Life as you knew it is now overThere are only two things that are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. --Albert Einstein
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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Currently Watching: Blood Diamond (Two-Disc Special Edition)

Child Soldiers of Conflict Diamonds

All men and women are supposed to be created equal, even if their lives aren't.  Who we are and what we become is largely based on our environments and the choices we make in them.  So how do we fit good and evil into that mix?  Take the demonic, soulless rebels in Africa who massacre villages, rape and kill the women, force the men to mine for conflict diamonds, and take the sons to brainwash and turn into the next generation of rebels. 

It is those children I am talking about here.  No person considers them anything but victims of the war.  They are forced to commit unimaginable horrors, to become trained to kill without remorse, and if they object then without a doubt they'll end up on the wrong side of their AK-47s.  They have no choice but to obey the commands of the rebels, and soon enough they loose all humanity.  Those who survive the battles grow into adults and in turn kidnap the next generation of kids to pervert.

When did they cross the line from victims to demons?  Did they ever cross the line at all?  It would seem that they certainly did, but even if it was a gradual shift how, when, and why did that happen?

Trying to look at it from their point of view.  They know they grow up fearing death if they defect.  As they grow older they've got the local public and military to fear as well, for none of them would harbor any pity for a defective rebel, not after all the murder they have committed.  They seem to be stuck where they are, unless they can find a way to leave the country for good, and those opportunities aren't exactly easily available. 

They kill so that they themselves aren't killed.  They brutalize so that they themselves remain safe. 

It's all fine and dandy to say that murdering innocents to save your own scrawny neck is evil, but try to actually imagine yourself in their shoes.  How many of you would be willing to say no to the rebels?  Are you ready to sign your own death warrant?  Ready to die for a perfect stranger? Someone who'll be killed anyways, by someone else if not you?  And after that first murder the next one hundred become a lot easier.

I would like to think I'd be strong enough to spare them if I was in their place.  Maybe I'd turn on the rebels or just try to run away instead.  But it would be me alone against hundreds of others.  I would like to think I'd be strong enough, and at the moment I believe I would be, but you never really know until the moment of truth.  Not until it's kill or be killed.

So what do you do?  Do you condemn the rebels to the ranks of demons?  Consider them helpless victims?  Or do you just weep for the poor devils, for it is nothing but the blessing of God that stopped you from being right there marching with the worst of them.

--Yeah, I just saw Blood Diamond.


Sunday, April 29, 2007

What if Iran had Invaded Mexico

You should walk a mile in the other person's shoes before you start complaining about the speck in their eyes.


Taken from: http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20070405.htm
Written by: Noam Chomsky

What If Iran Had Invaded Mexico?

"The Iran Effect"

The results of an attack on Iran could be horrendous. After all, according to a recent study of "the Iraq effect" by terrorism specialists Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank, using government and Rand Corporation data, the Iraq invasion has already led to a seven-fold increase in terror. The "Iran effect" would probably be far more severe and long-lasting. British military historian Corelli Barnett speaks for many when he warns that "an attack on Iran would effectively launch World War III."

What are the plans of the increasingly desperate clique that narrowly holds political power in the U.S.? We cannot know. Such state planning is, of course, kept secret in the interests of "security." Review of the declassified record reveals that there is considerable merit in that claim -- though only if we understand "security" to mean the security of the Bush administration against their domestic enemy, the population in whose name they act.

Even if the White House clique is not planning war, naval deployments, support for secessionist movements and acts of terror within Iran, and other provocations could easily lead to an accidental war. Congressional resolutions would not provide much of a barrier. They invariably permit "national security" exemptions, opening holes wide enough for the several aircraft-carrier battle groups soon to be in the Persian Gulf to pass through -- as long as an unscrupulous leadership issues proclamations of doom (as Condoleezza Rice did with those "mushroom clouds" over American cities back in 2002). And the concocting of the sorts of incidents that "justify" such attacks is a familiar practice. Even the worst monsters feel the need for such justification and adopt the device: Hitler's defense of innocent Germany from the "wild terror" of the Poles in 1939, after they had rejected his wise and generous proposals for peace, is but one example.

The most effective barrier to a White House decision to launch a war is the kind of organized popular opposition that frightened the political-military leadership enough in 1968 that they were reluctant to send more troops to Vietnam -- fearing, we learned from the Pentagon Papers, that they might need them for civil-disorder control.

Doubtless Iran's government merits harsh condemnation, including for its recent actions that have inflamed the crisis. It is, however, useful to ask how we would act if Iran had invaded and occupied Canada and Mexico and was arresting U.S. government representatives there on the grounds that they were resisting the Iranian occupation (called "liberation," of course). Imagine as well that Iran was deploying massive naval forces in the Caribbean and issuing credible threats to launch a wave of attacks against a vast range of sites -- nuclear and otherwise -- in the United States, if the U.S. government did not immediately terminate all its nuclear energy programs (and, naturally, dismantle all its nuclear weapons). Suppose that all of this happened after Iran had overthrown the government of the U.S. and installed a vicious tyrant (as the US did to Iran in 1953), then later supported a Russian invasion of the U.S. that killed millions of people (just as the U.S. supported Saddam Hussein's invasion of Iran in 1980, killing hundreds of thousands of Iranians, a figure comparable to millions of Americans). Would we watch quietly?

It is easy to understand an observation by one of Israel's leading military historians, Martin van Creveld. After the U.S. invaded Iraq, knowing it to be defenseless, he noted, "Had the Iranians not tried to build nuclear weapons, they would be crazy."

Surely no sane person wants Iran (or any nation) to develop nuclear weapons. A reasonable resolution of the present crisis would permit Iran to develop nuclear energy, in accord with its rights under the Non-Proliferation Treaty, but not nuclear weapons. Is that outcome feasible? It would be, given one condition: that the U.S. and Iran were functioning democratic societies in which public opinion had a significant impact on public policy.

As it happens, this solution has overwhelming support among Iranians and Americans, who generally are in agreement on nuclear issues. The Iranian-American consensus includes the complete elimination of nuclear weapons everywhere (82% of Americans); if that cannot yet be achieved because of elite opposition, then at least a "nuclear-weapons-free zone in the Middle East that would include both Islamic countries and Israel" (71% of Americans). Seventy-five percent of Americans prefer building better relations with Iran to threats of force. In brief, if public opinion were to have a significant influence on state policy in the U.S. and Iran, resolution of the crisis might be at hand, along with much more far-reaching solutions to the global nuclear conundrum.

Promoting Democracy -- at Home

These facts suggest a possible way to prevent the current crisis from exploding, perhaps even into some version of World War III. That awesome threat might be averted by pursuing a familiar proposal: democracy promotion -- this time at home, where it is badly needed. Democracy promotion at home is certainly feasible and, although we cannot carry out such a project directly in Iran, we could act to improve the prospects of the courageous reformers and oppositionists who are seeking to achieve just that. Among such figures who are, or should be, well-known, would be Saeed Hajjarian, Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi, and Akbar Ganji, as well as those who, as usual, remain nameless, among them labor activists about whom we hear very little; those who publish the Iranian Workers Bulletin may be a case in point.

We can best improve the prospects for democracy promotion in Iran by sharply reversing state policy here so that it reflects popular opinion. That would entail ceasing to make the regular threats that are a gift to Iranian hardliners. These are bitterly condemned by Iranians truly concerned with democracy promotion (unlike those "supporters" who flaunt democracy slogans in the West and are lauded as grand "idealists" despite their clear record of visceral hatred for democracy).

Democracy promotion in the United States could have far broader consequences. In Iraq, for instance, a firm timetable for withdrawal would be initiated at once, or very soon, in accord with the will of the overwhelming majority of Iraqis and a significant majority of Americans. Federal budget priorities would be virtually reversed. Where spending is rising, as in military supplemental bills to conduct the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, it would sharply decline. Where spending is steady or declining (health, education, job training, the promotion of energy conservation and renewable energy sources, veterans benefits, funding for the UN and UN peacekeeping operations, and so on), it would sharply increase. Bush's tax cuts for people with incomes over $200,000 a year would be immediately rescinded.

The U.S. would have adopted a national health-care system long ago, rejecting the privatized system that sports twice the per-capita costs found in similar societies and some of the worst outcomes in the industrial world. It would have rejected what is widely regarded by those who pay attention as a "fiscal train wreck" in-the-making. The U.S. would have ratified the Kyoto Protocol to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions and undertaken still stronger measures to protect the environment. It would allow the UN to take the lead in international crises, including in Iraq. After all, according to opinion polls, since shortly after the 2003 invasion, a large majority of Americans have wanted the UN to take charge of political transformation, economic reconstruction, and civil order in that land.

If public opinion mattered, the U.S. would accept UN Charter restrictions on the use of force, contrary to a bipartisan consensus that this country, alone, has the right to resort to violence in response to potential threats, real or imagined, including threats to our access to markets and resources. The U.S. (along with others) would abandon the Security Council veto and accept majority opinion even when in opposition to it. The UN would be allowed to regulate arms sales; while the U.S. would cut back on such sales and urge other countries to do so, which would be a major contribution to reducing large-scale violence in the world. Terror would be dealt with through diplomatic and economic measures, not force, in accord with the judgment of most specialists on the topic but again in diametric opposition to present-day policy.

Furthermore, if public opinion influenced policy, the U.S. would have diplomatic relations with Cuba, benefiting the people of both countries (and, incidentally, U.S. agribusiness, energy corporations, and others), instead of standing virtually alone in the world in imposing an embargo (joined only by Israel, the Republic of Palau, and the Marshall Islands). Washington would join the broad international consensus on a two-state settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict, which (with Israel) it has blocked for 30 years -- with scattered and temporary exceptions -- and which it still blocks in word, and more importantly in deed, despite fraudulent claims of its commitment to diplomacy. The U.S. would also equalize aid to Israel and Palestine, cutting off aid to either party that rejected the international consensus.

Evidence on these matters is reviewed in my book Failed States as well as in The Foreign Policy Disconnect by Benjamin Page (with Marshall Bouton), which also provides extensive evidence that public opinion on foreign (and probably domestic) policy issues tends to be coherent and consistent over long periods. Studies of public opinion have to be regarded with caution, but they are certainly highly suggestive.

Democracy promotion at home, while no panacea, would be a useful step towards helping our own country become a "responsible stakeholder" in the international order (to adopt the term used for adversaries), instead of being an object of fear and dislike throughout much of the world. Apart from being a value in itself, functioning democracy at home holds real promise for dealing constructively with many current problems, international and domestic, including those that literally threaten the survival of our species.





Currently Reading: Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold War, and the Roots of Terror

Question and Answer time:

The question was posed:
"What kind of quality other than an angry mob behind it is it that the koran texts have?"

Here's the short answer (well, I tried to keep it short):

It was the text of the Koran and the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed that led the Muslim world to preserve the writings of the Greeks and Romans which would have otherwise been lost, to father the study of sciences like Chemistry and Algebra (the only true evil that you may attribute to Islam). They were studying the spread of diseases, health and sanitation while all their European counterparts could do was saw people's limbs off if they felt ill. Scholars from around the world, both Muslim and non-Muslim, would go to study in Damascus and Baghdad, to the largest library of the time, and this was all going on during the worst of Europe's dark ages. Without the scientific advances made by Islam our current technology would be a couple centuries behind where it is now (say goodbye to your new cell phone).

Islam and the Koran gave women more rights than any other civilization of the time. For the first time women were allowed to own property and conduct business. They did not belong to their husbands but instead a relationship filled with equal rights was created, where a woman could even divorce her husband if she felt abused. Where else have woman's rights of this degree been seen before the last century?

The West complains about the hijab and how it oppresses women.There are two things to say to that: 1) Even before the time of the Prophet, instead of oppressing women the coverings were considered a sign of status and nobility (nuns wear them, don't they? and it's definitely better than girls thinking they have to starve themselves to look pretty). and 2) the Koran says "there is no complusion in religion," and anyone who tries to force people to comply with his interpretation of religion is dead wrong and should be stopped. Any compliance with acts such as following hijab must be voluntary or they have no meaning.


Remember, in Islam there is no clash between Science and Religion. There is no submission of women under man. And there is NO PUNISHING OTHERS FOR NOT SHARING YOUR FAITH. That was never Islam and never will be, and any "Muslim" claiming otherwise is either ignorant or has a personal agenda to fulfill...there goes the clash of civilizations idea


Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Scenes from Spiderman 3

Here are some scenes (not a trailer, but released SCENES) from Spiderman 3!
It includes an awesome fight with the Hobgoblin



Spiderman 3 Preview (NOT A TRAILER!) - Amazing videos are here


Tuesday, February 13, 2007

The new Iraq War

It's President Bush's lucky day...

 Iraq Iran

Four years seems to be long enough in the government's mind for Americans to forget everything they were told.  We got into Iraq because Bush and his pals kept on repeating over and over again that Sadaam had weapons.  Forget the fact that he didn't give us any proof, just saying the same lie over and over again turns out to be a surprisingly effective tactic to make someone believe you, and they're at it again pretending to tattle on Iran. 

You know how the terrorists in the Middle East get people to believe their perverted view of things?  That the West (and especially the Jews) are determined to wipe out their culture and way of life and replace it with their own?  It's because THEY ARE TOLD THE SAME THING OVER AND OVER AGAIN, AND THEY DON'T LOOK FOR PROOF...aka, brainwashing.  This is EXACTLY what this government has already done to it's citizens, and now they're already underway with round two. 

I even remember reading and posting another article from BBC about how the UN found that America was trying to falsify evidence to make it seem as if Iran was developing nuclear weapons as opposed to just nuclear energy as it claims.  Unfortunately I couldn't find that article.

Feeling skeptical?  Good, means you're trying to use your head instead of blindly accepting what I say.  But here are a few key excerpts from a BBC news article that should help change your mind.  They describe the so-called "proofs" Bush provided that Iran is funding terrorists in Iraq, and more. 

Now I'm not saying Iran's a saint here, but there are a whole lot of other places that are far more deserving of military intervention.  Places like N. Korea and Darfur come to mind.  Oh, and I almost forgot about AFGHANISTAN where the Taliban are slowly returning!  And it might be worth mentioning a certain other country (that shall remain unnamed since I don't like be called an anti-semetic) that likes to level cities and kill thousands of innocent civilians in a country it illegally occupied for twenty years (and still has other territories being occupied illegally) all for the supposed sake of getting back two low ranking soldiers. 
Of course, the U.S. is buddy buddy with them so I don't think that'll be happening anytime soon.

Edit: Here's another pic that I just found on Leonidas' xanga.  It speaks volumes about the current state of affairs, and it was found on yahoo news of all places! Pay special attention to the reports on the second and third lines...ring any bells?:
Bullshit

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/middle_east/6353489.stm
"No evidence was produced, other than a suggestion that the Iranian-supported Lebanese group Hezbollah had also used such charges, so the common origin had to be Iran."

"
At the moment, the US lacks a casus belli and by claiming that Iran is responsible for killing USA troops, it could be laying the groundwork for a 'self-defence' justification, according to this theory.  The new chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senator John Rockefeller said recently: 'To be quite honest, I'm a little concerned that it's Iraq again.' "

"
Many people will not distinguish between the Shia militias that Iran is said to supply - and which have ties to the Iraqi government - and the Sunni insurgents who have been the cause of much of the violence.  The allegedly Iranian supplied bombs are said to have caused the deaths of 170 American soldiers, but overall 2497 soldiers have been killed in hostile incidents, most of them at hands of the Sunnis.  The claim serves the purpose of helping to lay the blame for the whole insurgency at Iran's door."

"[The weapons Iran is allegedly supplying] are said to be provided by Iran in kit form and to be smuggled across the often-open border.  However the officials who presented the evidence could not make a direct link to Iran."

"Against the inference that this all comes from Iran is the concept that Iraqis themselves would be capable of copying a design and therefore do not need to get bombs from Iran.

And there have been a number of news reports over the last year expressing scepticism, even among military personnel, about the link to Iran.

The Washington Post reported last October that British troops in the south doubted the claim.

A year ago, the London Times said that British officers in Basra had stopped making any such claim, saying only that the technology matched bomb-making found elsewhere in the Middle East, including Lebanon and Syria."



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