I'll be fine. I'll be your bounty, Jubal Early. And I'll just fade away.

River ,'Objects In Space'


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.

Add yourself to the Buffista map while you're here by updating your profile.


Cindy - Mar 30, 2003 5:48:26 pm PST #2668 of 9843
Nobody

Thank you Betsy, I'm bookmarking it now.

Trudy - most of these guys already have a bundle, not that that decreases greed. But I don't know that it's the only motive. I think there's world-order sort of motives in there, too. Which, given who's on first, also carries the potential with it to be scary. I don't think this is only a greed endeavour though. I think it's our try at a domino theory. I just hope the dominoes don't fall on our frigging heads.


Lady O' Spain - Mar 30, 2003 5:52:49 pm PST #2669 of 9843
Red hair and black leather--my favorite color scheme.

**popping in**

Another reason that many Americans are protesting may be to let the rest of the world know that, as someone said above, not all Americans agree with this war. Maybe trying for a preemptive strike against an (probably inevitable) anti-American backlash down the road.

I'm also frustrated with the assumtion I keep encountering--the one that says anti-war=anti-military. For some people, sure. But I just keep thinking about my cousin, who's 25 and joined the army a year ago. I fully support him, and realize that risk comes along with the job description. But if he (God forbid) has to die in combat, I'd like it to be for a hell of a lot better reason than anything I've seen associated with this war.


Trudy Booth - Mar 30, 2003 6:08:54 pm PST #2670 of 9843
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

Trudy - most of these guys already have a bundle, not that that decreases greed.

It's not just cash, naturally, it's power too. The Bin Laden money all came from Daddy's contracts to build the roads in Saudi Arabia.

Every time I hear "but our oil doesn't COME from there" I want to scream "and don't you think that pisses us off?". "We've gone to war for industry before.


Betsy HP - Mar 30, 2003 6:38:46 pm PST #2671 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

But if he (God forbid) has to die in combat, I'd like it to be for a hell of a lot better reason than anything I've seen associated with this war.

Word. Those boys all look like sons to me. (And girls, daughters.) They look like my kids. I want them safe.

And I don't want them forced to decide between being killed by a civilian terrorist and killing an innocent civilian, because there is no livable choice there. Fighting a guerrilla war is soul-killing. (Not to say that the people who survive them are soulless, because they certainly aren't.)


Daisy Jane - Mar 30, 2003 6:49:07 pm PST #2672 of 9843
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

I don't have kids, but I hear you. I'm always thinking when someone tells me not to disrespect the fighting men and women in our armed forces, "I do respect them. I respect them so much, and think they're so good at what they do, that they shouldn't be sent to fight unless we have no other option. We owed them the respect of letting the inspectors inspect, of making sure we were doing this for sound reasons."


Betsy HP - Mar 30, 2003 7:20:57 pm PST #2673 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

I'm not claiming any moral authority coming from parenthood; far from it. It's more that it influences how responsible I hold myself for the rest of the world. If I don't want something for my own children, I should try to protect other children, too. (For the big stuff. Not for stuff like Internet violence and saying rude words.)


Typo Boy - Mar 30, 2003 7:30:12 pm PST #2674 of 9843
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Cindy - We're buggered. I can't see any viable way of withdrawing from this war, even if we wanted to, because of the tremendous loss of face both at home and abroad. I don't pretend to know how things are going to unfold, but everything I can see suggests that the repercussions are going to be bad, and that 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 wor

FayJay - you no longer speak for me (probably more comfortable anyway) though you do seem to speak for every Buffista except me.

Folks - if you are in the middle of doing something wrong, and realize it is wrong, you stop doing it. You lose face - yeah you blew it, you lose face.

As to what to you do; you negotiate; you take advantage of ending to war to get the inspectors back; you end the civilian sanctions that have killed so many Iraqis over the past 12 years, and have military only sanctions, backed by inspectors. You provide aid thorugh aid organizations to rebuild the water supply and ability to grow food; none of it goes to the Saddam regieme, but you do capital in investment in Iraq to rebuild water stations, sewers, hospitals, schools, so that people are no longer just living (and dying) on charity. And given contact with the outside world, with no 12 year siege or attack to rally people around Saddam he will fall. It wil take longer than if we had not had the war, because he gains cred for having survived the attack - but it still leads to a better result for Iraq and for the world than if we finish the war.

It won't happen of course; the administration is absolutel convinced of it's rightousness. And there is no way the Iraq army can survive in the long run; it is not like Vietnam - if we don't win in weeks , we will in months. I guarantee, there will be no Saddam regieme in three months, probably a lot less. But as good as it is that Saddam will go, I expect both Iraq and the world will end up the worse for it. There was a another way. Now that the attack is on-going, there is still another way - just a tougher one.


Trudy Booth - Mar 30, 2003 7:36:58 pm PST #2675 of 9843
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

Gar is right. That's why God made diplomats.

He's also right in that we'll never do it. Why should we? All is proceeding according to plan.

I'm also with Heather. I respect our soldiers so much that I think they should have camoflage that actually camoflages them. And I think the psych wards in VA hospitals should be top of the line. And that if they can't restore a vet's mind they should take care of him for the rest of his life. And that if, say, a few thousand of them come down with a mysterious syndrome they shouldn't be stonewalled for YEARS.


Betsy HP - Mar 30, 2003 7:39:01 pm PST #2676 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

it is not like Vietnam - if we don't win in weeks , we will in months.

It depends on how you define "win". I would expect that irritated Iraqis will be picking off occupation soldiers for years. I don't see how it is possible to set up either a stable occupation or a stable peace thereafter.

Folks - if you are in the middle of doing something wrong, and realize it is wrong, you stop doing it.

Unless stopping is worse. If I attack somebody who is holding a gun, I have thrown away the option to walk away. Unless I get control of the gun, I am going to die. It's that simple.

The Iraqis can't win a war against the United States. They can't do the United States mainland any great harm. In that sense, they don't have a gun. But if we walked away right now, leaving Baghdad in ruins, we don't leave the country in a stable state. And on one thing I do agree with the Bush administration: the "oil for food" program has not worked. The money didn't go to food; it went to weapons. The starvation is on our heads, but it is also on Saddam Hussein's. I have no belief that aid organizations could succeed in guiding money only to humanitarian purposes while a Baathist government is in power.

As I said, I can see no good solution coming from this. But I don't find walking away cold any more bearable than any other alternative.


Betsy HP - Mar 30, 2003 7:39:50 pm PST #2677 of 9843
If I only had a brain...

And that if, say, a few thousand of them come down with a mysterious syndrome they shouldn't be stonewalled for YEARS.

And that you don't balance the budget by cutting veterans' services. And that you pay privates a wage sufficient that they don't need food stamps.