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Perspective

Perspective

2001-09-23 by GAmoore@aol.com

I heard the situation put into simple and clear perspective by Condi Rice 
this morning. Afganistan (and other places) are this hide-out where they 
train, shield, and recruit terrorists. Then every few months they go out 
and strike somewhere in the world. They've been doing this for years, and 
there have been a string of INCREASINGLY large attacks.

Their view is that they have crossed the line. And now we need to go in 
and clean out that rat's nest before more terror is delivered to the rest 
of the world.

A job needs to be done, for the good of the world. And the US is willing 
to accept the loss of life of our soldiers, the economic costs, and the 
political costs. 

I agree.

I am very much against the innocent being killed, but the US military is 
made up of moral individuals. Plus, most of the innocent are in refugee 
camps in Iran or Pakistan, or heading there at high speed now.

Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-23 by The Pupkid

on 23/9/01 7:27 pm, GAmoore@... at GAmoore@... wrote:

> A job needs to be done, for the good of the world. And the US is willing
> to accept the loss of life of our soldiers, the economic costs, and the
> political costs. 

While you pat yourselves on the back, lots of us are sick to the stomach at
the thought of what is about to be done in our names.  And highly dubious
about what it will do to rid the West of the threat of terror.

> I am very much against the innocent being killed, but the US military is
> made up of moral individuals. Plus, most of the innocent are in refugee
> camps in Iran or Pakistan, or heading there at high speed now.

I am lost for words at this last couple of sentences.

Yesterday I listened to a report on BBC Radio 4 from their correspondent who
spent two years as one of the only Western reporters in Khabul (she was
ordered out of Afghanistan six months ago by the Taliban).  She was talking
about how she has spent the last few days on the phone to former friends and
sources in Afghanistan who are all petrified at thought of what is about to
happen to them.  None of them support the Taliban.  They can't understand
why political & economic pressure cannot be brought through the UN to rid
the country of their increasingly unpopular and despotic leaders.  Instead,
as has happened repeatedly during the last 20 years they're about be done
over again.

These people have been through suffering we can't dream of, and here we are
convincing ourselves that its OK to bomb lots more of them to shit because
all the innocent ones will have run away.

For shame.

pk

Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-24 by GAmoore@aol.com

Pupkid wrote 
>> A job needs to be done, for the good of the world. And the US is willing
>> to accept the loss of life of our soldiers, the economic costs, and the
>> political costs. 
>
>While you pat yourselves on the back, lots of us are sick to the stomach at
>the thought of what is about to be done in our names.  And highly dubious
>about what it will do to rid the West of the threat of terror.

Go in the bathroom and vomit then. You are ASSUMING you know what will 
happen, when in reality, nothing has happened yet. Please at least wait 
for the crime to occur before blaming us for it.

Would you prefer to wait for Osama and his other killers to turn 
themselves in to the FBI? If not, then are you willing to watch as other 
Americans are killed all around the world? And how about Europeons or 
Russians? Is it alright to see a 747 loaded with fuel plow into the Eifle 
Tower, Big Ben, or the Rome colesium? Are you willing to watch 6,500 of 
your fellow citizens crushed, burned up, or forced to jump from high 
buildings to their deaths?

Well, I'm not willing to do that. I don't want to see the entire world 
grind to a halt out of fear of these motherfucking bastards. They don't 
desserve to be called human beings, and they have surrendered the right 
to be among the living.

Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-24 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Thoughts from the mind of GAmoore@..., 9/24/01:

>Pupkid wrote
>>>  A job needs to be done, for the good of the world. And the US is willing
>>>  to accept the loss of life of our soldiers, the economic costs, and the
>>>  political costs.
>>
>>While you pat yourselves on the back, lots of us are sick to the stomach at
>>the thought of what is about to be done in our names.  And highly dubious
>>about what it will do to rid the West of the threat of terror.
>
>Go in the bathroom and vomit then. You are ASSUMING you know what will
>happen, when in reality, nothing has happened yet. Please at least wait
>for the crime to occur before blaming us for it.

As far as I can see, there are 2 possible attitudes.  One: have blind 
faith in the US government to do the right thing.  If "by accident" 
any sort of wrong is being done, we can always complain about that 
later.  Or two: don't have blind faith in the US government and sound 
some words of warning and good reason, before we run the risk of 
making nasty mistakes.

I have the impression attitude one is rather common, and is (imo) 
extremely naive. Give me one good reason to have *blind* faith in 
whichever government.  "Blaming someone after the crime has occured" 
makes less sense to me than warning for a "possible crimne about to 
occur".

Therefore attitude two makes much more sense, in a rational world. 
The only problem is that all words of wisdom, care, rationality or 
compassion probably will have little or no effect on the actual 
measures that will be executed.  So be it.  At least those of us 
who've sounded words of warning will have the rational and emotional 
satisfaction of having been awake enough to have warned for any s* 
hitting the fan, _if_ things go wrong.  If nothing "hits the fan" and 
all actions are a wonderful success, well, then we've warned for 
nothing.  Still no harm done, and: better safe than sorry...

>They don't desserve to be called human beings, and they have 
>surrendered the right to be among the living.

... which would almost get me started on the fact that the US is the 
only western civilisation that's still thinking the death penalty is 
a reasonable punishment...  But I won't, I won't...


ttfn,
HJ
-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-24 by GAmoore@aol.com

Hendrik wrote L
>I have the impression attitude one is rather common, and is (imo) 
>extremely naive. Give me one good reason to have *blind* faith in 
>whichever government.  "Blaming someone after the crime has occured" 
>makes less sense to me than warning for a "possible crimne about to 
>occur".

It wasn't a 'warning'. A warning is fine. It was statement of disgust 
about something that never happened as though it were fact. 

Apart from the recent 6500 dead, Osama Bin Laden is already under 
indictment for the bombings of the American embassies in Africa which 
killed over 200 mostly Africans.

Lets turn this around Hendrik. Why is it that you feel YOU are the only 
one with principles and morals? 


>... which would almost get me started on the fact that the US is the 
>only western civilisation that's still thinking the death penalty is 
>a reasonable punishment...  But I won't, I won't...

We would gladly lock all of them up in jail for life, if they will kindly 
surrender... or if they promise to never do any more mass murders. 
However, we have to make sure they are not crossing their fingers behind 
their backs, and their faces have to look very sincere, otherwise the 
deal is off. 

When a murderer comes into your house and kills your mother, and says he 
is going to come back and get you next time. Do you wait for him to come 
back?

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-24 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Thoughts from the mind of GAmoore@..., 9/24/01:

>Hendrik wrote L
>>I have the impression attitude one is rather common, and is (imo)
>>extremely naive. Give me one good reason to have *blind* faith in
>>whichever government.  "Blaming someone after the crime has occured"
>>makes less sense to me than warning for a "possible crimne about to
>>occur".
>
>It wasn't a 'warning'. A warning is fine. It was statement of disgust
>about something that never happened as though it were fact.

If we start nitpicking...  the 'disgust' as you call it (although I 
think it was 'annoyance') was directed to the _fact_ that Bush's 
threats to an as yet not-proven guilty party and in particular his 
supposed 'hosts' have led to massive streams of refugees leaving 
their homes.

>Lets turn this around Hendrik. Why is it that you feel YOU are the only
>one with principles and morals?

If I watch TV (Dutch, Belgian, German, and English) to follow 
discussions related to the WTC attack, or if I read my daily incoming 
private mail, or if I read the OT list... then I don't see why I 
should feel I'm the _only_ one with principles and morals.  For some 
odd reason, my view seems to be the view of many, many people on the 
planet.
Maybe I'm an uneducated, illiterate, ignorant, room-temperature-IQ 
s.o.b., fine, but you can't seriously claim the same status for _all_ 
the others sharing my viewpoint.  Fortunately, as I _would_ like to 
feel unique in _that_ respect...

>  >... which would almost get me started on the fact that the US is the
>>only western civilisation that's still thinking the death penalty is
>>a reasonable punishment...  But I won't, I won't...
>
>We would gladly lock all of them up in jail for life, if they will kindly
>surrender... or if they promise to never do any more mass murders.

No you don't.  You lock them up, and then kill them.  But once more, 
let's not get side-tracked too much.  This entire thread already is 
covering all of recent history, which, I think, I silly enough.


HJ


-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by Dennis Gunn

At 10:08 PM +0200 9/24/01, Hendrik Jan Veenstra wrote:
>If we start nitpicking...  the 'disgust' as you call it (although I
>think it was 'annoyance') was directed to the _fact_ that Bush's
>threats to an as yet not-proven guilty party and in particular his
>supposed 'hosts' have led to massive streams of refugees leaving
>their homes.

And if you want to stick to the point.  The reason there has been 
such a strong reaction to this is due to the fact that this is a 
totally irrational and unfair assessment.

1.  The investigators in this case claim to have evidence of bin 
Ladens involvement but *whether it is known for certain or not that 
he is the culprit in this case* even you admit that bin Laden is 
behind numerous terrorist killing of US citizens.  His own video 
tapes indicate that.  Right?

2.  Bin Laden's own video tapes also indicate that he believes that 
people on the side of God should just go right on killing Americans 
where ever they can be found and whenever there is a chance.  So he 
could not possibly pose clearer and more serious threat to the US. 
Right?

3.  Bin Laden's hosts the Taliban are not unaware of any of this and 
yet they allow him to live and operate within their borders and until 
last couple of days have not even pretended not to know where he is 
or what was doing.   Whether or not the Taliban are making war on the 
US, bin Laden and his group clearly are.  For a country's leadership 
to allow a group of people within their borders to freely make war on 
another country would traditionally  generally be considered an act 
war.  Is this not correct Hendrik?

4.  When you have an armed group of people who have killed your 
people and are promising to kill more the first priority is to 
apprehend them and make them stop.  Right?

5.  If that group of people happen to be suicidal religious zealots 
there is no reason to believe that they will not be trying to kill 
you even harder than you will be trying to apprehend them so however 
much you may want to take them alive it is not altogether unlikely 
taking them alive will be impossible.  In fact it is going to be 
pretty damned unlikely that you can take them alive.  Right?  You do 
remember we are talking about training camps for suicide bombers here 
don't you Hendrik?

When trying to apprehend a religious zealot who is making war on your 
people and has already succeeded in killing large numbers of them 
"dead or alive" under these circumstances is common sense.  How else 
could it be done Hendrik?

The first thing bush did in this instance was to publicly call for 
the Taliban to hand over bin Laden.  The second thing was to ask the 
Pakistani's to negotiate with the Taliban to turn him over.  Can you 
tell me what was unreasonable about either of these requests.  Please 
tell me what he could have done better or different.  Remember you 
must make your proposal realistic.

The Taliban's reaction was to say that they would defend bin Laden 
with the last drop of Afghan blood.  *That* was when the Afghans 
started fleeing.

Given the circumstances it is a pretty twisted point of view that 
blames Bush for the fleeing Afghanis.  And when an otherwise 
apparently rational person sticks to such an irrational point of view 
it looks a lot like hate.  That's why it is perceived that way by 
many Americans who read what you have written.  I have the same 
impression and further have the impression that perhaps you do hate 
us and even you are not aware of it.

I do not share GA Moore's apparent belief that the US is right in all 
things.  But I think the handling of this incident has been pretty 
good and the mindless finger pointing pisses me off in view of the 
magnitude of the tragedy.   No matter what Bush does the assumption 
is made that whatever is going wrong is his fault.   That is 
basically a sign of hatred.  It is the Taliban who have been doing a 
very war like thing to the US by putting up bin Laden for as long as 
they have and the US has been remarkably patient with them and has 
been responding very slowly to some rather incredible provocation 
that has been going on since *long before* this incident. I have no 
idea how much of this information reaches the Afghanis or in what 
form but it is the potential consequences of the actions of bin Laden 
their leaders that is scaring them.   And they should be scared.  It 
is reasonable to be scared when the leadership of your country commit 
what are basically acts of war on a country with a vastly superior 
military force.  I guess if some German Christian fundamentalists 
freely operating within Belgium bombed the Kremlin and the Belgian 
authorities said that they would defend the fundamentalists with the 
last drop of Belgian blood, the Belgian populace might get a little 
nervous too.

Again your blame is irrationally misdirected and highly unfair.  Why 
that is I do not know but that is the reason it is perceived as hate.


>If I watch TV (Dutch, Belgian, German, and English) to follow
>discussions related to the WTC attack, or if I read my daily incoming
>private mail, or if I read the OT list... then I don't see why I
>should feel I'm the _only_ one with principles and morals.  For some
>odd reason, my view seems to be the view of many, many people on the
>planet.

Lots of people think the world is 6000 years old and that evolution 
is a hoax.  They also think that there was a flood a few thousand 
years ago that covered the entire world and the highest mountain tops 
were submerged.

Just because a lot of people share these ideas does that make them 
any more feasible to you?

A lot of people are scared and want to appease.  That may be natural 
but that does not make it wise and the numbers who feel that way 
don't make it wise either.
-- 


                                 Dennis Gunn
                                 Mightyjohn@...

                  check out  MIGHTY JOHN HENRY's album "hot air head"
                                                    info at
                        http://www.twics.com/~mightyjo/home.html

Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-25 by Mark Lennox

>
> Over the last two weeks, the US has not dropped a single bomb, or fired
one
> missile at Afghanistan, or Bin Laden's suspected bases.

US troops are currently being taken out of mothballs (so to speak...) and
are undergoign retraining before being shipped to the area, the truth is the
US is not yet ready for a retalitory strike...

> They have tried reasonable diplomatic means to bring the guilty party to
> justice,

calling for Bin Ladens head on a platter and describing the upcoming war as
a 'crusade' ??? Are you sane?

>wheras the Taliban has tried to start WW3 by calling for a holy
> war. So tell me now, who is the insane party??

err... the Taliban has actually said that it will start a Jihad IF and only
IF Afghanistan is attacked or if Bin Laden is harmed or seized without
proper proof being shown. They have stated that if the US supplies proof of
his guilt then he will be brought to trial (I'm aware that such a trial
might well be a mockery of justice but how and ever until that is shown to
be a fact...)

> The facts speak for themselves, as they have allways done.........

which facts would they be?

--
Mark Lennox
Consultant

ENDUSER
Guinness Enterprise Centre
Taylor's Lane
Dublin 8
Ireland
--
e-mail : mark@...
phone  : (+353 1) 4100 665
direct : (+353 1) 4100 707
fax : (+353 1) 4100 985
web    : http://www.enduser.ie
--
----- Original Message -----
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: "John Matthews" <Groovey@...>
To: <logic-ot@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2001 7:52 AM
Subject: [L-OT] Perspective


> Lets keep this in perspective, Bin Laden killed 7,000 people two weeks ago
> to this day.

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Dennis Gunn <mightyjohn@...>
> To: <logic-ot@yahoogroups.com>
>
> > The first thing bush did in this instance was to publicly call for
> > the Taliban to hand over bin Laden.  The second thing was to ask the
> > Pakistani's to negotiate with the Taliban to turn him over.  Can you
> > tell me what was unreasonable about either of these requests.  Please
> > tell me what he could have done better or different.  Remember you
> > must make your proposal realistic.
> >
> > The Taliban's reaction was to say that they would defend bin Laden
> > with the last drop of Afghan blood.  *That* was when the Afghans
> > started fleeing.
> >
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
>

Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-25 by marc lindahl

> From: "Mark Lennox" <mark@...>
>
> They have stated that if the US supplies proof of
> his guilt then he will be brought to trial (I'm aware that such a trial
> might well be a mockery of justice but how and ever until that is shown to
> be a fact...)

Regarding that little point.  At least, in the US, you provide the proof at
trial -- there is no obligation to present it to the defendant (or his
cohorts) before trial.  To get to trial, you need an indictment by a grand
jury - so you must present enough evidence to convince them.  And the grand
jury proceedings can be secret or sealed.  So, the US really has no
obligation at all to present the Taliban with any evidence.  But perhaps,
they should present it to a sealed grand jury type of thing in a World Court
somewhere... perhaps that's been done?  In any case, Bin Laden has already
been indicted in at least three bombings, so that's sufficient to arrest
him.

Re: Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by GAmoore@aol.com

I agree with everything Dennis Gunn said, except I didn't say this :
>I do not share GA Moore's apparent belief that the US is right in all 
>things.  But I think the handling of this incident has been pretty 
>good 

I said before that the US has made mistakes - miscalculations, 
heavihandedness, etc. Toppling the elected but leftish government in 
Chile in the 70's and backing the right wing in El Salvador are two for 
example. 

But when you look at the wide range of things the US has needed to take 
care of - Cuba to Korea, Vietnam to Venezuela, Iran to Israel, etc... 
there's chance for mistakes. 

But why is the US has to be the policeman of the world - taking care of 
problems everywhere they crop up. And then if we do 100 good things, all 
people bring up is the 1 bad thing.

And the people making these accusations are from countries which 
conveniently don't put the effort and don't take the risks.

As we know from the music world, its always easier to criticize than to 
create.

Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective

2001-09-25 by GAmoore@aol.com

What if they have an informer among Bin Laden's crew. If they reveal 
that, the guyis dead, and the evidence is dead. If they have some way of 
listening in on his calls, and they reveal that, then the guy stops 
calling. In fact, this already happened. A newspaper reported that the 
CIA was tracking Bin Laden a few years ago. Ever since then, he doesn't 
use a cell phone. 

The very LEAST the Talibanimals could do, is take Bin Laden into custody 
until this is sorted out. Lets face it, they hate America and all 
non-Muslims, they like what Bin Laden does, and they are co-conspirators.
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>> They have stated that if the US supplies proof of
>> his guilt then he will be brought to trial (I'm aware that such a trial
>> might well be a mockery of justice but how and ever until that is shown to
>> be a fact...)
>
>Regarding that little point.  At least, in the US, you provide the proof at
>trial -- there is no obligation to present it to the defendant (or his
>cohorts) before trial.  To get to trial, you need an indictment by a grand
>jury - so you must present enough evidence to convince them.  And the grand
>jury proceedings can be secret or sealed.  So, the US really has no
>obligation at all to present the Taliban with any evidence.  But perhaps,
>they should present it to a sealed grand jury type of thing in a World Court
>somewhere... perhaps that's been done?  In any case, Bin Laden has already
>been indicted in at least three bombings, so that's sufficient to arrest
>him.

Re: Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by Dennis Gunn

At 12:42 PM -0400 9/25/01, GAmoore@... wrote:
>I agree with everything Dennis Gunn said, except I didn't say this :
>>I do not share GA Moore's apparent belief that the US is right in all
>>things.  But I think the handling of this incident has been pretty
>>good
>
>I said before that the US has made mistakes - miscalculations,
>heavihandedness, etc. Toppling the elected but leftish government in
>Chile in the 70's and backing the right wing in El Salvador are two for
>example.
>
>But when you look at the wide range of things the US has needed to take
>care of - Cuba to Korea, Vietnam to Venezuela, Iran to Israel, etc...
>there's chance for mistakes.

Well I really shouldn't say this because it will probably piss you 
off but Cuba was obviously pretty much a disaster, Korea could have 
been a success but instead ended up being a disastrously pulled 
punch, much to MacAurthur's chagrin.  And Vietnam?  What a sad 
debacle.   America Vietnam and the entire world would have been much 
much much better off if the US had done nothing at all or better 
still if the US government had simply recognized the government that 
Ho Chi Minh was trying to establish in 1945 based on a constitution 
that was pretty much simply a translation of that of the United 
States.  Yes Ho Chi Minh had studied Marxism but in 1945 he was not a 
Marxist he was simply trying to prevent the reoccupation of his 
country by the French who BTW spent an amount of money on their war 
in Vietnam that was equal to the amount of aid money they received 
from the US after the war.  I have seen you asking here if the US 
should have simply let the USSR have their way in Vietnam.  With the 
gift of hindsight the answer would have to be a resounding YES 
because if that is what we had done and the USSR had tried to take 
Vietnam it would have been them that were humiliated instead of us. 
On the other hand the Soviets might  have looked at the history of 
Vietnam (like the US apparently didn't) and decided that invading 
Vietnam was not a good idea.

Anyway highly recommended reading on the topic is Vietnam: The Ten 
Thousand Day War by Micheal Maclear.

Anyway while I tend to believe taken as a whole the US influence on 
the world politics has probably been a positive thing I have to admit 
that that is what I *want* to believe and I just don't know enough 
about history to say conclusively that it is true.  We have had some 
really awful failures and I do not expect everyone to sing our 
praises.  On the other hand it still irks me to see people who should 
know better talking trash.

Credit where credit is due.  Bush looks and talks like a boob but 
that does not mean that he should be trashed when he is behaving 
sensibly.  Doing that to a person tends to discourage them from 
behaving sensibly
-- 


                                 Dennis Gunn
                                 Mightyjohn@...

                  check out  MIGHTY JOHN HENRY's album "hot air head"
                                                    info at
                        http://www.twics.com/~mightyjo/home.html

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Thoughts from the mind of Dennis Gunn, 9/25/01:

>At 10:08 PM +0200 9/24/01, Hendrik Jan Veenstra wrote:
>>If we start nitpicking...  the 'disgust' as you call it (although I
>>think it was 'annoyance') was directed to the _fact_ that Bush's
>>threats to an as yet not-proven guilty party and in particular his
>>supposed 'hosts' have led to massive streams of refugees leaving
>  >their homes.
>
>[longish post deleted, generally drawing the following conclusion:]
>When trying to apprehend a religious zealot who is making war on your
>people and has already succeeded in killing large numbers of them
>"dead or alive" under these circumstances is common sense.  How else
>could it be done Hendrik?

I don't get what your problem is.  I never anywhere disagreed with 
any of the points you make.  Sure bin Laden is a madman, sure the 
Taliban are equally crazy.  Of course the US have every reason to 
want to catch bin Laden.  Of course I'm glad the US up till now have 
exhibited the wisdom to not drop bombs someplace indiscriminately. 
Et cetera.  The only thing I have a problem with is the "dead or 
alive" part -- not because a dead bin Laden would be a bad thing per 
se, but for reasons having to do with hollow rethorics and demagogic 
use of language, esp. when it comes from the leader of a superpower 
like the US.

Please quote me on any of these points, and prove me wrong...

One of the things I objected to was the fact that very soon (i.e. 
from day one) bin Laden was publicized to sort-of be the devil 
incarnate (maybe true) and the obvious mastermind behind the WTC 
attack (at that point in time still just a conjecture and not much 
more).
Sure I know he's been the no.1 on the most wanted list for some time. 
I fully understand the US wants to grab him -- but they've probably 
wanted that even _before_ the WTC attack (otherwise he wouldn't be 
no.1, right?).  But apparently the embassy and the marine-ship 
attacks weren't sufficient to launch any large scale action aginst 
him...  And then there's the WTC-attack, and all of a sudden there 
_is_ sufficient reason to cry out for war, etc, etc.  Even when it's 
not yet clear that this same bin Laden was behind it.  Sorry, but I 
find that weird and somewhat inconsistent.
Just suppose... what if the WTC-attack was carried out by a small 
group of independent individuals, now all dead with their planes?  It 
wasn't that hard to do, apparently, so the fuzz about "big 
organisation & loads of money" is just crap.  Then what?
Sure, still sufficient reason to want to catch bin Laden, but then it 
has nothing to do with the WTC-attack...

The fact that now it has become clear (?) that indeed there is rather 
compelling evidence connecting bin Laden to the WTC is only a recent 
development.  When Bush cried out for war, dead or alive, etc, (and 
when I wrote my 1st letter) this was all still just speculation.  In 
fact, multiple clues to the WTC attack had been found which were not 
connected to bin Laden at all.

In short: fine if the US wants to catch whichever criminal 
mastermind.  I never objected to that.  I objected to the false 
rethorics and the bullshit cowboy-talk.  I objected to the fact that 
an entire people was threatened before anything was proven.
And, as you say later, of course it's mainly the Taliban attitude 
that got the Afghans running (as I alraedy admitted in an earlier 
post), but, knowing how completely out of their mind the Taliban are, 
their reaction could have been predicted.  And thus the one provoking 
the reaction also carries a part of the guilt.  If I tell a parent 
that his child came to me, crying because he had been abused, and 
then tell him to stop abusing his child, guess what will happen?  The 
(obviously psychotic) parent will probably beat the crap out of the 
child.  Only the parents fault?  No.

>The first thing bush did in this instance was to publicly call for
>the Taliban to hand over bin Laden.  The second thing was to ask the
>Pakistani's to negotiate with the Taliban to turn him over.  Can you
>tell me what was unreasonable about either of these requests.

Nothing.  I never said it was.  Again: please quote me saying otherwise.

However, you leave out a bit.  The _really_ first thing Bush did was 
not to request the Taliban anything.  The first thing he did, when 
nothing was sure yet about who destroyed the WTC, was to use very 
simple demagogic language.  I explained this earlier and will not 
repeat the argument.

>Please tell me what he could have done better or different.  Remember you
>must make your proposal realistic.

"Must"?  Says who?  Anyway, the thing I keep re-iterating over and 
over, and which seems to be a very difficult point to grasp is: Bush 
should have refrained from using hollow demagogy.  *In the context of 
the WTC-attack*, asking Afghanistan to hand over bin Laden was 
pointless (and damaging) until Bush could come up with concrete 
evidence -- which he _then_ couldn't.  Prioirity no.1 should be: find 
whoever attacked the WTC.  And not: find bin Laden.  If both now seem 
to coincide: fine.  But that relationship was not altogether clear at 
the time Bush first contacted Afghanistan, displayed his demagogic 
powers, or at the time I wrote my 1st message.

>The Taliban's reaction was to say that they would defend bin Laden
>with the last drop of Afghan blood.  *That* was when the Afghans
>started fleeing.

No, you got the chronology backward.  The Afghans started fleeing 
almost as soon as Bush gave his first public speeches ("smoke them 
out of their holes", "dead or alive", etc.).  The fact that from day 
1 bin Laden was mentioned as the most likely suspect, made it obvious 
for all the world that all Bush's threats were most likely directed 
to Afghanistan.

>Given the circumstances it is a pretty twisted point of view that
>blames Bush for the fleeing Afghanis.  And when an otherwise
>apparently rational person sticks to such an irrational point of view
>it looks a lot like hate.  That's why it is perceived that way by
>many Americans who read what you have written.  I have the same
>impression and further have the impression that perhaps you do hate
>us and even you are not aware of it.

I really do hope you're not a psychiater to whom people trust their souls...

I (once more) explained my view on "shared responsibility" above.  I 
explained this earlier.  Of course Bush is not the _only_ one 
responsible.  I never said he was.  Knowing in advance the Taliban 
are mad, and being able to predict they would respond with "blood & 
holy war", he _does_ share responsibility.

>No matter what Bush does the assumption is made that whatever is 
>going wrong is his fault.

I never made such a ridiculous assumption.

>  >If I watch TV (Dutch, Belgian, German, and English) to follow
>>discussions related to the WTC attack, or if I read my daily incoming
>>private mail, or if I read the OT list... then I don't see why I
>>should feel I'm the _only_ one with principles and morals.  For some
>>odd reason, my view seems to be the view of many, many people on the
>>planet.
>
>Lots of people think the world is 6000 years old and that evolution
>is a hoax.  They also think that there was a flood a few thousand
>years ago that covered the entire world and the highest mountain tops
>were submerged.

Oh, really...

>Just because a lot of people share these ideas does that make them
>any more feasible to you?

Yeah... as I wrote earlier: fell free to send a few guys over to 
educate the completely uneducated, ill-informed, under-developed, 
blind and prejudiced masses of Western Europe.

Of course in principle you're right.  Numbers don't make truth.  But 
in some cases numbers should get you thinking.  Especially when these 
'numbers' are not just a bunch of John Doe's, but contain e.g. 
well-educated historians, well-informed people who spent years in the 
US, etc.
Theoretically they may all be wrong, but simply disregarding the 
opinion of millions as "stupid" or "ill-informed" says more about 
yourself than about these people.

The fact that quite a lot of people are critical about the way the US 
tends to go about in its foreign policy, doesn't _automatically_ make 
them all fools, just because they disagree with _you_.


cheers,
HJ
-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

[L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-25 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Hi all,

It seems as if my initial posting of last Saturday has caused a 
discussion beyond my wildest expectations.  "Seems as if", since 
there have been quite a few more provocative posts, almost coinciding 
(or even preceding) mine, but for some odd reason I seem to be 
getting all the blame.  Fine, I don't have a problem with that. 
However, now that I seem to be the Big Bad Boy in the eyes of some, I 
feel the need to try to put a few things back in perspective (also 
triggered by a private recommendation I received from a fellow LUGger 
(thanks - you know who you are)).

First of all, my initial post was meant to express genuine concern 
regarding the way Bush expressed himself in his initial public 
speeches, and the effects such utterings could have (and have had). 
For some reason many seem to feel that I thus "trod on forbidden 
ground".  As if the US president is holy, or beyond any possible 
criticism.  Anyone is allowed his or her opinion, but with this kind 
of view of the US president I just don't agree.  Which is my right, I 
suppose.

Second, this discussion now seems to be all over the place. 
Palestines and Isrealis, WWII, colonialism, slavery, muslims and 
christians, you name it and it's there.  Ranging from sensible 
exchanges of arguments to bizarre justifications for various 
attrocities.  A few more days, and we'll be discussing the medieval 
crusades I suppose, and defend our own historic mass-murders as 
"reasonable loss of lives".  I would ask you all to please reconsider 
the usefulness of such arguments and debates.
It was never my intention to start such a wide-ranging debate.  My 
concern was with the present situation, and not with centuries of 
history.  Maybe we should all indeed be focussing on present affairs 
and leave the past to itself.  After all, talking about things that 
happened, say, 50 years ago 1) won't change anything and 2) is likely 
to be largely opinionated and not grounded in undisputable fact.
Maybe I was naive in not expecting such a storm to break loose.  OK, 
then I am naive.  As the Bible says: only a child will inherit the 
kingdom of god (or whatever the translation in English is).

Third, the bare fact that my post _did_ cause such a turmoil is 
meaningful in itself.  Loosely speaking there seem to be two parties. 
Those saying America does the right thing (with a minority claiming 
America has _always_ done the right thing), and those questioning 
(our outright attacking) many aspects of America's history and 
'wisdom'.
The details of such arguments are not important: it's all too easy to 
tackle any argument with a counter-argument, and keep doing so ad 
infinitum (8 years of philosophy has at least taught me _that_).
What is important however (imo) is that the positive image of the US 
nation (as a *political entity*, which is different from the 
Americans as individuals) obviously isn't shared by all the world. 
In fact, there are millions who have a rather different view on US 
politics. (please realise that I'm not venting an opinion, but just 
making an observation).
Since not all of them can be completely unreasonable, ill-informed 
idiots, there probably is some valid reason for such a critical 
attitude.  In itself this needn't be a problem.  There surely is 
sufficient reason to be critical w.r.t. almost _any_ nation's 
political past (which western country hasn't meddled in slavery or 
colonies for example?).

My impression however is that the wide-ranging irritation with the US 
(which obviously is present, not just in this group but all over the 
world, from peaceful Western Europe to violent Afghanistan) mainly 
has to do with the (equally wide-ranging) unwillingness to 
acknowledge the validity of such a critical attitude.  The people 
making the most noise seem to be those that scream that America isn't 
to blame for anything, at best grudgingly admitting that "Vietnam 
possible wasn't such a good idea".
Probably it's this attitude of infallibility and self-righteousness 
that gets to people's nerves and makes them feel compelled to open 
wide the dusty cupboards of history.  Pointless maybe, but 
understandable.  Especially since this attitude isn't now all of a 
sudden displayed for the first time in history.

The bottomline is that we are all "sinners".  And our forefathers 
were.  We all are to blame for all the violence in the world. 
Karma...  and therefore we all are justified to warn each other as 
soon as we think the other "might lose it".  That's not a matter of 
pointing the finger and blaming the other for all the horror in the 
world -- it's a matter of genuine concern for the well-being of 
humanity.  If we don't help each other to get rid of this dead weight 
of millenia of karma, then who will?  If we don't help each other to 
finally wake up, open our eyes, and face reality, no matter how 
painful that may be (for either party), then who will?
The truth may be out there (to quote the X-files), but it's up to us 
to discover it.  And as individuals we're way too ignorant and small 
to "make it on our own".  What we need is each other.  The courage to 
face our own 'dark side' and those of others, and to acknowledge that 
we all are not _that_ different in the end.  As long as one person or 
any group of persons thinks they're in whichever way superior to 
another, our karma will contimnue to pile up, and the sorrow of 
humankind will continue.

Original sin, as the Bible describes it, was the eating of the fruit 
from "the tree of knowledge of good and evil".  That's where our 
sorrow started: when we started to distinguish one from the other, 
blaming the other for their evil, and taking pride in our own good.

All my original message intended to do was to warn for possible 
short-sightedness (something I've re-iterated several times).  To 
warn against simplistic statements, and dangerous demagogy.  To warn 
against eyes closed shut and unreceptive ears.  All I wanted was to 
check if we're awake enough...

Those accusing me of terrorist sympathies, cultural hatred or other 
such qualities, are free to have their opinion.  I'm not really hurt 
or offended.  I am however surprised at how completely people can 
misunderstand each other.
In the heat of the argument, I may have said things that were "wrong" 
-- even though I've tried at all times to stay reasonable, to not 
take the (sometimes obvious) bait that was offered on numerous 
occasions.  Maybe I failed in my attempts, and did indeed say 
unreasonable things. I don't have the time or energy to re-read all 
posts to minutely check them for anything that could be interpreted 
wrongly.  However, if I did mess up anywhere, I am genuinely sorry, 
en hereby offer my apologies to anyone offended.


Are we awake enough?



peace,
Hendrik Jan

-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by Kool Musick

GA Moore wrote:

>... then if we do 100 good things, all people bring up is the 1 bad thing.

Human beings everywhere have short memories. This is nothing new.



>And the people making these accusations are from countries which
>conveniently don't put the effort and don't take the risks.

Human beings everywhere are prone to being idle. This also is nothing new.



>As we know from the music world, its always easier to criticize than to
>create.

Then ... create.


Kool Musick
Keep Musick Kool



_________________________________________________________
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Get your free @... address at http://mail.yahoo.com

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-25 by Kool Musick

Hendrik Jan wrote:

>And thus the one provoking
>the reaction also carries a part of the guilt.
Hmmm. Must remember that one.

Kool Musick
Keep Musick Kool


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Get your free @... address at http://mail.yahoo.com

Re: [L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-26 by Kool Musick

Dennis Gunn wrote:

>Your criticism of Bush is basically that you think he said the wrong
>thing at the wrong time.  The pot calling the kettle black if ever
>I've seen it.

Wow!!!

Kool Musick
Keep Musick Kool


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Re: [L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-26 by Dennis Gunn

At 11:25 PM +0200 9/25/01, Hendrik Jan Veenstra wrote:
>

<snip>

>Probably it's this attitude of infallibility and self-righteousness
>that gets to people's nerves and makes them feel compelled to open
>wide the dusty cupboards of history.  Pointless maybe, but
>understandable.  Especially since this attitude isn't now all of a
>sudden displayed for the first time in history.

<snip>

>Those accusing me of terrorist sympathies, cultural hatred or other
>such qualities, are free to have their opinion.  I'm not really hurt
>or offended.  I am however surprised at how completely people can
>misunderstand each other.
>In the heat of the argument, I may have said things that were "wrong"
>-- even though I've tried at all times to stay reasonable, to not
>take the (sometimes obvious) bait that was offered on numerous
>occasions.  Maybe I failed in my attempts, and did indeed say
>unreasonable things. I don't have the time or energy to re-read all
>posts to minutely check them for anything that could be interpreted
>wrongly.  However, if I did mess up anywhere, I am genuinely sorry,
>en hereby offer my apologies to anyone offended.

No your not.  All you've done is just made a long winded 
rationalization for some poorly timed, unfair and downright tactless 
criticism while vaguely implying that anyone that it offended is just 
kind of too dumb to get your deeper meaning.  That kind of apology is 
far more offensive than none at all.

Just like you're absolutely free to have your opinions and make your 
comments, every one else is free call them what they are.

Your criticism of Bush is basically that you think he said the wrong 
thing at the wrong time.  The pot calling the kettle black if ever 
I've seen it.
-- 


                                 Dennis Gunn
                                 Mightyjohn@...

                  check out  MIGHTY JOHN HENRY's album "hot air head"
                                                    info at
                        http://www.twics.com/~mightyjo/home.html

Re: Re: Re: [L-OT] Perspective (is pretty twisted)

2001-09-26 by Dennis Gunn

At 4:54 PM -0700 9/25/01, Kool Musick wrote:
>Hendrik Jan wrote:
>
>>And thus the one provoking
>>the reaction also carries a part of the guilt.
>Hmmm. Must remember that one.

Like when a woman get's raped for the sin of looking good or gets 
robbed for the sin of having money in her purse?
-- 


                                 Dennis Gunn
                                 Mightyjohn@...

                  check out  MIGHTY JOHN HENRY's album "hot air head"
                                                    info at
                        http://www.twics.com/~mightyjo/home.html

Re: [L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-26 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Thoughts from the mind of Dennis Gunn, 9/26/01:

>That kind of apology is far more offensive than none at all.

Guess it's just impossible to make everybody happy...

>Your criticism of Bush is basically that you think he said the wrong
>thing at the wrong time.  The pot calling the kettle black if ever
>I've seen it.

Well argued...

I guess saying nothing, and waiting to see what happens, and only 
then, in case someone f*cks up, speak up, is a more sensible course 
of action?

Grateful to be enlightened...


cheers,
HJ
-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

Re: [L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-26 by Dennis Gunn

At 10:51 AM +0200 9/26/01, Hendrik Jan Veenstra wrote:
>Thoughts from the mind of Dennis Gunn, 9/26/01:
>
>>That kind of apology is far more offensive than none at all.
>
>Guess it's just impossible to make everybody happy...

Perhaps not but that kind of "apology" would not make *anyone* happy.

>  >Your criticism of Bush is basically that you think he said the wrong
>>thing at the wrong time.  The pot calling the kettle black if ever
>>I've seen it.
>
>Well argued...

Thank you.

>I guess saying nothing, and waiting to see what happens, and only
>then, in case someone f*cks up, speak up, is a more sensible course
>of action?
>
>Grateful to be enlightened...

OK gladly.  In a post to GA Moore you ask:

>Now who misprespresent what here?  This is really getting to my
>nerves.  I try to remain polite and reasonable, but these false and
>bizarre accusations coming "out of the blue" really start to annoy me.

Your question is ho is misrepresenting what.  In your "apology", 
which BTW was really not much more than just having another go at the 
people you offended in the first place, you said

>  The people
>making the most noise seem to be those that scream that America isn't
>to blame for anything, at best grudgingly admitting that "Vietnam
>possible wasn't such a good idea".

The remark seems to be directed at me since the quoted bit appears to 
be an out of context piece of something  that I wrote which in it's 
entirety was:

>Cuba was obviously pretty much a disaster, Korea could have been a 
>success but instead ended up being a disastrously pulled punch, much 
>to MacAurthur's chagrin.  And Vietnam?  What a sad debacle. 
>America Vietnam and the entire world would have been much much much 
>better off if the US had done nothing at all or better still if the 
>US government had simply recognized the government that Ho Chi Minh 
>was trying to establish in 1945 based on a constitution that was 
>pretty much simply a translation of that of the United States.  Yes 
>Ho Chi Minh had studied Marxism but in 1945 he was not a Marxist he 
>was simply trying to prevent the reoccupation of his country by the 
>French who BTW spent an amount of money on their war in Vietnam that 
>was equal to the amount of aid money they received from the US after 
>the war.  I have seen you [GA Moore] asking here if the US should 
>have simply let the USSR have their way in Vietnam.  With the gift 
>of hindsight the answer would have to be a resounding YES because if 
>that is what we had done and the USSR had tried to take Vietnam it 
>would have been them that were humiliated instead of us.  On the 
>other hand the Soviets might  have looked at the history of Vietnam 
>(like the US apparently didn't) and decided that invading Vietnam 
>was not a good idea.

So is the balanced perspective that you are advising us all to take? 
The one that says the above statement is "grudgingly admitting that 
'Vietnam possible wasn't such a good idea'"?

Now I am just dumb o'l Merican cowpoke and therefore by definition I 
don't know nothing about open mindedness but I am really not sure 
what kind of mind could read what I wrote there say that it was 
"grudgingly admitting that 'Vietnam possible wasn't such a good 
idea'".  I suspect that such a mind would be of such a shape and 
dimension as to make it suitable for slipping through mail slots, 
keyholes or sliding under doors.

The "perspective" appears to be that of the writer standing in front 
of a full length mirror with a Fresnell lens four inches out front of 
his ego.

But again I am just a hairy chested cowboy.  What do I know.

Gitcher ass ready for some O good ol fashioned word peace cause it's 
kumin atcha from Hendrik Jan Veestra.
-- 


                                 Dennis Gunn
                                 Mightyjohn@...

                  check out  MIGHTY JOHN HENRY's album "hot air head"
                                                    info at
                        http://www.twics.com/~mightyjo/home.html

Re: [L-OT] Please read: Zoom out, adjust focus

2001-09-26 by Hendrik Jan Veenstra

Thoughts from the mind of Dennis Gunn, 9/26/01:

>  > The people
>  >making the most noise seem to be those that scream that America isn't
>>to blame for anything, at best grudgingly admitting that "Vietnam
>>possible wasn't such a good idea".
>
>The remark seems to be directed at me since the quoted bit appears to
>be an out of context piece of something  that I wrote which in it's
>entirety was:
[...]

No, it wasn't directed at you, or anything you wrote.

>I am really not sure what kind of mind could read what I wrote there 
>say that it was "grudgingly admitting that 'Vietnam possible wasn't 
>such a good
>idea'".

Me neither, as my remark had nothing to do with your posting.


HJ
-- 
     Hendrik Jan Veenstra
     email: mailto:h@...
     www:   http://www.ision.nl/users/h/index.html

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