Author Topic: Thanks Alot, Spain....  (Read 1128 times)

storch

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #45 on: July 09, 2004, 10:59:25 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by cpxxx
My point Lazs is that damaging your own country to fight terrorism doesn't work. Terrorism is like smoke. You can fight the smoke all day but won't win unless you  extinguish the fire. Even a small fire can cause a lot of smoke.

Kneejerk reactions don't work. Most countries with terrorist problems learned that the hard way.  Americans are not stupid and they learn fast. But Americans are on a steep learning curve.


We will find, manipulate conditions, control and anhiliate them because we are the greatest power on earth.  resistence is futile.

Offline lazs2

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #46 on: July 09, 2004, 11:02:04 AM »
well then perhaps we should learn from the countries that have been successful in stopping terrorism like ireland for instance?   france?  spain?   which?

Maybe it is you who is on a steep learning curve... maybe it is because we had 8 years of european like thought that we are in the mess that you are in?

what would kerry do to combat terrorism?    What would you suggest?

I suggest hunting down all the people who are known terrorists and all the people who fund them... I propose pointing out to countries that a govenment that supports terrorists is a government that is about to be replaced.

lazs

Offline Habu

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #47 on: July 09, 2004, 11:48:34 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by cpxxx
So now it's Spain's fault. Add them to the same hate list as France and let us all forget who the real enemy is.  Terrorism is working by dividing America from it's friends and eroding everyone's rights, reducing our freedom to travel and increasing fears.  That's how terrorism works.

Don't play their game.


But we can still hate France right?

Offline Westy

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #48 on: July 09, 2004, 11:51:08 AM »
Why of course!!

For if there is at least one thing in this day and age that we have in an overabundance of in this country it is hate.

storch

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #49 on: July 09, 2004, 11:52:16 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Westy
Why of course!!

For if there is at least one thing in this day and age that we have in an overabundance of in this country it is hate.


Spoken like a true liberal

Offline Edbert

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Thanks Alot, Spain....
« Reply #50 on: July 09, 2004, 12:00:52 PM »
Great op-ed piece in the Washington Post today:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37954-2004Jul8.html

Site requires a login (seems they all do these days) so I'll paste it in here in case you don't have/want one...
_____________________________ _
Blixful Amnesia

By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, July 9, 2004; Page A19


Thank God for Hans Blix. Whenever we become lax and forgetful about how the world changed on Sept. 11, former chief inspector Blix is there to make the case for mindless complacency. In a recent speech in Vienna he warned that one should be wary of the claim that "the risk that reckless groups and governments might acquire weapons of mass destruction is the greatest problem facing our world today."
Why? Because "to hundreds of millions of people around the world, the big existential issue is hunger, and also that wherever you live on this planet, the risk of global warming and other environmental threats are existential."

Here we are at the crux of a debate over the United States'
aggressive interventionism of the past few years. Is Islamic radicalism in potential alliance with terrorist states that possess such weapons a threat to the very existence (hence:
"existential") of the United States and of civilization itself?

On Sept. 12, 2001, and for many months after, that proposition was so self-evident that it commanded near unanimous support. With time -- three years in which, contrary to every expectation and prediction, the second shoe never dropped -- that consensus has evaporated.

The new idea, expressed by Blix representing the decadent European left, and recently amplified by Michael Moore representing the paranoid American left, is that this existential threat is vastly overblown. Indeed, deliberately overblown by a corrupt/clueless (take your pick) President Bush to justify American aggression for reasons of . . . and here is where the left gets a little fuzzy, not quite being able to decide whether American aggression is intended simply to enrich multinational corporations -- or maybe just Halliburton alone -- with fat war contracts, distract from alleged failure in Afghanistan, satisfy some primal masculine urge or boost poll ratings.

We have come a long way in three years. The idea that Sept.
11 was a historic turning point, a wake-up call to a war declared by our enemies but ignored by us, has begun to fade. The week after the attacks, the late-night comedy shows went dark -- and upon returning to the air they were almost apologetic about telling jokes, any jokes, ever again. Today, Moore produces a full-length film parody of Sept. 11 and its aftermath that is not just highly celebrated but commands a huge popular audience. To be sure, Moore's version is not quite as crazed as the French bestseller claiming that the planes that crashed into the World Trade Center were remotely controlled by the CIA at the behest of the president. Moore merely implies some sinister plot, citing connections between the Bush and bin Laden families. It's a long way from two years ago, when Rep. Cynthia McKinney was run out of Congress for suggesting that Bush had foreknowledge. (She is today in a tight race, with a very good chance of regaining her seat.)

Unlike the French book or the Moore movie, Blix is not deranged. He is merely in denial, discounting the uniqueness of the WMD-terrorism issue by comparing it to global warming and hunger. Yes, hunger is an existential issue to the people suffering it. As are car accidents, heart disease and earthquakes. But they hardly threaten to destroy civilization. Hunger is a scourge that has always been with us and that has not been a threat to humanity's existence for at least 1,000 years. Global warming might one day be, but not for decades, or even centuries, and with a gradualness that will leave years for countermeasures.

There is no gradualness and there are no countermeasures to a dozen nuclear warheads detonating simultaneously in U.S.
cities. Think of what just two envelopes of anthrax did to paralyze the capital of the world's greatest superpower. A serious, coordinated attack on the United States using weapons of mass destruction could so shatter America as a functioning, advanced society that it would take generations to rebuild.

What is so dismaying is that such an obvious truth needs repeating. The passage of time, the propaganda of the anti-American left and the setbacks in Iraq have changed nothing of that truth. This is the first time in history that the knowledge of how to make society-destroying weapons has been democratized. Today small radical groups allied with small radical states can do the kind of damage to the world that in the past only a great, strategically located and industrialized power such as Germany or Japan could do.

It is a new world and exceedingly dangerous. Everything is at stake. We are now deeply engaged in a breast-beating exercise for not having connected the dots before Sept. 11.
And yet here we are three years after Sept. 11, with the dots already connected, and we are under a powerful urge to ignore them completely.

letters@charleskrauthammer.com


C 2004 The Washington Post Company