Moderator: EMG
goldragon_70 wrote:Could you make a Subliminal of Curse CCP?
drydreamer wrote:"For everyone basically believes WHAT THEY WANT TO BELIEVE!...Some of these opinions are based on lies and misperceptions; but we have bought into them so heavily that it would turn our lives upside down to deny them!"
Mr_Oblivious wrote:Even Mr. Oblivious knows that nobody ever claimed Saddam had succeeded in buying yellowcake from Niger, so there was no claim to whittle down. That Valerie Plame had been working openly as a CIA employee at the Langley headquarters for years, so there was no covert career to ruin. That CIA officials have testified that Joe Wilson's report supported the intelligence of Saddam trying to buy yellowcake from Niger, unlike what Joe Wilson claimed his own report said when he went public in the New York Times. That blackouts often occur in American cities as well. That "happy crowds" in many locations of Iraq were broadcast live across the world during the war, even though many seem determined not to remember them today. That the Turks can use brutal tactics against guerillas that the Americans cannot, if only because the world media doesn't really care so long as it's the Turks that are doing it instead of the Americans.
Mr. Oblivious could go on, but even he can't stop people from being Willfully Oblivious.
Mr_Oblivious wrote:Mr. Oblivious doesn't even know where to begin with Sandy's post, except to say that he is amazed Sandy would rely on "press reports" as the basis for so much of his argument in the same post Sandy ends with words about the media's power to manipulate. That he truly doubts someone worried about preserving her cover would work openly at CIA headquarters. That the American criminals at Abu Ghraib were turned in by other American soldiers and were under investigation before the story ever appeared in the media, and that they are now going to jail themselves, unlike what you would find in a Turkish prison. Still, Mr. Oblivious is glad that Sandy now admits there were "happy crowds" in Iraq.
Mr. Oblivious could go on, but he senses more anger and cynicism than honest analysis of a complex situation.
morrcomm wrote:I have to go with gurlbidesign on this one. I have family that will most likely be in Iraq shortly, and I've had friends serving there from the start. What I've always heard from them is a very different picture than what I always see presented in the media. Without them, I would probably believe that Iraq was nothing more than car bombs and hopelessness as well, rather than that being just one sliver of what's really going on there.
This really got driven home to me during their election earlier this year. I remember seeing reporter after reporter and so-called expert after so-called expert being shocked at what they were seeing. They'd missed what had been right in front of them all the time, but what the people many of us know there had been telling us all along.
"Hotel Journalism" at its finest... :wink:
gurlbidesign wrote:Always the bridesmaid............ :? :wink:
gurlbidesign wrote:Sandy, you have been pretty vocal against the President....I haven't heard of any knocks on your door. Not getting to us via WiFi from some gulag are you? What freedom of speech have you lost? Active duty military have always been under different rules....The Uniformed Code of Military Justice. As a retired service member I lived under those rules for many years.
sandy82 wrote:
(Latest polls show that over half the American public thinks the war is a mistake. Those pollsters aren't talking to the right people, are they?)
sandy82 wrote:
By the way, we have at least one active-duty veteran of the Iraq/Afghanistan theater on this site as a regular contributor. I'll let him reveal himself, if he wants to. He could tell us, first-hand, what he really thinks of the war zones. But these days, he may not want to do that. He's had some harsh words for the Bush Administration, and he may realize that freedom of speech only goes so far these days. And he's still on active duty. More's the pity.
sandy82 wrote:
morrcomm, you have some predictable and lovable traits. You know what they are. :wink:
sandy82 wrote:
You have to go with gurlbidesign on this one.
Have to?
What you've always heard from them...
Always?
gurlbidesign wrote:What freedoms have you personally lost, speech or otherwise. I certainly haven't lost any. And "those people at rallies who were arrested", what was the charge against them? I doubt they were just sitting there minding there own business.
sandy82 wrote:LOL, I think you're seeing things. I am enjoying our exchange. The anger and presumptive statements seem to be coming from you.
One relies on press reports in the absence of being there. Better than one press report on a particular topic are reports from various media.
I frankly can't understand much of what you're saying above, due to the punctuation. I can't tell whether you're saying something or whether you're trying to say that I'm saying it.
sandy82 wrote:.
GBD, I hadn't heard about the intercepted phone calls. I'm sure you did hear about them. My skepticism is not directed toward you. It's more general in nature. In order to satisfied, I wouldn't accept transcripts, much less translations. I would want my own experts (American and Iraqi; technical, linguistic, military, cultural) to listen to the original tapes for accent, dialect, profession-related abbreviations and slang. Then I would want to do stress tests on the recorded voices, broad-scope analysis of background noises, see the originals of the chain-of-custody documents and interview everyone in the chain(s). On and on. It would be ideal if one could trace the actual contents of those reported phone calls from original, verified tapes through all the various intermediate steps, unbroken, until the contents reached whatever media packaged the final information and delivered it to the public. Otherwise, it is possible that the phone calls were reported but, in fact, were never made.
sandy82 wrote:
Just like the yellow-cake uranium or the meeting in Vienna between an underling of Saddam Hussein and an underling of Osama bin Laden. The meeting was widely reported, but then it was recanted.
Mr_Oblivicomm wrote:Mr. Sandy,
Mr. Oblivious does envy the upper body development in Skot's avatar, but Mr. Oblivious is not Skot. Mr. Oblivious was confused by your fixation on this Skot until Mr. Oblivious went back deeper into the posts on this site. Mr. Oblivious soon saw that you have often looked for secret identities of posters, and he has decided this must be some strange form of hazing that all new site members must undergo. Mr. Oblivious now feels welcome here!
When Mr. Oblivious refers to someone else, he uses the person's name or "you." Mr. Oblivious refers to himself as "Mr. Oblivious" or "he," following in the august footsteps of other scions of third-personhood, like Vanilla Ice and Nixon. He can see how you might have been confused by his last post, even though he had thought the context would have made the pronoun references clear. Yet even Mr. Oblivious realizes that a focus on deeper semantical meanings beneath the words of posts can sometimes obscure the plain meaning of posts. So, Mr. Oblivious was speaking for himself in the second and third sentences of his last post, and in the future, he will strive to be more clear.
Mr. Oblivious also holds no anger in this thread or toward you. He has corrected incorrect facts, tried to provide context that was lacking, and questioned your conclusions. Even Mr. Oblivious knows that disagreement is not the same thing as anger. Mr. Oblivious has, however, found much anger in addition to disagreement expressed in your posts toward many political figures, and often in very personal rather than policy-oriented terms. Mr. Oblivious still wonders if that same anger might not be coloring your analysis of their policies and the complex events in this area.
MsOblivious wrote:Ms. Oblivious thinks that it's not polite for users to use multiple accounts to harass certain users. Ms. Oblivious knows that Mr. Oblivious is really Morrcomm and she thinks people ought to know. Ms. Oblivious thinks that it should be noted how Mr. Oblivious seems to harass Sandy at every turn. Ms. Oblivious knows that Mr. Oblivicomm knows damn well that Sandy is female, yet Mr. Oblivious seems to enjoy referring to her as a he. Before Mr. Oblivious goes jumping to conclusions, no Ms. Oblivious is not Sandy, but Ms. Oblivious does have your ip and she checked both of your accounts.
MsOblivious wrote:Ms. Oblivious thinks that it's not polite for users to use multiple accounts to harass certain users. Ms. Oblivious knows that Mr. Oblivious is really Morrcomm and she thinks people ought to know. Ms. Oblivious thinks that it should be noted how Mr. Oblivious seems to harass Sandy at every turn. Ms. Oblivious knows that Mr. Oblivicomm knows damn well that Sandy is female, yet Mr. Oblivious seems to enjoy referring to her as a he. Before Mr. Oblivious goes jumping to conclusions, no Ms. Oblivious is not Sandy, but Ms. Oblivious does have your ip and she checked both of your accounts.Mr_Oblivicomm wrote:Mr. Sandy,
Mr. Oblivious does envy the upper body development in Skot's avatar, but Mr. Oblivious is not Skot. . . .
morrcomm wrote:Actually, I don't know damn well that Sandy is a female. Especially since I've even had EMG refer to Sandy as a "he" in a PM.
. . .
I think even Mrs. Oblivious will agree that actual points were being made as well -- and that *skot* most likely ended up with more grief directed his way than Sandy ever got from Mr. Oblivious. In fact, I was about to come out as Mr. Oblivious because of the skot fixation, which quite honestly surprised even me.
I apologize for letting this lark get carried away -- and I especially apologize to skot -- but if Ms. Oblivious truly worries about user's being harassed at every turn, I'm surprised she waited till now to voice any displeasure. When it comes to recent forum "harassment," I'm a rank amateur considering the tweaks of Mr. Oblivious.
sandy82 wrote:
GBD---skot hasn't been seen since Wednesday...
I wonder where he went.
By the way, Mr. Oblivious said he could go on. At least, he was truthful.
He seems to have..er..went.
I hope he'll be back, and under the same name. :wink:
I have my doubts on that one, but I also have my hopes.
.
On Sunday October 16, 2005, at 1:16 am MDT, sandy82 wrote:Morrcomm, very interesting post. Many thanks.
Return to Philosophy, Religion & Politics
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests