funk de fino
Dreaming of unicorns
Sometimes, people with military experience have the "agenda" of needing to cover up the truth about what the military does, so they are not necessarily good authorities.
Only in the JJ fantasy homeworld.
Sometimes, people with military experience have the "agenda" of needing to cover up the truth about what the military does, so they are not necessarily good authorities.
That's nice. So Jane, what is your point of the the OP or thread that you continue to refuse tell anyone? Do you enjoy the small talk and being ever so coy?Thanks for another post declaring the pointlessness of posting and for your sweet little ad hominem fantasy about me.
Sometimes, people with military experience have the "agenda" of needing to cover up the truth about what the military does, so they are not necessarily good authorities.
Such "agendas" are frequently flagged with juvenile ad hominem abuse.
I have no interst in responing to anything in the extract of LONGTABBER PE's that you have quoted, which is a good example of a poster believing his/her own fantasies to be real.
If you haven't changed your display options, you will have 50 posts per page, so #120 will be on the third page.

I'm afraid I'm at a loss as to how this contributes to the discussion.
No one is denying that sometimes military folks are "less than ideal", shall we say. I pointed out a few instances myself, and I hesitate to try and number the times I heard of a soldier coming up hot on a urinalysis or smuggling drugs across the border (I used to be stationed in Fort Bliss, which is right next to Juarez, Mexico) or heard that there was a domestic disturbance of some sort; although bear in mind that I was on active duty for four years and there were at least a hundred thousand soldiers stationed on Fort Bliss, so the actual number in comparison to the population was very small. But I fail to see how that relates specifically to them being in the military. The military did not make them that way; they were that way already. They were inclined to break the law well before they joined the armed forces. And when they break the law, they are usually dismissed from service unless they are a D*** good soldier and the incident was a momentary aberration that they show no inclination of repeating. Repeat offenders get kicked out; single offenders, if they are good soldiers, stay in.
As for veterans; I can't speak to how they are treated in the UK, but being a disabled veteran (technically speaking at any rate) myself, I CAN speak to how they are treated in the US. They are given every opportunity to get help here; people in the Veterans Administration actively seek out veterans who slip through the cracks of an imperfect system and get them the help they need when they find them. You also need to define the term "veteran"; in the strictest sense, it means someone who has seen combat of some sort, but in the sense it is typically used in the US, it means someone who fought with honor and dignity and served their country well. Someone can technically be a veteran without embodying the spirit of the word, and that is typically where you find those individuals you list in your post, JJ.
As for Cindy Sheehan; don't get me started on the lies that woman spouts. I knew people who served with her son while I was on active duty; they've all said she's full ofand that her son joined the military at least partially to get away from her. I'm a little more inclined to believe people who served on a daily basis with the man than a woman with a political agenda, regardless of her personal relationship with him. Her son CHOSE to join the military; he CHOSE, IIRC, to re-enlist once his term of service was up at least once. What she is doing is spitting on his choice and the choice of every other honorable military member, so I have NO respect for the woman and wish she would just shut up.
As I said, I'm not really sure what you are implying via that post, JJ, but it looks to me as though you are somehow drawing a correlation between the inclination to break the law and military service, either current or former, on the part of the criminal in question. While I will not deny that the military has its share of lawbreakers, I find it difficult to believe the number is much higher than any other group of people you could name.
And as to the opportunities granted to military members; most of us are a typical example, yes. Military service is viewed by many companies in the private sector as an example of a person's ability to carry out a job in the right way and with the right attitude doing it; we are seen as hard workers who get the job done properly. I will admit that I likely have more going for me than some, since I was and am an officer, but Longtabber has enough time in the enlisted side to more than make up for that difference in rank, and even a soldier who was discharged as an E-4 can parlay that into higher pay and more responsibility than someone who is just starting out in their chosen career.
The long and the short of it is this; is that video an entirely truthful representation of military service? The answer is, yes and no; they aren't lying about what they show, they just aren't showing all of it. But advertising isn't meant to be completely truthful; it is meant to show the most positive aspects of whatever is being sold to make it more appealing to those watching. If you're going to complain about truth in advertising, you might want to aim your weapons in the direction of every company that has ever advertised, because I can guarantee you that you won't find ONE that was completely upfront about their product in their advertising. If the military is to be penalized for not showing absolutely everything, you'll have to apply that standard everywhere else as well, or you're a hypocrite, JJ. It is up to the consumer, in this instance, to educate themselves about the product in whatever way they feel necessary before "making a purchase", so to speak.
What she is doing is spitting on his choice and the choice of every other honorable military member.
As I said, I'm not really sure what you are implying via that post, JJ, but it looks to me as though you are somehow drawing a correlation between the inclination to break the law and military service, either current or former, on the part of the criminal in question.
The military did not make them that way; they were that way already. They were inclined to break the law well before they joined the armed forces.
Since we are sticking to the OP I will focus my comments on your comments regarding it.
What are they?
It has been a few days since JihadJane posted in this thread, and in the few days before that when she did post, she responded to my posts but answered no questions.
In the meantime, she has posted several times on other threads.
So, for the choir: This is a(nother) clear demonstration that JihadJane doese not act in the way she claims and is simply another poster who makes posts that are often nicely formed but rarely nicely filled.
To JihadJane: Despite your claims otherwise, I have acted in an adult fashion in this entire thread. Still, to ensure there was no misunderstanding, I changed my tack to a very formal, very neutral, very fair one.
You did not reciprocate. Instead, you acted as you have done in every serious thread in which I have seen you post, this one included. You acted as an intellectual bully, complete with the bully's cowardice.
You ignore facts and questions all the while denying you are doing so.
I don't know if you are aware of this behavior or if you truly believe you are presenting cogent arguments, but I do not care. If it is the former, then it is on you to change it. If the latter, it is not in my ability to fix you.
If I am mistaken about you, then demonstrate it, don't claim it. I will not respond to your farcical claims and rants. I will, however, respond to direct answers to the questions that have been asked.
You are not a thinker, JihadJane, nor a debater. You are a series of slogans on protest signs, written by the shallow and carried by the gullible. That you obviously take pride in this role is saddening.
ETA: And, yes, this is adult. Speaking truth, even when unpleasant, is far more adult than avoiding it, as you have done throughout this entire thread.
Excellent. This is finally some good commentary. One wonders why it was so difficult to get from you.See my reply to Sabrina, above, for some comments.
When there is no discussion of topic, little else is left.JihadJane said:Enough personalization.
I've piqued your curiosity, have I? You are mistaken to assume that I have a preoccupation with anything here, let alone you. My interest in this thread is about the topic and the unfounded and undefended statements you made along with the absence of any relevant commentary on your part in a thread you started.JihadJane said:your own preoccupation with me is intriguing.
Mine at least, had substance. I'm afraid this is a poor and paraphrased echo of Clinton's original, which was itself a hollow gesture.JihadJane said:Perhaps I can respond in kind. I hear your pain.
You wonder in vain.JihadJane said:I wonder if you are accostomed to having rather too much control.
I think it is unethical to recruit people into risking thier lives and future wellbeing using the manpulative and dishonest tools of consumer advertising, just as it would be for any hazardous job. Going to fight in a war is not comparable with "making a purchase", especially when the true nature of the "product" is disguised.
Cindy Sheehan's question to George Bush was:
"What was the noble cause that my son died for?"
I disagree with your analysis. Cindy Sheehan isn't making any judgement about her son's choice. She is responding to her awareness that he didn't die for a noble cause. Her son didn't have enough information to make an informed choice. He was lied to, and, along with millions of others, he believed the lies that got him killed in Iraq. She now campaigns to prevent other young people's lives being similarly wasted.
War is institutionalized, legalized murder...
When there is no discussion of topic, little else is left.
You wonder in vain.
I myself have qualms with how recruiting is done but more at the actual recruiting station. The television ads are a grabber, not a contract.I think it is unethical to recruit people into risking thier lives and future wellbeing using the manpulative and dishonest tools of consumer advertising, just as it would be for any hazardous job.
I don't recall any advertisement suggesting it is.JihadJane said:Going to fight in a war is not comparable with "making a purchase",
Speaking directly to the marketing campaign and not to actual recruiters, I don't think I agree. Can you be more specific, please?JihadJane said:especially when the true nature of the "product" is disguised.
And GWB couldn't rightly answer. That is an issue with GWB and the justification for the war, not with the military, unless you are suggesting the military not be subject to the lawful orders of its CinC.JihadJane said:Cindy Sheehan's question to George Bush was:
"What was the noble cause that my son died for?"
Insofar as this is what she does, I have no issues, but her actions go beyond simply demonstrating for and demanding "No More Lies."JihadJane said:I disagree with your analysis. Cindy Sheehan isn't making any judgement about her son's choice. She is responding to her awareness that he didn't die for a noble cause. Her son didn't have enough information to make an informed choice. He was lied to, and, along with millions of others, he believed the lies that got him killed in Iraq. She now campaigns to prevent other young people's lives being similarly wasted.
These things are oft overstated (read the popular characterization of Vietnam Veterans in the 80s and 90s), but they are real. Change "result veterans can expect" to "possible results veterans should be prepared for" and we may be in violent agreement.JihadJane said:I highlighted the "link between the mental health of those returning from combat zones, chronic alcohol and drug abuse and domestic violence" as an illustration of the kind of result veterans can expect form their service,
In every television ad or just at the recruiter's station? Perhaps at Boot Camp before they incur a lasting obligation?JihadJane said:which they should be warned about before they join up.
Christians are disproportionately represented among the incarcerated, too. Surgeon General's warnings for religion, then?JihadJane said:Veterans are disproportionately represented among the homeless and incarcerated.
No. It is this form of statement that makes it difficult to take your sensible statements seriously. (By "sensible" I don't mean "those I agree with." I disagree with much of this current post, but it is, in the main, sensible)JihadJane said:War is institutionalized, legalized murder
CAN lead. And rarely "directly."JihadJane said:and the trauma of living with violence and brutality leads directly to the many difficulties war veterans face when returning to civilian life.
I am between you and Sabrina on this. If they were "that way already" they would stand a good chance (not a perfect one, though) of not making it in (setting aside the declining entry standards for now), so I tend to lean toward your position. However, it can be reasonably argued that the rigors of service, particularly in combat, serve more to highlight inherent problems than to create new ones. Note that I said "more" not "only."JihadJane said:I do not believe that "they were that way already".
I don't think it came to represent it at all. It tarnished it, stained it, shamed those in it, but did not come to represent it.JihadJane said:Perhaps we can take the crime that came to represent the the US attack on Iraq, the abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib prison, as an example.
I get what you're saying, but I disagree. I'd say they were equally culpable with those who made it happen and those who let it happen.JihadJane said:Those who were punished were the least culpable.
While we could argue about how high up the punishment needed to go, I am with you in spirit on this. Higher heads needed to roll.JihadJane said:They acted as they did in response to a lawless environment. The Military Intelligence operatives who directed the abuse were not imprisoned, nor were those responsible, right up to the White House, for setting up the conditions that allowed the abuse to happen.
Sometimes, but in that case your beef is with the state and not the soldiers, which makes your OP puzzling.JihadJane said:This illustrates how ordinary soldiers are perceived by the State which sends them to war - they are useful idiots.
No. The OP is an attack on the military itself, not on its misuse and misleading by the civilian hierarchy.JihadJane said:I see the OP video as an effort to stop such exploitation.
Okay.JihadJane said:BTW, I am not the only one who has serious doubts about LONGTABBER PE.
But JJane does not mind speaking from ignorance.JIHADJANE "I don't respond to patronizing idiocy."
War is institutionalized, legalized murder and the trauma of living with violence and brutality leads directly to the many difficulties war veterans face when returning to civilian life. I do not believe that "they were that way already".
JJ said:BTW, I am not the only one who has serious doubts about LONGTABBER PE.
Excellent. This is finally some good commentary. One wonders why it was so difficult to get from you.
Of course, there is something to be said for the scarred, amputee veteran who is the recruiter in "Starship Troopers."
I don't recall any advertisement suggesting it is.
Speaking directly to the marketing campaign and not to actual recruiters, I don't think I agree. Can you be more specific, please?
And GWB couldn't rightly answer. That is an issue with GWB and the justification for the war, not with the military, unless you are suggesting the military not be subject to the lawful orders of its CinC.
In every television ad or just at the recruiter's station? Perhaps at Boot Camp before they incur a lasting obligation?
Christians are disproportionately represented among the incarcerated, too. Surgeon General's warnings for religion, then?
No. It is this form of statement that makes it difficult to take your sensible statements seriously. (By "sensible" I don't mean "those I agree with." I disagree with much of this current post, but it is, in the main, sensible)
I don't think it came to represent it at all. It tarnished it, stained it, shamed those in it, but did not come to represent it.
I get what you're saying, but I disagree. I'd say they were equally culpable with those who made it happen and those who let it happen.
Sometimes, but in that case your beef is with the state and not the soldiers, which makes your OP puzzling.
No. The OP is an attack on the military itself, not on its misuse and misleading by the civilian hierarchy.
Now then. Is your second to last sentence your only comment about the OP?
What do you call taking people's lives without their consent?
You'll have to tell me. Most of it could have been avoided in this thread by answering the early and direct questions to you regarding the OP.What's the point of fighting?
It's also simple to miss the point, and puzzling when the point is both valid and largely in agreement with you.JihadJane said:Things are much simpler when one is killing giant bugs rather than human beings.
And you used it so it became yours.JihadJane said:It was Sabrina's phrase.
No. The first is to get you in the door. Recruiters try to close the sale. It's the difference between a Honda ad and the salesman who sits down with you and "works the numbers."JihadJane said:The marketing campaign is a recruitment campaign.
Your question indicates you missed the point entirely. Please re-read.JihadJane said:What noble cause did Cindy Sheehan's son die for?
You want "the national consciousness" to warn soldiers about the dangers of war? Setting aside questions about the validity of the premise of a national consciousness, I say go for it, but don't focus on America; focus on every national with a military and every organization that uses force. Put fundamentalist jihadists at or near the top of your list.JihadJane said:In the national consciousness.
Right there in the part you quoted: "Surgeon General warnings for religions, then?JihadJane said:Your point?
It varies depending on circumstance, as you know.JihadJane said:What do you call taking people's lives without their consent?
In some circles. And do not make the mistake of conflating recognizability with representativeness.JihadJane said:This is the most iconic, instantly recognizable image of the "liberation" of Iraq
And yet you choose to go with the first.JihadJane said:and, along with the smoking Twin Towers, of the "War on Terror":
You would be incorrect.JihadJane said:I'd say they are scapegoats.
Did you watch it? Did you not see the claims about horrific and intentional actions on the part of soldiers?JihadJane said:How is the OP a beef with soldiers?
Agreed. So?JihadJane said:The State is responsible for sending people to fight its supporters' wars.
See above. Watch the clip.JihadJane said:How is the OP an attack on the military?
An upped ante! Goodie!JihadJane said:Now then, now then.
Then you've been reading a thread different from the one you're writing.JihadJane said:This entire thread is my comment on the OP.
How often do people consent to have their lives taken?What do you call taking people's lives without their consent?
There, there, fixed it for ya.JJane corrected for context of this thread and in particular the OP and video clip said:My favorite pictue of the "War on Terror":
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What do you call it when they are trying to take yours but you get in there first?
Were they trying to murder you?
....
You spammed and now cannot even support your OP.
JihadJane said:Quote:
Sometimes, but in that case your beef is with the state and not the soldiers, which makes your OP puzzling.
How is the OP a beef with soldiers? The State is responsible for sending people to fight its supporters' wars.
But JJane does not mind speaking from ignorance.
How often do people consent to have their lives taken?
There, there, fixed it for ya.
You'll have to tell me. Most of it could have been avoided in this thread by answering the early and direct questions to you regarding the OP.
It's also simple to miss the point, and puzzling when the point is both valid and largely in agreement with you.
And you used it so it became yours.
No. The first is to get you in the door. Recruiters try to close the sale. It's the difference between a Honda ad and the salesman who sits down with you and "works the numbers."
Your question indicates you missed the point entirely. Please re-read.
And GWB couldn't rightly answer. That is an issue with GWB and the justification for the war, not with the military, unless you are suggesting the military not be subject to the lawful orders of its CinC.
You want "the national consciousness" to warn soldiers about the dangers of war? Setting aside questions about the validity of the premise of a national consciousness, I say go for it, but don't focus on America; focus on every national with a military and every organization that uses force. Put fundamentalist jihadists at or near the top of your list.
You are free to ignore history.
It varies depending on circumstance, as you know.
Separate from the absolute silliness of the question -- and it is extremely silly coming from someone who does have a brain (you do).
Is killing ever not murder? Ever? Can you think of no instance?
In some circles. And do not make the mistake of conflating recognizability with representativeness.
And yet you choose to go with the first.
You would be incorrect.
Did you watch it? Did you not see the claims about horrific and intentional actions on the part of soldiers?
Agreed. So?
See above. Watch the clip.
Then you've been reading a thread different from the one you're writing.
The only imagery that ever gave me a warm feeling on the WoT was gun camera footage or targeting pod tapes of a few of our better placed airstrikes. Most of that you don't have access to, and I don't either, anymore.What's your "favorite picture" of the "War on Terror", DR?