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Originally Posted by ?????
ALL governments desire power over the populace. If a government cannot control the populace by force, it is not a government.
Just because a government exercises force to lock up criminals does not mean that it actively seeks to gain additional power. The difference lies in the ideology of the people running it, and whether they are more concerned for those being governed or for those doing the governing. In this particular case, the vast amount of evidence (most recently, the disastrous responses to Katrina and, to a lesser extent, Rita) suggests that the majority of concern rests with those doing the governing.
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I somehow doubt that I would stand for having my personal rights taken away; if such a thing happened in America, widespread revolt would ensue, even in the military, because military personnel are not obligated to follow orders that are not in accordance with the Constitution. But the Constitution extends its protections to American citizens ONLY.
That's a common misconception. Nowhere does the Bill of Rights ever make a distinction between citizens and non-citizens.
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Saddam did likely have the WMDs. I'm of the opinion that he carted them off to Syria or one of those other moronic terrorist countries or groups. His ties to al-Qaeda were virtually nonexistent; he and Osama differed substantially in their religious stances. However, considering that both have an open disdain for the U.S., that isn't particularly relevant.
I've yet to see any solid evidence presented for the "Saddam gave the WMD away" theory. There seems to have been plenty of evidence given that the WMD had been destroyed, exactly as the records said they had. Since we never found the WMD and the Nigerian yellowcakes theory has been thoroughly discredited, I think it's fairly safe to say that the entire war was marketed on a lie, namely that Saddam had nuclear weapons. That, I would regard as a crucial mistake.
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Two thousand American soldier deaths is nowhere near disastrous. It's a drop in the bucket.
By that scale, three thousand American deaths on 9/11 is nowhere near disastrous either. Good call.
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And Islam is indeed a violent, combative religion. There exist no other ways to interpret those particular verses. A is A; a thing either is or it isn't. A verse in a holy book either advocates violence or it does not. There is no in-between; contradictions do not exist. Christianity is also a violent, combative religion. Their behavior is not different than that of, say, the Crusaders.
I can agree with you here, at least in that they both contain violent verses.
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Their behavior is different from ours, in that we endeavor not to kill civilians randomly. I don't particularly care if we do or not, at least not because of any humanitarian reason; wanton civilian slaughter wastes resources that could be appropriated to better subdue and destroy the enemy.
Here I do not, simply because of the reasons Big D cited above that as many as 100,000 Iraqis may be dead. If the 100,000 dead estimate is true, we have killed 100,000 in three years. Saddam killed 300,000 in thirty years, so it wouldn't be far amiss to say that you'd have been safer as an Iraqi citizen under Saddam's regime.
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5000 warheads is more than enough to basically nuke the crap out of everything.
But the problem with this is that once we launch nukes, so does everyone else who has them. And then the world gets destroyed.
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As I said, the Bill of Rights makes a very clear distinction between American citizens and everyone else. It is not a misconception.
Then I would like you to point out where it says makes this "very clear distinction," because search as I may, I am completely unable to locate it, and when I have asked other trolls such as you to locate it, they too have come up completely blank. Until you do such, I will assume that you are just making this up.
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Three thousand CIVILIAN deaths matter, because they're our civilians. Two thousand MILITARY deaths do not.
So we don't have a duty to the people who signed up to protect our country to ensure that they don't spend their lives in vain?
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As I stated earlier, I don't care whether Iraqi civilians are safer or not. As long as terrorists die when our military fires, however many enemy civilians get killed is a complete non-issue. I'm an imperialist; I believe in expanding our power and economy as much as possible. The oil revenues we'll bring in from over there will be massive.
The nuclear issue is why I advocate some sort of a missile defense system. Basically, my desire is no less than to nuke offending countries with impunity and plunder the hell out of whatever's left.
Wow. Self-centered much?