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New site? Maybe some day.
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: post by PatMeebles at 2006-03-30 18:18:29
ShadowSD:
If all that is actually true, I totally agree with everything you've said on this subject


Then I'll take care of this first

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2006/03/27/israel

Website:
As all of this has been going on, the scholars who wrote the piece have been largely quiet — giving a few early interviews in which they defended their work, but declining to get into a point-by-point discussion and also criticizing their critics for implying that their piece is anti-Semitic. (Most of the critics do stay a bit away from that explicit charge, and while “bigoted” is used frequently, “anti-Semitic” is generally not, at least by the professors discussing the article.)


ShadowSD:
John McLaughlin (certainly no liberal, and a host who makes sure at least half of his panel is far right at all times) of PBS's The McLaughlin Report routinely quotes statistics for US Troops Killed, US Troops Wounded/Amputeed, and Iraqi civilians killed. Several months ago, I remember seeing that the number of Iraqi civilians killed had exceeded 120,000.

Whenever McLaughlin puts these figures on the screen, he always names the original source of the numbers. I wish I could remember it offhand... but it's certainly no controversial source, and it'll be right there on the screen the next time he quotes the figures. (It should also be noted than neither far right wingers Tony Blankley or Pat Buchanan ever take issue with the veracity of those numbers after McLaughlin lists them.)


The Lancet Group isn't a controversial one (MoveOn.org didn't give the statistics originally). However, this is the ONLY study that has actually put out a number anywhere near to 100,000. Also, Pat Buchanan is an isolationist "to hell with them" conservative.

ShadowSD:
PatMeebles:
If that's your opinion, then you haven't really been paying attention. The fact is that the evidence was strong, since everyone believed it. The fact is that the government hasn't had the resources to translate the millions of documents recovered SINCE 2003 (so they wouldn't have been presented in 2002). Negroponte owned the documents, and stalled in releasing them until now. His reasons for not releasing them have gone from "nothing interesting" to "far too interesting to declassify." And right now, all the info from the documents has provided tons of evidence for the invasion; you don't have to pull teeth to extract pro-war supporting intel from these documents.


I think your point of view comes from a leap of faith in our government that I'm not willing to make. Obviously, declassification and analysis take time, but so do falsification and cherry picking.

The reason I assume the latter where you assume the former is the past behavior of this administration. 1) As determined by the 9/11 commission and countless other neutral sources, much of the Iraq/Al Qaeda evidence was cherry picked if not fabricated, which means the Bush Administration has a history of doing this. 2) When Joe Wilson challenged a piece of their "evidence", the White House retalliated by outing his wife as a CIA agent, proving they retalliate against anyone who challenges the veracity of their claims, even when it risks breaking the law. 3) Armstrong Williams was among "independant" conservative talk show hosts and cable news commentators who backed up the pro-war arguments, and was eventually revealed to be a paid Bush Administration mouthpiece, which means the adminisration has a history of propaganda and attempting to deceive the public about the war.

I could list about a hundred other reasons I don't trust these people, but you can see why I'm not willing to give them the benefit of the doubt...


My point of view didn't come from a leap of faith in the government, and it certainly isn't a leap of faith when you look at these captured documents (which the administration hasn't made one single mention of to the public, I might add).

ShadowSD:
When Joe Wilson challenged a piece of their "evidence", the White House retalliated by outing his wife as a CIA agent, proving they retalliate against anyone who challenges the veracity of their claims, even when it risks breaking the law.


Joe Wilson changed what the administration said and then claimed that what they "said" was false. Bush said that Iraq SOUGHT uranium in Niger. He didn't claim that a transfer actually took place. Wilson said "but no transaction took place," as if that was the original claim to begin with. Niger's own PM admitted that Iraq came looking to open up trade (Niger's only exports goats (or something like that) and Uranium).

ShadowSD:
PatMeebles:
ShadowSDsaid:
Dershowitz is suggesting that the fact that certain arguments and figures exist on Neo-Nazi hate sites as well as in the paper automatically means the paper got its information from those Neo-Nazi sites


No, Dershowitz is saying that academics took already-out-of-context quotes from neo nazis and quoted them as documented fact.


That's what I just said. I simply added that Dershowitz is making that assumption because he sees certain information in the paper that is also used by Neo-Nazi sites, and he assumes the paper therefore must have gotten the information from those sites. I think I explained pretty well why such an assumption is a) flawed and b) a red herring that stifles debate, exploiting sympathy to shame people away from even considering a different viewpoint.


No, that's not what you just said. Dershowitz is saying that they quoted the article and directly cited it. You're claiming that the paper merely has some of the same info as Nazi sites. It's different to share an opinion with someone and to directly quote from them and cite them, which I agree with.

ShadowSD:
PatMeebles:
This whole idea that Israel controls US foreign policy is ludicrous, with our support of a two state solution, our economic assistance to Palestinians before Hamas took power.


Israel Prime Minister Olmert (and Sharon before him) advocate a two state solution. In fact, anyone in their right mind advocates a two state solution, and just the existence of a two state solution certainly doesn't mean the Palestinians will automatically get a fair shake. The question is what territory will the Israelis and Palestinians each get? If the Israelis get all the fertile land and religous shrines, and the Palestinians get nothing but shit, a two state solution is hardly fair.

In addition, the fact that there wasn't a two state solution in 1948 or the fifty eight years since then (and the fact that Israel has only in this decade agreed to it) suggests a gross unfairness towards the Palestinians (who apparantely didn't deserve their own country until this decade, and yet have been expected to police themselves without sovereignty, and since they're unable to do that, they deserve no seat at the negotiating table; WTF?!).

Economic aid to the Palestinians has been pennies compared to the aid we give Israel every year. Also, Israel has nuclear weapons, but the Bush Adminstration refuses to even admit that out loud, while at the same time criticizing Iran for preparing to have such capabilities in ten years; the irony is that Iran signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, whereas Israel never did.

All this is bad news for us (and Israel) when it gets out to the world, and good news for Al Qaeda recruitment. Too bad they're the only ones who see it...

If we wanted to protect American interests, and in the long run Israeli interests, we would have been even handed in the process starting decades ago: even levels of aid per capita, standing up to Israel when it violated UN Resolution 242 just like we stood up to the Palestinians any time they did something wrong, and threatening BOTH sides with a total suspension of aid unless they sat down at the negotiation table. This whole strategy of "the Palestinians have no state, but we expect them to at the same time police themselves and prevent terrorism, and since they can't, they won't have a say in negotiations" is the most self-defeating strategy I've ever heard of, inherently designed with no possible hope of succeeding, only perpetuating a stalemate that leads to the inevitable deaths of countless Israeli and Palestinian civilians (and with that policy now a rallying cry for jihadism, it has since lead to the deaths of thousand of American civilians too, and will sadly lead to countless more).


During the Oslo treaty dealings, Isreal agreed to give Arafat nearly everything he wanted. It was Arafat who screwed the deal over and decided that there would be no compromise

Isreal has given back territories to Arab countries that signed treaties with it, like Egypt. Isreal was also provoked to war by the blockade that Egypt deployed against its shipping, which is an act of war. I don't agree with UN resolution 242 because it demands that Isreal give up territories forcefully when the other side hasn't even bothered to offer a truce.

Also, I wonder why aid hasn't been as great to Palestine than it has been to Isreal, unless you look at the suicide bombings, elected officials who deny Isreal's right to exist, the fact that after the Gaza withdrawl the Palestinians destroyed the Green Houses that had been given to them by Isreali philanthropic groups. This also brings up another question of why hasn't the Middle East been so quick to aid Palestine.
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