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#41
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Jürgen R. wrote:
J.D. Walker wrote: Jürgen R. wrote: wrote: THE PERMANENT WAR ON TERROR [...] This guy is simply too dumb. A detailed reply would be a waste of time. Jürgen, When you call a man a paid assassin and then duck behind cover, it does not make you look honorable, or bright. You might want to reconsider. I called nobody a 'paid assassin'. I called Matt Nemmers, who is (or was) in the U.S. Navy, one of Uncle Sam's hired killers. By this I mean that the U.S. military is an organization whose sole purpose is to kill people. Discussing anything of this kind with Parr, who is an unreconstructed cold warrior, is completely pointless. Thank you for the clarification. -- "Do that which is right..." Rev. J.D. Walker |
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#42
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On Aug 21, 1:55*am, wrote:
wrote: * * *At the moment, our Nemmers is serving a central regime that has killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and other innocents in -- to use a phrase that the Old Menshevik Martov employed to describe Bolshevism -- "war en permanence." *Which is to say, the war on terror, which has no definition for victory and which will never end until the American people, still further impoverished by massive *public spending and its misallocation or resources, rise up and *demand that we attend to our own business rather than run military bases in a hundred or more countries. Yours, Larry Parr Larry, would you care to document that number, or did you read it on a Kool-Aid package? Even far-left sites (like iraqbodycount.org), which we may assume estimate high, claim civilian casualties well under 100,000. Of course, this has absolutely nothing to do with chess. Why don't you take it over to Daily Kos (if you want an echo chamber) or Lucianne.com (if you want to start a fight)? Hello John, I hope all is well --- haven't seen you in about 25 years if I'm not mistaken! So you find the figure "well under 100,000" comforting? Iraq's population is a little less than one tenth of the US population, so that would be the equivalent of about a million civilian casualties here. Also, the figures we see on such sites as iraqbodycount represent violent deaths only, directly related to miltary and paramilitary operations. You're probably aware of the Lancet study done some time ago, which concluded that the total number of excess deaths attributable to the invasion was 655,000. Proportionally that would be the equivalent of over 6 million Americans. Naturally the usual talking heads immediately appeared on various cable TV shows to dispute the methodology of that study. But they were rarely very specific about that. In fact the Lancet researchers scrupulously followed the customary protocols to the point of fanaticism: they risked their lives to make sure that their sampling methods were thorough. I'm reminded of an exchange Dick Cavett had with General Westmoreland about 40 years ago. Westmoreland disputed some widely circulated reports of civilian casualties in Vietnam. Cavett replied: So, General, what level of civilian casualties would you consider acceptable? Ten thousand? Fifty thousand? That was a stumper then and it remains a stumper today. Larry T. |
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#43
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Larry Tapper wrote:
On Aug 21, 1:55 am, wrote: wrote: At the moment, our Nemmers is serving a central regime that has killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and other innocents in -- to use a phrase that the Old Menshevik Martov employed to describe Bolshevism -- "war en permanence." Which is to say, the war on terror, which has no definition for victory and which will never end until the American people, still further impoverished by massive public spending and its misallocation or resources, rise up and demand that we attend to our own business rather than run military bases in a hundred or more countries. Yours, Larry Parr Larry, would you care to document that number, or did you read it on a Kool-Aid package? Even far-left sites (like iraqbodycount.org), which we may assume estimate high, claim civilian casualties well under 100,000. Of course, this has absolutely nothing to do with chess. Why don't you take it over to Daily Kos (if you want an echo chamber) or Lucianne.com (if you want to start a fight)? Hello John, I hope all is well --- haven't seen you in about 25 years if I'm not mistaken! So you find the figure "well under 100,000" comforting? Iraq's population is a little less than one tenth of the US population, so that would be the equivalent of about a million civilian casualties here. Also, the figures we see on such sites as iraqbodycount represent violent deaths only, directly related to miltary and paramilitary operations. You're probably aware of the Lancet study done some time ago, which concluded that the total number of excess deaths attributable to the invasion was 655,000. Proportionally that would be the equivalent of over 6 million Americans. Naturally the usual talking heads immediately appeared on various cable TV shows to dispute the methodology of that study. But they were rarely very specific about that. In fact the Lancet researchers scrupulously followed the customary protocols to the point of fanaticism: they risked their lives to make sure that their sampling methods were thorough. I'm reminded of an exchange Dick Cavett had with General Westmoreland about 40 years ago. Westmoreland disputed some widely circulated reports of civilian casualties in Vietnam. Cavett replied: So, General, what level of civilian casualties would you consider acceptable? Ten thousand? Fifty thousand? That was a stumper then and it remains a stumper today. Larry T. Well stated Mr. Tapper. When one country illegally invades another country, they are responsible for a war crime that not only includes violent deaths, but also indirectly caused deaths, destruction of the economy, destruction of the infra structure, dislocation of millions of citizens and more. Even if our government were honest enough to state publicly, "Oops! Sorry, we goofed. Our intelligence was bad." That does not change the fact that it is a war crime. There are many other issues here that I would rather not raise in this newsgroup. I only go this far because we may see similar idiocy hit the Women's World Championship of chess. -- "Do that which is right..." Rev. J.D. Walker |
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#44
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[...]
I'm reminded of an exchange Dick Cavett had with General Westmoreland about 40 years ago. Westmoreland disputed some widely circulated reports of civilian casualties in Vietnam. Cavett replied: So, General, what level of civilian casualties would you consider acceptable? Ten thousand? Fifty thousand? That was a stumper then and it remains a stumper today. Why? The answer is zero. However, this also implies no Westmoreland, McNamara, Bush, Condoleezza Rice, no Rumsfeld and no Cheney. And how do you keep these goons from doing their thing? Larry T. |
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#45
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#46
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Den 2008-08-21 17:03:38 skrev J.D. Walker :
So we are into war and terror now? Why don't you have a look on some of my online papers: THE PSYCHODYNAMICS OF TERRORISM Abstract: Drawing on notions from comparative religion, and also Freud's discussion of the death drive, light is shed on the psychodynamic principles behind terrorism, and the bottomless evil of mankind, in general. Terrorism is not foremostly a political problem, or a problem deriving from poverty. Nor is it an evil that derives from unshackled instinctual forces. Terrorism, and the even greater problem of bullying and victimization of our peers, derive from an archaic psychic economy of sin transference. Following St Paul, people can be vaccinated against this evil, by forsaking ideological grandiose ideals; by giving up the search for the perfect, blissful, condition of outer life, and instead learn that 'the kingdom is within.' Keywords: terrorism, theocracy, human sacrifice, transfer of sin, Khidr, The Green Man, St Paul, death drive, genocide. Read the fulla article he http://home7.swipnet.se/~w-73784/terror.htm ----------------- THE BLOOD SACRIFICE remarks on the symbolism and psychology Abstract: Victimization as a form of sacrificial ritual is discussed. It is understood as an inferior and archaic method of ego emancipation. By the destructive deed original wholeness is disrupted and transfer of sin and guilt occurs. The blood sacrifice originates as a defense against the fear of an overwhelming unconscious. Power over life and death is imparted to the institution of consciousness. By that means an identification with collective consciousness is promoted and a weak consciousness strengthened. The regressive bond to the unconscious is temporarily severed, but the sacrifice must be renewed. It is the real impetus behind Freud's death drive and also the destructive narcissistic relationship. Keywords: rite of passage, self-mutilation, primal transgression, ego wholeness, flagellants, amputation disorder, sin transference, St Paul, Tezcatlipoca. Read the fulla article he http://home7.swipnet.se/~w-73784/bloodsac.htm ---------------------- Well stated Mr. Tapper. When one country illegally invades another country, they are responsible for a war crime that not only includes violent deaths, but also indirectly caused deaths, destruction of the economy, destruction of the infra structure, dislocation of millions of citizens and more. Even if our government were honest enough to state publicly, "Oops! Sorry, we goofed. Our intelligence was bad." That does not change the fact that it is a war crime. There are many other issues here that I would rather not raise in this newsgroup. I only go this far because we may see similar idiocy hit the Women's World Championship of chess. |
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#47
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M. Winther wrote:
Den 2008-08-21 17:03:38 skrev J.D. Walker : So we are into war and terror now? Why don't you have a look on some of my online papers: THE PSYCHODYNAMICS OF TERRORISM Abstract: Drawing on notions from comparative religion, and also Freud's discussion of the death drive, light is shed on the psychodynamic principles behind terrorism, and the bottomless evil of mankind, in general. Terrorism is not foremostly a political problem, or a problem deriving from poverty. Nor is it an evil that derives from unshackled instinctual forces. Terrorism, and the even greater problem of bullying and victimization of our peers, derive from an archaic psychic economy of sin transference. Following St Paul, people can be vaccinated against this evil, by forsaking ideological grandiose ideals; by giving up the search for the perfect, blissful, condition of outer life, and instead learn that 'the kingdom is within.' Keywords: terrorism, theocracy, human sacrifice, transfer of sin, Khidr, The Green Man, St Paul, death drive, genocide. Read the fulla article he http://home7.swipnet.se/~w-73784/terror.htm ----------------- THE BLOOD SACRIFICE remarks on the symbolism and psychology Abstract: Victimization as a form of sacrificial ritual is discussed. It is understood as an inferior and archaic method of ego emancipation. By the destructive deed original wholeness is disrupted and transfer of sin and guilt occurs. The blood sacrifice originates as a defense against the fear of an overwhelming unconscious. Power over life and death is imparted to the institution of consciousness. By that means an identification with collective consciousness is promoted and a weak consciousness strengthened. The regressive bond to the unconscious is temporarily severed, but the sacrifice must be renewed. It is the real impetus behind Freud's death drive and also the destructive narcissistic relationship. Keywords: rite of passage, self-mutilation, primal transgression, ego wholeness, flagellants, amputation disorder, sin transference, St Paul, Tezcatlipoca. Read the fulla article he http://home7.swipnet.se/~w-73784/bloodsac.htm Interesting. Worthy of a second read. Thanks. ---------------------- Well stated Mr. Tapper. When one country illegally invades another country, they are responsible for a war crime that not only includes violent deaths, but also indirectly caused deaths, destruction of the economy, destruction of the infra structure, dislocation of millions of citizens and more. Even if our government were honest enough to state publicly, "Oops! Sorry, we goofed. Our intelligence was bad." That does not change the fact that it is a war crime. There are many other issues here that I would rather not raise in this newsgroup. I only go this far because we may see similar idiocy hit the Women's World Championship of chess. -- "Do that which is right..." Rev. J.D. Walker |
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#48
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BODY COUNTS
Larry, would you care to document that number, or did you read it on a Kool-Aid package? Even far-left sites (like like iraqbodycount.org), which we may assume estimate high, claim civilian casualties well under 100,000. -- John Hillery John Hillery's reaction was expectable. One thing: it is not merely left-wing anti-American sites that put the number of Iraqis killed or dead because of our invasion at many hundreds of thousands, but also conservative (yes, conservative!) Taft-Republican sites such as www.antiwar.com and www.lewrockwell.com To be sure antiwar.com is very conservative indeed -- a child of the thinking of libertarians and Taft Republicans of what is called the Old Right, which opposed American interventionism around the globe. A thorough discussion of casualties in Iraq can be found at Wikipedia. We invaded a country that never attacked the United States and wreaked havoc. We are now paying the bill in terms of trillions of dollars (counting opportunity costs). No rational and even semi-rational analysis can call the war anything other than a disaster for all concerned, except to be sure, for al-Qaeda and numerous terrorist groups who have grown fat on our bloody blundering. Yours, Larry Parr wrote: wrote: At the moment, our Nemmers is serving a central regime that has killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and other innocents in -- to use a phrase that the Old Menshevik Martov employed to describe Bolshevism -- "war en permanence." Which is to say, the war on terror, which has no definition for victory and which will never end until the American people, still further impoverished by massive public spending and its misallocation or resources, rise up and demand that we attend to our own business rather than run military bases in a hundred or more countries. Yours, Larry Parr Larry, would you care to document that number, or did you read it on a Kool-Aid package? Even far-left sites (like iraqbodycount.org), which we may assume estimate high, claim civilian casualties well under 100,000. Of course, this has absolutely nothing to do with chess. Why don't you take it over to Daily Kos (if you want an echo chamber) or Lucianne.com (if you want to start a fight)? |
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#49
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"Matt Nemmers" wrote in message ... wrote: SNIP Give Mr. Nemmers a sample kit with some Fuller brushes, a plaid suit, and I have no doubt he could once again drink beer of an evening in the company of decent men. SNIP Thanks for the vote of confidence, Larry, but I already drink beer quite often in the company of the decent men and women who choose to serve our country and protect your right to be an arrogant prick. And that is how it should be. Absolutely. I also served, and served all sorts, and it was sometimes 'hot'. Like your country I took an oath to serve the people, not expecting them to 'support the troops', but was paid to support their wishes. That is currently, and for some time had not been the current policy, or any majority wish of the people. Since I have been on both sides of this, Matt, I can say I understood the guy who outranked Ollie North who threw his congressional medal of honor on the floor of the senate committee's investigation, saying that North spoke to protect the president, would even take the fall for the President, but this was not his oath as an officer to protect the people. He will not pick up his medal till North discards his uniform. Of course, this is tense stuff. Emotional. Some like to excite it from their genuine sense of what is right or wrong, or even legal. Others from lesser motive, would **** with you about it. When you are 'in' you do not choose, you do need to just believe that orders are decent, and you do not have the means to determine if they are, or are not. You can't put your arse on the line if you don't. That is the conundrum here. And you might hear another voice to these issues which you do not like? Yet as you say, the great thing about the service is that you protect that voice's expression, in fact, that is your reason to exist. Tough to explain to those never 'in' what that means. Heuch! Not tough -is it possible? Be cool, come home if you can, and be true to yourself first. That is the prayer we might offer serving troops. We civvies cannot know much of what it is about, but we can know something of the worth of which we expose you and the country - all are citizens here, and all may speak their conscience. That is why we fight. Sorry, not 2cents, 10 Cordially, Phil Innes Regards, PSC(SW) Matt Nemmers, United States Navy |
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#50
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"Chess One" wrote in message . .. "Matt Nemmers" wrote in message ... wrote: SNIP Give Mr. Nemmers a sample kit with some Fuller brushes, a plaid suit, and I have no doubt he could once again drink beer of an evening in the company of decent men. SNIP Dear Larry Parr, Since I have redressed, to some degree Mr. Nemmers, it would be unjust not to offer you the same. Here it is, and as much felt: It is their duty to serve their officers, and to their sense of what is at stake as represented by them. To attempt to engage an NCO who decides merely tactical matters, not strategic ones, especially not global ones of the verisitudes of the war, is to combat entirely the wrong level of things. That is my correction to your message. Men have hot things fly by their ear, which they do not know the cause thereof, but the certain effect it has, and this has radical effect on their being, and their orientation to their country. It is not any argument to them over politics, but flesh and blood, theirs and their friends. No serviceman can who has experienced such heat can /feel/ otherwise. This is not Eric Blair in Burma. It is not 'to kill an elephant'. Hardly anyone would understand that reference. You will. I think for so public a contradiction I offer you here I should also say that it is for you to maintain your right senses of what is decent, which I do not dispute that you already do, but that to engage such things with a serving NCO is not any liberty he is capable of appreciating. Neither are you capable of knowing the heat which passed by his ear, nor understand what flesh and blood is decided by distant words of others who compel his presence in their decision. I say these things respectfully, since after all, these are matters of huge import. They are unlikely [lol] resolved here in a public newsgroup about chess praxis by any such simple intercession as I attempt. But they supercede it in my mind, so I take this here licence to contradict thee, the same as I did to Matt Nemmers. It says "We The People", and what is meant by that? Certainly not only some white slave-owning males of property. Is it certain that it means only current Americans? That is the issue the world now discusses, and it is a fine thing. A great sentiment. Something to fight for - but how so? Cordially, Phil Innes |
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