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#61
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The best way to prevent an offensive force from killing you is to kill them
first. So let's say there is a country with 25-million people in it. Out of this 25-million, 4%, (or 1-million) hate the US so vehemently that they will become suicide bombers, or join anti-American militia. These people hide among the general population. (30-40% of the general population hate the US enough that they won't get "involved" and rat out the bad guys). The bad guys don't wear uniforms, march in formation, or ride around in clearly identifiable military vehicles. We really don't know who the bad guys are until they are setting off a roadside bomb or firing an AK47 ot our guys. Looks like we ultimately have two choices, really. 1) Carpet bomb the whole place into a nuclear wasteland, and consider the 24 million either "collateral damage" or racially guilty by virtue of a common religion. or: 1. Identify the enemy. Do this by doubling, tripling, or quintupling the intelligence budget. Use both electronic surveillance *and* clandestine operatives. Infiltrate the terrorist cells and identify the criminal terrorist *******s during the planning process, (not after the fact). 2. Surgically remove the terrorist leaders. We can do this in ways that would leave even their supporters unsure whether the head ******* was taken out by the US or died of natural causes. 3. Avoid repeating the mistakes of Israel, Russia, and other countries that have decades of experience fighting the same problem. 4. Try to insure that we are not creating hatred for the US faster than we are killing off the folks who already hate us. *************** If everybody hates us then why do the oppressed people of the world want to come here to better their lives? Sorry, but your question has nothing to do with this discussion. It tries to refute a postion that "everybody" hates us, and I don't see any claims to that effect. We need to eliminate the people who hate us so badly that they will attack us. That's far from "everybody". In fact, because it isn't even close to a majority in most of the Islamic countries in the world it is even more questionable to make war against an entire country rather than the criminal elements within the country. We also need to examine our actions to make sure that we do not, unnecessarily or unjustly, give even more people a valid reason to hate us. |
#62
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On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 19:10:20 -0400, NOYB wrote:
According to Chris Bowers (the author of that site you just listed), Harris, Pew and NAES polls from earlier this year show that more people consider themselves Democrat than Republican. He then tries to extrapolate the data to reach the conclusion that Bush leads by only 5.6% rather than the 10 or 11 points shown in the Times and Newsweek polls. What a crock! Rasmussen agrees that Bush leads by 4-5 points, not double digits. If the Time and Newsweek polls were accurate, other polls will start to show similar results. Time will tell. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/Poll...20Sept%206.htm |
#63
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On Tue, 07 Sep 2004 02:05:28 +0000, Gould 0738 wrote:
Or are you proposing a national draft? We'll see a draft again beginning in 2005. Too hot an issue in an election year. We cannot expand the current war into Iran, (which is the next stage of the New American Century Plan that Bush has followed to date), without a *lot* more cannon fodder. Scary, isn't it? And we are only talking about another Third World country. Wait until the rest of the PNAC program kicks in and we try starving China's or India's oil needs. Now, that will be interesting. And we still do not have a comprehensive energy program. What a way to run a country. How many times do you extend the tours of the poor guys and gals in the Guard and Reserve before you begin bordering on involuntary servitude, anyway? |
#64
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I am a Republican wrote in message . ..
On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 16:31:13 -0400, "NOYB" wrote: ...also shows Bush ahead by 11 points. Bush 54% Kerry 43% That's a 13 point bounce fellas! Bush is now leading in two major polls with leads that are well outside the poll's margin of error. I love it!!!! John Smith, trying to hide yet again. |
#65
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basskisser wrote:
I am a Republican wrote in message . .. On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 16:31:13 -0400, "NOYB" wrote: ...also shows Bush ahead by 11 points. Bush 54% Kerry 43% That's a 13 point bounce fellas! Bush is now leading in two major polls with leads that are well outside the poll's margin of error. I love it!!!! John Smith, trying to hide yet again. That one, too? What an asshole. -- Not dead, in jail, or a slave? Thank a liberal! And don't forget to pay your taxes so the rich don't have to! |
#66
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![]() "thunder" wrote in message ... On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 19:10:20 -0400, NOYB wrote: According to Chris Bowers (the author of that site you just listed), Harris, Pew and NAES polls from earlier this year show that more people consider themselves Democrat than Republican. He then tries to extrapolate the data to reach the conclusion that Bush leads by only 5.6% rather than the 10 or 11 points shown in the Times and Newsweek polls. What a crock! Rasmussen agrees that Bush leads by 4-5 points, not double digits. If the Time and Newsweek polls were accurate, other polls will start to show similar results. Time will tell. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/Poll...20Sept%206.htm The Gallup/CNN/USA Today poll splits the difference. It shows a 7 point lead for Bush among likely voters. Rasmussen may agree that Bush leads by 4-5 points, but his current poll shows just a one point lead. He blames the discrepancy on an anomaly in the polling data from last Saturday where Kerry was actually leading. He throws that poll out, and comes to the conclusion that Bush leads by 4-5 points. Absurd! It sounds to me like Rasmussen needs to get his act together. When 3 of the four major polls (Gallup, Time, Newsweek) come out showing Bush with an average lead of 9.33%, and Rasmussen shows a 1 point lead, then that doesn't speak very highly of the accuracy of his polls. |
#67
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![]() "JohnH" wrote in message ... On 07 Sep 2004 03:21:50 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote: Snipped 1. Identify the enemy. Do this by doubling, tripling, or quintupling the intelligence budget. Use both electronic surveillance *and* clandestine operatives. Infiltrate the terrorist cells and identify the criminal terrorist *******s during the planning process, (not after the fact). snipped Chuck, I like this idea. It has been mentioned before (maybe by you). My question would be, what do we do during the 5-10 years it would take to recruit, train, and infiltrate the agents who could handle the work? Will the terrorists hold off for this time? John H No. Call it collateral damage. Hurts when it is a little closer to home? Mark Browne |
#68
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![]() "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... "Better red than dead". :-) I like it! |
#69
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The terrorists have little to fear when we are
distracting ourselves by making war on organized armed forces that have never attacked us, and are not credible threats in the future. PS: The PNAC strategies were conceived with the concept of defending the US against terrorism as a secondary, rather than primary priority. The military adventures recommended by PNAC are not well advised when defending the US against terrorism must now be our highest strategic priority. Bush is surrounded by the authors of the PNAC doctrine- Cheney, Wolfowitz, etc etc etc. All of his advisors are giving him biased and ultimately ineffective advice. |
#70
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![]() "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... The terrorists have little to fear when we are distracting ourselves by making war on organized armed forces that have never attacked us, and are not credible threats in the future. PS: The PNAC strategies were conceived with the concept of defending the US against terrorism as a secondary, rather than primary priority. Wrong. Ridding the World of terrorism was one of the benefits predicted in the Pax Americana vision for the future. |
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