What do you remember from September 11?

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DaveB78
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16 Sep 2006, 4:36 pm

I have not mentioned empire at at all. Capitalism and Republican government are the only economic and governmental systems consistent with individual liberty.



Emettman
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16 Sep 2006, 5:05 pm

DaveB78 wrote:
Capitalism and Republican government are the only economic and governmental systems consistent with individual liberty.


Even, for the purposes of argument, granting that, to impose capitalism and republican government against the wishes and tradition of a population is certainly not consistent with liberty. And will be seen as such. The act of an imperator.

And is only the right sort of democratic vote to be allowed? What has followed the election of Hamas by the Palestinians has been instructive.



DaveB78
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16 Sep 2006, 5:13 pm

Apparently, I write one thing and your read another. I have not suggested anything be IMPOSED anywhere. Any government established in Iraq wil be established by the Iraqis...what I said was if a capitalistic republic was established... Where is there any mention of any imposition? Also, democracy is bad the vote for Hamas is a good illustration, that is why I specifficy used the word REPUBLIC.



Emettman
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16 Sep 2006, 6:00 pm

DaveB78 wrote:
Where is there any mention of any imposition? Also, democracy is bad the vote for Hamas is a good illustration, that is why I specifficy used the word REPUBLIC.


"if an effective stable capitalistic republic can be established in Iraq"
Is noticeably different from "...if Iraq establishes a stable capitalistic republic."

I'd take the first to hint at outside influence, at the very least, in a region with an extensive history of puppet regimes and rulers sponsored if not actually "bought".

"Democracy is bad": I'm afraid that again betrays a reluctance to let people choose their own paths.
Yes, a republic which constitutionally sets up musts and mustn'ts overriding a simple democratic majority can be seen as superior. It takes democracy one step beyond legalised mob-rule.
But unless you ARE into imposition, you wil have to wait for that to be arrived at by the people concerned, with nohing more than suggestion and persuasion by external forces. I've seen no suggestion that the election of Hamas was unconstitutional or was anything other than free and fair.



DaveB78
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16 Sep 2006, 6:12 pm

I don't hint. Perhaps a dependent clause wae omited"by the Iraqis".

Democracy is tantamount to mob rule...see James Madison and Federalist number 10 and this quote from Tytler.\ to pretty well sum it up:

Quote:
"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largess from the public treasury. From that time on the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the results that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship.

The average age of the world's great civilizations has been 200 years. These nations have progressed through this sequence:
from bondage to spiritual faith;
from spiritual faith to great courage;
from courage to liberty;
from liberty to abundance;
from abundance to selfishness;
from selfishness to complacency;
from complacency to apathy;
from apathy to dependency;
from dependency back again to bondage."




I am prepared to keep US troops in Iraq until Iraqi troops can effectively quell any sectarian violence so that the new government can become established and the people of Iraq can truly decide just what sort of government and economy they want. My bias is for a republic and a free market economy because i believe both institutions promote individual liberty and I see a frre I raq as an Ally against the Caliphatists ant Takfiris.



Emettman
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17 Sep 2006, 2:37 am

DaveB78 wrote:
Democracy is tantamount to mob rule...


I'm not disagreeing with that (I wonder what proportion
of those working for "more democracy" and worrying about the "democratic defecit" realise what they are asking for?) In practice some sort of constitutional effect is usually found to be in place, due to tradition, or religious values, if not formally arrived at.

I also agree that NOW there is little alternative to working towards the best Iraqi government that the Iraqis can form. And that this is going to cost hundreds of soldiers their lives.

But I believe that the second Gulf war was launched illegally, and on pretext. That can be argued, but worse, in realpolitik terms it has increased, not eased, the world situation with respect to terrorist violence. It was a distraction, and a deflection of massive resources. There was no need to invade Iraq THEN.

I hope "Iraqi troops can effectively quell any sectarian violence so that the new government can become established" but a fair proportion of the military IS sectarian.

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My bias is for a republic and a free market economy because i believe both institutions promote individual liberty and I see a free Iraq as an Ally against the Caliphatists ant Takfiris.


I share somewhat your bias, (but note that a free market is not a fair one) only on Winston Churchill's ground, that the alternatives are worse.

I see the best ally against extremist Islam to be moderate Islam.
If we alienate that, which I believe we have been doing, then we are heading to a catastrophic clash of civilisations (some argue that there is no moderate Islam.)

The terrorists need to be delicately separated from their hinterland of passive support and sympathy. Currently I think we're breeding more enemy than we're destroying.



DaveB78
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17 Sep 2006, 7:25 am

I am taking a long view on this matter, decades maybe a century or more. I am not overly familiar with Islam, but it will be essential to separate religion from the INSTITUTIONS of government while allowing the free practice of religion within the nation. I do not know if Islam is compatable with that concept.



Emettman
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17 Sep 2006, 8:50 am

DaveB78 wrote:
...it will be essential to separate religion from the INSTITUTIONS of government while allowing the free practice of religion within the nation. I do not know if Islam is compatable with that concept.


I suspect America only achieved this by accident, seeking principally to avoid the domination of government by one Christian denomination over against others. I'm not at all sure the founding fathers had witchcraft in mind, when thinking of freedom of religion.

Islam does not easily admit of the secular state or, in practice (notwithstanding certain verses in the Koran), freedom of religion. Leaving Islam for another religion is subject to severe penalty in many states. I'd get in trouble openly practicing my beliefs, or inviting people to join with my worldview.

Like the conditions of a republic, only more severe, the truth of the Koran would be taken to outweigh any democratic vote, some truths being held not to be subject to public opinion.



DaveB78
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17 Sep 2006, 9:06 am

If that is true, then it might become irreconciliible, but Turkey as an example of a pedomininently Muslim nation seems to have truck a balance albeit a non/democratic/republican balance, it is at least a balance between secular and religious law. My thought for Iraq in specific is that many mistakes have been made on many levels since the fall of Saddam, but paramount amoung them is the botion of the top down design of the government. By that I mean, there was a rush to establish a national government before there were mayors and regional governors etc...that is upside down. likewise. the idea of developing an export based economy...oil...is also upside down...a domestic economy should be developed first...you don't shoot your customer... Just my rambling thoughts...is the US to blame fo all of this?...maybe not all, but certainly some, because we are so damned impatient.



rwac86
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28 Sep 2006, 11:40 pm

I had to be at work at 3 am on the 12th. I left my house around 1 because i could not sleep. Could not get away from the pictures on TV. I needed gas. What I saw next scared me 10x worse than what I saw on TV. Out of 5 gas station in a realitivly small town, only one had any gas left, sighn said around $5 a gallen ( I only had 3 and was already running on fumes. People were fighting with the clerks, each other. Physically fighting, as in throwing punches over one lousy tank of Gas. like one tank would change much even if the gas related "panic" had even been justified.
The people in the most expensive, gas guzzling vehicals seemed to be the worst.
Of every thing I saw and heard that day , somehow I missed the news comentary that even hinted at the need for such panic. Yet somehow an entire town ( apparently others as well ) decided that they all needed one last"cheap" tank of gas at all costs. Is that all it takes ???? GOOD FREAKING GREIF!! !! !! The NT"s think we are the "damaged"ones?!?!?! !? I am starting to think that If we just mess with them alittle every once in a while they just might destroy themselves and we can get on with the bussiness of evolution.



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29 Sep 2006, 1:51 pm

I'm from Mexico. I was 15 and I was at high school. That day I had a computing and programming class. The teacher arrived late to the class, and he inmediately turned on the TV (that classroom had one), In the news, they pass a lot of times the video at the moment when airplanes crashed, first one and then the other. But I was a little distracted, like in other planet, It takes me like one hour to understand the real situation :?



sigholdaccountlost
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01 Oct 2006, 10:00 am

I don't know. I found out on the news, though. And as for unpatrotic, well:

Feeling, expressing, or inspired by love for one's country.

See, one's own country. Not my own country.


Hang on...that means according to G.W.B, I'm you-know.



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09 Oct 2006, 11:04 pm

I was at my house as it was a school day. School had just started a few days earliar and I had just started at a new school. my mom had woken me up like any other day, and the TV was on and she was crying (because she's from new York) and such. It was about 7:00 in the morning. when we got to school everyone was in a panic.



dexkaden
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10 Oct 2006, 9:40 am

I was sitting in the principal's office because I had said "isn't it awesome?" in response to a teacher's question about it. In my defense, I wasn't thinking about the PEOPLE involved, just the explosion and the fire and the complete disentegration of the buildings. I was absolutely mortified that someone would think that I thought the destruction of human life was awesome. But what can I say--there seems to be a translation problem.


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psych
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12 Oct 2006, 1:54 pm

dexkaden wrote:
I was sitting in the principal's office because I had said "isn't it awesome?" in response to a teacher's question about it. In my defense, I wasn't thinking about the PEOPLE involved, just the explosion and the fire and the complete disentegration of the buildings. I was absolutely mortified that someone would think that I thought the destruction of human life was awesome. But what can I say--there seems to be a translation problem.


Thats outrageous - punished!? - you shouldve been commended a gold star for rejecting popular american slang and employing the english language in the way it was rightfully intended. I hope it wasnt an English teacher that sent you to the principals office.



dexkaden
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12 Oct 2006, 1:57 pm

Ha! It WAS an English teacher, but not just any English teacher--an AP English teacher! I explained myself, and all they said was to "be more sensitive." :roll: Whatever.


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