Don’t bring back the draft, bring back war taxes

by Doctor Science

One thing we agree on about the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars is that the (American) human costs were borne by only a small part of the population. For people in the military and their families the war was a constant and excessive burden, but most Americans felt no direct consequences at all. And I think we all agree that one reason these wars dragged on so long — the longest of *any* of this country’s wars — was because the burden was so very unevenly distributed, so that the public — and their representatives, and the media — could basically forget about the wars for weeks or even months at a stretch.

As usual when this topic comes up, in our discussion last month we talked about whether having a draft instead of a voluntary military would ensure that more Americans had “skin in the game”, and would take war with more of the seriousness it deserves.

But there’s another way to give more people skin in the game. It’s a truism that wars have a cost in blood and treasure. Afghanistan and Iraq were different from past wars on the “treasure” axis: there was no explicit war tax. On the contrary, one of the “selling points” of the war was that it would pay for itself, so there was no need to increase federal revenues (=raise taxes) to pay for it. In finance this is called a leveraged buyout, but in politics it’s either imperialism or just plain plunder. There was plundering in Iraq, all right, but it didn’t end up with the people who fought or paid for the war.

The Bush Administration didn’t just refuse to consider a war tax, they actively worked to reduce tax rates (and thus federal revenue) while the war was in progress. The enormous cost of the wars were almost entirely financed by borrowing, along with cutting other programs. Some of those program cuts were at the Veterans’ Administration, the principle vehicle for helping the people who’d be paying the “blood” costs of the war.

Right now, the United States is mostly a plutocracy. Wealthy people tend to be very interested in politics, have access to politicians, and have different priorities and opinions from most other Americans. Because politicians depend so much on the wealthy for campaign funding, what we get are public policies that are heavily weighted toward things the wealthy are worried about, and toward solutions that they favor.

In other words, for war to be taken seriously the top 1% — and even 0.1% — of Americans have to have “skin in the game”.

Bringing back the draft won’t affect these people significantly, because there aren’t very many of them, they’re almost all over 40, and their children and grandchildren will have lots of ways of getting around military service or of getting nice, cushy postings if they don’t. No, the way you motivate the wealthy and get their attention is with *taxes*.

I’m not saying all wars need to be directly paid for by increased revenues immediately. Every war of the past few hundred years, at least, has been paid for by a mix of borrowing and immediate taxation. But I think there has to be *some* immediate taxation, at least 25% of the cost of the war, year by year.

And those war taxes need to fall on the upper end of the income scale. The poor and middle classes will pay for war with their blood; the treasure needs to come from the rich. If we weren’t a plutocracy, maybe we could look for a “fairer” system where all classes contribute both blood and treasure, but that’s not what we’ve got. I’m pretty sure that if there’d been an Iraq War tax that hurt the 0.1% as much as stop-loss policies hurt military families, the war would have ended by 2005 if it had been begun at all. The wrath of the rich would really have concentrated Congress’s mind, as the mere human cost did not.

564 thoughts on “Don’t bring back the draft, bring back war taxes”

  1. Except that there seems to be more political demand for lower taxes than for more war — perhaps especially in the political groups who favor both. Not, perhaps, a lot more, but cerrtainly some.
    Which suggests that just the threat of higher taxes to pay for war would result in fewer military actions. Not, however, in higher taxes — although a case could be made for (belatedly) raising taxes to pay for the last couple of wars, where they were not raised….

  2. Except that there seems to be more political demand for lower taxes than for more war — perhaps especially in the political groups who favor both. Not, perhaps, a lot more, but cerrtainly some.
    Which suggests that just the threat of higher taxes to pay for war would result in fewer military actions. Not, however, in higher taxes — although a case could be made for (belatedly) raising taxes to pay for the last couple of wars, where they were not raised….

  3. Except that there seems to be more political demand for lower taxes than for more war — perhaps especially in the political groups who favor both. Not, perhaps, a lot more, but cerrtainly some.
    Which suggests that just the threat of higher taxes to pay for war would result in fewer military actions. Not, however, in higher taxes — although a case could be made for (belatedly) raising taxes to pay for the last couple of wars, where they were not raised….

  4. ‘Way ‘way back in the early oughties, I proposed that the mideast war costs (including VA costs) be funded by a tax on oil company profits.
    Never would have happened, but it was the right thing to do. Still is.

  5. ‘Way ‘way back in the early oughties, I proposed that the mideast war costs (including VA costs) be funded by a tax on oil company profits.
    Never would have happened, but it was the right thing to do. Still is.

  6. ‘Way ‘way back in the early oughties, I proposed that the mideast war costs (including VA costs) be funded by a tax on oil company profits.
    Never would have happened, but it was the right thing to do. Still is.

  7. I think the main problem with the draft is that it is so narrow: it needs to be much wider. It needs to cover adults of all ages. I mean, most people commenting here are not of prime-fighting ages, but I’d wager that most can drive a car which means that they could have driven a truck in Iraq. That job was incredibly dangerous but it is very much something that an overweight 47 year old can do. Likewise, instead of importing tens of thousands of domestic workers from the Phillipines or Bangledash as support staff to cook meals for troops, wash their clothes, etc., we could have Americans who are 30 or 40 or 50 or 60 years old doing that work.
    Obviously, it is enormously disruptive to have to ditch your life for a year to serve in Iraq, totally apart from the danger of living in a war zone. But if we’re going to consider shredding the liberty of 20 year olds, we damn well better do the same for 47 year olds as well.
    And there’s so much other work that needs to be done…who provides child care for soldiers’ families? Drafted middle age adults of course!

  8. I think the main problem with the draft is that it is so narrow: it needs to be much wider. It needs to cover adults of all ages. I mean, most people commenting here are not of prime-fighting ages, but I’d wager that most can drive a car which means that they could have driven a truck in Iraq. That job was incredibly dangerous but it is very much something that an overweight 47 year old can do. Likewise, instead of importing tens of thousands of domestic workers from the Phillipines or Bangledash as support staff to cook meals for troops, wash their clothes, etc., we could have Americans who are 30 or 40 or 50 or 60 years old doing that work.
    Obviously, it is enormously disruptive to have to ditch your life for a year to serve in Iraq, totally apart from the danger of living in a war zone. But if we’re going to consider shredding the liberty of 20 year olds, we damn well better do the same for 47 year olds as well.
    And there’s so much other work that needs to be done…who provides child care for soldiers’ families? Drafted middle age adults of course!

  9. I think the main problem with the draft is that it is so narrow: it needs to be much wider. It needs to cover adults of all ages. I mean, most people commenting here are not of prime-fighting ages, but I’d wager that most can drive a car which means that they could have driven a truck in Iraq. That job was incredibly dangerous but it is very much something that an overweight 47 year old can do. Likewise, instead of importing tens of thousands of domestic workers from the Phillipines or Bangledash as support staff to cook meals for troops, wash their clothes, etc., we could have Americans who are 30 or 40 or 50 or 60 years old doing that work.
    Obviously, it is enormously disruptive to have to ditch your life for a year to serve in Iraq, totally apart from the danger of living in a war zone. But if we’re going to consider shredding the liberty of 20 year olds, we damn well better do the same for 47 year olds as well.
    And there’s so much other work that needs to be done…who provides child care for soldiers’ families? Drafted middle age adults of course!

  10. If the government were to pay for its wars via taxes, then the wealthy would pay more than their fair share.
    If, however, the government were to pay for its wars via deficit spending, then the wealthy will earn more than their fair share of interest on the money loaned.
    There were probably plenty of other reasons Bush chose not to fund the war with a war tax (tough sell! makes the effort seem more difficult than your pitch promises!), but maybe it’s a simple as who profits from it.
    For the record, I’m in favor of War Taxes tied to specific Wars. Heck, it might be enough to bring RFRA into play.

  11. If the government were to pay for its wars via taxes, then the wealthy would pay more than their fair share.
    If, however, the government were to pay for its wars via deficit spending, then the wealthy will earn more than their fair share of interest on the money loaned.
    There were probably plenty of other reasons Bush chose not to fund the war with a war tax (tough sell! makes the effort seem more difficult than your pitch promises!), but maybe it’s a simple as who profits from it.
    For the record, I’m in favor of War Taxes tied to specific Wars. Heck, it might be enough to bring RFRA into play.

  12. If the government were to pay for its wars via taxes, then the wealthy would pay more than their fair share.
    If, however, the government were to pay for its wars via deficit spending, then the wealthy will earn more than their fair share of interest on the money loaned.
    There were probably plenty of other reasons Bush chose not to fund the war with a war tax (tough sell! makes the effort seem more difficult than your pitch promises!), but maybe it’s a simple as who profits from it.
    For the record, I’m in favor of War Taxes tied to specific Wars. Heck, it might be enough to bring RFRA into play.

  13. Turb, forget 47 year olds. 65 year olds (and older!) can still drive trucks and cook meals. Heck, someone in a wheel chair can still probably type and fill out forms — and the military has a lot of that, even when they get off a peace-time footing.
    Part of the problem is that the military still gives at least lip service to the idea that every man can be an infantryman, regardless of whether he is assigned that duty or not. It might make sense, if you have a very small, all-professional army, to have everybody cpmbat capable. But for an army the size of ours, and given how modern warefare works, it is nonsense.

  14. Turb, forget 47 year olds. 65 year olds (and older!) can still drive trucks and cook meals. Heck, someone in a wheel chair can still probably type and fill out forms — and the military has a lot of that, even when they get off a peace-time footing.
    Part of the problem is that the military still gives at least lip service to the idea that every man can be an infantryman, regardless of whether he is assigned that duty or not. It might make sense, if you have a very small, all-professional army, to have everybody cpmbat capable. But for an army the size of ours, and given how modern warefare works, it is nonsense.

  15. Turb, forget 47 year olds. 65 year olds (and older!) can still drive trucks and cook meals. Heck, someone in a wheel chair can still probably type and fill out forms — and the military has a lot of that, even when they get off a peace-time footing.
    Part of the problem is that the military still gives at least lip service to the idea that every man can be an infantryman, regardless of whether he is assigned that duty or not. It might make sense, if you have a very small, all-professional army, to have everybody cpmbat capable. But for an army the size of ours, and given how modern warefare works, it is nonsense.

  16. DrSci:
    I’m pretty sure that if there’d been an Iraq War tax that hurt the 0.1% as much as stop-loss policies hurt military families, the war would have ended by 2005 if it had been begun at all.
    I wouldn’t be so sure. There seems to be more support for the wars among veterans (where the burden fell the most heavily) than among the general populace.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/05/afghanistan-and-iraq-veterans-poll-view-of-war_n_995408.html
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/08/few-regrets-89-of-iraq-and-afghanistan-vets-would-do-it-all-over-again/
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/01/do-iraq-and-afghanistan-veterans-think-the-wars-were-worth-fighting/
    And a link to the main KFF/WP poll: http://www.washingtonpost.com/pb/after-the-wars
    Note it isn’t strong support, just stronger than the general populace. While overall I think war taxes are a good thing (if we must go to war), but I think the major problem with your plan is exactly the same problem you’re trying to get around:
    Right now, the United States is mostly a plutocracy. Wealthy people tend to be very interested in politics, have access to politicians
    The difficulty is selling a war tax, especially a highly progressive one (which seems to be what you are proposing), is that it targets the very people who have access to politicians.
    To get over that access, you need a populace that is engaged and energetic on that topic. We have a functioning democracy, and when the populace feels strongly about something, it in general will happen. And bluntly, people don’t like voting for higher taxes. It’s a hard sell.
    But I don’t even think this is merely rich people licking their lips over government bonds and reconstruction contracts. The invasion of Iraq was popular in the beginning:
    http://www.pewresearch.org/2008/03/19/public-attitudes-toward-the-war-in-iraq-20032008/
    Now, even though the cost of war has been unfairly shared in this country, we are war weary. There is limited support for intervention in Syria, or Ukraine. The American populace has seen war for the last decade, and we have been reminded how horrible it really is. We are properly reluctant to use military force.
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls. We must keep the terrible nature of war near the forefront of our national conscience.

  17. DrSci:
    I’m pretty sure that if there’d been an Iraq War tax that hurt the 0.1% as much as stop-loss policies hurt military families, the war would have ended by 2005 if it had been begun at all.
    I wouldn’t be so sure. There seems to be more support for the wars among veterans (where the burden fell the most heavily) than among the general populace.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/05/afghanistan-and-iraq-veterans-poll-view-of-war_n_995408.html
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/08/few-regrets-89-of-iraq-and-afghanistan-vets-would-do-it-all-over-again/
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/01/do-iraq-and-afghanistan-veterans-think-the-wars-were-worth-fighting/
    And a link to the main KFF/WP poll: http://www.washingtonpost.com/pb/after-the-wars
    Note it isn’t strong support, just stronger than the general populace. While overall I think war taxes are a good thing (if we must go to war), but I think the major problem with your plan is exactly the same problem you’re trying to get around:
    Right now, the United States is mostly a plutocracy. Wealthy people tend to be very interested in politics, have access to politicians
    The difficulty is selling a war tax, especially a highly progressive one (which seems to be what you are proposing), is that it targets the very people who have access to politicians.
    To get over that access, you need a populace that is engaged and energetic on that topic. We have a functioning democracy, and when the populace feels strongly about something, it in general will happen. And bluntly, people don’t like voting for higher taxes. It’s a hard sell.
    But I don’t even think this is merely rich people licking their lips over government bonds and reconstruction contracts. The invasion of Iraq was popular in the beginning:
    http://www.pewresearch.org/2008/03/19/public-attitudes-toward-the-war-in-iraq-20032008/
    Now, even though the cost of war has been unfairly shared in this country, we are war weary. There is limited support for intervention in Syria, or Ukraine. The American populace has seen war for the last decade, and we have been reminded how horrible it really is. We are properly reluctant to use military force.
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls. We must keep the terrible nature of war near the forefront of our national conscience.

  18. DrSci:
    I’m pretty sure that if there’d been an Iraq War tax that hurt the 0.1% as much as stop-loss policies hurt military families, the war would have ended by 2005 if it had been begun at all.
    I wouldn’t be so sure. There seems to be more support for the wars among veterans (where the burden fell the most heavily) than among the general populace.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/05/afghanistan-and-iraq-veterans-poll-view-of-war_n_995408.html
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/08/few-regrets-89-of-iraq-and-afghanistan-vets-would-do-it-all-over-again/
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/04/01/do-iraq-and-afghanistan-veterans-think-the-wars-were-worth-fighting/
    And a link to the main KFF/WP poll: http://www.washingtonpost.com/pb/after-the-wars
    Note it isn’t strong support, just stronger than the general populace. While overall I think war taxes are a good thing (if we must go to war), but I think the major problem with your plan is exactly the same problem you’re trying to get around:
    Right now, the United States is mostly a plutocracy. Wealthy people tend to be very interested in politics, have access to politicians
    The difficulty is selling a war tax, especially a highly progressive one (which seems to be what you are proposing), is that it targets the very people who have access to politicians.
    To get over that access, you need a populace that is engaged and energetic on that topic. We have a functioning democracy, and when the populace feels strongly about something, it in general will happen. And bluntly, people don’t like voting for higher taxes. It’s a hard sell.
    But I don’t even think this is merely rich people licking their lips over government bonds and reconstruction contracts. The invasion of Iraq was popular in the beginning:
    http://www.pewresearch.org/2008/03/19/public-attitudes-toward-the-war-in-iraq-20032008/
    Now, even though the cost of war has been unfairly shared in this country, we are war weary. There is limited support for intervention in Syria, or Ukraine. The American populace has seen war for the last decade, and we have been reminded how horrible it really is. We are properly reluctant to use military force.
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls. We must keep the terrible nature of war near the forefront of our national conscience.

  19. gun camera footage
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.

  20. gun camera footage
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.

  21. gun camera footage
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.

  22. I wonder: if IUDs had been thrown under U.S. troop transports in Iraq and IEDs inserted into women’s vaginas stateside whether Hobby Lobby’s manufactured outrage would have gained as much purchase with Alito and company.
    I favor a flat tax of 100% on stupidity to fund foreign wars with additional surcharges every time either Dick Cheney or John McCain open their mouths to demand weapons and troops be sent everywhere.
    The deficit would disappear overnight, although I disagree with Reagan and Laffer that we would end up with less stupidity.
    McCain’s most recent bullsh*t that he might not have sent troops to Iraq in the first place is not even believed by him (how the Vietnamese tolerated him is beyond human understanding), and besides, his two Vice Presidents would have undermined him behind the scenes to reverse that position, with Joseph Lieberman manning the neo-conservative barricades to reverse any hesitation on Iraq, and Sarah Death Palin and her Tea Party sh*theads urging both impeachment and a military coup if he dared not spend trillions of borrowed money to bring muscular Putin-style, military terror to the rest of the world.
    Speaking of Putin, if things are as they seem in the latest from Ukraine, I just don’t see what American Republicans and conservatives find so sexy/powerful about the idiot, outside of shirtless grandstanding and gay bashing.
    It looks like Putin has screwed the pooch and the Russian people should rise up and shoot the f*cker in the head.
    That should happen a lot of places around the globe.

  23. I wonder: if IUDs had been thrown under U.S. troop transports in Iraq and IEDs inserted into women’s vaginas stateside whether Hobby Lobby’s manufactured outrage would have gained as much purchase with Alito and company.
    I favor a flat tax of 100% on stupidity to fund foreign wars with additional surcharges every time either Dick Cheney or John McCain open their mouths to demand weapons and troops be sent everywhere.
    The deficit would disappear overnight, although I disagree with Reagan and Laffer that we would end up with less stupidity.
    McCain’s most recent bullsh*t that he might not have sent troops to Iraq in the first place is not even believed by him (how the Vietnamese tolerated him is beyond human understanding), and besides, his two Vice Presidents would have undermined him behind the scenes to reverse that position, with Joseph Lieberman manning the neo-conservative barricades to reverse any hesitation on Iraq, and Sarah Death Palin and her Tea Party sh*theads urging both impeachment and a military coup if he dared not spend trillions of borrowed money to bring muscular Putin-style, military terror to the rest of the world.
    Speaking of Putin, if things are as they seem in the latest from Ukraine, I just don’t see what American Republicans and conservatives find so sexy/powerful about the idiot, outside of shirtless grandstanding and gay bashing.
    It looks like Putin has screwed the pooch and the Russian people should rise up and shoot the f*cker in the head.
    That should happen a lot of places around the globe.

  24. I wonder: if IUDs had been thrown under U.S. troop transports in Iraq and IEDs inserted into women’s vaginas stateside whether Hobby Lobby’s manufactured outrage would have gained as much purchase with Alito and company.
    I favor a flat tax of 100% on stupidity to fund foreign wars with additional surcharges every time either Dick Cheney or John McCain open their mouths to demand weapons and troops be sent everywhere.
    The deficit would disappear overnight, although I disagree with Reagan and Laffer that we would end up with less stupidity.
    McCain’s most recent bullsh*t that he might not have sent troops to Iraq in the first place is not even believed by him (how the Vietnamese tolerated him is beyond human understanding), and besides, his two Vice Presidents would have undermined him behind the scenes to reverse that position, with Joseph Lieberman manning the neo-conservative barricades to reverse any hesitation on Iraq, and Sarah Death Palin and her Tea Party sh*theads urging both impeachment and a military coup if he dared not spend trillions of borrowed money to bring muscular Putin-style, military terror to the rest of the world.
    Speaking of Putin, if things are as they seem in the latest from Ukraine, I just don’t see what American Republicans and conservatives find so sexy/powerful about the idiot, outside of shirtless grandstanding and gay bashing.
    It looks like Putin has screwed the pooch and the Russian people should rise up and shoot the f*cker in the head.
    That should happen a lot of places around the globe.

  25. Hartmut:
    A lot of people (far too many)
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Often unaware of it, or possessing only a stylized John Wayne concept of it, perhaps.

  26. Hartmut:
    A lot of people (far too many)
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Often unaware of it, or possessing only a stylized John Wayne concept of it, perhaps.

  27. Hartmut:
    A lot of people (far too many)
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Often unaware of it, or possessing only a stylized John Wayne concept of it, perhaps.

  28. In the War Tax scenario, there’d be a specific levy for a specific purpose, which is much closer to the ACA exemptions religious orgs (and closely held Corps) enjoy wrt to women’s health care.
    RFRA says the government can burden a person’s religious expression if:
    1. the burden is in furtherance of a compelling government interest;
    2. it’s the least restrictive way for the government to further its interest.
    Adams conceded #1, and then failed at #2. The court said the existing tax system — everybody pays, full stop — was the least restrictive means.
    In the War Tax fantasy world, the government would win at 1, but the Quakers may have a shot at 2. There are plenty of less restrictive means for the government to fund a war than a specific war tax.
    It’s moot anyway. But fun to think about!

  29. In the War Tax scenario, there’d be a specific levy for a specific purpose, which is much closer to the ACA exemptions religious orgs (and closely held Corps) enjoy wrt to women’s health care.
    RFRA says the government can burden a person’s religious expression if:
    1. the burden is in furtherance of a compelling government interest;
    2. it’s the least restrictive way for the government to further its interest.
    Adams conceded #1, and then failed at #2. The court said the existing tax system — everybody pays, full stop — was the least restrictive means.
    In the War Tax fantasy world, the government would win at 1, but the Quakers may have a shot at 2. There are plenty of less restrictive means for the government to fund a war than a specific war tax.
    It’s moot anyway. But fun to think about!

  30. In the War Tax scenario, there’d be a specific levy for a specific purpose, which is much closer to the ACA exemptions religious orgs (and closely held Corps) enjoy wrt to women’s health care.
    RFRA says the government can burden a person’s religious expression if:
    1. the burden is in furtherance of a compelling government interest;
    2. it’s the least restrictive way for the government to further its interest.
    Adams conceded #1, and then failed at #2. The court said the existing tax system — everybody pays, full stop — was the least restrictive means.
    In the War Tax fantasy world, the government would win at 1, but the Quakers may have a shot at 2. There are plenty of less restrictive means for the government to fund a war than a specific war tax.
    It’s moot anyway. But fun to think about!

  31. thompson, most would retch if confronted with it first hand. But gun camera footage is the perfect sanitized version. Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Some war veteran turned movie director (Sam Fuller?) said that it would be necessary to put machine guns into movie theaters firing live rounds right above the heads of the audience to give it at least a glimpse of the real thing. And some other veteran opined that smell was the essential missing ingredient. In “Oh! What a Lovely War” at least he actors got the full package. The trench scenes were shot on/in a waste dump during a heat wave and several lost conscience from the unbelievable stink.

  32. thompson, most would retch if confronted with it first hand. But gun camera footage is the perfect sanitized version. Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Some war veteran turned movie director (Sam Fuller?) said that it would be necessary to put machine guns into movie theaters firing live rounds right above the heads of the audience to give it at least a glimpse of the real thing. And some other veteran opined that smell was the essential missing ingredient. In “Oh! What a Lovely War” at least he actors got the full package. The trench scenes were shot on/in a waste dump during a heat wave and several lost conscience from the unbelievable stink.

  33. thompson, most would retch if confronted with it first hand. But gun camera footage is the perfect sanitized version. Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Some war veteran turned movie director (Sam Fuller?) said that it would be necessary to put machine guns into movie theaters firing live rounds right above the heads of the audience to give it at least a glimpse of the real thing. And some other veteran opined that smell was the essential missing ingredient. In “Oh! What a Lovely War” at least he actors got the full package. The trench scenes were shot on/in a waste dump during a heat wave and several lost conscience from the unbelievable stink.

  34. Model62:
    Good point, I suppose there could be some legal case for a specific war tax. But I think the everybody pays, full stop idea would still apply. After all, Adams was perfectly willing to pay for other things, if only she could be guaranteed that it wasn’t spent on war.
    Then again, we allow conscientus objectors to avoid combat duty, perhaps a similar doctrine would apply.
    Hartmut:
    most would retch if confronted with it first hand.
    I’d agree.
    Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Personally, I get no thrill from gun camera footage. Or footage of the aftermath. Or pictures of death and destruction.
    Not saying there aren’t sanitized depictions, or that people don’t glorify war and combat. My point is that confronting voters with the reality of war is the best check against engaging in war.
    Maybe you’re right, gun camera is too abstract to most people. I don’t know, its real enough for me.

  35. Model62:
    Good point, I suppose there could be some legal case for a specific war tax. But I think the everybody pays, full stop idea would still apply. After all, Adams was perfectly willing to pay for other things, if only she could be guaranteed that it wasn’t spent on war.
    Then again, we allow conscientus objectors to avoid combat duty, perhaps a similar doctrine would apply.
    Hartmut:
    most would retch if confronted with it first hand.
    I’d agree.
    Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Personally, I get no thrill from gun camera footage. Or footage of the aftermath. Or pictures of death and destruction.
    Not saying there aren’t sanitized depictions, or that people don’t glorify war and combat. My point is that confronting voters with the reality of war is the best check against engaging in war.
    Maybe you’re right, gun camera is too abstract to most people. I don’t know, its real enough for me.

  36. Model62:
    Good point, I suppose there could be some legal case for a specific war tax. But I think the everybody pays, full stop idea would still apply. After all, Adams was perfectly willing to pay for other things, if only she could be guaranteed that it wasn’t spent on war.
    Then again, we allow conscientus objectors to avoid combat duty, perhaps a similar doctrine would apply.
    Hartmut:
    most would retch if confronted with it first hand.
    I’d agree.
    Concrete enough for the thrill but abstract enough to avoid the side effects.
    Personally, I get no thrill from gun camera footage. Or footage of the aftermath. Or pictures of death and destruction.
    Not saying there aren’t sanitized depictions, or that people don’t glorify war and combat. My point is that confronting voters with the reality of war is the best check against engaging in war.
    Maybe you’re right, gun camera is too abstract to most people. I don’t know, its real enough for me.

  37. I was an extra playing a combat soldier in “Apocalypse Now” while in the Philippines a million years ago and yes, it was a movie, and the rounds were blanks, but with helicopters and aircraft right overhead, explosions set a few feet away (we weren’t always told where) and the fusillades of military gunfire, I think I got a taste of the horrible, deafening, disequilibrating noise of war, even though the takes were only a few minutes long.
    It was sobering. I’m pretty sure I shot most of my mates nearby, and they me.
    No purple hearts.
    The combat scenes, especially the first 20 minutes, of “Saving Private Ryan” with the surround sound shrapnel whistling past your ears in the theater did not have me thinking, “God, I wish I’d been in the front row of the Allies landing craft on D-Day.”
    Some of the war-lovers in this country, luckily, are pinned down at the Bundy Ranch and putting on weight from ordering out for cheeseburgers from the local drive-in.
    Others have developed carpel tunnel syndrome from launching cruise missiles via their keyboards in their basements while wearing little more than their bathrobes.
    The most egregious, tacky, tasteless, ridiculous, disgusting, and damaging example of such thinking was George W. Bush stuffing a sock down the front of his flight suit britches and fake landing a fighter jet on the aircraft carrier.
    It put the concept and tradition of civilian control and command of the military back a couple of centuries.

  38. I was an extra playing a combat soldier in “Apocalypse Now” while in the Philippines a million years ago and yes, it was a movie, and the rounds were blanks, but with helicopters and aircraft right overhead, explosions set a few feet away (we weren’t always told where) and the fusillades of military gunfire, I think I got a taste of the horrible, deafening, disequilibrating noise of war, even though the takes were only a few minutes long.
    It was sobering. I’m pretty sure I shot most of my mates nearby, and they me.
    No purple hearts.
    The combat scenes, especially the first 20 minutes, of “Saving Private Ryan” with the surround sound shrapnel whistling past your ears in the theater did not have me thinking, “God, I wish I’d been in the front row of the Allies landing craft on D-Day.”
    Some of the war-lovers in this country, luckily, are pinned down at the Bundy Ranch and putting on weight from ordering out for cheeseburgers from the local drive-in.
    Others have developed carpel tunnel syndrome from launching cruise missiles via their keyboards in their basements while wearing little more than their bathrobes.
    The most egregious, tacky, tasteless, ridiculous, disgusting, and damaging example of such thinking was George W. Bush stuffing a sock down the front of his flight suit britches and fake landing a fighter jet on the aircraft carrier.
    It put the concept and tradition of civilian control and command of the military back a couple of centuries.

  39. I was an extra playing a combat soldier in “Apocalypse Now” while in the Philippines a million years ago and yes, it was a movie, and the rounds were blanks, but with helicopters and aircraft right overhead, explosions set a few feet away (we weren’t always told where) and the fusillades of military gunfire, I think I got a taste of the horrible, deafening, disequilibrating noise of war, even though the takes were only a few minutes long.
    It was sobering. I’m pretty sure I shot most of my mates nearby, and they me.
    No purple hearts.
    The combat scenes, especially the first 20 minutes, of “Saving Private Ryan” with the surround sound shrapnel whistling past your ears in the theater did not have me thinking, “God, I wish I’d been in the front row of the Allies landing craft on D-Day.”
    Some of the war-lovers in this country, luckily, are pinned down at the Bundy Ranch and putting on weight from ordering out for cheeseburgers from the local drive-in.
    Others have developed carpel tunnel syndrome from launching cruise missiles via their keyboards in their basements while wearing little more than their bathrobes.
    The most egregious, tacky, tasteless, ridiculous, disgusting, and damaging example of such thinking was George W. Bush stuffing a sock down the front of his flight suit britches and fake landing a fighter jet on the aircraft carrier.
    It put the concept and tradition of civilian control and command of the military back a couple of centuries.

  40. I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.

  41. I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.

  42. I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.

  43. thompson: … you need a populace that is engaged and energetic
    We run this republic with the populace we have, not the populace we wish we had.
    But in all seriousness, it seems to me that the kind of politics that gets called centrist, or moderate, or bipartisan, by the Very Serious People who always compare it favorably to good old-fashioned win-some-lose-some competitive democracy, is a fine recipe for an indifferent and lethargic populace.
    The people who raise hell — who are not Very Serious, who want what they want and spit on compromise — are the people politicians actually fear in the end. It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    If I were a billionaire, I’d spend money on convincing the populace that taxing me more would be bad for them. I’d push memes like “wealth creation” and pooh-pooh questions about the distribution of that wealth. I would use politicians and pundits as my mouthpieces, of course. And I’d convince a lot of the populace.
    Oh wait: it’s already been done.
    –TP

  44. thompson: … you need a populace that is engaged and energetic
    We run this republic with the populace we have, not the populace we wish we had.
    But in all seriousness, it seems to me that the kind of politics that gets called centrist, or moderate, or bipartisan, by the Very Serious People who always compare it favorably to good old-fashioned win-some-lose-some competitive democracy, is a fine recipe for an indifferent and lethargic populace.
    The people who raise hell — who are not Very Serious, who want what they want and spit on compromise — are the people politicians actually fear in the end. It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    If I were a billionaire, I’d spend money on convincing the populace that taxing me more would be bad for them. I’d push memes like “wealth creation” and pooh-pooh questions about the distribution of that wealth. I would use politicians and pundits as my mouthpieces, of course. And I’d convince a lot of the populace.
    Oh wait: it’s already been done.
    –TP

  45. thompson: … you need a populace that is engaged and energetic
    We run this republic with the populace we have, not the populace we wish we had.
    But in all seriousness, it seems to me that the kind of politics that gets called centrist, or moderate, or bipartisan, by the Very Serious People who always compare it favorably to good old-fashioned win-some-lose-some competitive democracy, is a fine recipe for an indifferent and lethargic populace.
    The people who raise hell — who are not Very Serious, who want what they want and spit on compromise — are the people politicians actually fear in the end. It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    If I were a billionaire, I’d spend money on convincing the populace that taxing me more would be bad for them. I’d push memes like “wealth creation” and pooh-pooh questions about the distribution of that wealth. I would use politicians and pundits as my mouthpieces, of course. And I’d convince a lot of the populace.
    Oh wait: it’s already been done.
    –TP

  46. CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.
    And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.

  47. CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.
    And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.

  48. CNN made their bones broadcasting Iraq I live. Millions of Americans watched it. Their ratings were through the roof.
    And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.

  49. We run this republic with the populace we have
    Ah, so that is what a democracy is! 🙂
    It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    Aren’t they doing both? The rich have access to politicians, and have access to media.
    However, when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will. When people don’t care strongly, or are split, it becomes easier to guide the discussion with money.
    My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed. As evidenced by decline in support for military actions, even limited ones, as the reality of Iraq and Afghanistan seeped its way slowly into the national consciousness.

  50. We run this republic with the populace we have
    Ah, so that is what a democracy is! 🙂
    It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    Aren’t they doing both? The rich have access to politicians, and have access to media.
    However, when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will. When people don’t care strongly, or are split, it becomes easier to guide the discussion with money.
    My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed. As evidenced by decline in support for military actions, even limited ones, as the reality of Iraq and Afghanistan seeped its way slowly into the national consciousness.

  51. We run this republic with the populace we have
    Ah, so that is what a democracy is! 🙂
    It’s commonplace to speak of the super-rich buying politicians with campaign money, but what they’re really doing if you think it through is indoctrinating the populace.
    Aren’t they doing both? The rich have access to politicians, and have access to media.
    However, when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will. When people don’t care strongly, or are split, it becomes easier to guide the discussion with money.
    My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed. As evidenced by decline in support for military actions, even limited ones, as the reality of Iraq and Afghanistan seeped its way slowly into the national consciousness.

  52. thompson:
    when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will.
    Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank.
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party, despite the wishes of party leaders and oligarchs. But I don’t know how much marketing effort has been thrown at them, or if party leaders (during the Bush Administration and now) just expect the followers to, well, follow, and don’t know how to cope when they won’t.
    And the really intensive marketing force in the GOP is the conservative media: talk radio, Fox News, and the Wall Street Journal. I don’t know of any position conservative media has strongly promoted but which has then been rejected by the GOP rank-and-file — now centered on the Tea Party. Can you think of any?

  53. thompson:
    when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will.
    Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank.
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party, despite the wishes of party leaders and oligarchs. But I don’t know how much marketing effort has been thrown at them, or if party leaders (during the Bush Administration and now) just expect the followers to, well, follow, and don’t know how to cope when they won’t.
    And the really intensive marketing force in the GOP is the conservative media: talk radio, Fox News, and the Wall Street Journal. I don’t know of any position conservative media has strongly promoted but which has then been rejected by the GOP rank-and-file — now centered on the Tea Party. Can you think of any?

  54. thompson:
    when the populace cares strongly about something, there is no amount of money, ad buys, etc etc, that can overcome popular will.
    Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank.
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party, despite the wishes of party leaders and oligarchs. But I don’t know how much marketing effort has been thrown at them, or if party leaders (during the Bush Administration and now) just expect the followers to, well, follow, and don’t know how to cope when they won’t.
    And the really intensive marketing force in the GOP is the conservative media: talk radio, Fox News, and the Wall Street Journal. I don’t know of any position conservative media has strongly promoted but which has then been rejected by the GOP rank-and-file — now centered on the Tea Party. Can you think of any?

  55. People seem to forget that we had a draft during the Vietnam war, and it, although the draft may have engendered protests, it didn’t prevent the war from lasting for years.
    In any case, even if a draft would reduce U.S. aggression around the world, no benefit could justify slavery, which is what the draft is. The military, like other employers should compete for employees in the open market.

  56. People seem to forget that we had a draft during the Vietnam war, and it, although the draft may have engendered protests, it didn’t prevent the war from lasting for years.
    In any case, even if a draft would reduce U.S. aggression around the world, no benefit could justify slavery, which is what the draft is. The military, like other employers should compete for employees in the open market.

  57. People seem to forget that we had a draft during the Vietnam war, and it, although the draft may have engendered protests, it didn’t prevent the war from lasting for years.
    In any case, even if a draft would reduce U.S. aggression around the world, no benefit could justify slavery, which is what the draft is. The military, like other employers should compete for employees in the open market.

  58. And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.
    I remember live footage of missiles hitting targets full of people. The camera was on the missile, so it’s true, no post-impact footage of charred bodies.
    Throughout the Afghanistan and Iraq II campaigns there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff. To hot and nasty for TV, but not for YouTube and email circulation.
    Long story short, challenge away, but IMO you’re wrong about American’s appetite for and interest in seeing carnage, as long it’s other folks.

  59. And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.
    I remember live footage of missiles hitting targets full of people. The camera was on the missile, so it’s true, no post-impact footage of charred bodies.
    Throughout the Afghanistan and Iraq II campaigns there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff. To hot and nasty for TV, but not for YouTube and email circulation.
    Long story short, challenge away, but IMO you’re wrong about American’s appetite for and interest in seeing carnage, as long it’s other folks.

  60. And the reporting, at least as I recall it, had minimal displays of graphic violence or the results.
    I remember live footage of missiles hitting targets full of people. The camera was on the missile, so it’s true, no post-impact footage of charred bodies.
    Throughout the Afghanistan and Iraq II campaigns there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff. To hot and nasty for TV, but not for YouTube and email circulation.
    Long story short, challenge away, but IMO you’re wrong about American’s appetite for and interest in seeing carnage, as long it’s other folks.

  61. IIRC, there was something like 85% of public support for universal background checks on gun sales, post Sandy Hook.
    Yet somehow, it didn’t happen. Would it have happened at 90% support? 95% support? 99% support with the 1%ers dead set against it?
    Perhaps if the 85% had the “intensity” of the other 15% it would make a difference, IOW: “drag the politicians out to street and beat them with shovels if they don’t do what we want”. Rather than “we think it’s a good idea. No? Oh well”.

  62. IIRC, there was something like 85% of public support for universal background checks on gun sales, post Sandy Hook.
    Yet somehow, it didn’t happen. Would it have happened at 90% support? 95% support? 99% support with the 1%ers dead set against it?
    Perhaps if the 85% had the “intensity” of the other 15% it would make a difference, IOW: “drag the politicians out to street and beat them with shovels if they don’t do what we want”. Rather than “we think it’s a good idea. No? Oh well”.

  63. IIRC, there was something like 85% of public support for universal background checks on gun sales, post Sandy Hook.
    Yet somehow, it didn’t happen. Would it have happened at 90% support? 95% support? 99% support with the 1%ers dead set against it?
    Perhaps if the 85% had the “intensity” of the other 15% it would make a difference, IOW: “drag the politicians out to street and beat them with shovels if they don’t do what we want”. Rather than “we think it’s a good idea. No? Oh well”.

  64. thompson: My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed.
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    I only say “probably” because I seem to remember that Teddy Roosevelt’s splendid little war with Spain was partly funded by a tax on telephone services that remained on the books for about a century. On the other hand, that was a rich man’s tax when it was enacted: the average person in the street did not have a telephone back then. (Taking “in the street” literally, nobody did.) So even if I’m remembering correctly, it’s not clear what thesis this example supports.
    I’m fairly sure, however, that I could make a war extremely unpopular, nowadays, if I could arrange for it to be financed by a tax on cellphone minutes.
    –TP

  65. thompson: My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed.
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    I only say “probably” because I seem to remember that Teddy Roosevelt’s splendid little war with Spain was partly funded by a tax on telephone services that remained on the books for about a century. On the other hand, that was a rich man’s tax when it was enacted: the average person in the street did not have a telephone back then. (Taking “in the street” literally, nobody did.) So even if I’m remembering correctly, it’s not clear what thesis this example supports.
    I’m fairly sure, however, that I could make a war extremely unpopular, nowadays, if I could arrange for it to be financed by a tax on cellphone minutes.
    –TP

  66. thompson: My point is that I doubt the average person on the street has much appetite for war, if they knew what it entailed.
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    I only say “probably” because I seem to remember that Teddy Roosevelt’s splendid little war with Spain was partly funded by a tax on telephone services that remained on the books for about a century. On the other hand, that was a rich man’s tax when it was enacted: the average person in the street did not have a telephone back then. (Taking “in the street” literally, nobody did.) So even if I’m remembering correctly, it’s not clear what thesis this example supports.
    I’m fairly sure, however, that I could make a war extremely unpopular, nowadays, if I could arrange for it to be financed by a tax on cellphone minutes.
    –TP

  67. In Germany the tax on sparkling wine/champagne was introduced to get extra revenue for the (then) Imperial Fleet. This tax did not disappear after 1918. It would take some time before it ceased to be just a tax on the wealthy only since the commoners preferred more basic alcoholic beverages.

  68. In Germany the tax on sparkling wine/champagne was introduced to get extra revenue for the (then) Imperial Fleet. This tax did not disappear after 1918. It would take some time before it ceased to be just a tax on the wealthy only since the commoners preferred more basic alcoholic beverages.

  69. In Germany the tax on sparkling wine/champagne was introduced to get extra revenue for the (then) Imperial Fleet. This tax did not disappear after 1918. It would take some time before it ceased to be just a tax on the wealthy only since the commoners preferred more basic alcoholic beverages.

  70. Vietnam dragged on for a long time (albeit not as long as this centuries examples). But it is perhaps noteworthy that, save in cases where we are clearly and directly attacked, nobody ever sells getting into a way while admitting how long it may run. It’s always going to be “a short, victorious war.” With the natives greeting our troops with flowers.
    Oh yes, and because it will be so quick and easy, there won’t be any need for additional taxes to pay for it. War on the cheap. At least until the fighting starts — at which point we suddenly discover an urgent need for additional men and equipment.

  71. Vietnam dragged on for a long time (albeit not as long as this centuries examples). But it is perhaps noteworthy that, save in cases where we are clearly and directly attacked, nobody ever sells getting into a way while admitting how long it may run. It’s always going to be “a short, victorious war.” With the natives greeting our troops with flowers.
    Oh yes, and because it will be so quick and easy, there won’t be any need for additional taxes to pay for it. War on the cheap. At least until the fighting starts — at which point we suddenly discover an urgent need for additional men and equipment.

  72. Vietnam dragged on for a long time (albeit not as long as this centuries examples). But it is perhaps noteworthy that, save in cases where we are clearly and directly attacked, nobody ever sells getting into a way while admitting how long it may run. It’s always going to be “a short, victorious war.” With the natives greeting our troops with flowers.
    Oh yes, and because it will be so quick and easy, there won’t be any need for additional taxes to pay for it. War on the cheap. At least until the fighting starts — at which point we suddenly discover an urgent need for additional men and equipment.

  73. DrSci:
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party
    I think immigration is a good example. It likely played a role in the defeat of Cantor, despite his substantial money and support advantage.
    Another example is the Syria conflict. I’ll admit I don’t watch much foxnews, but what little I have seen regarding the conflict tended to follow the lines of Mccain, Graham, etc. Intervention in Syria polls poorly in general, and worse in R’s:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/164282/support-syria-action-lower-past-conflicts.aspx
    I’ll admit neither is a perfect example of what I’m suggesting. Then again, I don’t think there are any perfect examples in politics and popular opinion. It’s a messy field, and I certainly wouldn’t claim any simple answer fully describes it.
    russell:
    there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff.
    How large, compared to the voting public? There are fans of child pornography, but I wouldn’t consider them representative of the voters in general. Alternatively, I’m also not clear on why the videos were distributed, and to who. Videos of police brutality are common online, some youtube videos have millions of views. But I wouldn’t necessarily claim that the majority of people viewing them are doing so because they enjoy and support the violence.
    If your point is that there are sick people out there, I would agree. If your point is that its a large percentage of the population, I am unconvinced.
    Tony P:
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    Heh, perhaps. And like I said, I have no objection to war taxes. I think they are unlikely, due to vested interests against increased taxes at the higher levels. I also don’t think they are the best strategy, as sometimes people making sacrifices believe in the sacrifices they are making are worthwhile.
    As I mentioned, those that carried the burden most heavily in Iraq and Afghanistan are in general more supportive of the war. While its true you can modify behavior with taxes, simply taxing something doesn’t eliminate it.

  74. DrSci:
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party
    I think immigration is a good example. It likely played a role in the defeat of Cantor, despite his substantial money and support advantage.
    Another example is the Syria conflict. I’ll admit I don’t watch much foxnews, but what little I have seen regarding the conflict tended to follow the lines of Mccain, Graham, etc. Intervention in Syria polls poorly in general, and worse in R’s:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/164282/support-syria-action-lower-past-conflicts.aspx
    I’ll admit neither is a perfect example of what I’m suggesting. Then again, I don’t think there are any perfect examples in politics and popular opinion. It’s a messy field, and I certainly wouldn’t claim any simple answer fully describes it.
    russell:
    there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff.
    How large, compared to the voting public? There are fans of child pornography, but I wouldn’t consider them representative of the voters in general. Alternatively, I’m also not clear on why the videos were distributed, and to who. Videos of police brutality are common online, some youtube videos have millions of views. But I wouldn’t necessarily claim that the majority of people viewing them are doing so because they enjoy and support the violence.
    If your point is that there are sick people out there, I would agree. If your point is that its a large percentage of the population, I am unconvinced.
    Tony P:
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    Heh, perhaps. And like I said, I have no objection to war taxes. I think they are unlikely, due to vested interests against increased taxes at the higher levels. I also don’t think they are the best strategy, as sometimes people making sacrifices believe in the sacrifices they are making are worthwhile.
    As I mentioned, those that carried the burden most heavily in Iraq and Afghanistan are in general more supportive of the war. While its true you can modify behavior with taxes, simply taxing something doesn’t eliminate it.

  75. DrSci:
    The nearest I can come is the absolute resistance to immigration reform by foot soldiers within the Republican Party
    I think immigration is a good example. It likely played a role in the defeat of Cantor, despite his substantial money and support advantage.
    Another example is the Syria conflict. I’ll admit I don’t watch much foxnews, but what little I have seen regarding the conflict tended to follow the lines of Mccain, Graham, etc. Intervention in Syria polls poorly in general, and worse in R’s:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/164282/support-syria-action-lower-past-conflicts.aspx
    I’ll admit neither is a perfect example of what I’m suggesting. Then again, I don’t think there are any perfect examples in politics and popular opinion. It’s a messy field, and I certainly wouldn’t claim any simple answer fully describes it.
    russell:
    there was a quite large fan base for bootlegs of the gorier stuff.
    How large, compared to the voting public? There are fans of child pornography, but I wouldn’t consider them representative of the voters in general. Alternatively, I’m also not clear on why the videos were distributed, and to who. Videos of police brutality are common online, some youtube videos have millions of views. But I wouldn’t necessarily claim that the majority of people viewing them are doing so because they enjoy and support the violence.
    If your point is that there are sick people out there, I would agree. If your point is that its a large percentage of the population, I am unconvinced.
    Tony P:
    Probably true, if “what it entailed” was higher taxes. Which is DocSci’s thesis.
    Heh, perhaps. And like I said, I have no objection to war taxes. I think they are unlikely, due to vested interests against increased taxes at the higher levels. I also don’t think they are the best strategy, as sometimes people making sacrifices believe in the sacrifices they are making are worthwhile.
    As I mentioned, those that carried the burden most heavily in Iraq and Afghanistan are in general more supportive of the war. While its true you can modify behavior with taxes, simply taxing something doesn’t eliminate it.

  76. How large, compared to the voting public?
    I didn’t realize that we were discussing how many as a percentage of the voting public.
    Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    How big? Bigger than small. Bigger than trivial, and bigger than inconsequential. Bigger than just weirdos and creeps.

  77. How large, compared to the voting public?
    I didn’t realize that we were discussing how many as a percentage of the voting public.
    Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    How big? Bigger than small. Bigger than trivial, and bigger than inconsequential. Bigger than just weirdos and creeps.

  78. How large, compared to the voting public?
    I didn’t realize that we were discussing how many as a percentage of the voting public.
    Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    How big? Bigger than small. Bigger than trivial, and bigger than inconsequential. Bigger than just weirdos and creeps.

  79. “Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank”
    Well, they’re sure trying. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine. Neither the lefties nor the right wingers will be happy until we are engaged in perpetual war of Armageddon proportions. But it’s a soft sell based on whipped up moral outrage.
    Working against Assad helped to create ISIS, who we also get to fight.
    Now there’s Africom (African Command) where we have more troops that most realize fighting someone or another for some reason or another.
    Both parties voted unanimously to support Israel’s latest slaughter of Palestinian fish in the Gaza barrel; replete with Palestinian children gunned down on a beach while repairing fishing nets.
    War is what the US does all over the world and both parties are responsible.
    A draft would never work because it would cause people to start examining the concept of perpetual global war; and probably resist.
    A war tax would have a similar result, albeit to a lesser degree.
    A bad economy with low paying jobs is a defacto draft and I suspect that is in part why we have such a situation.
    Essentially, we are f’ed unless we burn down DC, shoot all of the politicians, and start all over again. But that’s why gun control is so important. They know that once war with Russia commences, what the reaction might be.
    Is there a single politician that is fanning the flames of war?

  80. “Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank”
    Well, they’re sure trying. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine. Neither the lefties nor the right wingers will be happy until we are engaged in perpetual war of Armageddon proportions. But it’s a soft sell based on whipped up moral outrage.
    Working against Assad helped to create ISIS, who we also get to fight.
    Now there’s Africom (African Command) where we have more troops that most realize fighting someone or another for some reason or another.
    Both parties voted unanimously to support Israel’s latest slaughter of Palestinian fish in the Gaza barrel; replete with Palestinian children gunned down on a beach while repairing fishing nets.
    War is what the US does all over the world and both parties are responsible.
    A draft would never work because it would cause people to start examining the concept of perpetual global war; and probably resist.
    A war tax would have a similar result, albeit to a lesser degree.
    A bad economy with low paying jobs is a defacto draft and I suspect that is in part why we have such a situation.
    Essentially, we are f’ed unless we burn down DC, shoot all of the politicians, and start all over again. But that’s why gun control is so important. They know that once war with Russia commences, what the reaction might be.
    Is there a single politician that is fanning the flames of war?

  81. “Please give an example of something the populace cares strongly about that political marketing has been unable to sway, because I’m drawing a blank”
    Well, they’re sure trying. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine. Neither the lefties nor the right wingers will be happy until we are engaged in perpetual war of Armageddon proportions. But it’s a soft sell based on whipped up moral outrage.
    Working against Assad helped to create ISIS, who we also get to fight.
    Now there’s Africom (African Command) where we have more troops that most realize fighting someone or another for some reason or another.
    Both parties voted unanimously to support Israel’s latest slaughter of Palestinian fish in the Gaza barrel; replete with Palestinian children gunned down on a beach while repairing fishing nets.
    War is what the US does all over the world and both parties are responsible.
    A draft would never work because it would cause people to start examining the concept of perpetual global war; and probably resist.
    A war tax would have a similar result, albeit to a lesser degree.
    A bad economy with low paying jobs is a defacto draft and I suspect that is in part why we have such a situation.
    Essentially, we are f’ed unless we burn down DC, shoot all of the politicians, and start all over again. But that’s why gun control is so important. They know that once war with Russia commences, what the reaction might be.
    Is there a single politician that is fanning the flames of war?

  82. //Drat!
    “… nobody ever sells getting into a war”//
    Got side tracked. Yes. Wars are absolutely sold. Remember the Maine! remember the Lusitania! Remember Pearl Harbor! Tonkin Gulf! Red Commies and dominoes! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 1)! dead babies ripped from incubators in Kuwaiti hospitals. Remember 9/11! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 2)! WMD! Yellow cake! Mobile germ labs! Assad gassed his own people! Putin responsible for shoot down of passenger airliner!
    Those few simple slogans – several lies and most vast oversimplifications – have been (or will be in the latter case) the sales pitches that were bought by the American people, that launched the green machine that killed millions.
    Unless you are saying that the American people exist in a constant insatiate hunger for war and the sales pitches were not necessary.

  83. //Drat!
    “… nobody ever sells getting into a war”//
    Got side tracked. Yes. Wars are absolutely sold. Remember the Maine! remember the Lusitania! Remember Pearl Harbor! Tonkin Gulf! Red Commies and dominoes! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 1)! dead babies ripped from incubators in Kuwaiti hospitals. Remember 9/11! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 2)! WMD! Yellow cake! Mobile germ labs! Assad gassed his own people! Putin responsible for shoot down of passenger airliner!
    Those few simple slogans – several lies and most vast oversimplifications – have been (or will be in the latter case) the sales pitches that were bought by the American people, that launched the green machine that killed millions.
    Unless you are saying that the American people exist in a constant insatiate hunger for war and the sales pitches were not necessary.

  84. //Drat!
    “… nobody ever sells getting into a war”//
    Got side tracked. Yes. Wars are absolutely sold. Remember the Maine! remember the Lusitania! Remember Pearl Harbor! Tonkin Gulf! Red Commies and dominoes! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 1)! dead babies ripped from incubators in Kuwaiti hospitals. Remember 9/11! Saddam worse than Hitler (part 2)! WMD! Yellow cake! Mobile germ labs! Assad gassed his own people! Putin responsible for shoot down of passenger airliner!
    Those few simple slogans – several lies and most vast oversimplifications – have been (or will be in the latter case) the sales pitches that were bought by the American people, that launched the green machine that killed millions.
    Unless you are saying that the American people exist in a constant insatiate hunger for war and the sales pitches were not necessary.

  85. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine.
    Somehow my recollection is different. It had the Obama administration avoiding getting militarily involved in Syria (to the fury of the neocons). While (to widespread surprise) successfully getting the chemical weapons out of Assad’s hands.
    As for the situation in Ukraine, I’m just not seeing any effort to get us militarily involved at the moment. And the closest I’ve seen to that was a suggestion, from outside the admistration, back when Crimea was being grabbed to move some naval vessels into the Black Sea. Which might have actually escallated to the point of getting a war going . . . except that it didn’t actually happen.
    So far, we seem to be focused on economic, not military, responses to Russia. With, admittedly, a huge assist from Putin’s missteps — he looks to have gotten the EU motivated to sign in on sanctions that were previously more than they would go for.

  86. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine.
    Somehow my recollection is different. It had the Obama administration avoiding getting militarily involved in Syria (to the fury of the neocons). While (to widespread surprise) successfully getting the chemical weapons out of Assad’s hands.
    As for the situation in Ukraine, I’m just not seeing any effort to get us militarily involved at the moment. And the closest I’ve seen to that was a suggestion, from outside the admistration, back when Crimea was being grabbed to move some naval vessels into the Black Sea. Which might have actually escallated to the point of getting a war going . . . except that it didn’t actually happen.
    So far, we seem to be focused on economic, not military, responses to Russia. With, admittedly, a huge assist from Putin’s missteps — he looks to have gotten the EU motivated to sign in on sanctions that were previously more than they would go for.

  87. The BHO admin was absolutely trying to get us into the fray in Syria by lying about who was responsible for the gas attack. It was their yellow cake/wmd/mobile labs moment. It failed and they were wrong, but, undeterred by truth, they’re back at it again with the downed Malaysian airliner in the Ukraine.
    Somehow my recollection is different. It had the Obama administration avoiding getting militarily involved in Syria (to the fury of the neocons). While (to widespread surprise) successfully getting the chemical weapons out of Assad’s hands.
    As for the situation in Ukraine, I’m just not seeing any effort to get us militarily involved at the moment. And the closest I’ve seen to that was a suggestion, from outside the admistration, back when Crimea was being grabbed to move some naval vessels into the Black Sea. Which might have actually escallated to the point of getting a war going . . . except that it didn’t actually happen.
    So far, we seem to be focused on economic, not military, responses to Russia. With, admittedly, a huge assist from Putin’s missteps — he looks to have gotten the EU motivated to sign in on sanctions that were previously more than they would go for.

  88. Informed observer–I don’t have any problems with people criticizing the Obama Administration when it’s wrong and I’ll get right to it in a moment, but I think your Syria analysis is mistaken. Obama drew his red line regarding Syria, but he seemed flummoxed when Syria apparently used poison gas. (I know some people said it was the rebels but don’t know enough to say who was right.) But it seemed to me that Obama was relieved to have a face-saving way out. He is in favor of drone killing, but not boots on the ground. Now there was a lot of talk of arming “moderate” rebels. I’m always surprised at how touchingly eager Americans are to arm “moderate” rebels. (Maybe they could have found some moderate Palestinian rebels to arm. In a way, they did, but they expect those arms to be used against other Palestinians, as in the brief Palestinian civil war the US/Israel instigated because they didn’t like the fact that Hamas won the election. ) There’s maybe a bit less eagerness to get involved in the Syrian war on the side of the “rebels”, since the most effective rebels in Syria seem to be the ones who are also rebelling in Iraq, killing Christians and so on. Which is also, btw, why I’ve read Christians in Syria support Assad.
    Regarding the bipartisan consensus about slaughtering Palestinians, you’re right. It’s this sort of thing that makes the word “bipartisan” leave a bad taste in my mouth. There’s something touching in the President’s empathy for Israeli children under the “rain of rockets”–he’s always talking about how he’d feel if his daughters were under those rockets. He never seems to empathize with Palestinian farmers or fishermen or unarmed protestors getting shot during ceasefires. They don’t exist. Their deaths are barely reported and promptly forgotten the instant an Israeli is killed. That, by definition, is when a ceasefire has ended. Though sometimes it only requires some Palestinian rockets without any deaths. But Obama is just doing what apparently every American politician is supposed to do–humanize one side and justify the violence inflicted by them, but not on them.

  89. Informed observer–I don’t have any problems with people criticizing the Obama Administration when it’s wrong and I’ll get right to it in a moment, but I think your Syria analysis is mistaken. Obama drew his red line regarding Syria, but he seemed flummoxed when Syria apparently used poison gas. (I know some people said it was the rebels but don’t know enough to say who was right.) But it seemed to me that Obama was relieved to have a face-saving way out. He is in favor of drone killing, but not boots on the ground. Now there was a lot of talk of arming “moderate” rebels. I’m always surprised at how touchingly eager Americans are to arm “moderate” rebels. (Maybe they could have found some moderate Palestinian rebels to arm. In a way, they did, but they expect those arms to be used against other Palestinians, as in the brief Palestinian civil war the US/Israel instigated because they didn’t like the fact that Hamas won the election. ) There’s maybe a bit less eagerness to get involved in the Syrian war on the side of the “rebels”, since the most effective rebels in Syria seem to be the ones who are also rebelling in Iraq, killing Christians and so on. Which is also, btw, why I’ve read Christians in Syria support Assad.
    Regarding the bipartisan consensus about slaughtering Palestinians, you’re right. It’s this sort of thing that makes the word “bipartisan” leave a bad taste in my mouth. There’s something touching in the President’s empathy for Israeli children under the “rain of rockets”–he’s always talking about how he’d feel if his daughters were under those rockets. He never seems to empathize with Palestinian farmers or fishermen or unarmed protestors getting shot during ceasefires. They don’t exist. Their deaths are barely reported and promptly forgotten the instant an Israeli is killed. That, by definition, is when a ceasefire has ended. Though sometimes it only requires some Palestinian rockets without any deaths. But Obama is just doing what apparently every American politician is supposed to do–humanize one side and justify the violence inflicted by them, but not on them.

  90. Informed observer–I don’t have any problems with people criticizing the Obama Administration when it’s wrong and I’ll get right to it in a moment, but I think your Syria analysis is mistaken. Obama drew his red line regarding Syria, but he seemed flummoxed when Syria apparently used poison gas. (I know some people said it was the rebels but don’t know enough to say who was right.) But it seemed to me that Obama was relieved to have a face-saving way out. He is in favor of drone killing, but not boots on the ground. Now there was a lot of talk of arming “moderate” rebels. I’m always surprised at how touchingly eager Americans are to arm “moderate” rebels. (Maybe they could have found some moderate Palestinian rebels to arm. In a way, they did, but they expect those arms to be used against other Palestinians, as in the brief Palestinian civil war the US/Israel instigated because they didn’t like the fact that Hamas won the election. ) There’s maybe a bit less eagerness to get involved in the Syrian war on the side of the “rebels”, since the most effective rebels in Syria seem to be the ones who are also rebelling in Iraq, killing Christians and so on. Which is also, btw, why I’ve read Christians in Syria support Assad.
    Regarding the bipartisan consensus about slaughtering Palestinians, you’re right. It’s this sort of thing that makes the word “bipartisan” leave a bad taste in my mouth. There’s something touching in the President’s empathy for Israeli children under the “rain of rockets”–he’s always talking about how he’d feel if his daughters were under those rockets. He never seems to empathize with Palestinian farmers or fishermen or unarmed protestors getting shot during ceasefires. They don’t exist. Their deaths are barely reported and promptly forgotten the instant an Israeli is killed. That, by definition, is when a ceasefire has ended. Though sometimes it only requires some Palestinian rockets without any deaths. But Obama is just doing what apparently every American politician is supposed to do–humanize one side and justify the violence inflicted by them, but not on them.

  91. Draft or tax? In some ways a superficial choice. The problem begins with our definition of “vital” national interests, and the institutional arrangements we have erected to promote them. As always, Andy Bacevick nails it.
    For this discussion, see item 6. For my pet peeve, see item 9. The rest are, well, excellent.

  92. Draft or tax? In some ways a superficial choice. The problem begins with our definition of “vital” national interests, and the institutional arrangements we have erected to promote them. As always, Andy Bacevick nails it.
    For this discussion, see item 6. For my pet peeve, see item 9. The rest are, well, excellent.

  93. Draft or tax? In some ways a superficial choice. The problem begins with our definition of “vital” national interests, and the institutional arrangements we have erected to promote them. As always, Andy Bacevick nails it.
    For this discussion, see item 6. For my pet peeve, see item 9. The rest are, well, excellent.

  94. Donald it was the Syrian rebels that fired the gas. This has been proven and should have been pretty much known all along. I also think that the US cannot keep poking at Russia, especially in the Ukraine, without some serious martial consequences arising at some point. Remember, no one planned WW1 to occur as the massive conflagration that is was. It just sort of fell into place because of all of the alliances and mindless gratuitous bellicose talk that set the stage.
    At any rate, I have diverted from the intended topic. I think both a war tax and a draft are a good idea.
    First, it should be a no brainer that if you want to have a war, you’re going to have to pay for it. Simply printing money is a bad idea (see macro economics 101).
    Second, we have military personnel that have been deployed multiple times and they are burned out. The suicide rate among combat arms troops is quite high, as is the PTSD incidence, TBIs, and citizens aren’t fully aware of just how high because the figures are diluted by all of the non-combat arms being included in the denominator. Retention rates in combat arms are not so good either any more. IMO, from a combat effectiveness standpoint, two combat deployments should be the max. A draft should be used to fill the billets since all of our politicians seem to agree that we are involved in a perpetual war against “terrorism” (which seems to include just about anything or anyone that annoys us even slightly) as well as suffering the responsibility to protect (R2P) all over the globe which I suspect is a cover for empire building, but, regardless, means even more combat.
    A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective. Liberal politicians want war (liberals are heavily represented in the R2P crowd), but it is the one area of civic life where they are not demanding a contribution from those able to give. Republicans, want war, but, cheap bastards that they are, they don’t want to pay for it either.
    BTW, what is this fascination with being “strong” and flexing American military might – or even being militarily mighty in the first place – that both sides of the aisle suffer from?
    But yeah,if that’s how we want to be, then everyone should have to dig deep and contribute.

  95. Donald it was the Syrian rebels that fired the gas. This has been proven and should have been pretty much known all along. I also think that the US cannot keep poking at Russia, especially in the Ukraine, without some serious martial consequences arising at some point. Remember, no one planned WW1 to occur as the massive conflagration that is was. It just sort of fell into place because of all of the alliances and mindless gratuitous bellicose talk that set the stage.
    At any rate, I have diverted from the intended topic. I think both a war tax and a draft are a good idea.
    First, it should be a no brainer that if you want to have a war, you’re going to have to pay for it. Simply printing money is a bad idea (see macro economics 101).
    Second, we have military personnel that have been deployed multiple times and they are burned out. The suicide rate among combat arms troops is quite high, as is the PTSD incidence, TBIs, and citizens aren’t fully aware of just how high because the figures are diluted by all of the non-combat arms being included in the denominator. Retention rates in combat arms are not so good either any more. IMO, from a combat effectiveness standpoint, two combat deployments should be the max. A draft should be used to fill the billets since all of our politicians seem to agree that we are involved in a perpetual war against “terrorism” (which seems to include just about anything or anyone that annoys us even slightly) as well as suffering the responsibility to protect (R2P) all over the globe which I suspect is a cover for empire building, but, regardless, means even more combat.
    A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective. Liberal politicians want war (liberals are heavily represented in the R2P crowd), but it is the one area of civic life where they are not demanding a contribution from those able to give. Republicans, want war, but, cheap bastards that they are, they don’t want to pay for it either.
    BTW, what is this fascination with being “strong” and flexing American military might – or even being militarily mighty in the first place – that both sides of the aisle suffer from?
    But yeah,if that’s how we want to be, then everyone should have to dig deep and contribute.

  96. Donald it was the Syrian rebels that fired the gas. This has been proven and should have been pretty much known all along. I also think that the US cannot keep poking at Russia, especially in the Ukraine, without some serious martial consequences arising at some point. Remember, no one planned WW1 to occur as the massive conflagration that is was. It just sort of fell into place because of all of the alliances and mindless gratuitous bellicose talk that set the stage.
    At any rate, I have diverted from the intended topic. I think both a war tax and a draft are a good idea.
    First, it should be a no brainer that if you want to have a war, you’re going to have to pay for it. Simply printing money is a bad idea (see macro economics 101).
    Second, we have military personnel that have been deployed multiple times and they are burned out. The suicide rate among combat arms troops is quite high, as is the PTSD incidence, TBIs, and citizens aren’t fully aware of just how high because the figures are diluted by all of the non-combat arms being included in the denominator. Retention rates in combat arms are not so good either any more. IMO, from a combat effectiveness standpoint, two combat deployments should be the max. A draft should be used to fill the billets since all of our politicians seem to agree that we are involved in a perpetual war against “terrorism” (which seems to include just about anything or anyone that annoys us even slightly) as well as suffering the responsibility to protect (R2P) all over the globe which I suspect is a cover for empire building, but, regardless, means even more combat.
    A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective. Liberal politicians want war (liberals are heavily represented in the R2P crowd), but it is the one area of civic life where they are not demanding a contribution from those able to give. Republicans, want war, but, cheap bastards that they are, they don’t want to pay for it either.
    BTW, what is this fascination with being “strong” and flexing American military might – or even being militarily mighty in the first place – that both sides of the aisle suffer from?
    But yeah,if that’s how we want to be, then everyone should have to dig deep and contribute.

  97. bobbyp – yep. I agree 100% with everything in your Bacevick link. I read it after putting up my last comment. If I had read it before, I would have simply seconded the value of the link and left it at that.

  98. bobbyp – yep. I agree 100% with everything in your Bacevick link. I read it after putting up my last comment. If I had read it before, I would have simply seconded the value of the link and left it at that.

  99. bobbyp – yep. I agree 100% with everything in your Bacevick link. I read it after putting up my last comment. If I had read it before, I would have simply seconded the value of the link and left it at that.

  100. IO, have you got a reliable citation for the claim that it has been “proven” that the rebels were responsible for the gas attack? Preferably with a plausible explanation for how they got their hands on the gas, and why they would have gassed their own people, rather than Assad’s forces.

  101. IO, have you got a reliable citation for the claim that it has been “proven” that the rebels were responsible for the gas attack? Preferably with a plausible explanation for how they got their hands on the gas, and why they would have gassed their own people, rather than Assad’s forces.

  102. IO, have you got a reliable citation for the claim that it has been “proven” that the rebels were responsible for the gas attack? Preferably with a plausible explanation for how they got their hands on the gas, and why they would have gassed their own people, rather than Assad’s forces.

  103. A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective.
    aka “the people”.
    I also await the proof that it was the Syrian rebels who deployed the gas.

  104. A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective.
    aka “the people”.
    I also await the proof that it was the Syrian rebels who deployed the gas.

  105. A problem I have with liberals is that they are always talking about the common good; doing what’s best for the collective.
    aka “the people”.
    I also await the proof that it was the Syrian rebels who deployed the gas.

  106. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism and that crucify/behead Christians would use captured or home made gas? Do you really not believe that people who trumped up an invasion of a sovereign country based on non-existent yellow cake from Niger, non-existent WMD and non-existent associations with Al Qaeda wouldn’t lie about who used gas?
    The bottom line here is that Obama, Kerry, et al state that Assad was behind the gas attack. They had no – 0 – evidence for this. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    After the dust settled it appeared that it was at least as likely, probably more so, that the Syrian rebels themselves deployed the gas; which accidently went off over the wrong target area. 100% proof? No. But, again, where is the proof that is was government forces as the BHO administration says it was?
    We are very stupidly backing the wrong guys in Syria and those chickens are already coming home to roost in the form of ISIS.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_International_Commission_of_Inquiry_on_the_Syrian_Arab_Republic
    Also in May, according to a report by American journalist Seymour Hersh the CIA briefed the Obama administration on al-Nusra’s work with sarin, and on Al-Qaeda in Iraq’s knowledge of Sarin production methods in Syria.
    http://www.itv.com/news/update/2014-04-02/farage-syria-rebels-more-than-likely-to-blame-for-gas-attacks/
    http://www.mintpressnews.com/witnesses-of-gas-attack-say-saudis-supplied-rebels-with-chemical-weapons/168135/
    http://shoebat.com/2013/08/27/evidence-syrian-rebels-used-chemical-weapons-not-assad/
    http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304858104579262882620510434
    http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/05/russia-delivers-report-to-u-n-saying-syrian-rebels-behind-sarin-gas-attack-in-march/
    http://missingpeace.eu/en/2013/09/freed-belgian-writer-claims-syrian-rebels-responsible-for-sarin-gas-attack/

  107. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism and that crucify/behead Christians would use captured or home made gas? Do you really not believe that people who trumped up an invasion of a sovereign country based on non-existent yellow cake from Niger, non-existent WMD and non-existent associations with Al Qaeda wouldn’t lie about who used gas?
    The bottom line here is that Obama, Kerry, et al state that Assad was behind the gas attack. They had no – 0 – evidence for this. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    After the dust settled it appeared that it was at least as likely, probably more so, that the Syrian rebels themselves deployed the gas; which accidently went off over the wrong target area. 100% proof? No. But, again, where is the proof that is was government forces as the BHO administration says it was?
    We are very stupidly backing the wrong guys in Syria and those chickens are already coming home to roost in the form of ISIS.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_International_Commission_of_Inquiry_on_the_Syrian_Arab_Republic
    Also in May, according to a report by American journalist Seymour Hersh the CIA briefed the Obama administration on al-Nusra’s work with sarin, and on Al-Qaeda in Iraq’s knowledge of Sarin production methods in Syria.
    http://www.itv.com/news/update/2014-04-02/farage-syria-rebels-more-than-likely-to-blame-for-gas-attacks/
    http://www.mintpressnews.com/witnesses-of-gas-attack-say-saudis-supplied-rebels-with-chemical-weapons/168135/
    http://shoebat.com/2013/08/27/evidence-syrian-rebels-used-chemical-weapons-not-assad/
    http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304858104579262882620510434
    http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/05/russia-delivers-report-to-u-n-saying-syrian-rebels-behind-sarin-gas-attack-in-march/
    http://missingpeace.eu/en/2013/09/freed-belgian-writer-claims-syrian-rebels-responsible-for-sarin-gas-attack/

  108. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism and that crucify/behead Christians would use captured or home made gas? Do you really not believe that people who trumped up an invasion of a sovereign country based on non-existent yellow cake from Niger, non-existent WMD and non-existent associations with Al Qaeda wouldn’t lie about who used gas?
    The bottom line here is that Obama, Kerry, et al state that Assad was behind the gas attack. They had no – 0 – evidence for this. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    After the dust settled it appeared that it was at least as likely, probably more so, that the Syrian rebels themselves deployed the gas; which accidently went off over the wrong target area. 100% proof? No. But, again, where is the proof that is was government forces as the BHO administration says it was?
    We are very stupidly backing the wrong guys in Syria and those chickens are already coming home to roost in the form of ISIS.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_International_Commission_of_Inquiry_on_the_Syrian_Arab_Republic
    Also in May, according to a report by American journalist Seymour Hersh the CIA briefed the Obama administration on al-Nusra’s work with sarin, and on Al-Qaeda in Iraq’s knowledge of Sarin production methods in Syria.
    http://www.itv.com/news/update/2014-04-02/farage-syria-rebels-more-than-likely-to-blame-for-gas-attacks/
    http://www.mintpressnews.com/witnesses-of-gas-attack-say-saudis-supplied-rebels-with-chemical-weapons/168135/
    http://shoebat.com/2013/08/27/evidence-syrian-rebels-used-chemical-weapons-not-assad/
    http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304858104579262882620510434
    http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/05/russia-delivers-report-to-u-n-saying-syrian-rebels-behind-sarin-gas-attack-in-march/
    http://missingpeace.eu/en/2013/09/freed-belgian-writer-claims-syrian-rebels-responsible-for-sarin-gas-attack/

  109. From Kevin Drum:
    http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2014/07/more-pointless-bluster-foreign-policy-please
    Incoherent at best, we are, speaking of the collective.
    I repeat: Tax stupidity. You could meter Sarah Death Palin’s tweets and the resulting revenue would shore up Medicare for generations.
    What the 39% mentioned by Drum seem to want is Vladimir Putin as their leader — bare-chested, WWF muscle flexing, shooting their f*cking mouths off until something blows up, and then stiffing the rest of us on both the blood and the treasure.
    Basically Erick Erickson, though I suspect his man breasts aren’t quite as firm.
    Hear tell Erickson has instituted a policy whereby only purely pro-life (pre-born life; those born remain eminently killable) types may front page at Red State, narrowing the previous rather amorphous qualification of limiting the privilege to anti-American, murderous sh*thead jagoffs.

  110. From Kevin Drum:
    http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2014/07/more-pointless-bluster-foreign-policy-please
    Incoherent at best, we are, speaking of the collective.
    I repeat: Tax stupidity. You could meter Sarah Death Palin’s tweets and the resulting revenue would shore up Medicare for generations.
    What the 39% mentioned by Drum seem to want is Vladimir Putin as their leader — bare-chested, WWF muscle flexing, shooting their f*cking mouths off until something blows up, and then stiffing the rest of us on both the blood and the treasure.
    Basically Erick Erickson, though I suspect his man breasts aren’t quite as firm.
    Hear tell Erickson has instituted a policy whereby only purely pro-life (pre-born life; those born remain eminently killable) types may front page at Red State, narrowing the previous rather amorphous qualification of limiting the privilege to anti-American, murderous sh*thead jagoffs.

  111. From Kevin Drum:
    http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2014/07/more-pointless-bluster-foreign-policy-please
    Incoherent at best, we are, speaking of the collective.
    I repeat: Tax stupidity. You could meter Sarah Death Palin’s tweets and the resulting revenue would shore up Medicare for generations.
    What the 39% mentioned by Drum seem to want is Vladimir Putin as their leader — bare-chested, WWF muscle flexing, shooting their f*cking mouths off until something blows up, and then stiffing the rest of us on both the blood and the treasure.
    Basically Erick Erickson, though I suspect his man breasts aren’t quite as firm.
    Hear tell Erickson has instituted a policy whereby only purely pro-life (pre-born life; those born remain eminently killable) types may front page at Red State, narrowing the previous rather amorphous qualification of limiting the privilege to anti-American, murderous sh*thead jagoffs.

  112. The Gavlak disavowal that Slarti linked doesn’t mean much–Dale Gavlak wasn’t in Syria and admits to helping translate the article. And now wants no part of it. Well, if I were a respectable mainstream reporter I probably wouldn’t want to be associated with this story either, true or not, unless it was solid. Bad career move to be in the minority on something like this even if one were right, (I can’t remember the name of that San Jose Mercury reporter who committed suicide after saying the CIA was involved in contra drug trafficking) and definitely bad if one is wrong.
    I read some of this material last year–not being an expert, I couldn’t judge it then and can’t judge it now. I expect governments to lie, it’s just a question of which governments are lying in any given case and I have no idea. Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.

  113. The Gavlak disavowal that Slarti linked doesn’t mean much–Dale Gavlak wasn’t in Syria and admits to helping translate the article. And now wants no part of it. Well, if I were a respectable mainstream reporter I probably wouldn’t want to be associated with this story either, true or not, unless it was solid. Bad career move to be in the minority on something like this even if one were right, (I can’t remember the name of that San Jose Mercury reporter who committed suicide after saying the CIA was involved in contra drug trafficking) and definitely bad if one is wrong.
    I read some of this material last year–not being an expert, I couldn’t judge it then and can’t judge it now. I expect governments to lie, it’s just a question of which governments are lying in any given case and I have no idea. Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.

  114. The Gavlak disavowal that Slarti linked doesn’t mean much–Dale Gavlak wasn’t in Syria and admits to helping translate the article. And now wants no part of it. Well, if I were a respectable mainstream reporter I probably wouldn’t want to be associated with this story either, true or not, unless it was solid. Bad career move to be in the minority on something like this even if one were right, (I can’t remember the name of that San Jose Mercury reporter who committed suicide after saying the CIA was involved in contra drug trafficking) and definitely bad if one is wrong.
    I read some of this material last year–not being an expert, I couldn’t judge it then and can’t judge it now. I expect governments to lie, it’s just a question of which governments are lying in any given case and I have no idea. Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.

  115. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism…
    At this point in my life, there’s very little that I would find impossible to believe.
    The idea that the rebels gassed themselves by accident actually seems fairly credible to me on principle, even in the absence of specific evidence, because it has that true-to-life element of people screwing up and doing amazingly stupid things.
    Especially so because it has that additional sort of high-risk combination of “free lance violence” and “dangerous chemicals”.
    You seemed quite clear that it was, hands-down, no-question, abso-guaranteed-lutely obvious that it was the rebels.
    We all asked if you might like to back that up.
    I’ll take a look at your links and let you know what I think.
    In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria.

  116. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism…
    At this point in my life, there’s very little that I would find impossible to believe.
    The idea that the rebels gassed themselves by accident actually seems fairly credible to me on principle, even in the absence of specific evidence, because it has that true-to-life element of people screwing up and doing amazingly stupid things.
    Especially so because it has that additional sort of high-risk combination of “free lance violence” and “dangerous chemicals”.
    You seemed quite clear that it was, hands-down, no-question, abso-guaranteed-lutely obvious that it was the rebels.
    We all asked if you might like to back that up.
    I’ll take a look at your links and let you know what I think.
    In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria.

  117. Russell, do you really find it so difficult to believe that radicals that practice cannibalism…
    At this point in my life, there’s very little that I would find impossible to believe.
    The idea that the rebels gassed themselves by accident actually seems fairly credible to me on principle, even in the absence of specific evidence, because it has that true-to-life element of people screwing up and doing amazingly stupid things.
    Especially so because it has that additional sort of high-risk combination of “free lance violence” and “dangerous chemicals”.
    You seemed quite clear that it was, hands-down, no-question, abso-guaranteed-lutely obvious that it was the rebels.
    We all asked if you might like to back that up.
    I’ll take a look at your links and let you know what I think.
    In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria.

  118. More on MintPress from slart’s link:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mint_Press_News
    informed observer, I have no doubt we’re “backing” the wrong guys (although that backing seems pretty weak tea compared to previous and blundering U.S. backing in the region) in Syria, but this leaves open the question of who you think the right guys are, and why American backing of them would not result in some similar blowback as all of our other backing since about the time I was born.*
    *I’m sick of everything and everyone in the Mideast and think all parties should go f*ck themselves without our assistance.

  119. More on MintPress from slart’s link:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mint_Press_News
    informed observer, I have no doubt we’re “backing” the wrong guys (although that backing seems pretty weak tea compared to previous and blundering U.S. backing in the region) in Syria, but this leaves open the question of who you think the right guys are, and why American backing of them would not result in some similar blowback as all of our other backing since about the time I was born.*
    *I’m sick of everything and everyone in the Mideast and think all parties should go f*ck themselves without our assistance.

  120. More on MintPress from slart’s link:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mint_Press_News
    informed observer, I have no doubt we’re “backing” the wrong guys (although that backing seems pretty weak tea compared to previous and blundering U.S. backing in the region) in Syria, but this leaves open the question of who you think the right guys are, and why American backing of them would not result in some similar blowback as all of our other backing since about the time I was born.*
    *I’m sick of everything and everyone in the Mideast and think all parties should go f*ck themselves without our assistance.

  121. The weapon shown in some of informed observer‘s links is the Syrian Hell Cannon, which shoots projectiles that look like rockets that are made from empty propane canisters filled with X, where X is usually some kind of improvised and fuzed HE. It’s just a mobile howitzer that is rigged to shoot these things, which (if you look at the video) are basically bolted together out of scrap metal.
    If these are Syria’s much-vaunted chemical weapons, well, yawn.

  122. The weapon shown in some of informed observer‘s links is the Syrian Hell Cannon, which shoots projectiles that look like rockets that are made from empty propane canisters filled with X, where X is usually some kind of improvised and fuzed HE. It’s just a mobile howitzer that is rigged to shoot these things, which (if you look at the video) are basically bolted together out of scrap metal.
    If these are Syria’s much-vaunted chemical weapons, well, yawn.

  123. The weapon shown in some of informed observer‘s links is the Syrian Hell Cannon, which shoots projectiles that look like rockets that are made from empty propane canisters filled with X, where X is usually some kind of improvised and fuzed HE. It’s just a mobile howitzer that is rigged to shoot these things, which (if you look at the video) are basically bolted together out of scrap metal.
    If these are Syria’s much-vaunted chemical weapons, well, yawn.

  124. IO, I see rumors. I see accusations. I see a report from Russia (which supports Assad, and can’t really be considered an objective observer in any case — c.f. the nonsense coming from them regarding Ukraine). What I don’t see is evidence. Not saying there definitely isn’t any. Just that I haven’t seen any, and your sources don’t provide it.
    The chemical weapons were in Assad’s armories. Which makes him most likely as the user. Not proven, but far more likely. Could the rebels have captured an armory and used some? Yes. Is there evidence that this actually happened? Not that I have yet seen.

  125. IO, I see rumors. I see accusations. I see a report from Russia (which supports Assad, and can’t really be considered an objective observer in any case — c.f. the nonsense coming from them regarding Ukraine). What I don’t see is evidence. Not saying there definitely isn’t any. Just that I haven’t seen any, and your sources don’t provide it.
    The chemical weapons were in Assad’s armories. Which makes him most likely as the user. Not proven, but far more likely. Could the rebels have captured an armory and used some? Yes. Is there evidence that this actually happened? Not that I have yet seen.

  126. IO, I see rumors. I see accusations. I see a report from Russia (which supports Assad, and can’t really be considered an objective observer in any case — c.f. the nonsense coming from them regarding Ukraine). What I don’t see is evidence. Not saying there definitely isn’t any. Just that I haven’t seen any, and your sources don’t provide it.
    The chemical weapons were in Assad’s armories. Which makes him most likely as the user. Not proven, but far more likely. Could the rebels have captured an armory and used some? Yes. Is there evidence that this actually happened? Not that I have yet seen.

  127. what I see in informed observer’s links are:
    Carla Del Ponte says it might have been the rebels.
    The Russian government says it was the rebels.
    A Belgian guy says it was the rebels, because he heard them talking about it while he was held captive.
    I don’t know much about Del Ponte, so I have no opinion as to her credibility.
    Syria is a long-time client state of the Russians, so I’m not inclined to take their word for it.
    Belgian guy amounts to, basically, hearsay.
    Maybe the definitions for “evidence” and “proof” are less than clear.
    I don’t necessarily believe Kerry and Obama out of hand, either. I’m just unconvinced about any definitive claims about who did what when it comes to Syria, because the place is a freaking mess.
    I’m also unconvinced that any side would be the “right” side, for the same reason.
    I doubt there is anyone involved who would qualify as a natural ally of ours, or who has our interests in mind. The only US interest I can see there is in the effects the civil war has on the middle east in general.
    If somebody can explain why any party in Syria is really our BFF, I’m all ears.
    I don’t mean to be dismissive of what is a totally crappy and horrific situation for folks living there, I’m just not sure why we need to be jumping into every civil war on the planet.
    Or, I *do* understand why we feel the need to jump into this particular one, and per Bacevich’s article, find the underlying strategy to be wrong-headed and harmful, to us and others.

  128. what I see in informed observer’s links are:
    Carla Del Ponte says it might have been the rebels.
    The Russian government says it was the rebels.
    A Belgian guy says it was the rebels, because he heard them talking about it while he was held captive.
    I don’t know much about Del Ponte, so I have no opinion as to her credibility.
    Syria is a long-time client state of the Russians, so I’m not inclined to take their word for it.
    Belgian guy amounts to, basically, hearsay.
    Maybe the definitions for “evidence” and “proof” are less than clear.
    I don’t necessarily believe Kerry and Obama out of hand, either. I’m just unconvinced about any definitive claims about who did what when it comes to Syria, because the place is a freaking mess.
    I’m also unconvinced that any side would be the “right” side, for the same reason.
    I doubt there is anyone involved who would qualify as a natural ally of ours, or who has our interests in mind. The only US interest I can see there is in the effects the civil war has on the middle east in general.
    If somebody can explain why any party in Syria is really our BFF, I’m all ears.
    I don’t mean to be dismissive of what is a totally crappy and horrific situation for folks living there, I’m just not sure why we need to be jumping into every civil war on the planet.
    Or, I *do* understand why we feel the need to jump into this particular one, and per Bacevich’s article, find the underlying strategy to be wrong-headed and harmful, to us and others.

  129. what I see in informed observer’s links are:
    Carla Del Ponte says it might have been the rebels.
    The Russian government says it was the rebels.
    A Belgian guy says it was the rebels, because he heard them talking about it while he was held captive.
    I don’t know much about Del Ponte, so I have no opinion as to her credibility.
    Syria is a long-time client state of the Russians, so I’m not inclined to take their word for it.
    Belgian guy amounts to, basically, hearsay.
    Maybe the definitions for “evidence” and “proof” are less than clear.
    I don’t necessarily believe Kerry and Obama out of hand, either. I’m just unconvinced about any definitive claims about who did what when it comes to Syria, because the place is a freaking mess.
    I’m also unconvinced that any side would be the “right” side, for the same reason.
    I doubt there is anyone involved who would qualify as a natural ally of ours, or who has our interests in mind. The only US interest I can see there is in the effects the civil war has on the middle east in general.
    If somebody can explain why any party in Syria is really our BFF, I’m all ears.
    I don’t mean to be dismissive of what is a totally crappy and horrific situation for folks living there, I’m just not sure why we need to be jumping into every civil war on the planet.
    Or, I *do* understand why we feel the need to jump into this particular one, and per Bacevich’s article, find the underlying strategy to be wrong-headed and harmful, to us and others.

  130. Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    No. That’s not what I think, nor what I wrote. Specifically, I said:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn. If so, point it out. I’ll either try to explain it better or retract it. Because that would be incorrect.

  131. Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    No. That’s not what I think, nor what I wrote. Specifically, I said:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn. If so, point it out. I’ll either try to explain it better or retract it. Because that would be incorrect.

  132. Hartmut’s claim is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. My experience is that there is.
    No. That’s not what I think, nor what I wrote. Specifically, I said:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn. If so, point it out. I’ll either try to explain it better or retract it. Because that would be incorrect.

  133. Here is a video that purports to be of Syrian rebels building the bombs that are shot from these so-called Hell Cannons.
    Note that they are all blue, and also note there are a LOT of them.
    This isn’t anything like a contradiction of the claim, but it does underscore that these are largely home-made weapons and NOT e.g. chemical weapons warheads mounted on another vehicle.

  134. Here is a video that purports to be of Syrian rebels building the bombs that are shot from these so-called Hell Cannons.
    Note that they are all blue, and also note there are a LOT of them.
    This isn’t anything like a contradiction of the claim, but it does underscore that these are largely home-made weapons and NOT e.g. chemical weapons warheads mounted on another vehicle.

  135. Here is a video that purports to be of Syrian rebels building the bombs that are shot from these so-called Hell Cannons.
    Note that they are all blue, and also note there are a LOT of them.
    This isn’t anything like a contradiction of the claim, but it does underscore that these are largely home-made weapons and NOT e.g. chemical weapons warheads mounted on another vehicle.

  136. bobbyp:
    I’d agree, that’s a great list. I can’t actually pick one or two that stand out from the rest in my mind. Thanks for the link.

  137. bobbyp:
    I’d agree, that’s a great list. I can’t actually pick one or two that stand out from the rest in my mind. Thanks for the link.

  138. bobbyp:
    I’d agree, that’s a great list. I can’t actually pick one or two that stand out from the rest in my mind. Thanks for the link.

  139. “In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria”
    The lesser of two evils, who, IMO, appears to be Assad. Assad is at least westernized and socially moderate. I don’t see how anyone in their right mind can favor ISIS/al Qaeda – and the fact is that the so called moderate rebels have been subsumed by the radicals at this point; CIA and State fantasies of their ability to play chess with maniacs and win aside.
    I guess my point is that no one knows for sure who launched the chemical attack, but state was cocksure it was Assad when they thought that would allow US bombs to be dropped. If there was a war tax and a draft then people would ask the right questions and come to the sane conclusion when the politicians and MSN info op.s talking heads start beating the drums of war. I’m telling you, this Syrian gas and Malaysian jet shoot down are way too reminiscent of yellow cake, etc.
    I asked the honorable lunatic from AZ, Sen John McCain, why it is a good idea to support the Syrian rebels given their proclivity for radical Islam, murdering Christians, invading countries and declaring caliphates and all that rot. His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. Asad = Hitler. I responded that many of the 100,000 dead in the civil war were killed by the rebels themselves and, of those actually killed by Assad’s troops, many are the same extremists that we, ourselves, were killing in Iraq and Afghanistan. So…….Then McCain started rambling something or another about democracy and freedom, to which I countered that Hamas is democratically elected too, but…….end of conversation (true story, not illustrative fiction). Problem is, Obama’s crew spouts the same nonsense. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    We need citizens to have some skin in the game or these craven louts will continue on the march toward Armageddon.

  140. “In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria”
    The lesser of two evils, who, IMO, appears to be Assad. Assad is at least westernized and socially moderate. I don’t see how anyone in their right mind can favor ISIS/al Qaeda – and the fact is that the so called moderate rebels have been subsumed by the radicals at this point; CIA and State fantasies of their ability to play chess with maniacs and win aside.
    I guess my point is that no one knows for sure who launched the chemical attack, but state was cocksure it was Assad when they thought that would allow US bombs to be dropped. If there was a war tax and a draft then people would ask the right questions and come to the sane conclusion when the politicians and MSN info op.s talking heads start beating the drums of war. I’m telling you, this Syrian gas and Malaysian jet shoot down are way too reminiscent of yellow cake, etc.
    I asked the honorable lunatic from AZ, Sen John McCain, why it is a good idea to support the Syrian rebels given their proclivity for radical Islam, murdering Christians, invading countries and declaring caliphates and all that rot. His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. Asad = Hitler. I responded that many of the 100,000 dead in the civil war were killed by the rebels themselves and, of those actually killed by Assad’s troops, many are the same extremists that we, ourselves, were killing in Iraq and Afghanistan. So…….Then McCain started rambling something or another about democracy and freedom, to which I countered that Hamas is democratically elected too, but…….end of conversation (true story, not illustrative fiction). Problem is, Obama’s crew spouts the same nonsense. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    We need citizens to have some skin in the game or these craven louts will continue on the march toward Armageddon.

  141. “In the meantime, I’m curious to know which is the “right” side in Syria”
    The lesser of two evils, who, IMO, appears to be Assad. Assad is at least westernized and socially moderate. I don’t see how anyone in their right mind can favor ISIS/al Qaeda – and the fact is that the so called moderate rebels have been subsumed by the radicals at this point; CIA and State fantasies of their ability to play chess with maniacs and win aside.
    I guess my point is that no one knows for sure who launched the chemical attack, but state was cocksure it was Assad when they thought that would allow US bombs to be dropped. If there was a war tax and a draft then people would ask the right questions and come to the sane conclusion when the politicians and MSN info op.s talking heads start beating the drums of war. I’m telling you, this Syrian gas and Malaysian jet shoot down are way too reminiscent of yellow cake, etc.
    I asked the honorable lunatic from AZ, Sen John McCain, why it is a good idea to support the Syrian rebels given their proclivity for radical Islam, murdering Christians, invading countries and declaring caliphates and all that rot. His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. Asad = Hitler. I responded that many of the 100,000 dead in the civil war were killed by the rebels themselves and, of those actually killed by Assad’s troops, many are the same extremists that we, ourselves, were killing in Iraq and Afghanistan. So…….Then McCain started rambling something or another about democracy and freedom, to which I countered that Hamas is democratically elected too, but…….end of conversation (true story, not illustrative fiction). Problem is, Obama’s crew spouts the same nonsense. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    We need citizens to have some skin in the game or these craven louts will continue on the march toward Armageddon.

  142. Donald:
    Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.
    To me, this is a far more important aspect of the war than the release of chemical weapons. Chemical weapons are terrible, and especially suited to the slaughter of non-combatants, but people killed by conventional weapons are just as dead.
    As russell notes, we don’t seem to have any natural allies in that war. And as Bacevich (via bobbyp) notes, we have a very poor history of choosing allies in that region.

  143. Donald:
    Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.
    To me, this is a far more important aspect of the war than the release of chemical weapons. Chemical weapons are terrible, and especially suited to the slaughter of non-combatants, but people killed by conventional weapons are just as dead.
    As russell notes, we don’t seem to have any natural allies in that war. And as Bacevich (via bobbyp) notes, we have a very poor history of choosing allies in that region.

  144. Donald:
    Morally, either side in the Syrian civil war is perfectly capable of slaughtering civilians, as has been demonstrated numerous times.
    To me, this is a far more important aspect of the war than the release of chemical weapons. Chemical weapons are terrible, and especially suited to the slaughter of non-combatants, but people killed by conventional weapons are just as dead.
    As russell notes, we don’t seem to have any natural allies in that war. And as Bacevich (via bobbyp) notes, we have a very poor history of choosing allies in that region.

  145. I think the closest there comes to a “right side” in Syria is probably the Kurds — who would be sufficiently pleased in everybody else just bigger off and leave them alone. They don’t seem to have any interest in conquering the rest of the country for their own version of “how the world should be.” They don’t (from what little I have seen) seem inclined to slaughtering those who disagree with them.
    But beyond that, I think our best overall policy is to just stand back and let those in the country battle it out. We succeeded in doing the one thing that was important for the chances of peace elsewhere in the Middle East — getting rid of Assads chemical weapons stockpile. And beyond that, we really don’t have a dog in this fight.
    The good news is, so far the administration shows no sign of trying to get us involved. Which, would probably be easy enough to do, if they were so inclined.

  146. I think the closest there comes to a “right side” in Syria is probably the Kurds — who would be sufficiently pleased in everybody else just bigger off and leave them alone. They don’t seem to have any interest in conquering the rest of the country for their own version of “how the world should be.” They don’t (from what little I have seen) seem inclined to slaughtering those who disagree with them.
    But beyond that, I think our best overall policy is to just stand back and let those in the country battle it out. We succeeded in doing the one thing that was important for the chances of peace elsewhere in the Middle East — getting rid of Assads chemical weapons stockpile. And beyond that, we really don’t have a dog in this fight.
    The good news is, so far the administration shows no sign of trying to get us involved. Which, would probably be easy enough to do, if they were so inclined.

  147. I think the closest there comes to a “right side” in Syria is probably the Kurds — who would be sufficiently pleased in everybody else just bigger off and leave them alone. They don’t seem to have any interest in conquering the rest of the country for their own version of “how the world should be.” They don’t (from what little I have seen) seem inclined to slaughtering those who disagree with them.
    But beyond that, I think our best overall policy is to just stand back and let those in the country battle it out. We succeeded in doing the one thing that was important for the chances of peace elsewhere in the Middle East — getting rid of Assads chemical weapons stockpile. And beyond that, we really don’t have a dog in this fight.
    The good news is, so far the administration shows no sign of trying to get us involved. Which, would probably be easy enough to do, if they were so inclined.

  148. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    there is ample evidence that the Ukrainian rebels had already captured a missile battery capable of hitting that plane, that they had received training, that the training wasn’t necessary complex, that they had already shot down a Ukrainian govt plane that same day, that they bragged about shooting both planes, that they started erasing evidence of all of that once the truth came out, that they are now saying things like “everybody on board was already dead before the plane exploded”, etc..
    not everything is a conspiracy.

  149. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    there is ample evidence that the Ukrainian rebels had already captured a missile battery capable of hitting that plane, that they had received training, that the training wasn’t necessary complex, that they had already shot down a Ukrainian govt plane that same day, that they bragged about shooting both planes, that they started erasing evidence of all of that once the truth came out, that they are now saying things like “everybody on board was already dead before the plane exploded”, etc..
    not everything is a conspiracy.

  150. Now they’re doing it again with regards to the Malaysian airliner shoot down in the Ukraine.
    there is ample evidence that the Ukrainian rebels had already captured a missile battery capable of hitting that plane, that they had received training, that the training wasn’t necessary complex, that they had already shot down a Ukrainian govt plane that same day, that they bragged about shooting both planes, that they started erasing evidence of all of that once the truth came out, that they are now saying things like “everybody on board was already dead before the plane exploded”, etc..
    not everything is a conspiracy.

  151. Sadly, Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy. Or at least we need to consider the possibility seriously. The Maine in Havana harbor? Tonkin Gulf? Light at the end of the tunnel? Everything said in the build up to the invasion of Iraq? Come on. When is enough enough for you?
    http://turcopolier.typepad.com/sic_semper_tyrannis/2014/07/httpconsortiumnewscom20140720what-did-us-spy-satellites-see-in-ukraine.html
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what? Sh!t happens in the fog of war. The USS Vincennes anyone? Israeli attack on the USS Liberty?
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control. The Russian ethnics don’t want it. The regime is oppressing the Russian ethnics. Russia has valid interests in the Ukraine. Our interests have to do with Chevron. Shades of Smedley Butler here. It stinks. And it playing with fire, nuclear fire at that.

  152. Sadly, Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy. Or at least we need to consider the possibility seriously. The Maine in Havana harbor? Tonkin Gulf? Light at the end of the tunnel? Everything said in the build up to the invasion of Iraq? Come on. When is enough enough for you?
    http://turcopolier.typepad.com/sic_semper_tyrannis/2014/07/httpconsortiumnewscom20140720what-did-us-spy-satellites-see-in-ukraine.html
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what? Sh!t happens in the fog of war. The USS Vincennes anyone? Israeli attack on the USS Liberty?
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control. The Russian ethnics don’t want it. The regime is oppressing the Russian ethnics. Russia has valid interests in the Ukraine. Our interests have to do with Chevron. Shades of Smedley Butler here. It stinks. And it playing with fire, nuclear fire at that.

  153. Sadly, Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy. Or at least we need to consider the possibility seriously. The Maine in Havana harbor? Tonkin Gulf? Light at the end of the tunnel? Everything said in the build up to the invasion of Iraq? Come on. When is enough enough for you?
    http://turcopolier.typepad.com/sic_semper_tyrannis/2014/07/httpconsortiumnewscom20140720what-did-us-spy-satellites-see-in-ukraine.html
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what? Sh!t happens in the fog of war. The USS Vincennes anyone? Israeli attack on the USS Liberty?
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control. The Russian ethnics don’t want it. The regime is oppressing the Russian ethnics. Russia has valid interests in the Ukraine. Our interests have to do with Chevron. Shades of Smedley Butler here. It stinks. And it playing with fire, nuclear fire at that.

  154. On the larger, original questions of taxing, drafting and selling War to the citizenry, y’all might want to read Paul Fussell’s “The Great War”, about the origins in grandiose martial, romantic notions in literature, art, and the cult of honor in European culture from deep in the 18th century as the fertile soil that gave rise to the rush into the greatest slaughter perpetrated by the so-called civilized world (because a relatively unimportant ArchDuke was assassinated), is exhaustively explored.
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.
    War-porn? They thought war was going to be a little closed-mouth kissing and then we all get medals and a parade.
    The technologies of gas, artillery, Naval warfare, and later tanks quickly brought it to the level of snuff porn and then all of the surviving sensitive poets went home to commit suicide.

  155. On the larger, original questions of taxing, drafting and selling War to the citizenry, y’all might want to read Paul Fussell’s “The Great War”, about the origins in grandiose martial, romantic notions in literature, art, and the cult of honor in European culture from deep in the 18th century as the fertile soil that gave rise to the rush into the greatest slaughter perpetrated by the so-called civilized world (because a relatively unimportant ArchDuke was assassinated), is exhaustively explored.
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.
    War-porn? They thought war was going to be a little closed-mouth kissing and then we all get medals and a parade.
    The technologies of gas, artillery, Naval warfare, and later tanks quickly brought it to the level of snuff porn and then all of the surviving sensitive poets went home to commit suicide.

  156. On the larger, original questions of taxing, drafting and selling War to the citizenry, y’all might want to read Paul Fussell’s “The Great War”, about the origins in grandiose martial, romantic notions in literature, art, and the cult of honor in European culture from deep in the 18th century as the fertile soil that gave rise to the rush into the greatest slaughter perpetrated by the so-called civilized world (because a relatively unimportant ArchDuke was assassinated), is exhaustively explored.
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.
    War-porn? They thought war was going to be a little closed-mouth kissing and then we all get medals and a parade.
    The technologies of gas, artillery, Naval warfare, and later tanks quickly brought it to the level of snuff porn and then all of the surviving sensitive poets went home to commit suicide.

  157. Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy.
    no, it isn’t.
    the assumption of conspiracy utterly eliminates rational thought: it’s metastasized confirmation bias.
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what?
    298 dead. that’s what. FFS.
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    no, it doesn’t. there is no conspiracy to bring the Ukraine “under US control”.

  158. Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy.
    no, it isn’t.
    the assumption of conspiracy utterly eliminates rational thought: it’s metastasized confirmation bias.
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what?
    298 dead. that’s what. FFS.
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    no, it doesn’t. there is no conspiracy to bring the Ukraine “under US control”.

  159. Cleek, all too often it is a conspiracy.
    no, it isn’t.
    the assumption of conspiracy utterly eliminates rational thought: it’s metastasized confirmation bias.
    Even if it was the Ukranian rebels, so what?
    298 dead. that’s what. FFS.
    The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    no, it doesn’t. there is no conspiracy to bring the Ukraine “under US control”.

  160. “His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. ”
    Yeah and he wasn’t the only one. I no longer have the links and figures at my fingertips, but last summer , when the approximate figure from the Syrian Observatory guy was 100,000 dead, only a fraction of those were civilians in the first place.–something like 36,000 if my memory is right. Oddly enough, Assad’s forces (the military and associated militia) were dying in comparable or larger numbers to the civilians and the rebel deaths were the smallest. Which was weird, since Assad’s side has the heavy weaponry. But anyway, the common Western claim that “Assad” had killed 100,000 of his own people was not supported by what little evidence we actually had.
    I’ve never seen a breakdown on who was killing the civilians, though I gather Human Rights Watch thinks Assad’s side has killed the most. But the radical Islamists would probably kill more if they won.

  161. “His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. ”
    Yeah and he wasn’t the only one. I no longer have the links and figures at my fingertips, but last summer , when the approximate figure from the Syrian Observatory guy was 100,000 dead, only a fraction of those were civilians in the first place.–something like 36,000 if my memory is right. Oddly enough, Assad’s forces (the military and associated militia) were dying in comparable or larger numbers to the civilians and the rebel deaths were the smallest. Which was weird, since Assad’s side has the heavy weaponry. But anyway, the common Western claim that “Assad” had killed 100,000 of his own people was not supported by what little evidence we actually had.
    I’ve never seen a breakdown on who was killing the civilians, though I gather Human Rights Watch thinks Assad’s side has killed the most. But the radical Islamists would probably kill more if they won.

  162. “His robot like answer, Assad has killed over 100,000 of his own people. ”
    Yeah and he wasn’t the only one. I no longer have the links and figures at my fingertips, but last summer , when the approximate figure from the Syrian Observatory guy was 100,000 dead, only a fraction of those were civilians in the first place.–something like 36,000 if my memory is right. Oddly enough, Assad’s forces (the military and associated militia) were dying in comparable or larger numbers to the civilians and the rebel deaths were the smallest. Which was weird, since Assad’s side has the heavy weaponry. But anyway, the common Western claim that “Assad” had killed 100,000 of his own people was not supported by what little evidence we actually had.
    I’ve never seen a breakdown on who was killing the civilians, though I gather Human Rights Watch thinks Assad’s side has killed the most. But the radical Islamists would probably kill more if they won.

  163. and, put me in the “let them fight it out” column. Ukraine isn’t our fight, neither is Syria, neither was Libya.
    but one they start killing innocent bystanders (or flyovers, in this case), someone has to answer for it.

  164. and, put me in the “let them fight it out” column. Ukraine isn’t our fight, neither is Syria, neither was Libya.
    but one they start killing innocent bystanders (or flyovers, in this case), someone has to answer for it.

  165. and, put me in the “let them fight it out” column. Ukraine isn’t our fight, neither is Syria, neither was Libya.
    but one they start killing innocent bystanders (or flyovers, in this case), someone has to answer for it.

  166. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.

  167. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.

  168. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.

  169. There’s a word or two missing in the first paragraph of my 1:31 pm, but I don’t know which ones.

  170. There’s a word or two missing in the first paragraph of my 1:31 pm, but I don’t know which ones.

  171. There’s a word or two missing in the first paragraph of my 1:31 pm, but I don’t know which ones.

  172. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    Seconding cleek here. Considering that the US doesn’t have even allies such as the EU (or Turkey or Georgia) under anything that could be called “control,” why would we think that we could do so with Ukraine? Not to mention, what would be the benefit to us of doing so?
    The only reason that Ukraine would be important is if we, for whatever reason, were looking to mount a land invasion of Russia. God knows why we would want to, but still, that is the only way Ukraine would be important militarily. And the case for economic benefit of such control is even weaker. It will be a long time before Ukraine is any kind of economic plus. So what would be the point?

  173. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    Seconding cleek here. Considering that the US doesn’t have even allies such as the EU (or Turkey or Georgia) under anything that could be called “control,” why would we think that we could do so with Ukraine? Not to mention, what would be the benefit to us of doing so?
    The only reason that Ukraine would be important is if we, for whatever reason, were looking to mount a land invasion of Russia. God knows why we would want to, but still, that is the only way Ukraine would be important militarily. And the case for economic benefit of such control is even weaker. It will be a long time before Ukraine is any kind of economic plus. So what would be the point?

  174. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    Seconding cleek here. Considering that the US doesn’t have even allies such as the EU (or Turkey or Georgia) under anything that could be called “control,” why would we think that we could do so with Ukraine? Not to mention, what would be the benefit to us of doing so?
    The only reason that Ukraine would be important is if we, for whatever reason, were looking to mount a land invasion of Russia. God knows why we would want to, but still, that is the only way Ukraine would be important militarily. And the case for economic benefit of such control is even weaker. It will be a long time before Ukraine is any kind of economic plus. So what would be the point?

  175. I do wonder the next time Edward Snowden has a sit-down chin wag with Vlad Putin if he could ask him what the deal is with the Malaysian jet.
    It’s amazing in this world of high-tech intelligence and hacking in which someone, probably in Russia, can cop my credit card info via Target and the NSA can read in real time that I hate their guts right here at OBWI (hello NSA, I hate you. And if the NRA is listening too, do f8ck yourselves), how little we know about bupkis in the world.
    Not that the kibitzing isn’t fun.

  176. I do wonder the next time Edward Snowden has a sit-down chin wag with Vlad Putin if he could ask him what the deal is with the Malaysian jet.
    It’s amazing in this world of high-tech intelligence and hacking in which someone, probably in Russia, can cop my credit card info via Target and the NSA can read in real time that I hate their guts right here at OBWI (hello NSA, I hate you. And if the NRA is listening too, do f8ck yourselves), how little we know about bupkis in the world.
    Not that the kibitzing isn’t fun.

  177. I do wonder the next time Edward Snowden has a sit-down chin wag with Vlad Putin if he could ask him what the deal is with the Malaysian jet.
    It’s amazing in this world of high-tech intelligence and hacking in which someone, probably in Russia, can cop my credit card info via Target and the NSA can read in real time that I hate their guts right here at OBWI (hello NSA, I hate you. And if the NRA is listening too, do f8ck yourselves), how little we know about bupkis in the world.
    Not that the kibitzing isn’t fun.

  178. Count:
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.

    Which is why, I’d argue, its important to inform people of the true nature of war.

  179. Count:
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.

    Which is why, I’d argue, its important to inform people of the true nature of war.

  180. Count:
    The Great War didn’t have to be sold. The people and the military were out front and diplomacy and statecraft were left in the dust.
    The people, much-vaunted, but really a mass of silly, lethal stupidity and fed heroic pap for nearly a century in Germany, England, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungarian Empire couldn’t wait to hit the trenches.

    Which is why, I’d argue, its important to inform people of the true nature of war.

  181. Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn.
    thompson:
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls.
    Hartmut:
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.
    thompson:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    I disagree with your opinion.
    Millions of people watched Gulf I.
    Millions of people watched the “Shock And Awe” lightshow.
    Millions of people have seen this footage of a helicopter gunship attack, with narration by the crew.
    There’s no lack of real-life reporting from war theaters, much of it quite graphic. Outside of broadcast media, there’s a ton of stuff circulated via email, YouTube, etc., and millions of people look at that.
    The only example I can think of where graphic war coverage made a big dent in public opinion was Vietnam. The reason it did so in that case was, IMO, that we were portrayed as the bad guys in a lot of that coverage.
    The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    People don’t seem to be bothered much by scenes of mayhem, bloodshed, and death if the other guy is the “bad guy”. And yes, millions and millions of people look at that stuff.

  182. Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn.
    thompson:
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls.
    Hartmut:
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.
    thompson:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    I disagree with your opinion.
    Millions of people watched Gulf I.
    Millions of people watched the “Shock And Awe” lightshow.
    Millions of people have seen this footage of a helicopter gunship attack, with narration by the crew.
    There’s no lack of real-life reporting from war theaters, much of it quite graphic. Outside of broadcast media, there’s a ton of stuff circulated via email, YouTube, etc., and millions of people look at that.
    The only example I can think of where graphic war coverage made a big dent in public opinion was Vietnam. The reason it did so in that case was, IMO, that we were portrayed as the bad guys in a lot of that coverage.
    The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    People don’t seem to be bothered much by scenes of mayhem, bloodshed, and death if the other guy is the “bad guy”. And yes, millions and millions of people look at that stuff.

  183. Or perhaps you’re referring to a different comment, where I said I think there is no audience for war porn.
    thompson:
    IMHO, far more effective than threatening to tax the 0.1%, is showing people the cost of war. Embedded reports, gun camera footage, death tolls.
    Hartmut:
    War porn? The government could make a ton of money by streaming it for a hefty fee. A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching sand-n-words getting slaughtered by US military might and likley consider the cynical remarks by the guys pulling the trigger an added bonus. It’s too much like a (sick) videogame.
    thompson:
    One is too many. But I would disagree with “A lot of people”. Perhaps I am too optimistic about human nature, but I challenge the assertion that by and large, americans enjoy the bloodshed of war.
    I disagree with your opinion.
    Millions of people watched Gulf I.
    Millions of people watched the “Shock And Awe” lightshow.
    Millions of people have seen this footage of a helicopter gunship attack, with narration by the crew.
    There’s no lack of real-life reporting from war theaters, much of it quite graphic. Outside of broadcast media, there’s a ton of stuff circulated via email, YouTube, etc., and millions of people look at that.
    The only example I can think of where graphic war coverage made a big dent in public opinion was Vietnam. The reason it did so in that case was, IMO, that we were portrayed as the bad guys in a lot of that coverage.
    The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    People don’t seem to be bothered much by scenes of mayhem, bloodshed, and death if the other guy is the “bad guy”. And yes, millions and millions of people look at that stuff.

  184. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?

  185. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?

  186. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?

  187. There is a reason why the media’s tease of “Our next story may shock you!” going into a commercial break turns out to be a rush to make popcorn.

  188. There is a reason why the media’s tease of “Our next story may shock you!” going into a commercial break turns out to be a rush to make popcorn.

  189. There is a reason why the media’s tease of “Our next story may shock you!” going into a commercial break turns out to be a rush to make popcorn.

  190. I disagree with your opinion.
    Which is fine, but you said “is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. ”
    I didn’t say that.
    On the substance of what you said:
    Millions watching news of war does not necessarily imply people enjoy bloodshed. It could also be explained by people wanting to be informed about a war we were engaged in. Wars are significant events, and it should be no surprise that people follow the news.
    I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    It has also been used as war porn. I wouldn’t suggest otherwise, and yes, that’s disgusting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    I couldn’t agree more. And its a hell of a lot harder to convince yourself you’re not the bad guy when you see video/pictures of “The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.”
    I wouldn’t say that’s just the media portraying the US as bad. It is bad.
    And, as you noted, there was a negative effect on popular opinion of the war.

  191. I disagree with your opinion.
    Which is fine, but you said “is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. ”
    I didn’t say that.
    On the substance of what you said:
    Millions watching news of war does not necessarily imply people enjoy bloodshed. It could also be explained by people wanting to be informed about a war we were engaged in. Wars are significant events, and it should be no surprise that people follow the news.
    I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    It has also been used as war porn. I wouldn’t suggest otherwise, and yes, that’s disgusting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    I couldn’t agree more. And its a hell of a lot harder to convince yourself you’re not the bad guy when you see video/pictures of “The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.”
    I wouldn’t say that’s just the media portraying the US as bad. It is bad.
    And, as you noted, there was a negative effect on popular opinion of the war.

  192. I disagree with your opinion.
    Which is fine, but you said “is that there’s an audience for war porn. You think there isn’t. ”
    I didn’t say that.
    On the substance of what you said:
    Millions watching news of war does not necessarily imply people enjoy bloodshed. It could also be explained by people wanting to be informed about a war we were engaged in. Wars are significant events, and it should be no surprise that people follow the news.
    I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    It has also been used as war porn. I wouldn’t suggest otherwise, and yes, that’s disgusting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.
    Nobody wants to be the bad guy.
    I couldn’t agree more. And its a hell of a lot harder to convince yourself you’re not the bad guy when you see video/pictures of “The guy shooting the other guy in the head was an officer of our client state. We were burning down the village that the naked little girl was running away from.”
    I wouldn’t say that’s just the media portraying the US as bad. It is bad.
    And, as you noted, there was a negative effect on popular opinion of the war.

  193. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.

    I’d agree….depends on the definition of “control”. You don’t have to buy into a more conspiratorial analysis of international relations (cf Informed Observer-politics does indeed make for strange bedfellows!)to note that the U.S. and its allies have essentially brought NATO right up to the Russian border, and were highly supportive of Ukraine falling into the Common Market system.
    If you were a Russian, even a sane one, how would you take this? This is a question we seldom ask ourselves. We just assume our influence is “good” (for them).
    It is the paternalism that grates.
    Count: Agree. The Fussell book on the Great War is terrific, especially the parts about the suffragettes! A little corner of history I was totally unaware of.

  194. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.

    I’d agree….depends on the definition of “control”. You don’t have to buy into a more conspiratorial analysis of international relations (cf Informed Observer-politics does indeed make for strange bedfellows!)to note that the U.S. and its allies have essentially brought NATO right up to the Russian border, and were highly supportive of Ukraine falling into the Common Market system.
    If you were a Russian, even a sane one, how would you take this? This is a question we seldom ask ourselves. We just assume our influence is “good” (for them).
    It is the paternalism that grates.
    Count: Agree. The Fussell book on the Great War is terrific, especially the parts about the suffragettes! A little corner of history I was totally unaware of.

  195. The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.

    I’d agree….depends on the definition of “control”. You don’t have to buy into a more conspiratorial analysis of international relations (cf Informed Observer-politics does indeed make for strange bedfellows!)to note that the U.S. and its allies have essentially brought NATO right up to the Russian border, and were highly supportive of Ukraine falling into the Common Market system.
    If you were a Russian, even a sane one, how would you take this? This is a question we seldom ask ourselves. We just assume our influence is “good” (for them).
    It is the paternalism that grates.
    Count: Agree. The Fussell book on the Great War is terrific, especially the parts about the suffragettes! A little corner of history I was totally unaware of.

  196. If I were a (sane) Russian, how would I take the Ukraine moving towards the Common Market? Probably my response would be “Hot damn! Maybe we can get in, too!”
    As a route to propserity, better governance, etc. it looks to be the best chance on offer for Russia. Not that the current government would agree, or ever consider accepting the limits on its own power that would be required. Heck, there are European governments with a whole lot more interest in their own people which have serious reservations about the EU. But a sane Russian would see it as a possible step forward.
    NATO might well be a different story. But a Russia which was joining the EU would mean the end of NATO. You can’t really have a defensive alliance when there isn’t a credible threat left.

  197. If I were a (sane) Russian, how would I take the Ukraine moving towards the Common Market? Probably my response would be “Hot damn! Maybe we can get in, too!”
    As a route to propserity, better governance, etc. it looks to be the best chance on offer for Russia. Not that the current government would agree, or ever consider accepting the limits on its own power that would be required. Heck, there are European governments with a whole lot more interest in their own people which have serious reservations about the EU. But a sane Russian would see it as a possible step forward.
    NATO might well be a different story. But a Russia which was joining the EU would mean the end of NATO. You can’t really have a defensive alliance when there isn’t a credible threat left.

  198. If I were a (sane) Russian, how would I take the Ukraine moving towards the Common Market? Probably my response would be “Hot damn! Maybe we can get in, too!”
    As a route to propserity, better governance, etc. it looks to be the best chance on offer for Russia. Not that the current government would agree, or ever consider accepting the limits on its own power that would be required. Heck, there are European governments with a whole lot more interest in their own people which have serious reservations about the EU. But a sane Russian would see it as a possible step forward.
    NATO might well be a different story. But a Russia which was joining the EU would mean the end of NATO. You can’t really have a defensive alliance when there isn’t a credible threat left.

  199. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    it really isn’t.
    -cleek
    With the tragi-comic demise of the Wallace presidential bid (Henry, not George) I would say they are pretty well in agreement as to the basics when it comes to defining where our “national interests” lie. This is a well known consensus that has been in place ever since.
    For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    Such a goal has huge policy implications. Wouldn’t you agree?

  200. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    it really isn’t.
    -cleek
    With the tragi-comic demise of the Wallace presidential bid (Henry, not George) I would say they are pretty well in agreement as to the basics when it comes to defining where our “national interests” lie. This is a well known consensus that has been in place ever since.
    For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    Such a goal has huge policy implications. Wouldn’t you agree?

  201. It’s all the same foreign policy, elephants and donkeys alike.
    it really isn’t.
    -cleek
    With the tragi-comic demise of the Wallace presidential bid (Henry, not George) I would say they are pretty well in agreement as to the basics when it comes to defining where our “national interests” lie. This is a well known consensus that has been in place ever since.
    For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    Such a goal has huge policy implications. Wouldn’t you agree?

  202. For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    true. but wanting the baddest guns and make-workiest make-work defense bucks is a lot different than wanting to get involved in every conflict that pops up. the GOP’s leading foreign policy team of McCain and Graham sounds nothing like Obama or any other big name Dem.

  203. For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    true. but wanting the baddest guns and make-workiest make-work defense bucks is a lot different than wanting to get involved in every conflict that pops up. the GOP’s leading foreign policy team of McCain and Graham sounds nothing like Obama or any other big name Dem.

  204. For example, there is no basic disagreement as between Dems and Repulicans that the US armed forces be “the most powerful” in the world.
    true. but wanting the baddest guns and make-workiest make-work defense bucks is a lot different than wanting to get involved in every conflict that pops up. the GOP’s leading foreign policy team of McCain and Graham sounds nothing like Obama or any other big name Dem.

  205. I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.

    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Lots of folks watch that stuff. They may think it’s funny, or they may think it’s horrible, but they watch it.
    Unlike during the Vietnam era, it hasn’t made much of a change in our foreign policy.
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”, or how much gore needs to be on display for it to be nasty enough to qualify for purposes of this discussion, or whether it’s “porn” or not, we can probably pound the question into the ground for another 100 comments.
    But there has been ample coverage of most of the wars we’ve been in in the last 30 years, including live, real-time coverage of places under active bombardment. There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    If you can think of examples since then, I’m all ears. I can’t think of any.

  206. I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.

    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Lots of folks watch that stuff. They may think it’s funny, or they may think it’s horrible, but they watch it.
    Unlike during the Vietnam era, it hasn’t made much of a change in our foreign policy.
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”, or how much gore needs to be on display for it to be nasty enough to qualify for purposes of this discussion, or whether it’s “porn” or not, we can probably pound the question into the ground for another 100 comments.
    But there has been ample coverage of most of the wars we’ve been in in the last 30 years, including live, real-time coverage of places under active bombardment. There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    If you can think of examples since then, I’m all ears. I can’t think of any.

  207. I’d point out, that one of your examples, the collateral murder video, has been cited in arguments against war. Which is an example of what I’m suggesting.
    The question I’d have is does its release overall encourage further military action by the US, or discourage it.
    My opinion is that is discourages it.

    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Lots of folks watch that stuff. They may think it’s funny, or they may think it’s horrible, but they watch it.
    Unlike during the Vietnam era, it hasn’t made much of a change in our foreign policy.
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”, or how much gore needs to be on display for it to be nasty enough to qualify for purposes of this discussion, or whether it’s “porn” or not, we can probably pound the question into the ground for another 100 comments.
    But there has been ample coverage of most of the wars we’ve been in in the last 30 years, including live, real-time coverage of places under active bombardment. There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    If you can think of examples since then, I’m all ears. I can’t think of any.

  208. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.
    I am still waiting for the claim that those two Malyasian planes were actually those that were disappeared on 9/11 (with all the passengers*) and replaced by holograms (so the explosives packed into the WTC would be attributed to a plane impact). The perpetrators just waited for an opportunity to dispose of them in pursuit of another nefarious goal. The one dumped in the Pacific was likely linked to Benghazi (the investigation thereof respectively) and the one in Ukrained linked to the Palestine conflict.
    *which would explain why the corpses were not fresh anymore.
    Joke aside, I just this afternoon went passed a demonstration in Berlin when the guy with the megaphone defended the ‘only 50 corpses and already mummified’ story while another one added the claim that there are no separatists in Ukraine and it’s all a US/EU plot.

  209. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.
    I am still waiting for the claim that those two Malyasian planes were actually those that were disappeared on 9/11 (with all the passengers*) and replaced by holograms (so the explosives packed into the WTC would be attributed to a plane impact). The perpetrators just waited for an opportunity to dispose of them in pursuit of another nefarious goal. The one dumped in the Pacific was likely linked to Benghazi (the investigation thereof respectively) and the one in Ukrained linked to the Palestine conflict.
    *which would explain why the corpses were not fresh anymore.
    Joke aside, I just this afternoon went passed a demonstration in Berlin when the guy with the megaphone defended the ‘only 50 corpses and already mummified’ story while another one added the claim that there are no separatists in Ukraine and it’s all a US/EU plot.

  210. No doubt, soon, maybe this afternoon, we’ll learn from Newsmax that the second Malaysian jet is sitting on a dirt runway somewhere next to the first Malaysian jet (previously dead bodies also removed) being readied to fly up Louie Gohmert’s Texan butt.
    I am still waiting for the claim that those two Malyasian planes were actually those that were disappeared on 9/11 (with all the passengers*) and replaced by holograms (so the explosives packed into the WTC would be attributed to a plane impact). The perpetrators just waited for an opportunity to dispose of them in pursuit of another nefarious goal. The one dumped in the Pacific was likely linked to Benghazi (the investigation thereof respectively) and the one in Ukrained linked to the Palestine conflict.
    *which would explain why the corpses were not fresh anymore.
    Joke aside, I just this afternoon went passed a demonstration in Berlin when the guy with the megaphone defended the ‘only 50 corpses and already mummified’ story while another one added the claim that there are no separatists in Ukraine and it’s all a US/EU plot.

  211. To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy. Ditto Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Ditto pictures of gassed Kurds in Iraq. Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    As for the Doc’s post: if the 1% agreed to a war tax, would that trump a vote by the rest not to go to war? Or, if the 1% agreed to a war tax *and* the easily misled masses *also* agreed, would Doc then be on board with the war?
    IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?

  212. To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy. Ditto Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Ditto pictures of gassed Kurds in Iraq. Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    As for the Doc’s post: if the 1% agreed to a war tax, would that trump a vote by the rest not to go to war? Or, if the 1% agreed to a war tax *and* the easily misled masses *also* agreed, would Doc then be on board with the war?
    IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?

  213. To reiterate my point above, the last time I can think of where exposure to real wartime conditions made any kind of dent in American foreign policy was the Vietnam era.
    Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy. Ditto Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Ditto pictures of gassed Kurds in Iraq. Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    As for the Doc’s post: if the 1% agreed to a war tax, would that trump a vote by the rest not to go to war? Or, if the 1% agreed to a war tax *and* the easily misled masses *also* agreed, would Doc then be on board with the war?
    IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?

  214. I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Syria ?
    The previous reluctance to back your NATO allies in Libya ?
    Over here, there is no way a UK parliament would now be able to vote in favour of taking part in (for example) another Iraq invasion.

  215. I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Syria ?
    The previous reluctance to back your NATO allies in Libya ?
    Over here, there is no way a UK parliament would now be able to vote in favour of taking part in (for example) another Iraq invasion.

  216. I do not see, as a practical matter, how that has made any material difference in our foreign policy.
    Syria ?
    The previous reluctance to back your NATO allies in Libya ?
    Over here, there is no way a UK parliament would now be able to vote in favour of taking part in (for example) another Iraq invasion.

  217. “The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2fYcHLouXY
    Yes Russell, you are a smart guy from what I can see, but missing quite a bit re; the Ukraine. Please note the Chevron banner and Victoria Nuland’s quasi orgasmic affect.

  218. “The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2fYcHLouXY
    Yes Russell, you are a smart guy from what I can see, but missing quite a bit re; the Ukraine. Please note the Chevron banner and Victoria Nuland’s quasi orgasmic affect.

  219. “The US wants to bring the regime in the Ukraine under it’s control.
    ?!?!??
    This seems, to me, to be a somewhat exaggerated claim.
    Am I missing something?”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2fYcHLouXY
    Yes Russell, you are a smart guy from what I can see, but missing quite a bit re; the Ukraine. Please note the Chevron banner and Victoria Nuland’s quasi orgasmic affect.

  220. “Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy.”
    This is true.
    “Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.”
    Many here now, yes. On 9/12, the winds of war blew pretty hard given the makeup of the OBWItariat then.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    “IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?”
    I suspect vaguely satisfied that the war is being paid for, though personally I would extend the war tax far below the 1%, because why should the eagerness of the middle class go unlevied?
    How ya doing, McTX?

  221. “Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy.”
    This is true.
    “Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.”
    Many here now, yes. On 9/12, the winds of war blew pretty hard given the makeup of the OBWItariat then.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    “IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?”
    I suspect vaguely satisfied that the war is being paid for, though personally I would extend the war tax far below the 1%, because why should the eagerness of the middle class go unlevied?
    How ya doing, McTX?

  222. “Offhand, I’d say the live images of two jets slamming into the WTC had an impact on foreign policy.”
    This is true.
    “Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.”
    Many here now, yes. On 9/12, the winds of war blew pretty hard given the makeup of the OBWItariat then.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    “IOW, Doc S, if you got what you wanted and there was still a war, where would that leave you?”
    I suspect vaguely satisfied that the war is being paid for, though personally I would extend the war tax far below the 1%, because why should the eagerness of the middle class go unlevied?
    How ya doing, McTX?

  223. russell: There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I don’t know about the first and third sentences there. The NYTimes or the WaPo has published ample photographs of dead and mutilated people? Perhaps they have, but I have to say, I have been a fairly active reader these past almost 12 years and graphic coverage of, say, dead and mutilated Iraqis in major publications doesn’t seem that prevalent to me (Abu Ghraib perhaps being an exception). Instead, it seems to me that the “major” publications and websites aimed at US audiences go out of their way to keep that stuff off the front pages and/or give ample warning that you’re likely to come across it should you continue reading/watching/click on this link (trigger warnings!). The sample of people that actively seek such images out for “porn”, it seems to me, aren’t the ones that are going to be persuaded by the images.
    Indeed, it could be that those iconic images from Vietnam were so effective because the general public had no choice to see them if they wanted to read the news. These days, if I don’t want to see graphic images of, er, the spoils of war and still be “informed,” I don’t have to.
    If people in the U.S. want to be exposed to the damage caused by wars then they can visit an active war zone or, for a real education, have a full blown war right here in the U.S. Which hasn’t happened since, what, the Civil War? Seems like we remember that fairly well, although some seem to have learned the wrong lessons.

  224. russell: There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I don’t know about the first and third sentences there. The NYTimes or the WaPo has published ample photographs of dead and mutilated people? Perhaps they have, but I have to say, I have been a fairly active reader these past almost 12 years and graphic coverage of, say, dead and mutilated Iraqis in major publications doesn’t seem that prevalent to me (Abu Ghraib perhaps being an exception). Instead, it seems to me that the “major” publications and websites aimed at US audiences go out of their way to keep that stuff off the front pages and/or give ample warning that you’re likely to come across it should you continue reading/watching/click on this link (trigger warnings!). The sample of people that actively seek such images out for “porn”, it seems to me, aren’t the ones that are going to be persuaded by the images.
    Indeed, it could be that those iconic images from Vietnam were so effective because the general public had no choice to see them if they wanted to read the news. These days, if I don’t want to see graphic images of, er, the spoils of war and still be “informed,” I don’t have to.
    If people in the U.S. want to be exposed to the damage caused by wars then they can visit an active war zone or, for a real education, have a full blown war right here in the U.S. Which hasn’t happened since, what, the Civil War? Seems like we remember that fairly well, although some seem to have learned the wrong lessons.

  225. russell: There has been ample photographic documentation of dead and mutilated people in major publications. There have been many, many tallies of casualties. People have been very well exposed to the damage caused by wars.
    I don’t know about the first and third sentences there. The NYTimes or the WaPo has published ample photographs of dead and mutilated people? Perhaps they have, but I have to say, I have been a fairly active reader these past almost 12 years and graphic coverage of, say, dead and mutilated Iraqis in major publications doesn’t seem that prevalent to me (Abu Ghraib perhaps being an exception). Instead, it seems to me that the “major” publications and websites aimed at US audiences go out of their way to keep that stuff off the front pages and/or give ample warning that you’re likely to come across it should you continue reading/watching/click on this link (trigger warnings!). The sample of people that actively seek such images out for “porn”, it seems to me, aren’t the ones that are going to be persuaded by the images.
    Indeed, it could be that those iconic images from Vietnam were so effective because the general public had no choice to see them if they wanted to read the news. These days, if I don’t want to see graphic images of, er, the spoils of war and still be “informed,” I don’t have to.
    If people in the U.S. want to be exposed to the damage caused by wars then they can visit an active war zone or, for a real education, have a full blown war right here in the U.S. Which hasn’t happened since, what, the Civil War? Seems like we remember that fairly well, although some seem to have learned the wrong lessons.

  226. IO, I actually listened to the whole speech. I hear the lady say she “told President Yanakovych that he has a choice” — whether to move Ukraine in the direction of Europe or not. She doesn’t hide the fact that she thinks that would be better for Ukraine. You could, I suppose, fault her for offering gratuitious advice. But that really doesn’t seem to me to be the usual approach to “bringing someone under control”.
    And I’m not sure what significance you are reading into the fact that Chevron was sponsoring this particular event (in which her speech was only one item). Is there some large oil deposit in Ukraine that you have heard of, but the rest of us have not? As far as I am aware, Ukraine’s only significant natural resource is agriculture. (Not something that Chevron is really focused on.)

  227. IO, I actually listened to the whole speech. I hear the lady say she “told President Yanakovych that he has a choice” — whether to move Ukraine in the direction of Europe or not. She doesn’t hide the fact that she thinks that would be better for Ukraine. You could, I suppose, fault her for offering gratuitious advice. But that really doesn’t seem to me to be the usual approach to “bringing someone under control”.
    And I’m not sure what significance you are reading into the fact that Chevron was sponsoring this particular event (in which her speech was only one item). Is there some large oil deposit in Ukraine that you have heard of, but the rest of us have not? As far as I am aware, Ukraine’s only significant natural resource is agriculture. (Not something that Chevron is really focused on.)

  228. IO, I actually listened to the whole speech. I hear the lady say she “told President Yanakovych that he has a choice” — whether to move Ukraine in the direction of Europe or not. She doesn’t hide the fact that she thinks that would be better for Ukraine. You could, I suppose, fault her for offering gratuitious advice. But that really doesn’t seem to me to be the usual approach to “bringing someone under control”.
    And I’m not sure what significance you are reading into the fact that Chevron was sponsoring this particular event (in which her speech was only one item). Is there some large oil deposit in Ukraine that you have heard of, but the rest of us have not? As far as I am aware, Ukraine’s only significant natural resource is agriculture. (Not something that Chevron is really focused on.)

  229. russell:
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”,
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    I challenged the use of “A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching […]”. Although “a lot” can mean pretty much anything, I think its misleading in a discussion about the voting public as a whole.
    In the same sense I could say ‘a lot of people view child pornography’. True statement, depending on what I mean by ‘a lot’. But also potentially misleading.
    1% of people getting off on war porn is ‘a lot’ to me, and disturbing. But not really a crippling counterargument, IMO. If Hartmut, or you, or someone else, wants to attach numbers, by all means, go ahead.
    Otherwise, we’ll probably have to disagree on what ‘a lot’ is, and/or how relevant that lot is. I’m sure we’ll live.
    Personally, I’m far more interested in the other aspects of what you said:
    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Fair. It’s pretty hard to pick out the effect of one video out of the soup of current events. I can say that the video was fodder for a lot of anti-war blogging and editorials. Perhaps they have no effect, but I find that unlikely.
    While I can’t find a reputable poll of the video specifically, there is a (small, maybe just noise) loss of support in mid 2010, shortly after release of the video:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/171923/fewer-support-iraq-withdrawal-decision-2011.aspx?ref=image
    The timing of the polls isn’t really ideal, and its a small bump, so maybe nothing.
    And if you consider Abu Ghraib, I think it would be hard to deny that release of the abuse photos had influenced the national conversation:
    From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_torture_and_prisoner_abuse ):
    On November 1, 2003, The Associated Press published a lengthy report[19] on inhumane treatment, beatings and deaths at Abu Ghraib and other American prisons in Iraq, based on interviews with released detainees, who told journalist Charles J. Hanley of inmates attacked by dogs, made to wear hoods and humiliated in other ways.[20] The article gained little notice.
    But that changed after the release of photos by 60 minutes and the New Yorker. There were press conferences, hearings, etc. And that had an effect according to CNN (http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/05/18/detainee.abuse.lookback/index.html?iref=24hours ):
    < A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll immediately after the photos were released showed that nearly three-quarters of Americans said the mistreatment of the detainees was unjustified under any circumstances. Bush's overall performance rating sank to what was then the lowest of his presidency, 46 percent. The poll also showed support for the war at its lowest since before it began, with only 44 percent saying they believed it was worthwhile. It was a blow from which the administration, especially then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, never fully recovered. Amanpour said Obama's presidential victory and big wins by Democrats in the House and Senate were proof of that.
    Again, I can’t point to a specific policy that was because Abu Ghraib, but if you look back at the Gallup polling, there is again a shift (this one larger) in support in mid 2004, after the photos were released.
    So, if you want me to cite a specific policy enacted after the release of violent imagery of war, I can’t. But I do believe it influences the public debate, and public opinion, which in turn influences policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    That is the claim I made.
    And you make a fair point. I have nothing concrete. I see evidence in America’s increased reluctance to go to war after a decade of footage, casualty counts, and photos from Iraq and Afghanistan: Either in Syria, combating ISIL in Iraq, or in Ukraine. More directly in the declining poll numbers as the Iraq war dragged on. Many, many things contribute to that reluctance and decline, certainly. I’d suggest those graphic depictions do as well.
    Do I have a controlled experiment that demonstrates that irrefutably? No. I have some poll numbers and my perception of the national discussion. Both are likely flawed, and you’re free to find them unpersuasive.

  230. russell:
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”,
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    I challenged the use of “A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching […]”. Although “a lot” can mean pretty much anything, I think its misleading in a discussion about the voting public as a whole.
    In the same sense I could say ‘a lot of people view child pornography’. True statement, depending on what I mean by ‘a lot’. But also potentially misleading.
    1% of people getting off on war porn is ‘a lot’ to me, and disturbing. But not really a crippling counterargument, IMO. If Hartmut, or you, or someone else, wants to attach numbers, by all means, go ahead.
    Otherwise, we’ll probably have to disagree on what ‘a lot’ is, and/or how relevant that lot is. I’m sure we’ll live.
    Personally, I’m far more interested in the other aspects of what you said:
    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Fair. It’s pretty hard to pick out the effect of one video out of the soup of current events. I can say that the video was fodder for a lot of anti-war blogging and editorials. Perhaps they have no effect, but I find that unlikely.
    While I can’t find a reputable poll of the video specifically, there is a (small, maybe just noise) loss of support in mid 2010, shortly after release of the video:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/171923/fewer-support-iraq-withdrawal-decision-2011.aspx?ref=image
    The timing of the polls isn’t really ideal, and its a small bump, so maybe nothing.
    And if you consider Abu Ghraib, I think it would be hard to deny that release of the abuse photos had influenced the national conversation:
    From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_torture_and_prisoner_abuse ):
    On November 1, 2003, The Associated Press published a lengthy report[19] on inhumane treatment, beatings and deaths at Abu Ghraib and other American prisons in Iraq, based on interviews with released detainees, who told journalist Charles J. Hanley of inmates attacked by dogs, made to wear hoods and humiliated in other ways.[20] The article gained little notice.
    But that changed after the release of photos by 60 minutes and the New Yorker. There were press conferences, hearings, etc. And that had an effect according to CNN (http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/05/18/detainee.abuse.lookback/index.html?iref=24hours ):
    < A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll immediately after the photos were released showed that nearly three-quarters of Americans said the mistreatment of the detainees was unjustified under any circumstances. Bush's overall performance rating sank to what was then the lowest of his presidency, 46 percent. The poll also showed support for the war at its lowest since before it began, with only 44 percent saying they believed it was worthwhile. It was a blow from which the administration, especially then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, never fully recovered. Amanpour said Obama's presidential victory and big wins by Democrats in the House and Senate were proof of that.
    Again, I can’t point to a specific policy that was because Abu Ghraib, but if you look back at the Gallup polling, there is again a shift (this one larger) in support in mid 2004, after the photos were released.
    So, if you want me to cite a specific policy enacted after the release of violent imagery of war, I can’t. But I do believe it influences the public debate, and public opinion, which in turn influences policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    That is the claim I made.
    And you make a fair point. I have nothing concrete. I see evidence in America’s increased reluctance to go to war after a decade of footage, casualty counts, and photos from Iraq and Afghanistan: Either in Syria, combating ISIL in Iraq, or in Ukraine. More directly in the declining poll numbers as the Iraq war dragged on. Many, many things contribute to that reluctance and decline, certainly. I’d suggest those graphic depictions do as well.
    Do I have a controlled experiment that demonstrates that irrefutably? No. I have some poll numbers and my perception of the national discussion. Both are likely flawed, and you’re free to find them unpersuasive.

  231. russell:
    If you want to mince words about how many people is “a lot”,
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    I challenged the use of “A lot of people (far too many) get off on watching […]”. Although “a lot” can mean pretty much anything, I think its misleading in a discussion about the voting public as a whole.
    In the same sense I could say ‘a lot of people view child pornography’. True statement, depending on what I mean by ‘a lot’. But also potentially misleading.
    1% of people getting off on war porn is ‘a lot’ to me, and disturbing. But not really a crippling counterargument, IMO. If Hartmut, or you, or someone else, wants to attach numbers, by all means, go ahead.
    Otherwise, we’ll probably have to disagree on what ‘a lot’ is, and/or how relevant that lot is. I’m sure we’ll live.
    Personally, I’m far more interested in the other aspects of what you said:
    I guess my point here is that there is, as best I can tell, zero evidence that the “collateral murder” video made any concrete change in our policies or practices, in Iraq or anywhere.
    Fair. It’s pretty hard to pick out the effect of one video out of the soup of current events. I can say that the video was fodder for a lot of anti-war blogging and editorials. Perhaps they have no effect, but I find that unlikely.
    While I can’t find a reputable poll of the video specifically, there is a (small, maybe just noise) loss of support in mid 2010, shortly after release of the video:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/171923/fewer-support-iraq-withdrawal-decision-2011.aspx?ref=image
    The timing of the polls isn’t really ideal, and its a small bump, so maybe nothing.
    And if you consider Abu Ghraib, I think it would be hard to deny that release of the abuse photos had influenced the national conversation:
    From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_torture_and_prisoner_abuse ):
    On November 1, 2003, The Associated Press published a lengthy report[19] on inhumane treatment, beatings and deaths at Abu Ghraib and other American prisons in Iraq, based on interviews with released detainees, who told journalist Charles J. Hanley of inmates attacked by dogs, made to wear hoods and humiliated in other ways.[20] The article gained little notice.
    But that changed after the release of photos by 60 minutes and the New Yorker. There were press conferences, hearings, etc. And that had an effect according to CNN (http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/05/18/detainee.abuse.lookback/index.html?iref=24hours ):
    < A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll immediately after the photos were released showed that nearly three-quarters of Americans said the mistreatment of the detainees was unjustified under any circumstances. Bush's overall performance rating sank to what was then the lowest of his presidency, 46 percent. The poll also showed support for the war at its lowest since before it began, with only 44 percent saying they believed it was worthwhile. It was a blow from which the administration, especially then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, never fully recovered. Amanpour said Obama's presidential victory and big wins by Democrats in the House and Senate were proof of that.
    Again, I can’t point to a specific policy that was because Abu Ghraib, but if you look back at the Gallup polling, there is again a shift (this one larger) in support in mid 2004, after the photos were released.
    So, if you want me to cite a specific policy enacted after the release of violent imagery of war, I can’t. But I do believe it influences the public debate, and public opinion, which in turn influences policy.
    Your claim, to which Hartmut’s “war porn” comment was a reply, was that exposure to stuff like that would make Americans less inclined to engage in warfare. I see no evidence of that.
    That is the claim I made.
    And you make a fair point. I have nothing concrete. I see evidence in America’s increased reluctance to go to war after a decade of footage, casualty counts, and photos from Iraq and Afghanistan: Either in Syria, combating ISIL in Iraq, or in Ukraine. More directly in the declining poll numbers as the Iraq war dragged on. Many, many things contribute to that reluctance and decline, certainly. I’d suggest those graphic depictions do as well.
    Do I have a controlled experiment that demonstrates that irrefutably? No. I have some poll numbers and my perception of the national discussion. Both are likely flawed, and you’re free to find them unpersuasive.

  232. Looks like I caused a bit of confusion here. My original statement was a rather narrow one aimed directly at gun camera footage. It is my opinion (and seemingly that of the Pentagon) that this specific kind of ‘softcore’ war porn will have no ‘negative’ effect on the American public as far as its acceptance of US led wars is concerned or will even feed it. The more ‘hardcore’ stuff (like the infamous leaked helicopter dialogue) will have a certain effect but imo there will be more people getting off on it than will get angry enough to work actively against the policies that lead to it. Abu Ghraib went clearly beyond te line causing a double outrage but that exactly is (to me) the second shocking thing. The outrage was not just about what had happened there but also that it got public. Someone remarked above that 3/4 of the public were disgusted. What I see there is that an nonnegligible part of the population was not or for the wrong reason (the scandal to them being that it got leaked not what was committed). The administration’s first reaction too was going after the leak. My reading of the whole affair is that there are millions that found nothing wrong about US committed torture and war crimes and many more that were willing to accept such things to happen provied they had not to look at the sausage being made before eating it. The overall effect of even Abu Ghraib seems to have been depressingly low and (at least until there was a change in administration) the only firm conclusion was to keep a better lid on stuff like that (I doubt the abuse itself fully stopped under Cheney/Bush, it just got moved out of sight again). I think the lesson drawn by the executive/policy makers is that the public can be made to swallow almost anything but that there is a small risk of overdoing it and that therefore the flow of info has to be controlled tightly with an eye on the disturbance meter. But still the ‘safety margin’ seems quite high (and disgustingly so).
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release. The slightest tone of bragging would ‘spoil’ it and rather trigger calls for revenge. Plus the ‘sunk costs’ fallacy still has great power, i.e. the idea of ‘we can’t give up now after all the sacrifices we have made’. It’s losing value currently but mainly outside Washington and I have my doubts about that being a longterm effect. Keep the (visible) sacrifices low for a time and a ‘return to normal’ mya be in the cards sooner than one might hope.
    Clarification: I do not consider the American public especially war hungry but it can be churned up sufficiently long enough to go into war and will then be complacent enough to stay in it absent personal sacrifices. At the moment the public is a bit more sensitive as far as the first part is concerned (unwilling to start a new war) but if the US should get involved without too obviously jumping into it, the second part could still be relied on.
    To close with another cynical statement: As long as war is a bipartisan thing in Washington, public opinion can be ignored for the most part with low risk.

  233. Looks like I caused a bit of confusion here. My original statement was a rather narrow one aimed directly at gun camera footage. It is my opinion (and seemingly that of the Pentagon) that this specific kind of ‘softcore’ war porn will have no ‘negative’ effect on the American public as far as its acceptance of US led wars is concerned or will even feed it. The more ‘hardcore’ stuff (like the infamous leaked helicopter dialogue) will have a certain effect but imo there will be more people getting off on it than will get angry enough to work actively against the policies that lead to it. Abu Ghraib went clearly beyond te line causing a double outrage but that exactly is (to me) the second shocking thing. The outrage was not just about what had happened there but also that it got public. Someone remarked above that 3/4 of the public were disgusted. What I see there is that an nonnegligible part of the population was not or for the wrong reason (the scandal to them being that it got leaked not what was committed). The administration’s first reaction too was going after the leak. My reading of the whole affair is that there are millions that found nothing wrong about US committed torture and war crimes and many more that were willing to accept such things to happen provied they had not to look at the sausage being made before eating it. The overall effect of even Abu Ghraib seems to have been depressingly low and (at least until there was a change in administration) the only firm conclusion was to keep a better lid on stuff like that (I doubt the abuse itself fully stopped under Cheney/Bush, it just got moved out of sight again). I think the lesson drawn by the executive/policy makers is that the public can be made to swallow almost anything but that there is a small risk of overdoing it and that therefore the flow of info has to be controlled tightly with an eye on the disturbance meter. But still the ‘safety margin’ seems quite high (and disgustingly so).
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release. The slightest tone of bragging would ‘spoil’ it and rather trigger calls for revenge. Plus the ‘sunk costs’ fallacy still has great power, i.e. the idea of ‘we can’t give up now after all the sacrifices we have made’. It’s losing value currently but mainly outside Washington and I have my doubts about that being a longterm effect. Keep the (visible) sacrifices low for a time and a ‘return to normal’ mya be in the cards sooner than one might hope.
    Clarification: I do not consider the American public especially war hungry but it can be churned up sufficiently long enough to go into war and will then be complacent enough to stay in it absent personal sacrifices. At the moment the public is a bit more sensitive as far as the first part is concerned (unwilling to start a new war) but if the US should get involved without too obviously jumping into it, the second part could still be relied on.
    To close with another cynical statement: As long as war is a bipartisan thing in Washington, public opinion can be ignored for the most part with low risk.

  234. Looks like I caused a bit of confusion here. My original statement was a rather narrow one aimed directly at gun camera footage. It is my opinion (and seemingly that of the Pentagon) that this specific kind of ‘softcore’ war porn will have no ‘negative’ effect on the American public as far as its acceptance of US led wars is concerned or will even feed it. The more ‘hardcore’ stuff (like the infamous leaked helicopter dialogue) will have a certain effect but imo there will be more people getting off on it than will get angry enough to work actively against the policies that lead to it. Abu Ghraib went clearly beyond te line causing a double outrage but that exactly is (to me) the second shocking thing. The outrage was not just about what had happened there but also that it got public. Someone remarked above that 3/4 of the public were disgusted. What I see there is that an nonnegligible part of the population was not or for the wrong reason (the scandal to them being that it got leaked not what was committed). The administration’s first reaction too was going after the leak. My reading of the whole affair is that there are millions that found nothing wrong about US committed torture and war crimes and many more that were willing to accept such things to happen provied they had not to look at the sausage being made before eating it. The overall effect of even Abu Ghraib seems to have been depressingly low and (at least until there was a change in administration) the only firm conclusion was to keep a better lid on stuff like that (I doubt the abuse itself fully stopped under Cheney/Bush, it just got moved out of sight again). I think the lesson drawn by the executive/policy makers is that the public can be made to swallow almost anything but that there is a small risk of overdoing it and that therefore the flow of info has to be controlled tightly with an eye on the disturbance meter. But still the ‘safety margin’ seems quite high (and disgustingly so).
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release. The slightest tone of bragging would ‘spoil’ it and rather trigger calls for revenge. Plus the ‘sunk costs’ fallacy still has great power, i.e. the idea of ‘we can’t give up now after all the sacrifices we have made’. It’s losing value currently but mainly outside Washington and I have my doubts about that being a longterm effect. Keep the (visible) sacrifices low for a time and a ‘return to normal’ mya be in the cards sooner than one might hope.
    Clarification: I do not consider the American public especially war hungry but it can be churned up sufficiently long enough to go into war and will then be complacent enough to stay in it absent personal sacrifices. At the moment the public is a bit more sensitive as far as the first part is concerned (unwilling to start a new war) but if the US should get involved without too obviously jumping into it, the second part could still be relied on.
    To close with another cynical statement: As long as war is a bipartisan thing in Washington, public opinion can be ignored for the most part with low risk.

  235. Do tell us what we think. Wouldn’t want to mind reading cap to get dusty…
    Sure, I’ll step out on a limb:
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    2. Ditto Desert Storm.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    Mind reader. A good mind reader, but a mind reader nonetheless.
    How ya doing, McTX?
    Good. Busy. You?

  236. Do tell us what we think. Wouldn’t want to mind reading cap to get dusty…
    Sure, I’ll step out on a limb:
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    2. Ditto Desert Storm.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    Mind reader. A good mind reader, but a mind reader nonetheless.
    How ya doing, McTX?
    Good. Busy. You?

  237. Do tell us what we think. Wouldn’t want to mind reading cap to get dusty…
    Sure, I’ll step out on a limb:
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    2. Ditto Desert Storm.
    I would add that a majority of the American public agree now agree with many here at OBWI at the moment and with some here on 9/12, especially regarding Iraq II.
    Mind reader. A good mind reader, but a mind reader nonetheless.
    How ya doing, McTX?
    Good. Busy. You?

  238. I don’t know about the first and third sentences there.
    The AP collection of Pulitzer prize winning photos, from the Iraq War.
    Dead kid in a box, dead kid on a gurney with his mom, dead soldier on a gurney, carnage at a bomb site, and the famous charred Blackwater guy hanging from a bridge.
    Plus some less gruesome shots.
    Just off the top of my head.
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    Agreed. Also, agreed about Abu Ghraib.
    I have no particular argument with anything in your 2:01. I had a fairly tiny point to make, which I’ve probably over-made by now.
    Peace out.
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    And that’s a fact, Jack.
    If you want to invade and overthrow because the guy’s a thug and gasses his own people, make that case. Folks will or won’t go along.
    Iraq was sold on the basis of spurious connections between Hussein and Al Qaeda. I.e., that there was some connection between Hussein and 9/11, and/or that he would supply the dreaded weapons of mass destruction to terrorists, who would in turn use them on us.
    All lies.
    The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    It was, is now, and if appearances do not lie will continue to be, a manifestation of policy made by the stupidest f***ing people on the planet.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.

  239. I don’t know about the first and third sentences there.
    The AP collection of Pulitzer prize winning photos, from the Iraq War.
    Dead kid in a box, dead kid on a gurney with his mom, dead soldier on a gurney, carnage at a bomb site, and the famous charred Blackwater guy hanging from a bridge.
    Plus some less gruesome shots.
    Just off the top of my head.
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    Agreed. Also, agreed about Abu Ghraib.
    I have no particular argument with anything in your 2:01. I had a fairly tiny point to make, which I’ve probably over-made by now.
    Peace out.
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    And that’s a fact, Jack.
    If you want to invade and overthrow because the guy’s a thug and gasses his own people, make that case. Folks will or won’t go along.
    Iraq was sold on the basis of spurious connections between Hussein and Al Qaeda. I.e., that there was some connection between Hussein and 9/11, and/or that he would supply the dreaded weapons of mass destruction to terrorists, who would in turn use them on us.
    All lies.
    The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    It was, is now, and if appearances do not lie will continue to be, a manifestation of policy made by the stupidest f***ing people on the planet.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.

  240. I don’t know about the first and third sentences there.
    The AP collection of Pulitzer prize winning photos, from the Iraq War.
    Dead kid in a box, dead kid on a gurney with his mom, dead soldier on a gurney, carnage at a bomb site, and the famous charred Blackwater guy hanging from a bridge.
    Plus some less gruesome shots.
    Just off the top of my head.
    We seem to be talking past each other about something which is really a minor part of the larger discussion.
    Agreed. Also, agreed about Abu Ghraib.
    I have no particular argument with anything in your 2:01. I had a fairly tiny point to make, which I’ve probably over-made by now.
    Peace out.
    1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.
    And that’s a fact, Jack.
    If you want to invade and overthrow because the guy’s a thug and gasses his own people, make that case. Folks will or won’t go along.
    Iraq was sold on the basis of spurious connections between Hussein and Al Qaeda. I.e., that there was some connection between Hussein and 9/11, and/or that he would supply the dreaded weapons of mass destruction to terrorists, who would in turn use them on us.
    All lies.
    The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    It was, is now, and if appearances do not lie will continue to be, a manifestation of policy made by the stupidest f***ing people on the planet.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.

  241. The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    I left out “legal”.
    The only reason those @ssholes haven’t been hauled in front of some international court or other is that the current administration has quashed those efforts.
    Stupidest f***ing guys on the planet, then and now, and will be until the day they die.

  242. The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    I left out “legal”.
    The only reason those @ssholes haven’t been hauled in front of some international court or other is that the current administration has quashed those efforts.
    Stupidest f***ing guys on the planet, then and now, and will be until the day they die.

  243. The correct response to “9-11 happened, let’s invade Iraq” on rational, ethical, moral, strategic, tactical, and any other bases you can think of is “put the crack pipe down”.
    I left out “legal”.
    The only reason those @ssholes haven’t been hauled in front of some international court or other is that the current administration has quashed those efforts.
    Stupidest f***ing guys on the planet, then and now, and will be until the day they die.

  244. Russell puts it better than I could. I’d just underline that AQ was in Afghanistan, not Iraq so anyone who was watching the scenes from 9-11 and were thinking ‘geez, that Sadaam has gassed his own people’, I would have said that they were suffering from a flattened affect…

  245. Russell puts it better than I could. I’d just underline that AQ was in Afghanistan, not Iraq so anyone who was watching the scenes from 9-11 and were thinking ‘geez, that Sadaam has gassed his own people’, I would have said that they were suffering from a flattened affect…

  246. Russell puts it better than I could. I’d just underline that AQ was in Afghanistan, not Iraq so anyone who was watching the scenes from 9-11 and were thinking ‘geez, that Sadaam has gassed his own people’, I would have said that they were suffering from a flattened affect…

  247. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court? Or just that they have failed to “faithfully execute the law” by not initiating prosecutions in American courts themselves?

  248. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court? Or just that they have failed to “faithfully execute the law” by not initiating prosecutions in American courts themselves?

  249. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court? Or just that they have failed to “faithfully execute the law” by not initiating prosecutions in American courts themselves?

  250. Then:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/8038/seventytwo-percent-americans-support-war-against-iraq.aspx
    Now:
    http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/home_page/179.php?lb=hmpg1
    Larison, a conservative cited here by conservatives over the years:
    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/the-iraq-war-and-getting-angry/
    More:
    http://www-personal.umd.umich.edu/~atthrall/whyiraq.pdf
    Colin Powell, reading his own mind then, and more recently:
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/09/colin-powell-book_n_1503592.html
    Regarding earlier gas attacks by Saddam Hussein:
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/08/25/secret_cia_files_prove_america_helped_saddam_as_he_gassed_iran
    One item I’m absolutely sure of from mere mind reading is that no one at OBWI of any political stripe harbored any affection whatsoever for Saddam Hussein, then or now.
    But he was a useful murderous thug for carrying out U.S. foreign policy in the Mideast for a long time and rewarded for it by this country and by some of the same folks who engineered his demise, despite his treatment of his own people …. until he wasn’t.
    It was reported back during the troubles, perhaps falsely, I don’t know, that George W. Bush once looked up at a strategery session for the Iraq War and asked which ones were the Shiites and which ones were the Sunnis and at that point I stopped trying to read his mind and went back to reading the backs of cereal boxes, if only for the superior content.
    On the level of personal anecdote, one of my best friends, nominally a conservative and who agreed with his very conservative brother and the Administration that Iraq II needed to happen, and I were talking about the War near its beginning and I asked him “Whaddya plan on doing with it (Iraq), once you have it?”
    This was before Pottery Barn became a metaphor.
    About a year or so ago, he told me that I was the only person he knew at the time who asked that simple question and that he was wrong to support the war, not that either of our opinions meant a rat’s ass to anyone.
    So, at the anecdotal level, I don’t need to read minds because the minds I’m talking to form words, which they speak from their very mouths, and I listen.
    I supported the invasion of Afghanistan (again, so what) because it was inevitable but I figured it should be a limited engagement given the nature of the place and the likelihood that we would be treated to the same desserts as the Russians were once we caused enough damage, and once started without an exit plan, I figured the war there would have the duration of the Comanche Wars, with people I knew getting their asses shot off one at a time.
    I also voted for Ronald Reagan the first time, so that should be a signal that no one should ever listen to me about anything.
    As far as al Qaeda and 9/11 goes, I had moments years ago where I might have been convinced to nuke both Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, given their complicity, but I was just shooting my mouth off and besides, no one, especially Americans, is really interested in punishing our real enemies, foreign and domestic, because we kind of like them.

  251. Then:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/8038/seventytwo-percent-americans-support-war-against-iraq.aspx
    Now:
    http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/home_page/179.php?lb=hmpg1
    Larison, a conservative cited here by conservatives over the years:
    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/the-iraq-war-and-getting-angry/
    More:
    http://www-personal.umd.umich.edu/~atthrall/whyiraq.pdf
    Colin Powell, reading his own mind then, and more recently:
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/09/colin-powell-book_n_1503592.html
    Regarding earlier gas attacks by Saddam Hussein:
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/08/25/secret_cia_files_prove_america_helped_saddam_as_he_gassed_iran
    One item I’m absolutely sure of from mere mind reading is that no one at OBWI of any political stripe harbored any affection whatsoever for Saddam Hussein, then or now.
    But he was a useful murderous thug for carrying out U.S. foreign policy in the Mideast for a long time and rewarded for it by this country and by some of the same folks who engineered his demise, despite his treatment of his own people …. until he wasn’t.
    It was reported back during the troubles, perhaps falsely, I don’t know, that George W. Bush once looked up at a strategery session for the Iraq War and asked which ones were the Shiites and which ones were the Sunnis and at that point I stopped trying to read his mind and went back to reading the backs of cereal boxes, if only for the superior content.
    On the level of personal anecdote, one of my best friends, nominally a conservative and who agreed with his very conservative brother and the Administration that Iraq II needed to happen, and I were talking about the War near its beginning and I asked him “Whaddya plan on doing with it (Iraq), once you have it?”
    This was before Pottery Barn became a metaphor.
    About a year or so ago, he told me that I was the only person he knew at the time who asked that simple question and that he was wrong to support the war, not that either of our opinions meant a rat’s ass to anyone.
    So, at the anecdotal level, I don’t need to read minds because the minds I’m talking to form words, which they speak from their very mouths, and I listen.
    I supported the invasion of Afghanistan (again, so what) because it was inevitable but I figured it should be a limited engagement given the nature of the place and the likelihood that we would be treated to the same desserts as the Russians were once we caused enough damage, and once started without an exit plan, I figured the war there would have the duration of the Comanche Wars, with people I knew getting their asses shot off one at a time.
    I also voted for Ronald Reagan the first time, so that should be a signal that no one should ever listen to me about anything.
    As far as al Qaeda and 9/11 goes, I had moments years ago where I might have been convinced to nuke both Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, given their complicity, but I was just shooting my mouth off and besides, no one, especially Americans, is really interested in punishing our real enemies, foreign and domestic, because we kind of like them.

  252. Then:
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/8038/seventytwo-percent-americans-support-war-against-iraq.aspx
    Now:
    http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/articles/home_page/179.php?lb=hmpg1
    Larison, a conservative cited here by conservatives over the years:
    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/the-iraq-war-and-getting-angry/
    More:
    http://www-personal.umd.umich.edu/~atthrall/whyiraq.pdf
    Colin Powell, reading his own mind then, and more recently:
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/09/colin-powell-book_n_1503592.html
    Regarding earlier gas attacks by Saddam Hussein:
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/08/25/secret_cia_files_prove_america_helped_saddam_as_he_gassed_iran
    One item I’m absolutely sure of from mere mind reading is that no one at OBWI of any political stripe harbored any affection whatsoever for Saddam Hussein, then or now.
    But he was a useful murderous thug for carrying out U.S. foreign policy in the Mideast for a long time and rewarded for it by this country and by some of the same folks who engineered his demise, despite his treatment of his own people …. until he wasn’t.
    It was reported back during the troubles, perhaps falsely, I don’t know, that George W. Bush once looked up at a strategery session for the Iraq War and asked which ones were the Shiites and which ones were the Sunnis and at that point I stopped trying to read his mind and went back to reading the backs of cereal boxes, if only for the superior content.
    On the level of personal anecdote, one of my best friends, nominally a conservative and who agreed with his very conservative brother and the Administration that Iraq II needed to happen, and I were talking about the War near its beginning and I asked him “Whaddya plan on doing with it (Iraq), once you have it?”
    This was before Pottery Barn became a metaphor.
    About a year or so ago, he told me that I was the only person he knew at the time who asked that simple question and that he was wrong to support the war, not that either of our opinions meant a rat’s ass to anyone.
    So, at the anecdotal level, I don’t need to read minds because the minds I’m talking to form words, which they speak from their very mouths, and I listen.
    I supported the invasion of Afghanistan (again, so what) because it was inevitable but I figured it should be a limited engagement given the nature of the place and the likelihood that we would be treated to the same desserts as the Russians were once we caused enough damage, and once started without an exit plan, I figured the war there would have the duration of the Comanche Wars, with people I knew getting their asses shot off one at a time.
    I also voted for Ronald Reagan the first time, so that should be a signal that no one should ever listen to me about anything.
    As far as al Qaeda and 9/11 goes, I had moments years ago where I might have been convinced to nuke both Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, given their complicity, but I was just shooting my mouth off and besides, no one, especially Americans, is really interested in punishing our real enemies, foreign and domestic, because we kind of like them.

  253. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court?
    The specific case I am thinking of is Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of criminal charges against the “Bush 6” in the Spanish court system.
    The case was re-assigned (reasonably) away from Garzon because of his participation in other proceedings involving Guantanamo detainees. Also, because some folks in the Spanish court system apparently thought Garzon to be something of a glory hound.
    The case was subsequently dropped. Among the reasons for that were requests from Obama and some US Senators that the Spanish courts let it be.
    See here, , here, and here.
    The “Bush 6” and Bush himself have subsequently been found guilty of war crimes by a court in Kuala Lumpur, but Malaysia doesn’t have a great big army, so nobody cares what they say.

  254. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court?
    The specific case I am thinking of is Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of criminal charges against the “Bush 6” in the Spanish court system.
    The case was re-assigned (reasonably) away from Garzon because of his participation in other proceedings involving Guantanamo detainees. Also, because some folks in the Spanish court system apparently thought Garzon to be something of a glory hound.
    The case was subsequently dropped. Among the reasons for that were requests from Obama and some US Senators that the Spanish courts let it be.
    See here, , here, and here.
    The “Bush 6” and Bush himself have subsequently been found guilty of war crimes by a court in Kuala Lumpur, but Malaysia doesn’t have a great big army, so nobody cares what they say.

  255. russell, do you have evidence that the current administration has “quashed” efforts to bring (accused) American war criminals before an international court?
    The specific case I am thinking of is Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of criminal charges against the “Bush 6” in the Spanish court system.
    The case was re-assigned (reasonably) away from Garzon because of his participation in other proceedings involving Guantanamo detainees. Also, because some folks in the Spanish court system apparently thought Garzon to be something of a glory hound.
    The case was subsequently dropped. Among the reasons for that were requests from Obama and some US Senators that the Spanish courts let it be.
    See here, , here, and here.
    The “Bush 6” and Bush himself have subsequently been found guilty of war crimes by a court in Kuala Lumpur, but Malaysia doesn’t have a great big army, so nobody cares what they say.

  256. wj, I think by not doing the latter they automatically became guilty of not doing the former since the international courts can only become active when the national ones don’t.
    Personally I think that no American executive in the forseeable future will create a precedent there because it would bite them in the behind sooner rather than later – domestically. Theatre acts are the only thing that can be expected. Btw, I consider the ‘Invade the Hague Act’ as primarily for show only too. The international community is aware that the great powers exempt themselves from the rules applying to commoners and that little can be done about it. The world would just appreciate if those above the law would not insist on crowing about it on a regular base while using the same laws as a pretense for their own actions.
    Clarification: It’s not as if Europe lacks a similar attitude, although a bit less conspicuous. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators that then used the produce on their enemies (domestic more than foreign).
    *There may have been minor charges for faulty paperwork.

  257. wj, I think by not doing the latter they automatically became guilty of not doing the former since the international courts can only become active when the national ones don’t.
    Personally I think that no American executive in the forseeable future will create a precedent there because it would bite them in the behind sooner rather than later – domestically. Theatre acts are the only thing that can be expected. Btw, I consider the ‘Invade the Hague Act’ as primarily for show only too. The international community is aware that the great powers exempt themselves from the rules applying to commoners and that little can be done about it. The world would just appreciate if those above the law would not insist on crowing about it on a regular base while using the same laws as a pretense for their own actions.
    Clarification: It’s not as if Europe lacks a similar attitude, although a bit less conspicuous. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators that then used the produce on their enemies (domestic more than foreign).
    *There may have been minor charges for faulty paperwork.

  258. wj, I think by not doing the latter they automatically became guilty of not doing the former since the international courts can only become active when the national ones don’t.
    Personally I think that no American executive in the forseeable future will create a precedent there because it would bite them in the behind sooner rather than later – domestically. Theatre acts are the only thing that can be expected. Btw, I consider the ‘Invade the Hague Act’ as primarily for show only too. The international community is aware that the great powers exempt themselves from the rules applying to commoners and that little can be done about it. The world would just appreciate if those above the law would not insist on crowing about it on a regular base while using the same laws as a pretense for their own actions.
    Clarification: It’s not as if Europe lacks a similar attitude, although a bit less conspicuous. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators that then used the produce on their enemies (domestic more than foreign).
    *There may have been minor charges for faulty paperwork.

  259. We’ve been assured by one and all that no one has read the ACA legislation, but apparently someone read the few words that were unintended misprints, and little else.
    The President should demand that Congress fix the offending passage toute suite, pending this further appeal to the panel, and if they don’t he should campaign in all 36 states and call those who block any such legislation bloodthirsty murderers.

  260. We’ve been assured by one and all that no one has read the ACA legislation, but apparently someone read the few words that were unintended misprints, and little else.
    The President should demand that Congress fix the offending passage toute suite, pending this further appeal to the panel, and if they don’t he should campaign in all 36 states and call those who block any such legislation bloodthirsty murderers.

  261. We’ve been assured by one and all that no one has read the ACA legislation, but apparently someone read the few words that were unintended misprints, and little else.
    The President should demand that Congress fix the offending passage toute suite, pending this further appeal to the panel, and if they don’t he should campaign in all 36 states and call those who block any such legislation bloodthirsty murderers.

  262. Hartmut, It is my understanding that the International Criminal Court can hear cases regardless of whether national courts have done anything. Lack of support from the particular country may hamper their ability to actually get the defendant into custody. But that doesn’t change the fact that they can be picked up and tried if they happen to travel to a country which will execute a ICC warrant.
    I seem to recall that a couple of the Bush II officials involved in torture (specifically John Yoo) had it pointed out to them that they were now liable to be arrested as a result of their actions, if they traveled outside the US.

  263. Hartmut, It is my understanding that the International Criminal Court can hear cases regardless of whether national courts have done anything. Lack of support from the particular country may hamper their ability to actually get the defendant into custody. But that doesn’t change the fact that they can be picked up and tried if they happen to travel to a country which will execute a ICC warrant.
    I seem to recall that a couple of the Bush II officials involved in torture (specifically John Yoo) had it pointed out to them that they were now liable to be arrested as a result of their actions, if they traveled outside the US.

  264. Hartmut, It is my understanding that the International Criminal Court can hear cases regardless of whether national courts have done anything. Lack of support from the particular country may hamper their ability to actually get the defendant into custody. But that doesn’t change the fact that they can be picked up and tried if they happen to travel to a country which will execute a ICC warrant.
    I seem to recall that a couple of the Bush II officials involved in torture (specifically John Yoo) had it pointed out to them that they were now liable to be arrested as a result of their actions, if they traveled outside the US.

  265. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators
    In the UK, the directors of Matrix Churchill nearly got sent to jail back in the late ’80s for supplying arms manufacturing equipment to Iraq – and then the trial collapsed when it became clear the UK government was complicit:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Report
    And of course there was Dr Gerald Bull, who paid with his life for designing a ‘supergun’ for Iraq:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Bull
    But generally you are right: governments themselves are more or less impervious in these matters, and it’s pretty rare for them to let anything happen to their arms industries.

  266. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators
    In the UK, the directors of Matrix Churchill nearly got sent to jail back in the late ’80s for supplying arms manufacturing equipment to Iraq – and then the trial collapsed when it became clear the UK government was complicit:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Report
    And of course there was Dr Gerald Bull, who paid with his life for designing a ‘supergun’ for Iraq:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Bull
    But generally you are right: governments themselves are more or less impervious in these matters, and it’s pretty rare for them to let anything happen to their arms industries.

  267. To my knowledge no one in Germany or France suffered serious* legal consequences for selling WMD production capacities to dictators
    In the UK, the directors of Matrix Churchill nearly got sent to jail back in the late ’80s for supplying arms manufacturing equipment to Iraq – and then the trial collapsed when it became clear the UK government was complicit:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Report
    And of course there was Dr Gerald Bull, who paid with his life for designing a ‘supergun’ for Iraq:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Bull
    But generally you are right: governments themselves are more or less impervious in these matters, and it’s pretty rare for them to let anything happen to their arms industries.

  268. Hartmut:
    Thanks for the response. I’d agree with this:
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release.
    Imagery is powerful. And a lot of people use imagery for propaganda. And given that people seem to trust photos or videos, careful editing and controlled release can get you all sorts of effects.
    My opinion is that photos, videos, recordings, coupled with good reporting, both grab attention and make things more real to the viewers. And when war is far away and abstract, I think its too easy to sell a line of glory, and medals on chests, and ignore the human cost.
    To use one of russell’s examples, this photo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:TrangBang.jpg ) carries a lot more weight for me than:
    A South Vietnamese Air Force pilot mistook the group for enemy soldiers and diverted to attack. The bombing killed two of Kim Phuc’s cousins and two other villagers. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Thi_Kim_Phuc )
    But you are correct, such things can be selectively edited and released to guide pro-war opinion as well.
    Also, your point that 20-30% of americans were not disturbed by the AG images is also well taken. If there is hope for the country in that regard, it’s that 20-30% is not a ruling majority, I suppose.

  269. Hartmut:
    Thanks for the response. I’d agree with this:
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release.
    Imagery is powerful. And a lot of people use imagery for propaganda. And given that people seem to trust photos or videos, careful editing and controlled release can get you all sorts of effects.
    My opinion is that photos, videos, recordings, coupled with good reporting, both grab attention and make things more real to the viewers. And when war is far away and abstract, I think its too easy to sell a line of glory, and medals on chests, and ignore the human cost.
    To use one of russell’s examples, this photo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:TrangBang.jpg ) carries a lot more weight for me than:
    A South Vietnamese Air Force pilot mistook the group for enemy soldiers and diverted to attack. The bombing killed two of Kim Phuc’s cousins and two other villagers. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Thi_Kim_Phuc )
    But you are correct, such things can be selectively edited and released to guide pro-war opinion as well.
    Also, your point that 20-30% of americans were not disturbed by the AG images is also well taken. If there is hope for the country in that regard, it’s that 20-30% is not a ruling majority, I suppose.

  270. Hartmut:
    Thanks for the response. I’d agree with this:
    A carefully edited reel of only US soldiers dying or getting wounded would be quite a different thing but it would still depend on the circumstances of release.
    Imagery is powerful. And a lot of people use imagery for propaganda. And given that people seem to trust photos or videos, careful editing and controlled release can get you all sorts of effects.
    My opinion is that photos, videos, recordings, coupled with good reporting, both grab attention and make things more real to the viewers. And when war is far away and abstract, I think its too easy to sell a line of glory, and medals on chests, and ignore the human cost.
    To use one of russell’s examples, this photo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:TrangBang.jpg ) carries a lot more weight for me than:
    A South Vietnamese Air Force pilot mistook the group for enemy soldiers and diverted to attack. The bombing killed two of Kim Phuc’s cousins and two other villagers. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Thi_Kim_Phuc )
    But you are correct, such things can be selectively edited and released to guide pro-war opinion as well.
    Also, your point that 20-30% of americans were not disturbed by the AG images is also well taken. If there is hope for the country in that regard, it’s that 20-30% is not a ruling majority, I suppose.

  271. France sometimes (most times?) appears to value export sales for its arms (and other) industry above everything else. I have the distinct impression that if one of its neighbors was massing military forces on the border, they would still persist in selling them weapons. But certainly they are unlikely to desist for any lesser threat.

  272. France sometimes (most times?) appears to value export sales for its arms (and other) industry above everything else. I have the distinct impression that if one of its neighbors was massing military forces on the border, they would still persist in selling them weapons. But certainly they are unlikely to desist for any lesser threat.

  273. France sometimes (most times?) appears to value export sales for its arms (and other) industry above everything else. I have the distinct impression that if one of its neighbors was massing military forces on the border, they would still persist in selling them weapons. But certainly they are unlikely to desist for any lesser threat.

  274. Many European nations sell arms to almost anyone able to pay for them* (those who can’t afford it buy in Russia or China). Germany sold off most of the used equipment from the late East German military. I remember a rather absurd political dispute about the delivery of minesweepers (naval vessels) to Turkey which was criticised because of the suppression of the Kurds. We all know of course that nothing is more suitable to supress rebels in the mountains than minesweepers unlike e.g. trucks or small arms (that got delivered without initial protests**).
    There were macabre jokes at times that Germany was unwilling to participate in international military actions abroad mainly because it was almost guaranteed that there would be German weapons in the hands of the opposition. The legacy of Krupp and Mauser is still strong. And someone has to take all the now superfluous main battle tanks off our hands. We hate to scrap the costly things and if some Gulf buffoon is willing to pay good money for them who are we to object (as long as it does not reach the title pages or the main evening news).
    *Israel gets special discounts. Half of their submarines got delivered free of charge and they may get the rest (that they have to pay for) at an even lower price than originally negotiated. And they have to do the changes to the tubes themselves that enables them to put nukes on those boats since we do not officially recognize that there is such an intention.
    **those came only later when trucks with insufficiently painted over NVA markings were spotted as part of Turkish operations in the Kurdish regions)

  275. Many European nations sell arms to almost anyone able to pay for them* (those who can’t afford it buy in Russia or China). Germany sold off most of the used equipment from the late East German military. I remember a rather absurd political dispute about the delivery of minesweepers (naval vessels) to Turkey which was criticised because of the suppression of the Kurds. We all know of course that nothing is more suitable to supress rebels in the mountains than minesweepers unlike e.g. trucks or small arms (that got delivered without initial protests**).
    There were macabre jokes at times that Germany was unwilling to participate in international military actions abroad mainly because it was almost guaranteed that there would be German weapons in the hands of the opposition. The legacy of Krupp and Mauser is still strong. And someone has to take all the now superfluous main battle tanks off our hands. We hate to scrap the costly things and if some Gulf buffoon is willing to pay good money for them who are we to object (as long as it does not reach the title pages or the main evening news).
    *Israel gets special discounts. Half of their submarines got delivered free of charge and they may get the rest (that they have to pay for) at an even lower price than originally negotiated. And they have to do the changes to the tubes themselves that enables them to put nukes on those boats since we do not officially recognize that there is such an intention.
    **those came only later when trucks with insufficiently painted over NVA markings were spotted as part of Turkish operations in the Kurdish regions)

  276. Many European nations sell arms to almost anyone able to pay for them* (those who can’t afford it buy in Russia or China). Germany sold off most of the used equipment from the late East German military. I remember a rather absurd political dispute about the delivery of minesweepers (naval vessels) to Turkey which was criticised because of the suppression of the Kurds. We all know of course that nothing is more suitable to supress rebels in the mountains than minesweepers unlike e.g. trucks or small arms (that got delivered without initial protests**).
    There were macabre jokes at times that Germany was unwilling to participate in international military actions abroad mainly because it was almost guaranteed that there would be German weapons in the hands of the opposition. The legacy of Krupp and Mauser is still strong. And someone has to take all the now superfluous main battle tanks off our hands. We hate to scrap the costly things and if some Gulf buffoon is willing to pay good money for them who are we to object (as long as it does not reach the title pages or the main evening news).
    *Israel gets special discounts. Half of their submarines got delivered free of charge and they may get the rest (that they have to pay for) at an even lower price than originally negotiated. And they have to do the changes to the tubes themselves that enables them to put nukes on those boats since we do not officially recognize that there is such an intention.
    **those came only later when trucks with insufficiently painted over NVA markings were spotted as part of Turkish operations in the Kurdish regions)

  277. And that’s a fact, Jack.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.
    Did not mean to ruffle any feathers other than in response to LJ’s snark. I stated, simply, that there are other photos that have affected our foreign policy. That was a true statement. I further stated that at least one foreign policy decision based on those photos, i.e. the decision to invade Iraq, was not and is not in line with the majority view here. Also a true statement.
    The majority view here was and is that 9-11 was not grounds to invade Iraq. I in no way implied that that judgment was in error. In hindsight, I concur as a matter of fact. Nor did I purport to say what people thought after 9-11.
    If I have inaccurately stated the majority view here, feel free to let me have it.

  278. And that’s a fact, Jack.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.
    Did not mean to ruffle any feathers other than in response to LJ’s snark. I stated, simply, that there are other photos that have affected our foreign policy. That was a true statement. I further stated that at least one foreign policy decision based on those photos, i.e. the decision to invade Iraq, was not and is not in line with the majority view here. Also a true statement.
    The majority view here was and is that 9-11 was not grounds to invade Iraq. I in no way implied that that judgment was in error. In hindsight, I concur as a matter of fact. Nor did I purport to say what people thought after 9-11.
    If I have inaccurately stated the majority view here, feel free to let me have it.

  279. And that’s a fact, Jack.
    And I’ll thank you to not make assumptions about what folks’ responses to the WTC attacks were.
    Did not mean to ruffle any feathers other than in response to LJ’s snark. I stated, simply, that there are other photos that have affected our foreign policy. That was a true statement. I further stated that at least one foreign policy decision based on those photos, i.e. the decision to invade Iraq, was not and is not in line with the majority view here. Also a true statement.
    The majority view here was and is that 9-11 was not grounds to invade Iraq. I in no way implied that that judgment was in error. In hindsight, I concur as a matter of fact. Nor did I purport to say what people thought after 9-11.
    If I have inaccurately stated the majority view here, feel free to let me have it.

  280. Hey, McTX, it’s the internet.
    Appearances can be deceiving:
    http://topekasnews.com/putin-makes-appearance-wwe-talks-smack-ultimate-warrior/
    Although later in “Putin’s” appearance, he lit into Obama, calling him a pussy, and the largely Republican WWE crowd in Tenneseee turned on a dime from booing Vlad to cheering, lifted him to their shoulders, and then marched as one into the parking lot and shot down a passenger jet that had just taken off from the Nashville airport.

  281. Hey, McTX, it’s the internet.
    Appearances can be deceiving:
    http://topekasnews.com/putin-makes-appearance-wwe-talks-smack-ultimate-warrior/
    Although later in “Putin’s” appearance, he lit into Obama, calling him a pussy, and the largely Republican WWE crowd in Tenneseee turned on a dime from booing Vlad to cheering, lifted him to their shoulders, and then marched as one into the parking lot and shot down a passenger jet that had just taken off from the Nashville airport.

  282. Hey, McTX, it’s the internet.
    Appearances can be deceiving:
    http://topekasnews.com/putin-makes-appearance-wwe-talks-smack-ultimate-warrior/
    Although later in “Putin’s” appearance, he lit into Obama, calling him a pussy, and the largely Republican WWE crowd in Tenneseee turned on a dime from booing Vlad to cheering, lifted him to their shoulders, and then marched as one into the parking lot and shot down a passenger jet that had just taken off from the Nashville airport.

  283. That’s the funny thing about snark, it tends to bite the snarker on the ass if they aren’t careful. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.
    And you going with ‘Sadaam gassed his own people’ kinda suggests that you misremembered what 9-11 was about. We all make mistakes, but more than a bit embarassing when you are trying to score points against the majority view of ObWi.

  284. That’s the funny thing about snark, it tends to bite the snarker on the ass if they aren’t careful. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.
    And you going with ‘Sadaam gassed his own people’ kinda suggests that you misremembered what 9-11 was about. We all make mistakes, but more than a bit embarassing when you are trying to score points against the majority view of ObWi.

  285. That’s the funny thing about snark, it tends to bite the snarker on the ass if they aren’t careful. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.
    And you going with ‘Sadaam gassed his own people’ kinda suggests that you misremembered what 9-11 was about. We all make mistakes, but more than a bit embarassing when you are trying to score points against the majority view of ObWi.

  286. Then there was Lana:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2699766/Blonde-WWE-star-slammed-using-MH17-tragedy-tasteless-storyline-grudge-match-Russian-American-wrestlers.html
    The wrestling community is said to be shocked, shocked I say by Lana and her costars’ behavior, though when Louie Gohmert, Charles Krauthammer, and Sarah Palin appeared momentarily at the event to feel and squeeze Putin’s biceps and make reference to a certain U.S. President’s granny jeans hiding his insufficient manhood, the crowd gave it up for the sculpted Russian leader.

  287. Then there was Lana:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2699766/Blonde-WWE-star-slammed-using-MH17-tragedy-tasteless-storyline-grudge-match-Russian-American-wrestlers.html
    The wrestling community is said to be shocked, shocked I say by Lana and her costars’ behavior, though when Louie Gohmert, Charles Krauthammer, and Sarah Palin appeared momentarily at the event to feel and squeeze Putin’s biceps and make reference to a certain U.S. President’s granny jeans hiding his insufficient manhood, the crowd gave it up for the sculpted Russian leader.

  288. Then there was Lana:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2699766/Blonde-WWE-star-slammed-using-MH17-tragedy-tasteless-storyline-grudge-match-Russian-American-wrestlers.html
    The wrestling community is said to be shocked, shocked I say by Lana and her costars’ behavior, though when Louie Gohmert, Charles Krauthammer, and Sarah Palin appeared momentarily at the event to feel and squeeze Putin’s biceps and make reference to a certain U.S. President’s granny jeans hiding his insufficient manhood, the crowd gave it up for the sculpted Russian leader.

  289. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.

    You drew two inferences that were neither intended nor warranted. I have never cast myself as the sole or even the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority, although I suppose a good case could be made that I am one of few voices of reason outside the majority here, not that I would be immodest enough to make it. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct. Also, I have stated more than once that the decision to invade Iraq was mistaken. That was not my view at the time. My view has changed. With every passing day, I see more and more evidence that the decision was wrong. I concede, again, my error.

  290. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.

    You drew two inferences that were neither intended nor warranted. I have never cast myself as the sole or even the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority, although I suppose a good case could be made that I am one of few voices of reason outside the majority here, not that I would be immodest enough to make it. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct. Also, I have stated more than once that the decision to invade Iraq was mistaken. That was not my view at the time. My view has changed. With every passing day, I see more and more evidence that the decision was wrong. I concede, again, my error.

  291. And given that you’ve cast yourself as the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority time and time again, when you say
    Not that the impact on foreign policy was what many here at ObWi wanted.
    the implication is that somehow, you were right and we were wrong. Not ‘many of us’. Not ‘we here’ Telling, that.

    You drew two inferences that were neither intended nor warranted. I have never cast myself as the sole or even the sold voice of reason outside the ObWi majority, although I suppose a good case could be made that I am one of few voices of reason outside the majority here, not that I would be immodest enough to make it. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct. Also, I have stated more than once that the decision to invade Iraq was mistaken. That was not my view at the time. My view has changed. With every passing day, I see more and more evidence that the decision was wrong. I concede, again, my error.

  292. Did not mean to ruffle any feathers
    no worries McK, I simply mistook the sense of your comment.
    also, wj, the case I had in mind concerning the current admin’s quashing of criminal charges brought against the Iraq war planners was Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of the “Bush 6” in the Spanish courts.
    The case was assigned away from Garzon (for good reasons) and was subsequently dropped. Some of that was due to a simple lack of desire on the part of the Spanish court system to wade into a political minefield, and some of it was due to Obama and some US Senators weighing in with the Spanish government and courts.
    As you have noted, we’ve done nothing about it here.
    The Bush 6 plus Bush have been convicted of war crimes in Kuala Lumpur. That may, perhaps, establish a precedent for other more consequential proceedings, but in and of itself Malaysia is just not a big enough dog for that to make any kind of dent in the lifestyles of the folks in question.
    Sorry for the slow reply, I tried to post this earlier but it went off into the ether…..

  293. Did not mean to ruffle any feathers
    no worries McK, I simply mistook the sense of your comment.
    also, wj, the case I had in mind concerning the current admin’s quashing of criminal charges brought against the Iraq war planners was Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of the “Bush 6” in the Spanish courts.
    The case was assigned away from Garzon (for good reasons) and was subsequently dropped. Some of that was due to a simple lack of desire on the part of the Spanish court system to wade into a political minefield, and some of it was due to Obama and some US Senators weighing in with the Spanish government and courts.
    As you have noted, we’ve done nothing about it here.
    The Bush 6 plus Bush have been convicted of war crimes in Kuala Lumpur. That may, perhaps, establish a precedent for other more consequential proceedings, but in and of itself Malaysia is just not a big enough dog for that to make any kind of dent in the lifestyles of the folks in question.
    Sorry for the slow reply, I tried to post this earlier but it went off into the ether…..

  294. Did not mean to ruffle any feathers
    no worries McK, I simply mistook the sense of your comment.
    also, wj, the case I had in mind concerning the current admin’s quashing of criminal charges brought against the Iraq war planners was Baltasar Garzon’s pursuit of the “Bush 6” in the Spanish courts.
    The case was assigned away from Garzon (for good reasons) and was subsequently dropped. Some of that was due to a simple lack of desire on the part of the Spanish court system to wade into a political minefield, and some of it was due to Obama and some US Senators weighing in with the Spanish government and courts.
    As you have noted, we’ve done nothing about it here.
    The Bush 6 plus Bush have been convicted of war crimes in Kuala Lumpur. That may, perhaps, establish a precedent for other more consequential proceedings, but in and of itself Malaysia is just not a big enough dog for that to make any kind of dent in the lifestyles of the folks in question.
    Sorry for the slow reply, I tried to post this earlier but it went off into the ether…..

  295. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct.
    Counsellor, I hope we can agree it is not simply what we say, but when we say it and what we say it with. I certainly find the juxtaposition of the phrase “many here at ObWi wanted” and Sadaam gassing his people to be revealing, but I am always happy to leave it up to the gentle readers of the comment section. That’s how I understand these things to work.

  296. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct.
    Counsellor, I hope we can agree it is not simply what we say, but when we say it and what we say it with. I certainly find the juxtaposition of the phrase “many here at ObWi wanted” and Sadaam gassing his people to be revealing, but I am always happy to leave it up to the gentle readers of the comment section. That’s how I understand these things to work.

  297. Second, regarding what I actually did say, you drew an inference, informed perhaps by your noted tolerance for dissent (that was snark), that was neither intended nor warranted. Put differently, you leapt to a conclusion. Rather, if you read carefully, I simply made a statement of fact and one that was correct.
    Counsellor, I hope we can agree it is not simply what we say, but when we say it and what we say it with. I certainly find the juxtaposition of the phrase “many here at ObWi wanted” and Sadaam gassing his people to be revealing, but I am always happy to leave it up to the gentle readers of the comment section. That’s how I understand these things to work.

  298. McKinney,
    You are correct: images from 9/11 certainly incited the American populace to favor war. The “American street” saw the pictures and watched the videos and loudly (though not unanimously) demanded blood.
    And you are correct that those images were used by Dick and Dubya to incite the populace to howl for Saddam’s blood specifically. Evidently, the American populace can be led by the nose toward war.
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way: images turning the American populace away from war as markedly as 9/11 images turned us toward war.
    lj,
    Way back in this 2010 thread, McKinney and I had a bit of conversation about the “Saddam gassing his own people” meme. Far be it from me to suggest that it influenced his view of “many here at ObWi” in any way.
    –TP

  299. McKinney,
    You are correct: images from 9/11 certainly incited the American populace to favor war. The “American street” saw the pictures and watched the videos and loudly (though not unanimously) demanded blood.
    And you are correct that those images were used by Dick and Dubya to incite the populace to howl for Saddam’s blood specifically. Evidently, the American populace can be led by the nose toward war.
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way: images turning the American populace away from war as markedly as 9/11 images turned us toward war.
    lj,
    Way back in this 2010 thread, McKinney and I had a bit of conversation about the “Saddam gassing his own people” meme. Far be it from me to suggest that it influenced his view of “many here at ObWi” in any way.
    –TP

  300. McKinney,
    You are correct: images from 9/11 certainly incited the American populace to favor war. The “American street” saw the pictures and watched the videos and loudly (though not unanimously) demanded blood.
    And you are correct that those images were used by Dick and Dubya to incite the populace to howl for Saddam’s blood specifically. Evidently, the American populace can be led by the nose toward war.
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way: images turning the American populace away from war as markedly as 9/11 images turned us toward war.
    lj,
    Way back in this 2010 thread, McKinney and I had a bit of conversation about the “Saddam gassing his own people” meme. Far be it from me to suggest that it influenced his view of “many here at ObWi” in any way.
    –TP

  301. sorry to pull a late drive-by, but I just wanted to revisit this sentence.
    McKinneyTexas:
    “1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.”
    There are certainly people who think we were right to invade Iraq: they point to Saddam’s many atrocities, they claim he DID have weapons of mass destruction (somewhere–maybe he got rid of them before the invasion), we should be spreading democracy wherever we can, etc. etc. Dick Cheney is one such person.
    But not even Dick Cheney says that 9-11 was cause to invade Iraq.
    Do you remember why?

  302. sorry to pull a late drive-by, but I just wanted to revisit this sentence.
    McKinneyTexas:
    “1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.”
    There are certainly people who think we were right to invade Iraq: they point to Saddam’s many atrocities, they claim he DID have weapons of mass destruction (somewhere–maybe he got rid of them before the invasion), we should be spreading democracy wherever we can, etc. etc. Dick Cheney is one such person.
    But not even Dick Cheney says that 9-11 was cause to invade Iraq.
    Do you remember why?

  303. sorry to pull a late drive-by, but I just wanted to revisit this sentence.
    McKinneyTexas:
    “1. The majority here did not and do not think 9-11 was sufficient cause to invade Iraq, even knowing Saddam had gassed his own people.”
    There are certainly people who think we were right to invade Iraq: they point to Saddam’s many atrocities, they claim he DID have weapons of mass destruction (somewhere–maybe he got rid of them before the invasion), we should be spreading democracy wherever we can, etc. etc. Dick Cheney is one such person.
    But not even Dick Cheney says that 9-11 was cause to invade Iraq.
    Do you remember why?

  304. From the 2010 thread:

    rabid neocons led by Cheney seize upon 9-11 and hype war with Iraq, not because they actually believed or cared whether there were WMD, it was enough that there was at one time. The larger neocon picture was that we would be viewed as liberators, hailed throughout the country and would lead the Middle East to everlasting, Jeffersonian democratic peace.

    I’m quoting not to pick on McK, but only because this is pretty much exactly how I view the events. Then, and now.
    What I hope has become clear in the 10+ years since it all went down is that, in fact, the folks responsible for bringing us to war in Iraq were, in fact, a bunch of lying SOB’s with an agenda. The reality of WMD / no WMD was beside the point.
    I recommend Harry Frankfurt’s “On Bullshit” for a discussion of the dynamics between truth, lies, and bullshit.
    The push to war in Iraq was utter bullshit. The presence or absence of WMD was immaterial. The goodness or badness of Hussein was immaterial. The relationship between Hussein and Al Qaeda was immaterial.
    All immaterial, except to the degree that they provided a justification for the invasion.
    The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.
    McK wrote his words as a characterization of some weird, fantastic conspiracy theory, cooked up by the imagination of fevered progressives.
    Not weird, not fantastic, not imaginary.
    Read ’em and weep.

  305. From the 2010 thread:

    rabid neocons led by Cheney seize upon 9-11 and hype war with Iraq, not because they actually believed or cared whether there were WMD, it was enough that there was at one time. The larger neocon picture was that we would be viewed as liberators, hailed throughout the country and would lead the Middle East to everlasting, Jeffersonian democratic peace.

    I’m quoting not to pick on McK, but only because this is pretty much exactly how I view the events. Then, and now.
    What I hope has become clear in the 10+ years since it all went down is that, in fact, the folks responsible for bringing us to war in Iraq were, in fact, a bunch of lying SOB’s with an agenda. The reality of WMD / no WMD was beside the point.
    I recommend Harry Frankfurt’s “On Bullshit” for a discussion of the dynamics between truth, lies, and bullshit.
    The push to war in Iraq was utter bullshit. The presence or absence of WMD was immaterial. The goodness or badness of Hussein was immaterial. The relationship between Hussein and Al Qaeda was immaterial.
    All immaterial, except to the degree that they provided a justification for the invasion.
    The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.
    McK wrote his words as a characterization of some weird, fantastic conspiracy theory, cooked up by the imagination of fevered progressives.
    Not weird, not fantastic, not imaginary.
    Read ’em and weep.

  306. From the 2010 thread:

    rabid neocons led by Cheney seize upon 9-11 and hype war with Iraq, not because they actually believed or cared whether there were WMD, it was enough that there was at one time. The larger neocon picture was that we would be viewed as liberators, hailed throughout the country and would lead the Middle East to everlasting, Jeffersonian democratic peace.

    I’m quoting not to pick on McK, but only because this is pretty much exactly how I view the events. Then, and now.
    What I hope has become clear in the 10+ years since it all went down is that, in fact, the folks responsible for bringing us to war in Iraq were, in fact, a bunch of lying SOB’s with an agenda. The reality of WMD / no WMD was beside the point.
    I recommend Harry Frankfurt’s “On Bullshit” for a discussion of the dynamics between truth, lies, and bullshit.
    The push to war in Iraq was utter bullshit. The presence or absence of WMD was immaterial. The goodness or badness of Hussein was immaterial. The relationship between Hussein and Al Qaeda was immaterial.
    All immaterial, except to the degree that they provided a justification for the invasion.
    The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.
    McK wrote his words as a characterization of some weird, fantastic conspiracy theory, cooked up by the imagination of fevered progressives.
    Not weird, not fantastic, not imaginary.
    Read ’em and weep.

  307. “The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.

    This is BS. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground, there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them and it’s easy to call names when you aren’t in charge.
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes. Was there a driving force behind many of these decisions that we had seen similar reactions when similar events had occurred? Yes. After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort. Almost every person in some way or another. After 9/11 we did less than that but with the same emotional urgency. Chasing a different kind of enemy. Hoping for a better result.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.

  308. “The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.

    This is BS. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground, there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them and it’s easy to call names when you aren’t in charge.
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes. Was there a driving force behind many of these decisions that we had seen similar reactions when similar events had occurred? Yes. After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort. Almost every person in some way or another. After 9/11 we did less than that but with the same emotional urgency. Chasing a different kind of enemy. Hoping for a better result.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.

  309. “The folks in question were, and are, cons and grifters, and we – the American public as a community – were their marks. Dante’s circles 9, 8, and 7 (and in some cases 4) were created for people like them. This is not a partisan thing, they’re just bad people, regardless of what letter follows their name.
    Treacherous, fraudulent, violent MF’ers, all of them. And, some of them greedy, to boot.

    This is BS. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground, there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them and it’s easy to call names when you aren’t in charge.
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes. Was there a driving force behind many of these decisions that we had seen similar reactions when similar events had occurred? Yes. After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort. Almost every person in some way or another. After 9/11 we did less than that but with the same emotional urgency. Chasing a different kind of enemy. Hoping for a better result.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.

  310. It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.
    OMFG. so silly.
    there was no con and shifty sales job before the Afghanistan war. there really was a link between 9/11 and that country, and even though i opposed it (because i thought we’d just leave the country in worse shape than we found it, which would breed more anti-US sentiment), there was a legitimate reason to do it.
    for Iraq, there was no such justification. it was a con, top to bottom. it was easy to see this in real time because the rationales kept changing and the strongest arguments against it were dismissed with handwaving and arguments like “why do you love Saddam?”
    and, Obama got a lot of shade from the left for not getting out of Afghanistan sooner. it’s still a sore point for a lot of people. and he is reviled by many on the left for his drone use.

  311. It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.
    OMFG. so silly.
    there was no con and shifty sales job before the Afghanistan war. there really was a link between 9/11 and that country, and even though i opposed it (because i thought we’d just leave the country in worse shape than we found it, which would breed more anti-US sentiment), there was a legitimate reason to do it.
    for Iraq, there was no such justification. it was a con, top to bottom. it was easy to see this in real time because the rationales kept changing and the strongest arguments against it were dismissed with handwaving and arguments like “why do you love Saddam?”
    and, Obama got a lot of shade from the left for not getting out of Afghanistan sooner. it’s still a sore point for a lot of people. and he is reviled by many on the left for his drone use.

  312. It is a PURELY partisan thing, Obama has kept us in Afghanistan for six years, doing pretty much everything that was done in Iraq, plus drones and hit squads in dozens of other countries, and worse. But he gets a partisan walk on the con and grifter and violent mfer front. Because he’s your con.
    OMFG. so silly.
    there was no con and shifty sales job before the Afghanistan war. there really was a link between 9/11 and that country, and even though i opposed it (because i thought we’d just leave the country in worse shape than we found it, which would breed more anti-US sentiment), there was a legitimate reason to do it.
    for Iraq, there was no such justification. it was a con, top to bottom. it was easy to see this in real time because the rationales kept changing and the strongest arguments against it were dismissed with handwaving and arguments like “why do you love Saddam?”
    and, Obama got a lot of shade from the left for not getting out of Afghanistan sooner. it’s still a sore point for a lot of people. and he is reviled by many on the left for his drone use.

  313. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground
    The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.
    there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them
    Richard Perle and Trireme Partners.
    Richard Perle,
    trading defense briefings for dollars.
    After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort.
    The interest in invading Iraq, and expressed desire to invade Iraq, precede 9/11 by many many years.
    They wanted to restructure the political environment of the Middle East. For a variety of reasons, not to exclude US economic interests.
    The means of doing so was the application of US military force.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    As far as I can tell, folks have been arguing with, around, and about this for the last 12 years. You’re late to the party, buddy.
    What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.
    From my point of view, the partisan hat is on your head.
    Either way, your opinion of my point of view on this is nothing to me either way. The preponderance of the very ample evidence tells me that these guys are lying criminal bastards. Your personal opinion about it lacks evidentiary value, so as far as I’m concerned it’s not of interest.

  314. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground
    The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.
    there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them
    Richard Perle and Trireme Partners.
    Richard Perle,
    trading defense briefings for dollars.
    After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort.
    The interest in invading Iraq, and expressed desire to invade Iraq, precede 9/11 by many many years.
    They wanted to restructure the political environment of the Middle East. For a variety of reasons, not to exclude US economic interests.
    The means of doing so was the application of US military force.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    As far as I can tell, folks have been arguing with, around, and about this for the last 12 years. You’re late to the party, buddy.
    What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.
    From my point of view, the partisan hat is on your head.
    Either way, your opinion of my point of view on this is nothing to me either way. The preponderance of the very ample evidence tells me that these guys are lying criminal bastards. Your personal opinion about it lacks evidentiary value, so as far as I’m concerned it’s not of interest.

  315. “The people in charge” covers a lot of ground
    The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.
    there probably wasn’t a personal monetary motive between them
    Richard Perle and Trireme Partners.
    Richard Perle,
    trading defense briefings for dollars.
    After Pearl Harbor we committed the whole country to a war effort.
    The interest in invading Iraq, and expressed desire to invade Iraq, precede 9/11 by many many years.
    They wanted to restructure the political environment of the Middle East. For a variety of reasons, not to exclude US economic interests.
    The means of doing so was the application of US military force.
    The rest is a purely partisan view of the people involved, one that no many argues with because it is just sooooo wrought with emotion.
    As far as I can tell, folks have been arguing with, around, and about this for the last 12 years. You’re late to the party, buddy.
    What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.
    From my point of view, the partisan hat is on your head.
    Either way, your opinion of my point of view on this is nothing to me either way. The preponderance of the very ample evidence tells me that these guys are lying criminal bastards. Your personal opinion about it lacks evidentiary value, so as far as I’m concerned it’s not of interest.

  316. OMFG so silly. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war. There was little justification for being there after the first couple of years, Al-Qaeda had packed up and moved, yet Obama ran on the premise we had “deserted” the right war. Talk about BS. But the SURGE was all about country building which we are pretty sucky at as every place we have done it shows.
    I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true. They were politicians selling a policy. Happens every day with every President. It just doesn’t make the people involved violent, cons and mfers and blah blah.

  317. OMFG so silly. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war. There was little justification for being there after the first couple of years, Al-Qaeda had packed up and moved, yet Obama ran on the premise we had “deserted” the right war. Talk about BS. But the SURGE was all about country building which we are pretty sucky at as every place we have done it shows.
    I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true. They were politicians selling a policy. Happens every day with every President. It just doesn’t make the people involved violent, cons and mfers and blah blah.

  318. OMFG so silly. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war. There was little justification for being there after the first couple of years, Al-Qaeda had packed up and moved, yet Obama ran on the premise we had “deserted” the right war. Talk about BS. But the SURGE was all about country building which we are pretty sucky at as every place we have done it shows.
    I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true. They were politicians selling a policy. Happens every day with every President. It just doesn’t make the people involved violent, cons and mfers and blah blah.

  319. I thought that the surge, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, was all about trying to gain at least a short time of (relative) peace and stability, so we could get out without looking like we had been driven out. As a military effort to “win” either war, the surges were failures. As a political move to allow us to leave, they seem to have been rather more of a success.
    You can argue, in both cases, that ramping up a war in order to get out is various kinds of a bad thing to do. But that’s politics in the US. Like it or hate it, any President has to work in the (political) environment he is in.

  320. I thought that the surge, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, was all about trying to gain at least a short time of (relative) peace and stability, so we could get out without looking like we had been driven out. As a military effort to “win” either war, the surges were failures. As a political move to allow us to leave, they seem to have been rather more of a success.
    You can argue, in both cases, that ramping up a war in order to get out is various kinds of a bad thing to do. But that’s politics in the US. Like it or hate it, any President has to work in the (political) environment he is in.

  321. I thought that the surge, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, was all about trying to gain at least a short time of (relative) peace and stability, so we could get out without looking like we had been driven out. As a military effort to “win” either war, the surges were failures. As a political move to allow us to leave, they seem to have been rather more of a success.
    You can argue, in both cases, that ramping up a war in order to get out is various kinds of a bad thing to do. But that’s politics in the US. Like it or hate it, any President has to work in the (political) environment he is in.

  322. I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true.
    Well done.
    If none of the crap that went on in the run-up to Iraq bugs you, bully for you. I found it, and find it, outrageous.
    You pick an odd collection of dudes, and a really odd collection of actions, to defend.

  323. I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true.
    Well done.
    If none of the crap that went on in the run-up to Iraq bugs you, bully for you. I found it, and find it, outrageous.
    You pick an odd collection of dudes, and a really odd collection of actions, to defend.

  324. I didn’t even say none of all that stuff you said is true, is true.
    Well done.
    If none of the crap that went on in the run-up to Iraq bugs you, bully for you. I found it, and find it, outrageous.
    You pick an odd collection of dudes, and a really odd collection of actions, to defend.

  325. I love this,
    “What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.”
    yet two sentences later these guys are lying criminal bastards. I think you can say bad things about Bush policy, even emotionally disagree with it,
    and even agree with Obama policy, no matter how hypocritical that might be,
    but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.

  326. I love this,
    “What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.”
    yet two sentences later these guys are lying criminal bastards. I think you can say bad things about Bush policy, even emotionally disagree with it,
    and even agree with Obama policy, no matter how hypocritical that might be,
    but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.

  327. I love this,
    “What I see in your comment is that nobody can say anything bad about the Bush crowd unless they also say something bad about Obama.”
    yet two sentences later these guys are lying criminal bastards. I think you can say bad things about Bush policy, even emotionally disagree with it,
    and even agree with Obama policy, no matter how hypocritical that might be,
    but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.

  328. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war
    who exactly are you calling out here? who are all these people saying that Obama’s surge was awesome?
    They were politicians selling a policy.
    a policy which killed 100,000 people, displaced millions and has now almost nearly destroyed the country.
    and they sold this “policy” with lie after lie after lie. top to bottom.
    but Obama gave one last attempt to fix up the mess Bush created in Afghanistan, so it’s even. i guess.

  329. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war
    who exactly are you calling out here? who are all these people saying that Obama’s surge was awesome?
    They were politicians selling a policy.
    a policy which killed 100,000 people, displaced millions and has now almost nearly destroyed the country.
    and they sold this “policy” with lie after lie after lie. top to bottom.
    but Obama gave one last attempt to fix up the mess Bush created in Afghanistan, so it’s even. i guess.

  330. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war
    who exactly are you calling out here? who are all these people saying that Obama’s surge was awesome?
    They were politicians selling a policy.
    a policy which killed 100,000 people, displaced millions and has now almost nearly destroyed the country.
    and they sold this “policy” with lie after lie after lie. top to bottom.
    but Obama gave one last attempt to fix up the mess Bush created in Afghanistan, so it’s even. i guess.

  331. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war.
    OMFG so silly. If we weren’t going to immediately vacate the country, there were justifications for doing a surge. So long as we were/are still there, we’ve continued to attempt to accomplish assorted goals, and some of them require more/less personnel. That’s just talking a pragmatic military justification, though, which obviously isn’t as important as a political justification, right? I think wj did a perfectly acceptable job of laying out a (relatively) reasonable political justification. I say this as someone who protested OEF back in the day, as with OIF.
    I still think both wars were mistakes, but once we got stuck in there were at times reasons to increase the number of in-theater personnel, and indeed, there were even reasons to delay our departure. At this point, I think the measured withdrawal we’re engaging in is the right course, though it should be more thorough than it will be. But there have been periods where withdrawal wasn’t on the table, and at that point, given only a choice between maintaining troop levels and increasing them, increasing them was justifiable.

  332. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war.
    OMFG so silly. If we weren’t going to immediately vacate the country, there were justifications for doing a surge. So long as we were/are still there, we’ve continued to attempt to accomplish assorted goals, and some of them require more/less personnel. That’s just talking a pragmatic military justification, though, which obviously isn’t as important as a political justification, right? I think wj did a perfectly acceptable job of laying out a (relatively) reasonable political justification. I say this as someone who protested OEF back in the day, as with OIF.
    I still think both wars were mistakes, but once we got stuck in there were at times reasons to increase the number of in-theater personnel, and indeed, there were even reasons to delay our departure. At this point, I think the measured withdrawal we’re engaging in is the right course, though it should be more thorough than it will be. But there have been periods where withdrawal wasn’t on the table, and at that point, given only a choice between maintaining troop levels and increasing them, increasing them was justifiable.

  333. There was NO justification for doing a SURGE in Afghanistan, that was just Obama picking a war.
    OMFG so silly. If we weren’t going to immediately vacate the country, there were justifications for doing a surge. So long as we were/are still there, we’ve continued to attempt to accomplish assorted goals, and some of them require more/less personnel. That’s just talking a pragmatic military justification, though, which obviously isn’t as important as a political justification, right? I think wj did a perfectly acceptable job of laying out a (relatively) reasonable political justification. I say this as someone who protested OEF back in the day, as with OIF.
    I still think both wars were mistakes, but once we got stuck in there were at times reasons to increase the number of in-theater personnel, and indeed, there were even reasons to delay our departure. At this point, I think the measured withdrawal we’re engaging in is the right course, though it should be more thorough than it will be. But there have been periods where withdrawal wasn’t on the table, and at that point, given only a choice between maintaining troop levels and increasing them, increasing them was justifiable.

  334. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.
    I say again, OMFG so silly. No, Marty, this is just not so. This is absolutely not so. The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. There is no sane requirement outside of the realm of tu quoque for lying criminality to encompass strictly both or neither. Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.

  335. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.
    I say again, OMFG so silly. No, Marty, this is just not so. This is absolutely not so. The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. There is no sane requirement outside of the realm of tu quoque for lying criminality to encompass strictly both or neither. Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.

  336. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards. Otherwise you are applying a partisan filter.
    I say again, OMFG so silly. No, Marty, this is just not so. This is absolutely not so. The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. There is no sane requirement outside of the realm of tu quoque for lying criminality to encompass strictly both or neither. Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.

  337. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards.
    I’m not sure what your point was there, but I just want to be clear about mine.
    I say they are lying criminal bastards because (a) they lie, and (b) they engage in criminal activities.
    The “bastards” part is just langiappe. For gaiety, as it were. If Cheney can tell Leahy to go f**k himself on the Senate floor, I don’t see that language like “bastard” should be considered de trop.
    But as a point of literal fact, I’m pretty sure they were actually the spawn of lawful marriages.
    Long story short, I do actually want to call them lying criminal bastards, because *that is what they are*.
    If you disagree that they lied, or engaged in criminal activities, that’s fine. IMO the preponderance of the evidence is on my side.
    Sometimes things have nothing to do with “whose side you’re on”. Some things are just so. This is one of them.

  338. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards.
    I’m not sure what your point was there, but I just want to be clear about mine.
    I say they are lying criminal bastards because (a) they lie, and (b) they engage in criminal activities.
    The “bastards” part is just langiappe. For gaiety, as it were. If Cheney can tell Leahy to go f**k himself on the Senate floor, I don’t see that language like “bastard” should be considered de trop.
    But as a point of literal fact, I’m pretty sure they were actually the spawn of lawful marriages.
    Long story short, I do actually want to call them lying criminal bastards, because *that is what they are*.
    If you disagree that they lied, or engaged in criminal activities, that’s fine. IMO the preponderance of the evidence is on my side.
    Sometimes things have nothing to do with “whose side you’re on”. Some things are just so. This is one of them.

  339. but none of it translates to lying criminal bastards unless you want to just say they are all lying criminal bastards.
    I’m not sure what your point was there, but I just want to be clear about mine.
    I say they are lying criminal bastards because (a) they lie, and (b) they engage in criminal activities.
    The “bastards” part is just langiappe. For gaiety, as it were. If Cheney can tell Leahy to go f**k himself on the Senate floor, I don’t see that language like “bastard” should be considered de trop.
    But as a point of literal fact, I’m pretty sure they were actually the spawn of lawful marriages.
    Long story short, I do actually want to call them lying criminal bastards, because *that is what they are*.
    If you disagree that they lied, or engaged in criminal activities, that’s fine. IMO the preponderance of the evidence is on my side.
    Sometimes things have nothing to do with “whose side you’re on”. Some things are just so. This is one of them.

  340. Well, lying, not really in political terms, criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front. So no, those are your opinions, not facts, and certainly are viewed through a partisan filter.

  341. Well, lying, not really in political terms, criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front. So no, those are your opinions, not facts, and certainly are viewed through a partisan filter.

  342. Well, lying, not really in political terms, criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front. So no, those are your opinions, not facts, and certainly are viewed through a partisan filter.

  343. “The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.”
    Actually, I think the PNAC crowd is much bigger than that and includes a number of media outlets/personalities. Whether or not the media figures are true adherents of the ideology, I’m not sure. 50/50 that they are just stupid whores.
    There is an R2P crowd that overlaps with the PNAC crowd. I suspect that this is because R2P appeals to liberals and is a way to sell the same old PNAC rot (involvement in foreign entanglements and empire building – all for the good of the savages, of course) in a new package. I am imagining that a lot of commenters here are r2Pers.
    At any rate, what I really wanted to say to Russell is that while the PNAC crowd may have been behind the Iraq debacle and a few other things that didn’t work out so well and, while I agree wholeheartedly with his sentiments about these people, they would not have been able to accomplish their nefarious machinations without, at minimum, the criminal negligence of lefties like Hilary Clinton, John Kerry. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they abdicated their responsibility to POTUS. That’s best case scenario. Worst – the one I subscribe to – is that they whole filthy lot of them were in on the PNAC scheme.
    It just bothers me that there’s all this partisan finger pointing when it should be clear as day that both parties are responsible.

  344. “The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.”
    Actually, I think the PNAC crowd is much bigger than that and includes a number of media outlets/personalities. Whether or not the media figures are true adherents of the ideology, I’m not sure. 50/50 that they are just stupid whores.
    There is an R2P crowd that overlaps with the PNAC crowd. I suspect that this is because R2P appeals to liberals and is a way to sell the same old PNAC rot (involvement in foreign entanglements and empire building – all for the good of the savages, of course) in a new package. I am imagining that a lot of commenters here are r2Pers.
    At any rate, what I really wanted to say to Russell is that while the PNAC crowd may have been behind the Iraq debacle and a few other things that didn’t work out so well and, while I agree wholeheartedly with his sentiments about these people, they would not have been able to accomplish their nefarious machinations without, at minimum, the criminal negligence of lefties like Hilary Clinton, John Kerry. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they abdicated their responsibility to POTUS. That’s best case scenario. Worst – the one I subscribe to – is that they whole filthy lot of them were in on the PNAC scheme.
    It just bothers me that there’s all this partisan finger pointing when it should be clear as day that both parties are responsible.

  345. “The PNAC crowd are basically Cheney, Feith, Wolfowitz, Perle, maybe Rumsfeld.
    The folks involved in criminal activities at a hands-on level are basically Yoo, Addington, Bybee, probably Gonzales and Hayes.
    Hopefully that focuses things.”
    Actually, I think the PNAC crowd is much bigger than that and includes a number of media outlets/personalities. Whether or not the media figures are true adherents of the ideology, I’m not sure. 50/50 that they are just stupid whores.
    There is an R2P crowd that overlaps with the PNAC crowd. I suspect that this is because R2P appeals to liberals and is a way to sell the same old PNAC rot (involvement in foreign entanglements and empire building – all for the good of the savages, of course) in a new package. I am imagining that a lot of commenters here are r2Pers.
    At any rate, what I really wanted to say to Russell is that while the PNAC crowd may have been behind the Iraq debacle and a few other things that didn’t work out so well and, while I agree wholeheartedly with his sentiments about these people, they would not have been able to accomplish their nefarious machinations without, at minimum, the criminal negligence of lefties like Hilary Clinton, John Kerry. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they abdicated their responsibility to POTUS. That’s best case scenario. Worst – the one I subscribe to – is that they whole filthy lot of them were in on the PNAC scheme.
    It just bothers me that there’s all this partisan finger pointing when it should be clear as day that both parties are responsible.

  346. Hardly unusual, but I think NomVide has made a point worth repeating:
    The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. […] Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.
    ‘But the other side did it too’ for various values of ‘it’ detracts from the discussion of whether it should be done at all.
    Marty, you said:
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes.
    I’d be curious to hear why you think using the available justifications to commit the US to occupying a foreign nation, is in any way a moral thing to do. Beyond that its been done before, or done after, or the other side did something similar.
    Frex, WMDs were used as a justification, but it was based on pretty shoddy evidence, and the quality of the evidence was hidden from the public. To me, that’s lying.
    I don’t know if Bush et al truly believed it was right and moral to invade, but even if I did, its a pretty crappy ‘ends justify the means’ moralization for deliberately misleading the US public into war.

  347. Hardly unusual, but I think NomVide has made a point worth repeating:
    The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. […] Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.
    ‘But the other side did it too’ for various values of ‘it’ detracts from the discussion of whether it should be done at all.
    Marty, you said:
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes.
    I’d be curious to hear why you think using the available justifications to commit the US to occupying a foreign nation, is in any way a moral thing to do. Beyond that its been done before, or done after, or the other side did something similar.
    Frex, WMDs were used as a justification, but it was based on pretty shoddy evidence, and the quality of the evidence was hidden from the public. To me, that’s lying.
    I don’t know if Bush et al truly believed it was right and moral to invade, but even if I did, its a pretty crappy ‘ends justify the means’ moralization for deliberately misleading the US public into war.

  348. Hardly unusual, but I think NomVide has made a point worth repeating:
    The requirement for one of the two to be lying criminal bastards is for their individual conduct to be deceitful and illegal. […] Obama’s alleged moral turpitude is immaterial to Bush’s; the two can be examined separately and judged on their individual merits.
    ‘But the other side did it too’ for various values of ‘it’ detracts from the discussion of whether it should be done at all.
    Marty, you said:
    Did they think war with Iraq was the right thing to do? Yes. Did they use the available justifications to get it approved? Yes.
    I’d be curious to hear why you think using the available justifications to commit the US to occupying a foreign nation, is in any way a moral thing to do. Beyond that its been done before, or done after, or the other side did something similar.
    Frex, WMDs were used as a justification, but it was based on pretty shoddy evidence, and the quality of the evidence was hidden from the public. To me, that’s lying.
    I don’t know if Bush et al truly believed it was right and moral to invade, but even if I did, its a pretty crappy ‘ends justify the means’ moralization for deliberately misleading the US public into war.

  349. Tony P:
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way:
    I think Vietnam War is a good example. In the sense that there were violent images used to build public opposition towards the war. Not in the sense that there was anything good about the war.
    I’d also include Abu Ghraib in that category

  350. Tony P:
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way:
    I think Vietnam War is a good example. In the sense that there were violent images used to build public opposition towards the war. Not in the sense that there was anything good about the war.
    I’d also include Abu Ghraib in that category

  351. Tony P:
    And I, for one, would be reassured by a clear example going the other way:
    I think Vietnam War is a good example. In the sense that there were violent images used to build public opposition towards the war. Not in the sense that there was anything good about the war.
    I’d also include Abu Ghraib in that category

  352. …criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one.
    Marty, it is true that one of us thinking something is, or ought to be, a crime doesn’t make it one. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal. If I see someone raping a little girl on the street corner**, that is unquestionably criminal behavior — and not just because I think so. Do you disagree?
    In the case of torture carried out against prisoners, nobody doubts that doing so is a crime. The closest anyone can come is to argue that waterboarding, sleep deprivation, etc. “aren’t really torture.” Should the matter ever actually come to trial, don’t expect that defense to work.
    ** Not necessarily making an equivalence between the two activities here. Just making the point that even us non-lawyers can recognize criminal activity in many cases.

  353. …criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one.
    Marty, it is true that one of us thinking something is, or ought to be, a crime doesn’t make it one. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal. If I see someone raping a little girl on the street corner**, that is unquestionably criminal behavior — and not just because I think so. Do you disagree?
    In the case of torture carried out against prisoners, nobody doubts that doing so is a crime. The closest anyone can come is to argue that waterboarding, sleep deprivation, etc. “aren’t really torture.” Should the matter ever actually come to trial, don’t expect that defense to work.
    ** Not necessarily making an equivalence between the two activities here. Just making the point that even us non-lawyers can recognize criminal activity in many cases.

  354. …criminal? Not in reality. You thinking its a crime doesn’t make it one.
    Marty, it is true that one of us thinking something is, or ought to be, a crime doesn’t make it one. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal. If I see someone raping a little girl on the street corner**, that is unquestionably criminal behavior — and not just because I think so. Do you disagree?
    In the case of torture carried out against prisoners, nobody doubts that doing so is a crime. The closest anyone can come is to argue that waterboarding, sleep deprivation, etc. “aren’t really torture.” Should the matter ever actually come to trial, don’t expect that defense to work.
    ** Not necessarily making an equivalence between the two activities here. Just making the point that even us non-lawyers can recognize criminal activity in many cases.

  355. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal.
    Thank you.

  356. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal.
    Thank you.

  357. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean that we can’t recognize behavior which is criminal.
    Thank you.

  358. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    the Bush admin never lost a court case? do tell.

  359. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    the Bush admin never lost a court case? do tell.

  360. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    the Bush admin never lost a court case? do tell.

  361. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    If this is your comprehensive standard for Executive criminality: 1) ouch, and 2) I personally seem to recall the Bush administration repeatedly getting slapped down by SCOTUS and lower courts for “pushing the boundaries”, albeit far fewer than I’d’ve liked (but then I suppose I am a bit of a DFH, or at least a CFH). To say nothing of the other times they changed policies in the 11th hour to avoid court challenges. So I’m really not sure where you’re coming from with this particular defense of Bush et al.

  362. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    If this is your comprehensive standard for Executive criminality: 1) ouch, and 2) I personally seem to recall the Bush administration repeatedly getting slapped down by SCOTUS and lower courts for “pushing the boundaries”, albeit far fewer than I’d’ve liked (but then I suppose I am a bit of a DFH, or at least a CFH). To say nothing of the other times they changed policies in the 11th hour to avoid court challenges. So I’m really not sure where you’re coming from with this particular defense of Bush et al.

  363. Besides, they just pushed the boundaries and no Supreme Court slapped their hands, so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    If this is your comprehensive standard for Executive criminality: 1) ouch, and 2) I personally seem to recall the Bush administration repeatedly getting slapped down by SCOTUS and lower courts for “pushing the boundaries”, albeit far fewer than I’d’ve liked (but then I suppose I am a bit of a DFH, or at least a CFH). To say nothing of the other times they changed policies in the 11th hour to avoid court challenges. So I’m really not sure where you’re coming from with this particular defense of Bush et al.

  364. so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    Well, that depends on the venue.
    Further, I was unaware that a tiff with the Supremes is now considered a “criminal” matter.
    That Bush, Cheney, and the rest of those rat bastards breathe air somewhere in this country as free men is an affront to human decency.

  365. so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    Well, that depends on the venue.
    Further, I was unaware that a tiff with the Supremes is now considered a “criminal” matter.
    That Bush, Cheney, and the rest of those rat bastards breathe air somewhere in this country as free men is an affront to human decency.

  366. so they are better off than Obama on the criminal front.
    Well, that depends on the venue.
    Further, I was unaware that a tiff with the Supremes is now considered a “criminal” matter.
    That Bush, Cheney, and the rest of those rat bastards breathe air somewhere in this country as free men is an affront to human decency.

  367. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they (Kerry, H. Clinton) abdicated their responsibility…
    Insofar as they, like most Democratic Party officeholders, share the “conceit” of Empire, I write this off as abject (and yes, despicable) political cowardice.

  368. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they (Kerry, H. Clinton) abdicated their responsibility…
    Insofar as they, like most Democratic Party officeholders, share the “conceit” of Empire, I write this off as abject (and yes, despicable) political cowardice.

  369. The moment came to step up and wisely guide the country in difficult times, they (Kerry, H. Clinton) abdicated their responsibility…
    Insofar as they, like most Democratic Party officeholders, share the “conceit” of Empire, I write this off as abject (and yes, despicable) political cowardice.

  370. I agree just about always with what Russell writes here, and love his style. I just wish that he would, just once in a while, take the gloves off.
    har, har, har..!!!!

  371. I agree just about always with what Russell writes here, and love his style. I just wish that he would, just once in a while, take the gloves off.
    har, har, har..!!!!

  372. I agree just about always with what Russell writes here, and love his style. I just wish that he would, just once in a while, take the gloves off.
    har, har, har..!!!!

  373. Since Hillary got mentioned, I think her husband crossed the line into criminal behaviour when he used ‘extraordinary rendition’ with full knowledge that those rendered would be tortured and the info gained put at the disposal of the US. The country was obviously not seen as ripe yet to have those acts committed without subcontracting them to foreigners. If Cheney/Bush ever went to trial, Bill Clinton would have to join them in the dock or it would indeed by partisan hypocrisy. To my knowledge Obama has not (yet?) been found guilty of the same. His drone policy might qualify as at least partially criminal but that would have to be decided in a different venue. Hillary seems not to have been directly involved in the matters at dispute here (M. Albright on the other hand clearly was in her time as Secretary of State).
    Political cowardice is not a crime (it may have cost both Hillary and Kerry the presidency but that too has little to do with criminal statutes).

  374. Since Hillary got mentioned, I think her husband crossed the line into criminal behaviour when he used ‘extraordinary rendition’ with full knowledge that those rendered would be tortured and the info gained put at the disposal of the US. The country was obviously not seen as ripe yet to have those acts committed without subcontracting them to foreigners. If Cheney/Bush ever went to trial, Bill Clinton would have to join them in the dock or it would indeed by partisan hypocrisy. To my knowledge Obama has not (yet?) been found guilty of the same. His drone policy might qualify as at least partially criminal but that would have to be decided in a different venue. Hillary seems not to have been directly involved in the matters at dispute here (M. Albright on the other hand clearly was in her time as Secretary of State).
    Political cowardice is not a crime (it may have cost both Hillary and Kerry the presidency but that too has little to do with criminal statutes).

  375. Since Hillary got mentioned, I think her husband crossed the line into criminal behaviour when he used ‘extraordinary rendition’ with full knowledge that those rendered would be tortured and the info gained put at the disposal of the US. The country was obviously not seen as ripe yet to have those acts committed without subcontracting them to foreigners. If Cheney/Bush ever went to trial, Bill Clinton would have to join them in the dock or it would indeed by partisan hypocrisy. To my knowledge Obama has not (yet?) been found guilty of the same. His drone policy might qualify as at least partially criminal but that would have to be decided in a different venue. Hillary seems not to have been directly involved in the matters at dispute here (M. Albright on the other hand clearly was in her time as Secretary of State).
    Political cowardice is not a crime (it may have cost both Hillary and Kerry the presidency but that too has little to do with criminal statutes).

  376. The only political cowardice Hilary and Kerry showed was when they got the chance to jump ship and blame it all on Bush, and they did it. Neither if them nor any other Senator who voted for the was did that because they were lied to. These were insiders, knowledgeable and open in their support for the war.
    Again, only a purely partisan view lets them shed responsibility by calling it “political” cowardice. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.

  377. The only political cowardice Hilary and Kerry showed was when they got the chance to jump ship and blame it all on Bush, and they did it. Neither if them nor any other Senator who voted for the was did that because they were lied to. These were insiders, knowledgeable and open in their support for the war.
    Again, only a purely partisan view lets them shed responsibility by calling it “political” cowardice. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.

  378. The only political cowardice Hilary and Kerry showed was when they got the chance to jump ship and blame it all on Bush, and they did it. Neither if them nor any other Senator who voted for the was did that because they were lied to. These were insiders, knowledgeable and open in their support for the war.
    Again, only a purely partisan view lets them shed responsibility by calling it “political” cowardice. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.

  379. Marty,
    The liars didn’t tell folks, even U.S. Senators, that they were lying. Bush and company were pretty ignorant, but not stupid. After all, the guy got elected (er, appointed) President.
    Kerry and Clinton share, with nearly all national political office holders the mission known as American Empire.
    This is not to blame them, but to explain them.
    Any qualms they may have had were pretty easily subsumed to calculations of political ambition (both had presidential aspirations) and raging national war fever.
    I said their vote was despicable. Apparently this is not good enough for your pure unadulterated partisanship.
    The administration of liars was steering the ship. Those two went along for the ride, and they do share responsibility.
    BUT THEY WERE NOT THE LIARS.
    Please do keep that fact in mind when you hurl your next partisan screed.
    Thanks.

  380. Marty,
    The liars didn’t tell folks, even U.S. Senators, that they were lying. Bush and company were pretty ignorant, but not stupid. After all, the guy got elected (er, appointed) President.
    Kerry and Clinton share, with nearly all national political office holders the mission known as American Empire.
    This is not to blame them, but to explain them.
    Any qualms they may have had were pretty easily subsumed to calculations of political ambition (both had presidential aspirations) and raging national war fever.
    I said their vote was despicable. Apparently this is not good enough for your pure unadulterated partisanship.
    The administration of liars was steering the ship. Those two went along for the ride, and they do share responsibility.
    BUT THEY WERE NOT THE LIARS.
    Please do keep that fact in mind when you hurl your next partisan screed.
    Thanks.

  381. Marty,
    The liars didn’t tell folks, even U.S. Senators, that they were lying. Bush and company were pretty ignorant, but not stupid. After all, the guy got elected (er, appointed) President.
    Kerry and Clinton share, with nearly all national political office holders the mission known as American Empire.
    This is not to blame them, but to explain them.
    Any qualms they may have had were pretty easily subsumed to calculations of political ambition (both had presidential aspirations) and raging national war fever.
    I said their vote was despicable. Apparently this is not good enough for your pure unadulterated partisanship.
    The administration of liars was steering the ship. Those two went along for the ride, and they do share responsibility.
    BUT THEY WERE NOT THE LIARS.
    Please do keep that fact in mind when you hurl your next partisan screed.
    Thanks.

  382. Marty,
    Or to put it another way, you go to political battle with the Left you have, not the Left you wish you had.
    Signed,
    Proud Partisan

  383. Marty,
    Or to put it another way, you go to political battle with the Left you have, not the Left you wish you had.
    Signed,
    Proud Partisan

  384. Marty,
    Or to put it another way, you go to political battle with the Left you have, not the Left you wish you had.
    Signed,
    Proud Partisan

  385. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.
    and as we all know, it’s the rowers who decide when and where to take the ship.

  386. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.
    and as we all know, it’s the rowers who decide when and where to take the ship.

  387. Whatever boat Bush is in, they were pulling the oars.
    and as we all know, it’s the rowers who decide when and where to take the ship.

  388. That was great, I really enjoyed the good old fashioned liberal Iraq war beat down. Its a shame none of you will ever be on meet the press.
    I would like to resurrect a dead horse though. I find it odd that so many people denied that the US is trying to control things in the Ukraine. I’m not currently inclined to dig up links, but I have the impression that both the current coup leaders and the 2004 orange revolution leaders were chosen by the US in coups just like Ike used to bake.
    Why are people reluctant to believe that it is not a coincidence that NATO is extending to essentially Russia’s front door?
    Incidentally I hear that Ukraine has substantial natural gas reserves as well as being the conduit for Russia’s gas to reach Europe.
    A lot of people at Naked Capitalism were saying that Bo Biden had engaged in naked corruption in his dealings with Ukraine, but I’m not sure how seriously I should take them.

  389. That was great, I really enjoyed the good old fashioned liberal Iraq war beat down. Its a shame none of you will ever be on meet the press.
    I would like to resurrect a dead horse though. I find it odd that so many people denied that the US is trying to control things in the Ukraine. I’m not currently inclined to dig up links, but I have the impression that both the current coup leaders and the 2004 orange revolution leaders were chosen by the US in coups just like Ike used to bake.
    Why are people reluctant to believe that it is not a coincidence that NATO is extending to essentially Russia’s front door?
    Incidentally I hear that Ukraine has substantial natural gas reserves as well as being the conduit for Russia’s gas to reach Europe.
    A lot of people at Naked Capitalism were saying that Bo Biden had engaged in naked corruption in his dealings with Ukraine, but I’m not sure how seriously I should take them.

  390. That was great, I really enjoyed the good old fashioned liberal Iraq war beat down. Its a shame none of you will ever be on meet the press.
    I would like to resurrect a dead horse though. I find it odd that so many people denied that the US is trying to control things in the Ukraine. I’m not currently inclined to dig up links, but I have the impression that both the current coup leaders and the 2004 orange revolution leaders were chosen by the US in coups just like Ike used to bake.
    Why are people reluctant to believe that it is not a coincidence that NATO is extending to essentially Russia’s front door?
    Incidentally I hear that Ukraine has substantial natural gas reserves as well as being the conduit for Russia’s gas to reach Europe.
    A lot of people at Naked Capitalism were saying that Bo Biden had engaged in naked corruption in his dealings with Ukraine, but I’m not sure how seriously I should take them.

  391. I don’t really know as much about the Ukrainian situation, but given the natural gas reserves, it is unsurprising that the US and the EU would want to be on the good side of that government. I guess that could shade over to a desire to ‘control’ Ukraine, but I’m guessing that the overwhelming opinion here is that the CIA isn’t really competent enough to organize something like this.
    It also implies that the wave of color revolutions (Rose in Georgia, Orange in Ukraine and Tulip in Kyrgyzstan) were the result of CIA meddling. 2 is a coincidence, 3 is a conspiracy, is one way to look at it, but the greater number of these events suggests (to me at least) that it was less the CIA pushing them and more that they actually represent the feelings of the populace. I also feel that the Tulip revolution _was_ an indigenous movement, though the US has taken advantage by using Manas airbase as a staging area for Afghanistan. However, Kyrgyzstan doesn’t have any appreciable natural resources, so controlling it wouldn’t really be such a catch.
    I thought that this pdf was interesting.
    Key Russian officers and officials presented a view of the US and the West as deliberately destabilizing nations in North Africa, the
    Middle East, and the rest of the world for their own ends. They describe such actions as having failed, and been a key source of
    terrorism. They see the West as rejecting partnership with the West as a threatening Russia along all of its borders with Europe.
    Senior Russian officials are also using the term Color Revolution” in ways that are far more critical than in the past. For example,
    the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, has accused the United States and the European Union of an attempt to stage yet
    another “color revolution” in Ukraine, and said during the Conference that, “Attempts to impose homemade recipes for internal
    changes on other nations, without taking into account their own traditions and national characteristics, to engage in the ‘export of
    democracy,’ have a destructive impact on international relations and result in an increase of the number of hot spots on the world
    map.” (RIA Novosti, May 23, 2014 ‘Color Revolutions’ Cause Apparent Damage to International Stability – Lavrov,
    http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2014/05/26/color-revolutions-upset-global-stability-russian-foreign-minister/. )
    The end result is a radically different reading of modern history, of US and European strategy, their use of force, and US and
    European goals and actions from any issued in the West and in prior Russian literature.
    Western experts can argue the degree to which this represents Russian anger over the West’s reaction to events in Ukraine,
    Russian efforts at persuading developing nations and Asia to back Russia in a reassertion of its strategic role in the world,
    propaganda to cloak the character Russian actions in the Ukraine and near abroad, an effort to justify Russian action in Syria, very
    real Russian concern over US and European actions that have destabilized key MENA and Central Asian states, and a host of other
    possible motives and intentions.

    This doesn’t really answer your question (I really don’t know), but beliefs can make their own reality, and if Russia views every act to support one of these countries as a strategic move to box Russia in, it forces the game to go in a particular direction.

  392. I don’t really know as much about the Ukrainian situation, but given the natural gas reserves, it is unsurprising that the US and the EU would want to be on the good side of that government. I guess that could shade over to a desire to ‘control’ Ukraine, but I’m guessing that the overwhelming opinion here is that the CIA isn’t really competent enough to organize something like this.
    It also implies that the wave of color revolutions (Rose in Georgia, Orange in Ukraine and Tulip in Kyrgyzstan) were the result of CIA meddling. 2 is a coincidence, 3 is a conspiracy, is one way to look at it, but the greater number of these events suggests (to me at least) that it was less the CIA pushing them and more that they actually represent the feelings of the populace. I also feel that the Tulip revolution _was_ an indigenous movement, though the US has taken advantage by using Manas airbase as a staging area for Afghanistan. However, Kyrgyzstan doesn’t have any appreciable natural resources, so controlling it wouldn’t really be such a catch.
    I thought that this pdf was interesting.
    Key Russian officers and officials presented a view of the US and the West as deliberately destabilizing nations in North Africa, the
    Middle East, and the rest of the world for their own ends. They describe such actions as having failed, and been a key source of
    terrorism. They see the West as rejecting partnership with the West as a threatening Russia along all of its borders with Europe.
    Senior Russian officials are also using the term Color Revolution” in ways that are far more critical than in the past. For example,
    the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, has accused the United States and the European Union of an attempt to stage yet
    another “color revolution” in Ukraine, and said during the Conference that, “Attempts to impose homemade recipes for internal
    changes on other nations, without taking into account their own traditions and national characteristics, to engage in the ‘export of
    democracy,’ have a destructive impact on international relations and result in an increase of the number of hot spots on the world
    map.” (RIA Novosti, May 23, 2014 ‘Color Revolutions’ Cause Apparent Damage to International Stability – Lavrov,
    http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2014/05/26/color-revolutions-upset-global-stability-russian-foreign-minister/. )
    The end result is a radically different reading of modern history, of US and European strategy, their use of force, and US and
    European goals and actions from any issued in the West and in prior Russian literature.
    Western experts can argue the degree to which this represents Russian anger over the West’s reaction to events in Ukraine,
    Russian efforts at persuading developing nations and Asia to back Russia in a reassertion of its strategic role in the world,
    propaganda to cloak the character Russian actions in the Ukraine and near abroad, an effort to justify Russian action in Syria, very
    real Russian concern over US and European actions that have destabilized key MENA and Central Asian states, and a host of other
    possible motives and intentions.

    This doesn’t really answer your question (I really don’t know), but beliefs can make their own reality, and if Russia views every act to support one of these countries as a strategic move to box Russia in, it forces the game to go in a particular direction.

  393. I don’t really know as much about the Ukrainian situation, but given the natural gas reserves, it is unsurprising that the US and the EU would want to be on the good side of that government. I guess that could shade over to a desire to ‘control’ Ukraine, but I’m guessing that the overwhelming opinion here is that the CIA isn’t really competent enough to organize something like this.
    It also implies that the wave of color revolutions (Rose in Georgia, Orange in Ukraine and Tulip in Kyrgyzstan) were the result of CIA meddling. 2 is a coincidence, 3 is a conspiracy, is one way to look at it, but the greater number of these events suggests (to me at least) that it was less the CIA pushing them and more that they actually represent the feelings of the populace. I also feel that the Tulip revolution _was_ an indigenous movement, though the US has taken advantage by using Manas airbase as a staging area for Afghanistan. However, Kyrgyzstan doesn’t have any appreciable natural resources, so controlling it wouldn’t really be such a catch.
    I thought that this pdf was interesting.
    Key Russian officers and officials presented a view of the US and the West as deliberately destabilizing nations in North Africa, the
    Middle East, and the rest of the world for their own ends. They describe such actions as having failed, and been a key source of
    terrorism. They see the West as rejecting partnership with the West as a threatening Russia along all of its borders with Europe.
    Senior Russian officials are also using the term Color Revolution” in ways that are far more critical than in the past. For example,
    the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, has accused the United States and the European Union of an attempt to stage yet
    another “color revolution” in Ukraine, and said during the Conference that, “Attempts to impose homemade recipes for internal
    changes on other nations, without taking into account their own traditions and national characteristics, to engage in the ‘export of
    democracy,’ have a destructive impact on international relations and result in an increase of the number of hot spots on the world
    map.” (RIA Novosti, May 23, 2014 ‘Color Revolutions’ Cause Apparent Damage to International Stability – Lavrov,
    http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2014/05/26/color-revolutions-upset-global-stability-russian-foreign-minister/. )
    The end result is a radically different reading of modern history, of US and European strategy, their use of force, and US and
    European goals and actions from any issued in the West and in prior Russian literature.
    Western experts can argue the degree to which this represents Russian anger over the West’s reaction to events in Ukraine,
    Russian efforts at persuading developing nations and Asia to back Russia in a reassertion of its strategic role in the world,
    propaganda to cloak the character Russian actions in the Ukraine and near abroad, an effort to justify Russian action in Syria, very
    real Russian concern over US and European actions that have destabilized key MENA and Central Asian states, and a host of other
    possible motives and intentions.

    This doesn’t really answer your question (I really don’t know), but beliefs can make their own reality, and if Russia views every act to support one of these countries as a strategic move to box Russia in, it forces the game to go in a particular direction.

  394. Thanks.
    I think the CIA has improved their skills since the 1950s and now are using NGOs and friendly billionaires among other tools.
    I think both Russia and China have been perceiving an effort to encircle them. Not without some justice.
    LOOK

  395. Thanks.
    I think the CIA has improved their skills since the 1950s and now are using NGOs and friendly billionaires among other tools.
    I think both Russia and China have been perceiving an effort to encircle them. Not without some justice.
    LOOK

  396. Thanks.
    I think the CIA has improved their skills since the 1950s and now are using NGOs and friendly billionaires among other tools.
    I think both Russia and China have been perceiving an effort to encircle them. Not without some justice.
    LOOK

  397. Whether or not it is actually true, nations that believe to be the victim of encirclement can get pretty dangerous (cf. Germany before 1914). Ungentlemanly acts are a common result of that.
    As an aside, I’d say that some in the US are furious that Canada is so unsuitable as a bogeyman to be used to create such a sense of encirclement in the general population. Not that they cease trying.

  398. Whether or not it is actually true, nations that believe to be the victim of encirclement can get pretty dangerous (cf. Germany before 1914). Ungentlemanly acts are a common result of that.
    As an aside, I’d say that some in the US are furious that Canada is so unsuitable as a bogeyman to be used to create such a sense of encirclement in the general population. Not that they cease trying.

  399. Whether or not it is actually true, nations that believe to be the victim of encirclement can get pretty dangerous (cf. Germany before 1914). Ungentlemanly acts are a common result of that.
    As an aside, I’d say that some in the US are furious that Canada is so unsuitable as a bogeyman to be used to create such a sense of encirclement in the general population. Not that they cease trying.

  400. I’m going to steal a bit from Ian Welsh:
    “They don’t see themselves as in the wrong in Ukraine. They don’t see themselves as weak. They don’t like being threatened. They don’t like Europe and the US acting as if they have the “right” to punish them for looking after their own interests in ways the West rarely hesitates to
    The Ukrainian mess is one of those situations where I can’t see the stakes for the West being worth the game. What is West getting from this? For Russia, on the other hand, the Ukraine in the West’s pocket is a spear ready to be thrust home at Moscow. It destroys strategic depth. And Ukraine was ruled by Russia for centuries, this is their sphere of influence. This is important to them, the stakes are high.
    Why does the West keep acti9ng as if the stakes are high for it? Is destroying Russia’s ability to defend itself from NATO that important? Is keeping Russia from having strategic depth that important?
    If it is, and it’s hard to see anything else in Ukraine worth fighting over (any natural resources would be sold to the West if they wanted them); then it’s hard not to conclude that Russians should be alarmed, because all the West gets out of this confrontation which is important, is Russian weakness.”
    I don’t watch mainstream outlets but from what I hear they’ve been treating Putin as the hitler of the week. It doesn’t seem like a good idea to me. But maybe this is an especially auspicious time for a nuclear power confrontation I don’t know.

  401. I’m going to steal a bit from Ian Welsh:
    “They don’t see themselves as in the wrong in Ukraine. They don’t see themselves as weak. They don’t like being threatened. They don’t like Europe and the US acting as if they have the “right” to punish them for looking after their own interests in ways the West rarely hesitates to
    The Ukrainian mess is one of those situations where I can’t see the stakes for the West being worth the game. What is West getting from this? For Russia, on the other hand, the Ukraine in the West’s pocket is a spear ready to be thrust home at Moscow. It destroys strategic depth. And Ukraine was ruled by Russia for centuries, this is their sphere of influence. This is important to them, the stakes are high.
    Why does the West keep acti9ng as if the stakes are high for it? Is destroying Russia’s ability to defend itself from NATO that important? Is keeping Russia from having strategic depth that important?
    If it is, and it’s hard to see anything else in Ukraine worth fighting over (any natural resources would be sold to the West if they wanted them); then it’s hard not to conclude that Russians should be alarmed, because all the West gets out of this confrontation which is important, is Russian weakness.”
    I don’t watch mainstream outlets but from what I hear they’ve been treating Putin as the hitler of the week. It doesn’t seem like a good idea to me. But maybe this is an especially auspicious time for a nuclear power confrontation I don’t know.

  402. I’m going to steal a bit from Ian Welsh:
    “They don’t see themselves as in the wrong in Ukraine. They don’t see themselves as weak. They don’t like being threatened. They don’t like Europe and the US acting as if they have the “right” to punish them for looking after their own interests in ways the West rarely hesitates to
    The Ukrainian mess is one of those situations where I can’t see the stakes for the West being worth the game. What is West getting from this? For Russia, on the other hand, the Ukraine in the West’s pocket is a spear ready to be thrust home at Moscow. It destroys strategic depth. And Ukraine was ruled by Russia for centuries, this is their sphere of influence. This is important to them, the stakes are high.
    Why does the West keep acti9ng as if the stakes are high for it? Is destroying Russia’s ability to defend itself from NATO that important? Is keeping Russia from having strategic depth that important?
    If it is, and it’s hard to see anything else in Ukraine worth fighting over (any natural resources would be sold to the West if they wanted them); then it’s hard not to conclude that Russians should be alarmed, because all the West gets out of this confrontation which is important, is Russian weakness.”
    I don’t watch mainstream outlets but from what I hear they’ve been treating Putin as the hitler of the week. It doesn’t seem like a good idea to me. But maybe this is an especially auspicious time for a nuclear power confrontation I don’t know.

  403. I’m having a problem seeing Ukraine, even as a member of NATO (which is not even under consideration, as far as I know), as any kind of strategic threat to Russia. First, and most obvious, nobody is going to make a land invasion of Russia — because everybody is real clear that Russia’s response would be to go nuclear the instant that looked to be even maybe successful. Second, if NATO were interested in such an invasion (and assuming all nuclear weapons magically disappear), Ukraine isn’t a particularly good path to take. Far, far faster and easier to roll tanks from Poland across Belarus, or just straight from Latvia, to Moscow than to try to get there from Ukraine.
    No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily. And even that isn’t much, since economic weapons (e.g. cutting off gas) would still be available.

  404. I’m having a problem seeing Ukraine, even as a member of NATO (which is not even under consideration, as far as I know), as any kind of strategic threat to Russia. First, and most obvious, nobody is going to make a land invasion of Russia — because everybody is real clear that Russia’s response would be to go nuclear the instant that looked to be even maybe successful. Second, if NATO were interested in such an invasion (and assuming all nuclear weapons magically disappear), Ukraine isn’t a particularly good path to take. Far, far faster and easier to roll tanks from Poland across Belarus, or just straight from Latvia, to Moscow than to try to get there from Ukraine.
    No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily. And even that isn’t much, since economic weapons (e.g. cutting off gas) would still be available.

  405. I’m having a problem seeing Ukraine, even as a member of NATO (which is not even under consideration, as far as I know), as any kind of strategic threat to Russia. First, and most obvious, nobody is going to make a land invasion of Russia — because everybody is real clear that Russia’s response would be to go nuclear the instant that looked to be even maybe successful. Second, if NATO were interested in such an invasion (and assuming all nuclear weapons magically disappear), Ukraine isn’t a particularly good path to take. Far, far faster and easier to roll tanks from Poland across Belarus, or just straight from Latvia, to Moscow than to try to get there from Ukraine.
    No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily. And even that isn’t much, since economic weapons (e.g. cutting off gas) would still be available.

  406. I think strategy has little to do with Russian feelings there. It’s more like an acquired reflex build up over a millenium. Imagine the US having suffered a dozen genocidal invasions from Canada and Mexico during its history now being confronted with both countries signing a strategic alliance with China combined with Chinese leaders openly promoting the PNCC (Project for a New Chinese Century). It would not even need talks about the right of self-determination of the Latino population in the Southern States to bring Washington close to going to war as fast as possible. Remember how the hawks reacted when South America began to elect leftists governments a few years ago? Who openly supported military coups against those same governments? The Russians have their own Monroe Doctrine and with a wee bit more justification. Hegemons have a notorious tendency towards digestive-rear-exit-ism, esp. when they feel their grip weaken.

  407. I think strategy has little to do with Russian feelings there. It’s more like an acquired reflex build up over a millenium. Imagine the US having suffered a dozen genocidal invasions from Canada and Mexico during its history now being confronted with both countries signing a strategic alliance with China combined with Chinese leaders openly promoting the PNCC (Project for a New Chinese Century). It would not even need talks about the right of self-determination of the Latino population in the Southern States to bring Washington close to going to war as fast as possible. Remember how the hawks reacted when South America began to elect leftists governments a few years ago? Who openly supported military coups against those same governments? The Russians have their own Monroe Doctrine and with a wee bit more justification. Hegemons have a notorious tendency towards digestive-rear-exit-ism, esp. when they feel their grip weaken.

  408. I think strategy has little to do with Russian feelings there. It’s more like an acquired reflex build up over a millenium. Imagine the US having suffered a dozen genocidal invasions from Canada and Mexico during its history now being confronted with both countries signing a strategic alliance with China combined with Chinese leaders openly promoting the PNCC (Project for a New Chinese Century). It would not even need talks about the right of self-determination of the Latino population in the Southern States to bring Washington close to going to war as fast as possible. Remember how the hawks reacted when South America began to elect leftists governments a few years ago? Who openly supported military coups against those same governments? The Russians have their own Monroe Doctrine and with a wee bit more justification. Hegemons have a notorious tendency towards digestive-rear-exit-ism, esp. when they feel their grip weaken.

  409. I tend to agree with Hartmut here and I think you can see it in their reaction to any kind of internal dissent. Like this, or when you think that members of Pussy Riot were in prison for almost 2 years total and were only released as a sop to protesters of Sochi and Russia’s laws against homosexuality. I’m trying to think of an incident where Putin and the Russian goverment made a compromise, but I can’t.

  410. I tend to agree with Hartmut here and I think you can see it in their reaction to any kind of internal dissent. Like this, or when you think that members of Pussy Riot were in prison for almost 2 years total and were only released as a sop to protesters of Sochi and Russia’s laws against homosexuality. I’m trying to think of an incident where Putin and the Russian goverment made a compromise, but I can’t.

  411. I tend to agree with Hartmut here and I think you can see it in their reaction to any kind of internal dissent. Like this, or when you think that members of Pussy Riot were in prison for almost 2 years total and were only released as a sop to protesters of Sochi and Russia’s laws against homosexuality. I’m trying to think of an incident where Putin and the Russian goverment made a compromise, but I can’t.

  412. Moscow has styled itself as the third (and last) Rome for centuries, long before some [expletive deleted] came up with that ‘shining city on a hill’ [another expletive] for the US. Chosen People Complex 😉

  413. Moscow has styled itself as the third (and last) Rome for centuries, long before some [expletive deleted] came up with that ‘shining city on a hill’ [another expletive] for the US. Chosen People Complex 😉

  414. Moscow has styled itself as the third (and last) Rome for centuries, long before some [expletive deleted] came up with that ‘shining city on a hill’ [another expletive] for the US. Chosen People Complex 😉

  415. i can think of one or two other countries that fancied themselves to be the pinnacle of human civilization, at least for a while.

  416. i can think of one or two other countries that fancied themselves to be the pinnacle of human civilization, at least for a while.

  417. i can think of one or two other countries that fancied themselves to be the pinnacle of human civilization, at least for a while.

  418. “No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily.”
    Hartmut beat me to it–reality has little to do with these things and the American government (as opposed to individuals) has zero credibility on this, given our own willingness to support murderous regimes and terrorist organizations when some tiny Latin American country posed a great threat to our very survival. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas, whose mighty military machine was set to roll northwards at any moment.

  419. “No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily.”
    Hartmut beat me to it–reality has little to do with these things and the American government (as opposed to individuals) has zero credibility on this, given our own willingness to support murderous regimes and terrorist organizations when some tiny Latin American country posed a great threat to our very survival. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas, whose mighty military machine was set to roll northwards at any moment.

  420. “No, the only real strategic loss to Russia would be the loss of the ability to bully a neighbor quite so easily.”
    Hartmut beat me to it–reality has little to do with these things and the American government (as opposed to individuals) has zero credibility on this, given our own willingness to support murderous regimes and terrorist organizations when some tiny Latin American country posed a great threat to our very survival. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas, whose mighty military machine was set to roll northwards at any moment.

  421. And yeah, my impression is that US was fine with a military coup in Honduras and back in the early 00’s the liberal editors at the NYT initially endorsed a coup against Chavez in Venezuela. Not that Chavez was some great prize as a leader, but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown? Force of habit, I guess.

  422. And yeah, my impression is that US was fine with a military coup in Honduras and back in the early 00’s the liberal editors at the NYT initially endorsed a coup against Chavez in Venezuela. Not that Chavez was some great prize as a leader, but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown? Force of habit, I guess.

  423. And yeah, my impression is that US was fine with a military coup in Honduras and back in the early 00’s the liberal editors at the NYT initially endorsed a coup against Chavez in Venezuela. Not that Chavez was some great prize as a leader, but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown? Force of habit, I guess.

  424. “…but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown?”
    Oil.

  425. “…but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown?”
    Oil.

  426. “…but what exactly was the interest in the Manhattan offices of an allegedly great newspaper in seeing some loudmouthed lefty overthrown?”
    Oil.

  427. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas
    Don’t forget the dire threat posed by the island of Grenada.
    Tourist destination or Soviet forward operating base?
    We report, you decide.

  428. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas
    Don’t forget the dire threat posed by the island of Grenada.
    Tourist destination or Soviet forward operating base?
    We report, you decide.

  429. I am, of course, referring to the Sandinistas
    Don’t forget the dire threat posed by the island of Grenada.
    Tourist destination or Soviet forward operating base?
    We report, you decide.

  430. wj,
    There are these things in international relations called “spheres of influence”. Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”
    And the answer is, “That’s the way it is.” I hear tell that wise man, Walter Cronkite, uttered that very exact line all the time.
    Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us…..so no big deal, right?
    Perhaps you have forgotten what all that fuss about a few missiles in Cuba was about.

  431. wj,
    There are these things in international relations called “spheres of influence”. Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”
    And the answer is, “That’s the way it is.” I hear tell that wise man, Walter Cronkite, uttered that very exact line all the time.
    Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us…..so no big deal, right?
    Perhaps you have forgotten what all that fuss about a few missiles in Cuba was about.

  432. wj,
    There are these things in international relations called “spheres of influence”. Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”
    And the answer is, “That’s the way it is.” I hear tell that wise man, Walter Cronkite, uttered that very exact line all the time.
    Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us…..so no big deal, right?
    Perhaps you have forgotten what all that fuss about a few missiles in Cuba was about.

  433. // Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”//
    This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history” and do a bunch of other empire building stuff, some of which was laid out in the PNAC’s seminal manifesto, Rebuilding America’s Defenses.
    Now that Russia is becoming strong and influential again and is forming alliances with Iran and China, the empire set in DC and all of the stupid think tanks (which is just about everyone in DC and in a think tank) are having a fit. They are re-starting the cold war. The Ukraine is a strategic chess piece on Russia’s doorstep.
    This isn’t just a disagreement. This is war, albeit a low grade proxy one for now.
    The Russians know this and you should know it.

  434. // Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”//
    This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history” and do a bunch of other empire building stuff, some of which was laid out in the PNAC’s seminal manifesto, Rebuilding America’s Defenses.
    Now that Russia is becoming strong and influential again and is forming alliances with Iran and China, the empire set in DC and all of the stupid think tanks (which is just about everyone in DC and in a think tank) are having a fit. They are re-starting the cold war. The Ukraine is a strategic chess piece on Russia’s doorstep.
    This isn’t just a disagreement. This is war, albeit a low grade proxy one for now.
    The Russians know this and you should know it.

  435. // Nations get into disagreements constantly about them. Now you have rightfully asked, “What’s the big deal? We’re not going to invade Russia. How could they not know this?”//
    This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history” and do a bunch of other empire building stuff, some of which was laid out in the PNAC’s seminal manifesto, Rebuilding America’s Defenses.
    Now that Russia is becoming strong and influential again and is forming alliances with Iran and China, the empire set in DC and all of the stupid think tanks (which is just about everyone in DC and in a think tank) are having a fit. They are re-starting the cold war. The Ukraine is a strategic chess piece on Russia’s doorstep.
    This isn’t just a disagreement. This is war, albeit a low grade proxy one for now.
    The Russians know this and you should know it.

  436. Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us [emphasis added]
    And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada. Whereas Russia has invaded (and held) most of Eastern Eurpoe as colonies within living memory. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada; whereas Putin says exactly that about Ukraine (and Georgia and the rest of the ex-USSR).
    In short, there’s no prospect of either Canada or Mexico signing a defense treaty with Russia, China, or anybody else. Because however irritating they find us as a neighbor, invasion isn’t one of their concerns. But Russias’s neighbors have a very real concern about being invaded, based on not only relatively recent history. They also the immeidate experience of Georgia and Ukraine being invaded. How would they not be looking for any defensive help they can find?
    P.S. As it happens, I do remember the fuss over Russian missiles in Cuba, having lived thru it. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics. We didn’t like it, and a lot of politicians did argue for attacking Cuba. But not, note, our government. And we weren’t massing tanks and transports in Florida for a mass invasion.

  437. Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us [emphasis added]
    And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada. Whereas Russia has invaded (and held) most of Eastern Eurpoe as colonies within living memory. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada; whereas Putin says exactly that about Ukraine (and Georgia and the rest of the ex-USSR).
    In short, there’s no prospect of either Canada or Mexico signing a defense treaty with Russia, China, or anybody else. Because however irritating they find us as a neighbor, invasion isn’t one of their concerns. But Russias’s neighbors have a very real concern about being invaded, based on not only relatively recent history. They also the immeidate experience of Georgia and Ukraine being invaded. How would they not be looking for any defensive help they can find?
    P.S. As it happens, I do remember the fuss over Russian missiles in Cuba, having lived thru it. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics. We didn’t like it, and a lot of politicians did argue for attacking Cuba. But not, note, our government. And we weren’t massing tanks and transports in Florida for a mass invasion.

  438. Now if Mexico and Canada entered into a binding military and/or defensive treaty alliance with Russia and/or the People’s Rep. of China, would you be concerned or not? After all, we have no plans to invade either country, and there is no realistic scenario whereby they will invade us [emphasis added]
    And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada. Whereas Russia has invaded (and held) most of Eastern Eurpoe as colonies within living memory. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada; whereas Putin says exactly that about Ukraine (and Georgia and the rest of the ex-USSR).
    In short, there’s no prospect of either Canada or Mexico signing a defense treaty with Russia, China, or anybody else. Because however irritating they find us as a neighbor, invasion isn’t one of their concerns. But Russias’s neighbors have a very real concern about being invaded, based on not only relatively recent history. They also the immeidate experience of Georgia and Ukraine being invaded. How would they not be looking for any defensive help they can find?
    P.S. As it happens, I do remember the fuss over Russian missiles in Cuba, having lived thru it. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics. We didn’t like it, and a lot of politicians did argue for attacking Cuba. But not, note, our government. And we weren’t massing tanks and transports in Florida for a mass invasion.

  439. The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history”
    The goal was full spectrum global dominance, where “full spectrum” means military, economic, and political.
    Globally.
    The emergence of even regional rivals was not to be tolerated.
    And no I’m not making it up, you can go read their stuff for yourself.
    IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.
    You’d think something like this had never been tried before.

  440. The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history”
    The goal was full spectrum global dominance, where “full spectrum” means military, economic, and political.
    Globally.
    The emergence of even regional rivals was not to be tolerated.
    And no I’m not making it up, you can go read their stuff for yourself.
    IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.
    You’d think something like this had never been tried before.

  441. The whole PNAC/neocon thing was based on the idea that with the fall of the Soviet Union, the US had emerged as the sole super power in the world and that we could, and should, use that status to “change history”
    The goal was full spectrum global dominance, where “full spectrum” means military, economic, and political.
    Globally.
    The emergence of even regional rivals was not to be tolerated.
    And no I’m not making it up, you can go read their stuff for yourself.
    IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.
    You’d think something like this had never been tried before.

  442. I haven’t followed the Ukraine issue closely, but it is my impression that there’s a lot of Westerners deeply interested in “pro-Western” leaders governing there. That’s a phrase commonly used in the NYT to describe people all over the world, unless, of course, the person isn’t “pro-Western”. However, I’ve never bothered to keep straight who is who and which person is corrupt and the names of the factions and who is a fascist and who is only accused of being a fascist and so on. So I’m not participating much in this discussion because of my ignorance, but it does strike me as naive to think that there isn’t a power struggle going on in the Ukraine that might involve us vs. Putin. Without in any way meaning this to be a defense of Putin. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”

  443. I haven’t followed the Ukraine issue closely, but it is my impression that there’s a lot of Westerners deeply interested in “pro-Western” leaders governing there. That’s a phrase commonly used in the NYT to describe people all over the world, unless, of course, the person isn’t “pro-Western”. However, I’ve never bothered to keep straight who is who and which person is corrupt and the names of the factions and who is a fascist and who is only accused of being a fascist and so on. So I’m not participating much in this discussion because of my ignorance, but it does strike me as naive to think that there isn’t a power struggle going on in the Ukraine that might involve us vs. Putin. Without in any way meaning this to be a defense of Putin. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”

  444. I haven’t followed the Ukraine issue closely, but it is my impression that there’s a lot of Westerners deeply interested in “pro-Western” leaders governing there. That’s a phrase commonly used in the NYT to describe people all over the world, unless, of course, the person isn’t “pro-Western”. However, I’ve never bothered to keep straight who is who and which person is corrupt and the names of the factions and who is a fascist and who is only accused of being a fascist and so on. So I’m not participating much in this discussion because of my ignorance, but it does strike me as naive to think that there isn’t a power struggle going on in the Ukraine that might involve us vs. Putin. Without in any way meaning this to be a defense of Putin. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”

  445. IO, I wouldn’t go so far as to claim I am exceptionally well informed, but I don’t think I am “remarkably ignorant” either. No doubt there are those who are still enraptured (as they were during the previous administration) with the idea of America as the sole superpower remaking the world. And they have, IMHO, a disgusting enthusiasm for starting wars, early and often. But they aren’t the ones running this administation. (And every poll I’ve seen suggests that they aren’t all that likely to be running the next one either. Although that admittedly isn’t a certainty.)
    I would also note that, while China is definitely becoming more powerful, Russia shows every sign of being on the down-hill road. Look at the state of their military. Look at their economy (outside the oil sector). Look even at their demographics. They are now a regional power (albeit one with nuclear weapons), but they aren’t a world power and aren’t likely to become one again any time soon. As a regional power, they can (and do) threaten their neighbors. But threaten the US? Only to the extent that they can nuke us if their existance is threatened — but not for anything less.

  446. IO, I wouldn’t go so far as to claim I am exceptionally well informed, but I don’t think I am “remarkably ignorant” either. No doubt there are those who are still enraptured (as they were during the previous administration) with the idea of America as the sole superpower remaking the world. And they have, IMHO, a disgusting enthusiasm for starting wars, early and often. But they aren’t the ones running this administation. (And every poll I’ve seen suggests that they aren’t all that likely to be running the next one either. Although that admittedly isn’t a certainty.)
    I would also note that, while China is definitely becoming more powerful, Russia shows every sign of being on the down-hill road. Look at the state of their military. Look at their economy (outside the oil sector). Look even at their demographics. They are now a regional power (albeit one with nuclear weapons), but they aren’t a world power and aren’t likely to become one again any time soon. As a regional power, they can (and do) threaten their neighbors. But threaten the US? Only to the extent that they can nuke us if their existance is threatened — but not for anything less.

  447. IO, I wouldn’t go so far as to claim I am exceptionally well informed, but I don’t think I am “remarkably ignorant” either. No doubt there are those who are still enraptured (as they were during the previous administration) with the idea of America as the sole superpower remaking the world. And they have, IMHO, a disgusting enthusiasm for starting wars, early and often. But they aren’t the ones running this administation. (And every poll I’ve seen suggests that they aren’t all that likely to be running the next one either. Although that admittedly isn’t a certainty.)
    I would also note that, while China is definitely becoming more powerful, Russia shows every sign of being on the down-hill road. Look at the state of their military. Look at their economy (outside the oil sector). Look even at their demographics. They are now a regional power (albeit one with nuclear weapons), but they aren’t a world power and aren’t likely to become one again any time soon. As a regional power, they can (and do) threaten their neighbors. But threaten the US? Only to the extent that they can nuke us if their existance is threatened — but not for anything less.

  448. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”
    I don’t know about that. The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.

  449. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”
    I don’t know about that. The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.

  450. And that phrase “pro-Western”–I always feel it’s supposed to mean “this person wears a white hat and you should cheer for him or her.”
    I don’t know about that. The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.

  451. This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    It seems to me that you are really trying your best to pick a fight here. The whole point of that paragraph is to set up the rest of the comment, which is a contradiction of that POV.
    As far as trying to reconcile the ideas of the PNAC/neocon clique being a bunch of worthless f&#ers and the fact that the US populace, in the main, can be isolationist in temperament (if you define isolationist as ‘more than willing to meddle, but never really willing to accept the responsibility’), that’s one of those incredible contradictions that makes the US the crazy place it is.
    Shelby Foote (a man with his own contradiction problems) says in Ken Burns The Civil War something like the great genius of the US is its ability to compromise, an ability that was lost in the run up to the Civil War, which is a quote that, at the time, had me nodding my head. However, I now tend to think that the great genius of the US is the ability to make absolute pronouncements on something and then, sometime in the future, be completely oblivious to the fact that such things came out of their mouths. It is that ability of always living in the present and never being bound to a historical past that allows the US to do what it does. Depending on your point of view, this may sound like a good thing or a bad thing, but for me, it is sort of like a similar trait in a good friend: at some point, you realize that if it was changed, the person would be so different that you might not recognize them.
    Something a bit more depressing and less biographical about Foote is here

  452. This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    It seems to me that you are really trying your best to pick a fight here. The whole point of that paragraph is to set up the rest of the comment, which is a contradiction of that POV.
    As far as trying to reconcile the ideas of the PNAC/neocon clique being a bunch of worthless f&#ers and the fact that the US populace, in the main, can be isolationist in temperament (if you define isolationist as ‘more than willing to meddle, but never really willing to accept the responsibility’), that’s one of those incredible contradictions that makes the US the crazy place it is.
    Shelby Foote (a man with his own contradiction problems) says in Ken Burns The Civil War something like the great genius of the US is its ability to compromise, an ability that was lost in the run up to the Civil War, which is a quote that, at the time, had me nodding my head. However, I now tend to think that the great genius of the US is the ability to make absolute pronouncements on something and then, sometime in the future, be completely oblivious to the fact that such things came out of their mouths. It is that ability of always living in the present and never being bound to a historical past that allows the US to do what it does. Depending on your point of view, this may sound like a good thing or a bad thing, but for me, it is sort of like a similar trait in a good friend: at some point, you realize that if it was changed, the person would be so different that you might not recognize them.
    Something a bit more depressing and less biographical about Foote is here

  453. This is a remarkably ignorant comment – sorry, but I can’t see it as anything else or label it more politely.
    It seems to me that you are really trying your best to pick a fight here. The whole point of that paragraph is to set up the rest of the comment, which is a contradiction of that POV.
    As far as trying to reconcile the ideas of the PNAC/neocon clique being a bunch of worthless f&#ers and the fact that the US populace, in the main, can be isolationist in temperament (if you define isolationist as ‘more than willing to meddle, but never really willing to accept the responsibility’), that’s one of those incredible contradictions that makes the US the crazy place it is.
    Shelby Foote (a man with his own contradiction problems) says in Ken Burns The Civil War something like the great genius of the US is its ability to compromise, an ability that was lost in the run up to the Civil War, which is a quote that, at the time, had me nodding my head. However, I now tend to think that the great genius of the US is the ability to make absolute pronouncements on something and then, sometime in the future, be completely oblivious to the fact that such things came out of their mouths. It is that ability of always living in the present and never being bound to a historical past that allows the US to do what it does. Depending on your point of view, this may sound like a good thing or a bad thing, but for me, it is sort of like a similar trait in a good friend: at some point, you realize that if it was changed, the person would be so different that you might not recognize them.
    Something a bit more depressing and less biographical about Foote is here

  454. And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada.
    An observation that is not in any way germane to my point, but if you insist, it has been within the last 100 years that Russia has been invaded twice by Germany with devastating effect.
    Apparently you believe this is something they should just get over.

  455. And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada.
    An observation that is not in any way germane to my point, but if you insist, it has been within the last 100 years that Russia has been invaded twice by Germany with devastating effect.
    Apparently you believe this is something they should just get over.

  456. And there you have the core of the difference. It has been over a century since we mounted a military invasion of Mexico, and two for Canada.
    An observation that is not in any way germane to my point, but if you insist, it has been within the last 100 years that Russia has been invaded twice by Germany with devastating effect.
    Apparently you believe this is something they should just get over.

  457. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics.
    Surely you jest. I recall those days well. Sending exploding cigars and real poison pen letters don’t count, I guess. Hysterical? indeed.
    Every American knows the big bad Bear stories. Practically none of us know the big bad Uncle collection. I should think it would behoove you to actually put yourself in others shoes when it comes to such matters. Can you think like a Latin American leader, or a Soviet Union leader? Can you not see that these nations have “interests” also? Interests that might not exactly mesh with ours? Are you claiming their interests are simply unwarranted, not worthy of a second thought?
    This leads to hegemonic thinking. Such thinking will fail. It always has.

  458. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics.
    Surely you jest. I recall those days well. Sending exploding cigars and real poison pen letters don’t count, I guess. Hysterical? indeed.
    Every American knows the big bad Bear stories. Practically none of us know the big bad Uncle collection. I should think it would behoove you to actually put yourself in others shoes when it comes to such matters. Can you think like a Latin American leader, or a Soviet Union leader? Can you not see that these nations have “interests” also? Interests that might not exactly mesh with ours? Are you claiming their interests are simply unwarranted, not worthy of a second thought?
    This leads to hegemonic thinking. Such thinking will fail. It always has.

  459. But you will note that even then, at the height of Cold War hysteria, Cuba’s relationship with Russia was not seen as cause for hysterics.
    Surely you jest. I recall those days well. Sending exploding cigars and real poison pen letters don’t count, I guess. Hysterical? indeed.
    Every American knows the big bad Bear stories. Practically none of us know the big bad Uncle collection. I should think it would behoove you to actually put yourself in others shoes when it comes to such matters. Can you think like a Latin American leader, or a Soviet Union leader? Can you not see that these nations have “interests” also? Interests that might not exactly mesh with ours? Are you claiming their interests are simply unwarranted, not worthy of a second thought?
    This leads to hegemonic thinking. Such thinking will fail. It always has.

  460. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada
    That’s the point. They pretty much do as we tell them to. Apparently it is beyond reasonable to understand that Russia thinks their smaller neighbors should have a similar relationship with them.
    But no. Instead you argue that it is right and proper that we should encircle Russia with military allies right up to their border, and they should just be delighted at the prospect.
    Remarkable.

  461. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada
    That’s the point. They pretty much do as we tell them to. Apparently it is beyond reasonable to understand that Russia thinks their smaller neighbors should have a similar relationship with them.
    But no. Instead you argue that it is right and proper that we should encircle Russia with military allies right up to their border, and they should just be delighted at the prospect.
    Remarkable.

  462. Also, you don’t hear American politicians lamenting that America no longer runs Mexico or Canada
    That’s the point. They pretty much do as we tell them to. Apparently it is beyond reasonable to understand that Russia thinks their smaller neighbors should have a similar relationship with them.
    But no. Instead you argue that it is right and proper that we should encircle Russia with military allies right up to their border, and they should just be delighted at the prospect.
    Remarkable.

  463. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I haven’t seen that used about the Saudis–in fact, the only time I’ve ever seen the Saudis praised is when Prince someone or other criticized Arafat for what he did or did not do at Camp David. The Saudis are our allies, but I don’t see them called pro-Western, but maybe I’ve forgotten or missed it.
    In general, when the NYT identifies a politician in some country as “pro-Western”, it’s clear that we’re supposed to cheer. But do I have links or proof? Nope. It’s just the impression I’ve built up over the years about the NYT.

  464. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I haven’t seen that used about the Saudis–in fact, the only time I’ve ever seen the Saudis praised is when Prince someone or other criticized Arafat for what he did or did not do at Camp David. The Saudis are our allies, but I don’t see them called pro-Western, but maybe I’ve forgotten or missed it.
    In general, when the NYT identifies a politician in some country as “pro-Western”, it’s clear that we’re supposed to cheer. But do I have links or proof? Nope. It’s just the impression I’ve built up over the years about the NYT.

  465. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I haven’t seen that used about the Saudis–in fact, the only time I’ve ever seen the Saudis praised is when Prince someone or other criticized Arafat for what he did or did not do at Camp David. The Saudis are our allies, but I don’t see them called pro-Western, but maybe I’ve forgotten or missed it.
    In general, when the NYT identifies a politician in some country as “pro-Western”, it’s clear that we’re supposed to cheer. But do I have links or proof? Nope. It’s just the impression I’ve built up over the years about the NYT.

  466. “IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.”
    Yes. Thank you.
    And my issue with wj is that s/he doesn’t seem to appreciate that that mind set is still prominent in US foreign policy. Sheesh, just eat some Tumms and hold your nose and watch Fox or CNN for a couple of hours. Retired brass, congress critters from both sides of the aisle, and the “reporters” are all jumping on the bandwagon – the band wagon that leads straight to hell; hell meaning war.
    I’m not trying to pick a fight, Liberal japonicas, I’m just astounded, truly, that someone could fail to notice this. And I delve into because I believe that if Americans thought that they, or their’s, would have to be the ones getting shot at and sh!tting between combat boots that most likely more of us would be asking “what the F–K?” of our unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine or arming non-existant moderate Islamic rebels to fight Assad (when in truth all moderates, if there ever were any, have been absorbed into Al Qaeda and ISIS).
    For christsakes, an investigation hasn’t even begun, but everyone knows that the “thug” Putin is somehow responsible for downing the Malaysian jet. A UN shelter in Gaza is hit by arty and women and children killed, but we don’t know who did it. It would risible if it weren’t so tragic.
    Both sides of the aisle. Both.

  467. “IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.”
    Yes. Thank you.
    And my issue with wj is that s/he doesn’t seem to appreciate that that mind set is still prominent in US foreign policy. Sheesh, just eat some Tumms and hold your nose and watch Fox or CNN for a couple of hours. Retired brass, congress critters from both sides of the aisle, and the “reporters” are all jumping on the bandwagon – the band wagon that leads straight to hell; hell meaning war.
    I’m not trying to pick a fight, Liberal japonicas, I’m just astounded, truly, that someone could fail to notice this. And I delve into because I believe that if Americans thought that they, or their’s, would have to be the ones getting shot at and sh!tting between combat boots that most likely more of us would be asking “what the F–K?” of our unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine or arming non-existant moderate Islamic rebels to fight Assad (when in truth all moderates, if there ever were any, have been absorbed into Al Qaeda and ISIS).
    For christsakes, an investigation hasn’t even begun, but everyone knows that the “thug” Putin is somehow responsible for downing the Malaysian jet. A UN shelter in Gaza is hit by arty and women and children killed, but we don’t know who did it. It would risible if it weren’t so tragic.
    Both sides of the aisle. Both.

  468. “IMO these guys were, and are, insane. At a minimum, their project was insane. Hubristic, arrogant, historically naive, and plain old nucking futs.”
    Yes. Thank you.
    And my issue with wj is that s/he doesn’t seem to appreciate that that mind set is still prominent in US foreign policy. Sheesh, just eat some Tumms and hold your nose and watch Fox or CNN for a couple of hours. Retired brass, congress critters from both sides of the aisle, and the “reporters” are all jumping on the bandwagon – the band wagon that leads straight to hell; hell meaning war.
    I’m not trying to pick a fight, Liberal japonicas, I’m just astounded, truly, that someone could fail to notice this. And I delve into because I believe that if Americans thought that they, or their’s, would have to be the ones getting shot at and sh!tting between combat boots that most likely more of us would be asking “what the F–K?” of our unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine or arming non-existant moderate Islamic rebels to fight Assad (when in truth all moderates, if there ever were any, have been absorbed into Al Qaeda and ISIS).
    For christsakes, an investigation hasn’t even begun, but everyone knows that the “thug” Putin is somehow responsible for downing the Malaysian jet. A UN shelter in Gaza is hit by arty and women and children killed, but we don’t know who did it. It would risible if it weren’t so tragic.
    Both sides of the aisle. Both.

  469. And my issue with wj is that…
    You do know that wj didn’t write the part you quoted? I realize that it can be easy to get comments confused, and since my eye surgery, I can see how easy it is to do, so I’m not trying to be the tone police. But since I’m one of the folks who has the keys to this place, if there is a mess in aisle 4, I could be on call to clean it up, so if you could watch as you weave through them, I’d appreciate it.

  470. And my issue with wj is that…
    You do know that wj didn’t write the part you quoted? I realize that it can be easy to get comments confused, and since my eye surgery, I can see how easy it is to do, so I’m not trying to be the tone police. But since I’m one of the folks who has the keys to this place, if there is a mess in aisle 4, I could be on call to clean it up, so if you could watch as you weave through them, I’d appreciate it.

  471. And my issue with wj is that…
    You do know that wj didn’t write the part you quoted? I realize that it can be easy to get comments confused, and since my eye surgery, I can see how easy it is to do, so I’m not trying to be the tone police. But since I’m one of the folks who has the keys to this place, if there is a mess in aisle 4, I could be on call to clean it up, so if you could watch as you weave through them, I’d appreciate it.

  472. I agree with “both”.
    Political money, corporate and foreign, is fungible and opaque. Especially for corrupt American politicians, especially for those of one particular party who require big-time funding to advance their domestic agenda of f*cking the poor.
    However, one can believe that both Putin (a Russian conservative) and Netanyahu (an Israeli conservative) have screwed the pooch, the murderers, without having any empathy for Hamas or the Ukraine government.
    The only thing Netanyahu hasn’t done to endear himself with the insane, so-called American (not), conservative (I’d be happy to get a new word for the murderous infestation of the Republican Party, the most dangerous organization on the face of the Earth, but the decent ones won’t give it up; yeah, Obama is an effectual moderate — big f*cking deal) is take his shirt off, Putin-wise.
    Look at this murdering c@cks@cker:
    http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2014/07/theyre-children-part-xxii.html
    He’s aiming at children with a high-powered military weapon to become President. Of this country. Because there are so many vermin filth in this country whose murderous forebears weren’t butchered by Lincoln, in a probable oversight.
    Perry’s people are in Dealey Plaza in Dallas as we speak wishing they could get a piece of Jack Kennedy, another moderate Democrat, who cut their taxes, the filth.
    They can’t wait for Obama’s limo to be a convertible.
    It would be fuuny and just if a sniper, during Perry’s photo-op (he needs to get his shirt off too, the dumsh*t Putinesque), had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    An advance for America. A downpayment on saving the country.

  473. I agree with “both”.
    Political money, corporate and foreign, is fungible and opaque. Especially for corrupt American politicians, especially for those of one particular party who require big-time funding to advance their domestic agenda of f*cking the poor.
    However, one can believe that both Putin (a Russian conservative) and Netanyahu (an Israeli conservative) have screwed the pooch, the murderers, without having any empathy for Hamas or the Ukraine government.
    The only thing Netanyahu hasn’t done to endear himself with the insane, so-called American (not), conservative (I’d be happy to get a new word for the murderous infestation of the Republican Party, the most dangerous organization on the face of the Earth, but the decent ones won’t give it up; yeah, Obama is an effectual moderate — big f*cking deal) is take his shirt off, Putin-wise.
    Look at this murdering c@cks@cker:
    http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2014/07/theyre-children-part-xxii.html
    He’s aiming at children with a high-powered military weapon to become President. Of this country. Because there are so many vermin filth in this country whose murderous forebears weren’t butchered by Lincoln, in a probable oversight.
    Perry’s people are in Dealey Plaza in Dallas as we speak wishing they could get a piece of Jack Kennedy, another moderate Democrat, who cut their taxes, the filth.
    They can’t wait for Obama’s limo to be a convertible.
    It would be fuuny and just if a sniper, during Perry’s photo-op (he needs to get his shirt off too, the dumsh*t Putinesque), had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    An advance for America. A downpayment on saving the country.

  474. I agree with “both”.
    Political money, corporate and foreign, is fungible and opaque. Especially for corrupt American politicians, especially for those of one particular party who require big-time funding to advance their domestic agenda of f*cking the poor.
    However, one can believe that both Putin (a Russian conservative) and Netanyahu (an Israeli conservative) have screwed the pooch, the murderers, without having any empathy for Hamas or the Ukraine government.
    The only thing Netanyahu hasn’t done to endear himself with the insane, so-called American (not), conservative (I’d be happy to get a new word for the murderous infestation of the Republican Party, the most dangerous organization on the face of the Earth, but the decent ones won’t give it up; yeah, Obama is an effectual moderate — big f*cking deal) is take his shirt off, Putin-wise.
    Look at this murdering c@cks@cker:
    http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2014/07/theyre-children-part-xxii.html
    He’s aiming at children with a high-powered military weapon to become President. Of this country. Because there are so many vermin filth in this country whose murderous forebears weren’t butchered by Lincoln, in a probable oversight.
    Perry’s people are in Dealey Plaza in Dallas as we speak wishing they could get a piece of Jack Kennedy, another moderate Democrat, who cut their taxes, the filth.
    They can’t wait for Obama’s limo to be a convertible.
    It would be fuuny and just if a sniper, during Perry’s photo-op (he needs to get his shirt off too, the dumsh*t Putinesque), had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    An advance for America. A downpayment on saving the country.

  475. IO, I know that mindset is present in a lot of the commentariate. (LJ, I think he was using that quote as an illustration, not trying to attribute it to me.) I just noted that it doesn’t seem to be driving the actual actions of the current administration.
    As I noted, it isn’t certain by any means that the next administration won’t revert. But for the moment, we seem to be avoiding an “unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine”. It’s infuriating the neocons, and they make a lot of noise, but we seem to be refraining. Or are you seeing the US government (not individual Congressmen, who are frequently loose cannons, but the actual government) doing something that is particularly bellicose, that I have just managed to miss?

  476. IO, I know that mindset is present in a lot of the commentariate. (LJ, I think he was using that quote as an illustration, not trying to attribute it to me.) I just noted that it doesn’t seem to be driving the actual actions of the current administration.
    As I noted, it isn’t certain by any means that the next administration won’t revert. But for the moment, we seem to be avoiding an “unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine”. It’s infuriating the neocons, and they make a lot of noise, but we seem to be refraining. Or are you seeing the US government (not individual Congressmen, who are frequently loose cannons, but the actual government) doing something that is particularly bellicose, that I have just managed to miss?

  477. IO, I know that mindset is present in a lot of the commentariate. (LJ, I think he was using that quote as an illustration, not trying to attribute it to me.) I just noted that it doesn’t seem to be driving the actual actions of the current administration.
    As I noted, it isn’t certain by any means that the next administration won’t revert. But for the moment, we seem to be avoiding an “unstatesmanly bellicose imperial approach to issues like the Ukraine”. It’s infuriating the neocons, and they make a lot of noise, but we seem to be refraining. Or are you seeing the US government (not individual Congressmen, who are frequently loose cannons, but the actual government) doing something that is particularly bellicose, that I have just managed to miss?

  478. lj, Shelby Foote was Walker Percy’s best friend and the one thing I didn’t care for in Percy was his seeming reticence and coyness about the subject of slavery and the Southern “experience”, compared to his full-throated opposition to Abortion, for example.
    Yes, he condemned slavery and the treatment of blacks since, but it was sidelong, clever, a drawling sort of obfuscation, something that should be understood in context.
    Foote also failed to convince Percy to read Proust, in my book, Percy’s failure.

  479. lj, Shelby Foote was Walker Percy’s best friend and the one thing I didn’t care for in Percy was his seeming reticence and coyness about the subject of slavery and the Southern “experience”, compared to his full-throated opposition to Abortion, for example.
    Yes, he condemned slavery and the treatment of blacks since, but it was sidelong, clever, a drawling sort of obfuscation, something that should be understood in context.
    Foote also failed to convince Percy to read Proust, in my book, Percy’s failure.

  480. lj, Shelby Foote was Walker Percy’s best friend and the one thing I didn’t care for in Percy was his seeming reticence and coyness about the subject of slavery and the Southern “experience”, compared to his full-throated opposition to Abortion, for example.
    Yes, he condemned slavery and the treatment of blacks since, but it was sidelong, clever, a drawling sort of obfuscation, something that should be understood in context.
    Foote also failed to convince Percy to read Proust, in my book, Percy’s failure.

  481. Also, Southerner’s, even smart ones like Foote, raised on “Ivanhoe” and the European romantic martial (Scot’s-Irish, Germanic horsesh*t) tradition and you end up with gas in the trench’s in WWI, scarved Confederate adjutants with impeccable, slicked mustaches and honor bulging in their britches, Mel Gibson, and George W. Bush smirking and adjusting the rolled-up argyll socks down his pants.

  482. Also, Southerner’s, even smart ones like Foote, raised on “Ivanhoe” and the European romantic martial (Scot’s-Irish, Germanic horsesh*t) tradition and you end up with gas in the trench’s in WWI, scarved Confederate adjutants with impeccable, slicked mustaches and honor bulging in their britches, Mel Gibson, and George W. Bush smirking and adjusting the rolled-up argyll socks down his pants.

  483. Also, Southerner’s, even smart ones like Foote, raised on “Ivanhoe” and the European romantic martial (Scot’s-Irish, Germanic horsesh*t) tradition and you end up with gas in the trench’s in WWI, scarved Confederate adjutants with impeccable, slicked mustaches and honor bulging in their britches, Mel Gibson, and George W. Bush smirking and adjusting the rolled-up argyll socks down his pants.

  484. “Both sides of the aisle. Both.”
    I half agree. That is, in the big picture, yes, Democrats too can be warmongers. But for the most part, they are less likely to be warmongers than Republicans though Rand Paul might change that, not that I would even consider voting for Rand Paul. An election campaign between Paul and Clinton would be ideologically confusing though.
    On Israel/Palestine, both parties are stupid and bigoted. One can’t blame this solely on the Republicans or the Christian evangelicals. The Obama Administration is marginally less bigoted, but only by comparison. Obama said that peace talks should be based on the
    67 lines, with adjustments, and Harry Reid sided with Netanyahu–
    link

  485. “Both sides of the aisle. Both.”
    I half agree. That is, in the big picture, yes, Democrats too can be warmongers. But for the most part, they are less likely to be warmongers than Republicans though Rand Paul might change that, not that I would even consider voting for Rand Paul. An election campaign between Paul and Clinton would be ideologically confusing though.
    On Israel/Palestine, both parties are stupid and bigoted. One can’t blame this solely on the Republicans or the Christian evangelicals. The Obama Administration is marginally less bigoted, but only by comparison. Obama said that peace talks should be based on the
    67 lines, with adjustments, and Harry Reid sided with Netanyahu–
    link

  486. “Both sides of the aisle. Both.”
    I half agree. That is, in the big picture, yes, Democrats too can be warmongers. But for the most part, they are less likely to be warmongers than Republicans though Rand Paul might change that, not that I would even consider voting for Rand Paul. An election campaign between Paul and Clinton would be ideologically confusing though.
    On Israel/Palestine, both parties are stupid and bigoted. One can’t blame this solely on the Republicans or the Christian evangelicals. The Obama Administration is marginally less bigoted, but only by comparison. Obama said that peace talks should be based on the
    67 lines, with adjustments, and Harry Reid sided with Netanyahu–
    link

  487. Great point about Percy and Foote. Of course, the Count knows, but maybe some others don’t, Percy’s father, committed suicide, so he was placed in the care of Will Percy, who introduced Shelby Foote to Walker Percy.
    He was also in charge of the relief efforts in the 1927 Mississippi flood
    With the Mississippi flood waters covering the entire Delta, the Greenville levee was the only high, safe place for thousands of refugees. The vast majority of the people stranded on the levee were African Americans, and they were desperate for food, potable drinking water and shelter. Will, raised by his father to care for African Americans and the less fortunate out of a sense of noblesse oblige and family honor, believed the only decent course of action was to evacuate the refugees.
    His decision could not have been more at odds with the views of Greenville’s planters. Petrified that once the refugees left, they’d never return, angry planters went straight to Will’s father and denounced the decision to evacuate. Will’s father sided with the planters over his son and put a stop to the evacuation.
    From that day forth, Will Percy’s leadership of the flood relief committee faltered. African Americans were virtually imprisoned on the levee and forced to work at gunpoint. Many refugees believed their treatment was comparable to slavery. Investigations would later show that the conditions in the Greenville camp were far and away the worst of any refugee site. On August 31, four months after the flood overran Greenville, Will resigned from his post. He sailed for Japan the very next day.

  488. Great point about Percy and Foote. Of course, the Count knows, but maybe some others don’t, Percy’s father, committed suicide, so he was placed in the care of Will Percy, who introduced Shelby Foote to Walker Percy.
    He was also in charge of the relief efforts in the 1927 Mississippi flood
    With the Mississippi flood waters covering the entire Delta, the Greenville levee was the only high, safe place for thousands of refugees. The vast majority of the people stranded on the levee were African Americans, and they were desperate for food, potable drinking water and shelter. Will, raised by his father to care for African Americans and the less fortunate out of a sense of noblesse oblige and family honor, believed the only decent course of action was to evacuate the refugees.
    His decision could not have been more at odds with the views of Greenville’s planters. Petrified that once the refugees left, they’d never return, angry planters went straight to Will’s father and denounced the decision to evacuate. Will’s father sided with the planters over his son and put a stop to the evacuation.
    From that day forth, Will Percy’s leadership of the flood relief committee faltered. African Americans were virtually imprisoned on the levee and forced to work at gunpoint. Many refugees believed their treatment was comparable to slavery. Investigations would later show that the conditions in the Greenville camp were far and away the worst of any refugee site. On August 31, four months after the flood overran Greenville, Will resigned from his post. He sailed for Japan the very next day.

  489. Great point about Percy and Foote. Of course, the Count knows, but maybe some others don’t, Percy’s father, committed suicide, so he was placed in the care of Will Percy, who introduced Shelby Foote to Walker Percy.
    He was also in charge of the relief efforts in the 1927 Mississippi flood
    With the Mississippi flood waters covering the entire Delta, the Greenville levee was the only high, safe place for thousands of refugees. The vast majority of the people stranded on the levee were African Americans, and they were desperate for food, potable drinking water and shelter. Will, raised by his father to care for African Americans and the less fortunate out of a sense of noblesse oblige and family honor, believed the only decent course of action was to evacuate the refugees.
    His decision could not have been more at odds with the views of Greenville’s planters. Petrified that once the refugees left, they’d never return, angry planters went straight to Will’s father and denounced the decision to evacuate. Will’s father sided with the planters over his son and put a stop to the evacuation.
    From that day forth, Will Percy’s leadership of the flood relief committee faltered. African Americans were virtually imprisoned on the levee and forced to work at gunpoint. Many refugees believed their treatment was comparable to slavery. Investigations would later show that the conditions in the Greenville camp were far and away the worst of any refugee site. On August 31, four months after the flood overran Greenville, Will resigned from his post. He sailed for Japan the very next day.

  490. had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    For the record, this qualifies as “out of bounds”.

  491. had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    For the record, this qualifies as “out of bounds”.

  492. had fired two shots, one through Perry’s eye and one through the rotor of that helicopter and the thing and crashed into and killed the Dealey Plaza f*ckwads.
    For the record, this qualifies as “out of bounds”.

  493. ……..though Rand Paul might change that
    There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.
    He does have a fanciful concern about U.S. citizens domiciled within the borders of the U.S. getting droned, an event that, absent domestic rebellion, is highly unlikely.
    He is somewhat squishy on droning aliens, however, no matter where they happen to reside.
    He and his fan base characterize this view as “principled”.

  494. ……..though Rand Paul might change that
    There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.
    He does have a fanciful concern about U.S. citizens domiciled within the borders of the U.S. getting droned, an event that, absent domestic rebellion, is highly unlikely.
    He is somewhat squishy on droning aliens, however, no matter where they happen to reside.
    He and his fan base characterize this view as “principled”.

  495. ……..though Rand Paul might change that
    There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.
    He does have a fanciful concern about U.S. citizens domiciled within the borders of the U.S. getting droned, an event that, absent domestic rebellion, is highly unlikely.
    He is somewhat squishy on droning aliens, however, no matter where they happen to reside.
    He and his fan base characterize this view as “principled”.

  496. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I have googled the following fragment: “administration praises Saudis”. Hits: “about” 80,700,000.
    Admittedly, this is highly unscientific, but just glance over the first couple of pages of entries to get a flavor…our official admiration for them borders on the effusive.

  497. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I have googled the following fragment: “administration praises Saudis”. Hits: “about” 80,700,000.
    Admittedly, this is highly unscientific, but just glance over the first couple of pages of entries to get a flavor…our official admiration for them borders on the effusive.

  498. “The Saidi government is called “pro-Western,” but nobody I know of thinks they are white hat guys we should cheer for. Just for one example.”
    I have googled the following fragment: “administration praises Saudis”. Hits: “about” 80,700,000.
    Admittedly, this is highly unscientific, but just glance over the first couple of pages of entries to get a flavor…our official admiration for them borders on the effusive.

  499. Will do.
    There is really no sense in crossing that rhetorical line on the moderate to left side of the political spectrum because one finds oneself among mostly decent, sensible people who find the behavior distasteful, as they should.
    Unlike on too much of the increasingly threatening Right, Republican side of the spectrum in recent decades, where such pronouncements, joking or otherwise about using military weaponry to snuff out one’s political enemies, can easily lead to praise, notoriety and even stardom and might result in an invite onto FOX News to jam with a former Republican Presidential (and perhaps again) and so-so base guitarist and discuss instituting radical government policies, or perhaps an email or two from like-minded and armed political operatives, say, Redstate frontpagers, inviting one to show up at political opponents’ events and wave weapons around, or perhaps a summons by a deadbeat rancher to drive across the country with heavy weaponry to threaten to kill those who try to carry out sensible government policies, or maybe even inquiries from the NRA or the Tea Party regarding one’s availability to run for political office at the State, or perchance, the Federal level, where one could even traipse around with one’s weapons in the hallowed halls of government and maybe forget and leave them loaded in the bathrooms, or at least an invite to speak at the Republican National Convention.
    No, the career upsides of being a threatening whackjob who invokes violence against the American people are quite choice on the Right and find enthusiasm among double-digit percentages of their base, whereas those on the Left, to their credit, try to tamp down such behavior.
    You’d think someone on Rick Perry’s staff, or maybe an old friend of his, or one of his few remaining sensible political supporters, or maybe even his lovely wife might take him aside and say, “You know, Rick, this constant, opportunistic display of the weapons killers might use you seem to turn to at every chance (now pointing them at children from the door of a helicopter) gives the impression that you might be hankering to use bloodshed against your enemies, and that doesn’t seem quite kosher in a Governor of a State, not to mention a Presidential candidate, and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.
    But no, out of basic human decency, we have to live with these people pointing guns at us, and even passing laws to let them do it over coffee and burritos, perchance six or seven vodka tonics.

  500. Will do.
    There is really no sense in crossing that rhetorical line on the moderate to left side of the political spectrum because one finds oneself among mostly decent, sensible people who find the behavior distasteful, as they should.
    Unlike on too much of the increasingly threatening Right, Republican side of the spectrum in recent decades, where such pronouncements, joking or otherwise about using military weaponry to snuff out one’s political enemies, can easily lead to praise, notoriety and even stardom and might result in an invite onto FOX News to jam with a former Republican Presidential (and perhaps again) and so-so base guitarist and discuss instituting radical government policies, or perhaps an email or two from like-minded and armed political operatives, say, Redstate frontpagers, inviting one to show up at political opponents’ events and wave weapons around, or perhaps a summons by a deadbeat rancher to drive across the country with heavy weaponry to threaten to kill those who try to carry out sensible government policies, or maybe even inquiries from the NRA or the Tea Party regarding one’s availability to run for political office at the State, or perchance, the Federal level, where one could even traipse around with one’s weapons in the hallowed halls of government and maybe forget and leave them loaded in the bathrooms, or at least an invite to speak at the Republican National Convention.
    No, the career upsides of being a threatening whackjob who invokes violence against the American people are quite choice on the Right and find enthusiasm among double-digit percentages of their base, whereas those on the Left, to their credit, try to tamp down such behavior.
    You’d think someone on Rick Perry’s staff, or maybe an old friend of his, or one of his few remaining sensible political supporters, or maybe even his lovely wife might take him aside and say, “You know, Rick, this constant, opportunistic display of the weapons killers might use you seem to turn to at every chance (now pointing them at children from the door of a helicopter) gives the impression that you might be hankering to use bloodshed against your enemies, and that doesn’t seem quite kosher in a Governor of a State, not to mention a Presidential candidate, and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.
    But no, out of basic human decency, we have to live with these people pointing guns at us, and even passing laws to let them do it over coffee and burritos, perchance six or seven vodka tonics.

  501. Will do.
    There is really no sense in crossing that rhetorical line on the moderate to left side of the political spectrum because one finds oneself among mostly decent, sensible people who find the behavior distasteful, as they should.
    Unlike on too much of the increasingly threatening Right, Republican side of the spectrum in recent decades, where such pronouncements, joking or otherwise about using military weaponry to snuff out one’s political enemies, can easily lead to praise, notoriety and even stardom and might result in an invite onto FOX News to jam with a former Republican Presidential (and perhaps again) and so-so base guitarist and discuss instituting radical government policies, or perhaps an email or two from like-minded and armed political operatives, say, Redstate frontpagers, inviting one to show up at political opponents’ events and wave weapons around, or perhaps a summons by a deadbeat rancher to drive across the country with heavy weaponry to threaten to kill those who try to carry out sensible government policies, or maybe even inquiries from the NRA or the Tea Party regarding one’s availability to run for political office at the State, or perchance, the Federal level, where one could even traipse around with one’s weapons in the hallowed halls of government and maybe forget and leave them loaded in the bathrooms, or at least an invite to speak at the Republican National Convention.
    No, the career upsides of being a threatening whackjob who invokes violence against the American people are quite choice on the Right and find enthusiasm among double-digit percentages of their base, whereas those on the Left, to their credit, try to tamp down such behavior.
    You’d think someone on Rick Perry’s staff, or maybe an old friend of his, or one of his few remaining sensible political supporters, or maybe even his lovely wife might take him aside and say, “You know, Rick, this constant, opportunistic display of the weapons killers might use you seem to turn to at every chance (now pointing them at children from the door of a helicopter) gives the impression that you might be hankering to use bloodshed against your enemies, and that doesn’t seem quite kosher in a Governor of a State, not to mention a Presidential candidate, and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.
    But no, out of basic human decency, we have to live with these people pointing guns at us, and even passing laws to let them do it over coffee and burritos, perchance six or seven vodka tonics.

  502. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    That could be. I had the impression he was somewhat critical of our drone assassination policy and imperialist wars, but since I had not the slightest interest in ever voting for him I never seriously checked it out. My info, such as it is, is secondhand.

  503. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    That could be. I had the impression he was somewhat critical of our drone assassination policy and imperialist wars, but since I had not the slightest interest in ever voting for him I never seriously checked it out. My info, such as it is, is secondhand.

  504. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    That could be. I had the impression he was somewhat critical of our drone assassination policy and imperialist wars, but since I had not the slightest interest in ever voting for him I never seriously checked it out. My info, such as it is, is secondhand.

  505. “…and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.”
    Backwards ballcaps are worn by baseball catchers, and others who behave as if they had taken a fastball to the head.

  506. “…and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.”
    Backwards ballcaps are worn by baseball catchers, and others who behave as if they had taken a fastball to the head.

  507. “…and by the way, lose the backwards baseball cap too because it makes you look like a 15-year old simp.”
    Backwards ballcaps are worn by baseball catchers, and others who behave as if they had taken a fastball to the head.

  508. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    If by that you mean his preferred balance between warlike approaches to foreign policy and diplomacy, that might be correct. But given his isolationist tendencies, the absolute inclination to go to war would seem to be noticably lower than the norm.

  509. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    If by that you mean his preferred balance between warlike approaches to foreign policy and diplomacy, that might be correct. But given his isolationist tendencies, the absolute inclination to go to war would seem to be noticably lower than the norm.

  510. “There is no evidence I am aware of that Rand Paul is any less warlike than your standard issue Republican.”
    If by that you mean his preferred balance between warlike approaches to foreign policy and diplomacy, that might be correct. But given his isolationist tendencies, the absolute inclination to go to war would seem to be noticably lower than the norm.

  511. “you make very reasonable points, count.”
    Words I never expected to see here at ObWi.
    And from Russell, no less.
    Suddenly I am transported back to the 1960s and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (the book) or King of Hearts (the movie) where the really sane ones are locked up in lunatic asylums.
    Groovy, man.

  512. “you make very reasonable points, count.”
    Words I never expected to see here at ObWi.
    And from Russell, no less.
    Suddenly I am transported back to the 1960s and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (the book) or King of Hearts (the movie) where the really sane ones are locked up in lunatic asylums.
    Groovy, man.

  513. “you make very reasonable points, count.”
    Words I never expected to see here at ObWi.
    And from Russell, no less.
    Suddenly I am transported back to the 1960s and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (the book) or King of Hearts (the movie) where the really sane ones are locked up in lunatic asylums.
    Groovy, man.

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