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  • #91
    Originally posted by PLATO


    Say we all left. Then what, genius?
    You don't have to leave. You just have to go to Kofi Annan cap in hand and say, "we will give you absolute control and you sort out the transition".

    You'd be surprised at the support that would get. Canada would fall all over itself to help as would Mexico and your other friends. Al Quaeda would lose big time if that happened.

    A problem shared is a problem halved.
    Only feebs vote.

    Comment


    • #92
      OK, I'm going to bed now. I must be in class in 8 hours and I really need to sleep.

      Good night to everybody. Even to OliverFA.
      "Son españoles... los que no pueden ser otra cosa" (Cánovas del Castillo)
      "España es un problema, Europa su solución" (Ortega y Gasset)
      The Spanish Civilization Site
      "Déjate llevar por la complejidad y cabalga sobre ella" - Niessuh, sabio cívico

      Comment


      • #93
        Originally posted by PLATO


        Please explain a bit further how you think that this line of postulation would lead to the conclusions you draw. I am really curious as to the corelations that you are drawing to gain these conclusions. (Unless of course that was just a troll )
        Well I couldn't help thinking that the Spanish people (like the British) have lived with the knowledge and the effects of terrorism for years:

        '
        1959

        Euskadi Ta Askatasuma (Basque Homeland and Freedom) is established as Spain enters the 20th year of General Franco's fascist dictatorship.
        The Basque language has been banned, its culture suppressed, and intellectuals imprisoned and tortured for their political and cultural beliefs. Eta's founders are students dissatisfied with the moderates in the existing Basque Nationalist Party, the Partido Nacionalista Vasco, or PNV.

        1961

        The only armed group to emerge during the Franco years, Eta attempts its first large-scale operation, the derailing of a train carrying civil war veterans travelling to San Sebastian (Donostia in Basque) to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the start of the Spanish civil war.

        The attempt fails, and police respond with road controls, arrests, house searches and the widespread use of torture.

        1968

        The group commits its first murder. Meliton Manzanas, the San Sebastian police chief, is the victim.

        1973

        Eta registers its most spectacular success, assassinating Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco, the prime minister and Franco's most likely successor. The group tunnelled under the road used by the admiral on his daily route from mass, mining it and blowing his car over a four-storey building.

        1974

        Eta is blamed for a bomb attack on a central Madrid bar frequented by police officers. The attack kills 12 people and seriously injures 69.

        1975

        Franco dies, and Juan Carlos, the grandson of Spain's last ruling king, takes his place.

        1978

        Spain's new democratic constitution gives autonomous powers to a Basque government in the provinces of Alava, Vizcaya and Guipuzcoa, with a parliament, police force, control over education, and tax-raising powers. Eta's political wing, Herri Batasuna, is founded to press for full independence for the three provinces and neighbouring Navarre.

        1979

        Madrid's airport and two railway stations are the target of simultaneous bombings, causing six deaths and 130 injuries.

        1980

        118 people are killed in what is Eta's bloodiest year to date.

        1983-87

        Gal, the anti-terrorist liberation group, is set up to fight a dirty war against Eta. Its agents carry out assassinations of known Eta members (and several who were not), kidnappings, bombings and torture, killing 27 people during the 80s.

        1987

        21 shoppers are killed when a bomb hits a Barcelona supermarket. Eta apologises for a "mistake."

        1988-95

        Judge Baltasar Garzon begins to look at links between the government and Gal. It emerges that Gal groups were made up entirely of mercenaries recruited by two policemen using public funds. The prime minister, Felipe Gonzalez, denies that he authorised their actions, but the scandal taints the ailing administration.

        1995

        The Popular Party (PP) leader, Jose Maria Aznar, is saved from an Eta car bomb by his car's armour plating. Police foil a plot to kill Juan Carlos in Majorca.

        1996

        The PP defeats the Socialist Party (PSOE) in the general election, and Mr Aznar becomes prime minister.

        1997

        Demanding that Basque prisoners are moved closer to home, Eta kidnaps and kills a Basque councillor, Miguel Angel Blanco. Six million Spaniards demonstrate against Eta on the streets. The year ends with 23 leaders of Herri Batasuna being given seven years in jail for collaborating with Eta, the first time any members of the party have been jailed for their links to the group.

        1998

        Eta announces its first indefinite ceasefire. A former interior minister, Jose Barrionuevo, is jailed for ten years for his part in the Gal operation.

        1999

        Eta ends its ceasefire, blaming lack of progress in talks with the Spanish government.

        2000

        A January car bombing, that kills an army officer in Madrid, marks a return to violence.

        Over the following months, one PSOE, one Basque and two PP politicians are killed in car bomb and shooting attacks in the Basque region and southern Spain; a newspaper columnist, Jose Luis de la Calle, is shot dead; and four suspected Eta members are killed when their car, loaded with arms and explosives, blows up in Bilbao.

        2001

        Eta announces that visitors to Spain are "legitimate targets".

        2002

        Bomb blasts hit several tourist resorts as an EU summit is held in Seville and a court suspends Batasuna for three years because of its suspected links with Eta

        2003

        An indefinite ban is imposed on Batasuna party and both the EU and US declare it a terrorist group. Twin bombs hit Benidorm and Alicante; there are further blasts in towns in northern Spain.
        Suspected Eta leaders are arrested in a series of police raids in November and December. The suspected logistics chief, Ibon Fernandez Iradi, is captured in the French town of Mont-de-Marsan.

        2004

        In a move much denounced by Spanish politicians Eta declares a ceasefire in eastern Catalonia. The Catalan region's Socialist president, Pasqual Maragall, said it was "perverse to use death to divide the peoples of Spain". '


        Governments aren't thrown out of office willy nilly because some disgruntled group of sociopaths set off bombs, or assassinate Prime Ministers, cabinet minsters or chiefs of police.

        I suggest that you consider the Spanish people might have the same degree of intelligence as any other human beings and might act not in reply to a chance event, but with discretion and with their political wits about them.
        Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

        ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

        Comment


        • #94
          Moreover, this whole terrorism problem is not that hard to solve. If the US leans on Israel and forces a settlement (which wouldn't be that hard) the chief gripe of most of the world's Muslims would disappear and Al Quaeda would lose most of the support it has.

          AQ feeds of the perceived unfairness of Western countries (esp. the US) with regard to the world's Muslims. Remove that, and you've removed most of the problem.
          Only feebs vote.

          Comment


          • #95
            Originally posted by joncha


            Say y'all never messed around there in the first place. Would we even be dealing with this mess now?
            What's your point? It's happened, now we have to deal with it. We can't undo it, so we have to make decisions on how to deal with it best.

            Comment


            • #96
              Ehrrrmm...

              Not so easy, as the US would ALSO have to pay its due's, AND it would have to place peace-keepers under UN command, just like the rest of the world would do.


              NO,no, Agathon, it's not THAT easy to do...
              "post reported"Winston, on the barricades for freedom of speech
              "I don't like laws all over the world. Doesn't mean I am going to do anything but post about it."Jon Miller

              Comment


              • #97
                Just a thing before I go to bed:

                The only armed group to emerge during the Franco years, Eta attempts its first large-scale operation, the derailing of a train carrying civil war veterans travelling to San Sebastian (Donostia in Basque) to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the start of the Spanish civil war.
                Oh, no, not at all. There was a lot of armed organizations that time: FRAP, GRAPO and many more. It's just ETA was the most important. When democracy arrived, almost every band left the violence (even the moderate wing of ETA), just ETA and GRAPO remained.
                "Son españoles... los que no pueden ser otra cosa" (Cánovas del Castillo)
                "España es un problema, Europa su solución" (Ortega y Gasset)
                The Spanish Civilization Site
                "Déjate llevar por la complejidad y cabalga sobre ella" - Niessuh, sabio cívico

                Comment


                • #98
                  This victory is a triumph of tolerance and dialogue opposed to furious revenge and the demagogic use of the terrorism. It is a pride to feel that the people who surround you are much more intelligent of which you thought, and that the reason wins against the control of mass media. Spain returns to Europe. And it is a pleasure that this happens right when the entire world is watching us, this can be a point of flexion to this painful world.

                  I just feel worried about the economy, but fortunately the spanish people thinks that there are more important things in life than money
                  Campeón 2006 Progressive Games
                  civ4 mods: SCSCollateral GrayAgainstBlue ProperCrossings
                  civ3 terrain: Irrigations Roads Railroads Borders Multimine Sengoku Napoleonic

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Originally posted by Niessuh
                    This victory is a triumph of tolerance and dialogue opposed to furious revenge and the demagogic use of the terrorism. It is a pride to feel that the people who surround you are much more intelligent of which you thought, and that the reason wins against the control of mass media. Spain returns to Europe. And it is a pleasure that this happens right when the entire world is watching us, this can be a point of flexion to this painful world.

                    I just feel worried about the economy, but fortunately the spanish people thinks that there are more important things in life than money

                    Comment


                    • PLATO: What I find really interesting is that the conservatives are thrown OUT of power after bombings. In this country, if another bombing takes place, even though they may have hidden information that would have saved lives, the conservatives would win.
                      "I predict your ignore will rival Ben's" - Ecofarm
                      ^ The Poly equivalent of:
                      "I hope you can see this 'cause I'm [flipping you off] as hard as I can" - Ignignokt the Mooninite

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by molly bloom


                        Well I couldn't help thinking that the Spanish people (like the British) have lived with the knowledge and the effects of terrorism for years:
                        That was some good info. Thanks!


                        However, it does not address my question to you in the context of how the proximity of the attacks to the election may have caused a reactionary vote nor how that relates to the earlier examples that you sited.
                        "I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration." - Hillary Clinton, 2003

                        Comment


                        • I do actually agree with Sava

                          It's time for the US to stop coddling Israel

                          But at the same time the Arabs AND THE EUROCOMS need to stop coddling Palestine

                          However I don't know how secure I would feel with the UN overseeing Iraq. The UN has absolutley no teeth and the place would turn into chaos overnight.

                          In any case, the Spanish people have made their decision, they are free to do whatever they want

                          Though I find it hypocritical of many Eurocoms complaining about US interventionism
                          We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by germanos
                            Ehrrrmm...

                            Not so easy, as the US would ALSO have to pay its due's, AND it would have to place peace-keepers under UN command, just like the rest of the world would do.


                            NO,no, Agathon, it's not THAT easy to do...
                            If you want to solve the problem you have to give something up.

                            What makes the US so special? If the US wants to exempt itself from the rules that apply to everyone else, then it will pay for doing so. If you treat everyone else with contempt, they are not going to want to help you - it's THAT simple.
                            Only feebs vote.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by The Emperor Fabulous
                              PLATO: What I find really interesting is that the conservatives are thrown OUT of power after bombings. In this country, if another bombing takes place, even though they may have hidden information that would have saved lives, the conservatives would win.
                              I do think you are correct. My take from what I have been reading here is that the conservatives may have been perceived as the source of Spain being targeted. This would most likely never be the case in the US. The opinion that the vote was based on the misinformation campaign carries validity. A one week swing in the polls over the conservative position on the Iraq war caused by a terror act does not imo. For that to be the source of the swing would be a purely reactionary and not policy vote.
                              "I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration." - Hillary Clinton, 2003

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Ted Striker
                                I do actually agree with Sava

                                It's time for the US to stop coddling Israel

                                But at the same time the Arabs AND THE EUROCOMS need to stop coddling Palestine

                                However I don't know how secure I would feel with the UN overseeing Iraq. The UN has absolutley no teeth and the place would turn into chaos overnight.

                                In any case, the Spanish people have made their decision, they are free to do whatever they want

                                Though I find it hypocritical of many Eurocoms complaining about US interventionism
                                I SOOO agree with everything posted here. Good post Ted.
                                "I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration." - Hillary Clinton, 2003

                                Comment

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