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Jackbass 09-13-2015 07:22 PM

Obama
 
Will win his second Nobel Peace Prize. What a #^&#^&#^&#^&ing joke

spence 09-13-2015 07:34 PM

Ummmmm....

The Dad Fisherman 09-13-2015 07:45 PM

Must be a slow year in the Peace Department.

Nebe 09-13-2015 07:49 PM

its Bush's fault.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Fly Rod 09-13-2015 08:09 PM

I thougt he was winning the.... "Gold Flying Fickle Finger of Fate award ."....how many remember that?.........:)

justplugit 09-13-2015 09:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1081526)
its Bush's fault.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

LOL Nebe, I never get tired of that post of yours. :)

Raider Ronnie 09-14-2015 05:12 AM

Who cares.
Less than 500 days till we are rid of the pos
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

PaulS 09-14-2015 06:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raider Ronnie (Post 1081539)
Who cares.
Less than 500 days till we are rid of the pos
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Classy

spence 09-14-2015 09:03 AM

I actually read that they're considering changing the name to the Obama Peace Prize and are going to give Barak the first one.

Nebe 09-14-2015 09:38 AM

As opposed to the Chenny death prize
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

JohnR 09-14-2015 11:10 AM

By any stretch the last 6.5 years have not been better than the previous 8 on the global stage.

Difference between a D- and an E+ between Bush and Obama. Sucks any way you slice it but we have gotten worse with these guys at the helm.

Nebe 09-14-2015 11:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1081565)
By any stretch the last 6.5 years have not been better than the previous 8 on the global stage.

Difference between a D- and an E+ between Bush and Obama. Sucks any way you slice it but we have gotten worse with these guys at the helm.

Are you talking about "peace" ?
You smoking crack today john?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

spence 09-14-2015 12:30 PM

I can't believe nobody has remarked the peace prize story from the OP is fake.

Nebe 09-14-2015 12:57 PM

Where's the link?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

The Dad Fisherman 09-14-2015 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fly Rod (Post 1081527)
I thougt he was winning the.... "Gold Flying Fickle Finger of Fate award ."....how many remember that?.........:)

I Do.....ugh....I'm officially old.

Laugh In
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

JohnR 09-15-2015 10:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1081570)
Are you talking about "peace" ?
You smoking crack today john?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Peace? Where? We are closer to real war today then any time since the 1980s.

The wars of the last 30 years? Puhleaze. Those are mere skirmishes, dust ups, and bad times. No disrespect whatsoever to those that have done their duty and fought in some of the most challenging times since Vietnam.

No, today, we are closer to a massive global war at any time since the 1980s, except things are less table than in the 1980s, and in many ways reminiscent in the posturing & turmoil of the 1910s and 1930s.

spence 09-15-2015 11:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1081652)
Peace? Where? We are closer to real war today then any time since the 1980s.

But how much of this is really mega-trends shifting geopolitics rather than US policy?

A huge problem here is we started a war without a game plan for when the big gears started to turn.

Nebe 09-15-2015 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1081652)
Peace? Where? We are closer to real war today then any time since the 1980s.

The wars of the last 30 years? Puhleaze. Those are mere skirmishes, dust ups, and bad times. No disrespect whatsoever to those that have done their duty and fought in some of the most challenging times since Vietnam.

No, today, we are closer to a massive global war at any time since the 1980s, except things are less table than in the 1980s, and in many ways reminiscent in the posturing & turmoil of the 1910s and 1930s.

It's Bush's fault
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

justplugit 09-15-2015 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JohnR (Post 1081565)
By any stretch the last 6.5 years have not been better than the previous 8 on the global stage.

Global and Domestic issues, the economy, divisions among us, transparency,trust in our leaders.
Best question ever for the middle class, " are you better off now than you were
6.5 years ago in all these issues?

JohnR 09-15-2015 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by spence (Post 1081653)
But how much of this is really mega-trends shifting geopolitics rather than US policy?

A huge problem here is we started a war without a game plan for when the big gears started to turn.

You silly goose. The US, both Dem and Rep parties, responsibly worked together for decades to balance and contain the global brushfires. The reason there were no Mega-Trends is that they were mostly held in check. The biggest destabilizer from the 40s to the 80s, was who? Your socialist workers paradise comrades. Who kept them (mostly) in check? More sensible people from the USA. Yes it was fustercluck but was generally a workable fustercluck.

The last 20 (25?) years have been awful - toss Jimmah Carters time in there too.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1081654)
It's Bush's fault
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Carter, Clinton, Bush, and Obama wraps it up in a bow.

Quote:

Originally Posted by justplugit (Post 1081663)
Global and Domestic issues, the economy, divisions among us, transparency,trust in our leaders.
Best question ever for the middle class, " are you better off now than you were
6.5 years ago in all these issues?

I am better off financially but that be about it. The world and the USA is less stable now than it was a decade ago.

The Dad Fisherman 09-16-2015 05:44 AM

Well.....at least Race Relations are steadily improving under him, maybe that's why he's getting it :rolleyes:

Raven 09-16-2015 06:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raider Ronnie (Post 1081539)
Who cares.
Less than 500 days till we are rid of the pos
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

wishing we had a countdown clock

then there should be a tremendous celebration

RIROCKHOUND 09-16-2015 07:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raven (Post 1081710)
wishing we had a countdown clock

then there should be a tremendous celebration

So who does the ganja infused farmer support?

Sea Dangles 09-16-2015 03:15 PM

That is like asking who the tree hugging teacher supports
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

RIROCKHOUND 09-16-2015 07:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sea Dangles (Post 1081760)
That is like asking who the tree hugging teacher supports
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Directed at me?

Biden if he runs or Webb if he ever gets traction. Biden was my initial choice in the pre 2008 primaries

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PaulS (Post 1081541)
Classy

Sorry, when Obama goes on TV and says "Republicans gotta stop just hatin' all the time", then he forfeits his right to any respect or courtesy from the other side. You reap what you sow, Paul.

Sea Dangles 09-17-2015 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1081785)
Directed at me?

Biden if he runs or Webb if he ever gets traction. Biden was my initial choice in the pre 2008 primaries

Ah,Biden
Isn't he the one who said"Stand up Chuck,let em see ya"?

This was directed towards Chuck Graham. A state senator in a wheelchair.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by spence (Post 1081653)
But how much of this is really mega-trends shifting geopolitics rather than US policy?

A huge problem here is we started a war without a game plan for when the big gears started to turn.

Bush eventually (too late, but better than never) did have a plan. It was called The Surge. It was an astonishing, spectacular, success. Listen to Obama's own remarks about the Iraq he inherited.

So your synopsis is wrong. The problem is that Obama demolished that plan by pulling out, and by pulling out of Libya and of not doing anything in Syria.

RIROCKHOUND 09-17-2015 01:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081810)
So your synopsis is wrong. The problem is that Obama demolished that plan by pulling out, and by pulling out of Libya and of not doing anything in Syria.

The Surge undoubtedly worked in the short-term. Do you feel the military could have sustained that level of effort there, and for how long? Would that make Iraq any more stable? Add to that sending ground-forces en masse to Libya and Syria? You certainly had your Neo-Con Wheaties this morning!

spence 09-17-2015 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081810)
Bush eventually (too late, but better than never) did have a plan. It was called The Surge. It was an astonishing, spectacular, success. Listen to Obama's own remarks about the Iraq he inherited.

So your synopsis is wrong. The problem is that Obama demolished that plan by pulling out, and by pulling out of Libya and of not doing anything in Syria.

I mean strategically they had no plan beyond removing Saddam. Not for Iraq or for the region.

The Surge was a tactic, it was a response to the situation at a point in time.

PaulS 09-17-2015 02:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081795)
Sorry, when Obama goes on TV and says "Republicans gotta stop just hatin' all the time", then he forfeits his right to any respect or courtesy from the other side. You reap what you sow, Paul.

So that is the same as calling someone a POS?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 02:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PaulS (Post 1081823)
So that is the same as calling someone a POS?
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

Obama called half the country, everyone who voted for the other guy, a bunch of hatemongers. Paul, at the State of the Union, he attacked the Supreme Court, they were sitting right in front of him, and they have no chance to respond. What should I call him? POS is being cordial.

Obama is almost always wrong, and somehow, never in doubt. Given the endless list of failures and disasters in his wake, where in God's name does the arrogance come from?

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 02:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1081818)
The Surge undoubtedly worked in the short-term. Do you feel the military could have sustained that level of effort there, and for how long? Would that make Iraq any more stable? Add to that sending ground-forces en masse to Libya and Syria? You certainly had your Neo-Con Wheaties this morning!

"The Surge undoubtedly worked in the short-term"

It worked until Obama fu**ed it all up by withdrawing. Yes or no?

"Do you feel the military could have sustained that level of effort there, and for how long?"

Yes. You leave a residual force to enforce stability until the Iraqia are sufficiently able to take care of themselves. What you don't do, is tell the enemy, especially this enemy, exactly when you are planning on leaving.

"Would that make Iraq any more stable? "

Why, specifically, would you doubt that? It was stable until we withdrew. So why would you presume that the stability would not have lasted if we were still there? Based on what? The empirical evidence suggests that as long as we were there, things were stable.

"Add to that sending ground-forces en masse to Libya and Syria?"

If the military isn't equipped to deal with the current state of the world, whose fault is that? I'd also disagree that we were in Libya and Syria "en masse".

"You certainly had your Neo-Con Wheaties this morning"

What I have this morning, is common sense and the ability to process what's going on right in front of my face. If liberals need special dietary supplements to be able to pull that off, maybe that says more about your side than it says about my side. The fact that I wish we had prevented the rise of ISIS when it was within our grasp, makes me a neocon? In other words, you conclude it's a character flaw to regret the loss of the thousands of victims of ISIS. Very compassionate of you.

PaulS 09-17-2015 05:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081824)
Obama called half the country, everyone who voted for the other guy, a bunch of hatemongers. Paul, at the State of the Union, he attacked the Supreme Court, they were sitting right in front of him, and they have no chance to respond. What should I call him? POS is being cordial.

Obama is almost always wrong, and somehow, never in doubt. Given the endless list of failures and disasters in his wake, where in God's name does the arrogance come from?

This was after the tea baggers started with Muslim, Kenyan crap. As I've said before you sound miserable. I'm thankful my parents never let me develop the hate you have to consider someone a POS bc of their politics.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

RIROCKHOUND 09-17-2015 07:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081825)
"The Surge undoubtedly worked in the short-term"

It worked until Obama fu**ed it all up by withdrawing. Yes or no?

"Do you feel the military could have sustained that level of effort there, and for how long?"

Yes. You leave a residual force to enforce stability until the Iraqia are sufficiently able to take care of themselves. What you don't do, is tell the enemy, especially this enemy, exactly when you are planning on leaving.

So, there is a contradiction here, as I see it, so the "the surge was working until Obama '#^&#^&#^&#^&ed it up" yet we just needed to leave a residual force? How much residual force? 10,000? 30,000? 100,000? For how long? Another 10 years? The surge was a short-term offensive, not a long-term plan.

This summed it up well for me, the surge bought us time, but I think it ultimately kicked the can down the road.

https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/...taL/story.html

I forget, who set the end date, and remind me, the Iraqi government really begged us to stay, right?

I have been beyond clear here over the years; post 9/11; go into Afghanistan. That turned into a boondoggle once mission creep took over, but Iraq, in my opinion was a mistake from the beginning


Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081825)
"Would that make Iraq any more stable? "

Why, specifically, would you doubt that? It was stable until we withdrew. So why would you presume that the stability would not have lasted if we were still there? Based on what? The empirical evidence suggests that as long as we were there, things were stable.

I was rushing and not clear. Post-whatever time you want to leave your residual force there (lets say 10 years), would Iraq ultimately be more stable 10 years later? I don't believe so. As the article above summarizes and I agree, if the Iraqi's aren't willing to fight, we shouldn't be fighting for them

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081825)
"Add to that sending ground-forces en masse to Libya and Syria?"

If the military isn't equipped to deal with the current state of the world, whose fault is that?

So, how much more money and troops do we need? Where does the money come from? Military industrial complex spending for debt/deficient control?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081825)
I'd also disagree that we were in Libya and Syria "en masse".

I also wasn't clear here either, as I am aware we did not go fully on the ground in either place. In your scenario, we'd be occupying Iraq with a residual force, PLUS going into Syria and Libya; Syria especially I see being on equal scale with Iraq if we were to put boots on the ground. I don't think it is in America's best interest to go into either place.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081825)
"You certainly had your Neo-Con Wheaties this morning"

What I have this morning, is common sense and the ability to process what's going on right in front of my face. If liberals need special dietary supplements to be able to pull that off, maybe that says more about your side than it says about my side. The fact that I wish we had prevented the rise of ISIS when it was within our grasp, makes me a neocon? In other words, you conclude it's a character flaw to regret the loss of the thousands of victims of ISIS. Very compassionate of you.

This is why you end up on my ignore list at times, when you turn into an off the rails internet A-hole. I made a pretty innocuous comment (I thought) based on the face that McCain, Lindsey Graham or another GOP Hawk could have written this post, and you take it to be a 'character flaw' insult and that I am not compassionate to the lives being lost and the unbelievable crisis currently unfolding. Am I willing to trade thousands of young American lives in Iraq, Libya and Syria? Nope. Not a chance. Especially not without global support with proportional troops and costs from allies.

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 08:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PaulS (Post 1081839)
This was after the tea baggers started with Muslim, Kenyan crap. As I've said before you sound miserable. I'm thankful my parents never let me develop the hate you have to consider someone a POS bc of their politics.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device

You are desperately reaching. If Obama had made that comment about the kooks who think he wasn't born here, fine. That's not what he said, Read the quote. He said all Republicans, all they do, is hate all the time. And that thing with attacking the Supreme Court at the SOTU. He's the hatemonger, clearly. But that's OK, because he's liberal and black.

RIROCKHOUND 09-17-2015 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081795)
Sorry, when Obama goes on TV and says "Republicans gotta stop just hatin' all the time", then he forfeits his right to any respect or courtesy from the other side. You reap what you sow, Paul.

This quote? You get personally insulted by the quote?

From Urban dictionary - Hatin - "Sayin bad things about/puttin someone down because they have something that you want"

But you can take it to mean hate-mongering if you want

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 08:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1081850)
So, there is a contradiction here, as I see it, so the "the surge was working until Obama '#^&#^&#^&#^&ed it up" yet we just needed to leave a residual force? How much residual force? 10,000? 30,000? 100,000? For how long? Another 10 years? The surge was a short-term offensive, not a long-term plan.

This summed it up well for me, the surge bought us time, but I think it ultimately kicked the can down the road.

https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/...taL/story.html

I forget, who set the end date, and remind me, the Iraqi government really begged us to stay, right?

I have been beyond clear here over the years; post 9/11; go into Afghanistan. That turned into a boondoggle once mission creep took over, but Iraq, in my opinion was a mistake from the beginning




I was rushing and not clear. Post-whatever time you want to leave your residual force there (lets say 10 years), would Iraq ultimately be more stable 10 years later? I don't believe so. As the article above summarizes and I agree, if the Iraqi's aren't willing to fight, we shouldn't be fighting for them



So, how much more money and troops do we need? Where does the money come from? Military industrial complex spending for debt/deficient control?



I also wasn't clear here either, as I am aware we did not go fully on the ground in either place. In your scenario, we'd be occupying Iraq with a residual force, PLUS going into Syria and Libya; Syria especially I see being on equal scale with Iraq if we were to put boots on the ground. I don't think it is in America's best interest to go into either place.



This is why you end up on my ignore list at times, when you turn into an off the rails internet A-hole. I made a pretty innocuous comment (I thought) based on the face that McCain, Lindsey Graham or another GOP Hawk could have written this post, and you take it to be a 'character flaw' insult and that I am not compassionate to the lives being lost and the unbelievable crisis currently unfolding. Am I willing to trade thousands of young American lives in Iraq, Libya and Syria? Nope. Not a chance. Especially not without global support with proportional troops and costs from allies.

There's no contradiction. The presence of US troops was stabilizing. Removing them too soon, was destructive. If you deny that, then presumably if Obama said that 2+2=7, you'd believe him.

"I think it ultimately kicked the can down the road. "

Al Queda in Iraq packed up and left, until we left. Then they came back, as ISIS.

"who set the end date, and remind me, the Iraqi government really begged us to stay, right?"

Bush made it clear that the end date should have been extended with a SOF agreement, right? Or wrong? Who made the decision to leave? Bush or Obama?

"but Iraq, in my opinion was a mistake from the beginning"

Maybe. But when your hero took over, it was stable, thanks to the Surge. He blew it. That's not really up for debate by anyone who isn't completely blinded by love for the man.

"Post-whatever time you want to leave your residual force there (lets say 10 years), would Iraq ultimately be more stable 10 years later?"

Why wouldn't it have stayed as stable as it was, thanks to the surge, if we left troops there? What do you base that presumption on? What evidence is there, that if the troops stayed, the stability would have crumbled? None. There is evidence that removing troops, was a disaster. Sorry if you don't like those facts.

RIROCKHOUND 09-17-2015 08:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1081866)
There's no contradiction. The presence of US troops was stabilizing. Removing them too soon, was destructive. If you deny that, then presumably if Obama said that 2+2=7, you'd believe him.

"I think it ultimately kicked the can down the road. "

Al Queda in Iraq packed up and left, until we left. Then they came back, as ISIS.

"who set the end date, and remind me, the Iraqi government really begged us to stay, right?"

Bush made it clear that the end date should have been extended with a SOF agreement, right? Or wrong? Who made the decision to leave? Bush or Obama?

"but Iraq, in my opinion was a mistake from the beginning"

Maybe. But when your hero took over, it was stable, thanks to the Surge. He blew it. That's not really up for debate by anyone who isn't completely blinded by love for the man.

"Post-whatever time you want to leave your residual force there (lets say 10 years), would Iraq ultimately be more stable 10 years later?"

Why wouldn't it have stayed as stable as it was, thanks to the surge, if we left troops there? What do you base that presumption on? What evidence is there, that if the troops stayed, the stability would have crumbled? None. There is evidence that removing troops, was a disaster. Sorry if you don't like those facts.

I'm tired and not turning the computer back on (too slow on tablet). The last paragraph... troops in Iraq for how long? Forever? Plus Libya and Syria. No thanks.

Jim in CT 09-17-2015 08:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RIROCKHOUND (Post 1081865)
This quote? You get personally insulted by the quote?

From Urban dictionary - Hatin - "Sayin bad things about/puttin someone down because they have something that you want"

But you can take it to mean hate-mongering if you want

Wow. I mean, wow. When Obama says that all of us hate, all the time, he wasn't really being derogatory, he was using some ebonics, urban definition of the word, not the definition that everyone in the sane world uses.

Bryan, would your head explode if you admitted he is flawed?

How about when he bashed the Supreme Court at the SOTU? Was he really being complimentary, but it went over my head because I didn't go to Hahvahd?

When he said the Cambridge police acted stupidly, despite admitting that he had no idea what happened, was actually saying they were brilliant, if the ghetto definition of "stupidly" is "acting with great competence"?

Anything to make him appear correct...


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