T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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619.1 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:05 | 17 |
|
Do you devalue life if you are prepared to fight to liberate others,
or stop attrocities happening to others?
Do you cross the road to the other side?
The men and women who join up have volunteered NOT to cross the road.
The only debate left is whether you think the road is the right one.
I, and many others, believe it is.
Heather
|
619.2 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:32 | 24 |
|
RE: .0
I suppose there are many ways to look at it.
I feel the lives of each and every person is valuable and should be
spared this awful situation. But I also believe in every person's
right to freedom from oppression.
I know many people in the US Armed Forces (having grown up in a
military town). From talking with these people and knowing them as
well as I do, a very large majority of them WANT to be over there.
They WANT and are devoted to guarenteeing a person's right to freedom.
Of course, no one WANTS war, no one WANTS bloodshed, but many of the
military personnel I know are willing to die for the cause of freedom.
And I know I am too. What is my life as compared to the lives of
millions of innocent people. If I lost my life for the cause of
freedom for them, it would be worth it.
kathy
|
619.3 | IMO | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:38 | 6 |
| re .0, we aren't over there to protect any ideal of freedom. We are
over there to protect US oil interests. The people who come back in
body bags will have died to protect oil interests, not freedom.
Lorna
|
619.4 | it's oil baby...all oil | MSBVLS::MARCOTTE | QUALITY...SINCE LAST THURSDAY | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:43 | 5 |
| re: .3
I agree with you 100% on this. I know that if Kuwait(sp?) and
Saudi-Arabia's chief export were dates...we would not have troops
over there, and hussien would not be where he is.
|
619.5 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Tue Jan 08 1991 10:44 | 11 |
|
Since current world oil production is higher than it was pre-invasion I
will have to say once again that I think this "fighting for oil" line
is over simplistic.
But then nobody is claiming that we are going to fight for democracy.
Freedom is only the absence of an unwelcome occupying power, not the
presence of US style democracy.
/. Ian .\
|
619.6 | Skip that premise | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jan 08 1991 11:39 | 23 |
| Michele,
The idea, "We need to do more <x> here before we are justified
in doing <x'> anywhere else" is a phony argument.
It is phony because one can *always* claim that more <x> needs
to be done. Whether its a claim that we need more and better
health care in Massachusetts, or that Womannotes needs to be more
free of any individual's perception of sexism, or that our society
needs to address the suffering of its members more attentively, it
is a claim that never ends.
Now, I am not advocating that the US "not take care of all of the
people who live here". I suggest weighing the level of current
care here against the level of current care there. Are they
wildly disparate? In our favor? If yes, then ignore the claim
that we must take care of our people first. If no, then address
the claim.
Since I believe the answer is yes, I recommend examining the situation
in the Persian Gulf on its own merits.
Ann B.
|
619.7 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Tue Jan 08 1991 11:48 | 27 |
| .2
Well, my experiences as an ex military wife whose husband was MIA
in Vietnam, and who just recently spoke to him about the desert
thing is this...
Yes, some of them *want* to be there but not for the reason of
"preserving life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
Some (and I will say most) of the military men I know want to
go to war, because of the perceived "glory" of it. Remember
John Wayne? Well, we can blame this mess on him. :-)
After also taking a course in Vietnam and the media, it has
become very clear to me that the movies we watch today; ie.
Platoon, etc. are not anti-war movies at all; in fact, they
glorify the gore, the passion, the experience. And in this class,
our instructor asked the young men if they would go to war even
after seeing what it can be like, every one of them said 'yes.'
"Protecting America" has nothing to do with it.
IMHO, Bush has watched too many John Wayne movies; he's using
others' lives to assert his own masculinity.
IMHO of course.
Maia
|
619.8 | still confused | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Tue Jan 08 1991 11:56 | 30 |
|
Ann,
I thought about your note, and I fail to see comparing our level
of care to theirs. What difference does that make? Is your thought
based on the fact that our level of care should be the same as theirs?
I disagree if this is so. From my understanding of the monies, the
money for care per person is much more available over there than it is
here.
I am not using my thought that we should take care of our people before
venturing out is not meant to be an argument. It is an opinion which
I feel is very valid. Why should our government allow the conditions
which clearly have a negative impact on the nation to continue?
Part of what I see in this situation is that the money being spent is
in my opinion not being spent on the correct situation.
How can the US help other people when a very large segment of its own
population needs help? I am seeing wasted US money and wasted US
lives.
I still fail to honestly understand why they are there in the first
place. Why aren't the rest of the nations that voted for action in
the UN vote standing right next to the soldiers from the US?
Michele
|
619.9 | | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:35 | 15 |
| Even if the only reason we go to war is for the economic reasons,
our people are still dying for the American way of life. If we were
to lose the oil that country supplied we could be in for dire
consequences.
I would like to see this nation look at other means of fuel, but until
this happens we should protect our interests.
As to why other countries won't send as much support...I don't know.
This country has always been a leader in world polotics. I'm not too
suprised other countries are using the sit back and wait theory.
L.J.
|
619.10 | reasonable comparison | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:56 | 12 |
|
i think comparing our governments activities in the domestic realm
versus the foreign or military realms is quite reasonable. from the
larger perspective, the question is 'what is the proper function of
government?' i believe the constituion says something like 'provide
for the common welfare'. presumably some people believe that fighting
in the gulf does indeed provide for the common welfare. i, however
(and many people), honestly believe that fighting is not for the
common welfare.
(one way of determining that might be to note how much good could be
done for our own people with the money being used in the gulf)
|
619.11 | We don't *have* the money | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Jan 08 1991 13:25 | 12 |
|
re .10:
Nit, Joe: I cringe when I hear people saying "Let's do something
better with the money".
WE DON'T HAVE THE MONEY!!
Excuse me for shouting, but we're financing this war solely on
debt! Let's not pretend there's money to spend. My view is that
it shouldn't be spent at all.
|
619.12 | $ | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:03 | 3 |
|
who is 'we'?
|
619.13 | The US is not quite alone | AYOV27::GHERMAN | I need a little time | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:17 | 19 |
| re 619.8 why aren't other nations standing by the US?
Total allied troops= 640,000
of which US troops 350,000
Total allied tanks = 4,200
of which US tanks 2,250
Total allied planes= 2,500 (combat only)
of which US planes 1,450
So while the US has over half the forces there, it is by no means alone.
Even Bangladesh has 2,000 troops in the UN forces.
Regards,
George
(Source- Scotland on Sunday this past weekend)
|
619.14 | why is the US the majority party? | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:43 | 11 |
|
re 13
George,
Thanks for the numbers. By your numbers the US is half of the entire
forces there. Sure there are other countries there, but why does the
US have to be the majority party in this?
Michele
|
619.15 | | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:27 | 11 |
| RE: 14
One posible answer:
Because the U.S. is a world leader and a good leader is one that leads
by example.
L.J.
|
619.16 | | TALLIS::KIRK | Matt Kirk | Tue Jan 08 1991 18:18 | 23 |
| re .15 - Because George Bush has a recession on his hands. Military action
(even deployment) tends to end recessions. Also, the military doesn't
want to reduce, and unless it finds a reason to exist in its current
size it'll have it's budget now.
After whatever happens in the middle east ends, the government will
be arguing for no military cuts because if we had cut it we wouldn't
have been able to send as many troops as we did.
re -.2 (?) - troop percentages.
With the exception of the U.S., Great Britain, Egypt, and (I think)
Syria, no other countries have committed more than a small fraction
of their troops. Egypt wants to be a significant regional player
again. Syria is an enemy of Iraq (our friend-of-the-month). Great
Britain has a government with views that are very similar to that of
the U.S. (which came first, I wonder).
Perhaps most of the other countries want to let those four countries
take the bulk of the casualties and expenses. Perhaps they feel
that losses won't go over well.
re -.1: I don't think being a "world leader" has anything to do with it.
|
619.18 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | One of the Happy Generations | Wed Jan 09 1991 02:24 | 4 |
| We also have the biggest financial resources...er, make that the
biggest debt...
--- jerry
|
619.19 | y | MSBVLS::MARCOTTE | QUALITY...SINCE LAST THURSDAY | Wed Jan 09 1991 06:43 | 2 |
| our forces are in the majority because maybe we are the biggest user
of foreign oil?
|
619.20 | | STKHLM::RYDEN | Dr of Comparative Irrelevance | Wed Jan 09 1991 08:10 | 6 |
|
I was under the impression that US is being sponsored by Saudi Arabia
and the exiled leaders of Kuwait...
??
Bo
|
619.21 | Bush is still a 4-letter word | BABBLE::MEAGHER | | Wed Jan 09 1991 09:29 | 19 |
| The U.S. is over there because we have strategic interests there. If the Middle
East had nothing of value to us (such as oil), we wouldn't be there.
We didn't do anything when Afghanistan was overrun, we aren't doing anything in
Africa (which is experiencing terrible carnage right now).
Secondarily, I think we're there to help prop Bush up. If we win the war, he'll
be a hero and we can feel on top of things again in spite of our sputtering
economy.
If we lose the war, we can blame our sputtering econony on the fact that we had
to spend so much money on the war, and nobody else helped us out. (It's lonely
at the top of the armed power heap, huh?)
I don't mind all the problems we're having in this country right now because I
think things have to get worse before they get better. In other words, things
won't get better till they get worse.
Vicki Meagher
|
619.22 | another | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 09:40 | 11 |
|
> re .0, we aren't over there to protect any ideal of freedom. We are
> over there to protect US oil interests. The people who come back in
> body bags will have died to protect oil interests, not freedom.
shouldn't this say "in my opinion we aren't over there to.......
Heather
|
619.23 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 09:58 | 10 |
| > We have the biggest military, the best
> technology, the best logistical support. Would you expect Bangladesh
> to field 350,000 troops just because we can do it?
I don't understand how you can say this, when american tanks cannot
shoot on the move, they have to stop then aim and fire, whereas other
countries have tanks which can aim and fire whilst on the move.
Heather
|
619.24 | DISCLAIMER: The following is an "opinion" | WUMBCK::FOX | | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:04 | 9 |
| > shouldn't this say "in my opinion we aren't over there to.......
In your opinion, it should say that. Perhaps you should have added
that... :-)
'Course, that's only *my* opinion that, your statement about
someone's opinion, should contain the phrase, "in my opinion".
Maybe it would be easier to assume replies are opinions only,
and everything else requires a reference?
John
|
619.25 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:10 | 5 |
|
ah yes, but wasn't that the viewpoint that Heather was taken to task
for in the Circle of Stones topic?
/. Ian .\
|
619.26 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:25 | 10 |
| re .22, Heather, if you will kindly take the time to more carefully
read my .3, which you have partially quoted, you will discover that the
title of my reply is "IMO." (in my opinion)
BTW, are you having fun, yet, going through the file trying to find
examples of things others have gotten away with that you didn't? Just
wondering...
Lorna
|
619.27 | in my opinion | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:44 | 13 |
|
>The U.S. is over there because we have strategic interests there. If the Middle
>East had nothing of value to us (such as oil), we wouldn't be there.
This is your opinion, athoigh you have ommited to say so.
I have the opinion that the troops are there to ensure Saddam cannot
keep visiting attrocities on Kuwait, and also to ensure that he is
stopped now, rather than later, when I believe a war will
be far worse.
Heather
|
619.28 | my opinions on questions | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:50 | 17 |
|
>> shouldn't this say "in my opinion we aren't over there to.......
> In your opinion, it should say that. Perhaps you should have added
> that... :-)
> 'Course, that's only *my* opinion that, your statement about
> someone's opinion, should contain the phrase, "in my opinion".
>
Ah well, you see, it in my opininin is should have if it were a
statement, however in my opinion is was a question
> Maybe it would be easier to assume replies are opinions only,
> and everything else requires a reference?
I do agree.
Heather
|
619.30 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:57 | 8 |
|
Okay, so if I learn all the abrieviations possible I can use
them in my headings , and write notes the way I would like, without
anyone hastleing me over missing out three words?
Heather
|
619.31 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 10:59 | 8 |
| > Heather, I am under the impression, gained from people in the US tank
> corps, that American tanks can indeed shoot while on the move.
I have gained this info from people in the Royal Engineers, that's why
our tanks will go first into the fray - 'cause they can move faster.
Heather
|
619.32 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:25 | 17 |
|
re .16, Matt: The French have a good number of troops in Saudi
Arabia. Of the Western countries, they have the third largest
number of troops, behind the US and the UK.
re .20, Bo: I'm not sure what you mean when you say that Saudi
Arabia is "sponsoring" the US troops. In terms of money, what
they've contributed is a drop in the bucket. In my opinion,
they are *stealing* from us. This is another major reason I'm
against the offensive campaign. They should be made to pay up!
re .22, Heather: Facts shouldn't have to be prefaced with "IMO".
If I say 2+2=4, I wouldn't say "in my opinion". That's absurd.
The facts speak pretty clearly to me in this case that the US is
over there to protect the supply of oil. Otherwise, why wouldn't
we have protected Afghanistan?
|
619.33 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:39 | 20 |
|
> re .22, Heather: Facts shouldn't have to be prefaced with "IMO".
> If I say 2+2=4, I wouldn't say "in my opinion". That's absurd.
> The facts speak pretty clearly to me in this case that the US is
> over there to protect the supply of oil. Otherwise, why wouldn't
> we have protected Afghanistan?
The facts say the troops are there.
Afgahnisatan did not have the UN declaration.
In fact, the UK would benefit without the war, we are the country that
has the least dependance on their oil supply - but the troops are still
there.
You have interpreted the facts one way, and have your opinion, as I
have interpreted them another, and have mine.
Heather
|
619.34 | | AYOV27::GHERMAN | I need a little time | Wed Jan 09 1991 14:00 | 33 |
| re .20/.32 and others.
As I'm home and have the Scotland on Sunday with the figures on
troop deployment in front of me, I thought I'd ruin some of the
guesswork by putting them in. :^) (I do see that I was off on a
figure or two from memory in my previous reply.)
Country Troops Tanks Aircraft Warships
Iraq 500,000 4,000 700 15
US 350,000 2,250 1,450 90
UK 34,000 160 60 11
France 10,000 40 50 6
Saudi Arabia 97,000 550 190 25
Kuwait 7,000 50 30 -
Egypt 35,000 600 - -
Syria 19,000 300
Pakistan 5,000
Bangladesh 2,000
Morocco 6,000
Senegal 500
Niger 500
Czechoslovakia 170
Greece- 1 warship; Italy 8 aircraft, 5 warships ; Denmark 1 warship
Canada 12 aircraft, 2 warships ; Netherlands 2 Warships ;
Australia 2 warships ; Spain 3 warships ;
Others 80,000 250 190 0
Sorry about including facts. :^)
Cheers,
George
|
619.35 | oops, my sarcasm is showing | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Wed Jan 09 1991 23:35 | 8 |
| re .32,
>> Otherwise, why wouldn't we have protected Afghanistan?
But the U.S. govt did protect Afghanistan. It kept
our athletes from going to the 1980 Olympics.
Dan
|
619.36 | Fight to Save Lives? | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Thu Jan 10 1991 17:28 | 29 |
| Is the U.S. preparing for war with a country threatening world peace?
Hardly. Iraq has 18,000,000 people. They are drafting 17-year-olds.
However, imagine Saddam Hussein as President of the Pan Arabic Union,
created in the 90's after U.S. withdrawl, encompassing the current Syria,
Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Yemen, the emirates, etc., with nuclear capability,
controlling the bulk of the world's petroleum reserves.
Hitler wasn't a world peace threat either when Germany marched into
Sudetenland in 1936, after the allies marched out. World War II might
not have been a world war, if it had been fought then. Countless lives
would have been *saved*.
Hitler was bluffing. He was building military capability, but he wasn't
there yet. Calling him at the time just seemed too expensive to World
War I-weary Britain and France.
Bush's comparison between the two leaders might actually show some
vision and an honest desire not to have history repeat itself.
The potential is there, including a large population of Jews if Israel
were to be overwhelmed.
Are the oil companies the *only* reason we are there?
This vision disturbs me, because it might prove to be as invalid
as the domino theory that helped get us into Viet Nam.
It also disturbs me because it could be correct.
|
619.37 | Graphic, Emotional Reply Follows | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Fri Jan 11 1991 00:15 | 26 |
| I hear people say:
"Kuwaity women are being raped by Iraqi soldiers."... An American women
is raped every 6 minutes
"Chemical warfare is barbaric."... So are the chemicals on the streets
of New York or Worcester or anytown, USA.
"There's a certain glory to war."... War is Hell. My father-in-law told
me a story about his glorious war. The old double U double U Two. He
told me of how he saw his best friend running scared holding his guts
in his stomach with the only hand he had left. Glorious war?
"We must fight so that others may be free." What is freedom? Is freedom
equality? Are the Saudi's free? Can they dress and worship as they
please? Can I understand why my brother/cousin/husband or friend will
return legless or lifeless? To protect the Saudi Freedom? No I can't.
Saudi freedom is an oxymoron. This is a BIG mistake. One person's eyes
for another person's pseudo freedom.
I'm really pis*ed at myself for not writing my Congressmen and Senators
before this escalated to this. Maybe I thought it'd go away. I don't
know. I am going to get involved though. For whatever good it will do.
Kate
|
619.38 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Fri Jan 11 1991 00:25 | 8 |
| re .37,
>> Maybe I thought it'd go away.
Apparently a lot of people think that if we all just
forget about Saddam Hussein, that he'll go away, too.
Dan
|
619.39 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Fri Jan 11 1991 08:31 | 17 |
|
> Apparently a lot of people think that if we all just
> forget about Saddam Hussein, that he'll go away, too.
Hey, maybe he will.
<cynical hat on here>
What I find interesting is not the number of people who think that
Saddam might go away, but the number of people who think that if
enough of us go away, maybe Saddam will follow our example and go
away himself.
<cynical hat off>
Sharon
|
619.40 | But in agreement with everything else | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:18 | 15 |
|
>"Chemical warfare is barbaric."... So are the chemicals on the streets
> of New York or Worcester or anytown, USA.
What sort of "chemicals" are you talking about on the streets of
anytown, USA?
If you're talking about drugs, I don't see the correlation. A person
chooses to take drugs, a person does not choose to have a chemical bomb
dropped on them.
Sign me confused.
kath
|
619.41 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:44 | 13 |
|
> >"Chemical warfare is barbaric."... So are the chemicals on the streets
> > of New York or Worcester or anytown, USA.
>
> What sort of "chemicals" are you talking about on the streets of
> anytown, USA?
>
> If you're talking about drugs, I don't see the correlation.
Call me a cynic, but I assumed she meant toxic waste.
Sharon
|
619.42 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:50 | 10 |
|
> Call me a cynic, but I assumed she meant toxic waste.
That was my other guess, but "on the streets" seemed to imply drugs to
me....I dunno why....
that's why I asked! ;-)
k
|
619.43 | US does devalue their own lives | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | ............<42`-`o> | Fri Jan 11 1991 10:15 | 16 |
| There's a few notes about The U.S. sticking its nose in the internal affairs
of other countries when they arent doing any better at home. Examples that
irritate:
U.S. nationals interfering and sponsoring terrorism in the
United kingdom. The U.S. politicians pontificating about levels of violence
in Northern Ireland (PART OF THE UNITED KINGDOM), which are insignificant
compared to some U.S. cities.
The people in Northern Ireland have voted in democratic elections to stay
part of the United Kingdom. Some persons may argue that King Billy took it
by conquest and we should give it back. I therefore suggest that the current
inhabitants of the U.S. give it back to the original occupants the Indians.
It should be noted that the U.S. is more recent than King Billy!
U.S. Hands off Northern Ireland!!
|
619.44 | wh is the U.S. anyway? | DENVER::DORO | | Fri Jan 11 1991 14:00 | 43 |
|
RE .37 Chemical warfare is barbaric
Thanks for bringing in this thought, since it clarified a fuzziness I
had in reading this topic.
To add to the general confusion, when the question is raised does the
US devalue life, WHAT "U.S." are we referring to? I can think of at
least three components;
- the government
- big business
- the people (cynicism exposed: I don't believe the government is
necessarily a part of the people anymore.)
Any other candidates??
-jamd - when will THEY do {the RIGHT thing} ??
(probably when I look in the mirror and recognize
THEM as me.)
additional thoughts:
I took .37 to be referring to toxic waste, and I *don't* believe I
(part of the people group) have any say in this matter: the decision
about what I am exposed to is made by business poeple whose attention may
on my welfare or may be on their bottom line. IMO
(Having said that I cannot control this, let me add the caveat that
*acting alone* I have no influence. As a part of a larger group, in
this case, greenpeace, or one of that ilk, individuals have large
voices. .37's intention to write or do *something* is what it takes if
we folks not involved in a daily basis in controlling the world are to
be heard.)
|
619.46 | question | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Jan 11 1991 14:50 | 7 |
| re .45, isn't chemical warfare painful for the victims?
I thought that some types of chemical warfare were supposed to be
extremely painful...?
Lorna
|
619.47 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:25 | 8 |
| Chemical warfare - and all weapons of mass destruction are "barbaric" because
they are indiscriminate. The theory is that it is ok to kill soldiers, and to
destroy your enemy's ability to wage war, but it is immoral to kill civilians.
Weapons of mass destruction are indiscriminate.
That's the theory.
-- Charles
|
619.48 | Chemicals | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Fri Jan 11 1991 21:36 | 7 |
| RE: Chemicals on the streets.
Kath,
I meant drugs. There are lots of innocent victims of the chemicals on
our streets. Children and babies.
Kate
|
619.49 | get real | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | linville | Sun Jan 13 1991 20:20 | 22 |
| Several people here have brought up Afghanistan and the U.S.
involvement or lack of involvement. The United States did get involved
by shipping stinger missiles to the rebels, which by the way turned the
war against Gorby and his troops.
The situation in the Gulf is not as simple as some people like to
believe. You cannot make the situation there PC, this is real life.
Study the history of the region and Saddam the man and then offer an
opinion based on knowledge not passion.
War is hell but so are ignorant people offering uninformed
opinions.
Argue the facts, argue the law, but don't attack everything and
everybody to legitimize a paticular position (that means don't change
the subject).
IMHO (ok)
Wayne
|
619.50 | put up or shut up | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Mon Jan 14 1991 08:42 | 3 |
| So offer us some facts already.
-- Charles
|
619.51 | information | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | linville | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:36 | 6 |
| I've done my reading and studying for my own information not yours. I
would suggest you do your own exploration of the area and people.
Wayne
|
619.52 | This is not our war | USCTR1::LRYDBERG | | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:37 | 6 |
| I say let Israel fight it's own war, because that's what this is all
about. If I hadn't known a Middle-Easterner for the past five years I
wouldn't have realized this either. I was truly brainwashed, like most
of the American citizens.
First target is Israel. We'll just be caught in the middle.
|
619.53 | | JURA::DONNELLY | Think we overdid it with the Sherry.. | Fri Jan 18 1991 07:17 | 27 |
| re: .36
A couple of small points:
> Hitler wasn't a world peace threat either when Germany marched into
> Sudetenland in 1936, after the allies marched out. World War II might
> not have been a world war, if it had been fought then. Countless lives
> would have been *saved*.
I think you refer to the Rhineland in 1933, the Sudetenland was what
Chzechoslovakia was sold out for in 1938.
> Hitler was bluffing. He was building military capability, but he wasn't
> there yet. Calling him at the time just seemed too expensive to World
> War I-weary Britain and France.
As the de-militarization of the Rhineland was part of the Versailles
treaty, and as the U.S. was a signatory to that, where was the U.S.
at that point ?
One other observation, I would be a bit less cynical about this
opposing aggression line if the U.S. had opposed Iraqi aggression
when they attacked Iran. An aggressor is an agressor, even if he is
attacking someone you are mad at !!
Aidan
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619.54 | ..I'm confused... | DENVER::DORO | | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:03 | 25 |
|
.53 brings up a point that's been niggling at the back of my mind
since I heard Bush's speech.
Where were we when Iraq was commiting atrocities on Iran? Much of the
evidence i've seen about what we are defending the people of Kuwati from
is in the form of pictures from the Iraq/Iran conflict.
If anyone's seen the blood chilling picture of a young child (very
young - about a year old) lying next to their parent, both victims of
indiscriminate chemical warfare, ...perhaps they can answer my question..
we (US Govt) "deplored" that action, but we (US govt) didn't get involved, we
didn't go there to save the innocent citizens....how cum not?
When I heard Bush's speech, my cynicism concerning inconsistencies
like the above got in the way of my buying into his program.
I pray for the US troops. I believe in them; I just feel like our
leaders are asking me to buy a half told story.
anybody else have this problem?
jamd
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619.55 | needed - a windproof foreign policy | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:24 | 10 |
| re .54 'US foreign policy' has for a long time been strictly
'spur-of-the-moment', subject to every change in the weather.
Iraq was an enemy to Iran, and the US played "The enemy of my enemy
is my friend." Now circumstances have changed and the inadequacy
of our short-range thinking is glaringly obvious. Out of spite
for Iran we created a monster in Iraq. (We did the same in the
Phillippines, Iran, Panama, Cuba, and plenty of other places.)
Until the US sets a long-range foreign policy and *sticks to it*
we will continue to have problems with yetserday's allies.
|
619.56 | ``I told you so.'' | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Fri Jan 18 1991 20:48 | 16 |
| re .54,
>> Where were we when Iraq was commiting atrocities on Iran?
When the subject came up after Iraq first used chemical
weapons against Iran, I said we should blockade supplies
for chemical weapons from getting to Iraq, and warn that
we would join in the war against them if they used
chemical weapons again. I was politely told it would
never happen.
The statement that if Hussein isn't stopped now the cost
in lives and effort will be much greater, later, didn't
start with his invasion of Kuwait.
Dan
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619.57 | Stop it now! | LABC::RU | | Mon Jan 21 1991 19:55 | 12 |
|
US should stop the practice of spending money and
losing life for the defense of other country.
It is better spending money in this 50 states.
Let those people in mid-east fight each other.
I bet you without the US support of Israel, Saud Arabia,
Egypt, in a short time, there will be peace.
If you think SH is another Hitler, a danger to wrold peace,
then you are brain washed by Bush.
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619.58 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 22 1991 01:04 | 9 |
| Isolationism has long been popular with nationalists. Like it or not,
the US is a part of the greater world community and as such we have
certain responsibilities to the rest of the world. Whether those
responsibilities include attacking Iraq is perhaps an interesting
topic. That we should ignore the rest of the world and "solve
our own problems" I feel is short sighted, selfish, and ultimately
futile.
-- Charles
|
619.59 | no, we can't just take our toys and go home any more
| CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Tue Jan 22 1991 13:48 | 12 |
| I have to reluctantly agree with Charles (.58). As much as I hate war
and violence, and think that we jumped rather too eagerly into this
particular war, without adequate thought or exploration of alternatives,
I don't think doing nothing was one of those alternatives. Like it or
not -- and on the whole I think it's a good thing -- we've become a global
society, a global economy, and there are no more quiet corners whose
activity affects only themselves.
I just wish the people in the US could get it through their heads that
being involved in the world doesn't mean we have to run the world.
--bonnie
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619.60 | Iran | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | linville | Tue Jan 22 1991 16:29 | 7 |
| In answer to why we didn't assist Iran during their war with Iraq. The
reason is simple ,they didn't ask for our help the S.A. government did.
Please think before you speak. There is enough misinformation and hot
air on TV.
Wayne
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619.61 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 22 1991 21:08 | 6 |
| The reason we didn't support Iran in it's war with Iraq is simpler than that -
we were supporting Iraq. Until he invaded Kuwait, Saddam Hussein was a
putative *ally*.
How soon they forget,
-- Charles
|
619.62 | Politics as Klein Bottle | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Jan 22 1991 22:30 | 10 |
| Well ... I believe you'll find that we were supporting Iraq
because it was opposing Iran, and the US didn't like Iran.
When I lived in Iran, and the Shah was in power, the US was not
supporting Iraq. I was in a busload of Americans that travelled
from Iran to Jordan through Iraq and received border-to-border
hassles, including a day of house arrest in Baghdad.
It seems like we pick our friends from among those who don't like
the ones we consider enemies at the moment.
|
619.63 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 22 1991 23:59 | 9 |
| Re: .61
We are in vociferous agreement. We will go back to supporting Iraq just
as soon as it becomes politically convenient/necessary. Oceania indeed.
We will support anyone as long as they act like *good* little client
states, nevermind their internal politics, their lack of democracy,
their human right's abuses.
-- Charles
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619.64 | | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Wed Jan 23 1991 01:23 | 4 |
| We sold arms to Iran (to be used in their war against Iraq) in
the Iran-Contra scandal, in case anyone remembers.
I'd call that supporting Iran against Iraq in at least one sense.
|
619.65 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | living in stolen moments | Wed Jan 23 1991 16:24 | 2 |
| .64, Suzanne -- thanks, I was just going to mention the Iran-Contra
scandal.
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619.66 | topic write locked | WMOIS::B_REINKE | hanging in there | Tue Feb 12 1991 12:10 | 1 |
| Please see 593.178
|