Welcome to the GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum forums.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Post New Thread Reply

Register GFY Rules Calendar Mark Forums Read
Go Back   GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum > >
Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed.

 
Thread Tools
Old 07-10-2005, 11:44 AM   #51
woj
<&(©¿©)&>
 
woj's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Chicago
Posts: 47,882
50.....,.....
__________________
Custom Software Development, email: woj#at#wojfun#.#com to discuss details or skype: wojl2000 or gchat: wojfun or telegram: wojl2000
Affiliate program tools: Hosted Galleries Manager Banner Manager Video Manager
Wordpress Affiliate Plugin Pic/Movie of the Day Fansign Generator Zip Manager
woj is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:45 AM   #52
theking
Nice Kitty
 
theking's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The good old USA!!!
Posts: 21,053
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickholio
Where 'reasonable cause' is, by the admission of the authors of the law itself, and extremely loose and can be ipso facto justified by whatever 'evidence' is collected.

Additionally, the federal government already HAD the ability to investigate terrorists under the Foreign Intelligence Surveilance Act. The USA PATRIOT extended that to any person, suspect of any crime, at any time, with minimal requirements. Everyday citizens can now be treated with the same disregard as foreign nationals with respects to search and seizure.

And if that isn't enough, how about section 215? The FBI can use Section 215 to demand ?any tangible thing,? including books, letters, diaries, library records, medical and psychiatric records, financial information, membership lists of religious institutions, and even -- as Attorney General Ashcroft himself conceded in testimony before Congress -- genetic information. Again, this is based on the loosest of requirements, with no requirement to disclose, and again not limited to people under investigation for terrorist ties.

How can you reasonably argue that rights have not be diminished by this terrible peice of legislature ram-rodded through by ashcroft on a 7 day schedule?
Reasonable cause is still required and it is not "every day citizens" that will be investigated...it is criminals/"terrorists" Every day citizens do not provide "reason cause" to be investigated for criminal/"terrorist" activities.
__________________
When you're running down my country hoss...you're walking on the fighting side of me!

FOR THE LYING LOWLIFE POSTING AS PATHFINDER...https://gfy.com/fucking-around-and-pr...athfinder.html
theking is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:47 AM   #53
rickholio
Confirmed User
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Nor'easterland
Posts: 1,914
Quote:
Originally Posted by bmb
*** wrong the arab lifted the 'o' from the hindus
These people disagree. It is, admittedly, a potentially biased source... but I've seen no counterclaim to the contrary. Citation?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bmb
*** I could set up coke smuggling ring from south America. so could you. I could not build the empire state building. a criminal enterprise is not the same this as an actual enterprise. it is much easer to destroy then it is to build
al-Jazeera is an international news organization. al-Arabiya is as well. And perhaps you should visit dubai before you claim that arabs don't know engineering... a great many foundations of modern engineering were perfected by the arabs after sweeping across the byzantine lands in the late stages of the holy roman empire. Remember that the caliphate represented a storehouse of knowledge and wisdom unrivaled by all other cultures on the planet at one point (arguably... the chinese were doing pretty good too, but were fairly isolated and relentlessly harassed by mongols).

You're on a losing track claiming that arabs are behind the times in anything other than religious grounds, and those claims can only reasonably be made about extremist islamics, not moderates.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bdb
**** there is a reason I'm a photographer and not a politician however a 'walk away' would be a real good start to solving the problem. their leadership has stolen all the money and now points the finger at the USA and the west in general so they don't get it in the ass .. . and the arab leadership does finance the terrorism. every plot has a Saudi in the mix somewhere, our real good buddies, the Saudis. .
This may piss off the leftist orthodoxy, but now that the US is there, it'd better stay there. The only thing keeping that area from degenerating into a post-yugoslavia style civil war is that they'd rather keep shooting at the in-country bucketheads. Once there's nothing in the way of them killing each other, the whole area, and I mean the *WHOLE* area, will be sucked into a massive pan-arabic sectarian conflict. Syria and saudi arabia are already sending in wahabbi and sunni partisans, iran is sending in shi'a, afghanistan obviously has had people running back and forth considering their growing abilities in insurgent, asymmetric warfare.

When the iran/iraq war started, gas prices when ballistic... and that was when only 2 players were engaged in a local conflict. Imagine the devastation on the world economy if the entire opec region collapsed into open revolt and civil war.

That, imo, was what the senior Bush was trying to avoid... keep Saddam in as a beaten puppet state that at least maintained the status quo and kept the spice flowing. Now the stage is being set to engage in a panarabic battle of ideology and the rest of the world is the ones going to be fuct unless there's a serious increase in manpower to keep a lid on it.
__________________
~
rickholio is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:54 AM   #54
theking
Nice Kitty
 
theking's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The good old USA!!!
Posts: 21,053
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickholio
Where 'reasonable cause' is, by the admission of the authors of the law itself, and extremely loose and can be ipso facto justified by whatever 'evidence' is collected.

Additionally, the federal government already HAD the ability to investigate terrorists under the Foreign Intelligence Surveilance Act. The USA PATRIOT extended that to any person, suspect of any crime, at any time, with minimal requirements. Everyday citizens can now be treated with the same disregard as foreign nationals with respects to search and seizure.

And if that isn't enough, how about section 215? The FBI can use Section 215 to demand ?any tangible thing,? including books, letters, diaries, library records, medical and psychiatric records, financial information, membership lists of religious institutions, and even -- as Attorney General Ashcroft himself conceded in testimony before Congress -- genetic information. Again, this is based on the loosest of requirements, with no requirement to disclose, and again not limited to people under investigation for terrorist ties.

How can you reasonably argue that rights have not be diminished by this terrible peice of legislature ram-rodded through by ashcroft on a 7 day schedule?
BTW...most of the "extraordinary" parts of the Patriot Act had "Sunset" clauses. Just recently the Sentate Judicial Committee held hearings on the Patriot Act and said "Sunset" clauses. I watched the entireity of the hearings on C-Span.

The head of the CIA...FBI...and the Attorney General were vigorously interrogated about the Patriot Act. I found all of them to be forth coming in their answers...including Attorney General Gonzales. I saw Attorney General Ashcroft when he was before the Senate Committees and he hedged his answers. Attorney General Gonzales did not.

It is immaterial...now...that the Patriot Act was ram-rodded through by the previous Congress...as it has now been fully veted before the current Congress.
__________________
When you're running down my country hoss...you're walking on the fighting side of me!

FOR THE LYING LOWLIFE POSTING AS PATHFINDER...https://gfy.com/fucking-around-and-pr...athfinder.html
theking is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:59 AM   #55
rickholio
Confirmed User
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Nor'easterland
Posts: 1,914
Quote:
Originally Posted by theking
Reasonable cause is still required and it is not "every day citizens" that will be investigated...it is criminals/"terrorists" Every day citizens do not provide "reason cause" to be investigated for criminal/"terrorist" activities.
I suspect you wouldn't admit to loss of rights unless there was a cop with a baton and a flashlight searching your lower intestine for evidence. Even then I suspect you'd try to rationalize it.

"Reasonable cause" has been in the past a basis as slim as being a person who 'fits the description of a suspect' to be eligible for immediate personal search. Would you like to be worked up on the basis of looking like a suspected criminal?

If you took a car for a test drive that was later used in a drive-by and your fingerprints are on it, would that be okay for people to poke through your medical history?

Should hanging out with a group of people unhappy about the current administration, or marching in a public protest, be cause to have a friendly federal agent go through your medicine cabinet and toolchest when you're at work, because you're a suspected insurgent?

The simple fact is, prior to USA PATRIOT cops could only search for what they had on the warrant, and it had to be exercised with your knowledge unless you were a foreign national suspected of espionage or terroristm. Now, they can look for whatever, whenever, not telling you shit until someone feels like it, with the only barrier a limp-wristed 'probable cause' standing in the way.

Moving up a step, check out sections 216 and 220. Now they don't even need to prove probable cause in proximity to where you ARE to be snooped on. You could live in San Diego and have some judge in Des Moines rubberstamp the go-ahead. A double-dunk curtailment of personal AND states' rights.

Terrible idea, terrible law, terrible consequences.
__________________
~
rickholio is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:02 PM   #56
Code_Havoc
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 221
Quote:
Originally Posted by Icon
I C your point to an extent - But American(13 colonies) ships fired on British vessels, attempted to invade what is now Canada, .....

Isn't a rebel more like an "Insurgent"? Trying to repell invading forces?

BUSH INC. strikes sheer terror everytime they open their mouth - Terrorists?

I know this seems like semantics, but what things are labelled indicates how they are percieved.

Like I said, it comes down a lot to personal believes and opinions and is a very fine line. I think tactics should also play a part in it. Many 'terrorists' hide from the person they are attacking. Where as a rebel, army or alone, is willing to get up into the other persons face to get the job done. When the 13 colonies rebelled, they openly told the British government to get their asses outta America. When they didn't, they brought out the guns and said 'get out, or we drive you'. Which is far drifferent from saying 'leave me alone or I'm going to go blow up a shopping mall'. Now nothing says the Founding Fathers would have done the same thing had they rebelled today, since in the 1700's it was pretty to blow up a bus.

And about rebel ships firing on British ships, if I remember correctly, and I could be wrong, they only fired on military ships.
Code_Havoc is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:09 PM   #57
theking
Nice Kitty
 
theking's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The good old USA!!!
Posts: 21,053
Quote:
Originally Posted by theking
BTW...most of the "extraordinary" parts of the Patriot Act had "Sunset" clauses. Just recently the Sentate Judicial Committee held hearings on the Patriot Act and said "Sunset" clauses. I watched the entireity of the hearings on C-Span.

The head of the CIA...FBI...and the Attorney General were vigorously interrogated about the Patriot Act. I found all of them to be forth coming in their answers...including Attorney General Gonzales. I saw Attorney General Ashcroft when he was before the Senate Committees and he hedged his answers. Attorney General Gonzales did not.

It is immaterial...now...that the Patriot Act was ram-rodded through by the previous Congress...as it has now been fully veted before the current Congress.
BTW...I do not know if any or all of the "Sunset" clauses were allowed to set and I am not sure if the Congress has even voted on it at this point...but what ever has been done or will be done...to repeat the Patriot Act has now been fully veted before the current Congress.

You also are not allowing for the fact that the Supreme Court ultimately decides what laws are constitutional and what laws are not. The Supreme Court has already ruled against the Justice Department in more than one instance of the appication of certain parts of the Patriot Act and or kicked it back down to a lower court. Attorney General Ashcroft was not pleased with the lower court decisions and the Sumpreme Court decision.

Point being...checks and balances are alive and well.
__________________
When you're running down my country hoss...you're walking on the fighting side of me!

FOR THE LYING LOWLIFE POSTING AS PATHFINDER...https://gfy.com/fucking-around-and-pr...athfinder.html

Last edited by theking; 07-10-2005 at 12:10 PM..
theking is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:13 PM   #58
rickholio
Confirmed User
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Nor'easterland
Posts: 1,914
Quote:
Originally Posted by theking
BTW...most of the "extraordinary" parts of the Patriot Act had "Sunset" clauses. Just recently the Sentate Judicial Committee held hearings on the Patriot Act and said "Sunset" clauses. I watched the entireity of the hearings on C-Span.

The head of the CIA...FBI...and the Attorney General were vigorously interrogated about the Patriot Act. I found all of them to be forth coming in their answers...including Attorney General Gonzales. I saw Attorney General Ashcroft when he was before the Senate Committees and he hedged his answers. Attorney General Gonzales did not.

It is immaterial...now...that the Patriot Act was ram-rodded through by the previous Congress...as it has now been fully veted before the current Congress.
The fact that you 'find people forth coming in answers' is immaterial to the fact that the law stripped people of rights they once had as afforded by the fourth amendment and backed by volumes of standing case law. "Forthcoming" means little more than that they believe in what they're signing on to as being a good idea. Gonzales was also quite forthcoming with the memo issued on the legality of the use of torture.

There was no sunset clause on provision 213. Police can still 'sneak and peak' on any suspect at any time for thin cause with no notification. Provision 215, the ability to obtain secretly private records has been sunsetted. There is at least 35 instances of this clause being invoked since September 2003.

As for 'fully vetted', I daresay not. Some of the provisions have been sunsetted, but without a full and public hearing of the abuses of those provisions prior. That happened a little over a month ago. Additionally, just before the sunset provisions came into effect, the administration was pushing for investigators to be able to get Tax, Medical and Library records with NO need for judicial approval. Even the pro-act'ers balked at removing that last slender defence.
__________________
~
rickholio is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:14 PM   #59
Icon
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The watercooler of life tripping balls with NPH
Posts: 1,757
Quote:
Originally Posted by Code_Havoc
Like I said, it comes down a lot to personal believes and opinions and is a very fine line. I think tactics should also play a part in it. Many 'terrorists' hide from the person they are attacking. Where as a rebel, army or alone, is willing to get up into the other persons face to get the job done. When the 13 colonies rebelled, they openly told the British government to get their asses outta America. When they didn't, they brought out the guns and said 'get out, or we drive you'. Which is far drifferent from saying 'leave me alone or I'm going to go blow up a shopping mall'. Now nothing says the Founding Fathers would have done the same thing had they rebelled today, since in the 1700's it was pretty to blow up a bus.

And about rebel ships firing on British ships, if I remember correctly, and I could be wrong, they only fired on military ships.
True - it does come down to personal beliefs...
American ships only attacked british military ships and supply ships....fair enough...
__________________

Icon
Professional Shark Wrestler
ICQ: 214 674 095


"I see Brown people"
Icon is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:22 PM   #60
rambler
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: vancouver
Posts: 745
Quote:
Originally Posted by alexg
Spain has proved without a doubt that terrorism can work in some places...
So has Israel
rambler is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:22 PM   #61
theking
Nice Kitty
 
theking's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The good old USA!!!
Posts: 21,053
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickholio
The fact that you 'find people forth coming in answers' is immaterial to the fact that the law stripped people of rights they once had as afforded by the fourth amendment and backed by volumes of standing case law. "Forthcoming" means little more than that they believe in what they're signing on to as being a good idea. Gonzales was also quite forthcoming with the memo issued on the legality of the use of torture.

There was no sunset clause on provision 213. Police can still 'sneak and peak' on any suspect at any time for thin cause with no notification. Provision 215, the ability to obtain secretly private records has been sunsetted. There is at least 35 instances of this clause being invoked since September 2003.

As for 'fully vetted', I daresay not. Some of the provisions have been sunsetted, but without a full and public hearing of the abuses of those provisions prior. That happened a little over a month ago. Additionally, just before the sunset provisions came into effect, the administration was pushing for investigators to be able to get Tax, Medical and Library records with NO need for judicial approval. Even the pro-act'ers balked at removing that last slender defence.
Dianne Feinstein in particular attempted to find abuses of the Patriot Act and admitted that she could not...and at this point niether has the ACLU...all though I think they may have stated some "alleged" abuses...but have been unable to come up with anything concrete.
__________________
When you're running down my country hoss...you're walking on the fighting side of me!

FOR THE LYING LOWLIFE POSTING AS PATHFINDER...https://gfy.com/fucking-around-and-pr...athfinder.html
theking is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:31 PM   #62
rickholio
Confirmed User
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Nor'easterland
Posts: 1,914
Quote:
Originally Posted by theking
Dianne Feinstein in particular attempted to find abuses of the Patriot Act and admitted that she could not...and at this point niether has the ACLU...all though I think they may have stated some "alleged" abuses...but have been unable to come up with anything concrete.
Ah, I see... there's no proof, therefore no violations, and if there's no violations then the egregious stripping of privacy is moot because... well, just because.

Whew. That's a relief. I guess I don't need to worry about weapons of mass distruction now either. I mean, there's no proof that any terrorist ever got a hold of one, or at least nothing aside from alleged abuses. I bet Iraq will be happy!

Whether or not those former rights were abused is, again, immaterial. The point now is that they NO LONGER EXIST. An expectation that a cop won't traipse through your house on thin evidence without your knowledge IS NO LONGER VALID. How can you reasonably claim that personal freedoms were not abridged by this one thing alone?
__________________
~
rickholio is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:51 PM   #63
Code_Havoc
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 221
"Absense of Evidence, is not Evidence of Absense."
Code_Havoc is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 12:52 PM   #64
rickholio
Confirmed User
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Nor'easterland
Posts: 1,914
Quote:
Originally Posted by Code_Havoc
"Absense of Evidence, is not Evidence of Absense."
Nice. That was a rumsfeldism, wasn't it? Along with the unknowable known unknowns?

Zen, and the art of political doublespeak...
__________________
~

Last edited by rickholio; 07-10-2005 at 12:53 PM..
rickholio is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 10:20 PM   #65
rett11
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 397
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickholio
I supported the first gulf war because it was a clear case of transnational agressive acts that needed a slapdown. Don't talk like you know me 'bub', you have no fucking clue.

Additionally, even if 'people like me' swayed your former president into pulling out, it was ultimately his decision. Don't blame others for the perceived failures of your paragons of virtue.

Personally, I think the senior Bush saw the flypaper effect (on US troops, not on terrorists) and wanted none of it. He, at least, was mature enough to see what clusterfucks the vietnam and soviet afghanistan campaigns were and had no desire to repeat them. The lessor bush apparently didn't learn that lesson, even when counseled by his father... trusting the voices in his head (let's charitably call it "god talking to him") rather than the wisdom of his progenitors.

This is an excellent post!! Terrorism works because of ignorant leaders like Bush. As long as there are short-sighted idiots like Bush, terrorism will continue to work.

I don't claim to have an answer for terrorism, but acting just like them will solve nothing. It will only serve to make them hate us even more, and to create a whole new group of terrorists.
rett11 is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 10:27 PM   #66
sacX
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 2,998
Quote:
Originally Posted by crankit
It goes without saying that our hearts go out to our comrades in England. Once again, I have to ask: When are we gonna stop jerking around with Koran abuse investigations and start killing these Al Queda pricks? They are uncivilized Nazis; if you don''t lose sleep over what we did to the Nazis during and after WW2, I don''t know why you''re upset with anything we do to these scumbags, whether it''s in Guantanimo Bay or on the battlefield.
because you can't tell who all the Al-Qaeda people are??

When you invade a country like Afghanistan or Iraq you kill a lot of INNOCENT CIVILIANS which along with occupation of these countries BREEDS new terrorists.

You need to be a whole lot more targetted and get the peaceful Muslim soceity on your side against the extremists not against you.
__________________
Have Asian Language Traffic?
sacX is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:28 PM   #67
EviLSuperstaR
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Right next to you
Posts: 804
Quote:
Originally Posted by crankit
It goes without saying that our hearts go out to our comrades in England. Once again, I have to ask: When are we gonna stop jerking around with Koran abuse investigations and start killing these Al Queda pricks? They are uncivilized Nazis; if you don''t lose sleep over what we did to the Nazis during and after WW2, I don''t know why you''re upset with anything we do to these scumbags, whether it''s in Guantanimo Bay or on the battlefield. Before you think I''m going insane by saying this, here''s a little history lesson: When the allies discovered the concentration camps in WW2, they lined up all the German guards - sometimes hundreds at a time - and machine-gunned them into ditches. No trial. No Geneva convention protections. They just rounded them up, shot them dead and threw dirt on them. Do you think they should have been tried for war crimes? Now we throw our guys in jail for putting underwear on people''s heads and, as that treasonous dick Dick Durbin says, "torturing captives with loud rap music." Loud rap music? Jesus - by those standards, I''m tortured every day, since I live and drive in Miami! But I''m getting ahead of myself.

Many people want to blame someone besides Al Queda for the London bombings. I say Al Queda and militant Islam are the only things to blame for the London bombings, along with most terrorism and conflict going on in the world today. Sit back and watch as each opposing argument is deflated one by one... J

"They attacked London because Tony Blair backs Bush on the war in Iraq!" My ass. Remember the tanker ship they bombed in Europe a few years ago? It was French. Yet France has been against U.S. policy since 2002. They blew up that club in Bali, Indonesia - A PREDOMINANTLY MUSLIM COUNTRY which staged huge protests against the wars in Afghanistan AND Iraq! Kinda throws that argument out the window, although it''s a convenient argument for Al Queda to use.

etc. Blablabla.....
You, surferking, your copied and pasted vision is shortsighted and utterly stupid:
Of course those who backed the Iraq war refute any link with the London bombs - they are in the deepest denial

Shortly after September 11 2001, when the slightest mention of a link between US foreign policy and the terrorist attacks brought accusations of heartless heresy, the then US national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice got to work. Between public displays of grief and solemnity she managed to round up the senior staff of the National Security Council and ask them to think seriously about "how do you capitalise on these opportunities" to fundamentally change American doctrine and the shape of the world. In an interview with the New Yorker six months later, she said the US no longer had a problem defining its post-cold war role. "I think September 11 was one of those great earthquakes that clarify and sharpen. Events are in much sharper relief."

For those interested in keeping the earth intact in its present shape so that we might one day live on it peacefully, the bombings of July 7 provide no such "opportunities". They do not "clarify" or "sharpen" but muddy and bloody already murky waters. As the identities of the missing emerge, we move from a statistical body count to the tragedy of human loss - brothers, mothers, lovers and daughters cruelly blown away as they headed to work. The space to mourn these losses must be respected. The demand that we abandon rational thought, contextual analysis and critical appraisal of why this happened and what we can do to limit the chances that it will happen again, should not. To explain is not to excuse; to criticise is not to capitulate.
We know what took place. A group of people, with no regard for law, order or our way of life, came to our city and trashed it. With scant regard for human life or political consequences, employing violence as their sole instrument of persuasion, they slaughtered innocent people indiscriminately. They left us feeling unified in our pain and resolute in our convictions, effectively creating a community where one previously did not exist. With the killers probably still at large there is no civil liberty so vital that some would not surrender it in pursuit of them and no punishment too harsh that some might not sanction if we found them.

The trouble is there is nothing in the last paragraph that could not just as easily be said from Falluja as it could from London. The two should not be equated - with over 1,000 people killed or injured, half its housing wrecked and almost every school and mosque damaged or flattened, what Falluja went through at the hands of the US military, with British support, was more deadly. But they can and should be compared. We do not have a monopoly on pain, suffering, rage or resilience. Our blood is no redder, our backbones are no stiffer, nor our tear ducts more productive than the people in Iraq and Afghanistan. Those whose imagination could not stretch to empathise with the misery we have caused in the Gulf now have something closer to home to identify with. "Collateral damage" always has a human face: its relatives grieve; its communities have memory and demand action.

These basic humanistic precepts are the principle casualties of fundamentalism, whether it is wedded to Muhammad or the market. They were clearly absent from the minds of those who bombed London last week. They are no less absent from the minds of those who have pursued the war on terror for the past four years.

Tony Blair is not responsible for the more than 50 dead and 700 injured on Thursday. In all likelihood, "jihadists" are. But he is partly responsible for the 100,000 people who have been killed in Iraq. And even at this early stage there is a far clearer logic linking these two events than there ever was tying Saddam Hussein to either 9/11 or weapons of mass destruction.

It is no mystery why those who have backed the war in Iraq would refute this connection. With each and every setback, from the lack of UN endorsement right through to the continuing strength of the insurgency, they go ever deeper into denial. Their sophistry has now mutated into a form of political autism - their ability to engage with the world around them has been severely impaired by their adherence to a flawed and fatal project. To say that terrorists would have targeted us even if we hadn't gone into Iraq is a bit like a smoker justifying their habit by saying, "I could get run over crossing the street tomorrow." True, but the certain health risks of cigarettes are more akin to playing chicken on a four-lane highway. They have the effect of bringing that fatal, fateful day much closer than it might otherwise be.

Similarly, invading Iraq clearly made us a target. Did Downing Street really think it could declare a war on terror and that terror would not fight back? That, in itself, is not a reason to withdraw troops if having them there is the right thing to do. But since it isn't and never was, it provides a compelling reason to change course before more people are killed here or there. So the prime minister got it partly right on Saturday when he said: "I think this type of terrorism has very deep roots. As well as dealing with the consequences of this - trying to protect ourselves as much as any civil society can - you have to try to pull it up by its roots."

What he would not acknowledge is that his alliance with President George Bush has been sowing the seeds and fertilising the soil in the Gulf, for yet more to grow. The invasion and occupation of Iraq - illegal, immoral and inept - provided the Arab world with one more legitimate grievance. Bush laid down the gauntlet: you're either with us or with the terrorists. A small minority of young Muslims looked at the values displayed in Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo Bay and Camp Bread Basket - and made their choice. The war helped transform Iraq from a vicious, secular dictatorship with no links to international terrorism into a magnet and training ground for those determined to commit terrorist atrocities. Meanwhile, it diverted our attention and resources from the very people we should have been fighting - al-Qaida.

Leftwing axe-grinding? As early as February 2003 the joint intelligence committee reported that al-Qaida and associated groups continued to represent "by far the greatest terrorist threat to western interests, and that that threat would be heightened by military action against Iraq". At the World Economic Forum last year, Gareth Evans, the former Australian foreign minister and head of the International Crisis Group thinktank, said: "The net result of the war on terror is more war and more terror. Look at Iraq: the least plausible reason for going to war - terrorism - has been its most harrowing consequence."

None of that justifies what the bombers did. But it does help explain how we got where we are and what we need to do to move to a safer place. If Blair didn't know the invasion would make us more vulnerable, he is negligent; if he did, then he should take responsibility for his part in this. That does not mean we deserved what was coming. It means we deserve a lot better.
EviLSuperstaR is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:29 PM   #68
pornguy
Too lazy to set a custom title
 
pornguy's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Homeless
Posts: 62,911
Terrorism is very simple. They do something, that makes you change your view of safety. Thats it. Once this happens, they have won.
__________________
PornGuy skype me pornguy_epic

AmateurDough The Hottes Shemales online!
TChicks.com | Angeles Cid | Mariana Cordoba | MAILERS WELCOME!
pornguy is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2005, 11:36 PM   #69
tristan_D
Confirmed User
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 7,865
these security measures only address the violent acts of terrorism, not terrorism itself. killing Bin Laden will not put an end to terrorism for its is based on ideology. I just saw a CNN documentary about terrorism in Europe.
tristan_D is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 12:10 AM   #70
Drake
Hello world!
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 12,508
Quote:
Originally Posted by RocHard
Wow. That's stunning. No idea who you really are but I agree with every word you just wrote.

The terrorist attacks have nothing to do with Iraq. 9/11 happened before we invaded Iraq, as well as other attacks. They attack Western nations because we are not Muslim or Islamic. They feel we do not have the right to exist. A small handful of people believe they are the "chosen race" and that no other peoples should be allowed to exist. This line of thinking when out when the Nazi "Master Race" was defeated in the 1940's.

I'm not a Nazi, not Jewish, and I surely didn't vote for Bush. I'm also married to a woman of Middle Eastern descent who still has family there.
I agree that fundamentalist thinking really has to be removed from Muslim/Islamic nations. A state headed by dogmatic religious dictators doesn't work in the modern world where laws are created, applied, and upheld because of their merit and not because they're mentioned in some ancient text supposedly from Allah or God.

The part I disagree with is when people say they hate our way of life. I don't think that's true. I think they love our way of life and see us as prohibiting them from partaking in our way of life. Their is nothing about having a nice house, car, food, and fun that anybody on earth wouldn't want.

If the war in Iraq is a true step forward for creating democracy and not merely stripping the place of it's natural resources for our benefit only, I think it's a good thing in the long run. I wonder if we're really that noble though.
Drake is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 12:31 AM   #71
WarChild
Let slip the dogs of war.
 
WarChild's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bermuda
Posts: 17,263
Quote:
Originally Posted by EviLSuperstaR
Tony Blair is not responsible for the more than 50 dead and 700 injured on Thursday. In all likelihood, "jihadists" are. But he is partly responsible for the 100,000 people who have been killed in Iraq.

There is no credible evidence to suggest 100,000 people have been killed in Iraq. That number comes from the Lancet Study. You might want to read that study and it's methods and decide for yourself if you think it's a credible number. I for one do not.
__________________
.
WarChild is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 05:52 AM   #72
alexg
IL4L.com
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Israel - ICQ: 162136565
Posts: 11,287
Quote:
Originally Posted by rambler
So has Israel
If you're talking about the pullout plan, then sadly I agree with you.

This government has indeed proved it.
alexg is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 07:06 AM   #73
directfiesta
Too lazy to set a custom title
 
directfiesta's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Montreal, Quebec
Posts: 29,682
Quote:
Originally Posted by bmb
how about this: culture is the mechanism by which a society functions. Arab society does not function. 100 billion trillion million dollars have gone into the middle east in the last 75 years. they can't even build a fucking toaster. they can't solve any problems. they can't do a fucking thing except stick dynamite in their ass and wander into the mall. I say we walk away and let them eat sand and fuck off . . . just my personal opinion
The world didn't start 10 years ago ...

When you get a check, the numbers on it are " arab": they invented it.
They also were the first to have running water, mainly in south of Spain ( the Alhambra ). I wont continue to try to educate you, since civilisation for you is limited to a McDonald, a Wall-Mart and a trailer park.
__________________
I know that Asspimple is stoopid ... As he says, it is a FACT !

But I can't figure out how he can breathe or type , at the same time ....
directfiesta is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 07:27 AM   #74
Drake
Hello world!
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 12,508
Quote:
Originally Posted by directfiesta
The world didn't start 10 years ago ...

When you get a check, the numbers on it are " arab": they invented it.
They also were the first to have running water, mainly in south of Spain ( the Alhambra ).
DF, will you agree that their civilization has fallen?
Drake is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2005, 08:00 AM   #75
directfiesta
Too lazy to set a custom title
 
directfiesta's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Montreal, Quebec
Posts: 29,682
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike33
DF, will you agree that their civilization has fallen?

Absolutely ... So has the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Romans and Chineese ( tough they are working on a comeback ) for the " old civilisations ".

In the case of the Arabs, the fought against each other, weakening their stronghold and leaving the territory opened to the Brits ... and selling out for a few gold coins ....

The wheel goes round and round again ....
__________________
I know that Asspimple is stoopid ... As he says, it is a FACT !

But I can't figure out how he can breathe or type , at the same time ....
directfiesta is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote
Post New Thread Reply
Go Back   GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum > >

Bookmarks
Thread Tools



Advertising inquiries - marketing at gfy dot com

Contact Admin - Advertise - GFY Rules - Top

©2000-, AI Media Network Inc



Powered by vBulletin
Copyright © 2000- Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.