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shaolin_Z
Hei Hu Quan

Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Austin, Texas, USA: TXTA #102
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| quote: | Originally posted by Capitalizt
It takes guts, and the determination to strike a blow against a regime that murdered 9 million innocent people. War is sometimes necessary, and Shaolin I could not disagree with you more. Every country tends to reflect the moral values of the people within it. Some cultures have radically different values that breed conflict and violence. If you share the values of your country (freedom, tolerance, democracy, etc), you should stand behind those who are committed to defending those values. I understand your anger because we've had very little DEFENSE recently. Most modern wars have been offensive...very unnecessary and tragic. So please, oppose the politicians when they send the troops into unjustified conflicts, by all means...Do what you can to change attitudes and rally opposition to war...but don't oppose the troops themselves. They will be your last line of defense if we ever face a true danger. |
I'm not saying all troops are savages, I'm just not fond of the institution of the military because of exactly the reasons you stated. I also think unconditionally supporting any group of people is completely irrational. There's good and bad everywhere, in every group. What I hoped to demonstrate is people who'll generalize all Americans because the the actions of (whatever number) of troops stationed in Iraq is no different than people generalizing about all Arabs or Muslims because of a video of a contractor being decapitated. It always easy to generalize to a group you don't belong to. People make all sorts of excuses for "their own kind." If you belong to multiple groups by default of genetics, heritage, nationality etc. though you exactly identify with any one of them, you're still going to get the short end of the stick. My point is simply this; mindlessnessly praising "service men" is just as retarded as mindlesslessly generalizing that Iraqis (or Arab and Muslims) are inherently violent or barbaric. I'm not saying you're doing that btw, but it's done fairly frequently if not explicitly then implicitly. Neither is a good thing, and I find many of the people who claim to support the troops to be hypocritical as they have no problem believing in a cause costing the lives of their own country men (not to mention disproportionately more civilian lives that they don't consider "one of their's") is kind of well, disgusting. Especially while they never have to face any such situation themselves, and chastise people critical of policy as unpatriotic and doing the opposite of "supporting the troops" apparently. It's a real fucking shame and disgrace when you consider how many troops come home in body bags or crippled, only to be charged by the military for their irreparable losses. Anyone in favor of supporting them would never want them to be sent there in the first place, to either not come back at all, come back with permanently disabling injuries, or to have lost a great deal of their sanity and humanity in the process. If you look at the number of military personnel going untreated, I'd hardly say the nation by and large is "supporting the troops," something that the state should already be doing in the first place, not charging families for the death and crippling of their sons and daughters. That is the other aspect of it.
EDIT: My last line of defense is myself btw, if we're actually invaded that is. I don't currently own any guns but would have no problem getting them if that were the case. Which isn't the case. When was the last war you remember on American soil?
___________________
"The Greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge." -Stephen Hawking
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me— and there was no one left to speak out for me." -Martin Niemöller
Last edited by shaolin_Z on Jul-25-2008 at 01:41
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Jul-25-2008 01:26
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shaolin_Z
Hei Hu Quan

Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Austin, Texas, USA: TXTA #102
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Another thing, it doesn't take guts... it takes economic desperation and / or brainwashing. Patriotism is the last refuse of the scoundrel. That's a lack of guts. It takes guts to oppose the state on the other hand, and to stand up for your fellow man... regardless of where on the globe. It also takes guts to refuse to serve, even if you're stationed there.
___________________
"The Greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge." -Stephen Hawking
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me— and there was no one left to speak out for me." -Martin Niemöller
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Jul-25-2008 02:09
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shaolin_Z
Hei Hu Quan

Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Austin, Texas, USA: TXTA #102
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And this:
| quote: | AFP, May 16, 2008
US soldier refuses to serve in "illegal Iraq war"
But while many seek refuge in Canada, the young soldier vowed to stay in the United States to fight "whatever charges the army levels at me."
Matthis Chiroux is the kind of young American US military recruiters love.
| quote: | 
Matthis Chiroux: "This occupation is unconstitutional and illegal and I hereby lawfully refuse to participate as I will surely be a party to war crimes." (watch video) |
"I was from a poor, white family from the south, and I did badly in school," the now 24-year-old told AFP.
"I was 'filet mignon' for recruiters. They started phoning me when I was in 10th grade," or around 16 years old, he added.
Chiroux joined the US army straight out of high school nearly six years ago, and worked his way up from private to sergeant.
He served in Afghanistan, Germany, Japan, and the Philippines and was due to be deployed next month in Iraq.
On Thursday, he refused to go, saying he considers Iraq an illegal war.
"I stand before you today with the strength and clarity and resolve to declare to the military, my government and the world that this soldier will not be deploying to Iraq," Chiroux said in the sun-filled rotunda of a congressional building in Washington.
"My decision is based on my desire to no longer continue violating my core values to support an illegal and unconstitutional occupation... I refuse to participate in the Iraq occupation," he said, as a dozen veterans of the five-year-old Iraq war looked on.
Minutes earlier, Chiroux had cried openly as he listened to former comrades-in-arms testify before members of Congress about the failings of the Iraq war.
The testimonies were the first before Congress by Iraq veterans who have turned against the five-year-old war.
| quote: | Some 300,000 of the 1.6 million US soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from the psychological traumas of post-traumatic stress disorder, depression or both, an independent study showed last month.
AFP, May 16, 2008 |
Former army sergeant Kristofer Goldsmith told a half-dozen US lawmakers and scores of people who packed into a small hearing room of "lawless murders, looting and the abuse of countless Iraqis."
He spoke of the psychologically fragile men and women who return from Iraq, to find little help or treatment offered from official circles.
Goldsmith said he had "self-medicated" for several months to treat the wounds of the war.
Another soldier told AFP he had to boost his dosage of medication to treat anxiety and social agoraphobia -- two of many lingering mental wounds he carries since his deployments in Iraq -- before testifying.
Some 300,000 of the 1.6 million US soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from the psychological traumas of post-traumatic stress disorder, depression or both, an independent study showed last month.
A group of veterans sitting in the hearing room gazed blankly as their comrades' testimonies shattered the official version that the US effort in Iraq is succeeding.
Almost to a man, the soldiers who testified denounced serious flaws in the chain of command in Iraq.
Luis Montalvan, a former army captain, accused high-ranking US officers of numerous failures in Iraq, including turning a blind eye to massive fraud on the part of US contractors.
| quote: | Kelly Dougherty, Executive Director of Iraq Veterans Against The War ( http://www.ivaw.org ). "We believe that the only way this war is going to end is if the American people truly understand what we have done in their name."
Like the Vietnam Winter Soldier hearings, the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans' gripping and often tearful testimony highlighted how the atrocities committed by American troops are not simply down to ‘a few bad apples' but are systematic and continuous and, importantly, a direct consequence of the increasingly bloody occupations.
Znet, May 9, 2008 |
Ex-Marine Jason Lemieux told how a senior officer had altered a report he had written because it slammed US troops of using excessive force, firing off thousands of rounds of machine gun fire and hundreds of grenades in the face of a feeble four rounds of enemy fire.
Goldsmith accused US officials of censorship.
"Everyone who manages a blog, Facebook or Myspace out of Iraq has to register every video, picture, document of any event they do on mission," Goldsmith told AFP after the hearing.
"You're almost always denied before you are allowed to send them home."
Officials take "hard facts and slice them into small pieces to make them presentable to the secretary of state or the president -- and all with the intent of furthering the occupation of Iraq," Goldsmith added.
Chiroux is one of thousands of US soldiers who have deserted since the Iraq war began in 2003, according to figures issued last year by the US army.
But while many seek refuge in Canada, the young soldier vowed to stay in the United States to fight "whatever charges the army levels at me."
The US army defines a deserter as someone who has been absent without leave for 30 days.
Chiroux stood fast in his resolve to not report for duty on June 15.
"I cannot deploy to Iraq, carry a weapon and not be part of the problem," he told AFP. |
Source: RAWA
EDIT: It's individuals like this that set a high standard for the rest of us.
___________________
"The Greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge." -Stephen Hawking
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me— and there was no one left to speak out for me." -Martin Niemöller
Last edited by shaolin_Z on Jul-25-2008 at 02:45
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Jul-25-2008 02:40
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Capitalizt
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2005
Location: USA
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| quote: | Originally posted by shaolin_Z
It takes guts to stand up for your fellow man, |
And that is exactly what JUST wars are about.
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Jul-25-2008 06:53
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hardcore trancer
Mystic Mind

Registered: Jan 2002
Location: Toronto,Canada
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Jul-25-2008 07:13
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