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And I thought I had seen it all...
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It doesn't paint a picture of mutual understanding and bipartisanship, that's for sure...
When Obama said to the GOP, "Republicans got to stop just hating all the time", he lost me, and he's never going to get me to stop despising him. He reaps what he sows, Spence. I don't like the GOP being as bratty as he is, we should rise above that. |
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So . . . Spence . . . what do you think Iran wants? After all, it has never wanted to build nuclear weapons. And doesn't now. It only wants peaceful use of nuclear power. Do you think, maybe, Iran is angling for some U.S. investment. A sort of Solyndra deal . . . say, maybe, half a bill to float them through the finish of their strictly peaceful nuclear program? And why do we care? What's it to us if they get the bomb? After all, they are a civilized country, whose people are like us. And, even though it's an Islamic State, it is not that nasty radical Al Qaida or ISIS brand, but the more moderate, majority Islam that we shouldn't be discriminating against and unjustly singling out like some reprobate that needs electric tethers to monitor their every move. And Netanyahu, the real problem (along with his running dog Republican Congress), claiming impending doom is typical right wing BS. The Republicans and Netanyahu should disappear. They just keep effing up the negotiations. Like Bush did ten years ago. We shouldn't even have to be doing this stuff now. And anyway, if we can trust the Iranians later to abide by some negotiated agreement, shouldn't we trust their word now that they are not, nor are they interested in, manufacturing nuclear weapons. Wouldn't it be a gesture of good will and trust to quit dogging them about there intentions, and let them do what they, as a sovereign nation, have a right to do. Maybe, that is what we're offering them, but ten years down the road. For now, we can pretend to have reached an agreement in order to satisfy those fear mongering right wingers that we have deterred nuclear holocaust . But we know, wink and nod, that the right-winger "fear" is bigoted ignorance, so just hang on a few more years, and by then you will have your peaceful nuclear program, and will be allowed to run it as you wish. |
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Actually, Congress has acted far more within Constitutional limits with these than Obama did with his. And he has damaged Congress's rightful power, but these two tweaks by Congress really haven't put a dent in Presidential power. So he is hardly sowing what he reaped, just a little bit. |
Treason
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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not unique or original....guess they are just "taking a more assertive role regarding a president who is a deceiver" 4/4/2007 DAMASCUS, Syria — U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi met Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Wednesday for talks criticized by the White House as undermining American efforts to isolate the hard-line Arab country. Pelosi’s visit to Syria was the latest challenge to the White House by congressional Democrats, who are taking a more assertive role in influencing policy in the Middle East and the Iraq war. http://www.nbcnews.com/id/17920536/n.../#.VP61vfnF86w about 10 years ago. Jim McDermott(D-Mich.) and two other anti-war liberal congressmen traveled to Iraq in September 2002 as the Bush administration tried to persuade Congress to authorize military action against Saddam Hussein. Joining McDermott were Rep. David Bonior (D-Mich.) and Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.). On September 29, 2002, the Iraqi government eagerly positioned McDermott and Bonior for an interview with ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos. Right on cue, McDermott mouthed the Iraqi Baathist Party line, declaring that President George W. Bush “will lie to the American people in order to get us into war.” When an incredulous Stephanopoulos pushed McDermott for clarification, asking if he stood by his claim that the president would intentionally lie to drag the nation into war, the congressman held firm: “I think the president would mislead the American people.” The Seattle congressman deduced that Bush and the administration would “give out misinformation … information that is not provable.” When Stephanopoulos asked for evidence of Bush’s lying, McDermott didn’t proffer any, simply reaffirming his conviction that the president was a deceiver. Stephanopoulos seemed taken aback when McDermott suspended the same suspicion toward his endearing Iraqi hosts. Whereas Bush operated on duplicity, McDermott said of Saddam and his regime: “I think you have to take the Iraqis on their face value.” of course there was Ted Kennedy and Russia....Pelosi was asked/warned by every living Secretary of State not to go to Syria and it was discovered that Mc Dermott & Co.'s little trist was financed by the Hussein Regime if you want to have a little fun GOOGLE "Syria Deadline" and "IRAN Deadline" :chatter .................... "On that last point, it has become the approach of transnational progressives to circumvent the Constitution’s treaty requirements. Presidents sign bilateral or multilateral international agreements that often contain statist and counter-constitutional provisions that no president (except maybe Obama) would dare propose as legislation. On the basis of all this, the international lawyers and organizations such as the United Nations, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and the European Union — all of which have an interest in being able to trump the U.S. Constitution’s protections of individual liberty and American sovereignty — begin to argue that the unratified agreement has transmogrified into “customary international law”; thus, the argument goes, lest it be considered an international outlaw, the United States must abide by the terms of the agreement even if the Senate has not ratified it. This hocus-pocus works, at least as a practical matter, because the Senate fails to defend its institutional turf by speaking up and conveying dissent in a formal way. Senators seem to think they need do no more than resist approving international agreements. But as we’re seeing with Obama’s Iran negotiations, they are sometimes not even asked to approve. In any event, it is not sufficient to refrain from saying “yes”; the Senate needs to take unambiguous action by saying “no.”" http://www.nationalreview.com/node/415104/print |
The Pelosi/Assad meeting was quite a bit different. She was there with a group of Congressional reps including a Republican to promote reform. There were other Republican reps meeting in Syria at the same time.
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And as for the strange accusations that the letter to Iran is treason, how is it treason to explain the truth, openly without deceit, how our system works. Or as it is supposed to work? |
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Big difference. |
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The Zakaria piece you so adored makes a great point. Does Iran have more to gain by having some capability than actually having a bomb and starting a new arms race? If they really wanted a bomb couldn't they have had one years ago? According to Bibi they've been on the cusp for decades. |
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This is pretty interesting. http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/...ighten-authors |
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I don't know if they could have had the bomb years ago. And the world has changed dramatically in some major respects in the last decade or two. And seems to change more rapidly as time goes on. Are we going to rely on our ability to monitor Iran's nuclear progress? Then do we rely on that ability which was supposedly monitoring it all along, and that monitoring has been saying that Iran has been creeping toward nuclear weapons ability to the point where, as Zakaria says, it is only months away? I don't know if Iran could have had the bomb years ago. There were stronger forces against it back then. But I believe they could have had a peaceful nuclear program years ago--very easily by continuing the Shah's program. What are we supposed to think Iran has to gain from getting a bomb? Wouldn't we have to think like the Iranian leaders in order to have an idea of what they believe they will gain from getting it? What were they thinking when they replaced the West friendly Shah with their theocratic regime. And what do they profess are the aims of their theocracy? We refuse to accept what they actually say their world view is and what they say about us, what their aims are vis-a-vis the West. We want to rationalize their desires into what is desirable in ours. Iran, even more than being on the cusp of getting the bomb, is only a moment away from joining powerful anti-Western alliances. The only reason they are not at this moment a contractual partner in those alliances is because of U.N. sanctions. Once those sanctions are lifted (as would happen when an agreement is reached) they will very quickly become official members of SOC and probably BRIC. And the most pacifistic desire of those alliances is merely to neutralize the power and influence of the U.S and what they consider its lackeys. But their darkest desire may be far more than a neutralization, maybe closer to a replacement. A destruction of Western civilization to be replaced by what they refer to as a Eurasian civilization. Let us just ignore all that. Iran and everybody else in the world, is basically like us. Go along to get along. Social justice, equality, everybody pursuing their individual dreams. Respect for the integrity of other nations. Hey, if Obama and Iran get together on a deal, the mullahs will recognize Israel's right to exist, correct? Is it conceivable, in your mind Spence, that what Iran wants to gain is not only nuclear weapons but a stronger more secure face to the West, whom it considers an enemy to its values, and the power, through military might and powerful alliances to face down the West, even defeat it? No, Zakaria's piece doesn't make a good point. |
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"governments represent the entirety of their respective states, are responsible for the conduct of foreign affairs, are required to fulfill the obligations they undertake with other states and may not invoke their internal law as justification for failure to perform their international obligations." He doesn't seem to recognize that the President alone is not U.S. government. That Congress is a major part of that government, and is a responsible party in performing international obligations. The article states also that "Zarif also noted that many previous international agreements the U.S. has been a party to have been 'mere executive agreements,' and not full treaties that received Senate ratification." If the Senate doesn't ratify a treaty, it can stand, so long as they don't later object, as an international "agreement." But not as indisputable "law." The first notable international "executive agreement" that was later made law, was Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase. Even though he made the agreement with France without first getting senate ratification, the Senate afterward did ratify it. If it had officially decided not to ratify it, to strike it down, the deal would have been nullified. Nor do those type of agreements being made somehow rewrite the Constitution thereby nullifying Congresses role in ratifying treaties. And, by the way, are we supposed to think that if the Iranian theocrats decide they don't like some treaty their country had signed on to that they wouldn't junk it? |
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Buck, he even went to prep school! Quote:
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Re the Utah firing squad thing . . . sometimes, when the new-fangled doesn't cut it, we have to go back to basics. Speaking of cutting and going back-- you know even bullets sometimes misfire. A quick and painless way would be the guillotine. Or, if we really wanted to scare the bejesus out of the bad guys, instead of the guillotine, we could use the ISIS method, including the videos. |
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Sanctions haven't worked up to now, and I thought that Obama said sanctions didn't work. And that unbroken circle of wanting sanctions removed if nuclear enrichment is stopped, but enrichment being necessary as a motive to remove sanctions has no logical end. To break the circle, one or the other has to unilaterally stop. Either the sanctions must unconditionally end, or the enrichment must unconditionally end. Making one dependent on the other logically results in the endless circle. So then would enforcement be Military? Now THAT would be interesting. Especially since Russia and China are part of the P5. And the +1, Germany, really doesn't, since the Hitler thing, like the mantle of aggressor. |
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/200...rack-obama-usa Who is he talking to? Voices, as Sea Dangles might say, in his own head? Voices that agree with him and see the world as he does? Is he talking to the common people in Iran who he thinks surely must view the world as he does? Where was he during the hope of the "other" Green Movement that Spence regrets was not successful? He spoke encouraging words but did nothing else to support their movement to overthrow the mullahs and gain democracy. Yet the Iranian people see that he takes action to sabotage Netanyahu's re-election. And now threatens to throw Israel's independence to the dogs in the U.N. He interferes in Libya, in Syria, in Egypt, and those all become a mess. He abandon's the democracy gained in Iraq, and it becomes a mess again and is increasingly falling into the clutches of the very oppressive regime that the Iranian people want to be free of. What do the common people see of Obama exercising his words and views in his own country? Contrary to the words of their own Green Path leader Mousani "you can't follow some parts of the [Iranian] Constitution and throw the rest into a bin" Obama does exactly that here. And acting more and more like a dictator rather than a servant of the people. They see him abandoning his democratic allies in their neck of the woods, cozying up to the dictators, making rationalizations about the Islamic nature of ISIS, so how are they supposed to view his patronizing and rather empty message of encouragement to them? Is he speaking to Khamenei and the mullahs? Really? Do they see their celebration as he does? He says: "Indeed, you will be celebrating your New Year in much the same way that we Americans mark our holidays – by gathering with friends and family, exchanging gifts and stories, and looking to the future with a renewed sense of hope. Within these celebrations lies the promise of a new day, the promise of opportunity for our children, security for our families, progress for our communities, and peace between nations. Those are shared hopes, those are common dreams." Does he really believe those are dreams common between him and the mullahs? That the ultimate leader, Khamenei, shares those dreams in common with him? Is their any possibility, in his mind, that they not only view the world and their place in it differently than he does? Haven't they SAID so? But never mind what they say. What HE says is the real reality. As he is demonstrating with Israel and what Netanyahu said to get elected. He is only going to believe his version of what Netanyahu said re the so-called two state solution. Even though Netanyahu says that he would consider it with certain reservations--EXACTLY THE SAME RESERVATIONS that he and Israel had all along. But no, only what Obama understands, sees, believes is, in his own self-centered mind, the truth of the matter. And he cannot, or will not, recognize that his view, what he sees to be the "common dreams," would actually be the demise of Khamenei and mullah rule of Iran. And, therefor, that any "negotiation" which would threaten that rule, and deny its desired power and expansion throughout the Middle East, would not be accepted by the Iranian theocrats. |
Are you debating yourself?
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Certainly the US and Iranian leadership differ on many values, but I think we've become mistakenly tuned to this idea that Iran's policy is driven by an irrational group of clerics and as such any effort to engage will only legitimize irrationality. Sure, Iran wants to be stronger but I don't believe they want to defeat the West. Hell, remember just after 9/11 they were actively engaged in helping the US target the Taliban as it was a shared interest. This attitude will certainly just make things worse. Like it or not Iran is and will always be a significant component stability or chaos in the Middle East. Disengagement over the past 30 years doesn't seem to have helped and in fact has likely made things worse. |
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There you have it... From the mouth of President Ahmadinejad... ""Anyone who loves freedom and justice must strive for the annihilation of the Zionist regime in order to pave the way for world justice and freedom.” " "Ahmadinejad, who has called the Holocaust a myth, has previously called for Israel's annihilation, in a 2005 speech in which he used a Persian phrase that translates literally as "wiped off the page of time." http://www.jpost.com/Iranian-Threat/...ihilate-Israel He also called the 9/11 attacks "a "big lie intended to serve as a pretext for fighting terrorism and setting the grounds for sending troops to Afghanistan," http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/...tan/index.html And the Iranian mullahs support the notion of stoning women to death, and executing homosexuals. Nope, according to Spence, there is nothing the least bit irrational going on in Iran. No reason to be concerned if they get a nuke. So Obama was right to sit on his hands over the whole thing, and therefore deserves a second Nobel Peace Prize. |
Petty fear mongering. Our politicians do it as well. They just have a different style.
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And what is this notion of disengagement over the past 30 years? How long have negotiations been going on? And sanctions, and various political machinations for and against all sides are forms of engagement. Maybe you mean the really and truly right kind of negotiations? And, of course, for you those negotiations should continue to discount fundamental differences in world view between the Iranian theocrats and the western secularists. The latter, of course, have the "correct" view. And the Iranians, of course, really know that, they're just shamming us into thinking they're irrational so they can scare us into lifting sanctions. Yeah, that'll work. |
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Funny how Spence can excuse the Iranians for petty fear mongering, but he thinks Netanyahu's politicking was not excusable and needed the wiser older brother to correct him. Maybe his style was just tooooo different. |
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"Our politicians do it as well" Ah, now you are guilty of solipsism, the belief that the world is like me. You assume that because our leaders bluff and fear monger, that the Iranians must be doing the same, you don't think they could possibly be capable of what they threaten. Too bad for the Nazis that you weren't US President in the 1940's. "Hitler isn't really interested in creating an Ayrian race, he's just fear-mongering, no one could be that irrational. The Japanese aren't really raping and cannibalizing their way across China, they're just bluffing". |
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