Coyote wrote:Kernel, Plekhanov, yes, I am pissed off at the way the war was set up because of the reasons I have stated-- we ended up being alienated by those who could most help us. I've said before and I say again, I am not supporting Bush in any of this-- he has made things far more difficult for the US than was neccesary.
Understatment of the century. At the end of the Clinton Presidency, pretty much the entire civilized world was okay with the United States. Now they are all pissed at us.b
That said, I believe that a final confrontation with Iraq was inevitable. The nature of that final confrontation was still up for grabs. But the US government has proven to be remarkably inept at grasping Arab issues and social values-- this has been going on for decades, long before GW Bush and even before Israel came into the scene.
Why was a final confrontation with Iraq inevitable? Iraq is no threat to the United States, nor was it ever post-Desert Storm. And don't even bother trying to moralize the situation, you know as well as I do that there are plenty of countries out there with ruthless dictators that we ignore that don't happen to be sitting on a huge supply of precious resources.
Bush had to play the hand that was dealt-- a prostrated Iraq that had turned its physical weakness into a moral strength by carping about how the people were suffering under the sanctions. He also refused to allow the WMD inspectors to do their jobs, something spelled out in the treaty halting the Gulf War. Bush could continue the sanctions, the oil-for-food program which was abused by Saddam, and enforcing the no-fly zones. Or he could capitulate to Saddam and lift all restrictions, allowing things in Iraq to basically return to normal so that one day Uday and/or Qusay could take control there.
Sure, why not? It is not our job to get involved in the internal politics of other nations unless it is absolutely necessary. There are plenty of worse dictators than Saddam to chase down after all.
Or what else? Saddam had proven remarkably resistent to any negotiation. He had no WMDs but why was he so vehement about refusing the inspectors then, and restricting their movements? The UN, EU, and others were convinced he was hiding something. He was not going to step down, apologize, or relinquish power in any way shape or form. He was abusing the smart-sanctions and the oil-for-food program, keeping his people in poverty for the propaganda benefit it brought.
So that justifies a full fledged invasion and occupation? Give me a fucking break, if we attacked everyone that violated UN security resolutions, Israel would be a radioactive crater right now.
But folks like Moore or others never mention this. No, all the misery here is 100% George W. Bush's fault. Not a mention of Saddam's abuses, the mass graves, chemical warfare, etc.
Once again, you speak from total ignorace of Moore's thesis. At no time during F-9/11 did he make the point that Saddam was a good guy.
But why isn't Saddam's responsibility for this taken into account? He could have used the oil for food program to see to the needs of his people but did not-- how is that Bush's fault? How come the reopening of schools and the resumption of commerce here not acknowledged?
All of which is irrelevent to the issue here which is that Bush did not invade Iraq to free its people, nor are they better off under the new regime, despite your protests to the contrary. Saddam's propeganda machine is gone, yet widespread hatred of the American occupation is widespread. Do you think this feeling was formed in a vaccuum?
The thing is, Yasmin-Alibhi Brown (yes, at least she honestly and openly yearns for others to suffer for her political desires, and is willing to admit it, I'll give her that) and Michael Moore carp on the evils of GW Bush without recognizing that militant religious fanatics and tyrant dictators have done far more, and far worse, for the region.
Total and complete Red Herring to Moore's argument which I must again point out that you obviously have no grasp of whatsoever.
So that's where I am seing things: you claim you don't want our lives thrown away for nothing, yet when a movie like "Farenheit 9-11" comes out that will stir up anger and possibly lead to more deaths.
Or it could lead to a change in the policy of the administration and save even MORE lives. Are you done with your pointless hypotheticals yet or would you like to put Moore on trial for causing the potential deaths of American soldiers?
So the US troops come across in a good light? Here, in a review of the movie by Roger Ebert, who is probably no fan of GW Bush himself:
Is this going to play well in the Arab world? There has to be a reason why someone like Hezbollah liked this flick-- a movie portraying US troops as heroic certainly won't be endorsed by them. Note in the review that he also focuses on troops that are angry with the war--
Ahh, I see, so it is better to supress valid video documentation because you feel it threatens the war movement. Obviously you have no concept of what freedom of speech is about do you?
There's an excellent on-point quote about this from the movie
The Contender: "Our morals only mean something if we stick to them when it's inconvenient".
So he talks only with soldiers that hate the war, and amputees, always a powerful anti-war statement, and while not mentioned in the Ebert review I have heard of the display of the crying mother in Michigan. I'm sure there is absolutely nothing in any of this that a terrorist could possibly find consoling.
I'm sick and tired of your total misrepresenatation of the film based on your reading of movie reviews. I remember the scenes in question EXTREMELY WELL (I've seen the movie three times) and your interpretation of them is completely wide of the mark.
Get this through your fucking thick skull:
Either actually watch the movie or shut the fuck up about it
I'm not saying everything here is roses, its not. There are a lot of complaints and there are some soldiers here who feel the war is unjustified. But Moore seems to be taking ONLY the dissenting and angry voices and pasing this off as a "documentary" that encourages not just resistance to Bush (politically justified) but since the average frustrated Arab probably can't get at GW Bush, he has to sek other, nearby targets instead. Guys like us, or the Iraqi truck drivers who work with us. Many times, they are the ones that suffer since they are softer targets.
Blah, blah, blah, more speculation on your part based on third hand information. Got any real examples to provide?
It is true, I have to rely on reviews and tales from others that have seen the film, but just as I don't think you need to be here just to have an opinion about the war, I can read the reviews both for and against and form opinions as well. Another excerpt from Chris Hitchens at MSN:
Or you could hold back on forming an opinion about it until actually watching it like a rational person might do...
: In this peaceable kingdom, according to Moore's flabbergasting choice of film shots, children are flying little kites, shoppers are smiling in the sunshine, and the gentle rhythms of life are undisturbed. Then—wham! From the night sky come the terror weapons of American imperialism. Watching the clips Moore uses, and recalling them well, I can recognize various Saddam palaces and military and police centers getting the treatment...
If Chris Hitchens wants to defend that interpretation at SDN I'd be glad to blast him to bits over it. In the meantime, how about you stop using other people's arguments?
... I'll just say that the "insurgent" side is presented in this film as justifiably outraged, whereas the 30-year record of Baathist war crimes and repression and aggression is not mentioned once. (Actually, that's not quite right. It is briefly mentioned but only, and smarmily, because of the bad period when Washington preferred Saddam to the likewise unmentioned Ayatollah Khomeini.)
Oh it's mentioned alright, but so is the fact that Bush's GOP predecessors were in full support of it, the same men that are now serving on his cabinet.
Hm, nothing in that a terrorist might take heart in.
Right, so now we should censor films based on what
might incite terrorism (read: disension against the state). Welcome to a totalitarian dictatorship.
It is one thing to be anti-Bush. God knows he's opened himself up for a lot of criticism. I don't like him, I don't trust him, and I don't plan to vote for him. I recognize the mistakes he's made in leading up to and conducting this war. But I still think that while we are here we are doing the right thing and that Moore's point of view will serve to give the enemy a sense of encouragement, posibly leading to nore of the deaths which he and others say thay want to prevent.
There's no easy way to say this so I'm just going to say it: too fucking bad. Moore is excercising his right to express his opinions and if you have a problem with that take it up with the signitories of the Constitution.
Could the war have been avoided? Maybe, maybe not, we had little wiggle room. I think we would have been here anyway at some point but it would be better to be here with our allies and with a more solid plan. That does not change my opinion that we are still bringing positive change to the area, change that is long overdue.
Many American (and European) governemnts have propped up dictators here before, and it is wrong. Now we are trying to clean one of them out. Encouraging the terrorists does not help.
You have got to be fucking joking. Just because there is a moral rationalization that is possible for the Iraq war doesn't make it right, nor does it make it the agenda of those fighting the war. If the agenda was really to take out a dictator that was terrorizing its citizens, we have TONS of better targets to choose from in dozens of African nations alone. But of course, none of them are sitting on a huge oil reserve...