![]() |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
|
Re: Canadian army....
I find there is one major flaw in the "military is bad" philosophy, and that is the supposition that military's cause violence. They do not. People cause violence and as long as man proves himself to be a violent creature, armies will be necessary to protect the more enlightened from the less enlightened.
We are blessed to live in relatively free societies governed by their people. These freedoms were not handed to us, but won from those who would tell us otherswise, and whether it's France, Britain, Germany or the US, freedom was not won through force of reason, but by force of arms from those who would not see reason. EX. American colonists begged King George to reconsider his policies before the Revolution. Most of the colonist leadership entered the Revolutionary War with regret, not vigor, and viewed revolution as the last resort but still necessary. No one is arguing that was is the ideal, but this world is not the ideal and those who have power would take it from you. "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~ Thomas Jefferson And I believe the Western intelellctuals that Bond refers to are also known as "neo cons" to many, and it's a reaction to the old Reagan era philosophy of propping up foreign dictatorships to keep greater threats at bay. Surpisingly enough, many liberal intellectuals agree with this philosophy and quote it when arguing against the Iraq war. The "neo con" philosophy is very new and it's first real (JFK's Bay of Pigs was the first attempt) experiment in culture building is Iraq and we'll have to see how it turns out. Right now, it looks pretty positive over the long run after a period of uncertainty. Is it a bit totalitarian? Absolutely, but so was our occupation of Germany after WW2, and its success is derived by the idea of moral superiority; that forced democracy (toppling tyrants on behalf of it's people) is > tolerated tyranny/dictatorship. The philosphy is that an opressed people will always support an opportunity for self-rule regardless of how it is won. My opinion? The Iraqi people will have to fight for their freedom. I believe the allied military has given the Iraqi people an opportunity, but it is still unknown whether or not the people value their own freedom enough to fight for it once we leave and a second, lesser fight begins. Success or failure will be measure on how the battle ends and it's effects on the region. Until that happens, we will not see if the "moral authority" vision of foreign policy is correct or at least correct in the case of Iraq (an admittedly westernized nation). I have my doubts, because I don't know if people can value freedom when it is handed to them instead of won through the will of it's people. |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Quote:
For the record I am not opposed to military spending, just to how much spending it takes. For someone living in a country that doesnt even have a national health service, can they really justify the spending on wmd's. Quote:
Quote:
Why should these people fight it out and solve it themselves, when we messed it up. A tyrant though he was, at least saddam kept these people in check. Iraq was and is not a third world country. It was all about oil and Bush's personal vendetta ...'let's not forget, this is the guy that tried to kill my dad'... that says it all. Quote:
|
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
By the way, I'm not saying that America was any better, my point was that all of this is in the past, and it doesn't affect out current situation in the least. Long story short: Everyone you're angry with is DEAD and their kids are RETIRED or DEAD. Get over it and lets concentrate on reality. Searching back nearly 80 years ago for arguments only appeals to our emotional senses of vengeance and generational justice. Quote:
Why should these people fight it out and solve it themselves, when we messed it up. A tyrant though he was,at least saddam kept these people in check. Iraq was and is not a third world country. It was all about oil and Bush's personal vendetta ...'let's not forget, this is the guy that tried to kill my dad'... that says it all.[/quote] Does your financial expertise tell you all this as well? These are all old arguments that we've argued about relentlessly over the last 6 or more years, so I'll pass on beating a dead horse. You believe what you believe, and I believe what I believe. If there is nothing new to add except for stale platitudes like "he killed mah daddah!!", "blood for oil", etc. I think we can put this exchange to rest. |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Quote:
Anyway as I said in my origional post on this subject. I am going off on a tangent and this was not the point I wanted to discuss. Quote:
You want me to argue facts, do I really need to explain how Europe is directly affected by America and in turn China. It is a world trade circle. Made possible by, among many other factors. The petro chemical dollar, I trust you know what that is. And heres another fact, before everything else, money makes the world go round so my profession puts me in a perfect place for this discussion. Quote:
When we go to war against another country it comes down to a few basic facts, what the military and government want us the public to believe, and what is actually going on. Why are we in Afganistan? Opium, thats why! The backbone of the developed worlds medical and health treatments. The same drugs you get in paracetamol or asprin even morphine are all derived from one plant. Poppies, the same one they make heroine out of. Why are we in Iraq. Oil. 25% of the worlds supply of it. Enough to keep the US and Europe's economy strong for the next 50 years. The three most valuable commodities on the planet. G.O.D. Gold - Oil and Drugs EDIT - for the record. Yes this is what armies are for. But charity should start at home. England just printed 75 billion pounds in new banknotes. And there are still homeless people living in the streets in our country. |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Morphine and Heroin I knew since they are both opiates and walla you get opium from poppy seeds. Did not know about Aspirin or Paracetamol. |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Not all of them contain this, just most. A clue can come in the part of the word 'ine' like cod'ine' for exaple. Morphine, one of the most effective pain killers in the world. What do you put in your little head ache tablets? A derived form of it. Makes sense really ;) They even use it in horse tranquilisers. |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Looking up articles, most of the arguments are about whether to burn outright or buy and burn. http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/25/po...tary.html?_r=1 As for "trace amounts" of things, that is a straw man. There are trace amounts of everything in everything. There are trace amounts of peanuts in almost every processed food. That doesn't prove we fought the Civil War to get the southern Peanut fields. Quote:
You seem to think that a imperfect society is a failed society. What I think you are forgetting is what previous efforts to create perfect societies reaped their people... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazism http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communism |
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
|
Re: Canadian army....
Quote:
Potatoes vs. Blitzkrieg, bet you know who wins!!!!!! Seriously though, I took a Polish History course and although the Polish military gets shit for folding in WW2 (basically, that wasn't fair since Poland was struggling as a country through that stretch). But Poland was hugely influential in western Europe over the past 2000 years, and they were ahead of the times. The country had a solid army at one point, and it was refuge for all the people that the rest of Europe hated. I mostly kid about stuff.........except for my hatred towards Canada. :D |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:15 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GameTavern