James Riley
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2015
- Messages
- 1,820
..bites us all de vez en cuando.
Then there is "You're the shit" which is the opposite of "You're shit." When given two choices, pick the third.
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..bites us all de vez en cuando.
James,
I am curious as to how you feel radical Islam, ISIS/ISIL, Sharia States should be characterized and confronted. Certainly, not all Muslims are anything more than peaceful people trying to live their lives, but there is one common denominator in it all. A relatively small group has been exporting violence all over the world for 40 years in the name of Islam (the pace of which has accelerated in the last 15 years), but a much larger portion has been oppressing parts of N. Africa, Central Asia, SW & SE Asia in the name of the same religion.
I feel like failing to acknowledge the role their religion plays is ignorance, because having had the opportunity to meet some of these young men, I can tell you they feel like religion is a huge factor.
I think this is where the vast majority of Americans, and most citizens living in Western Democracies, miss the boat. What makes the religion of Islam dangerous is that their religious leaders are also their political leaders and there isn't any separation between the two. In the Western liberal democracies there is a clear separation between the leaders of the "Church" and the political leaders. The legal system, the government institutions and social welfare systems are not ran by the local priests, rabbis or Imam's in Western Democracies. In the ME and throughout much of the Muslim world the Mosque is not only the center of worship but also the Courts system, the Welfare provider and the Political power of the area. So to many Muslims the government is the Mosque and Mosque is the government and that is dangerous for all the reasons our Founding Fathers were so careful to not make an "official" religion, even though many were devout. It is a mistake to apply our Western Idea of separation to church and state to what is normal in the Muslim world. Of course what makes them a brutal ideology is that all power is centralized with the Mosque and that is easily corrupted in to making people believe they are doing the will of Allah/God because the guy telling them that is the Political power, the Judge and Jury and their spiritual leader. Without understanding that it is difficult to combat the radicals in an informed and intelligent way.
We should leave the ME and let them have it. Everything we touch there turns to shit. Our brave men and women who have fought, died and bled for that part of world should be remembered for doing their duty and accomplishing their mission in the face of inept and poorly thought out political strategies but we should say that their sacrifice is enough and move out of the ME. It doesn't matter if it was GWB's invasion of Iraq or Obama's war on Libya, both turned into a shit storm of bad people grabbing power and using Islam to do justify it and making Mosque the center of power. It is the reason young Muslim men from around the world flock to be the ME to be Jihadist, they buy into the idea that Islam is the political and religious power that needs to be fought for and if they die doing it they are martyrs, There isn't a down side in their minds.
So be careful when you talk about Islam and whether or not it is an ideology and not a religion. In much of the world they are the same thing.
Nemont
That is a good question. The word has a fairly specific meaning, that is, one taking part in a war against non-Muslims. The meaning of "Radical" is unclear. We also have a problem in America of not understanding the religion so it helps us keep the issues separate.Just curios why Jihadi or Jihadist is accept but Radical Muslim/Islamist is not?
That is the problem with being politically correct, most people end up just faking it in spite of their real feelings. Also the demand for everyone to be PC allows everyone in the country to get hurt feelings over words instead of deeds. Being PC often leads us to having fake conversations over fake issues while the elephant in the room is trashing the place. Often being PC obscures what the issues really are and gives the politicians an easy way out of making difficult choices.
Nemont
They must think we're such a joke.
We argue over what to call them, while they want/plot to rape your wife and your 8 year old child, and sever your head with a machete, screaming 'Aloha Snackbar'
http://www.cc.com/video-clips/1xg42...jon-stewart-wait--whose-side-are-we-on-again-
When we need a comedian to explain our policies in the ME and do it so accurately you know we are in a situation that doesn't require us being PC or worrying about whether one is or is not a "radical". We have made our efforts there a complete cluster without any apparent coherent strategy for anything that looks like winning the war.
Nemont
http://www.cc.com/video-clips/1xg42...jon-stewart-wait--whose-side-are-we-on-again-
When we need a comedian to explain our policies in the ME and do it so accurately you know we are in a situation that doesn't require us being PC or worrying about whether one is or is not a "radical". We have made our efforts there a complete cluster without any apparent coherent strategy for anything that looks like winning the war.
Nemont
Just my opinion, but of all the States in the USA, Texas is without a doubt 1st on the list for which I want no advice on anything from any of their politicians on how Montana should do things. So shut up Rick Perry, your advice is not wanted or needed.
It's even more nuanced than that. I went back to graduate school in 2005 (electrical engineering) and probably 20% of the grad students got their undergraduate degrees in Iran. They were extremely well educated, motivated, and sophisticated people. All of them remained in he U.S. after graduation because they don't like the leader, who is mostly supported only by the rural people.http://www.cc.com/video-clips/1xg42...jon-stewart-wait--whose-side-are-we-on-again-
When we need a comedian to explain our policies in the ME and do it so accurately you know we are in a situation that doesn't require us being PC or worrying about whether one is or is not a "radical". We have made our efforts there a complete cluster without any apparent coherent strategy for anything that looks like winning the war.
Nemont
It's even more nuanced than that. I went back to graduate school in 2005 (electrical engineering) and probably 20% of the grad students got their undergraduate degrees in Iran. They were extremely well educated, motivated, and sophisticated people. All of them remained in he U.S. after graduation because they don't like the leader, who is mostly supported only by the rural people.
The company I'm currently contracting with has a staff of 15, 3 of them are from Iran, and we have several from China, South Korea, and of course India. All those are recently out of school. One segment that is missing is the US born white guy (we have one US born Mexican in a tech position). There's myself and three other people representing the US, but we are very senior people. The other three US people are in Tech positions with minimal education. In other words, the young brains of the company are all foreign born. The other companies I've contracted with are similar. Many of these people are Muslim but have no beef with the US.
On top of that our customers are from Japan and Korea. (Imagine if we still were hung up on Japan being the enemy rather than real people with evil leadership.)
So that is the modern reality, we are already heavily integrated with the rest of the world, including Muslims. The US isn't an island where our policy can be kicking ass of everyone who doesn't share our views. We represent about 4% of the world's population.
I see there is already a video "destroying" Obama's belief that we shouldn't bring religion into the battle. The analogy was that we would have lost if we had declared war on the Blitzkrieg and not Germany. Then he goes on to attack Islam directly, at which point I quite watching. Well that is silly for starters because we are arguing over whether or not to make a big deal out of their religion, not who we are declaring war on. Plus "Germany" at the time meant their government and military. A better analogy would be declaring war on all "radical" Germans, then having a vocal segment of our populace promote an attitude that Germans are fundamentally violent people who need to be exterminated. For the analogy to be accurate, these Germans would comprise 1/4 of the world's population including some of our most brilliant scientists (like Einstein). Had we done that with the global reach of today's media we would have been crushed.
The second falsehood was an implication that the radical Muslims could take over the US in 30-40 years and we would turn into a Sharia law governed society. I hear this fear so much. These guys are barely past setting their underwear on fire in their attacks against us. There are two ways American can lose it's freedom: 1) we become so overly concerned with a foreign threat that the government concentrates so much power that we become a tyranny, (read Madison on this subject) 2) we convince the 1.6 billion Muslims that we are at war with them and they defeat us directly in battle. His type of rhetoric furthers us down both of those paths.
On the other hand, there is a school of thought that we never should have called this a war, or called anyone enemy combatants. You only go to war with States and we elevate criminals by naming them as anything other than their individual, given birth name or "criminal" or "fugitive" etc.
So, imagine we treated 9/11 as a criminal act and pursued the individuals responsible for planning, financing and running that murder. Imagine when we had the support of the world. Imagine if we had the patience to wait and doggedly pursue the criminals like we do in all other cases. Imagine if a State, like Afghanistan was treated like a State harboring criminals and, if necessary, we went to war with the State after giving them and the world notice. No nation-building etc. Just go after the criminals and only violate the State's sovereignty to the extent necessary to accomplish the mission. And we don't decide what constitutes a "failed State." We just do our business and leave.
I think of it like Jesse James: He may have viewed himself as a soldier, a warrior for the Confederacy. However, the war was over, we treated him like a common POS, pursued him doggedly and got one of his own to shoot him in the back of the head. We did not allege the Civil War was still on. We did not treat him like an enemy. Had we done so, imagine how many more men from the former Confederacy would have joined him and continued an insurgency! Speaking of that, think of the KKK. These people were not legitimized as an insurgency. They didn't follow James. They were all a bunch of Fking losers and criminals.
So, we might not have 5,000 dead Americans, 35,000 wounded, no implosion of the Middle East, no unfunded multi-trillion dollar debts, no recession, (and for you haters, no Obama), etc.
In short, if you treat a POS like a State, he may become one: an Islamic State. And yes, there were voices in the wilderness who were screaming this at the top of their lungs immediately after 9/11. But they were lost in the din and we were all S on by the corporate media which silenced them, along with those who shouted them down as "un-American" and "un-Patriotic" and "failing to support the troops" etc. They got virtually no air time, save the internet backwaters.
Unfortunately, Americans felt good about beating the drums, wrapping themselves in the flag and getting their war on. That might be understandable but they were manipulated by men who saw dollar signs. We should have had calm, cool, collected, patient men and women who know the proper temperature of a dish of vengeance.
So here we are, all because we decided to legitimize a criminal organization. Having a "cause" does not make you a State or a soldier. The SLA had a cause. Think of all the militant groups in the U.S. that have/had a cause. We treat them as criminals.
Just some thoughts from back on 9/12.
Perhaps the audience isn't white, middle-aged men, but a broader, internatonal audience that has more nuance in how they talk about Muslim extremism.
How would you feel if the President were to talk about Radical Christianity that bombs abortion clinics, burns mosques or black churches or shoots up Planned Parenthood clinics? My guess is the christian community would be nervous about all being tied in to those actions.
The difference being we call them radical extremists why the double tongue here? A spade is a spade.
It's even more nuanced than that. I went back to graduate school in 2005 (electrical engineering) and probably 20% of the grad students got their undergraduate degrees in Iran. They were extremely well educated, motivated, and sophisticated people. All of them remained in he U.S. after graduation because they don't like the leader, who is mostly supported only by the rural people.
The company I'm currently contracting with has a staff of 15, 3 of them are from Iran, and we have several from China, South Korea, and of course India. All those are recently out of school. One segment that is missing is the US born white guy (we have one US born Mexican in a tech position). There's myself and three other people representing the US, but we are very senior people. The other three US people are in Tech positions with minimal education. In other words, the young brains of the company are all foreign born. The other companies I've contracted with are similar. Many of these people are Muslim but have no beef with the US.
On top of that our customers are from Japan and Korea. (Imagine if we still were hung up on Japan being the enemy rather than real people with evil leadership.)
So that is the modern reality, we are already heavily integrated with the rest of the world, including Muslims. The US isn't an island where our policy can be kicking ass of everyone who doesn't share our views. We represent about 4% of the world's population.
I see there is already a video "destroying" Obama's belief that we shouldn't bring religion into the battle. The analogy was that we would have lost if we had declared war on the Blitzkrieg and not Germany. Then he goes on to attack Islam directly, at which point I quite watching. Well that is silly for starters because we are arguing over whether or not to make a big deal out of their religion, not who we are declaring war on. Plus "Germany" at the time meant their government and military. A better analogy would be declaring war on all "radical" Germans, then having a vocal segment of our populace promote an attitude that Germans are fundamentally violent people who need to be exterminated. For the analogy to be accurate, these Germans would comprise 1/4 of the world's population including some of our most brilliant scientists (like Einstein). Had we done that with the global reach of today's media we would have been crushed.
The second falsehood was an implication that the radical Muslims could take over the US in 30-40 years and we would turn into a Sharia law governed society. I hear this fear so much. These guys are barely past setting their underwear on fire in their attacks against us. There are two ways American can lose it's freedom: 1) we become so overly concerned with a foreign threat that the government concentrates so much power that we become a tyranny, (read Madison on this subject) 2) we convince the 1.6 billion Muslims that we are at war with them and they defeat us directly in battle. His type of rhetoric furthers us down both of those paths.