If you oppose this war, I hope you like the idea that your children, or grandchildren, may live in an Islamic America under the Mullahs and the Sharia, an America that resembles Iran today.Raymond S. Kraft is a writer living in Northern California who has long been a student of Middle Eastern culture and religion.
This is insane. Iran is not the forth Reich. Iran spends 1% of the US on its military. It has never invaded another country. This is just absolutely nuts. Israel has its own nuclear deterrent, one would have to credit them with having sub based launch capabilities. This idea that Iran is one nuke away from imposing sharia law in the US is just NUTS!
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 18, 2008, 08:21:40 PMThis is insane. Iran is not the forth Reich. Iran spends 1% of the US on its military. It has never invaded another country. This is just absolutely nuts. Israel has its own nuclear deterrent, one would have to credit them with having sub based launch capabilities. This idea that Iran is one nuke away from imposing sharia law in the US is just NUTS! Hmm yet I bet in that number Iran spends on its military doesnt include the amount they spend funding and committing terrorist acts does it? Nor probably the amount of weapons they give to terrorists. Time and time again Iran has committed terrorist attacks or funded terrorist attacks. So claims of them not invading another country mean nothing.Israel is a responsible nation. Iran is not. History has shown us if Iran was to get a nuke they most likely would give it to terrorists or commit a terrorist act with it themselves.
So they're what, spending 2% of the US defense budget? The number for the US didn't include the supplemental budget request to fund the wars.
Iran has shown it is open to international pressure. They value stable markets because that's the best environment for them to sell their oil - there is no evidence that that giving out nukes is the direction they want to go because it would not be in their interests to do that. But even if they gave a terrorist organization a nuke and god forbid they somehow managed to detonate it in the US, how does that get you to the imposition of Sharia law in the US?? That is insane. That fear is nuts. And how does Iran messing around in proxy fights equate to the third Reich? There is no, none, nada, zilch resemblance between Germany circa 1938 and Iran circa 2008. Talking to Iran, unconditionally, is not appeasement and talking/diplomacy with Iran/Syria/N. Korea shares no, none, nada, zilch resemblance per se to Munich 1938.
Hitler did not start out small - he had the largest most powerful military the world had ever seen.The author you applaud said "If you oppose this war, I hope you like the idea that your children, or grandchildren, may live in an Islamic America under the Mullahs and the Sharia, an America that resembles Iran today."What is he (you) imagining? How could that under any circumstance come to pass?The great flaw with this argument is the total lack of belief in the superiority of our system of government (at least pre 2002), this concept of an Islamic America is really no different than the fears of a Red America in the '50s. How real was that threat? Was America ever on the verge of adopting a communist world view? Maybe if Vietnam didn't go well ... oh wait.
For someone intent on reminding America's youth of the significance of history, Raymond S. Kraft's treatise contains quite a few errors of fact in addition to his leaps of analytical faith. It is an interesting exercise to Google his name and read some of the rebuttals to what some consider a fanciful flight of fear-mongering. Although I personally do not agree with his conclusions, it is his citing of historical inaccuracies and his apparently conscious omission (or ignorance?) of other aspects of US history (that the US was actively supporting Saddam H. and even supplying him with arms at the very time he was busy killing his own countrymen, and the fact that SH was a secularist and hostile to Al Qaeda, to name but a couple of examples) that cause me to wonder about what Kraft does present in the way of facts. Kraft's view that the US has a good shot at creating a democratic peaceful Iraq seems very much like wishful thinking to me and flies in the face of the US's current treatment of those Iraqis who assisted them as translators etc but who have been pretty much abandoned by their former bosses and many of whom are now refugees or have been killed by fellow Iraqis who consider them traitors. Sixty Minutes had a segment on this that I saw last night and it was pretty disturbing. According to a young American who worked alongside some of these brave Iraqis and who is trying to gain access to the US for as many as he can, the US has accepted only 5000 while Sweden has accepted some 40,000 Iraqi refugees. Seems disgraceful to put them in harm's way then turn a blind eye to their plight. Democracy in Iraq may not seem so fabulous to those in this situation. I of course live in socialist Canada so I am clearly not nearly clever enough to understand how any particularly valid parallel can be drawn between fighting specific enemies in WWII and fighting an amorphous space-shifting entity like Al Qaeda which seems to have moved into Iraq after the US invasion and has seen rising recruitment among Sunnis there as a response to the American presence.
For someone intent on reminding America's youth of the significance of history, Raymond S. Kraft's treatise contains quite a few errors of fact in addition to his leaps of analytical faith. It is an interesting exercise to Google his name and read some of the rebuttals to what some consider a fanciful flight of fear-mongering. Although I personally do not agree with his conclusions, it is his citing of historical inaccuracies and his apparently conscious omission (or ignorance?) of other aspects of US history (that the US was actively supporting Saddam H. and even supplying him with arms at the very time he was busy killing his own countrymen, and the fact that SH was a secularist and hostile to Al Qaeda, to name but a couple of examples) that cause me to wonder about what Kraft does present in the way of facts.
It's in this context that articles like Samantha Power's recent Time magazine piece http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1731892,00.html are particularly important. Canada has borne a disproportionate share of the fighting in Afghanistan, and has suffered dreadful casualties. Eighty-two [now 83] Canadians have thus far been killed in Afghanistan, as compared with ninety-five from the much larger UK contingent. The death rate has taken its toll on Canadian public opinion, but one lesson of the Power article is that Iraq continues to poison everything; to the extent that the Afghan operation is conceived of as part of greater US foreign policy, it becomes less popular.
Like your GNP analysis looking at raw numbers is misleading. Canada is a much smaller country than the US - roughly one tenth the size.
BigSky, could you please explain how the Liberal Moron poster advances your point of view or contributes anything to the discussion?
And here I always thought that freedom involved the freedom to hold differing views, to exchange them and debate them. It would seem that from your perspective that freedom is limited to the freedom to agree with you and with everything you say.
Falling back on a position of saying that if one criticizes US foreign policy that one is therefore dissing the troops is specious and a bit weird.
I would point out that the very term freedom fighter is used by many who firmly believe that that is what THEY are fighting for.
PS I still think that Kraft's article is not particularly accurate and his conclusions a bit odd.
Way to go BigSky.
Way to go BigSky. You have misinterpreted much of what I was trying to say and I do not plan on discussing this further with you. I plan rather to "can" it as you suggest as it would appear that your idea of discussion is to denigrate and throw around silly labels. I will point out however that I did not say that your perspective was limited.
As his world view comes crashing down around his ears he'll probably be lashing out a lot for the next few months/years; getting all bitter. Don't take it personally.
Hmm yet it took you days to respond.
Quote from: BigSky on May 24, 2008, 10:48:42 AMHmm yet it took you days to respond.You really must be trying to make people who hold your world view look bad - it is so complete that I am beginning to wonder if your whole schtiick is a put on.