FloodG8-9595 wrote: THE WORLD HATES US!!
Archived topic from Anythingforums, old topic ID:1133, old post ID:14545
FloodG8-9595 wrote: THE WORLD HATES US!!
Oh yeah? Well I'm anti-everything! Try and convince me to like something. Just try it.fragged one wrote: i'm anti-bush and anti-kerry, and i've yet to have a single person point out to me how they would fundamentally run the country differently.
sintekk wrote:Bah! I don't got time to read your uber-long 300+ word postsMrSelf wrote:sintekk wrote:
Woah, woah, woah, didn't kerry say he still would have invaded iraq?
http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/08/09/kerry.iraq/
MrSelf wrote: But since we saw the same speak and he said he would still have ‘authorized the use of force as a possibility, but exhausted other sources first’, but you heard ‘kerry said just a while ago that even knowing what we know today, that he would still invaded iraq.’ Hmmm… Having the power to invade if necessary is not the same as still would have invaded…
(of course, this makes me think "Why did kerry authorize the war in the first place if he believed more work/searching/hob-knobbing/etc. was needed?" But I'm tired, it's midnight, and I could be missing another fact )
This gives the ability to use the military if Saddam attacks his own people, or starts up a chemical or biological weapons program, or violates any other part of the UN resolutions. Clearly this was written when we were sure that he had WMD's, without them he is not a continuing threat, but he was still in violation of what he was suppose to do, and because he invaded Kuwait and used biological weapon on iran and his own people, he has to prove that he isn't in violation, a threat to national secuity. That's why the weapon inspectors were being used, to verify if he was a threat.sec. 3 Authorization for use of United States Armed Forces.
(a)Authorization. - The President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in order to-
(1)defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq and
(2)enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq.
Ah, so basically, Kerry was just planning on using this as an incentive for Saddam to be more cooperative, or else, while Bush was tired of waiting for results and pushed the 'war' button once authorized.Pretty much it comes down to, if Bush was going to address Saddam, he needed to be able to actually make a difference. Without the threat of force, words are meaningless with Saddam, history has shown. So for the president to do anything worthwhile, he has to be able to use force if necessary.
"We know we can't count on the French. We know we can't count on the Russians, We know that Iraq is a danger to the United States, and we reserve the right to take pre-emptive action whenever we feel it's in our national interest."
- John Kerry, CNN Crossfire, 1997
"[W]e urge you, after consulting with Congress, and consistent with the U.S. Constitution and laws, to take necessary actions (including, if appropriate, air and missile strikes on suspect Iraqi sites) to respond effectively to the threat posed by Iraq's refusal to end its weapons of mass destruction programs."
- Letter to President Clinton, signed by Sens. Carl Levin, Tom Daschle, John Kerry, and others Oct. 9, 1998
"I will be voting to give the President of the United States the authority to use force-- if necessary-- to disarm Saddam Hussein because I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a real and grave threat to our security."
- Sen. John F. Kerry (D, MA), Oct. 9, 2002
"Without question, we need to disarm Saddam Hussein. He is a brutal, murderous dictator, leading an oppressive regime ... He presents a particularly grievous threat because he is so consistently prone to miscalculation ... And now he is miscalculating America's response to his continued deceit and his consistent grasp for weapons of mass destruction ... So the threat of Saddam Hussein with weapons of mass destruction is real..."
- Sen. John F. Kerry (D, MA), Jan. 23. 2003
Archived topic from Anythingforums, old topic ID:1133, old post ID:14640“I think Iraq is the most serious and imminent threat to our country. And I think Iraq and Saddam Hussein present the most serious and most imminent threat.”
- Sen. John Edwards (D, NC), CNN Late Edition, 2002
audio
I can't believe you of all people would fall back on such standard arguments fragged. A LOT of people supported the war in Iraq. I did. John Kerry did as well. Unfortunatly as you well know politics is a little more complicated that you seem to be looking at it now. I mean no offence and am simply trying to say what I would expect you to say to me if the situation were reversed.“I think Iraq is the most serious and imminent threat to our country. And I think Iraq and Saddam Hussein present the most serious and most imminent threat.”
- Sen. John Edwards (D, NC), CNN Late Edition, 2002
Haven't read that book I will check it out though if I get a chance soon... since I'm finished with Dark Tower.fragged one wrote: I supported the war in iraq, and STILL support the war in iraq.
I'd suggest reading The War Against America: Saddam Hussein and the World Trade Center Attacks: A Study of Revenge by Laurie Mylroie for a very interesting look on the attack on the World Trade Center in 1993, as well as the numerous American embassy bombings in Africa. Very good read for anyone interested in some not often reported reasons why Iraq was an imminent threat.
I'll have to look a little further into the specific subjects at hand here but, on a the bits that I do know I agree with you that there is need for change. I appriciate the straight forward list as that helps me understand your point a lot better. I still hold true to my reasons for voting for Kerry this election and sincerly hope that he wins, not because I think John Kerry is the president Im looking for in the long run but, in my opinion he's closer to that than idea than Bush is, and I want to be headed in the right direction even if it means I have to put up with some of the same crap policies we've been dealing with for countless presidents.. Eventually we will change the system ,I'm as for it as you are. I'm no fan of the income tax either man but, its not gonna change completley for a while.. it's the little changes one at a time we need to make. Even if you were to become president (best case senario for you) and you were able to put all your ideas into action. How many of your changes do you think would make it past all the others in DC. point being as I said in my last post lets get some more independates in local government so we can effect these changes from the bottom up.fragged one wrote: flood, i sincerly believe that saddam hussein had attacked the united states several times in the past by using 'terrorists'. ramzi yousef, i believe, was very possibly an iraqi intelligence agent, but most of us know him better as the 'mastermind' behind the 93 wtc bombing.
i spent too much time and energy trying to be anti-kerry that i lost sight of what truly matters and affects long-term america.
i don't support bush, or kerry, in any manner in this election for various reasons:
they both support the patriot act and the unconstitutional and anti-american provisions within it.
they both support drug prohibition, leading to more violent crime and filling our prisons with non-violent offenders.
they both support international welfare
they both seek to have limited immigration, which is proven to lead to illegal immigrants rushing through our porous borders and actually making it easier for would-be terrorists to enter.
they both support social welfare
they both refuse to allow americans to invest their own retirement savings, instead, they put it into the poorly managed social security system.
they both support the income tax, which by many, including me, is deemed to be unconstitutional...that's besides being costly to manage, difficult to understand with so many codes, and unfair to all americans.
they both support israel and it's sabre rattling, even while they threat attack on nearby nations such as iran.
those are a few reasons why i cannot and will not support either candidate. there are more, but that's just a small laundry list. in summary, they both support a costly and severly inflated government that makes this country more dangerous to live in with increased threats of being persecuted by the government.
I appriciate and applaud your stance with third parties and I think that if there were more people supporting them the country would be a better place. The way I see to do that is to vote them into Congress and Judicial positions exct. and allow them to work their magic on the system from the inside. once this is accomplished I feel that we can effectivly and in good will put in a thrid party president, I just don't think that it's a realistic thing to expect to happen on a large scale so quickly. Like I said your ideas Have merit and If i thought it was at all possible to undergo such a change in this nation as you are seeing by simply electing or supporting a third party candidate for president. I would agree with you one hundred precent but, I think it's going to take more time and hard work on a differnt level to get to that point.fragged one wrote: the way i see it, is that at this juncture, we have three paths to go down. two of which end up at the same place, albiet differing routes, and the other leads to a good place, a better america...the 'city upon the hill' as reagan envisioned.
while most of america is oblivious to the third path, i am not, and choose to continue to urge the other's to look at the map and see that the first two paths do not lead us to the right place.
I've been thinking about it, and I don't think that will do anything to help the political system, just trade out one party for another, as happens every 60 years or so. Until the rules are set up to encourage 3rd party's, and not encourage a 2 party system, what you are talking about will just put what ever party is behind that candidate in power and the 3rd party will fade out again, as it has throughout history. More has to be done to change the system than just a 3rd party president, and it all has to do with 3rd party's on a local level. There are a few now, but the system is so slanted towards 2 partys, it's hard to get a foothold. All 3 of these choices lead to the same place, you're fooling yourself if you think this one small event in our political system will drastically change it for the better, even assuming the candidate does take every opportunity to try to change the system.fragged one wrote: the way i see it, is that at this juncture, we have three paths to go down. two of which end up at the same place, albiet differing routes, and the other leads to a good place, a better america...the 'city upon the hill' as reagan envisioned.
while most of america is oblivious to the third path, i am not, and choose to continue to urge the other's to look at the map and see that the first two paths do not lead us to the right place.
only if bill has a republican congress to deal with. that way nothing gets done as the executive and legislative branch bang heads...FloodG8-9595 wrote: I cannot fathom why anyone would want that demon woman in office.. Now give me Bill back anyday.
my god man she's a giant mutant spider wearing a diaper!Legend wrote: She's so loverly.