View Full Version : Ron Paul Condemns Al-Awlaki's Killing
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 01:38 PM
If you will tell me what comments you found unclear, I'll be happy to clarify them if I can.
I don't recall saying your comments were unclear but, if I did, it's really not important for you to clarify. I simply don't care.
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:40 PM
Seriously? On second thought, yes.
I object to your obsessive use of commas and semicolons. Round off a fucking sentence every now and then, instead of piling up empty parallels.
I am only mildly annoyed by the mannerism at this point. Since you asked and I reflected on it, I thought I owed you a straight answer: it bugs me. You're trying way too hard. Overcompensation?
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 01:41 PM
No.
Okay, so, what was incoherent?
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:41 PM
I don't recall saying your comments were unclear but, if I did, it's really not important for you to clarify. I simply don't care.Ok.
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:43 PM
Okay, so, what was incoherent?Saying you're done with the conversation, then launching ad hominems, then pleading for topical focus, for example.
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 01:46 PM
Saying you're done with the conversation, then launching ad hominems, then pleading for topical focus, for example.
I don't see that as incoherent. You pretty succinctly made sense of what you thought occurred.
I would question when I launched any ad hominems but, that aside, I would like to get away from this conversation and back to the thread topic.
If that's incoherence, you're pretty incoherent yourself.
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:46 PM
Saying that critics are undermining national security and ought to confine themselves to legal challenges, and then saying such criticism is inconsequential in the next breath, is another example.
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 01:50 PM
Saying that critics are undermining national security and ought to confine themselves to legal challenges,...
External to this forum.
...and then saying such criticism is inconsequential in the next breath, is another example.
Internal to this forum.
Cleared up?
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:54 PM
Weaselly. That's not what you said before but I'll accept your clarification.
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 01:56 PM
I would question when I launched any ad hominems ...Of course you would. You would never stoop so low.
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 01:59 PM
Of course you would. You would never stoop so low.
In this thread.
I'm not above it and, readily admit I've stooped so low. But, I've tried real hard, in this conversation, not to do so.
ElNono
10-09-2011, 02:01 PM
yoni seems to have a difficult time distinguishing between 'making a legal case' vs 'legal'.
One argues for a legal position, the other determines the actual legality.
I also question the political side of this, which is to keep the memo secret? I don't believe national security was compromised when similar legal memos were released by this administration in the past.
This administration and the previous one are almost indistinguishable at this point.
Yonivore
10-09-2011, 02:04 PM
Weaselly. That's not what you said before but I'll accept your clarification.
Sure, it is. I've always maintained this forum carries absolutely no significance in the real world. My criticisms of the left have always been about those who are out in the real world, actively trying to apply their agenda.
If you've ever believed otherwise, let this be instructive.
If I've ever criticized your personal position on a topic as being destructive and as undermining the country's interests, please know, I meant that in terms of those -- outside this forum -- that hold the same position and are actively doing their best to enact that agenda in an effort the concretely undermine this country's interests.
I'm not sure how I can be more clear than that.
I think you and I are insignificant, vis-à-vis our involvement in this forum but, to the extent we carry our positions and ideals, outside this virtual world, we have real consequence on our community. But, in here, it's meaningless.
Winehole23
10-09-2011, 02:09 PM
In this thread.
I'm not above it and, readily admit I've stooped so low. But, I've tried real hard, in this conversation, not to do so.Thanks for trying.:toast
LnGrrrR
10-09-2011, 06:07 PM
I think you and I are insignificant, vis-à-vis our involvement in this forum but, to the extent we carry our positions and ideals, outside this virtual world, we have real consequence on our community. But, in here, it's meaningless.
To choose this or that is to affirm at the same time the value of what we choose, because we can never choose evil. We always choose the good, and nothing can be good for us without being good for all.
- Jean-Paul Sartre
ElNono
10-09-2011, 06:14 PM
But the French surrendered!!!
Yonivore
10-10-2011, 05:53 PM
Well, now we have an authority on the matter...
Al-Qaeda joins those questioning legality of U.S. killing of citizen Anwar al-Awlaki (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/checkpoint-washington/post/al-qaeda-joins-those-questioning-legality-of-awlaki-killing/2011/10/10/gIQAH7nZaL_blog.html)
Because, when it comes to killing Americans, these guys know the law.
ElNono
10-10-2011, 06:03 PM
Are you saying Ron Paul = AQ?
Winehole23
10-11-2011, 09:23 AM
Even Al Qaeda clowns us. Sad thing is, they're right.
admiralsnackbar
10-12-2011, 02:01 AM
Well, now we have an authority on the matter...
Al-Qaeda joins those questioning legality of U.S. killing of citizen Anwar al-Awlaki (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/checkpoint-washington/post/al-qaeda-joins-those-questioning-legality-of-awlaki-killing/2011/10/10/gIQAH7nZaL_blog.html)
Because, when it comes to killing Americans, these guys know the law.
No more than you do, Yones -- they just capitalize on exploiting their enemy's hypocrisy for hearts/minds points just as the US does.
Gotta hand it to them, though... their investment/return ratios are significantly better than our country's.
Winehole23
10-17-2011, 12:44 PM
PGfx3QAV64M
Wild Cobra
10-17-2011, 04:04 PM
PGfx3QAV64M
LOL...
That was good. I never saw it before. But then, I didn't watch Sesame street either.
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 11:41 AM
Two weeks after the U.S. killed American citizen Anwar Awlaki with a drone strike in Yemen — far from any battlefield and with no due process — it did the same (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/anwar-al-awlakis-family-speaks-out-against-his-sons-deaths/2011/10/17/gIQA8kFssL_story.html) to his 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, ending the teenager’s life on Friday along with his 17-year-old cousin and seven other people. News reports, based on government sources, originally claimed that Awlaki’s son was 21 years old and an Al Qaeda fighter (needless to say, as Terrorist often means: “anyone killed by the U.S.”), but a birth certificate (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/documents/abdulrahman-al-awlaki-birth-certificate.html) published by The Washington Post proved that he was born only 16 years ago in Denver. As The New Yorker‘s Amy Davidson wrote (http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/closeread/2011/10/an-american-teen-ager-in-yemen.html): “Looking at his birth certificate, one wonders what those assertions say either about the the quality of the government’s evidence — or the honesty of its claims — and about our own capacity for self-deception.” The boy’s grandfather said that he and his cousin were at a barbecue and preparing to eat when the U.S. attacked them by air and ended their lives...
... It is unknown whether the U.S. targeted the teenager or whether he was merely “collateral damage.” The reason that’s unknown is because the Obama administration refuses to tell us. Said the Post: “The officials would not discuss the attack in any detail, including who the target was.” So here we have yet again one of the most consequential acts a government can take — killing one of its own citizens, in this case a teenage boy — and the government refuses even to talk about what it did, why it did it, what its justification is, what evidence it possesses, or what principles it has embraced in general for such actions. Indeed, it refuses even to admit it did this, since it refuses even to admit (http://www.aclu.org/national-security/predator-drone-foia-cia-letter-refusing-confirm-or-deny-existence-records) that it has a drone program at all and that it is engaged in military action in Yemen.
http://www.salon.com/writer/glenn_greenwald/
ElNono
10-20-2011, 11:45 AM
^^^ Just terrible there's not even room for discussion for something like that. If you didn't bring it up, I wouldn't even have heard about it.
LnGrrrR
10-20-2011, 01:22 PM
Two weeks after the U.S. killed American citizen Anwar Awlaki with a drone strike in Yemen — far from any battlefield and with no due process — it did the same (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/anwar-al-awlakis-family-speaks-out-against-his-sons-deaths/2011/10/17/gIQA8kFssL_story.html) to his 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, ending the teenager’s life on Friday along with his 17-year-old cousin and seven other people.
It's only the worst of the worst! They're terrorists! They're not on US soil! They don't deserve any rights!
LnGrrrR
10-20-2011, 01:24 PM
To all the people that supported Awlaki's killing, what do you have to say about this?
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 01:28 PM
You're getting an earful right now.
hitmanyr2k
10-20-2011, 02:39 PM
To all the people that supported Awlaki's killing, what do you have to say about this?
Yemeni officials said the dead from the strike included Ibrahim al-Banna, the Egyptian media chief for al-Qaeda’s Yemeni affiliate, and also a brother of Fahd al-Quso, a senior al-Qaeda operative who was indicted in New York in the 2000 attack on the USS Cole in the port of Aden.
Collateral damage sucks but I can't sympathize. Why is this kid in the vicinity of these people? It's like they don't realize the consequences of hanging around with assholes. It's like I told a friend of mine awhile back. If you're dumb enough to play cards at your drug dealer friend's house don't be shocked when you're sitting in jail with him after the cops raid his ass. What happens a few months later...dumb fuck is sitting in jail with his friend on drug charges. Why? Because he was stupid enough to hang around with that idiot. You don't want to get blasted by drones? Stay away from people with targets on their back...it's that simple.
FuzzyLumpkins
10-20-2011, 02:48 PM
To all the people that supported Awlaki's killing, what do you have to say about this?
Was he targeted by the strike or was he collateral damage. If it was targeted for him then that is fucked up to all else.
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 02:51 PM
Why is this kid in the vicinity of these people? Maybe because he was entrusted to them by his father, who knew he was wearing crosshairs; and because he was a minor child and therefore under the control of his guardians, not at liberty to move as he pleased.
Is that enough reason to waste his ass without further ado or explanation?
clambake
10-20-2011, 02:52 PM
2 separate strikes?
hitmanyr2k
10-20-2011, 02:56 PM
Maybe because he was entrusted to them by his father, who knew he was wearing crosshairs; and because he was a minor child and therefore under the control of his guardians, not at liberty to move as he pleased.
Is that enough reason to waste his ass without further ado or explanation?
Great, so the father who has a target on his back because he's a loudmouth hate-mongering asshole entrusts his kid to other assholes with targets on their backs as well? Yeah, that's smart.
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 03:04 PM
Great, so the father who has a target on his back because he's a loudmouth hate-mongering asshole entrusts his kid to other assholes with targets on their backs as well? Yeah, that's smart.It's a killing offense to fall in with the wrong crowd, apparently.
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 03:06 PM
Hint: we're talking about a US citizen here.
hitmanyr2k
10-20-2011, 03:22 PM
It's a killing offense to fall in with the wrong crowd, apparently.
The only offense I see here is towards common sense. U.S. citizen or not I don't sympathize with that kind of stupidity. Even the biggest moron can deduce these guys have targets on their backs, it may be a little dangerous to hang with'em.
If his daddy handed him over to those kind of people then he was a fuckin moron, point blank. Hypothetically speaking, am I going to let my kids ride around with my drug kingpin brother? Am I going to name him godfather of my kids if something were to happen to me? Fuck no lol. Who's dumb enough to put their kids in harm's way?
clambake
10-20-2011, 03:31 PM
2 separate strikes, 2 weeks apart.
Winehole23
10-20-2011, 03:44 PM
The only offense I see here is towards common sense. U.S. citizen or not I don't sympathize with that kind of stupidity. Now stupidity is a killing offense. Tough crowd.
FuzzyLumpkins
10-20-2011, 04:37 PM
It's a killing offense to fall in with the wrong crowd, apparently.
No butt if it was unknown to those that issued the order that he was to be present but they rather they issued the order to attack the others that were clearly not compromising targets its pretty hard to point the finger.
It would be the same as if an American reporter who is clearly not a target getting hit by such an attack.
Vietnam was run with all the second guessing nonsense and you cannot formulate mission based on that.
Is it tragic? Certainly but at the same time the military operations against the training and organizational grounds in Yemen are a tactical and strategic necessity.
diego
10-20-2011, 05:24 PM
Is it tragic? Certainly but at the same time the military operations against the training and organizational grounds in Yemen are a tactical and strategic necessity.
Are they a tactical and strategic necessity, or just another step in a game of tit for tat? How many young arabs connected directly or indirectly with those killed in Yemen will grow to hate the US for drone attacks that are, be honest, just as cowardly as suicide bombers? Collateral damage only works when you are on the same side, otherwise its just murder of innocents, be it at the hands of a drone or a suicide bomber.
I remember the same argument being used for the cruise missile attacks in Sudan that took out a pharmaceutical plant and a candy factory. A year later, 9/11 happened. What guarantee do you have that this supposed "tactical and strategic necessity" will keep Americans safe? Is it worth forfeiting the higher moral ground, your ideals, without a guarantee that you will gain something from that?
in any case, the truly distrubing thing about this is the secrecy. If the US govt decided that these people are important enough of a threat as to violate the constitution and principles of sovereignty to eliminate, ok, there could be a case for that. But when they dont even acknowledge that they are doing it and give faulty intel to justify their actions, that doesnt inspire confidence, it just makes it all the more sinister.
ElNono
10-20-2011, 05:50 PM
^^^ well put.
FuzzyLumpkins
10-20-2011, 07:37 PM
Are they a tactical and strategic necessity, or just another step in a game of tit for tat? How many young arabs connected directly or indirectly with those killed in Yemen will grow to hate the US for drone attacks that are, be honest, just as cowardly as suicide bombers? Collateral damage only works when you are on the same side, otherwise its just murder of innocents, be it at the hands of a drone or a suicide bomber.
I remember the same argument being used for the cruise missile attacks in Sudan that took out a pharmaceutical plant and a candy factory. A year later, 9/11 happened. What guarantee do you have that this supposed "tactical and strategic necessity" will keep Americans safe? Is it worth forfeiting the higher moral ground, your ideals, without a guarantee that you will gain something from that?
in any case, the truly distrubing thing about this is the secrecy. If the US govt decided that these people are important enough of a threat as to violate the constitution and principles of sovereignty to eliminate, ok, there could be a case for that. But when they dont even acknowledge that they are doing it and give faulty intel to justify their actions, that doesnt inspire confidence, it just makes it all the more sinister.
Well if you do not believe that the attacks on various US military and civilian sights, various commuter stations in Europe, various embassies across the world et al originated from those Yemeni bases then so be it.
If you do admit that they originated from there then we can talk because at that point they were the base of operations for worldwide attacks and continued to be so.
Its the whole Osama Bin Laden Story. He bankrolled early jihadist nonsense in Yemen in the early 1980s. It was from that base of operations that he got involved in Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation and galvanized support for the organization across the region. His base of support was still on the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen the entire time. Thats where he was from.
Well they didn't go away and they are still operating thus the presence of their propogandist and training personnel.
I have no idea about Sudan and quite frankly with the water shortages the last two years across East Africa the last two years I really do not know why that was necessary.
Maybe they were full of shit in their explanations. I did not make them and there certainly is such a thing as strategic and tactical necessities. I am not going to condescend as to leave at that. i think I have indicated what they are clearly and specifically.
But I do know that AQ and their bases in Yemen had a lot of their ideology of antiwestern sentiment from US military installations in Saudi Arabia and their proximity to their holy cities. Much of that rhetoric came from Bin Laden though and maybe a change in approach because of his death is needed but I have absolutely no problem with military action in Yemen.
None.
diego
10-21-2011, 07:46 AM
I'm familiar with the Yemeni influence, like I said before a case could be made against them, and in fact it would have been much more logical to me to invade Yemen/Saudi Arabia than Iraq/Afghanistan. Yemen is definitely a hub for Arab terrorism.
My points more specifically were
a) why the secrecy
and
b) what does bombing solve
Suppose AQ managed to assassinate the entire US and UK political and military leadership (huge stretch, but bear with me). Every last one, dead. You dont think a new leadership, more hell bent on destroying AQ, would rise up? And if the US assassinates the entire AQ leadership... you don't think a new leadership, more hell bent on destroying the US, will rise up?
This is the real world, not the Terminator saga. Killing specific people doesnt magically eliminate an ideological movement in one fell swoop. At best it disorganizes the hit faction for a while, but eventually new leaders rise and if they are any good at leading they will use history to frame their ideology and recruit members (unless you are talking total extermination, but again that will only inspire others to join the fray). Right now the history the US is creating in the ME is that they are willing to kill innocents and fabricate evidence in the name of revenge. That is a far cry from "we are the most civilized country in the world, a beacon of freedom, justice and prosperity (and that's why they hate us!)".
As for the argument that "you shouldnt keep bad company" someone else threw around, do you honestly expect the average Yemeni or Pakistani to be up to date on these affairs? These are people living in extreme poverty, they should move to another city because some AQ guys are living in their town? Life is hard enough as it is for them then to have to be preoccupied with the president du jour's hit list (as if it were readily available to them) and the whereabouts of the terrorists. When the US police starts using missiles to apprehend murderers then your analogy will work, and you can see just how feasible it is to expect people to "just stay away" from murderers. 2 year old nephew? Watch your company! Next door neighbor? Mailman? Taxi driver? Wrong suspect, woops! etc etc. FYI they dont make a loudspeaker announcement before firing.
Clambake said 2 separate strikes, 2 weeks apart, you forgot to count the failed attempt right after OBL got taken out, which I believe consisted of 2 separate attacks, and another attempt before that in which a Yemeni gov official was accidentally killed. Thats a lot of "collateral damage". Add to that supporting an unpopular (30 year) president, why would the average Yemeni be against AQ and for the US/democracy/capitalism?
Tit for tat, again and again. The only good thing you can say is that you have much better weapons so your tit is bigger than their tat, but its still tit for tat.
As for Alwaki, AFAIK his biggest achievement was prepping the underwear bomber. Is it necessary to rehash all of the intelligence/bureaucratic failures that allowed that kid to even make it in the US? Its kind of mind boggling that the US is capable of sending unmanned drones deep into another country to take out a target, but incapable of adhering to their own immigration procedures. And the worst part is if I (father, homeowner, business owner, with US citizen siblings) apply for a US visa with a one way ticket and attempt to fly with no luggage, I'll probably be denied, but when a Nigerian kid accused of being a terrorist by his own father does it he gets his visa and makes it through two customs checkpoints. Clearly though, the problem is Alwaki...
diego
10-21-2011, 07:50 AM
oh, and IMO, the US is the closest to a beacon of freedom, justice and prosperity the world has ever seen, but that doesnt give it carte blanche to bomb the hell out of its enemies, more like the opposite-
Winehole23
10-21-2011, 01:39 PM
What you said can be turned 180 degrees. The fashionable thing to say now is that precisely because the USA is the closest thing to a beacon of freedom, justice and prosperity that has ever existed, it is uniquely and infinitely justified for its enlightened mobilizations of force, wherever they may occur.
FuzzyLumpkins
10-21-2011, 03:21 PM
I'm familiar with the Yemeni influence, like I said before a case could be made against them, and in fact it would have been much more logical to me to invade Yemen/Saudi Arabia than Iraq/Afghanistan. Yemen is definitely a hub for Arab terrorism.
My points more specifically were
a) why the secrecy
and
b) what does bombing solve
Suppose AQ managed to assassinate the entire US and UK political and military leadership (huge stretch, but bear with me). Every last one, dead. You dont think a new leadership, more hell bent on destroying AQ, would rise up? And if the US assassinates the entire AQ leadership... you don't think a new leadership, more hell bent on destroying the US, will rise up?
This is the real world, not the Terminator saga. Killing specific people doesnt magically eliminate an ideological movement in one fell swoop. At best it disorganizes the hit faction for a while, but eventually new leaders rise and if they are any good at leading they will use history to frame their ideology and recruit members (unless you are talking total extermination, but again that will only inspire others to join the fray). Right now the history the US is creating in the ME is that they are willing to kill innocents and fabricate evidence in the name of revenge. That is a far cry from "we are the most civilized country in the world, a beacon of freedom, justice and prosperity (and that's why they hate us!)".
As for the argument that "you shouldnt keep bad company" someone else threw around, do you honestly expect the average Yemeni or Pakistani to be up to date on these affairs? These are people living in extreme poverty, they should move to another city because some AQ guys are living in their town? Life is hard enough as it is for them then to have to be preoccupied with the president du jour's hit list (as if it were readily available to them) and the whereabouts of the terrorists. When the US police starts using missiles to apprehend murderers then your analogy will work, and you can see just how feasible it is to expect people to "just stay away" from murderers. 2 year old nephew? Watch your company! Next door neighbor? Mailman? Taxi driver? Wrong suspect, woops! etc etc. FYI they dont make a loudspeaker announcement before firing.
Clambake said 2 separate strikes, 2 weeks apart, you forgot to count the failed attempt right after OBL got taken out, which I believe consisted of 2 separate attacks, and another attempt before that in which a Yemeni gov official was accidentally killed. Thats a lot of "collateral damage". Add to that supporting an unpopular (30 year) president, why would the average Yemeni be against AQ and for the US/democracy/capitalism?
Tit for tat, again and again. The only good thing you can say is that you have much better weapons so your tit is bigger than their tat, but its still tit for tat.
As for Alwaki, AFAIK his biggest achievement was prepping the underwear bomber. Is it necessary to rehash all of the intelligence/bureaucratic failures that allowed that kid to even make it in the US? Its kind of mind boggling that the US is capable of sending unmanned drones deep into another country to take out a target, but incapable of adhering to their own immigration procedures. And the worst part is if I (father, homeowner, business owner, with US citizen siblings) apply for a US visa with a one way ticket and attempt to fly with no luggage, I'll probably be denied, but when a Nigerian kid accused of being a terrorist by his own father does it he gets his visa and makes it through two customs checkpoints. Clearly though, the problem is Alwaki...
Secrecy on what level? We are having air strikes in Yemen. You are not going to get explanations on the rationale for scheduling for obvious reasons.
If you want to talk about Al-Awlaki and that memo then I will not disagree with you. it stinks of a coverup. That beings said. Military action in Yemen has clear strategic objectives.
As for the notion that killing them is just going to replace them with people even more militant and determined. That is horseshit. Killing them leaves a power vacuum. Who will fill that is anyones guess. i am assuming the next most powerful regional players. But its typically the most influential and powerful that are at the top. The next tier is the next tier for a reason.
You want to talk about killing our leadership structure. if you were to remove congress, the president as well as all the O7 and up then we would be crippled from a leadership perspective and who would come out of that power vacuum is anyones guess. This guarantee that it will have the exact same ideology yet amplified has absolutely no logical justification.
Tit for tat? No its more like if we get intelligence of any AQ training activities in that region with what i am sure is a list of specific targets they all get the missile. We do not just do it in response to the latest embassy bombing.
Al-Awlaki gave specific reasons to the FtHood guy why going on such a rampage would not be against Islam. In essence he gave permission but for fuck sake he was in Yemen at an AQ training center when he got the missile.
diego
10-22-2011, 09:52 AM
Secrecy on what level...
first off, I apologize if I am coming off aggressive, I only mean to discuss the issue. I consider you a level headed poster and wouldnt bother to interject if I thought you were just another partisan tool (dont name them!)
It is obviously reasonable to be secretive about scheduling. But AFAIK there have been no formal charges against these supposed traitors, and were it not for the work of reporters we wouldnt even know about the air strikes and predator attacks. Forgive me if I consider it reasonable and necessary for the government to explain why they need to assassinate these people, at the expense of collateral damage and tax payer money, costs which are important for reasons foreign and domestic. Its not the same to announce it once it is done as it is to explain beforehand, and if these people are enemies of the state why must there be any secrecy about that enmity?
The root of this problem of determining strategic and tactical necessities is one of intelligence. Faulty intel, the kind that produces failed strikes, means you have all cost and no benefit. These strikes already have a complicated cost-benefit relationship but when you miss (killing innocents) it is very ugly. And again, as a society you depend on reporters to find out how effective the successes are and how costly the failures. If you are familiar with the story of Yemeni involvement in AQ, then you are also familiar with the substantial intelligence failures of the past 15+ years.
as for my other point about tit for tat, and it being logically unjustified to assume new leadership won't continue the same ideological course... Well, the whole concept of tit for tat, an eye for an eye is probably one of the oldest social constructs documented. But beyond the history, the logical justification is that blood is thicker than water. The righteous indignation of the "innocent" victims is ripe territory for an ideologue to recruit followers, it is very rare to see cool headed logic and forward thinking prevail in that environment.
When I say the US is IMO the closest to being a beacon of freedom, justice, prosperity, I say it in large part because of important things like the legal system, gov transparency, press freedom, etc. But those are all being subjugated to the war on terror, to the point where it looks an awful lot like you are stooping to your enemies' level. You are entitled to your opinion, what I question is to what point you can really say "this is a strategic/tactical necessity", both in the philosophical sense of ends justifying means yadda yadda, and in the practical sense of "did past bombing campaigns provide the US protection, or provide AQ with martyrs and zealots". IMO, the bombings fail on both counts, though I respect your opinion, particularly because it is much more difficult for me to trust a govt that, though I may admire your country is not and will never be my govt.
ElNono
10-22-2011, 12:02 PM
The whole "strategic/tactical necessity" can easily be turned around too from a philosophical standpoint. You could argue that 9/11 or other attacks were a "strategic/tactical necessity" for the bad guys, and that the people that died on them were "collateral".
Obviously, what ends up separating the sides is the proverbial "who is the good guy?" and this is where you go into the moral high ground terrain, who stands for what, who operates under what guidelines, etc etc etc, and part of the reason why you want to protect and remain respecting those tenets that built on that moral high ground to begin with.
FuzzyLumpkins
10-22-2011, 12:22 PM
The whole "strategic/tactical necessity" can easily be turned around too from a philosophical standpoint. You could argue that 9/11 or other attacks were a "strategic/tactical necessity" for the bad guys, and that the people that died on them were "collateral".
Obviously, what ends up separating the sides is the proverbial "who is the good guy?" and this is where you go into the moral high ground terrain, who stands for what, who operates under what guidelines, etc etc etc, and part of the reason why you want to protect and remain respecting those tenets that built on that moral high ground to begin with.
Its real simple. Us vs them. You are right you can always make the moral waters murky. For them i can certainly see them making a strategic decision to bomb symbolic targets. You have heard me enough to know that I do not put any stock into arbitrary notions like good or evil as reagrds to policy. That religious subjective nonsense.
ElNono
10-22-2011, 12:45 PM
Its real simple. Us vs them. You are right you can always make the moral waters murky. For them i can certainly see them making a strategic decision to bomb symbolic targets. You have heard me enough to know that I do not put any stock into arbitrary notions like good or evil as reagrds to policy. That religious subjective nonsense.
I'll just disagree that "it's real simple". From strictly a military standpoint, it might be. But when you enter the realm of civilians, "collateral" (a term I personally think attempts to desensitize, and that I truly despise), and the fallout from all that (lest we forget how our nation united and rallied after such an attack on civilians), it gets much more complicated. Just my opinion.
Winehole23
02-03-2012, 12:01 PM
From a certain perspective, there’s really only one point worth making about all of this: if you think about it, it is warped beyond belief that the ACLU has to sue the U.S. Government in order to force it to disclose its claimed legal and factual bases for assassinating U.S. citizens without charges, trial or due process of any kind. It’s extraordinary enough that the Obama administration is secretly targeting citizens for execution-by-CIA; that they refuse even to account for what they are doing — even to the point of refusing to disclose their legal reasoning as to why they think the President possesses this power — is just mind-boggling. Truly: what more tyrannical power is there than for a government to target its own citizens for death — in total secrecy and with no checks — and then insist on the right to do so without even having to explain its legal and factual rationale for what it is doing? Could you even imagine what the U.S. Government and its media supporters would be saying about any other non-client-state country that asserted and exercised this power?
But there’s one abuse that deserves special attention here: namely, the way in which the Obama administration manipulates and exploits its secrecy powers. Here is what the DOJ said to the ACLU about why it will not merely withhold all records, but will refuse even to confirm or deny whether any such records exist:
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-CAGBJOHng_w/TypyBf1njcI/AAAAAAAAAmk/mcQEmu8aQZc/s640/doj.png (http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-CAGBJOHng_w/TypyBf1njcI/AAAAAAAAAmk/mcQEmu8aQZc/s1600/doj.png)
So the Most Transparent Administration Ever™ refuses even to confirm or deny if there is an assassination program, or if it played any role in the execution of these three Americans, because even that most elementary information is classified.
http://www.salon.com/2012/02/02/aclu_sues_obama_administration_over_assassination_ secrecy/singleton/ (http://www.salon.com/writer/glenn_greenwald/)
Winehole23
02-03-2012, 12:02 PM
Earlier this week, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta went on 60 Minutes (http://www.salon.com/2012/01/30/leon_panettas_explicitly_authoritarian_decree/singleton/) and described the process by which U.S. citizens are targeted for assassination: “the President of the United States has to sign off and he should.” Obama officials have repeatedly gone to the media anonymously (http://www.salon.com/2010/11/01/awlaki_2/) to make claims about Awlaki’s guilt and to justify their assassination program. Here is one (http://www.lawfareblog.com/2011/09/3385/) “senior administration lawyer” — cowardly hiding behind anonymity — responding to my criticisms and justifying the assassination program to Benjamin Wittes (who naturally protected him from being identified). When I spoke at an NYU Law School event (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyJU2Ceq83s) in 2010 and criticized what was then the Awlaki assassination attempt while sitting next to FBI Counter-Terrorism official Niall Brennan, NPR’s national security reporter, Dina Temple-Raston, stood up and revealed (http://prospect.org/article/im-government-and-im-here-scare-you) that Obama officials had secretly shown her snippets of evidence to demonstrate that Awlaki was involved in actual Terrorist plots.
So Obama can go on TV shows and trigger applause for himself by boasting of the Awlaki killing. He can publicly accuse Awlaki of all sorts of crimes for which there has been no evidence presented. He can dispatch his aides to anonymously brag in newspapers about all the secret evidence showing Awlaki’s guilt and showing how resolute and tough the President is for ordering him executed. Justice Department and Pentagon officials scamper around in the dark flashing snippets of evidence about Awlaki to reporters like Temple-Raston so that they dutifully march forward to defend the government’s assassination program. Obama officials will anonymous insist in public that they have legal authority to target citizens for killing without trial.
same
boutons_deux
02-03-2012, 12:32 PM
So there's some concern about murdering US citizens, but no concern about murdering non-US citizens.
Just label everybody "enemy combatant" and start blasting way.
This Is War!
Winehole23
02-03-2012, 01:20 PM
So there's some concern about murdering US citizens, but no concern about murdering non-US citizens. Not so much, going by what's posted here.
TDMVPDPOY
02-03-2012, 01:44 PM
whichever way you decide, it all ends up taxpayer funded anyway
Winehole23
02-11-2012, 03:24 AM
it's not evidence, yet, but the USG gives color to the allegation Awlaki was operationally involved with the underwear bomber and Nidal Hasan in this memo (http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/UFASentencingBrief.pdf).
Winehole23
11-29-2012, 12:09 PM
US-born Islamic cleric Anwar al-Awlaqi, killed in a US drone attack in Yemen last year, had been in US custody at least twice in prior years but was released, a human rights group said.Judicial Watch, an accountability watchdog group, said it had learned this through Freedom of Information lawsuits it filed with the US government.
It said documents from the US embassy in Yemen, for instance, indicate Awlaqi was held for at least eight months between late 2006 and mid 2007. But the documents do not say how long he was held or why he was he was freed.
Back in October 2002, Awlaqi was detained at New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport on a warrant for passport fraud, a felony that can be punished with up to 10 years in jail.
But the FBI ordered his release, Judicial Watch said. Awlaqi flew to Washington, DC and eventually returned to Yemen.
In yet another incident, months before Awlaqi was killed in September 2011, the embassy in Yemen was instructed to send Awlaqi a letter urging him to come to the embassy to pick up an important document but not tell him what it was.
In fact, it was simply a revocation of his passport, Judicial Watch said.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jDpLVG9sjWwp59Vyd5fQ6AYy2OuA?docId%3DCNG.ace 288598d38f8e94805dc5d9fc7699c.41
LnGrrrR
11-29-2012, 12:52 PM
it's not evidence, yet, but the USG gives color to the allegation Awlaki was operationally involved with the underwear bomber and Nidal Hasan in this memo (http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/UFASentencingBrief.pdf).
Don't see why they couldn't have made that info public before the killing and discuss the reasons for doing so with the American public. You know, besides realpolitik.
boutons_deux
11-29-2012, 12:54 PM
"USG gives color to the allegation Awlaki was operationally involved with the underwear bomber and Nidal Hasan"
I believe everything the govt tells us.
SA210
11-29-2012, 12:56 PM
Any reason given for murdering his 16 year old American citizen son in a completely separate targeted attack two weeks later?
SA210
11-29-2012, 01:02 PM
Any reason given for murdering his 16 year old American citizen son in a completely separate targeted attack two weeks later?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pOUFHTN1G4
Winehole23
04-25-2014, 01:10 PM
Obama ordered to release legal memo:
A federal appeals panel in Manhattan ordered the release on Monday of key portions of a classified Justice Department memorandum that provided the legal justification (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/world/middleeast/secret-us-memo-made-legal-case-to-kill-a-citizen.html?pagewanted=all) for the targeted killing of a United States citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, who intelligence officials contend had joined Al Qaeda and died in a 2011 drone strike (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/world/middleeast/anwar-al-awlaki-a-us-citizen-in-americas-cross-hairs.html?ref=anwaralawlaki) in Yemen.
The unanimous three-judge panel, reversing a lower court decision, said the government had waived its right to keep the analysis secret in light of numerous public statements by administration officials and the Justice Department’s release of a “white paper” offering a detailed analysis of why targeted killings were legal.
“Whatever protection the legal analysis might once have had,” Judge Jon O. Newman wrote for the panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, “has been lost by virtue of public statements of public officials at the highest levels and official disclosure of the D.O.J. White Paper.”
The ruling stemmed from lawsuits filed under the Freedom of Information Act by The New York Times and two of its reporters, Charlie Savage and Scott Shane, and by the American Civil Liberties Union.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/22/nyregion/panel-orders-release-of-document-in-targeted-killing-of-anwar-al-awlaki.html
Winehole23
04-25-2014, 01:16 PM
“What makes it particularly significant is that it applies not just to a single document but to a habitual practice of government officials,” he said, “which is to say, ‘I’m going to talk about something that’s classified, but I’m not going to give you the underlying records.’ ”
Lawyers for the plaintiffs praised the ruling.
David E. McCraw, a lawyer for The Times, said: “The court declined to accept at face value the government’s claims about national security and instead did a searching and independent review of the record.”
Jameel Jaffer, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, added: “This is a resounding rejection of the government’s effort to use secrecy, and selective disclosure, as a means of manipulating public opinion about the targeted killing program. The government can’t pretend that everything about its targeted killing program is a classified secret while senior officials selectively disclose information meant to paint the program in the most favorable light.”
same
boutons_deux
04-25-2014, 01:22 PM
I'm much more concerned about the "untargeted" killings. (collateral drone deaths of innocents)
Jacob1983
04-28-2014, 03:33 AM
Obama ain't. He's more worried about some racist old Jew fuck talking shit about blacks than the deaths of innocent civilians.
Winehole23
12-16-2025, 10:35 AM
...and now we've got generals saying this is ok to do in the USA
based on secret lists, like Obama did
https://cdn.bsky.app/img/feed_thumbnail/plain/did:plc:s55ha5ykvjo3irso6p6ksbth/bafkreidvptn45qwd2njpqb7n5ibupcxfppx7de5xkmo2vyjpf kcjfpy7iq@jpeg
https://cdn.bsky.app/img/feed_fullsize/plain/did:plc:s55ha5ykvjo3irso6p6ksbth/bafkreicpobpfubk7rlkm2jfkrqax4rc4vyuayj5lyluiqdehm lwa324dxm@jpeg
https://theintercept.com/2025/12/12/trump-nspm-7-domestic-terrorist-executions-antifa-boat-strikes/
Winehole23
12-16-2025, 07:11 PM
(My receipts for Obama doing this are in this thread and elsewhere in this forum)
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.