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Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:I'm not sure how this is a response to what I said. Where did I say I was okay with training groups to commit acts of terror?
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:Yeah, you'd have to provide some incentive to get them not to commit terrorism and immediately defund them if they do. I get that this isn't clean and cut and dry.
addams wrote:Are you suggesting that we teach people to terroize others, then, don't pay them, if we catch them doing what we taught them to do?
It is a state that does not meet its responsibilities as a state to its own people.
It is a state that dictates what other states can and can not do.
It is a state that has bankrupted its self with war.
It is a state that has as ugly an underbelly as we have seen for 75 years.
It is a state that still has the rest of the world shaking in its boots.
It is a state that has secrets lots and lots of ugly secrets.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:addams wrote:Are you suggesting that we teach people to terroize others, then, don't pay them, if we catch them doing what we taught them to do?
No, I juist got done saying this. I'm fine training foreign elements to perform covert military operations. Having allies isn't wrong. I am against teaching them to commit acts of terror.It is a state that does not meet its responsibilities as a state to its own people.
It is a state that dictates what other states can and can not do.
It is a state that has bankrupted its self with war.
It is a state that has as ugly an underbelly as we have seen for 75 years.
It is a state that still has the rest of the world shaking in its boots.
It is a state that has secrets lots and lots of ugly secrets.
This is kind of hyperbolic. Nobody's going to suggest that the US is perfect or, indeed, that any place is. Comparatively, though, the US is one of the freest and wealthiest nations in the world. Noam Chomsky will also do this shit, where he will fixate on and hyperbolize one or two horrible things America has done and then say that Iran isn't much worse, or is even better. If that's the case, why doesn't he go live there?
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
jestingrabbit wrote:I suppose most people who had thought about the possibility assumed that this is what was happening, but this article manages to compile all the evidence for the conclusion pretty well: its increasingly clear that the US and Israel are state sponsors of terror, specifically the anti-Iranian Mujahideen-e-Khalq.
gorcee wrote:jestingrabbit wrote:I suppose most people who had thought about the possibility assumed that this is what was happening, but this article manages to compile all the evidence for the conclusion pretty well: its increasingly clear that the US and Israel are state sponsors of terror, specifically the anti-Iranian Mujahideen-e-Khalq.
I actually didn't see a single shred of evidence in that article at all, just unsubstantiated claims from "high-level sources".
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:That is a false dichotomy. The US occasionally (too often) behaves inappropriately, and is also substantially better than most other nations. And is a potential example for them.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:That is a false dichotomy. The US occasionally (too often) behaves inappropriately, and is also substantially better than most other nations. And is a potential example for them.
sourmìlk wrote:I'm fine training foreign elements to perform covert military operations. Having allies isn't wrong. I am against teaching them to commit acts of terror.
LaserGuy wrote:Most other nations don't have the power and resources to behave anywhere near as inappropriately as the US does. I'd rather not have most other nations use the United States as an example for how to deal with their foreign policy objectives, to be honest.
I think the point is that the people who you might want to train to perform covert military operations are invariably the same people who would use terrorism. And many covert military operations use similar, if not the same methods, as you would expect a terrorist to. I'm not sure how you would ever hope to go about separating them. And I certainly don't think there's any argument that, from the other guy's point of view, you are very clearly training terrorists.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
ameretrifle wrote:Magic space feudalism is therefore a viable idea.
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:LaserGuy wrote:Most other nations don't have the power and resources to behave anywhere near as inappropriately as the US does. I'd rather not have most other nations use the United States as an example for how to deal with their foreign policy objectives, to be honest.
Well I'm not saying we're particularly good, but relatively? We haven't tried to complete annihilate another nation, we haven't tried to commit genocide, we don't target civilians, and we don't tend to commit acts of terror.
sourmìlk wrote:The other guy's point of view is wrong so long as the people being trained aren't (and won't be) committing incidents of terror. And I don't really know the specific differences between training for covert operations and training for terrorism, so I really couldn't say.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:I am not familiar with what incidents in Libya and Lebanon specifically you are referring to (if you're referring to specific incidents.)
As for non-terrorist clandestine military operations: basically, sabotage. Planting the Stuxnet virus, disabling military machinery or blocking / destroying routes of transportation, etc.
LaserGuy wrote:sourmìlk wrote:I am not familiar with what incidents in Libya and Lebanon specifically you are referring to (if you're referring to specific incidents.)
As for non-terrorist clandestine military operations: basically, sabotage. Planting the Stuxnet virus, disabling military machinery or blocking / destroying routes of transportation, etc.
Sorry, my bad, got the countries wrong: US drone strikes have reportedly killed about 2000 people in Pakistan in the last six or so years. A similar, although smaller, campaign is going on in Yemen.
Nordic Einar wrote:Would "overthrowing South American Governments left and right" count as terrorism? Cuz there's been a fuck lot of that going on too.
Just sayin'.
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