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  • Re: Re: Distrubing quotes

    Originally posted by rev

    I wasn't aware that there was a draft during World War II.
    Of course there was one. How then do you get 16 million young to middle aged men out a population of 160 million to join the military? The draft was introduced in 1940, after the fall of France.

    Comment


    • Er, whatever happened to the Declaration of Independence's "all men have inalienable rights"?
      Yeah, they do, but sometimes, things must be bent a bit. And besides the 50 people they're going to arrest on suspicion of terrorism they will continue to do so. Better 50 people lose their inalienable rights then seeing another 5000 people become roasted like marshmallows in a fire. As in the line from the constititution I quoted above, public safety may sometimes take precedence. I'd rather be alive and have a little discomfort, than have my body parts strewn all over the building in which I used to work.

      Isn't it a little sad that your government might turn to you and say, "prison or war?" without you being able to do anything else about it? I'd probably have to chose the former, mainly because I'm scared to die -- unless, of course, I were passionate about the war, though that my livelihood and freedoms were really at risk, et cetera.
      Little hint rev...no one wants to die
      But dying for the greater good of ones country is a thing that sometimes has to be done.

      This current war, a war against terrorism is about each and everyones livelihoods and freedoms. And yes, if such things were tolerated and allowed to continue (as they certainly would if nothing was done to stop it), your livelihood and freedom would be greatly at risk.
      I see the world through bloodshot eyes
      Streets filled with blood from distant lies.

      Comment


      • I honestly didn't know that, Transcend. And, after a little research, I've learned that the draft has been around since the Civil War. Damn my high school history classes.

        Anyway, I fundamentally disagree with the basis for a draft, though it's at least prison for a few years and not the death penalty.
        the good reverend

        Comment


        • Originally posted by rev
          I honestly didn't know that, Transcend. And, after a little research, I've learned that the draft has been around since the Civil War. Damn my high school history classes.

          Anyway, I fundamentally disagree with the basis for a draft, though it's at least prison for a few years and not the death penalty.
          US only drafts during extraordinary times, such as Civil War, WW1, and WW2. But drafts are standard in most European countries. Even today, Germany still drafts its soldiers.

          I think draft should only be applied in situations in which the national existence is threatened. That means the drafts for Civil War and WW2 were justified, but not for WW1 and Vietnam.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by drake
            Perhaps not the invasion the forefathers envisioned, but these terrorists attacks could surely be interpreted as an invasion.
            How do you arrive at that conclusion?

            in·va·sion- The act of invading, especially the entrance of an armed force into a territory to conquer.
            I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
            For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio

            Comment


            • Thank you mr. dictionary

              This certainly isn't a conventional invasion we're talking about here no, but it is an invasion on the stability of this country.

              Look what has happened already? The invasion is of terror into the household of every american, and to the american economy.

              Yes, it's a very liberal interpretation of the word, I'm not denying that.
              I see the world through bloodshot eyes
              Streets filled with blood from distant lies.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by drake
                Yes, it's a very liberal interpretation of the word, I'm not denying that.
                In this instance, I don't think that a liberal interpretation of the word is sufficent to meet the burden of proof for what you want to do (suspend civil liberties), especially in light of the fact that you have a greater chance of dieing from heart disease than from terrorist attack.
                I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
                For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio

                Comment


                • --"And hell yes it could be better, but for once I think people need to stop and say, it could also be a hell of a lot worse!"

                  Well, see, that's the thing. Yes, it could be worse. Only problem is, if we aren't trying to make it better, then it will get worse.

                  Change does take time, but that includes changes for the worse. A lot of rights and liberties have been gradually eroded, some of them starting almost right after the nation's founding. I seem to recall a number of quotes posted in this thread (pretty sure it was this one) about the gradual encroachment of tyranny. I find these statements perfectly apropos. Many of the restrictions we suffer under right now are worse than those imposed under old King George. The Founders would be truly astonished at many of the things we currently tolerate and, in many cases, accept as "normal". I don't like that, and I want to change it.

                  --"If it violates my rights a few times for the better of the whole, so be it."

                  I do not now and never have accepted that argument. In the first place, I think you're arguing from false assumptions. I do not think it is possible for the government to violate anyone's right and that action truly be for the "better of the whole" (or the "greater good"). That may well be, and probably often is, the intention, but I don't think that's ever the reality.

                  --"Of course such an idea is absurd to some people around here...."

                  Yup. I prefer the "Ask not what you can do for your country, Ask what you can do for you, And how your country can stop preventing you from doing that" sentiment.

                  --"Someone, somewhere has to belly up to the bar to do that job."

                  Don't forget that the founders were against a standing army, not to mention any kind of conscription. They figured that if the cause was just, such as defending ourselves against unprovoked attacks (such as going after Bin Laden) then plenty of people would be willing to fight. They also figured that if the cause was unjust there wouldn't be enough manpower to carry it through. Of course, there's Selective Service now...

                  --"As Drake pointed out, rights are privlages of citizenship, not irrevokable mandates to hide behind."

                  This is exactly the attitude the Founders disagreed with. Look at the wording of both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. They considered rights to be fundamental, not given by government, but only to be acknowledged by governments. A governemnt that acknowledged and protected its citizens rights was a just government, one that ignored or violated those rights was unjust. The whole point of the Bill of Rights was to codify that there are simply some rights that no group of people can take from another, no matter their relative sizes. This gets right back into the Representative Democracy vs. Pure Democracy and the Founders distaste for "mob rule".

                  --"If you think otherwise, interview prisoners in correctional facilities about their "rights"."

                  Prisoners should be in jail only for violating someone else's rights, not for not agreeing with the government. The latter are more commonly known as "political crimes", something the Founders would not be very pleased to see happening in the US.

                  --"The USA was NOT set up on the concept that it's citizens are owed anything."

                  It was founded on the concept that its citizens had basic rights the goverment must acknowledge. In that sense, they are owed a basic respect from their government, and many areas of their lives they should be allowed to do as they please in. This has, obviously, not gotten across nearly as much lately, part of which I blame on Progessive Education, which seems to take the view you've been espousing here.

                  --"The people that wrote the constitution, of which you continue to talk of, would be rolling in their grave hearing the way you talk."

                  I hate to say this, but I was thinking the same thing about much of what I've heard coming from your side of the argument (especially the late entries from Chris 62).

                  --"and can be changed and ammended anytime."

                  Yes. Too bad they aren't following the amendment process to set up these courts.

                  --"public safety may sometimes take precedence."

                  That applies specifically to the Writ of Habeus Corpus in times of war. Nothing more.

                  Wraith
                  "As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight when everything seems seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we must be most aware of change in the air -- however slight -- lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness"
                  -- Justice William O. Douglas

                  Comment


                  • The Founders would be truly astonished at many of the things we currently tolerate and, in many cases, accept as "normal". I don't like that, and I want to change it.
                    Such as?

                    Yup. I prefer the "Ask not what you can do for your country, Ask what you can do for you, And how your country can stop preventing you from doing that" sentiment.
                    I guess I'm not quite so selfish to think this way. Yes, I think selfish is the appropriate word. Since I think your fundamental problem is a monetary one. Tell me if I'm wrong.

                    Don't forget that the founders were against a standing army, not to mention any kind of conscription. They figured that if the cause was just, such as defending ourselves against unprovoked attacks (such as going after Bin Laden) then plenty of people would be willing to fight. They also figured that if the cause was unjust there wouldn't be enough manpower to carry it through. Of course, there's Selective Service now...
                    Yes, but it was a different time. A time when men were men. When freedom wasn't taken for granted and it was appreciated. Now, all we have is a bunch of people who don't even have a conception just how good they have it. These men of the past were honoured to fight for their country and their freedom......now people just expect it. Its taken for granted.

                    I'd love to respond to more, but its time to go home
                    I see the world through bloodshot eyes
                    Streets filled with blood from distant lies.

                    Comment


                    • Far left funnies

                      Originally posted by Wraith
                      This is exactly the attitude the Founders disagreed with.
                      An over-generization on your part, and a not very accurate one at that. The approved constituition was a compromise, not a unilateral declaration.
                      Please refrain from sweeping generalization of what people "meant".
                      Look at the wording of both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
                      "Blacks are worth one fifths of whites"...Thomas Jefferson.
                      They considered rights to be fundamental, not given by government, but only to be acknowledged by governments.
                      In your opinion.
                      A governemnt that acknowledged and protected its citizens rights was a just government, one that ignored or violated those rights was unjust.
                      This does NOT contridict what i said in any way, and if you looked at the whole thread, I'm against this patriot act, so realize whom your arguing with and why.
                      The whole point of the Bill of Rights was to codify that there are simply some rights that no group of people can take from another, no matter their relative sizes. This gets right back into the Representative Democracy vs. Pure Democracy and the Founders distaste for "mob rule".
                      Bill of rights was a rider, not integral, of Constitution.
                      Founding fathers also believed average man incapable of governing himself, so they set up electoral college, to "regulate" voting to more "proper" choices.
                      In other words, "mod rule" in their minds meant the average man.
                      The founding fathers were men, not gods, you would do well not to idolize them so much.

                      Prisoners should be in jail only for violating someone else's rights, not for not agreeing with the government.
                      This statement is at cross-purposes with your whole post.
                      On the one hand, you say the rights are gaurteed, and here you say people should not be punished for violating the laws that protect said rights.
                      Which side of the fence are you on?
                      You can't have it both ways.
                      The latter are more commonly known as "political crimes", something the Founders would not be very pleased to see happening in the US.
                      Name people who are jailed in the USA for views.
                      Not a one.
                      They commited crimes in support of said views, not for the views themselves.

                      It was founded on the concept that its citizens had basic rights the goverment must acknowledge.
                      No, it was founded on the concept that each man should be equal to control his destiny in a fair manor.
                      In that sense, they are owed a basic respect from their government, and many areas of their lives they should be allowed to do as they please in.
                      As is the case in the USA
                      This has, obviously, not gotten across nearly as much lately, part of which I blame on Progessive Education, which seems to take the view you've been espousing here.
                      Non-sense, young man.
                      Do not attempt to subscribe your views on history are superior to mine based on your or my education, because I promise you, in this, you will lose heavily.

                      I hate to say this, but I was thinking the same thing about much of what I've heard coming from your side of the argument (especially the late entries from Chris 62).
                      More non-sense, see my earlier referneces to the true manor of the FF that you to quickly idolize, and I repeat, I'm against these laws, not for them, my confused young Texan.

                      Yes. Too bad they aren't following the amendment process to set up these courts.
                      I repeat, you wern't paying attention, I'm against this also.

                      When you have a debate, please try to understand who is on the side of what, your wild assumptions here placed you squarely in the wrong in this instance, I'm totally against these "patriot" laws and military tribunals.
                      I believe Saddam because his position is backed up by logic and reason...David Floyd
                      i'm an ignorant greek...MarkG

                      Comment


                      • --"Such as?"

                        Well, there's the income tax for starters. Just about everything that's been done in the name of the War on Drugs. The entire social spending budget. About 95% of the functions of the Federal government, really.

                        --"Yes, I think selfish is the appropriate word. Since I think your fundamental problem is a monetary one."

                        The money's a part of it, but hardly the fundamental. I'm not happy with any violations of rights, especially my own. Whether or not they involve cash is a secondary issue, just one readily understood and accepted by others.

                        --""Blacks are worth one fifths of whites"...Thomas Jefferson."

                        Interesting you should choose to quote Jefferson on this, considering he tried and almost suceeded in freeing the slaves very early on. Too bad the Rhode Island delegate was sick that day, otherwise he probably would have done so.

                        --"I'm against this patriot act, so realize whom your arguing with and why."

                        If you're against this act, that's fine. My problem with you is your "there are no rights, only privledges" attitude.

                        --"Bill of rights was a rider, not integral, of Constitution."

                        The Bill of Rights is fundamental in understanding how the Constitution came about. Without the Bill of Rights, the Constitution would not have passed.
                        The entire Constitution is nothing more than a listing of powers granted to the Federal government. That is very important. It shows that the initial assumption is that all powers and rights rest with the people, not with government. The Bill of Rights was added because most of the delegates thought that simply listing the powers of government was not enough. They wanted explicit protections of rights. And I have to say, that obviously still was not enough.

                        --"Founding fathers also believed average man incapable of governing himself,"

                        Not exactly. They did not trust the common man enough to give them full control, yes, but that was fundamentally because of the whole inaleniable rights issue.

                        --"On the one hand, you say the rights are gaurteed, and here you say people should not be punished for violating the laws that protect said rights."

                        People should be punished for violating the rights of others. There are a ton of laws these days that have nothing to do with the rights of anyone whatsoever. You can quite easily be jailed today without actually violating someone's rights. Smoking pot, for instance, is certainly a jailable offense these days, and yet there is nothing inherent to smoking pot that violates anyones rights.

                        --"Name people who are jailed in the USA for views."

                        The tens (or, more likely hundreds) of thousands who are in jail because they believe that, since it's their body they should be allowed to do whatever they please to it, even if that means smoking marijuana.

                        --"to the true manor of the FF that you to quickly idolize"

                        They deserve a little idolization. They sat down and tried to figure out how to make a government that works. Amazing how they did that, considering what had come before them. They had their faults, yes, and there are things that should have been done that weren't, but that doesn't mean they weren't great men.

                        Wraith
                        "It's a republic if you can keep it"
                        -- Benjamin Franklin, asked what sort of government the constitutional convention had chosen.

                        Comment


                        • Taking what one has for granted is the worst thing someone can do david. It IS a priviledge living in this country because of the rights one is afforded.
                          I don't take anything for granted. I'm more than willing to fight to protect my civil liberties. If that means fighting some foreign invader (not that one is around), fine (although I refuse to be drafted in any case for whatever reason), and if it means fighting the US federal government, that's just fine with me too.

                          I am NOT willing to limit civil liberties, though, in the name of something ambiguous like "the War on Terrorism", or the War on Drugs, or anything else. Granted, habeas corpus might be suspended in certain circumstances - but the only time in American history that the existence of the US was conceivably threatened was during the War of 1812, although I seriously doubt the British would have tried to retake the entire nation, they DID invade.

                          The Civil War, though, is a different case. At no time was the existence of the US in jeopardy. The Southern States that seceeded (and there might have been more, such as Maryland, if Mr. Lincoln had followed the Constitution) did so legally, and never meant to threaten the United States except in such a way as to gain independence - the few invasions of Northern territory were simply attempts to relieve pressure from, say, farmlands in Virginia, and attempts to throw off the tempo of the Union Army...it was still a defensive war and I think many people will back me up on that notion.

                          Moving on...

                          Your attempting to argue symantics.
                          The real world is harsh and cruel, as you will find when you leave the ivory towers of acedemia and enter the mainstream world.
                          It's your privilage to have rights, not the other way around, and you must fight to protect your rights, as history has shown time and again.
                          I'm not arguing semantics, I'm simply pointing out that "inalienable rights" cannot also be "privileges". And when has history shown that Americans had to fight to protect their rights? Again, possibly the War of 1812 (although Great Britain granted the necessary concessions on impressment and such before the outbreak of hostilities), but no other time, not even WW2 - the US was never, not once under any threat of invasion.

                          As we have seen throughout US history, the Constituiton is not set in stone, and can be changed and ammended anytime.
                          Placing your faith this way is quite dangerous, and certainly foolhardy.
                          Afterall, women don't vote, do they? yes they do, the Constituition was amended.
                          Actually if the Constitution could be amended "any time" then we would have a lot more amendments, eh? Obviously the Constitution can only be amended in certain circumstances - and some of the amendments "passed" were actually not legally ratified, such as the 13th-15th Amendments, and possibly the Income Tax, but that's a different debate.

                          The Draft is tried and true, since the early days of america, and despite all your protestations against it, it will continue, as a leagal and neccesary evil at times.
                          Legal? Nope. Nowhere in the Constitution is a draft allowed, therefore it can't be legal without a Constitutional amendment, which, in the case of a draft, would probably NOT get passed. Actually, the Constitution DOES limit the appropriation of funding towards a standing army to a maximum, upper limit of two years, but obviously that part isn't followed either, is it?

                          Better 50 people lose their inalienable rights then seeing another 5000 people become roasted like marshmallows in a fire.
                          So what's the magic number? Obviously, to you, a 1:100 ratio is OK...what about 1:50, or 1:10, or 1:5 for that matter? Where does it stop? Pretty soon, we'll be stripping the rights of 49% of the population in order to "save" the other 51%, if we continue down your path. That is pure utilitarianism, which I simply cannot agree with as a Constitutional OR a moral solution.

                          I think draft should only be applied in situations in which the national existence is threatened. That means the drafts for Civil War and WW2 were justified, but not for WW1 and Vietnam.
                          The national existence was no more threatened during WW2 or the Civil War (well, the national existence of the US, anyway - they certainly had no problem conquering and running roughshod over the CSA in a war of aggression), than it was during Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, or for that matter the September 11th attacks.

                          Wraith covered much of the rest adequately, so I will end here and leave it to you people to respond.
                          Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DaveDaDouche
                          Read my seldom updated blog where I talk to myself: http://davedadouche.blogspot.com/

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Seeker View Post
                            Is somebody connected to a Mafia a 'terrorist'? Your ordinary gangbanger off the street?
                            Organizationally:
                            the use of military force

                            "what's that"
                            sticks and stones
                            fists
                            teeth
                            rifles
                            tanks
                            etc

                            "how so"

                            maybe we should make fetish
                            of war
                            so it's like
                            a particular
                            flavor
                            of porn
                            and we know when we've found what we want
                            To us, it is the BEAST.

                            Comment

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