Quote from alfonso:
There are many other regimes that 'terrorise' their own people. Is that justification for invading another sovereign nation? Perhaps in your book it is. I wonder how many of you would havet taken kindly to a Soviet invasion of America for her abuse of her own black population during the first half of the 20th century.
I'm sorry, but the "he's an asshole" argument just doesn't cut it with me. (I wonder how keen the administration would be to depose a despot whose major resource was flaxseed oil.)
And it's not so much a case of me being 'jealous' than it is of being disappointed. Disappointed that there is so much that is good and so much that is right about America and the American way, that it is spoilt by foisting these phony wars on her public and the world at large.
These are great points. Let me add another one: does the USA really want democracy in Iraq?? There was a guy on CNBC yesterday who was a foreign policy expert -- he had an excellent point, which was who are the Iraqis going to elect as their leader?? He also made this point -- if the Saudis had a democracy, they would elect none other than our favorite piker, OBL. I'm personally scared that the devil we know -- Saddam -- may very well be better than the devil we don't. This is why I believe that containing Saddam is a better idea (for now, at least until he does something to us or our allies) than attempting to remove him.
I mean, shit, OBL could theoretically be elected leader of Iraq. And, of course, Rumsfeld wouldn't allow OBL to appear in public; he'd order the execution of OBL. SO, what you would have (if the Iraqis were to elect someone that the US doesn't like) in that situation would essentially be the US deciding who the leader of Iraq should be -- and that, my friends, is not democracy.
And btw, this thread is excellent.
Quote from Madison:
anti-war does not imply anti-Americanism. they can coexist, but do not have to. this is obvious, and those that immediately shout 'unpatriotic' are either being argumentative or are trying to sell the policy.
that saddam is evil and heinous is accepted fact, but does not necessarily imply that a preemptive overthrow of his government in opposition to world opinion is the proper course of action. ie, there are multiple possible policies regarding saddam, and disagreeing with one does not imply disagreement with all. that it is the chosen policy does not imply that it is the best policy, unless you assume the administration is infallible.
one may disagree with both President Bush and Saddam, while simultaneously fully supporting both the US Constitution and the US military. to say otherwise is absurd.
contrary to what the more vocal fools on ET say, one may like and support President Bush, yet simultaneously disagree with his political position, or vice versa.
