness of the Iranian leadership, what can we agree on?

    I don’t think anyone disagrees about the viciousness of the Iranian leadership, nor about their potential danger, nor about the desirability of addressing it.

    Points upon which there is disagreement – starkly between “left” and “right”, but quite noticeably between folks regardless of their political affiliation, who are keeping a steady eye open and those who are prone to panic, also regardless of their political affiliation:

    1) the capacity of Iran to do harm – most reasoned assessments are that Iran has very little capacity to make war at the present; and what capacity they have is limited to conventional direct and conventional proxy war-fare. IOW, they have no nuclear arsenal and are not close to one.
    2) the homogeny of the Iran regime – while Prez. A. and his inner circle are bellicose big-mouths, the regime consists of a number of elements and interests, many who are quite content to let the government go ballistic in rhetoric, but who threaten its power to endanger the security of Iran by attacking American or Israeli interests directly. Iran is an autocratic regime, but – unlike here (/snark) – sole power does not rest in the executive.
    3) Related to 2 – the sense of personal interest within the Iran regime. Regardless of Prez. A’s sanity, the .gov of Iran consists of flesh and blood people with flesh and blood loved ones, and it isn’t a property of flesh and blood people to wish complete destruction on self, family, and other loved ones, as would surely be the result if Prez. A. were allowed to start a Middle Eastern conflagaration by making a serious attack on Israel or (by proxy) on the U.S.
    4) The U.S.’ self-castration. This isn’t WWII, and if you think that GWB has a 29% approval rating now, wait until he asks us to make the kinds of sacrifices it would take to join another large-scale military engagement. Dark hints of “danger” from Iran will not be enough to convince Americans – including Congress, and perhaps including sane elements in the Pentagon, that we should re-institute the draft, fuel and nylon quotas, take on major *tax hikes*(!!!!!), etc., and start another war. We might as well face it, with our military hog-tied in the fight with Iraqi insurgents, the neocons have blown their wad. We’ll need to see an honest-to-god pearl harbor before we will mobilize for a war of what will amount to global proportions.
    5) The question of what approach makes sense to deal with the threat. The neocon worldview seens committed to the use of military force as the only legitimate response. When all you have is a hammer, I suppose, every problem looks like a nail. However, there are many young Iraqis (in a nation that is vey young, demographically), who don’t want more Sharia, who aren’t comfortable with a belligerent government policy toward the outside world, and who mainly desire peace and prosperity. It occurs to some of us that these are the people with the biggest stake in an Iranian regime, and with their hands closest to the machinery of power there. Chances are, these young people will, given time, solve their own problem. If we have managed to avoid making enemies of them with our conduct inside the borders of their neighbors, then their solution will bring about a good solution for us, as well. And, they may even want our help – which we would be morally obligated to provide if possible… meaning, if we have extricated ourself from the money-and-blood-pit which is Iraq, and have already met our other moral obligations alongside the rest of the world where it concerns the Sudan and other areas in much greater crisis.

    So, you see… it isn’t whether we agree that Iran is “bad” and “needs to go” – it’s a matter of whether we see things in the neocon black & white. It’s a matter of whether we think “bad” and “needs to go” always necessarily means “must invade now, regardless of cost or likely outcome”.

  207. Not all of Europe out, but places like France and Britain are sinking to rock bottom status. The question isn’t whether they will bounce back up, that’s rather debatable, the question is what happens if they die in the plummet.

    I don’t count Poland out, but based upon the principles and fortitude and examples shown by France in response to the riots, Britain in response to 7/7, and various other similar incidents, there’s not much of a trackrecord for optimism.

    This is like the situation in the beginning of WWII< if you asked the Brits if they counted out the French. Hrm... if they said yes, then in a few weeks France would not only surrender they would give Germany all their logistics bases in France as well as the entire French navy and army. If they said no, what else could they do except keep trucking along. So I don’t see what it changes things if Europe is out of the fight or if they are not out of the fight. It won’t change the Iranian situation for example, or Russia, or Japan, or China, or Indian. As I see it, the strategy of the enemy is to take over Western Europe (old Europe) and get Britain’s and France’s nukes. On this basis, do we sit around hoping the Euros will fight it out long enough so we can evacuate the rot from the MidEast like the Brits waiting for the French to capitulate before evacuating at Dunkirk? I like to count on our allies, but I have to realize that counting on France is a losing proposition. It was in WWII, and it is here now. It was really funny, cause after Hitler invaded Stalin, and Stalin changed the party rhetoric from (Hitler and friends vs Imperialism) to (the friendly Amis and Brits vs the fascistic Hitlerites), which is probably the inspiration for 1984’s Oceania war with East Asia switch on switch off, the communists in France suddenly became freedom fighters and guerrilas (after smoothing the way for the Germans into France that is). That has got to be one of the most funny things, if there hadn’t been a war going on at the time that is. (sorta like the behavior of the Democrats) Suffice it to say that Democracies are worthy of existence based upon their people, and Europe has done their best to make their people nothing but a bunch of Dolists. People on the Dole. Without the patriotism inherent in the US military to die and kill for your country, so your kids will be safer than you in the future, there is no future for democracies or republics. For me to believe that Europe has a chance, I’d have to see some sacrifice on their parts, or maybe just some common sense. Britain has a chance, a slim one. France has zero. Germany is in some kind of oblivion zone or something.

  208. I agree with Anonymous. I am sick to death of people like Malkin and polipundit. They are self serving.

  209. The Cold War, as has been noted, took about fifty years. I got to be looking at it at the age of, say, eighteen, which happened to be in 1963. I was a college frosh that year.
    We had to fight overseas, hot, cold, warm or instantly changing, but the worst enemies, the most dangerous were here in the States.

    Unfortunately, I don’t recall them being as well-organized and numerous as they are today. And the really weird thing is, you could, if you lied really hard, find something nice about communism.

    Right now, our internal enemies are working for people who not only have no visible redeeming qualities, they actually oppose all the stuff our lefties supposedly think is vital for a civilized society.

    Go figure.

  210. Late in the morning of 9/11 I remember thinking that the bad guys had picked the most beautiful day I could imagine to attack my country. We knew that there would be a swift and terrible response – somebody would die soon and it might even be the guys responsible for this attack.

    Just over two years later I shipped out to Iraq (as an activated Army Reservist) to do what needed doing all along. And, there’s every chance I’ll go again.

    That’s OK.

    Most all of my comrades are of a similar mind. We’re here for the long term. Most of us have over twenty years in, and are Field Grade Officers who can’t really effectively be dragooned into duty. We’re here because we have kids whom we don’t want to see bleeding in the dirt. That’s the choice – either we do this thing for as long as it takes or we hand the mess over to our children. Long war or short war, we’re in.

    The simple calculus is that somebody is going to have to pay the bill on this one.

  211. That shows how much difference is between Jack and I. Like I said before, his interpretation and beliefs could be right, but I can’t buy into them.

    Well, I’m happy to agree that my interpretation could be right, but I sure don’t know that I am.

    If one is honest I think one must grant the current situation is beyond human calculation.

    Ymar — do you count Europe out?

  212. Name

    Your web page

    All of these fields are optional.

    That’s what you see if you click “Other” instead of “anonymous” while commenting.

    It’s great suggestive hypnotis. ALl of these fields are optional, therefore… None of the Above ; )

  213. Anon has problems. And I suggest she talk to a military counsellor, presumably a military priest, about why she feels so much hostility toward Malkin that she would come to Neo-Neocon’s blog to post a rant about her and others. It’s 50/50, that’s she is female, right?

    Neo, what I don’t get is, a lot of blogs I post comments on have the Name, Email, and Weblink requirement. Blogger just requires you click on a button and input your name, yet…. there’s a bunch of Anons who don’t use that option.

    That doesn’t exactly seem logical to me. Almost nobody I’ve seen on the Name, Email, Link comment blogs post their name as “Anon” (presumably because they would have a hard time spelling anonymous).

    Human nature strikes again I suppose.

    I don’t even count Europe out.

    That shows how much difference is between Jack and I. Like I said before, his interpretation and beliefs could be right, but I can’t buy into them.

    Contrast this position with Anon’s comments about Malkin. Could there be a difference?

  214. I’ve been tired of the Bush-hate noise for a long time.
    But also angry.

    Conservatives have also been unhappy with Bush allowing (no veto) a Rep Congress to spend billions on pork; tax cuts good, but spending should be cut, too. At least growth of spending.

    But too few Bush/ spending questioning conservatives have been pushing alternatives to incumbents in the primaries. Like Jerry Lewis in CA (41), alone on my Rep primary ballot (Arnie has 3 rivals).

    It’s pretty stupid to be willing to not vote, sort of hoping a Dem would win over an uninspiring/ corrupt/ overspending Rep — yet not have tried to at least get a fresh faced Rep to challenge the guy in a primary.

    I think the anti-war folk are looking pretty silly, calling for “action” to stop genocide in Darfur — where the UN has said it’s not genocide.

    Just read Rerum Novarum, from 115 years ago (Pope Leo). Still relevant on Capital and Labor.

    The Long War goal — a World Without Dictators; but also a World Without Poverty (new World Bank phrase).

  215. Yes, indeed, let’s think about the soldiers… who know the kind of fatigue most of us will never know. Or let’s think about the military families, waiting each day for a precious word from their loved one… and dreading with all their might the arrival of a different word from someone else.

    Yes, it’s hard to stay focused and devoted over years and years of struggle with an intractable enemy. But folks, we (most of us) don’t have to face bullets, or IEDs, or cowardly terrorists with their human shields. We don’t have to slog through mud and sand for endless day after day. We don’t have to wonder if we, ourselves, will be tomorrow’s casualty in this war.

    They are the ones at the forefront of this fight… and, paradoxically, their sense of purpose makes it easier for them to carry on than it is for us. (Well, that and the fact that they aren’t really given the choice of giving up.)

    Yes, fatigue sets in. But we’re seeing battle-hardened troops that have returned to the United States — and many of them are disgusted with our loss of faith. Far be it from me to suggest that our troops, who have served their country well, should step up to the plate at home as well. But I suspect that, as our fatigue sets in, there will be others to invigorate us and keep the good fight going.

    And thank God for that. Not since the height of the Cold War have the issues been this clear. We must fight, or our children will live as slaves. Our enemy has told us this explicitly — and they might not consider an entire world living under sha’aria to be slavery, but we do.

    respectfully,
    Daniel in Brookline

  216. I guess I never thought the immigration debate was a “distraction”. It’s an important debate, and results from the forgotten 90’s era, much like terrorism did. We did little about neither problem, and now we’re stuck with 12,000,000 illegal aliens and a bunch of crazy islamofascists out there. Bush is dealing with both, as well he should be. Blame yourself for these problems, you slept through the 90’s and cashed the checks, and now you’re paying the price, except some are paying the ultimate price.

  217. The West is its own worst enemy.

    True, but that is also a backhand compliment to the power of the West. Its external enemies can annoy and hurt us, but they are a very long way from being able to threaten our survival.

    People have been singing of the West’s decline since Spengler and no doubt earlier, but until a more dynamic, adaptive society emerges I don’t anticipate the end of the West or its suicide.

    I don’t even count Europe out. They haven’t hit bottom yet, but when they do, I think we’ll see some remarkable things happen there.

  218. I have the impression that the anti-war moderates are similarly burning out.

    The disasters predicted for Iraq keep failing to come to pass. Bush keeps dodging bullet after bullet that was supposed to impeach him. And the continuing Islamic terrorism, the riots over cartoons, the election of Hamas, and now this horrific president of Iran are convincing more and more Americans that, regardless of what they think of Bush or the war, Islam is dangerous.

    Overall this is good news but still there is a long way to go and at best we are at the end of the beginning.

  219. From the enemy’s perspective, they have been fighting this war for over 1300 years. The President “long ago” shortly after 9-11 warned us this would be a long struggle replete with invisible victories. The West is
    its own worst enemy. We can only defeat the enemy through patience and perseverance-commodities that appear to be in shorter supply than either gold or oil. Hence, I remain pessimistic even though we are winning at the moment.

  220. What we need is a visible political movement to let enter those Leftist who are reconsidering their political beliefs — and a Islamic Reformation that would begin with the publishing of a Quran translated in Asia languages, along with a copy of the New Testament, done by Islamist and Christians. Or something like this — debate.

  221. You want fatigue? Try being a military dependent. Most of the people I know are going on their third tour and some are sweating out a fourth, and when they are home the guys I know are putting in sixteen to eighteen hours-sorry Michelle Malkin they don’t even now about “The Invasion” they’ve got other stuff on their plate. But that isn’t the tiring part.

    It’s internet bloggers such as Michelle Malkin and the rest of the bloggers in her pyramid of power structure deciding that the poop in her shorts-which changes color weekly must be addressed immediately!!!

    Now we’ve got Michelle Malkin’s Reconquesta as the all important issue. Ya crap Michelle it be a little more believable if you had blogged about this like your last cojole depended on it before or even during the last election. Shoot yourself for derilection of duty on that you little self-hater-Yes you would get caught in your own round up and sent to Cozumel before you could prove your Americanism-go find that ID…

    Because you look Mexican which isn’t a crime btw-however much you would like it to be one.

    NO the fatigue comes from realizing that she is a damn loon with a degree in ENGLISH-nothing else- and hardly ANYONE has the guts to take the little hater on-they’d sooner besmearch the Commander in Chief because by God he can’t send them the traffic.

    Ya and all Wretchard has for us is a whisper-how brave. Meanwhile the intellectual beard for all this Victor Davis Hanson can’t remember what he’s been lecturing Liberals about for years now-PRIORITIES. Not when it comes to his cause bete noire-Mexifornia-suddenly he is silent on what the worst case scenario is-and it ain’t flippin’ Mexicans coming over here to work with the criminal intent of trying to make a better future for themselves. {Yep my Greatgrandmother snuck in from the Canadian border Jewish last name Franck-no relation to Ann but we know what happened to the law abiding Jews now don’t we? And ya I’m damn glad she did it and if you wanted to call my relations who sacrificed everything for their families future a CRIMINAL I’d be doing more than marching….Most people know at a certain point to leave “your mama” out of it.}

    Illegal immigration has been condoned for decades by many President’s but no other President had the all incompassing distraction-ya that’s what it has been trivialized to by Michelle’s idiocy- of 9/11.

    My father is the veteran of WW II’s Battle of the Bulge, Korea and Vietnam. He later was a war planner at NORAD one thing I learned from him is you take care of the “worst case scenario” and work your way down. It’s a damn good principle and it W-OR-K-S.

    But no we have to be disracted by petty hatreds, and MANUFACTURED hysteria.
    Michelle Malkin is no friend to the military-she only exploits them to camaflouge her attacks on the Commander in Chief facing- in historical perspective- one of the major threats to the United States ever- 9/11 and our response to that.

    Eroding his base of support at a time like this and calling the President a treasoness traitor at Polipundit.com at a time like this is not fatigue it’s crazy, and unfortunately these “crazies” are defeating those feeling fatigue because many of the hating loons are “blessed” with OCD.

  222. The military bloggers have been doing this for years, and they don’t ever appear fatigued or tired, or even direspectful of the Other Side even when the Cindy Sheehans, and the whatshisname in Congress former Marine Democrat poster boy (just remed his name, Murtha), and Kerry and so on and so forth.

    Look at Beth Holloway. Look at that guy hosting America’s Most Wanted, motivated by the loss of his own son.

    Loss, grief, despair, all can be converted to determination and willpower. But it’s never automatic and it never works for everyone, simply because everyone will not lose a son except if a terroist attack with WMDs hit a big city.

    Immature people will make fun of things like that, but perhaps they just don’t get it and never will.

  223. I’ve been (mostly) steering clear of political subjects in my blog for awhile now; it seems there are plenty of more active bloggers covering that ground already…

  224. The war against communism took close to fifty years and included two wars that made little sense at the time — Korea and Viet Nam. We had better take the long view on the war to save Western Civilization.

  225. The Roman Legion was organized to fight in lines, averaging maybe 6 to 8 men deep. In battle the man at the front would fight for about 8 minutes, then move to the back of the line and the person behind him would take his place at the front. After another interval he too would then move to the back and the person behind him would take the front position. Organized in this way each man fought for about 8 minutes out of every 48 to 64. The enemies of the Romans often succomed to fatigue long before the Legionaires did.

    It’s ok to get fatigued, and it’s ok to take a step back. There is a person behind you who will fill the gap. And when you are refreshed you can rejoin the battle.

    Rath

  226. Tired of the struggle, tired of the bloodshed, and in some way tired most of all of the endless haranguing and vicious infighting here in the US.

    Personally speaking, I’m a lot calmer and balanced psychologically now than I was during the 2004 elections. I suppose I could sympathize with bloggers when they have to keep churning out material about distressing moments, as a reader it really isn’t much of an issue for me.

    Now comes the waiting, which is always the hard part. The doing is not easy, but it is rather simple in construction. America waits for Bush, Bush waits for Europe, Europe waits for America, Iran waits for their weapons program to be completed.

  227. Of course, terrorists and jihadists are COUNTING on fatigue to help their cause. When the President said it would be a long, generational war, he wasn’t kidding, and unfortunately, very few were actually listening at the time. This is the continuation of a long, long, struggle with radical Islam (I’m still not convinced there’s any other kind, no matter the protestations of the multiculturalists).

    Iran MUST be dealt with…either with tough diplomacy (like true sanctions and ostracizing by the community of nations; not likely) or with military action. Neither option is, as you say, desirable, but better dealt with NOW, than later, when one of America’s (or Israel’s, or Britain’s) cities is a radioactive ruin.

  228. Folks might be tired of the war, but that doesn’t mean they can’t get riled up about the really important stuff like erecting a mile high fence along the Mexican border or calling in the gay inquisition to question Mary Cheney’s pact with Satan or the profound violation of personal privacy embodied in telephone billings. Now isn’t a quiet time, now is a crazy time. The loons are roaming the streets and the internet. I only *wish* everyone would go take a nap.

  229. Discussing Iran with the left is not a rewarding task. Even when one can convince them about Ahmadinejad and his belief in death and all of the 12th Imam stuff, they consistently refuse to put 2 and 2 together and recalcitrantly insist on “giving peace a chance” and “not being a bully.”

  230. Somewhere, perhaps in the archives of Parameters, the journal of the American War College, there’s an article that notes we have never, ever been happy with long wars. Once it gets to be over three years, the public’s unhappiness with a state of war increases. And goes up. And with unhappiness comes depression and fatigue and “the mind shuts down.”

    The same sort of thing happened to Churchill as WWII lengthened with no positive victories for England. It took a win in Africa. A dramatic win. That seemed to re-energize the populace. And that is also the origin of the “End of the beginning” quote.

    We have, in truth, no ‘Dramatic Victories’ since the fall of Baghdad. Just the slow onlslaught with all the slow dying and, frankly, the lack of any startling drama to keep the public engaged .

    Bread AND circuses and all that. This is why Iran is so confounding and yet so alluring. We could have a big circus there at any moment. And it won’t feature the UN in the center ring.

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