Bush Destroyed Conservative Movement

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Doug
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Post by Doug »

Betsy wrote:Barbara offers: send in a specialized ground military to defeat the government/group committing the genocide.
DOUG
I don't see how that is any different from what I suggested with "send in the military." Of course, one has to look at this on a case by case basis, and it is extremely rare that one could wisely send in ONLY ground troops, with no air cover. That kind of fighting went out in WWI.
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Post by Hogeye »

But if you are concerned with murdering non-combatants, then a highly targeted commando-type unit is a moral option. But as you say, no self-respecting bloody State military would even seriously consider such a course "with no air cover." Yes, peaceniks like me and Dick Bennet agree with you, Doug - the notion of "just war" sparing non-combatants went out with WWI (and the development of aerial bombing.)
"May the the last king be strangled in the guts of the last priest." - Diderot
With every drop of my blood I hate and execrate every form of tyranny, every form of slavery. I hate dictation. I love liberty. - Ingersoll
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Post by Doug »

Hogeye wrote:But if you are concerned with murdering non-combatants, then a highly targeted commando-type unit is a moral option. But as you say, no self-respecting bloody State military would even seriously consider such a course "with no air cover." Yes, peaceniks like me and Dick Bennet agree with you, Doug - the notion of "just war" sparing non-combatants went out with WWI (and the development of aerial bombing.)
DOUG
It's not a matter of sparing non-combatants. You can't win modern wars without air cover.

And Darrel showed how this can be done effectively with his citation of Clinton's stopping of the Serbian genocide.
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Post by Hogeye »

Doug wrote:It's not a matter of sparing non-combatants. You can't win modern wars without air cover.
Again, for some of us, sparing non-combatants is of utmost importance. "Winning modern wars" is a big deal, I'm sure, to the statist mentality, but for accomplishing a specific objective (such as assassinating a ruler intent on genocide, or freeing hostages), such mass-murder is quite unnecessary.

Examples: Carter's attempt at sending a commando unit to free the American hostages in Iran satisfied just war criteria. Shooting rockets into civilian neighborhoods as was done in Fallujah does not, nor does any aerial bombing of civilian areas. Clinton's bombing of civilian areas in Serbia/Bosnia also does not qualify. Remember that school bus full of kids obliterated, and the Chinese embassy?
"May the the last king be strangled in the guts of the last priest." - Diderot
With every drop of my blood I hate and execrate every form of tyranny, every form of slavery. I hate dictation. I love liberty. - Ingersoll
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Post by Dardedar »

Hogeye wrote: Again, for some of us, sparing non-combatants is of utmost importance.
DAR
Yes, we all know how important sparing people's lives is to you:

"...the danger from loss of freedom of speech overrides the deaths of a few ignorant/stupid people. The problem is self-correcting - the gullible people die. I'm not willing to give up my freedom to save them, and I am not sorry about that in the least." --Hogeye, December 1, anti-FDA rant

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Post by Doug »

Hogeye wrote:
Doug wrote:It's not a matter of sparing non-combatants. You can't win modern wars without air cover.
Again, for some of us, sparing non-combatants is of utmost importance. "Winning modern wars" is a big deal, I'm sure, to the statist mentality, but for accomplishing a specific objective (such as assassinating a ruler intent on genocide, or freeing hostages), such mass-murder is quite unnecessary.
DOUG
I am specifically referring to wars performed in order to prevent genocide. You still have not explained in a consistent manner why you oppose wars to prevent genocide on the grounds that some civilians may be killed, and yet you are willing to allow genocide to take place instead, which results in even more deaths of civilians. War against genocide AND genocide results in the deaths of civilians, so you can't oppose one on the grounds that it kills civilians and not oppose the other.
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Post by Hogeye »

I'll explain it again. I am not a utilitarian. I don't simply count bodies and act on the basis of "which results in even more deaths." In deciding my conduct, I choose conduct that does not murder people. In evaluting conduct of an actor, I deem conduct which murders people to be wrong (except when the survival of the actor is at stake.) In other words, I am against murder in principle, not in the expedient utilitarian sense.

So, if there is a murder gang killing people, and I can stop the murder gang by murdering innocents, I will not do it, since I hold that such is wrong in principle. A utilitarian may murder innocents to stop the murder gang, if he counted up the expected deaths and, by murdering innocents he could reduce the expected death count.

I'm not sure why you don't get this. Perhaps you are stuck on the utilitarian thing; you mistake me not wanting to kill non-combatants, a principle of conduct, with dead non-combatants as a result. Here's one more way to say it: Being against murder on principle means not "trading off" some corpses for others. It is not okay to murder N people to save N + 1 from being murdered. Being against murder in principle means being against all murder; utilitarianism is being for the minimization of murder. Read the story of the sheriff and lynch mob again - that's a perfect illustration.

There are ways to reduce or prevent genocide that don't necessarily involve murdering non-combatants. Assassinating Pol Pot may have prevented a genocide. Supplying weapons to the victim group is a good idea. (The UN restrictions on small arms trade has contributed to several genocides in Africa already - they are doing the total opposite of what needs to be done.)
"May the the last king be strangled in the guts of the last priest." - Diderot
With every drop of my blood I hate and execrate every form of tyranny, every form of slavery. I hate dictation. I love liberty. - Ingersoll
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Post by Doug »

Hogeye wrote:I'll explain it again. I am not a utilitarian. I don't simply count bodies and act on the basis of "which results in even more deaths." In deciding my conduct, I choose conduct that does not murder people. In evaluting conduct of an actor, I deem conduct which murders people to be wrong (except when the survival of the actor is at stake.) In other words, I am against murder in principle, not in the expedient utilitarian sense.

So, if there is a murder gang killing people, and I can stop the murder gang by murdering innocents, I will not do it...
DOUG
But killing innocents is not how a military campaign stops genocide. The civilian deaths are accidental.
"We could have done something important Max. We could have fought child abuse or Republicans!" --Oona Hart (played by Victoria Foyt), in the 1995 movie "Last Summer in the Hamptons."
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Post by Barbara Fitzpatrick »

By Hogeye's definition, I'm a utilitarian - I want the fewest deaths total and not the fewest deaths I personally am responsible for. However, I do take his point about bombs and missiles - the civilian deaths may not be intended, but they aren't exactly accidental if you knowingly fire those things into a civilian area. Air cover is only necessary to defend against the other side's air. If the other side doesn't have air, you don't need it either. We are not fighting, anywhere in the world, in such a manner as to actually need air cover. We are bombing civilian areas because every group we are fighting is comprised of small, "non-traditional" forces - guerrillas, insurgents, warlords, etc. - that hide, if not live, in those civilian areas. It is counterproductive. We are knocking out people who would have been on our side - and making enemies of their families - and that's everywhere, not just Iraq. We need to be using equally small, well-trained, ground forces and good intelligence (NOT tortured confessions) to find the actual insurrgents and take the fight to the real enemy - be it in Iraq, Darfur, or anywhere else.
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Post by Doug »

Barbara Fitzpatrick wrote: By Hogeye's definition, I'm a utilitarian - I want the fewest deaths total and not the fewest deaths I personally am responsible for. However, I do take his point about bombs and missiles - the civilian deaths may not be intended, but they aren't exactly accidental if you knowingly fire those things into a civilian area.
DOUG
I agree. However, it seems to me that if you can prevent the genocide of 100,000 civilian people by using your army that kills 800 civilians in collateral damage, I'd say go ahead and prevent the superfluous deaths.
Barbara Fitzpatrick wrote: Air cover is only necessary to defend against the other side's air. If the other side doesn't have air, you don't need it either. We are not fighting, anywhere in the world, in such a manner as to actually need air cover
We are bombing civilian areas because every group we are fighting is comprised of small, "non-traditional" forces - guerrillas, insurgents, warlords, etc. - that hide, if not live, in those civilian areas. It is counterproductive. We are knocking out people who would have been on our side - and making enemies of their families - and that's everywhere, not just Iraq. We need to be using equally small, well-trained, ground forces and good intelligence (NOT tortured confessions) to find the actual insurrgents and take the fight to the real enemy - be it in Iraq, Darfur, or anywhere else.
DOUG
Well, sometimes air power is needed to knock out radar, take out military installations, etc. with the least amount of deaths on one's own side.

Even in Iraq, had we sent in enough troops to keep the peace, contra Lying Rummy's lowball numbers, the Iraqis may well have hailed us as liberators. Instead, we guarded oil rigs and didn't give a crap what happened to the people after we conquered them.
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Post by Hogeye »

Even on a utilitarian basis, judging from history it's doubtful whether statist wars help. WWII stopped the Holocaust (20 million dead), but made the world safe for "Uncle Joe" Stalin (Ukraine gencide - 20 million dead) and Mao (Cultural Revolution - 20-35 million dead). But that wasn't fought against genocide.

The recent Kosevo aggression and occupation was a war fought to overshadow Clinton's famous blowjob, but was ostensibly anti-genocide if you believe lackey US media like Fox. Even here, the utilitarian verdict is quite unclear. Evidence is that the threat of invasion hastened, encouraged, and accelerated ethnic cleansing. After the occupation, there was quite a bit of retaliatory genocide by the other side. Any claims to reduced overall genocide are mere propaganda.

Has occupation of Afghanistan or Iraq reduced death rates? Is there any reason whatsoever to assume that a similar tar-baby occupation of Rwanda would have reduced overall deaths, rather than extended them for longer?

Face it: government is just as incompetent at preventing genocide as it is at most things. The only thing a statist war guarantees is that munitions firms make money, ruling politician sell favors, State power is racheted up, and the flaghumpers cheer it all on while providing their sons and daughters as cannon-fodder.
Doug wrote:Even in Iraq, had we sent in enough troops to keep the peace, contra Lying Rummy's lowball numbers, the Iraqis may well have hailed us as liberators.
The Iraqis may well have hailed the US Imperial Army as liberators if they had put down Saddam and the Baathist Party and promptly left. If they had stayed, as they did, they would be hated as occupiers no matter how many or few there were. What you say is absurd, like saying if only the Nazis had sent more troops into France, the French would have hailed them as liberators. Suggestion: Quit watching US TV news - it rots the mind. And beware the Stateholm Syndrome.
"May the the last king be strangled in the guts of the last priest." - Diderot
With every drop of my blood I hate and execrate every form of tyranny, every form of slavery. I hate dictation. I love liberty. - Ingersoll
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Post by Doug »

Hogeye wrote:Face it: government is just as incompetent at preventing genocide as it is at most things.
Darrel gave an example where it worked.

There are many things at which government projects kick the asses of private projects. An interstate highway system, for example. Armies. Welfare for the poor. Border security. Intelligence gathering. Going into space. The list goes on and on.
Doug wrote:Even in Iraq, had we sent in enough troops to keep the peace, contra Lying Rummy's lowball numbers, the Iraqis may well have hailed us as liberators.
Hogeye wrote:The Iraqis may well have hailed the US Imperial Army as liberators if they had put down Saddam and the Baathist Party and promptly left.
No, that would not have been good enough. We would have had to keep an infrastructure in place for basic necessities and for security.
Hogeye wrote: If they had stayed, as they did, they would be hated as occupiers no matter how many or few there were. What you say is absurd, like saying if only the Nazis had sent more troops into France, the French would have hailed them as liberators. Suggestion: Quit watching US TV news - it rots the mind. And beware the Stateholm Syndrome.
The French government was not oppressing the French people when the Nazis invaded. That's ridiculous.
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Post by Dardedar »

Hogeye wrote: The recent Kosevo aggression... fought to overshadow Clinton's famous blowjob,...
DAR
Actually it was to stop a genocide, and it worked very well. Although it did take 78 days and a lot of destruction of infastructure. Incidentally, the repub's investigated the aspirin factory hit, thinking it was a Monica distraction (which I found somewhat plausible, and by plausible I mean likely), but they found Clinton's decisions in authorizing that were justified by the intel he was given.
but was ostensibly anti-genocide if you believe lackey US media like Fox.
DAR
Only in an Ozarkian fable could FOX be considered a lackey for Clinton.
Actually:
"In Western countries, opposition to NATO's intervention was mainly from conservatives and libertarians on the right, and from most of the far left."
Evidence is that the threat of invasion hastened, encouraged, and accelerated ethnic cleansing.
DAR
Threat of NATO bombings if you don't stop doing something always makes you want to do more of it. Is that how it works in an Ozarkian fable?
Any claims to reduced overall genocide are mere propaganda.
DAR
What a load. Clinton, via NATO, stopped them. Almost 200,000 dead. Good thing they moved when they did. The numbers were climbing fast. Stopping genocide is one of the few times I think military action is justified.

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Post by Hogeye »

The Albanian genocide in Kosovo was basically the same as WMDs in Iraq - a big lie based on a quarter-truth. It's funny how flaghumpers fall for government lies in the predictable partisan way. The two factions of the War Party are really very much alike, even to believing the bullshit or their faction's warmonger rulers.
The Foreign Office documents were responses to the courts' needs in deciding the status of Kosovo-Albanian refugees in Germany. Although one might in these cases suppose a bias in favor of downplaying a humanitarian catastrophe in order to limit refugees, it nevertheless remains highly significant that the Foreign Office, in contrast to its public assertion of ethnic cleansing and genocide in justifying NATO intervention, privately continued to deny their existence as Yugoslav policy in this crucial period. And this continued to be their assessment even in March of this year. Thus these documents tend to show that stopping genocide was not the reason the German government, and by implication NATO, intervened in Kosovo, and that genocide (as understood in German and international law) in Kosovo did not precede NATO bombardment, at least not from early 1998 through March, 1999, but is a product of it. - Important Internal Documents From Germany's Foreign Office Regarding Pre-Bombardment Genocide In Kosovo
The record is now crystal clear that NATO and the Clinton administration deliberately lied about Serbian atrocities in Kosovo to justify their intervention in a low-intensity civil war in the Balkans.

It turns out that as few as 2,108 people were actually killed in Kosovo over a period of months leading up to and including the period of heavy bombardment of Serbia by NATO forces.

This is hardly "genocide," as it was billed by Clinton, Defense Secretary William Cohen, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., former Sen. Bob Dole and David Scheffer, U.S. ambassador for war crimes.

By whipping up hysteria for an illegal bombing campaign, all of these men have blood on their hands.

It wasn't hundreds of thousands of dead in Kosovo, as some reports suggested. It wasn't even tens of thousands. It was, at worst, a couple thousand over a considerable period of time. That, of course, is still a dreadful and grisly toll. But, to put it in perspective, no global authority -- not the United Nations, nor NATO -- ever advocates intervention in the United States or anywhere else when the annual murder toll hits 2,000, which it does early in the first half of every year.

Think of the hyperbole we heard prior to the bombing campaign:

• "By the time the snows fall next winter, there will be genocide documented on a large scale in Kosovo," said Biden.

• "History will judge us harshly if we do not take action to stop this rolling genocide," said Hagel.

• "What we have in Kosovo and what (we) had in Bosnia was genocide, and that's why I think we should intervene," said Dole.

• "There are indications genocide is unfolding in Kosovo," said State Department spokesman Jamie Rubin.

• Cohen characterized the bombing campaign as a "fight for justice over genocide."

• Scheffer said Kosovo was one of the top three genocides since 1950, rivaled only by Rwanda and Cambodia.

But no one laid it on as thick as Clinton. He compared the atrocities in Kosovo to the Holocaust. Kosovo, he said, "is not war in the traditional sense. Imagine what would happen if we and our allies instead decided just to look the other way as these people were massacred on NATO's doorstep." - The real war crimes
The embarrassing truth is starting to come out that the Clinton administration lied to us about Kosovo atrocities, which were supposed to justify the bombing of Yugoslavia. In five months of investigation, and exhumation of the dead in Kosovo, U.N. war crimes investigators have found only 2,108 bodies.

Before the bombing, Mr. Clinton and Defense Secretary William Cohen repeatedly tossed out figures of 100,000 dead, and the State Department even claimed that up to 500,000 Kosovars were feared dead. Mr. Clinton claimed that his bombing prevented Slobodan Milosevic from "deliberate, systematic efforts at ethnic cleansing and genocide."

The chief prosecutor for the U.N. war crimes tribunal, Carla Del Ponte, can confirm only the 2,108 figure. That's what she reported to the U.N. Security Council.

Pathologist Emilio Perez Pujol, who led a Spanish forensic team looking for bodies, found only 187, mostly in individual graves. He calculated that "the final figure of dead in Kosovo will be 2,500 at the most. This includes lots of strange deaths that can't be blamed on anyone in particular."

The British, who seem to be more interested in getting to the truth than Congress, are pressuring Foreign Secretary Robin Cook to answer claims that Tony Blair's government misled the public over the scale of deaths in order to justify NATO's bombing of Belgrade. Alice Mahon, the Labor member of Parliament who chairs the Balkans committee, said that the Kosovo deaths were tragic, but did not justify the killing of Belgrade civilians by NATO's bombing. - Numbers game in Kosovo
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With every drop of my blood I hate and execrate every form of tyranny, every form of slavery. I hate dictation. I love liberty. - Ingersoll
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Post by Savonarola »

This is what I get for not nipping it in the bud good and early.

All comments regarding genocide should be posted in this thread.

--Savonarola, Politics Moderator
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Post by Dardedar »

DAR
An ancient Zmag rant and a 7 year old, outdated, Phyllis Schlafly article. Both filled with howlers and out dated junk. They are still finding mass graves (last year). I can't imagine anyone thinking this needs a response. I investigated and roasted this stuff once on NWA. About 200,000 confimed killed in the Bosnian genocide. Denial of this genocide is not dissimilar to holocaust denial.

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Post by Savonarola »

As we seem to be all out of on-topic conversation, it's apparent that we're done here.

If you can't cooperate, I'll leave you no choice.

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