Ok, now that we're in Politics...
I'm leaving for work/vacation now, so I'll make this short, but....
There is a conflict going on here, one in which one side will win and one side will die. (I'm also in the US military, by the way, not that it matters.)
However, war with Al Queada or Iraq (so ironic, considering that Bin Laden's pissed at us for defending Saudi against Hussein...) is going to create more problems for the US. We need to de-emotionalize our 'hit-back' response and see how we can truly win the conflict. Playing into what Hussein so obviously wants (so he can further anti-Americanism) is NOT going to help, as more people flock to the side of the underdogs here.
What will win this war is when the children of the Taliban want Levis and MTV. The people in a lot of other countries don't hate the US intrinsically; they're led to do so by mullahs, sheiks, and others on the top of their socioeconomic heirarchy. The West represents, to them, the end of that supremacy. The west's products, politics, and lifestyle would destroy the 'faith' (HA!) that is keeping their people in the dark ages. Hence, they use the ignorance of their people to their own benefit, and manipulate them to further their own ends.
I'm sure anyone who realized that along with a better standard of living and proper health care and civil rights, he can still be a Muslim, and a good one at that, would be amenable to improving his life materially. So, the answer is not smart bombs but Coca-Cola. Eliminate the source of the conflict, not the people fighting.
That is as repulsive to a lot of people, I'm sure, as a war, given the anti-corporate, anti-globalism sentiment here, but I'm looking at this from a warrior's perspective. A fight that breeds more fights is not one you can win. Would you rather that business profits, or that America be besieged by terrorists for the next 100 years? I'd rather be selling people stuff than killing them.
And I don't necessarily see how war with Iraq will stop anything we're trying to stop. I really feel like we're playing into someone's hands...
Gone to Thanksgiving,
Mike
I'm leaving for work/vacation now, so I'll make this short, but....
There is a conflict going on here, one in which one side will win and one side will die. (I'm also in the US military, by the way, not that it matters.)
However, war with Al Queada or Iraq (so ironic, considering that Bin Laden's pissed at us for defending Saudi against Hussein...) is going to create more problems for the US. We need to de-emotionalize our 'hit-back' response and see how we can truly win the conflict. Playing into what Hussein so obviously wants (so he can further anti-Americanism) is NOT going to help, as more people flock to the side of the underdogs here.
What will win this war is when the children of the Taliban want Levis and MTV. The people in a lot of other countries don't hate the US intrinsically; they're led to do so by mullahs, sheiks, and others on the top of their socioeconomic heirarchy. The West represents, to them, the end of that supremacy. The west's products, politics, and lifestyle would destroy the 'faith' (HA!) that is keeping their people in the dark ages. Hence, they use the ignorance of their people to their own benefit, and manipulate them to further their own ends.
I'm sure anyone who realized that along with a better standard of living and proper health care and civil rights, he can still be a Muslim, and a good one at that, would be amenable to improving his life materially. So, the answer is not smart bombs but Coca-Cola. Eliminate the source of the conflict, not the people fighting.
That is as repulsive to a lot of people, I'm sure, as a war, given the anti-corporate, anti-globalism sentiment here, but I'm looking at this from a warrior's perspective. A fight that breeds more fights is not one you can win. Would you rather that business profits, or that America be besieged by terrorists for the next 100 years? I'd rather be selling people stuff than killing them.
And I don't necessarily see how war with Iraq will stop anything we're trying to stop. I really feel like we're playing into someone's hands...
Gone to Thanksgiving,
Mike