luckydog71 said:
The one note Johnnies are back. It is all Bush’s fault!!!! It is all Bush’s fault!!!
I was watching for the last few days wondering how long it would take for the someone to jump in and blame Bush. This poll started out as a discussion focused on what would happen. Many are rightfully concerned that this conflict has the potential to spread into a region war. I doubt this could become WWIII, but it is very concerning.
I knew it would turn. There are a few on this board whose response has to be “it is Bush’s fault”. It is ironic that you criticize Bush for not stopping the conflict.
This is from somebody that when called on the carpet often resorts to backpeddling by saying you only support certain policies of the Bush administration and the Republicans. Sorry man, but I thinks you got your just desserts above. You bitch about the "blame Bush" mentality but that only makes you a raving hypocrite. How so? You use the EXACT same tactic whenever you throw out that most ignorant of attacks when you say some one is anti-American. In the end be it your "anti-American" or others' "blame Bush" tactics both have become boring broken records thay should be tossed into a the nearest dumpster bin.
luckydog71 said:
The US and Britain took on Iraq without support from France, Russia and Germany and the RoW was outraged.
An Iraqi military force that was far from the shape it was in during the Kuwaiti War. It's like the vaunted military prowess of the US and UK was used to kick the shit out of something that already had the shit kicked out of it.
Oh yah, LD, why did the US, UK, and its Orwellian named Coalition of the Willing invade Iraq?
No Iraqi connection to 9-11.
No more Iraqi WMD's.
No Iraqi connection to Al Qaida.
So why?
luckydog71 said:
The US and Britain have decided not to take on Iran or NK without a coalition of the major powers including Russia, Germany, and China. We do not need France for anything except wine (whine).
In your world one is required to WHINE when some one's comments are perceived to be anti-American. But let the hypocrisy overflow when it the opportunity arises to sling an Anti-France comment. Hypocrisy is very typical of Republican types.
luckydog71 said:
The US and Britain have decided not to directly engage in the Israeli / Hezbollah fight without a coalition and the lefties now scream it is a plot to help the GOP in the 06 election.
Is their screaming really any different than your's? If some one ain't in lock step with your views you quickly become a whiner. The intolerance for other views you display is something to see. Of course this is always highlighted by your very broad brush painting of anyone you disagree with as being some kind of leftie. My money is on you really not having any kind of inkling of what a leftie is.
luckydog71 said:
Russia is obviously taking Hezbollah’s side in calling for a “balanced” response. US is obviously taking Israeli’s side in claiming Israel has a right to defend itself.
A sweeping generalization if there ever was one.
luckydog71 said:
The majority of American citizens have learned a valuable lesson from the Iraq conflict. Our military intervention into regional conflicts does not result in support except from our closest allies. The correct approach is to call for peace, to pass UN resolutions that have no teeth.
Who asked the US to invade Afghanistan?
Who asked the US to invade Iraq?
luckydog71 said:
I hope that Bush stays the new course he has set. No military intervention. Provide help to your allies, such as satellite reconnaissance information and even military equipment, but the US troops stay out. We need to wait until Russia, China and the US all agree before responding.
As powerful as the USA is, it is far from being absolutely supreme. The US likely not directly enter the conflict because it lacks the available troops and equipment to do so.
luckydog71 said:
I want US troops in Iraq, Korea and Germany to come home. I do not want them redeployed to Iran, Lebanon, Syria, or any other hot spot. The best course is to let the locals fight it out until one side has totally annihilated the other.
Setting aside the fact the US supported one of the most vile dictatorships during the years since 1953 in South Korea, the presence of US forces is playing a big role from North and South Korea going at each all out again. If you're aching to see maybe hundreds of thousands of people get killed, then championing the withdrawal of US troops from South Korea is one way to do it.
luckydog71 said:
We need to let the UN do its job. I heard that Kofi Annan did phone Ehud Olmert and asked him nicely to stop fighting.
The first step for that is for the US to pay its membership dues. In my books a member that sits back boasting about how things should be done and doesn't pay their membership dues is one hell of a bad member to put it mildly. The UN is far from perfect, but so is the rest of the world. I agree the UN should be permitted to do its job.