All Ogle, No Cash -- It's Not Just Annoying, It's Un-American
Discussion of episodes currently airing in Un-American locations (anything that's aired in Australia is fair game), as well as anything else the Un-Americans feel like talking about or we feel like asking them. Please use the show discussion threads for any current-season discussion.
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Caroma, don't think that your opinions aren't listened to, they are. In fact you seem to be able to see some of the complexities of the current world situation at a far deeper level than just war/US/Bush bad vs peace/everyone else good. Some of the points that you raise really are at the heart of the matter...
Of course they're being "selfish"--it's called trying to make money for their workers and shareholders.
Yes. In a corporatised shareholder driven economy profit comes before morals.
Most of our Congress came from the private sector, and that's what we want, instead of the professional polticians. And as more and more rich guys like Bloomberg get into politics, it's going to get stickier and stickier. The ties will just multiply.
Again yes. Corporate sponsored politics, the triumvirate of government, industry, and the military. We have allowed the situation to develop where it is very difficult, if not impossible, to fix many of the problems of the world without a complete overhaul of many parts of the system. In times gone by this usually required a bloody revolution.
But people, relax, chill, Bush might be gone in 22 months!
But what does this do about the anti-US sentiment that has been fermenting for years and appears to be exploding around the world art the moment. It is not really anti-Bushism it is anti-American imperialism.
And IIRC the current figures are that 93 countries have ratified the Kyoto ptotocol.
Evil Jim that was a great article, you're right it sums it all up pretty well.
And Fay, seeing that you've mentioned that you rarely go to
Natter
I've taken the liberty of reposting something that I posted in
Natter
last night but that really followed on from the discussion in here.
Repost....As I was sitting here contemplating the discussion that has been taking place over in unamerican and elsewhere I noticed that the nightly news had begun. There were the usual war stories, clips of Bush/Blair/Howard, footage of the conflict, snippets of press briefings, and suicide bombing, then a story on the on-going protests against this war as they are reverberating around the world. Australia, Europe, America, then OMG CHINA, did I just hear right, they are allowing protests in China.
China has seen its first open protests against the Iraqi war, but limited the numbers allowed to demonstrate, fearing activists might become emboldened to take on issues nearer home. Small groups gathered in different parts of Beijing to protest - one saw about 200 foreign nationals march past the US ambassador's residence.
Then the story moved to Indonesia,
Jakarta sees huge anti-war rally
where organisers claimed more than three million showed up. The organisers, the Indonesian Solidarity Committee for Iraqi People, said about one million protesters were expected to attend the rally in the world’s largest Muslim-populated nation.
Then the story moved to India, millions more protesting and a government that hasn't been sure which side to claim to be on, Dear God we KNOW that they have nukes.
Then the story moved to the Middle East. Standard protests in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey etc.
And then Bethlehem.
Hundreds of Palestinian children protest for peace. Footage of this sea of childrens faces, not half-wrapped in dirty urban guerilla style cloths, but laughing, singing, chanting, and looking like any of the other children's protests that have occurred in the last few weeks, except perhaps younger. Tears came to my eyes as I thought of protests in China and Palestinian children filmed doing something other than fighting, attending funerals, or just looking downright miserable and tragic.
Then an Israeli jeep drove into the protest area, rocks were thrown, shots were fired, things began to get ugly, but then the jeep retreated out of the area. The children got back to the business at hand, went back to chanting for peace, and then more Israeli jeeps arrived, driving right into the protest area and firing live weapons and stun grenades(?), their given reason - to stop criticism of the US. Basically, chaos ensued. Terrified children screaming and running. I know that the media manipulate images for various purposes but the fact that children looking no older than 7 or 8 are having to be tended by the Red Crescent is just wrong.
I broke.
Dear Deity of your choice, what have we let loose? I feel that the aftereffects of this war are going to be horrendous. I hope with all my heart that I am wrong.
Dammit, I deleted my post.
A mate sent an ICQ msg about the Halliburton bullshit and said Cheney is, "still receiving deferred compensation from them".
It was mentioned in a few articles about the deal that he does or will recieve money from them. I think it's a set amount and I can't remember how much.
Then again, what is the direct purpose of a protest? It's not necessarily to cause immediate cessation of the protestable activity; but to register displeasure with it in a public, numerous way.
That's why I protest. Not to actually bring things to an immediate halt, but to make my voice heard. I want to be sure that when they announce how many people are for and against, I'm being counted as being against.
Of course they're being "selfish"--it's called trying to make money for their workers and shareholders.
Their actions aren't always in the interests of shareholders and workers. If that were the case we wouldn't have these huge corporate scandals with shareholders and workers getting the shaft.
Moonlit - thanks for re-posting that. It's depressing as hell, but, yes, please
t deity of choice
let us find a way to ameliorate the repercussions of this war.
That's the reason I protest. Not so much for an immediate ceassation, but to register my displeasure and make my voice heard. When they show the stats on for and against, I want mine counted as against
Fair play to you. I'm very aware of not doing anything useful, despite all my fine words - and the thing of it is, this is being done in my name.
What if (how more hypothetical can you get) the coalition said, "Okay then, we'll stop," -- what then? How should they handle it? Do we just pick up our ball and go home?
Gee, I thought the whole reason to rush INTO the war was because, once there, it wouldn't be easy to end it before reaching "our" aims. Kind of like the rushing into the big idiotic tax cut for the superwealthy because, once enacted, it's harder to later *increase* the taxes once such a move is deemed necessary.
I've been wondering that, too, Cindy. As somebody who thinks this war is wrong (and who really, really regrets not DOING more about that), I don't know what I want the government to do. If the Good Fairy comes down, waves her wand, and says "For the next month, George Bush will do whatever you tell him to do", I have no idea what I say.
I cannot imagine us leaving with the war unfinished. It embarrasses us in front of the world, it reduces our ability to tell other countries (Korea much?) to "Drop that NOW!" But I can't see any way we can finish this war quickly, either. It's a tar baby.
This is very much me, Betsy. Very much. I was dead set against the war, pre-war, but can't bring myself to protest it now, because I can't see an alternative. Eside from embarrassing ourselves and allies in front of the world, it would seem even more irresponsible to abandon it than it was to start it in the first place.
we need to be doing our damnedest to look to what we can build once it's all over, and how we can keep this from poisoning our relations with other countries throughout the Middle East and throughout the rest of the world.
I agree with this too, Fay.
I think the news did say, in the case of the Boston protest, that the rally permit was applied for several weeks ago, before things got officially war-y.
I want to make clear I wasn't disparaging the Boston Protest. It caught my eye, because it was here, and because it seemed to go so well, but it just made me wonder, "To What End?"
I think there are so many different groups involved in protesting, that there's no set answer anyhow. A lot of people are in need of an outlet for their dissent. So many feel their voices weren't heard in the 2000 Presidential election, that I think the frustration level was higher at the outset of this situation (among us common folk) that it usually would be. There's a subset that would be just as unhappy, even if Bush had taken 75% of the popular vote and the electoral college. There's the pacifist contingent (whom I most understand, although I'm not strictly a pacifist). There are those who want us to lose. There are a million opinions in between all of these.
they may be signalling their intent to vote against such policies in future
I really hope an electable alternative to Bush appears on the scene; one I can vote for, one who can win. There are lots of politicians (not necessarily candidates for President right now) whom I could back, but most of them are too liberal or too dry to (imo) be electable.
or even just trying to redress the opinion of their country in the world press. (I, for one, think it's a great idea to remind everyone that a country of 280,000,000 people ddoesn't all think the same way, and by "everyone" I mean both within and without the country.)
If France hadn't threatened to veto, and the UN had gone along with Bush, Blair, Anzar, Howard, et al... How would people here feel about this war today? I'm just curious. Personally? I can't decide if I would be more comfortable or not. I'd take comfort in the fact that we were less lonely, but it wouldn't change the facts of the war itself. I've already found myself falling into the fallback decision of hoping it's over swiftly and decisively with Hussein and his regime out of power.
Gee, I thought the whole reason to rush INTO the war was because, once there, it wouldn't be easy to end it before reaching "our" aims. Kind of like the rushing into the big idiotic tax cut for the superwealthy because, once enacted, it's harder to later *increase* the taxes once such a move is deemed necessary.
Oh, it probably was. But I just wonder about the protests. It really was completely hypothetical - a "where would we go from here" question, because I don't ever see Bush concerning himself with them (at least not 'til it comes close to election time). I know what people don't want to see. I don't know what people now do want to see.
Burrell, excellent point. And it's part of why I'm glad people are going on protesting, rather than just giving it up and calling it a day. (And why I
should
be out there with those people.)
But just because the war is underway and calling a halt to it tomorrow would likely do more harm than good doesn't mean that there aren't still valid points to be made.
Already the war isn't going as smoothly as the administration assumed. If things continue in this vein, I think a lot of people who supported the war based in part on those assurances of easy success will be looking around and trying to figure out where things went wrong. Maybe they'll take a look at the protestors still out there and decide that their views perhaps bear looking into. If the anti-war contingent has packed up and gone home, we miss a huge opportunity to reach people who are searching and questioning.
Calling off the protests now also sends a bad message to the hawks. Dissenting views are already, IMO, being scoffed at and ignored by those in power. By leaving the field, we tell them that if they just barrel through and do everything they can to lock things in, it'll all get easier. We tell them that we don't need to be listened to, that if they present us with a done deal it'll all go away.
Also, for many people the concern was not just what the U.S. and allies would do in the immediate sense, but what happens afterwards. Many, including myself, take their pledges to guide Iraq to a free, democratic state to be complete and utter BS. And that's not a done deal yet. There's still a chance to impress upon the PtB that in taking on Iraq, they've taken on a responsibility that doesn't go away when Saddam does.
How would people here feel about this war today?
Probably the way I felt about the first Gulf war and the Afghanistan war: sick but resigned. I hated Gulf I, but I honestly couldn't see an alternative.
This time around, I don't believe that alternatives were seriously considered.