My personal favorite is the current one. The 120mill bill or whatever, to bring troops home that bush turned down. Yet half the money would not have gone to the troops to bring 'em home.
Isn't it lovely what the news does.
My personal favorite is the current one. The 120mill bill or whatever, to bring troops home that bush turned down. Yet half the money would not have gone to the troops to bring 'em home.
Isn't it lovely what the news does.
I must have missed the big offensive against Al Queda during the 90s, I know it was all over the news and I was in a cave at the time ... and those financial seizures of Bin Laden's money ... and the securing of the borders and public transportation security measures that were enacted. Yup, all that happened, I must have just missed it.Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
However, I believe the reason Clinton didn't do much was partially because he was too busy defending himself against Republicans blowing the Monica nonsense out of proportion, which took the eye off the ball so to speak.
But if you find me ignorant of the series of major offensive and defensive measures the Clinton administration took against Al Queda and Bin Laden, please let me know. I can say though, we at least felt safer under Clinton than Bush.
I kind of doubt he could have rallied the forces without a major incident like 9/11.Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
About rallying the forces pre-911:
That's what leaders do. They know, before the general public does, who's planning what. There are tons of terrorists out there in the pre-9/11 era but Al Queda had made it a habit of bombing U.S. interests. After the, i don't know, fifth time ... someone should have told the American public about it. I'm personally disappointed that I didn't know jack about Al Queda before 9/11 and then found out they had been attacking U.S. interests for years before that.
I see plenty of demonizing on both sides. "Bush is the Devil", "Republicans are Nazis", "Bush is Hitler". It's about as bad as when Clinton was in office and people were calling him a "pervert", "deviant", "sex addict", "rapist". Exaggerations at best.Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
Republicans got so much power because when buildings are falling down and there are videos of people talking about killing you and your family and you neighbors, there's a push to the guy who says "I'm going to kick their butts" than the person who says "Let's try to understand and empathize with them ... and by the way, it's your fault".
Not saying either is right (because neither is the right way to deal with this), but when having a choice between the pitbull guarding my house or the poodle, I'll choose the pitbull. But now, maybe we need a poodle to smooth things over because the pitbull is way too wreckless.'
Reason number 4395083902548 we need a third, moderate, independent minded party in the United States that's not beholden to the religious right and big business, nor beholden to pseudo-socialists and anti-anything-Old School America-before-1992 activists.
Apparently, you did - although much of what he fought for against a resistive opposition party in the congress ultimately got killed or defused when Bush took over, that's a far cry from saying that 'nothing' was done. It's also blind to the fact that the president doesn't write legislation - Congress does, and Clinton had a hostile congress for most of his eight years, whereas Bush had a rubberstamp for 6.Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
I find it somewhat ironic that the list of measures you mention are exactly what he was trying to do in the 90s; a bit of googling may help you out from under that rock.
Actually, they got power by convincing people that the opposition was actually saying anything like "it's your fault."Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
Nothing? No missiles were fired? Clinton was criticized for doing it by the Republicans at the time? The 93 bombing warranted the invasion of an entire other nation? The Republican Congress at the time would've supported him?Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
Colin Powell would like to have a few words with you in private.Quote:
2. The "Bush lied" nonsense really needs to stop. For the 100,000th time, British, Jordanian, Russian, German, and U.S. intelligence, along with Bush's admin and Clinton's admin, all believed and reported that Hussein had WMD. A small minority said he didn't. Bush chose to believe the wrong people and Congress did the same.
We could've chased him there when we drove the Taliban out of Afghanistan. We've had years to do something and have done nothing but let him sit there.Quote:
3. Bin Laden is out in the mountains of Pakistan on the border, where it's no-man's land, and Pakistan is having it's own problems if you hadn't noticed. We'd have to invade another country to get him ... which is what we should have done to begin with, but it's still invading another country ... and the world would look at the U.S. as bullies ... basically, the same situation we have now.
So military priorities are now determined by low-hanging fruit? Not relevance or threat? That alone should get Bush, Cheney and Rummy thrown out on the street.Quote:
Bush went after Iraq because they have control of a huge oil reserve, it would be a safe haven in the middle of the middle east, and they were the easiest of the 3 axis' of evil to take down.
I'm just gonna roll my eyes at this. I forgot, this is an altruistic war.Quote:
Secondary to that was liberating people who were being tortured by Hussein and giving them democracy.
3/4 Generals disagree. Let's start with Shinseki.Quote:
They thought it'd be easy, like Afghanistan and the 1st Gulf War, it wasn't and they had no back-up plan ... and no one else did either.
No, it's to the CIA and FBI's credit, as well as Interpol. Not Bush's.Quote:
The United States will get hit again. It's a no brainer, it's to Bush's credit (of the few things we can credit his administration for) that the U.S. hasn't been hit since 9/11.
That's an excuse. I didn't say the Clinton administration didn't try to, I'm saying they didn't do. Even Yoda gets that one "try not. do, or do not. there is no try".
Bush has a hostile Congress and stares them down at every measure. Clinton, with an overwhelming majority of the public on his side, couldn't put forth public security measures and call the Republicans hypocrites if they tried to block them?
We're talking about performance, what is actually done and what isn't. No matter what, the Clinton administration didn't actually DO anything significant to tamp down on Al Queda. That's the point. Not saying they didn't think about it, I'm saying it wasn't a major priority and thus nothing actually happened ... but we got Don't Ask/Don't Tell?
Bush has had an opposition-congress for less than a year. And you may not know this, but the public doesn't get to decide what happen in the halls of Congress - the public desire to impeach Clinton was much lower than that to impeach Bush. And Clinton did put forth security propositions, and the repubs. did block them. That's what your missing - what you say he should have done, he did; the opposition just wouldn't let it get through.Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
Exactly - performance. Bush and the repubs had the helm at 9/11 and Katrina, yet they glory in that fact instead of being ashamed of their failures; the fact that Bush was "only there for 8 months" before 9/11 is as much of an excuse as saying that Clinton only "tried" to get anti-terrorism measured passed. Bush has over seen the two greatest disasters in recent US history, and yet people still say repubs. are stronger on security.Quote:
We're talking about performance, what is actually done and what isn't. No matter what, the Clinton administration didn't actually DO anything significant to tamp down on Al Queda. That's the point. Not saying they didn't think about it, I'm saying it wasn't a major priority and thus nothing actually happened ... but we got Don't Ask/Don't Tell?
And it was quite the priority in the Clinton years, btw - just not for the repub. congress who cried wag-the-dog everytime al queda pushed the blue dress off the headlines.
I see a lot of the "...but...but CLINTON!" argument going on. I fail to see how comparing Bush to him reconciles his shortcomings as a President.
V for Vendetta was a movie.Quote:
Originally Posted by Loyal Rogue
That was against Iraq, which as we all know, is the wrong target and had nothing to do with Al Queda terrorism.Quote:
Originally Posted by PAlexC
This is from "Meet The Press" on June 10th:Quote:
Colin Powell would like to have a few words with you in private.
MR. RUSSERT: In light of the fact that we did not find the weapons of mass destruction, the president still describes the war as a war of choice—war of necessity, rather than choice. Vice President Cheney said we would do the same thing all over again. Knowing what you know today, would you do the same thing all over again?
GEN. POWELL: If we knew today—or knew then what we know today, that there were no weapons of mass destruction, I would’ve had nothing to take to the United Nations. The national intelligence estimate, which was the basis of my presentation and, by the way, was the basis of the intimation that was given to the Congress that caused them to vote a resolution of support four months before my UN presentation, we rested our case on the existence of weapons of mass destruction that were a threat to us and could be given to terrorists, making it another kind of threat to us.
They didn't go further past Tora Bora because it would be entering a mountainous region in another country, and Pakistan brings up a series of other issues that the Bush admin (cowardly so) did not want to deal with. They could have, but by the rationale of most anti-Iraq War people, that would be just as much a violation as Iraq was.Quote:
We could've chased him there when we drove the Taliban out of Afghanistan. We've had years to do something and have done nothing but let him sit there.
It would have made even less sense to go after Iran or North Korea to start their war on terror (keep in mind, I don't agree with the strategy at all). You fight wars you think you can win, and of the three, they thought they could win Iraq because of Gulf War I and Afghanistan. It's not that hard to figure out.Quote:
So military priorities are now determined by low-hanging fruit? Not relevance or threat? That alone should get Bush, Cheney and Rummy thrown out on the street.
I said SECONDARY. It wasn't their main reason, but it was a secondary benefit to fighting the war. The spin was when they tried to make it seem like that was the main reason, which it never was ... but it was a good thing they thought to point to by getting rid of Saddam.Quote:
I'm just gonna roll my eyes at this. I forgot, this is an altruistic war.
3/4 now, not as many were that outspoken back in 2002 (read Powell's transcript again).Quote:
3/4 Generals disagree. Let's start with Shinseki.
But see, there's a fault in that logic. You can't put everything that goes wrong on Bush but everything that goes right on everyone else in government. It's not intellectually honest. If we're going to fault him for the failures in the "War on Terror", then he gets the successes as well and vice versa.Quote:
No, it's to the CIA and FBI's credit, as well as Interpol. Not Bush's.
I'm not a fan of Bush, but I'm going to be fair in my assessment. I have no axe to grind except against exaggerations on either side.
Haha. Not nearly as sexy as the conspiracy theories and wild accusations. But, at least these points are arguable.Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
It's true. He did do lots of things. Just that none of them were effective, obviously.Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
<pinches nose, shakes head>Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
U.S. missiles pound targets in Afghanistan, SudanQuote:
August 21, 1998
Web posted at: 5:10 a.m. EDT (0910 GMT)
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- American cruise missiles pounded sites in Afghanistan and Sudan Thursday in retaliation for the deadly bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania on August 7.
Then stop repeating the exaggerations of only one side.Quote:
I'm not a fan of Bush, but I'm going to be fair in my assessment. I have no axe to grind except against exaggerations on either side.
...speaking of spin.Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
So, the Democrats would have been all for a Taliban take-down before 9/11? A deportation of all suspected terrorists?
Regarding demonizing, the Democrats seem pretty good at that themselves. Look at Loyal Rogue, he still thinks that talking about Plame's job was illegal. ;)
Just stoking the flames. Gotta go work now! :D
For the record:Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
9 months < 8 years
That being said, we can spend all day pointing out this and the other about Bush vs. Clinton. For me, Clinton was a far greater president than Bush. That being said, it doesn't mean that his performance on the growing threat was lacking.
Putting forth things doesn't mean you're getting anything done. I can say the same about the Dems in Congress right now, who are saying a bunch of stuff but haven't actually DONE anything to end the Iraq War. That's what I mean when I say the Clinton admin didn't do anything ... no excuses, results. That's why Congress' rating is the lowest ever, they haven't actually DONE anything.
I stand corrected, he did drop bombs in 96 and 98 and missed him by a few hours after that. Wonder why nothing much happened after 1998? Oh yeah, Monica!Quote:
Originally Posted by japangreg
So, I'm back to my original premise, except for bombs being dropped in the Sudan and Afghanistan in 1998. Correction noted.
Quote:
Originally Posted by villain2
The facts seem to disagree with both of you.Quote:
Originally Posted by FlashLackey
Regarding Clinton's response to the '93 WTC attack:
Seems pretty effective to me... and he did it without needlessly spending half a trillion of our tax dollars, killing half a million innocent civilians, and turning world opinion against us in the process.Quote:
In October 1995, the militant Islamist and blind cleric Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, was sentenced to life imprisonment for masterminding the bombing. In 1998, Ramzi Yousef was convicted of "seditious conspiracy" to bomb the towers. In all, ten militant Islamist conspirators were convicted for their part in the bombing, each receiving prison sentences of a maximum of 240 years.