vegOmatic
15 years ago
No problem. Joe Biden was brought in because he's a genius on foreign policy.
blank
Cheesey
15 years ago

I already told you Iranians would fight against us if we invaded their country. More power to them. That is their obligation as citizens of Iran. You wouldn't seriously expect a country that is more than 20 times the age of our own to simply lay down and take it up the ass if we rolled across their borders, would you?

If Iran invaded America, I would hope Americans would fight back too.

What's your point?

"Nonstopdrivel" wrote:


MY POINT?
Were you not reading?
How about the fact that Iran invades Israel territory all the time, and you blast Israel for daring to fight back to protect their country.
The very words you wrote to say a country has the right to protect its self........you turn around and blast Israel for doing just that.
See the hypocracy in that?

And as far as you acting like Iran can be trusted. We should just let them go about their merry way, and stockpile nukes.
I pointed out from personal contact how far you can trust people from that area. He (the guy i knew) told me he had many friends in the U.S, and all of them felt that same as he did about OUR country. They smile at us, all the while hoping for an opportunity to strike.
Need an example? How about that guy in the army at Fort Hood.
THAT is what we are dealing with. People who don't care what they do. And the more of us they can kill, the happier they are. And they don't CARE if they die in the act. As long as they can take us out.
You can't make treaties with people that have one goal, and that is to KILL us.
I don't see why this is so hard to understand.
UserPostedImage
Cheesey
15 years ago
"Down with the U.S.A.!"

Yeah......but we have NO reason to fear them. After all, they are just "poor little Iran"............with nuclear weapons.

Can anyone tell me the last time we had rallys in the country with people holding "Down with Iran!" signs?

We have done nothing to that country, unless we were provoked. They on the other hand, like i have said, would kill us all if they had the chance.

I, for one, don't want them to get that chance.
UserPostedImage
Nonstopdrivel
15 years ago
Cheesey, with all due respect, I find it embarrassing that you make such a sweeping judgment of a nation over a few people you've met. So if a black guy shakes your hand and then takes your wallet, does that mean all blacks are lying, thieving scum? This is the exact attitude that got us into Iraq in the first place.

Any time anyone -- in particular, the government -- tries to persuade me to support a course of action using an argument based on fear, I am always instantly skeptical. Fear has been the tool of choice for tyrants, the power hungry, and warmongers throughout the millennia.

On WPR today, they interviewed Ervand Abrahamian, author of A Modern History of Iran, and he made a lot of interesting points.

He pointed out that the fact that the Islamic regime, with Ahmadenijad as its figurehead, had to rig the elections shows that they don't have much support in Iran. Interestingly, too, he said that the regime has particularly little support among the Muslim conservatives. He said that in his speeches, Ahmadenijad actively caters to what he calls the "evangelical Muslims," or in other words, the "born-again Muslims" who believe that the return of the Messiah is imminent. He said these evangelical Muslims make up perhaps 25% of the nation's population, just as evangelical Christians make up about 30% of the Republican Party, so anyone who wants to be in power has to at least cater to this contingent. (For a point of reference, I've had several Iranians tell me that almost no one in Iran is actually religious anymore, which jibes with what Abrahamian says.) He said it is hard to tell how much Ahmadenijad actually believes what he says and how much of it is just demagoguery to mobilize his base of support, just as it was hard to tell how much Bush truly believed his own evangelical Christian rhetoric. I'm of the personal opinion that Ahmadenijad is anything but the madman he is portrayed to be in our media; he is more of a minimally competent talking head backed by inflammatory advisors -- in the mold of Bush the Lesser.

He also pointed out that in fact, Iran's military is one of the weakest in the region -- probably one of the reasons why they want to posses a nuclear threat. Iran spends less money on weaponry than Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and even the little country of Kuwait. However, he also added that because the United States controls a great deal of territory in the region (Iraq and Afghanistan in particular), if Israel attacks Iran through any territory controlled by the United States, Iran will regard it as an act of aggression by the United States and will retaliate accordingly. And as I pointed out in an earlier post, while the people of Iran may not support the ruling regime, they do feel a duty to their homeland, and they will mobilize their militias en masse if we invade.

Is this something we really want to get involved in? Pull our troops out, pare back our military spending, and let's start mending our fences at home.

The purpose of this thread is not in fact to defend Iran, but rather to express my fear that the United States is overextending itself and overstaying its welcome in the world. Whether we like to admit it or not, the United States has been acting in an imperialistic fashion for decades. Every nation that has attempted to amass an empire has eventually fallen. A lot of Americans seem to be unconsciously influenced by the Manifest Destiny ideas of our forefathers and think that we have some sort of God-ordained immunity to this trend, but the fact is we don't. The worst thing about our imperialistic escapades is we can't even afford them; we're doing them on OPM (other people's money), money that will come due sooner or later. I don't want my children to have to grow up in a country that implodes after having grown too top heavy from its own hubris and greed. But I fear that is exactly what is going to happen.

All I have to say is that if my country invades Iran, I will put my wife and kids on a plane for a distant land and I will never return to this country (unless, of course, the CIA decides to drag me back). There is only so much patience I have for a country that refuses to learn from its mistakes.
UserPostedImage
Wade
  • Wade
  • Veteran Member
15 years ago


Any time anyone -- in particular, the government -- tries to persuade me to support a course of action using an argument based on fear, I am always instantly skeptical. Fear has been the tool of choice for tyrants, the power hungry, and warmongers throughout the millennia.

"Nonstopdrivel" wrote:



I think this is the underlying reason I am so anti-politics. It isn't just tyrants, power-hungry, and warmongers who play the fear card. It's caring and concerned and looking-to-do-good people. IMO the only thing politicians can do well is play upon fears.

If we need the state for anything, it is because of what we fear would happen without it. We fear war or poverty or illiteracy or immigration or commies or fascists or the other guy doing stuff to us.

But in the end, fear is not much of a reason to live by. Fear may keep too many space shuttles from blowing up, but it can't take us to the moon. Fear may be able to delay our death, but it can't improve our quality of living before our die. Fear may be able to prevent a particular robber from taking our wealth, but it can't show us how to create more wealth.

Fear may, sometimes, protect us from some bad things. But fear can't help us aspire to or create good things.

And so a profession whose only skill is, sometimes, making clear to us what we should fear, well, it just doesn't seem to be a profession worth much.

I don't mind any more whether a government "leader" tries to get my support through fear....because, quite frankly, I don't think he has any other way to get it. But because I know his only skill is playing on my fears, and because I know its not good for me to give too much counsel to my fears, I also rarely support such leaders.

Because, to me, they aren't leaders worth following.

I don't worry about what they ask me to do because, quite frankly, I'm not going to do anything because they ask me to. If the only people asking me to give charity were politicians, I'd never give to charity.

I worry about what they might force me to do.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)
Pack93z
15 years ago

Cheesey, with all due respect, I find it embarrassing that you make such a sweeping judgment of a nation over a few people you've met. So if a black guy shakes your hand and then takes your wallet, does that mean all blacks are lying, thieving scum? This is the exact attitude that got us into Iraq in the first place.

"Nonstopdrivel" wrote:



So kinda like your view on the 9th Ward in New Orleans.. eh.. lol.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"
Nonstopdrivel
15 years ago
What are you talking about? I made the comment that people were shooting at cops and that I was not impressed merely to point out that the city of New Orleans is not the uniformly noble victim it has been portrayed to be, not to imply all residents of New Orleans are suspect or that New Orleans should not be rebuilt.

I stand by my opinion that rebuilding trailer parks below sea level is asinine, however.
UserPostedImage
Cheesey
15 years ago
So....i guess what has happened in the region, or is happening doesn't matter?
You know fully well what i meant. There is a LARGE population of people of Arab descent that hate America. You'd have to be purposely blind to what's been going on in that region to paint me as a racist. There are terrorist cells all over the world, and who makes up the majority of these cells? Answer that question, if you dare. Because if you DO answer it honestly, it will destroy your argument or attempt at painting me for what I am not.
Did I say ALL Iranians are that way? Nope. But there is a large amount that are, and would gladly kill you and your family. If a certain group of people keep doing these kinds of things, I'll call it as it is. "Political correctness" shouldn't protect the bad people.
I call it not ignoring the facts. Not ignoring what's going on.

And Pack93z called you out on your own "sweeping judgement" of New Orleans, and it got your hackles up.
I guess that only works when you want it too, hey? The old "Do as I say, not as I do" rule.
Sorry, but you did the same thing you accused me of doing.
Sucks, doesn't it?
UserPostedImage
Nonstopdrivel
15 years ago
I've just shown you statistics culled from knowledgable people that show there aren't "a large amount" of Iranians just itching to kill us and destroy our way of life, but that in fact they are a decided minority -- and an increasingly marginalized one at that.

Alan, the idea that there are hordes of people around the world frothing at the mouth, obsessed with the destruction of America, makes no logical sense. Think about it: do you sit around plotting the demise of countries on the other side of the globe? Of course not. You have too many problems of your own to deal with. You have to get up in the morning, go to work, pay your bills, feed your family, keep your house clean, worry about the health of your heart, and so on. It's a rare day indeed you give any substantive thought to those infidels in Botswana or Denmark or Nigeria or even Iran. You don't have the time. What makes you think the people in those countries are any different? If anything, they have to expend even more effort than you do to keep themselves alive. They don't have the time nor the energy to waste on hating a country they will never see in their lifetimes.

As a member of the fedayeen (Saddam Hussein's private soldiers) once said to me, pointing to the U.S. ARMY nametape on my chest: "I don't have a problem you. I don't even have a problem with the United States. If it weren't for those words on your chest, you and I could go into Umm Qasr [the neighboring town], drink a little whiskey together, talk to the bitches, and have a good time. But the fact is, you're in my country, wearing that uniform, so I have a moral obligation as a man to defend my country against you. But am I going to load up a car with explosives, drive it into the street, blow it up, and risk the lives of my own women and children? Of course not! I'm going to take my rifle and shoot at you like a man."

He made these comments in the context of his argument that in fact the vast majority of explosive devices are being set not by Iraqis but by Jordanians, Syrians, Pakistanis, Saudis, etc., who are taking advantage of the situation in Iraq to fight us on Iraqi soil, to forestall us invading their lands. But his words illustrate the point I'm trying to make. As an Iraqi, he wasn't sitting around plotting the destruction of America. However, that didn't stop him from taking up arms to defend his country when it was invaded. Why? Because he's a man. And a man defends his homeland.

And no, I didn't make a sweeping judgment about New Orleans. I made a comment about a very small number of people in the city that -- as I have pointed out in the other thread -- connected to nothing else. The supposed false connections in my argument were erroneously interpolated by people reading my posts, which were addressing separate statements. So that argument fails too.

I'll leave you with some comments left on the Palin article on the Reason website:

Militant Islamic radicals have repeatedly stated that they want the influence of western powers out of their countries. Is that irrational? The radicals may not represent a majority view in their countries, but they are not "irrational haters". Saying they are is simply a cheap way of dismissing their grievances.

"Q b4 A" wrote:



They have actually been very specific about their hatred. It has very little to do with Islam and much to do with US foreign policy.
We were fairly well thought of in the ME before the CIA installed the Shah. Since then we have supported every brutal two-bit thug and monarchy and stuck our noses and our bombs in their business for so long that is where the hatred comes from.

Read OBL's declaration of war. He was very specific about the reasons and his goal. That goal to obtain victory was NOT about planting the flag of Islam in the US. It is to BANKRUPT the US.

Guess what? He's winning.

"gillicuty" wrote:


UserPostedImage
Fan Shout
Zero2Cool (5h) : Thomas Davis Jr is OLB, not WR. Oops.
Zero2Cool (5h) : Larry Fitzgeral and Thomas Davis sons too. WR's as well.
Mucky Tundra (20h) : Kaydon Finley, son of Jermichael Finley, commits to Notre Dame
dfosterf (3-Jul) : Make sure to send my props to him! A plus move!
Zero2Cool (3-Jul) : My cousin, yes.
dfosterf (3-Jul) : That was your brother the GB press gazette referenced with the red cross draft props thing, yes?
Zero2Cool (2-Jul) : Packers gonna unveil new throwback helmet in few weeks.
Mucky Tundra (2-Jul) : I know it's Kleiman but this stuff writes itself
Mucky Tundra (2-Jul) : "Make sure she signs the NDA before asking for a Happy Ending!"
Mucky Tundra (2-Jul) : @NFL_DovKleiman Powerful: Deshaun Watson is taking Shedeur Sanders 'under his wing' as a mentor to the Browns QBs
Zero2Cool (30-Jun) : Dolphins get (back) Minkah Fitzpatrick in trade
Zero2Cool (30-Jun) : Steelers land Jalen Ramsey via Trade
dfosterf (26-Jun) : I think it would be great to have someone like Tom Grossi or Andy Herman on the Board of Directors so he/they could inform us
dfosterf (26-Jun) : Fair enough, WPR. Thing is, I have been a long time advocate to at least have some inkling of the dynamics within the board.
wpr (26-Jun) : 1st world owners/stockholders problems dfosterf.
Martha Careful (25-Jun) : I would have otherwise admirably served
dfosterf (25-Jun) : Also, no more provision for a write-in candidate, so Martha is off the table at least for this year
dfosterf (25-Jun) : You do have to interpret the boring fine print, but all stockholders all see he is on the ballot
dfosterf (25-Jun) : It also says he is subject to another ballot in 2028. I recall nothing of this nature with Murphy
dfosterf (25-Jun) : Ed Policy is on my ballot subject to me penciling him in as a no.
dfosterf (25-Jun) : I thought it used to be we voted for the whatever they called the 45, and then they voted for the seven, and then they voted for Mark Murphy
dfosterf (25-Jun) : Because I was too lazy to change my address, I haven't voted fot years until this year
dfosterf (25-Jun) : of the folks that run this team. I do not recall Mark Murphy being subject to our vote.
dfosterf (25-Jun) : Ed Policy yay or nay is on the pre-approved ballot that we always approve because we are uninformed and lazy, along with all the rest
dfosterf (25-Jun) : Weird question. Very esoteric. For stockholders. Also lengthy. Sorry. Offseason.
Zero2Cool (25-Jun) : Maybe wicked wind chill made it worse?
Mucky Tundra (25-Jun) : And then he signs with Cleveland in the offseason
Mucky Tundra (25-Jun) : @SharpFootball WR Diontae Johnson just admitted he refused to enter a game in 41° weather last year in Baltimore because he felt “ice cold”
Zero2Cool (24-Jun) : Yawn. Rodgers says he is "pretty sure" this be final season.
Zero2Cool (23-Jun) : PFT claims Packers are having extension talks with Zach Tom, Quay Walker.
Mucky Tundra (20-Jun) : GB-Minnesota 2004 Wild Card game popped up on my YouTube page....UGH
beast (20-Jun) : Hmm 🤔 re-signing Walker before Tom? Sounds highly questionable to me.
Mucky Tundra (19-Jun) : One person on Twitter=cannon law
Zero2Cool (19-Jun) : Well, to ONE person on Tweeter
Zero2Cool (19-Jun) : According to Tweeter
Zero2Cool (19-Jun) : Packers are working on extension for LT Walker they hope to have done before camp
dfosterf (18-Jun) : E4B landed at Andrews last night
dfosterf (18-Jun) : 101 in a 60
dfosterf (18-Jun) : FAFO
Zero2Cool (18-Jun) : one year $4m with incentives to make it up to $6m
dfosterf (18-Jun) : Or Lions
dfosterf (18-Jun) : Beats the hell out of a Vikings signing
Zero2Cool (18-Jun) : Baltimore Ravens now have signed former Packers CB Jaire Alexander.
dfosterf (14-Jun) : TWO magnificent strikes for touchdowns. Lose the pennstate semigeezer non nfl backup
dfosterf (14-Jun) : There was minicamp Thursday. My man Taylor Engersma threw
dfosterf (11-Jun) : There will be a mini camp practice Thursday.
Zero2Cool (11-Jun) : He's been sporting a ring for a while now. It's probably Madonna.
Martha Careful (10-Jun) : We only do the tea before whoopee, it relaxes me.
wpr (10-Jun) : That's awesome Martha.
Mucky Tundra (10-Jun) : How's the ayahuasca tea he makes, Martha?
Please sign in to use Fan Shout
2025 Packers Schedule
Sunday, Sep 7 @ 3:25 PM
LIONS
Thursday, Sep 11 @ 7:15 PM
COMMANDERS
Sunday, Sep 21 @ 12:00 PM
Browns
Sunday, Sep 28 @ 7:20 PM
Cowboys
Sunday, Oct 12 @ 3:25 PM
BENGALS
Sunday, Oct 19 @ 3:25 PM
Cardinals
Sunday, Oct 26 @ 7:20 PM
Steelers
Sunday, Nov 2 @ 12:00 PM
PANTHERS
Monday, Nov 10 @ 7:15 PM
EAGLES
Sunday, Nov 16 @ 12:00 PM
Giants
Sunday, Nov 23 @ 12:00 PM
VIKINGS
Thursday, Nov 27 @ 12:00 PM
Lions
Sunday, Dec 7 @ 12:00 PM
BEARS
Sunday, Dec 14 @ 3:25 PM
Broncos
Friday, Dec 19 @ 11:00 PM
Bears
Friday, Dec 26 @ 11:00 PM
RAVENS
Saturday, Jan 3 @ 11:00 PM
Vikings
Recent Topics
8h / Random Babble / Martha Careful

4-Jul / Green Bay Packers Talk / wpr

2-Jul / Green Bay Packers Talk / dfosterf

2-Jul / Fantasy Sports Talk / dfosterf

1-Jul / Green Bay Packers Talk / wpr

29-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / Zero2Cool

25-Jun / Around The NFL / Martha Careful

23-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / Mucky Tundra

20-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / wpr

20-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / beast

20-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / beast

18-Jun / Random Babble / Zero2Cool

16-Jun / Green Bay Packers Talk / dfosterf

15-Jun / Random Babble / Martha Careful

14-Jun / Around The NFL / beast

Headlines
Copyright © 2006 - 2025 PackersHome.com™. All Rights Reserved.