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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 03 Oct 17 2.01pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

Only two I can think of would have been Dick Chaney and Paul Wolfewitez (Possibly Karl Rove?)

But yes, the point that's important here is that the Neo-Conservative influence in the White House, was minimal, and the original GW Bush administration wasn't less focused on Neo-Conservative policy ideals than the Clinton Era was in terms of 'Empire Building'


Edited by jamiemartin721 (03 Oct 2017 1.32pm)

Wolfowitz wasn't in the Jrn white house before 9/11. He came in once the 'Bush Doctrine' became the focus.

Chaney wasn't a neo con until after 9/11. During the first gulf war he said:

'I would guess if we had gone in there, I would still have forces in Baghdad today. We'd be running the country. We would not have been able to get everybody out and bring everybody home....

And the question in my mind is how many additional American casualties is Saddam [Hussein] worth? And the answer is not that damned many. So, I think we got it right, both when we decided to expel him from Kuwait, but also when the president made the decision that we'd achieved our objectives and we were not going to go get bogged down in the problems of trying to take over and govern Iraq'

 


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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 03 Oct 17 2.17pm

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Wolfowitz wasn't in the Jrn white house before 9/11. He came in once the 'Bush Doctrine' became the focus.

Chaney wasn't a neo con until after 9/11. During the first gulf war he said:

'I would guess if we had gone in there, I would still have forces in Baghdad today. We'd be running the country. We would not have been able to get everybody out and bring everybody home....

And the question in my mind is how many additional American casualties is Saddam [Hussein] worth? And the answer is not that damned many. So, I think we got it right, both when we decided to expel him from Kuwait, but also when the president made the decision that we'd achieved our objectives and we were not going to go get bogged down in the problems of trying to take over and govern Iraq'

I'm not going to agree that the president 'achieved objectives' given there were no WMDs discovered - but yeah, I do agree that the neo-conservative influence pre-9/11 was minimal.

 


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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 03 Oct 17 2.23pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by Harry Beever

Do you declare war on a country to flush out a terrorist? Has it gone well or did I miss something? I've no doubt none of us will ever be privy to the exact reasons the decision was undertaken but I think it is a jump from targeting a terrorist organisation to invading a country. Just how I see it.

?

I and anyone else watching was very privy to the overtly obvious reason the decision to invade Afghanistan was undertaken. Two massive towers came down killing over 2700 people.

The Taliban were asked to give him up and they refused. They were going to defend him along with his band of followers.

They went after Bin Laden, and eventually they got him....being secretly defended by his organisation's partial patron pakistan.


Edited by Stirlingsays (03 Oct 2017 2.34pm)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 03 Oct 17 2.32pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

I'm not going to agree that the president 'achieved objectives' given there were no WMDs discovered - but yeah, I do agree that the neo-conservative influence pre-9/11 was minimal.

I think we essentially agree.

I believe that they did believe WMD was there...it may have been or may not have been. Stuff was never accounted for.....It was probably taken....Whatever the case they had Saddam long enough to interrogate him on it.

The whole was it worth it? Well, lets put it like this....I use to be more of a neo con than I am now....Though Russia has shown us what happens if you get too picky.

Difficult judgements.

Edited by Stirlingsays (03 Oct 2017 2.32pm)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 03 Oct 17 2.40pm

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

?

I and anyone else watching was very privy to the overtly obvious reason the decision to invade Afghanistan was undertaken. Two massive towers came down killing over 2700 people.

The Taliban were asked to give him up and they refused. They were going to defend him along with his band of followers.

They went after Bin Laden, and eventually they got him....being secretly defended by his organisation's partial patron pakistan.


Edited by Stirlingsays (03 Oct 2017 2.34pm)

Quite, whilst the Iraq war is questionable, the Afghanistan conflict really wasn't. The Taliban for whatever reasons weren't going to give up Al-Qaeda or Bin Laden, and in doing so, either were stupid, or miscalculated just how far the US were going to go after 9/11.

I don't think even Al-Qaeda thought they'd get anywhere near that kind of success - Although notably Al-Qaeda only put the finance up for 9/11 the planning and arrangement were done through an 'affiliate' to the Al-Qaeda brand.

Once that first tower came down full of US citizens, someone was going to have to explain why there was ten thousand US tanks parked on their citizens lawns - and any country that just backed down from that would be no country to belong to.

 


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View Harry Beever's Profile Harry Beever Flag Newbury 03 Oct 17 2.48pm Send a Private Message to Harry Beever Add Harry Beever as a friend

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

?

I and anyone else watching was very privy to the overtly obvious reason the decision to invade Afghanistan was undertaken. Two massive towers came down killing over 2700 people.

The Taliban were asked to give him up and they refused. They were going to defend him along with his band of followers.

They went after Bin Laden, and eventually they got him....being secretly defended by his organisation's partial surrogate pakistan.

I'm not defending the Taliban but I gathered they wanted to see evidence of his involvement in 9/11 before they handed him over. Not unreasonable. It wasn't a flat refusal and it wasn't Afghanistan that orchestrated the 9/11 attacks. Why didn't they go for Saudi Arabia? Isn't that where the plan was ultimately conceived? 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis. Do we even know for sure they knew where he was? As you mention, he was found in pakistan. I'm sure the public are only aware of a very small fraction of what goes on in the decision making process.

Qatar are vocal supporters of Hamas and Hezbollah. Why not take action against them? All I'm saying is, "Bin Laden's in Afghanistan, they're not giving him to us without us answering questions, let's invade Afghanistan" is too simplistic for me.

 

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View Ray in Houston's Profile Ray in Houston Flag Houston 03 Oct 17 2.55pm Send a Private Message to Ray in Houston Add Ray in Houston as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

Very reasonable stuff. Interesting the US does not have a national register of firearms database, as the NRA and republicans have blocked this at every turn - meaning that the only national register is a manual document, to which sales of firearms have to be collated from sales reports (and guns sales at Gunshows are both exempt from the notice period time and addition to this s**ty register system).

Of course its worth noting that the reason why so many guns are in criminal circulation, is because of the legal gun system (where in guns get stolen, 'stolen' or 'lost' without any real accountability) and sold onto the black market.

Hardly any criminal gangs are smuggling weapons into the US, but plenty are smuggling weapons out (Mexico gangs traffic drugs over the border, and firearms back).

But the US problem with Guns isn't about good guys and bad guys, as you're more likely to be killed with a legally owned firearm, or one that was legally purchased and 'stolen/lost'.

So the argument of 'only the bad guys will have guns' is only kind of true - the reason that the 'other guy' has a gun, is because the system is so absurdly easy to move guns from the legal to illegal markets that its led to a proliferation of firearms.

The figures get obfuscated somewhat, because often a gun used illegally, is illegally held (someone with a criminal record who bought it at a gun show, or purchased off the black market, but originally purchased legally, or simply used illegally but owned legally).

Its actually very rare, especially so in spree shootings, for the guns to be purchased illegally.


It looks some some in Congress are trying to jump on this and strike while the iron's hot, while dismissing the "now's not the time" obfuscation for what it is. They face a strong headwind, so we'll see how that goes. I think the sheer number of victims - and the insane number of guns (23 in the hotel, another 19 at home) - might be a factor here.

It's the poster child situation showing the need for a gun registry and ammunition purchase registry. The shooter appears to have bought all his guns - and thousands of rounds of ammunition - legally, passing a background check along the way. But, if he had to register all those guns, there would at least have been a red flag flown high over his head. Why would a single man need over 40 guns? Why does one individual need a couple o' thousand semi-automatic rounds?

Think about it: 1 idiot tried to mix chemicals on a plane to make explosives, and now no one can take usable toiletries onto a plane. 1 idiot tried to blow up his shoes, and now we have to kick off our shoes to get through airport security. 1 idiot set his underpants on fire, and now we have to be subjected to a naked body scan or let a security agent feel us up. No one died in any of those botched attacks.

Here, 1 idiot stockpiled enough guns and ammunition to start a small war, and then shot nearly 600 people with them. That's the equivalent of the passenger capacity of three 737s. I think we can all handle the small inconvenience of registering guns in an effort to make this much less likely to be repeated; like the liquids bomber, like the shoe bomber, like the underpants bomber.

Of course, it would be a good first step simply to designate this as what it is: terrorism.

 


We don't do possession; we do defense and attack. Everything else is just wa**ing with a football.

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View dannyh's Profile dannyh Flag wherever I lay my hat....... 03 Oct 17 2.55pm Send a Private Message to dannyh Add dannyh as a friend

Can I ask why we are debating the pro's and pitfalls of Neo Conservatism in the White house, and 9/11, when over 60 people where killed innocently because of a country's backward gun laws ?

 


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View npn's Profile npn Flag Crowborough 03 Oct 17 3.06pm Send a Private Message to npn Add npn as a friend

Originally posted by dannyh

Can I ask why we are debating the pro's and pitfalls of Neo Conservatism in the White house, and 9/11, when over 60 people where killed innocently because of a country's backward gun laws ?

In fact Danny, as someone 'in the know' I was going to ask - massive number of casualties (killed and injured, though I imagine some of the injuries were stampede), does that surprise you, given the range from the hotel to the concert? What's the true effective range of automatic weapons?

 

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View Ray in Houston's Profile Ray in Houston Flag Houston 03 Oct 17 3.07pm Send a Private Message to Ray in Houston Add Ray in Houston as a friend

Originally posted by dannyh

Can I ask why we are debating the pro's and pitfalls of Neo Conservatism in the White house, and 9/11, when over 60 people where killed innocently because of a country's backward gun laws ?

Because...

squirrel.jpg Attachment: squirrel.jpg (29.21Kb)

 


We don't do possession; we do defense and attack. Everything else is just wa**ing with a football.

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 03 Oct 17 3.08pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by Ray in Houston

Because...

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Ray in Houston's Profile Ray in Houston Flag Houston 03 Oct 17 3.15pm Send a Private Message to Ray in Houston Add Ray in Houston as a friend

Originally posted by npn

In fact Danny, as someone 'in the know' I was going to ask - massive number of casualties (killed and injured, though I imagine some of the injuries were stampede), does that surprise you, given the range from the hotel to the concert? What's the true effective range of automatic weapons?

Depending on the barrel and ammunition, an AR-15 has an effective range of 500 yards. However, that's if you are shooting at a small target. I'd imagine that hosing down a tightly packed crowd of 22,000 people can be done effectively from quite a way farther.

As to the stampede, Congress still is planning to hold a vote this week on relaxing restrictions on silencers. Imagine if the shooter was firing into that crowd, but no one could hear the muzzle report? How many more people would've been hit/killed just because they were unaware that they were the fish in Paddock's giant barrel?

 


We don't do possession; we do defense and attack. Everything else is just wa**ing with a football.

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