thegreyfox
Member
siamesedreamer said:Thanks for posting a poll 14 months old.
Scorcho, if you want to agree to disagree, that's fine.
sure np. now tell me how many of those change their mind?
siamesedreamer said:Thanks for posting a poll 14 months old.
Scorcho, if you want to agree to disagree, that's fine.
You claimed that something that wasn't McCain's point was his point. Then you claimed that his point was contradictory. Then you claimed that he didn't say what he said, and took issue with how I interpreted what he said (which was pretty straight-forward and not at all "vague;" it was literally, "will we be there x years?" "no"). Then you started badgering me for info on when McCain would withdraw troops. Your entire posting sequence this evening has been arguing points for the sake of arguing. That's not me being too full of myself--that's you wanting to be full of me. Sorry guy, I'm spoken for.quadriplegicjon said:no i didnt.
Haven't you been reading this thread?Tamanon said:BTW APF, I assume you have the same quote distortion problem with the Clinton campaign doing the same thing with the 100 years war, right?
APF said:Haven't you been reading this thread?
icarus-daedelus said:Also, Jimmy Carter needs to get a sense of subtlety. "Well, he won my home state, and my family loves him, and the local town loves him, and I've committed adultery in my heart with him, but I'll leave it up to you to guess whether I'll vote for him or not!" He's so adorable.
scorcho said:SD, if you don't want to look at the March 08 poll i posted and continue to paint all Iraq War opponents are either 'short-sighted partisans' (in the US) or power-hungry (in Iraq), then it's not a simple difference of opinion. it's fucking cognitive dissonance and a blatant distortion of the opposition.
APF said:You claimed that something that wasn't McCain's point was his point. Then you claimed that his point was contradictory. Then you claimed that he didn't say what he said, and took issue with how I interpreted what he said (which was pretty straight-forward and not at all "vague;" it was literally, "will we be there x years?" "no"). Then you started badgering me for info on when McCain would withdraw troops. Your entire posting sequence this evening has been arguing points for the sake of arguing. That's not me being too full of myself--that's you wanting to be full of me. Sorry guy, I'm spoken for.
Tamanon said:Look, a lot of people agree with you, but unfortunately, a TON of people don't. It takes time to change views, you can't just drop in and fix everything. Besides, he wouldn't get congressional support for a full equalization of marriage amendment.
BTW, Carter is probably Obama-bound.
http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=107611
APF said:You claimed that something that wasn't McCain's point was his point. Then you claimed that his point was contradictory. Then you claimed that he didn't say what he said, and took issue with how I interpreted what he said (which was pretty straight-forward and not at all "vague;" it was literally, "will we be there x years?" "no"). Then you started badgering me for info on when McCain would withdraw troops. Your entire posting sequence this evening has been arguing points for the sake of arguing. That's not me being too full of myself--that's you wanting to be full of me. Sorry guy, I'm spoken for.
mckmas8808 said:APF you are crazy. No for real you are! What you are showing tonight is that McCain is now becoming a flip flopper. First he says staying in Iraq for 100 is cool, but now when its polically bad he is flipping his answer.
And if it isn't a flip flop then at best it was a "senior" moment.
No, I think you're misinterpreting what he's saying in these two instances. He's saying he wouldn't have a problem with an American presence there conceptually, if Americans weren't at war / dying / getting attacked / etc, but in a realistic sense, that's not going to happen because of the unique sociopolitical situation in Iraq which makes it a different ballgame than in places where we do have those long-standing presences. It's not too difficult to understand, if you just ... try to understand.mckmas8808 said:APF you are crazy. No for real you are! What you are showing tonight is that McCain is now becoming a flip flopper. First he says staying in Iraq for 100 is cool, but now when its polically bad he is flipping his answer.
so you only want to read polls that have leading questions that generate answers that conform to your ignorance on the matter. check.siamesedreamer said:I could give a rat's ass about the poll you posted. Get back to me when they start asking questions about whether or not they want Americans troops to leave even if it means hundreds of thousands of their fellow countrymen will be killed in the ensuing violence and millions of them will be living in refugee camps at the borders.
i don't believe in false premises, except the Domino Theory.siamesedreamer said:Do you really think the US/World would be better off with Iraq in complete genocidal chaos? Do you recognize the drastic consequences it would entail for your favored party? Do you think effects felt by the US as a result of the invasion won't be felt tenfold for willingly inviting the humanitarian calamity a withdrawal would ensure?
APF said:No, I think you're misinterpreting what he's saying in these two instances. He's saying he wouldn't have a problem with an American presence there conceptually, if Americans weren't at war / dying / getting attacked / etc, but in a realistic sense, that's not going to happen because of the unique sociopolitical situation in Iraq which makes it a different ballgame than in places where we do have those long-standing presences. It's not too difficult to understand, if you just ... try to understand.
siamesedreamer said:What's the distortion then? The people in America who want us out are largely DEMs who could give two shits about the consequences of our departure. The people in Iraq who want us out are those who intend to gain by whatever means necessary. I could give a rat's ass about the poll you posted. Get back to me when they start asking questions about whether or not they want Americans troops to leave even if it means hundreds of thousands of their fellow countrymen will be killed in the ensuing violence and millions of them will be living in refugee camps at the borders.
Do you really think the US/World would be better off with Iraq in complete genocidal chaos? Do you recognize the drastic consequences it would entail for your favored party? Do you think effects felt by the US as a result of the invasion won't be felt tenfold for willingly inviting the humanitarian calamity a withdrawal would ensure?
siamesedreamer said:What's the distortion then? The people in America who want us out are largely DEMs who could give two shits about the consequences of our departure. The people in Iraq who want us out are those who intend to gain by whatever means necessary. I could give a rat's ass about the poll you posted. Get back to me when they start asking questions about whether or not they want Americans troops to leave even if it means hundreds of thousands of their fellow countrymen will be killed in the ensuing violence and millions of them will be living in refugee camps at the borders.
Do you really think the US/World would be better off with Iraq in complete genocidal chaos? Do you recognize the drastic consequences it would entail for your favored party? Do you think effects felt by the US as a result of the invasion won't be felt tenfold for willingly inviting the humanitarian calamity a withdrawal would ensure?
Slurpy said:Yeah, I'm sure you gave a fuck about the good probability of Iraq 'genocidal chaos' during the lead up to the invasion, and the consequences of said invasion. It's cute how suddenly all there's all these alligator tears from people who couldnt give a rats ass about the Iraqi people otherwise, until now since its a nice and convenient argument to stay in Iraq. Just like how some suddenly gave a fuck about Iraqi human rights and suddenly decided to care that kurds were gased before going to war, and now suddenly we need to stay in 'for the Iraqis'. Right. Stop lying to yoursel and using moral justifications when it suits your political agenda.
I think the situation summed itself best when I heard Anne Coulter the other day yet again argue for staying in Iraq 'for the good of Iraqis', while she's had such great moments such as calling all arabs goat-fuckers and suggesting the nuking of the middle-east in the past. She's an extreme example, but you get the point. Crocodile tears.
Incognito said:How the Obama brand is working on you
Rest at link. It's a piece from February so I think most people here have already read through it. Nonetheless, it's still a good read.
ari said:So basically, since you guys think that no one cared about the people of iraq, we should leave and not atleast stable the country that we fucked up?
I believe that bush fucked us and lied about WMDs, but we are in a shitty hole right now and we must dig ourselves out. Its pretty silly to bail out while civilians over there is caught within a civil war who could care less about their well being.
i would say that our presence there is actually securing the civilians more then anything, that and help rebuilding towns with hospitals, shopping centers and schools.Tamanon said:To be fair, are we really keeping the civil war at bay anyways?
Tamanon said:To be fair, are we really keeping the civil war at bay anyways?
grandjedi6 said:
Tamanon said:I need to work on more rhetorical flourishes, yes.![]()
Like not ending our sentences with periodsgrandjedi6 said:To be fair, we all fall into habits over time
Very true.grandjedi6 said:To be fair, we all fall into habits over time
.icarus-daedelus said:Like not ending our sentences with periods
That's just a Kansas thing, dude. Nothing to feel bad about!Thunder Monkey said:Very true.
I find it damn near impossible to keep my pants on at K-Mart.
grandjedi said:
ari said:So basically, since you guys think that no one cared about the people of iraq, we should leave and not atleast stable the country that we fucked up?
I believe that bush fucked us and lied about WMDs, but we are in a shitty hole right now and we must dig ourselves out. Its pretty silly to bail out while civilians over there is caught within a civil war who could care less about their well being.
scorcho said:the fucking arrogance of your argument is amazing.
Slurpy said:Yeah, I'm sure you gave a fuck about the good probability of Iraq 'genocidal chaos' during the lead up to the invasion, and the consequences of said invasion.
That's not actually what the voter asked; the voter mentioned Bush suggesting there might be troops in Iraq for 50 years; McCain said, "hey 100 years would be cool with me if they're not being attacked--wouldn't it be fine with you?" Dems have erroneously labeled that as McCain being ok with 100 years of war, which obviously is a gross mischaracterization (ie Obama lied to smear him, just admit it and move on) of what he was trying to say. When asked by Rose how long he realistically felt troops would be in Iraq, and whether or not he sees a realistic possibility of a S Korea / Japan / Europe situation there, McCain said he didn't see a long-standing presence in Iraq due to the unique sociopolitical situation there. Again, none of this is hard to understand, neither point is contradictory, and neither is a "flip-flop" (I thought we were trying to get away from the politics of personal destruction, the failed politics as usual etc etc, but now you're literally trying to smear a combat veteran and war hero with charges of flip-flopping? Outrageous). One point is made about a hypothetical, one point is made about the realistic possibility of that hypothetical coming to pass.mckmas8808 said:See the thing you don't understand APF is that when a voter asks a presidential canidate how long would you like for us to stay in Iraq. You don't give people non-realistic answers when lots a people (yes even republicans) think staying in Iraq forever in some form is good.
FactCheck.org said:A widely forwarded e-mail claims that Obama's bills are more substantive and numerous than Clinton's. Don't believe it.
A misleading e-mail has been making the rounds, alleging that Clinton has fewer legislative accomplishments than Obama, and that they are less substantive. We've had questions about it from a number of readers, and blogs have jumped into the fray. So what's the real story on the Senate careers of the Democratic presidential candidates?
We find that the e-mail is false in almost every particular:
* It sets up a face-off between apples and, well, broccoli, comparing only the Clinton-sponsored bills that became law with all bills sponsored or cosponsored by Obama, whether they were signed into law or not.
* It includes legislation Obama sponsored in the Illinois state Senate, a very different legislative body.
* It tells us that Obama has sponsored more legislation than Clinton, when in fact he has sponsored less.
* It implies that Obama has passed more bills into law than Clinton, when the opposite is true.
Contrary to the e-mail's assertions, Clinton's and Obama's contributions are not qualitatively different, and quantitatively, Clinton has the edge.
[...]
What impresses us is how misleading the e-mail is. Its anonymous author doesn't apply the same standards to Clinton's record and Obama's, thus leading to false conclusions about their legislative records. For Clinton, the e-mail claims to examine bills that the senator has sponsored and that were passed into law during her Senate career. For Obama, however, it counts both sponsored and cosponsored bills, whether they were passed or not. And something the e-mail doesn't state clearly it counts bills Obama sponsored in the Illinois state Senate, before he was a United States senator.
[...]
Here's how FactCheck.org tallies the real breakdown of bills and resolutions sponsored by the candidates in the U.S. Senate.
![]()
[...]
An accurate comparison with the Clinton bills listed in the e-mail would have included only the bills Obama has sponsored that have been signed into law. This comparison favors Clinton heavily, since 19 of her bills in seven years have become law, while Obama has had just two in his three years:
* S. 2125, A bill to promote relief, security, and democracy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
* S. 3757, A bill to designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 950 Missouri Avenue in East St. Louis, Illinois, as the "Katherine Dunham Post Office Building."
[...]
Awesome, so the loose nuke thing he did with Lugar and the transparency bit with Coburn don't count because he wasn't the sole sponsor. Brilliant. Also, care to enumerate the awesomeness of those 19 bills Clinton passed as the sole sponsor?APF said:
It's so sad to see you spin like thisTriumph said:Awesome, so the loose nuke thing he did with Lugar and the transparency bit with Coburn don't count because he wasn't the sole sponsor. Brilliant. Also, care to enumerate the awesomeness of those 19 bills Clinton passed as the sole sponsor?
siamesedreamer said:Besides our moral duty to fix what we fucked, we have significant economic ties to the region that must be protected. I don't like gambling with downside risks.
.
Cheebs said:The Hillary Clinton campaign will be holding a protest at 30 Rock in NYC tomorrow a 8.
To protest NBC News/MSNBC. :lol