powell tells it like it is

Discussion in 'Politics' started by MondoTrader, Feb 5, 2003.

  1. ...on the wisdom of going through the UN in the first place:

    http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-singer021003.asp

    Excerpt:

     
    #111     Feb 10, 2003
  2. tampa

    tampa

    My goodness, you are a long winded fellow - were you like that when the rat was still alive?

    Let's see if we can be more brief in response.

    a) '91 or '98 doesn't cut it. He said the report said that Iraq was on the verge of developing a bomb. No such report was EVER issued - not in 1991, not in 1998, nor in 2003.

    b) It is true, I have no more expertise in nuclear technology than George Bush. And it's true that experts may disagree. So I am going with the UN inspectors who saw the tubes, and confirmed their numbers and use.

    c) It is not laughable to assume that a group of thugs could hijack an airplane. It is laughable that Iraq could float a boat large enough to launch a fair size plane, sail it out of the Persian Gulf, around the Cape, across the Atlantic, snuggle up along our shore, and not be detected.

     
    #112     Feb 10, 2003

  3. Tampa, you really blew it (again). After reading your post prior to this one, a very civil post to be sure, I was prepared to accept your olive branch despite your profanity in previous pages.

    Then I scrolled down to find this, your latest example of an unhinged mind.

    It is apparent that you are schizophrenic to say the least. You didn't even give me a chance to respond to your civil post before posting this one! And almost a full half-hour passed between your civil post and the post you now quote me on.

    What is your problem, other than having no social skills whatsoever?

    I don't mind my intellect being questioned, or my political beliefs, and I rather enjoy sparring back and forth with other ET members. Unlike you, I can take what I dish out, and expect nothing less. So call me what you will - a warmonger, unpatriotic, a liar, a mindless follower of our president, all those words that are insulting but at least within acceptable standards of decorum.
     
    #113     Feb 10, 2003
  4. As to the Bush statement and whatever import we're supposed to attribute to it, if you don't provide some news report or other piece of evidence - both his statement or statements and the evidence of dissembling - it's impossible to judge. All we have are your assertions and inferences. The IAEA did, for instance, report in '98 that Iraq was close to developing a nuclear weapon back in '91. Again, if you're referring to the statements around the Blair visit, the White House acknowledged the error, and most of us have moved on.

    You mischaracterize what the UN inspectors stated regarding the aluminum tubes. Al-Baradei reported the Iraqi explanation for them, and stated his opinion that the explanation was tenable. He could not "confirm" their "use," because they had not been used. Regardless of the truth of the matter, which may never be known, your response in effect concedes that you had no valid basis for your charges of dishonesty - merely your opinion and your suspicion, based upon 1) your choice of which experts to believe, and, obviously more important, 2) your desire to make a point.

    The UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) are actually rather small - much smaller than, say, a Cessna. I confess that I don't know what it takes to launch them, but transporting them would not be difficult.

    I suppose I could keep my responses shorter, perhaps by leaving out evidence and logic. Maybe instead of making the effort to consider serious matters seriously, I should offer up a bitter, empty, intermittently foul multi-post rant instead. I'll think about it.
     
    #114     Feb 10, 2003
  5. Nah, don't stoop to his level. One foul-mouthed blowhard is too many as it is.
     
    #115     Feb 11, 2003
  6. tampa

    tampa

    ...oh my goodness, it's OK to call for the destruction of a nation, the deaths of women and children, but one should not use the "S: word...it's not civil.

    Well, I stand corrected...pardon me...now tell me again, how many dead women and children is acceptable in this adventure?
     
    #116     Feb 11, 2003
  7. This post epitomizes your pathetic mindset. I could, and shall pose the exact same question to you: How many dead American women and children is acceptable to you?

    And it's OK to call for the destruction of your very own nation?

    Yep, your responses to any posts that attempt reason, i.e. Kymar's previous ones, only accentuate what most of us on this board (except Candle and a couple of other comrades-in-closets) know: you are incredibly naive.

    You did, however, earn some points for lack of profanity! Perhaps dessert will be awarded to you come the next recess period.:D
     
    #117     Feb 11, 2003
  8. Your posturing on behalf of the Iraqi people is much harder to tolerate than your language and your insults.

    You appear to think that some policy of benign neglect would demonstrate greater concern for the Iraqis than would the removal of the Ba'ath regime as soon as possible.

    Reversion to prior policies would mean leaving the Iraqis indefinitely under the control of a totalitarian kleptocracy that keeps itself in power through the systematic use of terroristic violence. In this regard, the comparisons to Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union under Stalin are quite fair. For the vast majority of Iraqis, neglect would mean lives of continued privation and hopelessness under international sanctions. Given the Ba'ath ideology of conquest, the actual history of the Ba'ath regime, and the likelihood that sanctions would eventually either be eliminated or substantially weakened, neglect would very likely mean eventual re-immersion of the populace in military conflict directed outward, though a civil war (between the regime and its opponents) is certainly another distinct possibility (and already a low-level reality), as the recent history of Iraq under the Ba'ath Party includes both.

    In short, the idea that the Iraqis would be better off on their own (or Hussein's own) is at least debatable, and would remain so even if the dubious casualty estimates offered up from anti-war quarters proved accurate. Rebels under arms in the north and south, in exile, or in prison have already shown what they prefer, and there is substantial evidence from defectors and other sources that most Iraqis, as well as most Arabs, would welcome Hussein's downfall. Even many anti-war activists claim that they would, even if they offer no way to achieve that outcome.
     
    #118     Feb 11, 2003
  9. msfe

    msfe

    Wimps, weasels and monkeys - the US media view of 'perfidious France'

    Dissenters in Europe become the first victims - of a war of words

    Gary Younge in New York and Jon Henley in Paris
    Tuesday February 11, 2003
    The Guardian

    The "petulant prima donna of realpolitik" is leading the "axis of weasels", in "a chorus of cowards". It is an unholy alliance of "wimps" and ingrates which includes one country that is little more than a "mini-me minion", another that is in league with Cuba and Libya, with a bunch of "cheese-eating surrender monkeys" at the helm.

    Welcome to Europe, as viewed through the eyes of American commentators and newspapers yesterday, as Euro-bashing, and particularly anti-French sentiment, reached new heights. In a barrage of insults and invective which ranged from the basest tabloid rants to the loftiest columnists on the most respected newspapers, European-led resistance to America's war plans in Iraq was portrayed not as a diplomatic position to be negotiated as a genetic weakness in the European mindset which makes them reluctant to fight wars and incapable of winning them.

    The front page of Rupert Murdoch's New York Post yesterday shows the graves of Normandy with the headline: "They died for France but France has forgotten." "Where are the French now, as Americans prepare to put their soldiers on the line to fight today's Hitler, Saddam Hussein?" asks the pugnacious columnist Steve Dunleavy. "Talking appeasement. Wimping out. How can they have forgotten?" A cartoon in the same paper shows an ostrich with its head in the sand below the words: "The national bird of France."

    If such language is proving a headache for the diplomats, then spare a thought for the French translators, who have struggled for words to convey the full force of the venom. "Cheese-eating surrender monkeys" - a phrase coined by Bart Simpson but made acceptable in official diplomatic channels around the globe by Jonah Goldberg, a columnist for the rightwing weekly National Review (according to Goldberg) - was finally rendered: " Primates capitulards et toujours en quête de fromages ". And the New York Post's "axis of weasel" lost much of its venom when translated as a limp " axe de faux jetons " (literally, "axis of devious characters").

    American wrath has been reserved for those nations which oppose their leadership, particularly following the decision to oppose shifting Nato resources to Turkey. "Three countries - France, Germany and their mini-me minion, Belgium - have moved from opposition to US policy toward Iraq into formal, and consequential obstructionism," argued the Wall Street Journal in an editorial yesterday. "If there is a war [the Turks] will face the danger of direct attack that is not feared in the chocolate shops of Brussels." The front page of the National Review blares "Putsch" with a sub-headline: "How to defeat the Franco-German power grab."

    While the jibes may be puerile, the possibility that the Bush administration and commercial outlets might follow them up with punitive measures has struck some as pernicious. An ad, due to come out soon, shows three German-made cars, including an Audi and a BMW, driving towards the camera with a voice saying: "Do you really want to buy a German car?"

    If there has been any European country that has attracted more contempt than others, it is France. In the Wall Street Journal, Christopher Hitchens described Jacques Chirac as "a positive monster of conceit _ the abject procurer for Saddam ... the rat that tried to roar". In the Washington Post, George Will opined that the "oily" foreign affairs minister, Dominique de Villepin, had launched France into "an exercise for which France has often refined its savoir-faire since 1870, which is to say retreat - this time into incoherence".

    And in the New York Times, Thomas Friedman argued that France should be removed from the security council and be replaced with India: "India is just so much more serious than France these days. France is so caught up with its need to differentiate itself from America to feel important, it's become silly." The Wall Street Journal editor, Max Boot, argues: "France has been in decline since, oh, about 1815, and it isn't happy about it." What particularly galls the Gauls is that their rightful place in the world has been usurped by the gauche Americans."

    At its ugliest, the transatlantic bile is becoming increasingly personal. When France Inter radio's correspondent in Washington, Laurence Simon, started to explain her government's position to Fox News (owned by Murdoch) she was interrupted by the presenter. "With friends like you, who needs enemies," she was told as she was taken off air.

    come and enjoy neutral Switzerland http://www.myswitzerland.com/
     
    #119     Feb 11, 2003
  10. skeptic123

    skeptic123 Guest

    It'is a bit off-topic, but I think it is related.

    Anybody remembers about a year ago so called "Jenin massacre". The europians were all over Israel for killing "hundreds and hundreds of innocent civilians".

    As we know now the massacre was not, but the point is THE EUROPEANS DID NOT NEED NO STINKING PROOF THEN. It was all so obivous, how could Israeli have not killed hundreds of people, they are so blood-thirsty. They also spoke on the phone to a few palestenians and got descriptions of hundreds of corpses lying on the streets of Jenin. Certainly much more credible sources of information then Collin Powell. I do not think anybody ever appologized to Israel for slander.

    On the other side no evidence is good enough for them now. Talk about double standards.

    BTW guess who led the charge against Israel then - of course France and Belgium. And msfe's favorite tabloid Guardian was the most anti-Israel too.
     
    #120     Feb 11, 2003