Have you ever read Bin Laden's 1996 fatwa or any of the more recent pronouncements of al-Zawahiri? It's pretty clear what they want to do. And it isn't just the USA that is at risk. Nor is it only the non-Muslim "western world". The governments of Egypt and Saudi Arabia are frequently singled out too. Misrepresenting this whole issue as just an American problem is pretty narrow-minded.
Says you: The conflict is certainly not stopped by rounding up people and incarcerating them indefinitely without a fair trial.
Upon what evidence do you base that assertion? Numerous conflicts have been stopped by incarcerating or executing people who had the means and the ability to inflict damage or defeat upon their foes. Here in Canada, we have to look no further than the trial and execution of Louis Riel. And in 1970, during the FLQ kidnapping crisis, emergency powers were invoked and hundreds of rather uninvolved people were rounded up and incarcerated. By your logic, each of those actions should have sparked a civil war or worse. But they didn't.
That's just a couple of examples from Canadian history but you can look at any wars, rebellions, and insurrections, and discover to your horror that a lot of them were stopped by rounding up people and incarcerating or executing them.
Wow. It's the old, "They hate us because we treat them so badly" argument.If you had you would realize that the practice of rounding up enemy combatants, incarcerating them, treating them inhumanely and torturing them is FUELING this particular conflict and providing the necessary ammo for indoctrination of many a muslim into terrorism.
Yes.There are people - probably millions of people - who will hate anyone and everyone in the U.S., no matter what we do, unless it involves conversion to fundamentalist Islam or mass suicide. No amount of making nice to them will change that.
All of what you said would make sense if we had been treating this as a criminal matter and sent the FBI to arrest them.Yes.
There are also people right here in the U.S. who would rape, torture and kill you or me without a second thought.
Trouble is, we can't tell who they are. No matter how heinous the crime, we can't just lock people up indefinitely without due process.
If we have evidence (real evidence--the sort that would stand up in court) that someone has committed a crime, then charge them and go through the process. If we don't, no matter how dangerous you might think they are, we've got to let them go. To claim that these are evil, murderous people is to beg the question.
The problem of what to do with people who can't be repatriated is another issue, but again, I think that's not insurmountable. (How many fall into that category anyway?)
Lets analyze this post.Wow. It's the old, "They hate us because we treat them so badly" argument.
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we rounded up prior to September 11, 2001?
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we incarcerated prior to September 11, 2001?
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we treated inhumanely and tortured prior to September 11, 2001?
I think the answer to all those questions is a number very close to zero.
And yet they somehow still persuaded themselves that nearly 3,000 of us needed to be murdered.
Patriot4life, wash the mud out of your eyes. There are people - probably millions of people - who will hate anyone and everyone in the U.S., no matter what we do, unless it involves conversion to fundamentalist Islam or mass suicide. No amount of making nice to them will change that.
Wow. It's the old, "They hate us because we treat them so badly" argument..
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we rounded up prior to September 11, 2001?
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we incarcerated prior to September 11, 2001?
How many jihadi enemy combatants had we treated inhumanely and tortured prior to September 11, 2001?
Patriot4life, wash the mud out of your eyes. There are people - probably millions of people - who will hate anyone and everyone in the U.S., no matter what we do, unless it involves conversion to fundamentalist Islam or mass suicide. No amount of making nice to them will change that.
This will not convince most on this forum but I'll bet Obama is listening:The point is that radical Islam won't stop attacking Western targets (let alone targets in the Islamic world) just because Congress decides to end the war. America can define the enemy however it likes, but it won't stop the conflict.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (UPI) -- U.S. military officials say dozens of detainees released from the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, military prison camp have likely returned to terrorism activities.
U.S. Defense Department spokesman Geoff Morrell told reporters Tuesday that since 2002, 61 former detainees have committed or are suspected to have committed attacks after being released from Guantanamo, CNN reported.
This will not convince most on this forum but I'll bet Obama is listening:
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/01/14/61_freed_detainees_said_back_in_terror/UPI-39891231947075/
Well he just signed an order to shut down GITMO within a year. That is a sharp reversal to his shut it down immediately posture as a candidate. I believe his exposure to presidential level briefings are maturing him quickly.The funny thing is that by being pragmatic and realistic, Obama can only go down in the estimation of his most rabid followers but he will go up in the estimation of people like me (who wouldn't have voted for him if I was an American).
Actually, if you look at what I wrote, you'll see I'm paraphrasing Patriot4life's argument.Lets analyze this post.
Logical Fallacy: Strawman
BHSCG has characterized the only reason we have given them to 'hate us' as Gitmo. Since absolutely no one has made that argument,
Well, if restating Patriot4life's own argument is a strawman, then I guess I'm guilty.Reason it's a fallacy: BSHCG is playing a shell game. To disguise weak arguments he's acting like a magician, making you watch and argue with one hand while the other does the trick. Unlike a magician, he is actually attempting to deceive you into thinking the magic is real, and that he really did teleport that quarter into his hand. Like any other Yuri Geller trick, the strawman argument is the resort of a faker, tricking you into believing something that just isn't true.
No. I said millions of people will hate us no matter what we do, not that nothing we can do will stop terrorism. Speaking of strawmen.BHSCG has correctly noted that nothing we can do can completely stop terrorism. Therefore he concludes nothing we can do will have any effect on it.
And please show where I said there was no solution. That's your second strawman in two paragraphs.Reason it's a fallacy: This almost doesn't need to be stated. Because he can pick apart any solution that's not perfect he's saying there's no solution.
And I said this where? Strawman number three. You're on a roll.BSCVG charges ahead with this one full on. EITHER our actions stop all terrorists and all hatred OR nothing we do will effect the situation.
Smearing? I beg your pardon. Telling someone his position is naive is not smearing, except in the world of people with tender sensibilities such as E.J. Armstrong and, apparently yourself.Reason it's a fallacy: BPSHG is implying that a position is hopelessly naive, and smearing everyone even implicitly associated with that.
Evidence? I observed that September 11 happened despite Patriot4life's claim that one of the reasons the jihadis hate us is for things we did after September 11. They hated us already, enough to murder thousands of us. They didn't need roundups and incarcerations to hate us. They already did.However, as I have demonstrated, this red herring fallacy is obviously false, since he himself has no arguments at all for his position. He merely masses up fallacies and throws them at people.
Yes.
There are also people right here in the U.S. who would rape, torture and kill you or me without a second thought.
Trouble is, we can't tell who they are. No matter how heinous the crime, we can't just lock people up indefinitely without due process.
If we have evidence (real evidence--the sort that would stand up in court) that someone has committed a crime, then charge them and go through the process. If we don't, no matter how dangerous you might think they are, we've got to let them go. To claim that these are evil, murderous people is to beg the question.
The problem of what to do with people who can't be repatriated is another issue, but again, I think that's not insurmountable. (How many fall into that category anyway?)
I say re-open Alcatraz.What are the odds that the Gitmo detainees end up in another facility largely identical to Gitmo with no civilian trials in the forthcoming future?
Nah, too expensive. Salt from the ocean is dissolving the place. In fact, that's why it was closed in the first place.I say re-open Alcatraz.
Persons lose such right anytime they enter into a state of war against the United States on behalf of a hostile foreign power regardless of who the president is.
There was a very small handful of US citizens captured (I think only one or two) while serving in the Waffen SS in World War II. And neither of them were released prior to the end of the war.
The poor oppressed Mr. Padilla should have chosen somewhere other than a planeload of American civillians to attempt to detonate his footwear.
Nah, too expensive. Salt from the ocean is dissolving the place. In fact, that's why it was closed in the first place.
. If you are saying that it is only recently that citizens lose their rights under that situation it is you that is woefully ignorant of history.- Now persons lose such right when they are accused of entering into a state of war against the United States. See the difference? I didn't think so
As I pointed out above, be careful calling people "goobers" when you fit the bill so nicely.2 - The poor oppressed Mr. Padilla had nothing to do whatsoever with planes or footwear. Those who fail to learn the from the mistakes of the past are doomed to repeat them. Those who fail history are goobers.