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9/11 Denial

#1 User is offline   Cobnat Icon

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 09:57 PM

QUOTE
It was the decisive moment of the South Carolina debate.
Hearing Rep. Ron Paul recite the reasons for Arab and Islamic resentment of the United States, including 10 years of bombing and sanctions that brought death to thousands of Iraqis after the Gulf War, Rudy Giuliani broke format and exploded:

"That's really an extraordinary statement, as someone who lived through the attack of 9/11, that we invited the attack because we were attacking Iraq. I don't think I have ever heard that before, and I have heard some pretty absurd explanations for Sept. 11.

"I would ask the congressman to withdraw that comment and tell us that he didn't really mean that."

The applause for Rudy's rebuke was thunderous – the soundbite of the night and best moment of Rudy's campaign.

After the debate, on Fox News' "Hannity and Colmes," came one of those delicious moments on live television. As Michael Steele, GOP spokesman, was saying that Paul should probably be cut out of future debates, the running tally of votes by Fox News viewers was showing Ron Paul, with 30 percent, the winner of the debate.
Brother Hannity seemed startled and perplexed by the votes being text-messaged in the thousands to Fox News saying Paul won, Romney was second, Rudy third and McCain far down the track at 4 percent.

When Ron Paul said the 9/11 killers were "over here because we are over there," he was not excusing the mass murderers of 3,000 Americans. He was explaining the roots of hatred out of which the suicide-killers came.

Lest we forget, Osama bin Laden was among the mujahideen whom we, in the Reagan decade, were aiding when they were fighting to expel the Red Army from Afghanistan. We sent them Stinger missiles, Spanish mortars, sniper rifles. And they helped drive the Russians out.

What Ron Paul was addressing was the question of what turned the allies we aided into haters of the United States. Was it the fact that they discovered we have freedom of speech or separation of church and state? Do they hate us because of who we are? Or do they hate us because of what we do?

Osama bin Laden in his declaration of war in the 1990s said it was U.S. troops on the sacred soil of Saudi Arabia, U.S. bombing and sanctions of a crushed Iraqi people, and U.S. support of Israel's persecution of the Palestinians that were the reasons he and his mujahideen were declaring war on us.

Elsewhere, he has mentioned Sykes-Picot, the secret British-French deal that double-crossed the Arabs who had fought for their freedom alongside Lawrence of Arabia and were rewarded with a quarter century of British-French imperial domination and humiliation.

Almost all agree that, horrible as 9/11 was, it was not anarchic terror. It was political terror, done with a political motive and a political objective.

What does Rudy Giuliani think the political motive was for 9/11?

Was it because we are good and they are evil? Is it because they hate our freedom? Is it that simple?

Ron Paul says Osama bin Laden is delighted we invaded Iraq.

Does the man not have a point? The United States is now tied down in a bloody guerrilla war in the Middle East and increasingly hated in Arab and Islamic countries where we were once hugely admired as the first and greatest of the anti-colonial nations. Does anyone think that Osama is unhappy with what is happening to us in Iraq?

Of the 10 candidates on stage in South Carolina, Dr. Paul alone opposed the war. He alone voted against the war. Have not the last five years vindicated him, when two-thirds of the nation now agrees with him that the war was a mistake, and journalists and politicians left and right are babbling in confession, "If I had only known then what I know now ..."

Rudy implied that Ron Paul was unpatriotic to suggest the violence against us out of the Middle East may be in reaction to U.S. policy in the Middle East. Was President Hoover unpatriotic when, the day after Pearl Harbor, he wrote to friends, "You and I know that this continuous putting pins in rattlesnakes finally got this country bitten."

Pearl Harbor came out of the blue, but it also came out of the troubled history of U.S.-Japanese relations going back 40 years. Hitler's attack on Poland was naked aggression. But to understand it, we must understand what was done at Versailles – after the Germans laid down their arms based on Wilson's 14 Points. We do not excuse – but we must understand.

Ron Paul is no TV debater. But up on that stage in Columbia, he was speaking intolerable truths. Understandably, Republicans do not want him back, telling the country how the party blundered into this misbegotten war.

By all means, throw out of the debate the only man who was right from the beginning on Iraq.


Source

Seriously, Rudy says ‘we’ as if U.S civilians and the U.S military are one and the same.

This post has been edited by Cobnat: 04 February 2008 - 10:00 PM

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#2 User is offline   Simperin' Fool Icon

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 10:08 PM

I find it pretty absurd that people apparently aren't allowed to explain themselves when others jump to conclusions anymore.
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#3 User is offline   civilian_number_two Icon

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 10:22 PM

That's such a sophomoric answer anyway. It's the sort of thing folks make fun of on Internet forums. For instance: "I thought BRAVEHEART sucked." "What? BRAVEHEART was about freedom! Do you hate freedom?"

To look at decades of Arab trouble with the west and to conclude a) that they "hate freedom" and cool.gif that anyone who looks for real motivation must be forgetting that thing that happened in New York seven years ago, is simplistic and pandering. Only the weakest and most easily satisfied party-line supporters would applaud at that. Even Bush gave up on saying "9/11" at every soundbite something like 3 years ago. I guess for Giulliani it's the only thing he has to define his tenure as mayor; not that he did anything important during the even, or after, but that he was there.
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#4 User is offline   Snake Logan Icon

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 10:38 PM

To understand why they applauded Rudy Giuliani you have to understand the shock Americans felt when those towers fell. The shock was so great that Americans lost all common sense they had, which wasn’t much to begin with.
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Posted 04 February 2008 - 10:51 PM

I think that might be going a bit too far. Americans put their trust erroneously in someone. We wanted a leader to heal our nation and protect us. Last time something like this happened we had Roosevelt in office. He asked members of the military, navy and air force what could be done. He got ideas from members of the opposing party. He united America in opposition to fascism et al.

Bush, in contrast, told the army, navy and air force what we were goign to do, and was only just barely persuaded into WAITING to attack Iraq. And of course the Republican party suddenly became the thin red line between us and dirty bombing destruction while any questioning of the Bush doctrine, even from his own people, became tantamount to treason.

I'm by no means an optimist when it comes to US government, but even I wouldnt have imagined this nightmare scenario.

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#6 User is offline   Snake Logan Icon

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 11:02 PM

Roosevelt was the guy who put a trade embargo on Japan and provoked the wrath of the Japanese navy who depended on oil from America. Americans did indeed entrust him and hundreds of thousands of Americans died in a needless war against Japan as a result.
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QUOTE (Game Over @ Feb 14 2008, 07:42 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yahtzee, you are the Oscar Wilde of the 21st century.

QUOTE (Patch @ Feb 14 2008, 08:37 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yahtzee is gay?!
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Posted 04 February 2008 - 11:04 PM

I doubt he expected them to react so drastically.
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#8 User is offline   J m HofMarN Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 02:48 AM

Oh yeah, it was silly to put an embargo on Japan, cuz they clearly werent doing anything bad.

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#9 User is offline   civilian_number_two Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 02:58 AM

Snake, I think it's awesome you suspect we don't comprehend the shock Americans felt when those towers fell. Immediately afterward, I billeted folks stranded at the airport until they could get alternate transport worked out. We all watched the news and felt the shift to the right on the tv shows we watched and the papers we read. I live close to the US border, and I visited after those towers fell. I talked to people from a number of different walks of life and yes, I comprehend the shock that people felt when the towers fell. But now it's 7 years alter and we are no longer shocked. We can see that the attacks had provocation, and that US foreign policy invites fear and hatred. People in the US oppose the war but somehow can't bring themselves to oppose the reasoning behind it: it's military aggression, plain and simple, that caused a reaction. Ron Paul was just saying that, and in general terms, when Giulliani decided to start shouting "9/11." In political terms, he might as well have been yelling "I love lower taxes and I believe in God!" It's vacuous and it draws a lot of attention to the sort of President he would be, more gassy and jingoistic even than Bush.

It's not about the shock, it's about pandering to a simplistic sentimentality, a desire to believe that no American action could have caused that attack. The idea that the attack was not a reaction, but a first strike made by people hell-bent on destroying freedom and the American way of life.

What's even more awesome, Snake, is that you repeat and support the pundit's point that American activity in the Pacific might have drawn the US militarily into a war against Japan (a war that was by the way absolutely successful and like the current one pretty much one-sided). Most would take it then that you are saying that there's something to Ron Paul's comments that the 9/11 attacks also had provocation, of a nature more tangible than "they hate freedom." Would that be correct, or are there different rules for assessing the two scenarios?


"I had a lot of different ideas. At one point, Luke, Leia and Ben were all going to be little people, and we did screen tests to see if we could do that." -George Lucas, in STAR WARS: the Annotated Screenplays (p197).
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#10 User is offline   Casual Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 05:58 AM

QUOTE (Snake Logan @ Feb 5 2008, 04:02 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Roosevelt was the guy who put a trade embargo on Japan and provoked the wrath of the Japanese navy who depended on oil from America. Americans did indeed entrust him and hundreds of thousands of Americans died in a needless war against Japan as a result.


Snake I don’t usually take issue with your points and I leave poking holes in them to people with better debate skills than my own. But this travesty has to be addressed, are you saying it was unnecessary to fight fascism? Are you saying that the Americans and the British should have ignored Manchuria? I don’t agree with pointless wars I never agreed with the current war from the start or my government’s role in it and I do get fed up with the USA frequently implying they won WW2 single-handedly. However if ever in history there was a fully justifiable reason for war the actions of the axis power was it.
QUOTE (arien @ Jun 29 2008, 03:34 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
So this baby, while still inside its mother, murdered his twin brother and STOLE HIS PENIS.

That is one badass baby.

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#11 User is offline   Slade Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 06:54 AM

And THAT is Giuliani in a nutshell. A pathetic, rhetoric-spewing fascist pig. It's nice that Ron Paul had the guts to point out real reasons behind aggression against the United States, and absolutely appalling that the GOP would rather cut him out of all debates than let him speak truth. I'm not surprised in the slightest, of course.

This was written in May of last year, in case other people were wondering.
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#12 User is offline   Despondent Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 09:26 AM

Two things everybody forgets about 9/11:

The bomber of the 93 WTC was facing a court date and/or sentence that day

NYC was electing their new mayor (election postponed, Rudy got an extension).


I'm just sayin'
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#13 User is offline   Snake Logan Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 02:47 PM

QUOTE (civilian_number_two @ Feb 5 2008, 06:58 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
What's even more awesome, Snake, is that you repeat and support the pundit's point that American activity in the Pacific might have drawn the US militarily into a war against Japan (a war that was by the way absolutely successful and like the current one pretty much one-sided). Most would take it then that you are saying that there's something to Ron Paul's comments that the 9/11 attacks also had provocation, of a nature more tangible than "they hate freedom." Would that be correct, or are there different rules for assessing the two scenarios?


Looking at the reasons for war is the first step to avoid wars in the future. If Americans don’t understand that their president did provoke Japan and if Americans don’t understand that their presidents have provoked the wrath of Islamic Fascists then America has a rocky road ahead.

QUOTE (Casual @ Feb 5 2008, 09:58 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Snake I don’t usually take issue with your points and I leave poking holes in them to people with better debate skills than my own. But this travesty has to be addressed, are you saying it was unnecessary to fight fascism? Are you saying that the Americans and the British should have ignored Manchuria? I don’t agree with pointless wars I never agreed with the current war from the start or my government’s role in it and I do get fed up with the USA frequently implying they won WW2 single-handedly. However if ever in history there was a fully justifiable reason for war the actions of the axis power was it.


Lend-Lease was giving Britain, USSR, China, various anti-German guerrilla units in Europe and anti-Japanese guerrilla units in Asia unimaginable amounts of food, medical supplies and guns. When America entered the war, the Germans were already being slaughtered in Stalingrad and the British were winning in North Africa against Rommel. Japan only had control of parts of China, Indochina and a bit of the Pacific. America WAS fighting fascism. What Roosevelt did was provoke Japan in a needless war that turned the Pacific, the Philippines Hong Kong, Burma, the Dutch East Indies and Papua New Guinea into killing fields.

This post has been edited by Snake Logan: 05 February 2008 - 02:52 PM

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QUOTE (Game Over @ Feb 14 2008, 07:42 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yahtzee, you are the Oscar Wilde of the 21st century.

QUOTE (Patch @ Feb 14 2008, 08:37 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yahtzee is gay?!
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#14 User is offline   J m HofMarN Icon

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 03:22 PM

Snake, your continuing insistence on drawing links between the current mindless agression, and the unprovoked aggression we comitted to provoke Islamic attacks, I say that your attempts to liken this situation in any way shape or form to World War 2 are reprehensible.

We are not fighting "Islamic fascists" We are not fighting fascists of any kind. There are no concentration camps (at least not on the opposing side) We did not provoke Japan in world war 2. We did not provoke Germany. An embargo is not an act of war. It was an attempt to slow Japan's rape of Manchuria. It was an attempt to deprive the Japanese of fuel that was used to transport people to death camps and to fuel generators that supplied power for medical experiments.

And finally to suggest that Roosevelt did as much to provoke an enemy assault as the current US regime has to Islam, is an insult to the memory of a great man. Would the other allied powers have won the war if the US hadnt intervened? You know what, I think so. But I'm glad we did because the fact that we joined the right side is one of the few things that gives me a bit of pride in this nation.

QUOTE
What Roosevelt did was provoke Japan in a needless war that turned the Pacific, the Philippines Hong Kong, Burma, the Dutch East Indies and Papua New Guinea into killing fields.


Wow. You really are taking this oppositional disorder of yours to new levels. World War 2 was a needless war? I'll let someone else handle this one...

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Posted 05 February 2008 - 03:58 PM

Except then Truman dropped The Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. And last I checked, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor first, which of course doesn't excuse atomic warfare and the slaughter of millions of innocent civilians, but does reasonably explain the overall war in the Pacific.

It's a shame that anyone let Giuliani out of the nut house and let him campaign, and it's an even bigger shame that just a week or two ago, I heard someone at the school I was working at say that he was going to vote for the man. His rhetoric is even more offensive than the Bush regime's, and I shudder to think what would have happened were he to continue the race and actually get elected.
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