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World War IV
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<blockquote data-quote="Judge Bean" data-source="post: 9383" data-attributes="member: 42"><p><strong>World War IV</strong></p><p></p><p><strong><em>The third pillar on which the Bush Doctrine rested was the assertion of our right to preempt.</em> </strong></p><p></p><p>This is a significant step in the foreign policy of the U.S., and the terrifying dimensions of it are best understood by considering it apart from the current "terrorist" conflict.</p><p></p><p>Consider what would have happened in 1946 if this had been the policy: we would have bombed Moscow and Stalingrad.</p><p></p><p>In 1950 or thereabouts, we would have bombed what was then called Peking.</p><p></p><p>In 1960, Havana.</p><p></p><p>In 1970, Hanoi.</p><p></p><p>In 1980, Moscow, if it was still there; but at least Tehran.</p><p></p><p>In 1990, Baghdad.</p><p></p><p>In 2000, Iraq if it was still there.</p><p></p><p>And now, North Korea, Libya, Syria, Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and Yemen are now eligible for bombing.</p><p></p><p>Any nation which does not share our approach to foreign relations (i.e., distort and manipulate any foreign government which is not amenable to a dominant corporate presence) is vulnerable to the U.S. military. I will say this again, also: no sovereign nation in the world at the present time regards itself in a state of war with the United States or under imminent threat of it.</p><p></p><p>The "war on terror" is most like the "war on drugs," that is, it is a synthetic war, a metaphorical war, a scenario, a computer game. What it is in fact is an epic criminal investigation and the attempt to arrest fugitives wanted for monstrous crimes. The need for the detention of the fugitives is so severe, and the prosecution so extensive, that the class of potential suspects has been stretched to include virtually all American citizens, and certainly all persons in the world of Arabic descent. An entire cabinet position and consolidated bureaucracies have been created just to prosecute the case. The desire of the Justice Department is to acquire unrestricted power to override the Constitution to pursue all suspects without having to give the reasons for suspicion in any given instance, and to treat individuals as enemy resident aliens whether or not they are citizens.</p><p></p><p>It was one of the worst crimes in modern history... well... I guess what's going on in Sudan right now is worse. Oh wait: I forgot Cambodia a few years ago, and Sarajevo. Hold it... OK, OK, not the worst maybe, but still... it was real bad. I know: let's give the military and the police carte blanche to make us safe. </p><p></p><p>We can always get our rights back later, right?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Judge Bean, post: 9383, member: 42"] [b]World War IV[/b] [b][i]The third pillar on which the Bush Doctrine rested was the assertion of our right to preempt.[/i] [/b] This is a significant step in the foreign policy of the U.S., and the terrifying dimensions of it are best understood by considering it apart from the current "terrorist" conflict. Consider what would have happened in 1946 if this had been the policy: we would have bombed Moscow and Stalingrad. In 1950 or thereabouts, we would have bombed what was then called Peking. In 1960, Havana. In 1970, Hanoi. In 1980, Moscow, if it was still there; but at least Tehran. In 1990, Baghdad. In 2000, Iraq if it was still there. And now, North Korea, Libya, Syria, Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and Yemen are now eligible for bombing. Any nation which does not share our approach to foreign relations (i.e., distort and manipulate any foreign government which is not amenable to a dominant corporate presence) is vulnerable to the U.S. military. I will say this again, also: no sovereign nation in the world at the present time regards itself in a state of war with the United States or under imminent threat of it. The "war on terror" is most like the "war on drugs," that is, it is a synthetic war, a metaphorical war, a scenario, a computer game. What it is in fact is an epic criminal investigation and the attempt to arrest fugitives wanted for monstrous crimes. The need for the detention of the fugitives is so severe, and the prosecution so extensive, that the class of potential suspects has been stretched to include virtually all American citizens, and certainly all persons in the world of Arabic descent. An entire cabinet position and consolidated bureaucracies have been created just to prosecute the case. The desire of the Justice Department is to acquire unrestricted power to override the Constitution to pursue all suspects without having to give the reasons for suspicion in any given instance, and to treat individuals as enemy resident aliens whether or not they are citizens. It was one of the worst crimes in modern history... well... I guess what's going on in Sudan right now is worse. Oh wait: I forgot Cambodia a few years ago, and Sarajevo. Hold it... OK, OK, not the worst maybe, but still... it was real bad. I know: let's give the military and the police carte blanche to make us safe. We can always get our rights back later, right? [/QUOTE]
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