Seamus, you're like a breath of fresh air in this place. You are actually reasonable AND you defend (mostly) the actions of your country.
I have patience, and I was initially warned that there would or could be direct attacks instead of discussion and debate. So I'm trying to be reasonable and approach everything with an open mind. You just have to realize that unless something is painted in easy to understand terms, it could very well go over my head. Kind of like impressionist art. I can see the big pictures clearer than the small ones.
I'll get right to the point:
EVERY army (Canada's included) has its share of bums, sadists, torturers, no-good bastards who oughtta be shot. That said, the majority of serving soldiers in any army (Nazis included) are probably just normal, decent, run-of-the-mill guys who have a job to do, some doing it out of patriotism (a minority in my respectful opinion,) the rest because they have to or for lack of better opportunities.
Okay, I agree with every military has it's bad apples. Clear example is that chick who took those photo's of those prisoners as she stood there smiling... That was just wrong on many levels. And I an respect your opinion that the majority of military serve because of lack of better opportunities. My opinion would be similar to yours, just differ in percentages. I think more people are altruistic than you give them credit for. But I do agree SOME go in because they didn't see much else to do with their lives.
On the whole, I don't think the U.S. army is made up of any better or worse men than the Iranian Army, the Canadian Army or any other armed force. They are probably better policed than some other armies but that's just my opinion - - I don't really know if a soldier who rapes a civilian is more likely to be punished if he's a GI or an Iranian, but we like to believe (with what justification I really don't know) that the American would be the one more likely to be punished.
Again, I agree. While I'm patriotic and stand behind our soldiers, I recognize that no one is "better" than someone else. I also agree that in the grand scheme of things, the American would be punished more often than others. I will also concede that some bad apples go through their carreers and never get caught. But over all, I love America. We have problems. But we work on them. We learn from them. And as far as I'm concerned, we debate them, just like you and I are doing now.
Be that as it may, there have been terrible atrocities committed by American forces in Iraq. The punishments meted out have been laughable. The number of commanders sacked for the atrocities occurring under their commands minimal or non-existent. The observance of basic rules of humanity towards captured prisoners, minimal to non-compliant. For this I blame the leadership, from the President on downwards. Senior officers who should have been able to control the behaviour of their men should either have been courtmartialled for either complicity or incompetence, or if they had any sense of honour should have resigned their commissions. None of this has happened. Does it mean your high-school buddies or family members who served are bad people? No. But somebody sure as hell is a bad person and their actions inevitably taint the reputation of the army they belong to.
Okay, here and further down you mention military justice. That's where I have to claim a significant lack of information. I don't know what happened to that woman who took those atrocious pictures. I don't know what happens to the bad apples that are found and pulled from the barrel. And yes, I do blame leadership. But while you claim we are doing all these horrible things, what about all the good the US does? The US military, the US government, the US people?
IMHO, the U.S. Army is engaged in a highly illegal operation. Illegal in international law. It invaded another country (Iraq) without any lawful right or pretext. It had no right to invade and has no right to be there now. Any "Iraqi" government established under their military occupation has no legitimacy whatsoever, because the constitution under which it functions is the product of an invading army. If the U.S. gets away with this shit - - invading another country without just cause, illegally - - it will be a catastrophe for international law. It will mean that the Charter of the United Nations, established to prevent exactly this sort of thing - - wars of aggression - - will have been superseded by the Law of the Jungle, the rule of the most powerful over the weaker. I hope like hell the U.S. fails completely in its occupation of Iraq just as I would have hoped that the Nazis would fail in their occupation of France. The U.S. has no more right to install over the Iraqi people the kind of government that IT prefers than the Nazis had to establish over the French people the kind of government that THEY preferred. It was precisely to STOP that kind of shit going down that the U.N. was established - - an organization in which the U.S.A. had the lead role in founding. To the extent that the U.S. Army is performing an illegal action, it is a criminal army.
Here again we're going to agree about some things, but disagree on others.
First, we're part of the U.N. We signed agreements and we should be held to them. I am also a rather tree-hugging people-loving kind of guy... I lean more towards Amnesty International than I do.... well.. other groups.
But with that being said, it's my opinion we should pull out of the U.N. It no longer functions well; we are a strong nation who who can decide for itself what's right and wrong without a corrupt U.N. infrastructure. I DO believe that there was reason enough to go to war, and I don't believe we need to ask the rest of the world if it's okay with them.
<<As many people that you would call "baboons" I would say there are 10 times that that are examples of modern day heroism.>>
Well, I wouldn't say "ten times" and I wouldn't say that the options are only between being a baboon and being a hero, but I don't want to quibble with you because you are a straight-shooter. So I'll take back the "baboons." I shouldn't have said it in the first place, but I am so used to arguing with people here who believe that the U.S. army can do no wrong (or claim that if they DO do wrong, it's extremely rare and they are appropriately punished for it) that "baboons" has become a sort of reflex response, just to counter-balance their extremism.
Thanks. Honestly, I have no clue what the percentages are either. But it would be my opinion that the percentage of good people is GREATER than that of the evil ones. That could be my optimistic personality showing.
<<You know, we're not perfect. But amongst the rest of the world... We're, imo, a hell of a lot closer than the rest. >>
As a people? You're morally no better and no worse than most others. I couldn't see you getting into the Holocaust the way the Germans did, for example, but then again it's hard to see you as the slave traders and slave owners that you once were, or even (more recently) as the lynch mobs and KKK that you once were. My bottom line is that no one people has a monopoly on evil or virtue and they shouldn't claim to be more virtuous than others. The others don't like to hear it and generally they know better.
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Very good points. No, we're not more virtuous than others. But... but... we LEARN. We evolve better. Slavery was accepted, but it was the PEOPLE and our leaders that brought and end to it. The KKK is now, for the most part, a JOKE. (I *have* to find that clown demonstration video...) Looking to the future, I see homosexuals being finally able to marry and to serve in the military openly. I see this as one of our major strengths. That we can learn and grow as a nation. Hitler's world couldn't have done that. Debate, discussion, and open dialogs DO help democracy flourish.
<<Why do you think there is no freedom of the press? I'm IN this country and I can tell you I could read or publish whatever I wanted.. I could speak my mind (I'm doing so this very second), etc... >>
You're just citing a textbook example of what Herbert Marcuse calls "repressive tolerance." Repressive tolerance is kind of what underlies H. L. Mencken's remark that "Freedom of the press belongs to the man who owns one." That's how it works. You and I can express our respective views freely here, to an audience of maybe twenty people. The ruling class has figured out that nothing you or I can say can have any effect on political life in America as long as that class controls what's said in the mainstream media ("MSM") of television, the big-city daily press and the national magazines. Which is why you will see very little of people like me on national TV and lots of "support the troops" and "Can America succeed in bringing democracy to Iraq" and similar nonsense like that - - little to none of "It's all about the oil" or American atrocities, which are generally treated as one-day or two-day stories and then lapse back into obscurity. Similarly with the victims of American bombing, American torture, American murder - - they're nobody. We don't even know their names. However, with American victims of 9-11, fallen or serving American soldiers, etc., we see their pictures, hear stories of how they're "coping" or not coping, every nauseous little detail of their lives, complete with photos of wives, kids, dogs, grandchildren, etc. Like nobody wants anyone to realize that hundreds of thousands of human beings are being killed over there, because they're NOT human beings, they're "Iraqis" or better yet, "collateral damage."
See, in 2007 and beyond, this is TOTALLY changing. Blogs, online editorials, and real life being broadcast instantaneously over the internet is having GREAT impact on the media and the news. If there is a camera or a reporter, you can bet the story is going to be released! I believe newspapers (and to a lesser degree, magazines) as such are dying a very slow death.
Now, about their nauseous little details of these mens and womens lives... I'm one of those people who want to know about them. And between you and me, I don't find their details nauseating. And what about these hundreds of thousands of human beings that are being killed over there? Are you including those people who strap on bombs to themselves, their children, the women, etc, and have them blow themselves up? Are you talking about the ones that are drawing their weapons against our soldiers? (Granted.... what are our soldiers DOING there?) But if you point a gun at one of our men, expect him to defend himself. That's plain thinking.
<<As far as kangaroo courts go... I really DO believe our system could use some work. However, again, it's better than most of the alternatives!>>
Yeah? A military kangaroo court on Guantanamo is better than WHAT alternative?
Yeah, I admit I know nothing about MILITARY courts. I was thinking more along the lines of our judicial system. I believe the idea that innocent until proven guilty is a sound start. I believe that a jury of 12 people is as good a system as any other. I believe in the rules of evidence. Is our regular justice system flawed? Yes. Because there are people involved. But that is what I was referring to when I said it would be better than the alternatives. I know next to nothing about military courts. I believe the innocent until proven guilty thing may not even exist in a military court. I don't know.
At this point I'm going to recognize that I think you and I will end up on differing sides on this topic. We can continue to discuss it, because you bring up some interesting thoughts. But I may not
always come back with a reply because I think it may just not be productive. But on a final note, thank you for the differing viewpoint! It's an eye opener to me. I hear some countries don't care for us, but I let it slide because I don't really care. But you (and others) have helped me see a little of why we Americans are regarded as we are.