Moore and Hezbollah sittin in a tree...

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Post by Coyote »

The Kernel wrote:Why was a final confrontation with Iraq inevitable? Iraq is no threat to the United States, nor was it ever post-Desert Storm.
As I pointed out, I don't believe that Iraq was a direct threat to the physical security of the United States, ie, I don't think they were going to drop paratroopers and lob nukes at us. A confrontation of some sort was inevitable because it sems we had three choices: let the situation sit as it was; call it off and leave Saddam alone; or try to allow for more sanctions or negotiations, ie, ratchet up existing pressure.

Ratcheting up existing pressure was politically untenable, since Saddam had turned America into teh universal bad guy by exploiting the suffering of his people, even though he had recourse to help them (oil-for-food/smart sanctions). So that wouldn't work.

Let the situation sit as it was-- a tense standoff with both sides hostile to each other-- while Iraqi suffering continued to play into the hands of Saddam's propaganda. See above.

Let Saddam go and display to the rest of the Middle East that Saddam stood firm while America blinked. The man becomes a hero and the next Nasser is created, a regional strongman who will push the limits of civilized behavior. We've already seen what he was capable of-- the chemical warfare wit Iran, invading Kuwait, bombing Israel, and mass graves of political disidents. So it's not like his kind of power was an unknown quanity.

We'd invested 13 years of sanctions, no-fly zones, and so on, all in the hopes of seeing through the UN resultions and the treaties that Saddam signed. Letting it all drop was not politically feasable.

You mentioned how the world was practically singing "Kum By Ya" with us during the Clinton years... I believe in a recent 60 Minuites interview even Clinton Himself agreed with the descision on "the Iraq thing" as he called it...
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.
Well, I never made a comment about those dictators, did I? Wait... I did say that I thought the Yugoslavian mission was a good idea but poorly executed, and even though I disliked Clinton as much as you dislike Bush, I didn't want to see unecesary suffering by any party involved... I think Yugoslavia sits only on huge stockpiles of nonexistium.

The world sat by and let Rwanda burn, Kofi Anan scolded the entire community for not only did we sit and watch, so did the French and all the other wonderful people of the world. I don't like the way we select and choose, it makes for a schitzophrenic foreign policy. It was wrong to support folks like, say, Pinochet and Mobuto Sese Seko, but we did. Every country has its share of dirty politics-- it's a fact. I don't like it, but I think in Iraq we are at least making an attempt to right a wrong that we allowed to fester.

You seem to be warming up the old "no blood for oil" chant. Save it. I'm sorry to say but as long as the economy of the entire planet turns on oil, then it is a valid strategic resource that will occassionally invite war. It used to be spice and opium. So sponge up your tears and buy a hybrid car-- I plan to-- and be a consumer who makes the world less dependent on our need to make dirty deals with asholes in the Middle East.
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.
How is it decided when it is "absolutely necessary"? We were already involved in the internal affairs of Iraq, nearly up to our necks. 1991-2003... lessee... 12 years, 8 years of which was during the Clinton administration and there were sanctions, no-fly zones, and starvations. But that was okay since it was during Clinton's era, and the world liked us then. Basically, after committing ourselves to "Regime Change" in Iraq (that was a Clinton comment, remember?) for 12 years, we had to shit or get off the pot.

"Kernel" wrote:
"Coyote" wrote: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...
So that justifies a full fledged invasion and occupation?
Um, actually, it was stipulated in the treaty that ended the Gulf War in 1991, that failure to provide access to the WMD sites would mean a resumption of hostilities. So, in a word, yeah.

Turns out Saddam didn't have any WMDs as near as we can tell. Then he was a double dumb-shit for not making it obvious, thus forestalling the invasion and saving all those lives. Still seems to me the responsibility rested with him. I hate to break the news to you, but not every bad descision on the face of this world originates from America.
give me a fucking break, if we attacked everyone that violated UN security resolutions, Israel would be a radioactive crater right now.
Actually, we displayed a great deal of patience for twelve years, remember also that from 1998 to 2001 or so the UN inspectors were kicked out after... horrors! Bill Clinton bombed Iraq in Operation Desert Fox for failure to comply with UN Inspectors!. Say it ain't so, Joe!

"kernel" wrote:
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.
Don't believe me, believe a French guy!:
"A French Philosopher who saw the Fucking Movie" wrote: Even less kind was France's superstar philosopher, Bernard-Henri Levy, who dismissed "Fahrenheit 9/11" as dishonest.

"When Michael Moore describes Iraq, before the American intervention, as a sort of oasis of peace and happiness, where people flew kites .... there wasn't only that," Levy said on RTL radio.

Levy noted that he opposed the war and considers Bush a "catastrophe for America." But, he added: "Saddam Hussein was also a horrible dictator. And that is not in the film of Michael Moore."
Maybe you'll believe the French Guy. After all, he's definitely not pro-Bush. Have another review here: http://www.theiowachannel.com/entertain ... etail.html
"da Kernel" wrote: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.
We invaded Iraq for many reasons, one of which I already agreed to was oil. Getting rid of Saddam as an annoying prick was another. The fact that even the French thought he had WMDs but were unwilling to do anything about it factors in there, unfortunately it was chosen as the main reason. Freeing the Iraqi people may have been low on GWBs list of priorities, but even GWB could not be blind to the political advantages of such an act-- so even if it weas done as a cynical ploy, the results are that the people are rid of a evil dictator.

Many Iraqis are indeed better off now than they were before, although certain Baathist officials are no longer living as pretty as they were. You'd be dismayed, I'm sure, at how optimistic many Iraqis are these days. But what the fuck do I know, I have met several dozen actual Iraqis and spoke with them about political subjects of the Middle East. You've had the chance to chit chat with...?
Kernel" wrote: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 people ARE frustrated that the power, water, and other things don't magically get lined with gold overnight. They are frustrated and we are the most obvious and immediate object of frustration for them. But if the people were truly as angry as you seem to imply, we'd have much, much more rebellion and fighting than we have, and we wouldn't have the ratio of 9 out of 10 insurgents being foreigners rather than locals.

And do you think that Hezbollah's warm fuzzy feelings about Moore was formed in a vacum?
"Kernel" wrote: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?
Ahh, so it is better to say that evil Coyote wants to suppress 'valid video documentation' in order to stifle criticism... when all else fails, imply the other guy may be a Nazi. Bah, Michael Moore's portrayal of troops in the scene I used as an example is the same "free speech" as yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. By presenting a certain image in certain ways, one can lead others to conclusions that are not necesarily based on fact. You are able to "lie" by only telling part of the story.

If Michael Moore took a picture of a Iraqi corpse on the side of the road.... and then used images of troops in a far-away base camp laughing at a joke their commander told them... and Moore splices those footages together and made it appear that the troops were laughing hysterically at the mangled corpse, then is that "valid video documentary"? Is that proper use or full abuse of the "Freedom Of Speech"? Freedom comes with responsibility, and as a "seroious documentarian" (ahem) Moore has a responsibility to the truth.

Would you feel that a "fair representation" of America was being made if you found that a "documentarian" of Moore's caliber were going to remote villages in India, showing them nothing but footage of Ku Klux Klan rallies and saying "this is America"?
Either actually watch the movie or shut the fuck up about it

Well, if that is the way you feel about it, then
Either enlist and get over here, or you have no right to have an opinion about the war


Actually I don't believe that... see, I find it funny that Moore is allowed to say as he chooses ... you get to have an opinion about a war you've not been to... but I don't seem to get an opinion about the movie until I've seen it... (did these scenes I describe not happen at all? Was there some way to put a "happy spin" on the hooded prisoner that I haven't heard of? Please enlighten me). I intend to see the movie (when I can get it for free at the library).

But I also saw Bowling for Columbine and found it to be full of half-truths and misleads as well (other threads have beat this to death already). It also appears that I am not the only person to have a negative impression of the movie based on what I've heard so far about it.
"Kernel" wrote:Blah, blah, blah, more speculation on your part based on third hand information. Got any real examples to provide?
Leith, the truck driver who I rode with one day knew the most English. He would translate bits of conversations from the other drivers. One day as the convoy was halted for a roadside bomb he heard two other drivers talking, a Shia'a and a Christian-- "Why do they want to atack the Americans?" one driver asked, "They are good guys, helping us".

Ali, the driver I rode with in our fourth run, pointed to a model of the Haram al-Sharif and said, "you know this?" "Haram al-Sahrif," I replied, "Palestine." Actuially, it is in th eOld City of Jerusalem and while the Dome is controlled by the PA, it is on Israeli land. "Yes, Palestine," he said, and put his hands together, side-by-side, "Palestine and Israel" "Salaam," I said, which means 'Peace'. "Salaam" he replied, his hands still together (only for a second... he was driving, after all)...

Hassam (I think that was his name) who's truck was blown up in a car bomb attack... came back to work with us despite the threats made to him. He claims to be "unafraid" of them and proud to be working with us.

Face it, I have probably mixed with more Iraqis than you and Moore combined. I'm sorry to inform you that many people here like us. Oh, sure, we get the bombings and the mortar attack (I mised one by 100 feet just 6 days ago). I tell you this because in the flood of news and tales of hate and death and murder, there actually are decent things going on here. I hope your perceptions are not shattered.
...you could hold back on forming an opinion about it until actually watching it like a rational person might do...
After all, no one ever reads a review about a movie with the intent to see if it is worth their while to go see it or not. You could try looking at some dissenting opinions as well, too.
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?
You're the one throwing down the gauntlet, why don't you invite him? And I use others arguments because I was given the impression that I needed to back up some of my statements with outside sources.
Right, so now we should censor films based on what might incite terrorism (read: disension against the state). Welcome to a totalitarian dictatorship.
There you go again with the Nazi angle. Where did I say "censor"? I sayid "use giood judgement" and don't claim bald propaganda as "documentary". I remember implying that Moore had a right to his opinion of Bush, did I not?
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....

I don't know what's really in their minds, so I can't say. But i stick by my statements that we are doing the right thing here.
Something about Libertarianism always bothered me. Then one day, I realized what it was:
Libertarian philosophy can be boiled down to the phrase, "Work Will Make You Free."


In Libertarianism, there is no Government, so the Bosses are free to exploit the Workers.
In Communism, there is no Government, so the Workers are free to exploit the Bosses.
So in Libertarianism, man exploits man, but in Communism, its the other way around!

If all you want to do is have some harmless, mindless fun, go H3RE INST3ADZ0RZ!!
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Post by Lord Poe »

Coyote wrote:I find it funny that Moore is allowed to say as he chooses ... you get to have an opinion about a war you've not been to... but I don't seem to get an opinion about the movie until I've seen it...
Excellent comeback, IMO.
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Post by SirNitram »

Lord Poe wrote:
Coyote wrote:I find it funny that Moore is allowed to say as he chooses ... you get to have an opinion about a war you've not been to... but I don't seem to get an opinion about the movie until I've seen it...
Excellent comeback, IMO.
If one wants to be considered as doing the things they decry in others, I suppose so...
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Post by Galvatron »

Coyote wrote:I find it funny that Moore is allowed to say as he chooses ... you get to have an opinion about a war you've not been to... but I don't seem to get an opinion about the movie until I've seen it...
I'd call that a false analogy.
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Post by Andrew J. »

Coyote wrote:I find it funny that Moore is allowed to say as he chooses ... you get to have an opinion about a war you've not been to... but I don't seem to get an opinion about the movie until I've seen it...
It is slightly easier to experience the movie first-hand than it is to experience the war in Iraq first-hand. You don't need to meet the physical standards required by the US military, to name just one example. :P
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Post by Lord Poe »

SirNitram wrote:If one wants to be considered as doing the things they decry in others, I suppose so...
You say tomAto, I say tomAAto...
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Post by SirNitram »

Lord Poe wrote:
SirNitram wrote:If one wants to be considered as doing the things they decry in others, I suppose so...
You say tomAto, I say tomAAto...
And it's Hypocrisy either way to whine about something and then do it yourself. :)
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Post by Lord Poe »

SirNitram wrote:And it's Hypocrisy either way to whine about something and then do it yourself. :)
I'm sorry....when did Coyote produce that political opinion movie of his?
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Post by SirNitram »

Lord Poe wrote:
SirNitram wrote:And it's Hypocrisy either way to whine about something and then do it yourself. :)
I'm sorry....when did Coyote produce that political opinion movie of his?
Are you being purposefully dense? He complains about someone passing judgement without seeing things first hand... Yet he himself is doign the same.
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Post by Lord Poe »

SirNitram wrote:Are you being purposefully dense? He complains about someone passing judgement without seeing things first hand... Yet he himself is doign the same.
No, he's giving back what he's getting. He's being screamed at for taking selective scenes he's heard about in F/911 out of "context" by those that think thry're seeing the "real" complete truth about Iraq, and telling you the reality of what he HIMSELF has witnessed.

And it wasn't through the lens or editor of someone with an agenda. If you can't understand that, then you're shy of a few thousand brain cells that I thought you had in what appears to be my sad overestimation of you.

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Post by Howedar »

It is physically impossible for one man to see everything there is to see in the Iraq conflict - there are always going to be incidents and occurances that were not seen firsthand.

On the other hand, it is not at all difficult to see a movie in its entirity.
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Post by Andrew J. »

Lord Poe wrote:No, he's giving back what he's getting. He's being screamed at for taking selective scenes he's heard about in F/911 out of "context" by those that think thry're seeing the "real" complete truth about Iraq, and telling you the reality of what he HIMSELF has witnessed.
Substitute "the movie" for "Iraq" in that quote and it might not be a total strawman.
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Post by Plekhanov »

Coyote wrote:So my frustration with Moore should be obvious by now-- as bad as Moore is, I doubt he would seek out Hezbollah to pander to them, but his portrayal of events here, while aimed at GW Bush, have the unintentional effect of encouraging a violent terrorist group. It is like handing ammunition to the enemy, in this case, propaganda support.
How about you address the point that Hezbollah also use Mel Gibson’s “The Passion” in their propaganda and that the film was well received in much of the middle east because it showed the crimes of “the jews”. Are you going to accuse Gibson and anti-Semitism and hating Israelis and wanting to see them killed because his film provided “moral support for the enemy?” and don’t forget that for many radical Muslims Israel and the US are essentially the same so by supporting the enemies of Israel Gibson is effectively fuelling the insurgency in Iraq (the invasion of which was apparently a Zionist plot after all).

Gibson faced accusations that his film was anti-Semitic before it came out yet he pushed ahead with it clearly not caring about the effects the film might have on an audience in the Middle East already very susceptible to anti-Semitism, but he ignored these warnings and proceeded with the film.

“So my frustration with” Gibson “should be obvious by now-- as bad as” Gibson “is, I doubt he would seek out Hezbollah to pander to them, but his portrayal of” the Jesus’s Crucifixion “while aimed at” Christians and potential Christians will “have the unintentional effect of encouraging a violent terrorist group. It is like handing ammunition to the enemy, in this case, propaganda support”

Gibson’s “quest for publicity and desire to” spread Christianity “has caused him to use poor judgement in his very public statement, which is what this movie is. I feel that others besides” those who convert to Christianity after seeing the Passion “and the reputation of the US troops” who are in the minds of militant Muslims Zionist stooges “will suffer as well.”

Now those last 3 paragraphs are bullshit Gibson isn’t responsible for the ways in which others might misuse what to him was a heartfelt labour of love (no matter how hateful The Passion might be in my opinion). But it worth bearing in mind that I used the same logic and many of the same words that you used to condemn Moore with a few substitutions in building my BS accusation that Gibson is fuelling the insurgency.

Moore made Fahrenheit 9/11 because he loves America and hates what Bush is doing to it. F.9/11 is Moore’s heartfelt response to Bush’s disastrous leadership and Moore is no more responsible for how others might misuse and misinterpret his film than Gibson is.
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Post by Coyote »

Hello, first off I'd like to apologize for two things: one, my atrocious editing on my last post making nearly unreadable (or at least painful)... we are quite limited in the amount of computer time we get so I did not have the opportunity to preview that before leaving...

And secondly my lateness in responding. I've since had the opportunity to come home on 2 weeks leave so I am now in Boise again and I mention this because it has some bearing on the social-political discourse I've seen here sine I left...

Okay, that said--

Sir Nitram, sorry but I was not intending to place a double standard on myself and Kernel's discourse. I was indeed trying to show the irony of the situation. It would indeed be very difficult for Kernel to go over and see Iraq for himself, and what has to be borne in mind was that for me, over there, Moore's movie is not in any theater I can go to-- so in other words, it is physically impossible for me to see the movie over there and I have no choice but to rely on reviews.

Hence the sarcasm on my part-- and I followed it up with the sentence that was unfortunately in black, that "no, I do not actually believe this"-- Kernel has a right to have an opinion on Iraq even without being there. He has access only to news sources which I think will be mostly biased, but despite the fact that I disgree with him politically I still think he is most likely a rational human being and can make his own choices.

So this is where I get into the changes I have seen in US society since coming back. I see polarization, a lot of it, and it is reflected in the bookstores and magazine stands of such disparate places as Bangor, Maine; Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas; and Phoenix, Arizona, the three airports where my plane touched down on the way home.

Now I know that my observations are not part of a scientific survey with all possible elements weighed into perspective. I see only what Joe Average sees-- the only "special" insight I have is my direct involvement with the situation in Iraq, and that is limited to a specific geographical area. I get my news of, say, Basra from a variety of news sites such as CNN, Fox, and BBC; Time, Newsweek, the Economist; also Stars and Stripes newspaper, Army Times, and Armed Forces Network.

What I see is a great deal of polarization, and that is reflected in the discourse between us here. Some of us have seen or read certain things and accept it as an unassailable truth while discounting dissenting opinions. I am as guilty of this as the next guy as I am only human. But votes in the elections will not be held by passionless scientists who stick to the facts, votes will instead be cast by the ordinary citizen who may as easily be swayed by one piece of news or another, or some other personal reason-- maybe even by nothing more logical than by some ideological bent. In fact, that seems to be most likely.

And that sucks, because if there is any time when people need to cast votes based on rational thought rather that idealogical bean-counting, it is now. It is disappointing for me to be placed in the camp of right-wing Bush apologistas simply because I happen to agree with the war and am sharply critical of what I see are lies from the media (including but not limited to Moore). I am sharply critical of Bush but because I am not dancing around the flames chanting "down with Chimpy McDeath" then I am simply pigeonholed into the Bush camp.

The situation in Iraq is not as bad as it is portrayed and I think we are making very positive change in the region. I also think Bush fucked it up by not confirming his reasons for going to war and by alienating our allies. I also fault many previous American (and in some cases, European) governments on both right and left for failing to understand the region, for not even trying to understand, and for supporting tyrants in order to square away deals.

The West in general, not just America, has been inconsistent in foreign policy in general but with the Arab lands especially. We court human rights when it suits us and ignore them when it doesn't. But bear in mind that this happens all over the world. Ask Somalis what happens at the hands of Candian paratroopers; ask Algerians what happens when every day is Abu Ghraib at the hands of the 'civilized' French.

I think every media lie that plays into the hands of the enemy, accidentally or intentionally, is fair game for criticism. When the US or any Western power fucks up and does something that hands justification to the enemy they are also open to criticism. I criticise both equally so just because I attack the sacred cow of Michael Moore does not put me in the Bush Cheerleading Academy.

So basically I respect your opinions, I may despise them or grumble about idealogical childishness, but I realize you may well be doing the same thing about me. Oh well. And of course everyone walks away thinking we are right and the other guy is just ignorant/inept/whatever.

So yes, I'll see the damn movie when it suits me, but at the same time, I say others should open themselves up to alternate points of view too and recognize that others people's opinions can be just as valid and they may know something you don't. A brave man looks his ideology in the eye and challenges it since you don't want it pulling your leash when you should be thinking. This is not a rebuke of Kernel or Plekhanov, this is something we all need to think of from time to time. It should not be hard in this crowd...

I too once was far more to the right than I am now. Had you caught me over a dozen years ago I would have been one of the Republican Cheerleaders indeed. A lot has changed since I actually went out to meet people who are different and realize that they have a point and that my way is not always the best way for all. I shucked things like viscious homophobia and racial ignorance for enlightment because it is better to be discomforted by such things than to live in a mental vacuum.

That doesn't mean I won't criticise... I obviously still do criticise things I think are wrong, both Moore and Bush being handy examples here. I retain that right to make judgement calls about such things.

Anyhow, I have to go, I'm not spending my whole vacation blabbing here.

Later.
Something about Libertarianism always bothered me. Then one day, I realized what it was:
Libertarian philosophy can be boiled down to the phrase, "Work Will Make You Free."


In Libertarianism, there is no Government, so the Bosses are free to exploit the Workers.
In Communism, there is no Government, so the Workers are free to exploit the Bosses.
So in Libertarianism, man exploits man, but in Communism, its the other way around!

If all you want to do is have some harmless, mindless fun, go H3RE INST3ADZ0RZ!!
Grrr! Fight my Brute, you pansy!
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