So civil war in every middle eastern country is the answer?
How are we going to bring this about?
...a liberal historian and commentator that makes as much sense as Victor Davis Hanson; without agreeing with him, of course.
C'mon, show me the Left's answer to rational, thoughtful, and intelligent commentary.
July 29, 2005
Reformation or Civil War?
The jihadists cannot be reasoned with, only defeated.
So civil war in every middle eastern country is the answer?
How are we going to bring this about?
Okay, that wasn't the question and you obviously didn't read the article...
Oh, come on TRO. Just because this Victor Davis Hanson has you drooling don't mean he makes sense. Yes, he has some valid points as almost all commentators from the righ and left do. Doesn't make him the "Dubya" of commentators does it?
There are plenty of "liberal" commentators who make sense but not to you because you live inside the box. Read Ted Rall, Richard Reaves, David Shribman, Cynthia Tucker, Alan Colmes and a host of others.
Op-ed columns can be read by many and also have many interpretations or opinions of said commentator.
But it was a nice read and thanks for posting it.
Except that Hanson is an historian first, commentator second.
Ted Rall? C'mon, he's hysterical. I've never heard of Reaves, Shribman, or Tucker and Colmes, well, he's no historian either.
So, what are the flaws in Hanson's assessment, Joe?
I did, and what he basically says is that if the Middle East doesn't want the West to solve their problem -- much like we did the Nazi issue of Germany, they need to get serious about stopping their own cancer.
And, he went on to demonstrated examples of where that is happening and where it needs to happen.
It was an affirmation of the Bush Doctrine and the Bush Middle East foreign policy.
Well, until you posted it I'd never heard of this Hanson dude. Is he related to that hot boy band, "Hanson"?
I didn't say there were any flaws in his assessment but to say that he's the all powerful and knowing Oz of conservative commentators, err...historians is simply a matter of opinion.
So now since the all knowing Hanson has "affirmed" the so called Bush Doctrine it makes it fool proof? I don't think so.
That's a nice thought, but how? How do you change the status quo of these dicatorships and Islamofascists states from within?I did, and what he basically says is that if the Middle East doesn't want the West to solve their problem -- much like we did the Nazi issue of Germany, they need to get serious about stopping their own cancer.Well that foreign policy is pretty much forcing that civil war by occupying Iraq and threatening to invade other mideast countries -- I wouldn't call that hands-off.It was an affirmation of the Bush Doctrine and the Bush Middle East foreign policy.
Maybe you should learn something about the guy.
I don't hold him up as all-knowing either. But, he does make his points without calling Ted Kennedy an idiot (which he is) or bashing the Left, which I've yet to see any Liberal commentators who can talk about the Middle East without tossing Bush's policies out with the bath water.
Any Liberal assessment of the turmoil in the Middle East seems to begin and end with how Bush is responsible for all that is wrong and how there is nothing going right there. And, when they do mention positives, they fail to recognize it as a consequence to Bush's Middle East policies and, instead, torture logic to place the credit elsewhere.
Let me give you an example:
Tom Friedman, of the New York Times, is knowledgeable about the Middle East, but intellectually, he is a follower, not a leader. So he is a little late to the party in terms of understanding, and apparently endorsing, the Bush administration's strategy for the Middle East. In yesterday's New York Times, Friedman wrote:
In other words, the Bush administration's strategy for the region is working. So far, Friedman's loyalty to the Democratic Party has always trumped his willingness to draw the obvious conclusions from his own observations. It will be interesting to see whether at some point, he will be willing to acknowledge that he and, you in this forum, his fellow liberals were wrong, and President Bush was right.
I thought he offered a great example in Israel, Chump.
Over a million Muslims live in the "non-occupied" areas of Israel -- the ultimate evil spon on earth, according to Islamic extremists -- and none of them are blowing themselves up. Why?
Well, he makes the point that they enjoy their freedoms and they realize their society (Israel proper) wouldn't stand for any nonsense.
This train of thought needs to be brought to the rest of the region.
Nice thought, but that doesn't change governments in other countries where it doesn't matter what the general population thinks, AND it seems to go against the "all Muslims are bad Muslims" philosophy pervasive in this forum.Over a million Muslims live in the "non-occupied" areas of Israel -- the ultimate evil spon on earth, according to Islamic extremists -- and none of them are blowing themselves up. Why?
Well, he makes the point that they enjoy their freedoms and they realize their society (Israel proper) wouldn't stand for any nonsense.
This train of thought needs to be brought to the rest of the region.
Bush has been in the White House too long and you've forgotten how conservative assessments were when Clinton was president. It goes both ways. Many like to throw out how "Clinton never did anything..blah, blah, blah" and how Bush does nothing wrong.Maybe you should learn something about the guy.
I don't hold him up as all-knowing either. But, he does make his points without calling Ted Kennedy an idiot (which he is) or bashing the Left, which I've yet to see any Liberal commentators who can talk about the Middle East without tossing Bush's policies out with the bath water.
Any Liberal assessment of the turmoil in the Middle East seems to begin and end with how Bush is responsible for all that is wrong and how there is nothing going right there. And, when they do mention positives, they fail to recognize it as a consequence to Bush's Middle East policies and, instead, torture logic to place the credit elsewhere.
I'm all for the liberation of people but tell it like it is and don't use WMD or other BS. I wish we would do more in other parts of the world so liberate and save human life but we can't do it all.
I don't believe you can force democracy on people unless they want it themselves and while I'm sure the majority of Iraq does it doesn't change the fact that the leaders of Iraq are not getting the message out to the their people. I fear some at the top are going to be Saddam's in drag and out to stuff their pockets with any scam they can get away with.
But I hope I'm wrong.
I'm sorry, I'm not aware of any of Clinton's bold foreign policy initiatives...
Let's see, there was the Jimmy Carter foray into North Korea. That went well. Granted, I'm not so sure it was Clinton's foreign policy prowess as much as it was Jimmy Carter's arrogance that led to that initiative.
Then, there was the normalizing of trade status with China resulting in the largest one-way transfer of U.S. trade and military secrets in the history of our nation. Yeah, that's a bonus.
Then, how can we forget the White House handshake between Arafat and Rabin. Wow! The peace was palpable...
So, fill me in on the Grand Foreign Policy initiatives of President Clinton's that I apparently missed.
You just have to do your part, Joe. The world will do the rest...
Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, and the former totalitarian Soviet Union stand in bright contrast to that statement.
You're not reading the right sources...there are successes all over the place in Iraq.
Then they'll fall like Saddam.
I'm betting you are.
Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan and the former Soviet Union the people made it happen. The Iraq leaders are pussy footing around, IMO.
See, what I mean. All negative statements about Clinton and Carter.
So I guess Bush is just doing his part and the World will take care of the rest.
I think I may be wrong too.
It took 4 years of intense combat and several more of U.S. Military presence and policy enforcement for Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan to be transformed. It took many years of chess-like foreign policy and intermittent armed conflict in minor communist-leaning holes for the same to happen in the former Soviet Union...and for the PEOPLE to demand the freedom and independence they witnessed in the West.
Peristroyka and glasnost, lowered the iron veil of Communist society and allowed those who had been, until then, held captive in countries that tightly controlled the intrusion of Western influence...to see what self-determination promised on the other side of "wall". And, keep in mind, Peristroyka and glasnost were never intended to end the Communist chokehold on their subjects, they were just forced -- by Reagan's foreign policy initiatives and the efforts of Pope John Paul II and the defiance of Lech Walesa and decades of out-spending their resources into oblivion -- to either self-destruct or attempt some limited loosening of Soviet oppression and try a hybrid model of communism and democratic reform.
Oooops! Port Wine stained Gorbechev didn't realize that peristroyka and glasnost would result in a complete and total rebellion from the people -- beginning in East Germany -- who, when they saw Ronald Reagan demand that the iron curtain be dismantled, saw for the first time, they could similarly demand change from their government...or, destroy it.
China and Iran, in particular, are similar to the former Soviet Union in that respect. But, even they, are having trouble containing the influx of information and exposure to the freedoms and independence inherent in Western culture and ideology.
It is all about getting the message to the masses. Western freedom and independence, for all it's warts, it superior to the oppressive forms of theocracy and totalitarianism enjoyed by the elite Mullahs and Dictators of yore.
That's what President Bush is doing.
I was giving you a chance to point to some successful Clinton foreign policy initiative and, instead, you whine about my pointing out his obvious failures.
Yep. Libya, Lebanon, and Afghanistan are a good start and a shining example of the effects of the Bush Doctrine on the Middle East. Individual freedom and individual rights -- no matter under what type of government they're exercised -- are the genie that cannot be re-bottled. Maybe a thousand years ago but, not in the current global context.
Fair enough.
Again, how is Afghanistan just "spreading the message" when we overthrew the government?Libya, Lebanon, and Afghanistan are a good start and a shining example of the effects of the Bush Doctrine on the Middle East.
Why does it have to be someone "from the left" that is so needed to express a view similar to the view fo another individual?
TRO you're so full of crap man, its like you talk so much about how you're pro this and pro that, you're a true american, why is it that you attempt to divide people up before you even get to the body of your post?
Its like you consider left'ers from another country
why can't left wingers agree with this? There is no real solid black line dividing left and right, i hope you remember this TRO. The majority have been going more extreme left and more extreme right, but the middle is always and has always been blurry...
I am all for getting rid of the violent religious fanatics. It is hardly a new, liberal or conservative idea to make a policy with that goal. The question is how.
Egypt has been suffering from terrorism for decades...the article didnt make that much sense to me, I didnt find it enlightening at all.Egypt finally is suffering from the same terror and mayhem that its radical sons like the pampered Atta and Dr. Zawahiri unleashed on so many poorer others.
21st century social values on countries and people mostly still living on the 15th century won't be that easy to achieve. Even moderated islamic or arabs countries dont have steady democracies, Morocco for example.
I think the solution is for US citizens to give up more civil liberties in exchange for the promise that we'll be kept safe.
It's nice to say all Muslims need to do is have a taste of representative democracy and everything will take care of itself, but that is easily countered with the example of Pakistan. Pakistan's flip-flopping between elected governments and military dictatorships, their use and abuse of cons utions and amendments thereof to establish and legitimize dictatorships, and huge, seemingly intractable differences between secular and religious interests, between religious groups themselves and ethnic groups still longing for self-rule -- all those make it quite difficult to make a lasting, stable democracy.
I take it from all the flak that you've neither decided on a Liberal historian worth their salt or come up with a Clinton foreign policy achievement worth crowing about.
Well, there was Mogadishu....no...nevermind.
Well, I'm confused by his opening -- that Atta guy is bragging after the London bombings -- does that mean that the west was complacent leading up to and following them? According to his words, we were.
I thought we weren't -- and if we weren't the Islamists were supposed to be cowering away.
Which is it?
[Edit - timeline was off]
Last edited by ChumpDumper; 07-30-2005 at 06:58 PM.
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