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Napoleon Ier wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:I'm not entirely sure you can say that the position of the US was to only intervene when it's direct interest was involved, you have to remember that Roosevelt was a Democrat of an Interventionist WIlsonian tradition, and it's entirely plausible that both he and indeed to a lesser degree Wilson intervened because they were genuinely concerned about the fate of oppressed peoples.
Then why did they take so much time?
.
Why did anyone? Where was the rest of the free world during the Abyssinian War, Anschluss, and Czechoslovakia?
OnlyAmbrose wrote:1) Regardless of whether or not a person agrees with the war in Iraq (and a lot of folks in the military don't), the simple fact of the matter is that without a military the United States would fall. You could join the Navy, get stationed on a ship, and never fire a weapon and you would still be "defending America" because you are part of that force which prevents attacks just by existing. On the flip side, you could join the Marines, get stationed in Iraq, and never fire a round in anger on American soil and you will still be defending America for the very same reason. Whether or not you agree with the various foreign wars America is currently in, the basic fact of the matter is that without the military America would fall, and for those who don't want to see America fall, joining is a noble pursuit.
2) All officers are required to take courses in "leadership and ethics" and read quite a bit of literature on the matter. Your cynicism about those in power is duly noted, but given that officers are required to essentially take philosophy courses leads me to believe that what can be done is being done. The battlefield is a very mentally stressful environment so atrocities happen, but precautions are taken. Even if you're a cynic you'd have to concede that the government doesn't want atrocities to happen, it's very bad PR and tactically disadvantageous in a war for hearts and minds as this one is.
3) You seem to be assuming that soldiers and Marines who follow "suicidal orders" are mindless robots. I can guarantee that they are not, because hundreds have proven to be willing to do suicidal things in combat without being ordered to. Men who jump on grenades to save their buddies, medics & corpsmen who run out into the open to grab a wounded comrade... there are hundreds of cases like this and many more which go unaccounted for.
I'm a little peeved at your portrayal of soldiers and Marines as brainless souless idiots who have no regard for their own lives or anyone else's. It's not the case. Any Marine ordered to do something dangerous is scared, nervous, and excited. Those are the same emotions you would feel in the same situation. What motivates them to get it done isn't some brainwashing conditioning, it's a feeling of obligation to his friends who are counting on him to do his job so they don't get hurt or killed.
And a military who gives suicidal orders is a mad one. which is the reason for my earlier rant. I do not think the soldiers are mindless drones, but they should recognise that their leaders don't always have their best interest in mind. If they see that and still join, well okay for them I guess, but plenty of new recruits seem to not know it.
But the decision to join still doesn't warrant any respect from me. Respect should be earned, and soldiers and marines who sacrifice themselves for their friends or for innocent strangers earn it. But just being in the military shouldn't give you any respect.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Define suicidal order? Sure, in hindsight it's easy to see that the tactics of WWI were ridiculous, but you had commanders from the days when close order drill was a combat tactic commanding troops against technologies of a new century. Does that make them mad, or stupid? I wouldn't say so, it's a product of the times.
Any order in combat could be perceived as a suicidal one. A squad leader orders a fire team to assault a position. "Wait, the guys over there have guns! They could shoot me! I could be killed! That's suicidal!" That kind of thinking can't happen on the battlefield or people WILL get killed.
Tactics evolve, times change, but most commanders in the field have their troops close to their heart. Marine leaders do anyways. The most prevalent lesson in my officer training thus far has been "your primary responsibility is to take care of your Marines." Everything we do boils down to that. At indoc I forgot to shave one night. "What, you forgot to shave Midshipman? You gonna forget to request ammo when you're out in the fleet? You gonna forget to get your Marines to the chow hall? You gonna lead hungry Marines into battle with no ammo, Midshipman? You're gonna get Marines killed, that's what you're gonna do!"
Maybe what's frustrating me is that you don't seem to get how the US military, works, how we're trained, what we're taught. That Marines have superiors who don't care about them is a lie. Caring about Marines is the lesson which above all others is repeated every day.
But the decision to join still doesn't warrant any respect from me. Respect should be earned, and soldiers and marines who sacrifice themselves for their friends or for innocent strangers earn it. But just being in the military shouldn't give you any respect.
I don't think anyone in the military would disagree with you on that.
Well, respect is shown to rank and such but extraordinary respect is certainly what you described.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis

Sure, there is a thing to be said for respect to rank. But my gripe is more of a reaction to what I frequently see on the internet. i.e., if someone mentions they have served or are serving (without any mention of what they did or their rank) they always get comments thanking them for their service and so on.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Sure, there is a thing to be said for respect to rank. But my gripe is more of a reaction to what I frequently see on the internet. i.e., if someone mentions they have served or are serving (without any mention of what they did or their rank) they always get comments thanking them for their service and so on.
And I'm not griping about you having a problem with the instant "respect" military people get. I seriously don't give a f*ck. What I AM griping about are comments like "anyone who enlists is an idiot." That's not just not giving someone respect, that's showing complete and utter disrespect, and I have an issue with that.
Though it seems like you've toned down the rhetoric to a reasonable level, and you have my thanks for that.
Snorri1234 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Sure, there is a thing to be said for respect to rank. But my gripe is more of a reaction to what I frequently see on the internet. i.e., if someone mentions they have served or are serving (without any mention of what they did or their rank) they always get comments thanking them for their service and so on.
And I'm not griping about you having a problem with the instant "respect" military people get. I seriously don't give a f*ck. What I AM griping about are comments like "anyone who enlists is an idiot." That's not just not giving someone respect, that's showing complete and utter disrespect, and I have an issue with that.
Though it seems like you've toned down the rhetoric to a reasonable level, and you have my thanks for that.
To be fair I was being a bit hyperbolic. Idiot is a little too strong of a word, I was just a litle pissed at the time. (And quite drunk too.) Idiot probably sounds disrespectfull, but it really wasnt my intent. I call people idiots all the time, without actually meaning disrespect. Hell, if everyone I've called an idiot takes it as disrespect I've probably disrespected the entire world, including myself.
mpjh wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Sure, there is a thing to be said for respect to rank. But my gripe is more of a reaction to what I frequently see on the internet. i.e., if someone mentions they have served or are serving (without any mention of what they did or their rank) they always get comments thanking them for their service and so on.
And I'm not griping about you having a problem with the instant "respect" military people get. I seriously don't give a f*ck. What I AM griping about are comments like "anyone who enlists is an idiot." That's not just not giving someone respect, that's showing complete and utter disrespect, and I have an issue with that.
Though it seems like you've toned down the rhetoric to a reasonable level, and you have my thanks for that.
To be fair I was being a bit hyperbolic. Idiot is a little too strong of a word, I was just a litle pissed at the time. (And quite drunk too.) Idiot probably sounds disrespectfull, but it really wasnt my intent. I call people idiots all the time, without actually meaning disrespect. Hell, if everyone I've called an idiot takes it as disrespect I've probably disrespected the entire world, including myself.
I used the term idiot also, but not for those that enlist, rather for those that lead them in a futile exercise and do not have the courage to stand up to the commander in chief and say "you are wrong and I am not executing in illegal order." Our leaders in Afghanistan have lead our troops in ridiculous, idiot exercises that have not captured or killed the intended target, have failed to pacified the country, have not removed the enemy Al Qaeda from the field, and have lost the support of the American people. I really don't think there are words strong enough to describe the abject failure of these leaders.
Snorri1234 wrote:
I'm calling Bush and his friends evil dickwads.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Snorri1234 wrote: I'm calling Bush and his friends evil dickwads.
Wow-hold your horses there cowboy! Controversial! Way to rebel there, tigah! You're, you're, I mean you're out there man. That's brave. That's a real display of political courage, I must say...
Aradhus wrote:The US government is number 1 when it comes to funding terrorist organisations, which is ironic since they've spent the past 7 years fighting "the war on terror".

mpjh wrote:For one, we fund military operations in Columbia, train their death squads, and turn a blind eye when they "disappear" their own people. State terrorism.
Similarly. we funded the military operations of Pinochet in Argentina, which engaged in precisely the same state terrorism.
We funded, through Israel, Hamas in its early days when we were trying to undercut the PLO.
We provided military support to the Philippine army in its terrorist campaign against the Muslim forces trying to gain autonomy in the Philippines. The Philippine army killed innocent civilians indiscriminately trying to terrorise the movement into submission.
During the war in Viet Nam we funded and executed Operation Phoenix, which was a program of assassinations of Vietnamese people, trying to terrorize the resistance into submission. It failed.
The United States Army engaged in a program to kill off all Bison in the western plains and thus eliminate the chief protein source for plains Native Americans, then when subdued the US Armn provided small pox laden blankets to the captives, killing off a large number of innocent women and children. That is terrorism.
There are more examples, if you want.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.

joe cool 360 wrote:Colombia death squads:
Why we funded them – to keep cocaine from being produced there and from entering the U.S.
What went wrong – the money went to “death squads”
What we’ve done about it – cut funding (with the likely possibility of eliminating it altogether)
joe cool 360 wrote:Hamas:
Why we funded them – to undercut the PLO (lesser of two weevils)
What went wrong – Hamas also wants jihad and all that jazz
What we’ve done about it – now that PLO is out the window, we’re against Hamas
joe cool 360 wrote:Philippine war against Muslims:
Why we funded them – To prevent the spread of terrorism
What went wrong – the Philippino citizens began committing acts of terrorism
What we’ve done about it – we’ve increased funding to the Philippines*
joe cool 360 wrote:Operation Phoenix:
Why we funded/ did it – to eliminate key members of the NLF in an attempt to keep them from eliminating people of South Vietnam
What went wrong – it didn’t work very well in the long run and was unethical
What we’ve done about it – outlawed assassinations
joe cool 360 wrote:US killing of Native Americans and Bison:
Why we did it – to kill the Indians
What went wrong – it’s unethical
What we’ve done about it – stopped killing Indians, provide them with numerous government grants and jobs
joe cool 360 wrote:*Why we’ve increased military funding to the Philippines – there’s a pretty major conflict going on down there, I know because I have a friend who lives down there. In addition, we’ve noticed the human rights violations and have told them that we will not increase aid any more until it is investigated.
(A slap on the wrist, I know)
[/quote]joe cool 360 wrote:So, what does all this say?
It says the U.S. is a country made up of fallible humans who will ignore atrocities on account of self-interest. However, we have tried to make up for past injustices and set things right, does it mean we are perfect? Of course not. Does it mean we are striving to be better? I think so.
This was a very cursory examination of the events you brought up, if someone has a more in-depth summary of one or more of these events, please share.
joe cool 360 wrote:Colombia death squads:
Why we funded them – to keep cocaine from being produced there and from entering the U.S.
What went wrong – the money went to “death squads”
What we’ve done about it – cut funding (with the likely possibility of eliminating it altogether)
Hamas:
Why we funded them – to undercut the PLO (lesser of two weevils)
What went wrong – Hamas also wants jihad and all that jazz
What we’ve done about it – now that PLO is out the window, we’re against Hamas
Philippine war against Muslims:
Why we funded them – To prevent the spread of terrorism
What went wrong – the Philippino citizens began committing acts of terrorism
What we’ve done about it – we’ve increased funding to the Philippines*