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Globalization

(First of two parts). Globalism is one of those notions much kicked around and little understood, shrouded in hysteria and knee-jerk cant. People with a host of grievances against technology, multinational corporations and capitalist democracies have made globalism a dirty word, at the same time that many social scientists and economists argue that the equitable spread of technology and a free-market economy is the planet's best hope. Either way, September 11 makes it clear that globalization - pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance - is one of the most important issues in our lifetimes.

In fact, as British political scientist Anthony Giddens writes in his eerily prescient book Runaway World: How Globalism is Reshaping Our Lives, the conflict now underway between the United States and some extremist fundamentalists was inevitable. Cosmopolitans welcome technology and cultural diversity, while fundamentalists find it disturbing and dangerous.

In a globalizing world -- one of its cornerstones being the Net -- technology, information, culture, money, business and imagery are routinely transmitted across the world. Boundaries mean different things now, including the inescapable fact that they are highly porous. This enrages political, social and religious fundamentalists, as we are hurriedly learning. They turn to religion, ethnic identity and nationalism to build "purer" traditions -- and a few turn to violence.

So despite the fact that there's no consensus on exactly what globalism is (my dictionary defines it as the process by which social institutions become adopted on a worldwide scale), the questions torment us: is globalism a force to ease poverty and inequality, by bringing higher standards of living and new technologies to poor and distant regions? Or merely an unprecedented vehicle for promoting the greed, conformity, environmental destruction and profit-at-all-cost ethos of multinational corporations? Perhaps it's both.

Giddens' predictions are coming true before our eyes. The conflict is here, and we seem to be unwilling and unknowing combatants. We, along with our leaders, are astonished at just how much we seem to be hated out there. We see our popular and technological culture despised in much of the world. Fundamentalist extremists have declared a holy war against it, one that may continue for years with bloody and uncertain consequences.

It's not an oversimplification to say that technology is the prime battleground. Technologies from movie cameras to TV sets to the Net are the means by which culture and wealth travel from one part of the world to the other. Fundamentalists have declared war on technology as much as on anything. And from anthrax to passenger jets as missiles, they've shown a sophisticated grasp of how technology can be used to devastating effect against its creators, who revel in making it but not thinking much about it.

In this conflict what Giddens calls "the cosmopolitan approach" is the choice of the people who are reading this column and working in the tech universe. We value free speech, religious freedom, scientific exploration, open communications, cultural choice and diversity. Such tolerance is closely conected to democracy.

Yet democracy and fundamentalism are both spreading world-wide, two seemingly irreconcilable ideologies colliding head-on. As Giddens points out, globalism creates a paradox: democratic cultures are its most enthusiastic proponents, yet globalism doesn't seem to promote democracy so much as corporate profits and practices. In fact, you could argue that globalism seems to expose the limits of democratic structures: Can governments preserve the environment, keep work secure and equitable, ensure fair wages, control capitalism, distribute new technologies equitably, respect diverse cultural values, contain greed and restrict the imagery that Americans love but that frightens and offends large segments of the world population?

In Part Two: Have multinationals hijacked globalism? (Yes.)

874 comments

  1. Actually... by InfinityWpi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The only reasons we seem to be surprised at how much we're hated out there is that we don't take the time to learn what our country has done over there, what past attitudes have been, past policies, past responses. Everyone knows America isn't well-liked in certain areas of the world... but precious few man-on-the-street Joe Average Citizens can tell you -why-. That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is. If people knew -why- we were hated, if they took the time to learn about the past instead of repeating it, maybe we could find a way out of this that doesn't involve a billion dollars worth of explosions.

    1. Re:Actually... by The+Kenneth · · Score: 0

      You are right. If something comes up its always targeted to a simplified cause that we can all shake our heads and denounce (oh, it was religeous fanatacism/they wanted attention/etc), instead of the multitude of issues that are clearly lying on the table.

    2. Re:Actually... by imrdkl · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Everyone makes mistakes. And everyone has their own interests, which leads to different definitions of what actually was a mistake.

      But make no mistake.. it's our love and support of Israel and the Jews which is the cornerstone of the hatred against us in the Muslim world (and other places). Not technology, not globalism, not some past aggression which we were percieved to be a part of.

      Hell, Bin Laden said it himself.

      Drop Israel, and everything will be fine. Or will it?

    3. Re:Actually... by j3110 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      With coorperations like Nike et al. its pretty obvious why a lot don't like the US. The Avg Joe just doesn't put it together. We slaved out Cuba for sugar after the Spanish American war. Castro used that to round up supporters. As you all know, we almost had a nukes fired at us.

      --
      Karma Clown
    4. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? You mean the average American Joe hasnt heard of Nicaragua? Israel? Iraq?

    5. Re:Actually... by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 2

      In this case, I think he has a strong argument that technology is a vital contributing factor. I'm not sure the point was brought out well enough.

      Given:

      1. Technology increases the ability of diverse folks to communicate on a global scale, immediately and without filters. (Think Internet chat rooms, cheap global long distance, etc.)

      2. Communications will illuminate differences and challenges to strongly held beliefs. (Think /. ;-)

      3. Immediate and unfiltered communications do not provide context and explanation of practices/customs/norms that are different. Thus, we don't get why Persian women would wear headscarves and they don't get why American women would wear short shorts. It's considered an affront on both sides of the argument by a portion of the population.

      4. Partially understood differences (rather than misunderstoond, I misunderstand French, but I partially understand a french person speaking English) yields conflict. (Call it the Babel Fish Axiom - "Because of this, the Babel fish has led to longer and bloodier wars than anything else in the history of creation." - THHGTTG)

      Thus: Technology yields greater communications with less context and explanation, which yiels more conflict.

      I think this is Katz's point, but a little more logically outlined.

    6. Re:Actually... by Brolly · · Score: 1, Informative

      Interesting point: while our "observed" support of Israel (we actually are just about the only country actually actively trying to influence peace in that region) is definitely a reason alot of middle easterners wouldn't mind if we were wiped off the face of the earth, aparently bin laden NEVER spoke of the palestinean/israeli conflict before september 11th, and then suddenly added it onto his list of greivances. I have a feeling no matter what we do, he would find a reason to hate us.

    7. Re:Actually... by andres32a · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I live and was born in a country were the USA isnt the most popular thing around. And I am not a USA fanatic myself. But there is something i can say for sure. I'd rather have the states as the world Superpower than the former USSR or the Nazi GERMANY or China or Afghanistan for that matter.

      The real reason that the states is somewhat not liked in many countries is for its "DUAL POLICY". Liberty and so on is promoted within but the states policies outside the borders have been in several ocations barbaric. My country for instance, has been in a civil war for decades that has been directly or indirectly promoted by the USA.
      In any case... Sept 11 is not justified in any way. Most of the world was as in shock as the USA was.

    8. Re: Actually... by johnrpenner · · Score: 2


      we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas.
      so why does donald rumsfeld insist that the bombing will not stop for the muslim holy days of 'ramadan'?

      bin laden is a terrorist without the support of the general muslim population. he is doing his darndest to get more people on his side by trying to convince the muslims that 'this is a war on muslims' instead of just a war on terrorism.

      just to put things in perspective - as horrible as the anthrax scare has been, MORE INNOCENT MUSLIM CIVILIANS HAVE DIED FROM US BOMBING 'ACCIDENTS' THAN PEOPLE HAVE DIED FROM ANTHRAX (check out the BBC or canadian news). this makes a lot of the afghani people VERY VERY nervous.

      if the US continues their bombings during the 'holy month' of ramadan - then it will only give bin laden amunition to dupe the rest of the muslims into thinking this is a war on muslims, and not just on him - do we really want to do that?

      (and i cannot emphasize enough how much my heart goes out to all the many victims of this war so far. no killing is right as far as i'm concerned). lets stop the violence now. violence begets more violence - he who lives by the sword shall die by the sword

      check out the 'AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE'.

      rushing in to help those who are hurt or needy is the true call of the pacifist - killing or violence is not.

      best regards,
      john penner (canada).

    9. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is. If people knew -why- we were hated, if they took the time to learn about the past instead of repeating it, maybe we could find a way out of this that doesn't involve a billion dollars worth of explosions.

      Unfortunately, no amount of understanding of *why* on our part will ever convince the people who destroyed the WTC to stop doing it. They don't care if we understand--they want us destroyed.

      Bin Laden actually doesn't care about the Palestinians or Iraq or any of that. He wants the world remade in his view--he points to the Taliban as the ultimate form of society. In an interview a few years ago, he said his ultimate goals were not to get the US out of the mideast, but to have a jihad in Egypt, a jihad in Israel, a jihad in Bosnia--basically a Jihad everywhere that will replace all governments with a fundamentalist Muslim one such as the Taliban. It's a different kind of globalization, really.

      Again, no amount of understanding the root of the problem will make that go away. The only thing that these people (the terrorists) understand is having a bomb dropped on them so they can't do anything anymore. It's a sad commentary on humans, but its the truth--do you think enough understanding would have prevented Hitler from attempting world domination? I doubt it--ask Neville Chamberlain.

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    10. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "My country for instance, has been in a civil war for decades that has been directly or indirectly promoted by the USA" What country if may i ask?

    11. Re:Actually... by Bouncings · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      That's wholey absurd. "Why do they hate us?" "How can we make them like us?" "What can we do to earn their trust?" -- all of these questions are signs of ignorance. Why do the Slashdot trolls post comments about hot grits? WHO CARES! The only things we need to learn about fundamentalists is what will help us DESTROY them, not appease them!

      This is a long explanation, but I think the anti-globalization argument is connected to "But why do they hate us argument." They are both equally ignorant points of view. If you are ready for some patriotism, read on. Otherwise, go back to Berkley!

      Did we ask why Hitler hated Jews? No. Would it have helped? No.

      The Blame America First Club (tm) has made it a mission to explain to the masses of compassionate Americans why their wealth, their entertainment, and their freedoms have made so many others unhappy. They say we should share are wealth to be loved around the world. Let's see how that would work:

      The GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is about 10 trillion dollars a year. Let's say we gave away 1/4 of that, destroying our economy and impairing our ability to contribute in the future. That would be 2.5 trillion dollars, divided by the population of the earth (6 billion), that comes down to $416 we could give to each person around the earth. They could then piss away that wealth because they don't understand how to invest it or use it to earn more wealth.

      Or, we could allow capitalism to create wealth around the world. Yes, the minimum-wage-labor bigots would cry that we are exploiting 3rd world countries. If we ignore them, they will eventually accumulate wealth, understand the value of currency, and create wealth themselves.

      Simple facts: They hate us because we're powerful, wealthy, intelligent, educated, and yes, free. Nothing but the destruction of all of these will quench their thirst for destruction. And yes, we can and will kill all the terrorists.

      "You know what the great thing about martyers are? They're dead." -- Mike Rosen

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    12. Re:Actually... by AugstWest · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree. And there's been no push really in the media or in school to educate the American people on just what the US had done in the middle east for the last 30 years.

      Instead of a nation thinking about innovative ways of dealing with foreign policy, we're getting everyone riled up for a fight.

      As the Onion said, "Privileged Sons of Millionaires Square Off On World Stage."

      We're not learning any lessons, and it's been 3 decades of buildup to this disaster. People wonder why it didn't happen sooner -- because the "intelligence" agencies had caught up with earlier attempts. This one snuck past them.

    13. Re:Actually... by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      I know what we've done in the middle east, what our policies were and what they are now--and none of it is really all that bad. Not perfect, but not that bad... I wouldn't hate the US if I were living there.

      The most interesting thing isn't what these people could hate us for, but what they do hate us for. It seems the list goes like this: 1) Supporting Israel 2) Troops in Saudi Arabia 3) Free women (not as in beer), but as a symbol of non-religious lifestyles. These aren't good reasons to be mildly perturbed, let alone take down two of our towers.

      The biggest mistake in relations I know of is this war right now. We're being panzies, attacking from very high, which causes more misses. We're also "devistating" them with about one bomb an hour. Please.... Throwing a bomb at someone who has one government run newspaper isn't going to change minds for the better.

      We need to either really fight these people or find a peacefull solution--none of this half-assed war.

      Something that may have worked in the past is some peacefull evolution. Put a quality American hospital in Afganistan and put an American face on all the aid we give them and watch the opinions slowly change.

    14. Re: Actually... by btlzu2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      John Penner said: "we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas. so why does donald rumsfeld insist that the bombing will not stop for the muslim holy days of 'ramadan'? "

      Do you honestly think that Christmas would be a concern for any terrorist? Do you think they're sitting around saying, "We've got a great plan, but we just can't do it on Christmas!"

      Give me a break! You can't be softer than the people you're trying to defeat.

      --
      Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead.
    15. Re:Actually... by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      It won't be. Bin Laden had never mentioned Palestine before, and he only brought it up now to rile up support for his cause.

      The point of making mistakes is to learn from them. We have proven that we don't.

      Hell, Bush just appointed Negroponte to be our ambassador to the UN. So just as we laucnh a "War on Terror," we appoint a world-reknowned terrorist to be our UN representative.

      The New World Order will continue apace.

    16. Re:Actually... by Spankophile · · Score: 2, Flamebait
      (we actually are just about the only country actually actively trying to influence peace in that region)


      You're kidding right? Just about the only country trying to influence peace? What about Canada? WHat about Britain? The US's idea of influencing peace is to deal arms evenly around an area to make sure no one can uprise enough to take a big enough peace of the pie to be happy.


      Oh yeah, and feel free to mod me down for trolling if you don't like my opinion. We can always use more heads in the sand.

    17. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 0
      we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas.

      Actually we wouldn't "want" to get terrorized on any day. But, we were, on September 11.

      So why does donald rumsfeld insist that the bombing will not stop for the muslim holy days of 'ramadan'

      Uh, because we're fighting a war, numbskull. You don't stop a war because of an enemy's holiday. That would just be stupid and suicidal. Certainly would not help you win the war.

      You do want the U.S. to win the war, right?

      just to put things in perspective - as horrible as the anthrax scare has been, MORE INNOCENT MUSLIM CIVILIANS HAVE DIED FROM US BOMBING 'ACCIDENTS' THAN PEOPLE HAVE DIED FROM ANTHRAX

      Wow, that really puts things in "perspective". Especially your use of CAPITAL LETTERS.

      The problem is that somewhere in your calculus you left out the thousands who were MURDERED (more capitals for your benefit) on September 11. Why is that?

      If the US continues their bombings during the 'holy month' of ramadan - then it will only give bin laden amunition to dupe the rest of the muslims into thinking this is a war on muslims, and not just on him

      Ah, so in your opinion, all the Muslims of the world are this easily duped. Muslims, by their very nature, lack the capacity to understand fundamental concepts, such as: This is war, and you don't stop fighting wars because of the enemy's claim to a holiday.

      Muslims are easily tricked by this maneuver. Muslims are, all of them, just looking for an excuse to fight. They are all ready and able and willing to mis-interpret this to the extent that they will join up with bin Laden. That's the way Muslims are! Right?

      That's what you're saying. Were I a Muslim, I'd be very, very offended.

      lets stop the violence now.

      Too late. You should have told that to the terrorists. Before September 11.

      violence begets more violence

      Yeah, just keep repeating that.

      (canada).

      Ok now I understand.

    18. Re:Actually... by imrdkl · · Score: 1

      he (bin Laden) needn't have mentioned it before. Granted, the Israel/Palestinian conflict is good fodder, but it is certainly not the reason why Israel and the Jews, and therefore the USA, are hated by many Muslims (and others). My feeling is that it goes a bit deeper than that... and bin Laden is said to be a "deep" guy. (6 ft deep soon, heh)

    19. Re:Actually... by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's Katz's point. I think it's better.

    20. Re:Actually... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, no amount of understanding of *why* on our part will ever convince the people who destroyed the WTC to stop doing it. They don't care if we understand--they want us destroyed.

      This may be correct, but understanding could help prevent the future creation of people with this level of fanitical devotion to destruction.

      I would hope that we could base our govenrmental policies on something a little more inclusive and mature than we have seemed to in the past. All countries, I think, could do better at being good members of the world community.

    21. Re:Actually... by dacron · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that even a knowledge of history doesn't really provide these answers. There are as many Muslims who complain that America doesn't do enough to help other groups (particularly those of different ethnic backgrounds) as there are who argue America should stop interfering in their affairs. Our haphazard foreign policy, unable to find an acceptable balance between these two choices, certainly explains the mistrust often felt towards America and only serves to feed the extremists, but somehow implying that there *is* some kind of easy answer if we read our history books strikes me as a vast oversimplification.

    22. Re:Actually... by r_newman · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's as simple as that. Many people just don't care for the idea that perhaps their country is wrong. The attitude I hear most often from US citizens when I comment on US foreign policy is one of indignation that anyone dare question the policies of the "Greatest Nation on Earth".

      While I won't accuse these people of fanaticism, they seem to honestly believe that eveything their government does outside it's borders is good and right. Interestingly, these are some of the same people who condemn the same governments for "human rights abuses" within their borders.

      In many cases it seems to be an extreme version of national pride, the unwillingness to admit to an outsider the possibility that somebody may have screwed up along the way. I can't say where this is derived from, though I suspect it has its roots in the same place as the witch-hunt for "Commies" of the '60's & 70's.

      Other people just don't seem to care. One of these people told me last year - during a discussion about the US which had led to middle-eastern policy - that he had better things to worry about than a foreign policy that didn't affect him.

      I doubt very much that the US leadership wants their Middle-Eastern policies for the last 30 years scrutinised. The status quo is that the majority of US citizens doesn't care about their governments abuses in the region, and this gives these governments much greater freedom.

      --

      --
      Bzzzzzt..."AAAAaaaaarrrgh!!!" Thud.
    23. Re:Actually... by Theodrake · · Score: 1

      What I've read about John "not Nicholas" Negroponte does not seem to indicate he is a "world-reknowned terrorist". The worse I read about him is 100 people dissappeared while he was ambassabor to Honduras. Horrible crimes that he claims he knew nothing about. Sounds fishy that he wouldn't know anything, but I've never seen any evidence that he ordered, sanctioned, or personally carried out the crimes. So how is he a "world-reknowned terrorist".

    24. Re:Actually... by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      > it is certainly not the reason why Israel and the Jews, and therefore the USA, are hated by many Muslims (and others). My feeling is that it goes a bit deeper than that...

      This isn't a challenge, but a real question. What do you mean it goes deeper than that? What do you think is in the back of many Muslims minds when they hate the US?

    25. Re:Actually... by JahToasted · · Score: 1
      Everyone knows America isn't well-liked in certain areas of the world... but precious few man-on-the-street Joe Average Citizens can tell you -why-. That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is. If people knew -why- we were hated, if they took the time to learn about the past instead of repeating it, maybe we could find a way out of this that doesn't involve a billion dollars worth of explosions.

      Excellent post...

      The sad thing about it is that no one seems to be getting this. I find it scary how one-sided the reporting has been lately. What Americans don't know is that the WTC bombing isn't that big a deal in the developing world. Why should it be? do Americans care if 5,000 people starve to death in Africa (or case in point, Afghanistan) ? So why should Afghani's care that 5,000 Americans died in New York? How many Americans really care that innocent people are being bombed in Afghanistan right now, honestly?

      Americans live their lives in a bubble. On Sept 11 that bubble was burst... but instead of looking out and seeing the real world for the first time, they choose to build a bigger, stronger bubble.

      It is time for americans to wake up. In the real world, people die. Instead of building walls around yourselves and separating yourselves from the rest of the world, why not try to make the world a better place?

      Americans want to give the CIA money and power to train agents to fight Bin Laden the same way they allowed the CIA to train Bin Laden to fight the Soviet Union. If you really want to get the guys who made Sept 11 happen then bomb the CIA. The US created a monster to fight the soviet Union. Once the the Soviet Union was gone they left them there. Who give a fuck about Afghanistan, right?

      I find it sad that the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. I find it sad the US trained terrorists to fight the Soviet Union, I find it sad that the Afghani people were at the mercy of these terrorists after the Soviet Union left. I find it sad that the World Trade Center was bombed. I find it sad that the Afghanistan is being bombed again. I find it sad that the terrorist will strike again in retaliation for afghanistan being bombed. I find it sad that the US will bomb more countries in retaliation for that.

      The article seems to imply that its just Islamic Fundamentalists behind this. The way I see it there are fundamentalists on the US side too.

    26. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who again is America trying to defeat? OHHH.. Yeah now I remember. The Red Cross. Damn them foreign aid workers..

      Should innocent Afghans have to live in fear during their holy month? It seems to me that, besides Taliban propaganda, the only way to convince the Afghan population that this is indeed a jihad, or holy war, is to continue battle through the holy month. Can America risk having the whole country of Aghanistan _and_ every neighboring country in protest? What should happen, IMO, is America should concentrate on foreign aid and helping the refugees during Ramadan _and_ Christmas. This would give the Taliban time to reconsider too (or time to plan and act, unfortunately).
      Give me a break! You can't be softer than the people you're trying to defeat.
      Being "hard" or "soft" is not what war is about. The point of war is defeating (or persuading) the enemy. That is all. Want to know the biggest weapon America has right now? Kindness. If we (US) show them that we _really_ believe in freedom, respect for all, etc. then they will see that the Taliban is spreading misinformation about America. On the other hand, if we go in there and destroy all they have left (i.e. those were _not_ Taliban airports that America destroyed--those _were_ Afghan's airports that were taken over by the Taliban a mere decade ago) then who is the terrorist now?
    27. Re:Actually... by rowdent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh of course it has to be the Israeli conflict that is the cause of all this hatred. That makes an awful lot of sense; the US never switched sides during the Iran-Iraqi war, or screwed the Arab countries for the sake of oil or other profitable endeavors. The fact of the matter is that the US has done very terrible things over there. The Ayatollah Khomeini had his reasons for taking hostages two decades ago, and he became a hated man then for protecting the freedoms of his own people.

      Drop Israel, and everything will be fine. Or will it?

      Everything will not be fine if Israel is dropped because Bin Laden will only want more. Israel is not the root of the problem, American business practices and wartime actions are the roots of this conflict. Bin Laden blew up the Pentagon and the WTC for a reason, it was not an act of random violence like most would like to think.

      --
      "If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear." --George Orwell
    28. Re: Actually... by jdgreen7 · · Score: 4, Redundant

      If you were to study your history a little more before siding with whatever sounds good on TV, you'd know that the profit Muhammed (sp, I know) himself started a war during Rammadan in the 800's. In the Koran, if a warrior fights during Rammadan for the right cause, he will be rewarded greatly. So, with this aspect in mind, America should be rewarded, not yelled at for bombing for a month!

      Don't be so quick to judge. We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is. Should we really wait for a month to go by before attacking again? That gives them a chance to regroup and launch another September 11th.

    29. Re:Actually... by gray+code · · Score: 1

      Well, even if that were true (and i'm not saying it isn't), Mutually Assured Destruction is what kept us at "peace" during the Cold War and is probably the only reason the US and/or most of Europe isn't aglow right now.

      MAD seems to be what you're suggesting we propagate in the Middle East. At least there's a historical precedent for it working.

    30. Re:Actually... by bradasch · · Score: 1

      I understand your post is a flamebait, but I'd like to address some points:

      Simple facts: They hate us because we're powerful, wealthy, intelligent, educated, and yes, free. Nothing but the destruction of all of these will quench their thirst for destruction. And yes, we can and will kill all the terrorists.

      I'm sorry but no. It's not that simple. If it was, I would the first one suport this war. Stop thinking that the main "reason" for terrorism is envy. It's not. The main reason is your ignorance about what your country is doing at their places.
      Of course, it's much easier to ignore this, and go on saying they are just a bunch of crazy envious people that must be eliminated.
      Another thing: look at your priorities: you put powerful and wealthy before intelligent, educated and free.

      ... They say we should share are wealth to be loved around the world...

      You're wrong again. Nobody is asking you to work for them. The main point is that globalization is always done at the expense of poorer countries. No american company invests money in other countries without wanting some profit. It happens all over the world, and, again, you choose to ignore it, because it's easier this way.

      Your post is exactly the kind of reasoning that gives terrorist motivation; worst, it's a road ending in war. Don't expect the "collateral damages" to be only in Afghanistan.

    31. Re:Actually... by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Insightful
      > it's our love and support of Israel and the Jews which is the cornerstone of the hatred against us in the Muslim world (and other places)

      Well-put. It has nothing to do with technology, it has to do with our (poorly-executed) attempt to make good in 1948 for what we stood by and allowed to happen during WW2.

      > Drop Israel, and everything will be fine. Or will it?

      I'm glad you said "Or will it?" Because that's tantamount to dropping the one country in the middle east that's actively capitalist, has a burgeoning high-tech industry, and watching a second genocide.

      The point now is that after 50 years, we're inextricably linked to them - it's no longer old-sk00l or neo-Nazis, it's also the fundie Muslims claiming that Jews (whether in America or Israel) control the world's money supply, and using that as the pretext for continuous bloodshed.

      America is a target and will remain one, whether or not we withdraw support for Israel.

      But to the peaceniks who really do think that dropping support for Israel will end the violence in the Middle East, I'd like you to think very carefully about how hard, and with what weapons, the Israelis will strike back, should they be faced with certain annihilation?

      Bonus points for working out how many years it'll be before any survivors feel the need to build streetlights within 20 miles of the glassy plains around what was once Mecca?

    32. Re:Actually... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 4, Informative
      Interesting point: while our "observed" support of Israel (we actually are just about the only country actually actively trying to influence peace in that region)

      The US gives over $5 billion a year to Israel in aid. Together with the $2 billion given to Egypt for signing the camp David accords that is over half the US aid budget.

      This largess is given to a country whose idea opf promoting peace is to take land from the Palestinians to build 'settlements' that are intended to make their occupation permanent and whose thanks to the US is for their Prime Minister to cal President Bush 'an appeaser'.

      aparently bin laden NEVER spoke of the palestinean/israeli conflict before september 11th

      The statement is untrue. The declaration of war against the US issued by Bin Laden many years ago mentions Israel. Zawhiri, the man somewhat inaccurately refered to as Bin Laden's 'number 2' is actually the head of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad who murdered Saddat for signing the camp David agreement. Israel has been the primary cause for Islamic Jihad for 20 years. Al Qaeda and Islamic Jihad have essentially been the same organization since Bin Laden was expelled from Sudan.

      There is only one response that Sharon should be making at this time 'How can we help'. Instead Sharon ordered an invasion of the West Bank on the 12th September and the assasination of 20 odd Palestinians - causing the deths of another 40 civilians who were killed by the bombs planted to kill the terrorists. The fact that Sharon has gone out of his way to incite more violence during the time of America's need is absolutely dispicable.

      Sharon is not a friend of the US.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    33. Re: Actually... by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas. so why does donald rumsfeld insist that the bombing will not stop for the muslim holy days of 'ramadan'?

      Funny, I was just thinking the same thing about the "Yom Kippur War".

      Pot, kettle, event horizon.

    34. Re: Actually... by johnrpenner · · Score: 2

      > > Give me a break! You can't be softer than
      > > the people you're trying to defeat.
      >
      > Being "hard" or "soft" is not what war is about.

      war is a no-win game.

      the only 'good end' to a war, is to find
      a solution such that both parties will stop
      their fighting and killing of each other.

      bombing and retaliation will not bring that about.
      that will only escalate the violence such that more
      people will die on both sides.

      i agree with the general gist of the original post.
      that in order to 'stop the fighting', we have to
      come to undersand the underlying causes that
      brought about the fighting in the first place.

      lets not add fuel to the fire

      best regards,
      john penner.

    35. Re: Actually... by juju2112 · · Score: 1

      I agree that it's uncool of our military to bomb on holy days.

      As to the 'violence doesn't solve anything' point, though.. when i was in history class I was told something that I think really applies here.

      When WWI came, it was really really bloody, because people were still using age-old sword and shield tactics but had guns instead.

      After that war, people didn't want to be in wars anymore. It was clear that peace should be attempted at all costs. Violence doesn't solve anything. Germany had been defeated and other countries had it under their thumb. So, when Germany started mass producing tanks and taking over neighboring countries, a policy of appeasement was in place. Europe didn't want to piss anyone off so they just let Germany build a military and start bulling other countries. The result? WWII!

    36. Re:Actually... by AugstWest · · Score: 2

      I hear ya. I was actually called a "commie pinko fag" yesterday.

      A lot of people just argue with anything that questions their blind faith.

    37. Re:Actually... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Did we ask why Hitler hated Jews? No. Would it have helped? No. People do ask this type of question, but you are right that such understanding probably would not have been of much benifit in dealing with Germany after the outbreak of hostilities, or even after the seizure of power by the Nazis.

      Unless you were asleep in high school history class (perhaps we should blame the US school system?) however, you should recall the large amount of thought that has gone into the treatment of Germany by the international community after WWI and how that led to the conditions that made WWII quite likely.

      The world's understanding of some of these issues directly led to the way that Germany, Italy, and Japan were treated after the end of WWII. If the victors of WWII had taken the type of actions taken after WWI (and embodied by the idea that "Nothing but the destruction of all of these will quench their thirst for destruction.") it seems quite possible that the losers of WWII would still be chomping at the bit to destroy/take over the world.

      Without learning from the past, we could have been fighting a war in central Europe every twenty years or so.

      Could we have handled the end of WWII better? Quite possibly we could have. The war crimes trials in Germany helped to lay blame and bring closure to some very evil actions. Similar trials in Japan were not handled as well, with many responsible people not being held accountable and many evil actions being downplayed by the occupational forces. The internment of Japanese/American and Japanese/Canadian citizens was done very poorly, but the actions after the war were just as bad with no apologies or restitution for a very long time.

      We CAN learn from our errors. Such learning CAN have direct positive benifit to us in the future. To refuse to learn the lesson that indescriminate use of power is a dangerous thing is stupidity to the highest degree.

      Learning about motivations and history and reprecussions seems to be a "no brainer" to me. Heck, I can even imagine that we might learn that the best course of action is to take the very action that is being proposed by the "kill them all without question" group. The only arguement I can see against such research would be that perhaps it might turn up some unpleasant results. To that I would say that is still worthwhile. Better to know unpleasant truths than to act in ignorance.

    38. Re: Actually... by Cassandra · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point of the parent poster was of course that we are not just bombing terrorists, but by not paying respect to Ramadan we act as if we do. Actually less than 1 ppm of the people targeted by the bombs are terrorists--they just happen to live in the wrong country. When the next terrorist act strikes the US I wonder if you are just going to sit back and say, oh that serves the Bush administration right for boming Afghanistan...


      And before you flame me, please note that I don't think the bombing is an all bad thing, just that it isn't an all good thing either.

    39. Re:Actually... by dachshund · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well said.

      And of course, America stopping financial support to Israel isn't the end-all-be-all that we like to think. Israel will survive, albeit meanly, without American aid. They may resort to unsavory means to replace the lost revenue, but they'll get by. And they'll buy their arms somewhere else.

      If we yank support, we lose our only real lever in that region. Things could get messy fast, and I think every administration in recent history knows it.

    40. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but this is altruistic, idealist bullshit. Go live in your la-la land and let everyone walk all over you. Ridiculous. Kindness? ha.

    41. Re:Actually... by AugstWest · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, more information has surfaced recently, as more documents become declassified.

      There was a good bit on it at newsday.com, but they pulled it. Here's google's cache of it.

      This one's a bit extreme:

      In a civilized world, Mr. Negroponte would not be a candidate for high public office; he would be on trial for crimes against humanity. As U.S. ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985, he oversaw the supply mission for U.S.-trained "Contra" terrorists, based in Honduras, who waged war against the people and government of Nicaragua. Part of that campaign involved ensuring that the regime in Honduras received hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. military and economic aid, despite its dismal human-rights record. Thus, when Battalion 316, a CIA-trained body of the Honduran army, slaughtered hundreds of alleged dissidents and kidnapped and tortured hundreds of others, Mr. Negroponte turned a blind eye. In reports to his government, he consistently claimed that the Honduran regime bore no responsibility for the wave of atrocities unleashed in that country. This week, Mr. Negroponte, an architect of terror and the illegal violation of state sovereignty, will be confirmed as the U.S. representative to a forum - the United Nations - whose Charter is based on respect for the sovereignty of all countries, whether rich or poor, and which claims to safeguard the rights of all human beings, whether powerful or powerless.

      Hell, it's not even a complete sentence, but it gets the point across.

    42. Re:Actually... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      That's wholey absurd. "Why do they hate us?" "How can we make them like us?" "What can we do to earn their trust?" -- all of these questions are signs of ignorance. Why do the Slashdot trolls post comments about hot grits? WHO CARES! The only things we need to learn about fundamentalists is what will help us DESTROY them, not appease them!

      This is a long explanation, but I think the anti-globalization argument is connected to "But why do they hate us argument." They are both equally ignorant points of view. If you are ready for some patriotism, read on. Otherwise, go back to Berkley!

      Did we ask why Hitler hated Jews? No. Would it have helped? No.


      I think you grossly misunderstood the original post, and your reply reeks of ignorance.

      It's not that we need to understand why the islamic fundamentalists hate us -- they hate pretty much everybody who isn't an islamic fundamentalist; and you can feel free to substitue "christian fundamentalist" or "nationalist zealot" for "islamic fundamentalist" if you would like.

      But the original post wasn't about fundamentalists. It was about normal, ordinary people.

      The US is looked down upon not because we are rich, but because we are wasteful; not because we are powerful, but because we abuse that power; not because we are intelligent and educated, but because most American high school graduates can give you a biography for every player on their favorite football team, but can't tell you who their senators are or how many represenatives their state has in the House.

      What you call patriotism, I call rabid nationalism. I consider myself patriotic because I believe in the Bill of Rights, in the concepts upon which this nation was founded. There were so many ideas flying around that not all of them could be put to words; only the most key of freedoms were, in fact -- but the authors of the Constitution trusted their posterity to remember why we fought a war against the British, and why the rights of the populus had to be guaranteed by law.

      Sadly we have failed in the mission they have given us. The so-called "founding fathers" wished for us to have a love of diversity and a tolerance of others -- principles which are very difficult in practice.

      Americans of today are disliked because they strive for homogeny; they want to always have access to their Starbucks lattes and their McDonalds' happy meals. Americans want to drive their SUVs, shop at malls, watch Must-See TV, and rely on others to make crucial decisions for them. Most importantly, Americans always want to blame someone else.

      Something you should try some time -- go to another country and play "Spot the Foreigner" at a local plaza or major thoroughfare. A friend of mine did this in Florence, and the following patterns could be observed: Italians were usually rail-thin, tan, and relaxed. Germans were usually a bit heaver (although not obese), and very serious. English people smiled a lot and seemed to be content with their lot in life. Americans were nominally much more plump than the average, almost never spoke the local language, and spent their time trying to find things that were as American as possible.

      The rest of the world doesn't want to be America.

      The rest of your argument is going to be ignored, as it isn't relevant to the original post.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    43. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      I live and was born in a country were the USA isnt the most popular thing around.

      So...you were born in the USA before 9/11?

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    44. Re:Actually... by toe+jam+football · · Score: 1

      While I agree with you that the U.S. has done some questionable and downright shitty things to many folks around the globe, part of the problem is also the lack of freedom of the press in much of the middle east. The Middle East Media and Research Institute has a large collection of translated newspaper artlicles, from the region, which shed light on some of the anger directed at the U.S. and it's allies. There is a lot of anti-US propaganda, comprised of blatant lies, that is being fed to the people of the muslim world (at least those living under religious dictatorships or in kingdoms, like Saudia Arabia and Iran).

      --
      - toe jam football
    45. Re:Actually... by dactex · · Score: 1

      Israel is only part of the problem. The Islamic Salvation Foundation (Al-Qaeda) wishes to cleanse the islamic world of the influence of the infidels, not just Israel. All the regimes that the US has put in place and/or massively supported in the Middle East are almost to the last dictatorial, repressive regimes which remain in power solely because the US can say "Jump" and they'll say "how high." When those regimes come crashing down, and they have and will, the new governments are very likely to be heavily reactionary and understandably angry at the US. Neither does it bode well for the future prospects of democracy in those countries. Oppressive regimes are notoriously difficult to overthrow and the only powers capable of doing so are either the nation's own military, or outside powers, meaning foreign (if covert) intervention. Either way one can't say that democracy has much of a chance as a likely outcome. The people are likely to resent their "saviors" unless they are a popular domestic force.

    46. Re: Actually... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Which, due to a coincidence of religious calendars that year, is also known as the Ramadan war.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    47. Re:Actually... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      I know what we've done in the middle east, what our policies were and what they are now--and none of it is really all that bad. Not perfect, but not that bad... I wouldn't hate the US if I were living there.

      I'm sorry? You know what we've done, yet you list only three things? How about support for the Shaw of Iran? How about support of other repressive regeims in the area? How about perceived unfair ecconomic priciples? I don't have that much knowledge about the region, but even I know that there are more complaints than women driving trucks without veils (neither the women or the trucks :-).

      Heck, some fellow from China donates big to Clinton and everyone has a hissey fit, yet people can't understand why people in the mid-east might be upset with the USA's foreign policy?

      Do you have similar knowledge about the USA's policies in Central America? Are you having difficulty understanding why many people there think the USA should burn in the pits of hell?

      Head on down to the library and pick up a few books on the recent history of the region. You'll be suprised what policies have been followed in the persuit of oil and teh defense from "communism".

    48. Re: Actually... by btlzu2 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, and without intent to flame, I don't quite understand how pacifists get the way they are. I sometimes think they have the reality part of their brain missing. Damn, I hate war and wish we could live in John Lennon's "Imagine" world, but you have to look at reality, IMO. If we did nothing but say, "oh, I'm sorry, it MUST be our fault that you killed 5000 people", we would look like weakened fools--it's the exact recipe for getting taken advantage of and losing our position of power. We must find those responsible and obtain justice with as minimal damage to innocent people as possible. It's reality and reality is not perfect.

      --
      Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead.
    49. Re:Actually... by Bouncings · · Score: 2

      Indeed, we certainly can learn from the past, and social scientists can accurately predict what social conditions promote fundamentalism. Poverty and social uncertainty lead to nazism in Germany, and probably did lead to terrorism in Afghanistan. In in the future, certainly need to realize what conditions lead to the spread of terrorism. But in our current situation, that's water under the bridge.

      Right now, someone has to lose and someone has to win. I'd prefer to be on the winning side. When we have toppled the Taliban we need to do what we did with Japan: rebuild it.

      We also need to address the deplorable conditions in other countries that will grow terrorism.

      But blaming terror on some kind of social injustice created by global capitalism is not the answer.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    50. Re:Actually... by Cassandra · · Score: 1

      Again, no amount of understanding the root of the problem will make that go away. The only thing that these people (the terrorists) understand is having a bomb dropped on them so they can't do anything anymore.


      That may be right, but unfortunately we are not just bombing terrorists.
      The way I see it we have two options here.


      1. Assume that all Afghans are terrorists. Then we might as well nuke the entire nation out of existence. That would be much simpler than what we are doing now.


      2. Assume that most Afghans are not terrorists. Then I think we should pay the suffering people some respect by at least respecting their holy month. That would also deny al Quaida the chance of pretending this is a war against Islam.

    51. Re:Actually... by Buggernut · · Score: 1

      Don't forget.

      Bin Laden has stated that driving the American forces out of the 'holyland' of Saudi Arabia (with the two 'holiest' sites Mecca and Median) was his primary mission.

      Like with the Palestinian situation, OBL also uses the plight of fellow Muslims starving in Iraq as another rallying point to drum up support for his movement.

      What's more, he has been known to mention western "cultural imperialism" (ie. the spread of democratic, secular cultural influences) into the Muslim world as one of his grievances.

      The aim of the Al-Qaeda movement is to bring every Islamic country around the world under strict Islamic (nb. not democratic) rule. If they were such "freedom fighters", would they ban television and other media of mass communication through the government that they propped up in what has become of Afghanistan?

    52. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1

      Quoth InfinityWpi:
      we don't take the time to learn what our country has done over there... If people knew -why- we were hated.. maybe we could find a way out of this

      Why is this modded up to 5 ? This whining recititaton of a trite falacy: If we are held in contempt then we must have done something to deserve that contempt.

      You suppose reason where none exists. Recognize irrationality as the root cause; The Taliban are religious fanatics. With them reason and motive share no interelation. They kill us because they hate use, and they hate us becasue we have televisions, because we permit women to bare their faces in public, because we are Catholic and Jewish and Buhdist and atheist; For all the ways we violate their view of Islamic practice, we are despised.

      You claim that our failure to recognize acts of terrorism as payback for our misdeeds owes to ignorance of our own misdeeds. You haughtily imply that your contrary position owes to your superior knowledge, yet you fail to name a single one of those misdeeds, a logical failure reavealing sorry weakness of mind.

      Your argument is this: "Terrorists are murdering thousands of Americans because we provoked them by doing terrible things to them. But I really don't know what those terrible things are and I can't name any and nobody else can either. But I'm certain that they exist, we just have to look harder for them." Certainly anyone (except for the moderators) would recognize your reasoning as daft.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    53. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      1. Assume that all Afghans are terrorists. Then we might as well nuke the entire nation out of existence. That would be much simpler than what we are doing now.

      But this is a *war* and there are bound to be civilian casualties. I'm sure not all Germans were Nazis, but we had to attack that country for the better of the rest of the world (and for the security of our own nation). Civilians die during war--it's not a good thing, but a fact of war. What percentage of our casualties have been civilian so far, 99.9%?

      2. Assume that most Afghans are not terrorists. Then I think we should pay the suffering people some respect by at least respecting their holy month. That would also deny al Quaida the chance of pretending this is a war against Islam.

      Giving the Taliban and al-Qaida a month to reorganize in the middle of this would be a huge mistake. War is war, and it sucks. Pearl Harbor was on a Sunday, do you think the bin Laden would pay the same respect to us?

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    54. Re:Actually... by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      Yes, there was support of oppressive regimes and the destruction of governments. Actually, I was referring to these very things in my post.

      I also said I find it interesting that militants attack us in the name of other, less severe, atrocities.

      And, no, I wouldn't hate the US if I lived there.

    55. Re:Actually... by Bouncings · · Score: 3, Redundant
      A few observations.


      • Americans of today are disliked because they strive for homogeny; they want to always have access to their Starbucks lattes and their McDonalds' happy meals. Americans want to drive their SUVs, shop at malls, watch Must-See TV, and rely on others to make crucial decisions for them. Most importantly, Americans always want to blame someone else.

      Do you know what the most popular restaurant in Paris is? McDonalds. The only reason SUVs don't sell well in Europe and Asia is the price of gasoline is higher. Every nation has shopping malls, and Must-See TV is syndicated around the world.


      America isn't perfect. We have our Christian fundamentalists (abortion clinic bombings anyone?), we have poverty, we need to work out more and eat better (which again, would be a sign of consumerism and wealth), we even have a legislature that is showing less and less willingness to preserve the Bill of Rights. That said, it's still a pretty decent place to live.


      I admit I am feeling pretty nationalistic after 9-11. I'm a libertarian, I don't support capitalism at all costs, but I don't sing along with the brainwashed-politicly-correct Madison/Berkley/MIT dogma. That dogma being, no matter what the facts, you can feel good about yourself if you Blame America First.


      I'm sorry, but you're living in a fool's paradise and I don't want to die in your fool's paradise.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    56. Re: Actually... by ka9dgx · · Score: 2

      TET

    57. Re:Actually... by Theodrake · · Score: 1
      Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit... This is like the old argument used in rape cases. She was asking for it. Bullshit. The USA is not to blame for the actions of others. This is not the results of anything we have deliberately done. But their act was a deliberate choice to use terror to kill and maim. This was a deliberate act of war on our way of life. They don't like us. Nothing we could have done short of buying into their religious beliefs would stop them from hating us.

      Bush has said this isn't a war on Islam. True, but also false. It is a war on a type of Islam that preaches it has all the answers and everybody else better believe that or we will kill you. Islam teaches that the only justified war is against a nation that won't let you practice Islam. The problem is their form of Islam can't be practiced in a modern world. So they have declared war on the modern world and they will use our way of life in their attempt to destroy it.

      Understand that. They will die attempting to destroy the modern world. They will gladly use the technology that the modern world creates, if it furthers their religious beliefs. You must understand that they see no hypocrisy in using tools that were created by the very thing they wish to destroy.

      We didn't come out of the dark ages in Europe until the church lost control of knowledge. When knowledge was set free, we started to innovate. This of course has led to the modern world we know. The world they would destroy.

    58. Re:Actually... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      In in the future, certainly need to realize what conditions lead to the spread of terrorism. But in our current situation, that's water under the bridge.

      I disagree in that I see in our current actions things that I suspect are the seeds of future problems. Have we fairly targeted the Taliban (heck, I don't even know if we have fairly targeted Bin Laden, though I suspect that we have)? Is bombing the best way to act from the viewpoint of not giving rise to more terrorists? Is there a better way of supplying aid to the area?

      Right now, someone has to lose and someone has to win.

      When did "right now" start? Sept 11 or when bombs starting falling over Afghanistan? Was it a better idea to postpone the military activity? Are there any other options now?

      There are tonnes of good questions that can be asked at this late point of time. Questions who's answers would be useful to know.

      But blaming terror on some kind of social injustice created by global capitalism is not the answer.

      But not examining social injustices, whatever their causes, is plain silly.

    59. Re: Actually... by zulux · · Score: 2

      war is a no-win game.

      Care to explain how civilisation should have responded to WWII? Should we have has a love in, while the Germans were killing TEN MILLION PEOPLE in Europe and the Japanese were killing TWENTY MILLION PEOPLE in Asia? I hope we have the courage to defend the defenseless - and not sit on our butts when people are being murdered.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    60. Re: Actually... by jafac · · Score: 3, Troll

      . . . however, I *HATE* the fact that I'm classified as a "pacifist" for wanting the Afghan bombing to stop.

      I think that this is completely the wrong way to do this - because the Afghan propaganda seems to be much more effective on 1 billion muslims than the US propaganda they've been hearing for the past 20 years. I think that every bomb that drops on Afghanistan is going to be characterized as an attack on islam, a genocide of arabs and persians, and proof of how Evil the US is. Every day, clearly, the US's standing in the coalition is getting worse and worse.

      What we must do, is:
      Pull out of the UN. Create a new world-organization that does not include nations who support terrorism. All member-states have to have a minimum standard of identifying citizens who want to cross borders, and serious laws against money laundering that are strictly enforced. Security is what people want. Security is the best way to ensure peace, and prosperity. Pull out of Saudi Arabia. Pull out of Israel (since the Israeli government clearly is not interested in peace). Develop alternative energy sources to power the Western economies of the 21st century. Stop all foreign aid and erect trade interdiction to all non-member states.
      Let the Arabs starve. Let them know that it's their extremists and their pandering to the extremists that got them into this position, the only way to ensure their own survival and prosperity is to become democratic nations, and join the coalition, and find and eliminate their extremists, and stop sponsoring their propaganda in their schools.
      If they want to farm dust, and play in their oil, and lead mideval lives, they're free to do so. But we should completely cease all contact with those societies, and prevent those people from entering Western society so they can no longer terrorize us.

      And Israel's problems should be Israel's alone. I, for one, am sick of taking it in the nuts for them. If they want peace, then they have to get rid of their own extremists. Note that all this recent Palestinian violence started when Ariel Sharon came to power. He and his extremist regime are just as nasty as the Jerry Falwells and the Mulluh Omars of the world.

      If OBL wants to create a "pure islamist state" and use oil as a weapon to topple the West, I say, let him try, and let him fail on his own.
      The muslims of the world will soon find out that 90% of them don't want a pure islamist state, and when the west finds alternative energy sources, then they'll be crying like the oil industry did in the 80's - remember? OPEC cut back on supply, and demand dropped, and they went hungry.

      In the end, what we'll have is a bunch of counter-revolutions in the middle east, Arabs who will overthrow these religious regimes, and they'll be much more strongly committed to democracy, because they had to fight to get it, instead of having "the man" impose it on them "against allah's will".
      And the world will be a better place, not only because of the better political climate in the mideast, but because the western economies will be using less oil, and the environment may actually allow human life to exist on this planet.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    61. Re:Actually... by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      It might be important to note that many Americans are also critical of those who go to McD's in their SUV's, shop at malls, drink StarBucks and watch "Must See" TV.

      We don't like those people either, but the're here and (GHASP!!) in Europe too!

    62. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you guys denounce Stalin and the whole Soviet apparatus for what it representes in history (hell, you don't even have to buy into the 'Big Business' version of history if you don't want- read Emma Goldman's 'My Disillusionment With Russia' if you can find a copy the US Communist party hasn't burned), then we will start taking your 'atrocities in Nicaragua' bullshit seriously.

      You're being goddamned puppets for the Stalinists who siezed power in Nicaragua otherwise.

    63. Re:Actually... by InfinityWpi · · Score: 2

      I feel I should respond here...

      This whining recititaton of a trite falacy: If we are held in contempt then we must have done something to deserve that contempt.

      Which makes a hell of a lot more sense than "We're being bombed just for the hell of it."

      You suppose reason where none exists. Recognize irrationality as the root cause; The Taliban are religious fanatics. With them reason and motive share no interelation. They kill us because they hate use, and they hate us becasue we have televisions, because we permit women to bare their faces in public, because we are Catholic and Jewish and Buhdist and atheist; For all the ways we violate their view of Islamic practice, we are despised.

      And I wouldn't be arguing with you if not for this: I'm not talking about just the Taliban. Saying the Taliban hates us and the entire rest of hte Muslim world loves us is like saying David Koresh was the only insane Christian. The Taliban hates us for those reasons, yes. But others hate us for the reasons I listed below (I have to stop replying from the bottom of a post upwards).

      You claim that our failure to recognize acts of terrorism as payback for our misdeeds owes to ignorance of our own misdeeds. You haughtily imply that your contrary position owes to your superior knowledge, yet you fail to name a single one of those misdeeds, a logical failure reavealing sorry weakness of mind.

      Other people have listed them for me, including a nice listing of people we've bombed recently. Simply because you do not keep up to date on current events, please do not presume the rest of the /. community shares your ignorance. I am no more haughty than you are able to come up with an intelligent rebutal. Rather than insult me, perhaps solid facts would be more useful to you. When has a Muslim country come right out and said they loved America? If I recall, the only one has been Kuwait, after we played schoolyard teacher and broke up a fight at recess. Where is their vocal support now?

      Your argument is this: "Terrorists are murdering thousands of Americans because we provoked them by doing terrible things to them. But I really don't know what those terrible things are and I can't name any and nobody else can either. But I'm certain that they exist, we just have to look harder for them."

      Actually, my arguement is that many people (this includes everyone from the extremist Taliban to the French, from Somali warlords to Montana seperatists) believe that this country's past misdeeds (selling arms, toppling governments, training terrorists) paint us as an unjust and underhanded nation. Most Americans only know of this happening in Central America, because it's closer to home. The Bay of Pigs, the coup leading to the building of the Panama Canal, and (the biggest blunder in recent deades) Vietnam all play a part in this, as does our support of one side and not the other in Israel, our injecting ourselves into the affairs of Bosnia and Iraq and Columbia... We've ceased playing policeman to the world and now we're trying to play the parent, chastising the kids when they don't do what they're told. The 'kids' are older than we are, we just don't seem to realize it.

      Certainly anyone (except for the moderators) would recognize your reasoning as daft.

      Or possibly the moderators just understood what I was talking about instead of saying "I don't know what he's talking about, so he must be wrong."

    64. Re:Actually... by gorilla · · Score: 2
      and it's been 3 decades of buildup to this disaster

      I'd say longer. The US has had an awful foreign policy all throughout the late 19th and 20th C. From the United Fruit Company in South America, the various Asian countries and it's continual support of various dictators around the world, the one thing that the US should have learnt is that what it's meddling invariably results in regretable consequences.

    65. Re:Actually... by come_sucker · · Score: 0

      They should bomb you just as if you were bin Laden himself. It's people like you who allow terrorists to hijack our planes and spread smallpox everywhere. I hope the FBI "accidentally" kills you in their treason arrest. Go to hell where bin Laden and Allah are.

    66. Re:Actually... by Theodrake · · Score: 1
      I don't see a peacefull solution when their form of law is so different from ours. Look they captured someone and immediately execute them. We on the other hand would have given Osama bin Laden a chance in court to fight the accusation he was behind the WTC attacks. In their system once accused you are guilty and it is only the matter of punishment that can be mitigated. No appeals. Just summary judgment and execution of sentence.

      So our asking for Osama was a death sentence in their system.

    67. Re:Actually... by zulux · · Score: 2

      We are NOT hated around the world - I've been fortunate to be able to travel, and 99.99% of the people love Americans. We are generouros, tolerent and interesting. If someone treats you badly or ruddly in a forign county, most likely it due to YOUR behaviour - you were either being boorish, snobbish or booring.

      We are loved so much that people litterly will risk their lives just trying to get in to our country. And they come here not because of our purple mountains, wal-mart or Oprah - they come here because there are Americans here, for all our faults.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    68. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting how you're able to sort out and identify all the regines the US has put in place as 'dictatorial and repressive' but you fail to also apply that label to the regimes opposing the US.

      Clever sophistry won't win an arguement. Sure it'll allow you to rally a bunch of young college students to chant and hand out leaflets. That won't sustain your lil' revolution.

    69. Re:Actually... by Cassandra · · Score: 1

      But this is a *war* and there are bound to be civilian casualties. I'm sure not all Germans were Nazis, but we had to attack that country for the better of the rest of the world (and for the security of our own nation).


      Ofcourse we had to do something about Germany. But I actually think the terror bombings of Dresden was wrong as well. They only served to terrorize the German people.

      Civilians die during war--it's not a good thing, but a fact of war. What percentage of our casualties have been civilian so far, 99.9%?


      There is ofcourse a subtle difference here. Afghanistan did not declare war on us, al-Qaida did. Yet it is Afghanistan we are attacking. Oh well, their government are almost terrorists to their people anyways.


      Giving the Taliban and al-Qaida a month to reorganize in the middle of this would be a huge mistake.


      This might be a good point, but I'm afraid I know too little about the allied strategy right now to tell for sure. Though to me it looks more like terror bombings now (and showing the world that we are doing something). How many strategic targets are there in Afghanistan anyway?


      ...do you think the bin Laden would pay the same respect to us?


      No. But it is not the enemy I want to pay respect, it those who happen to be his neighbors.

    70. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A deep fear of anything modern.

    71. Re: Actually... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      If we did nothing but say, "oh, I'm sorry, it MUST be our fault that you killed 5000 people", we would look like weakened fools--it's the exact recipe for getting taken advantage of and losing our position of power.

      Not wanting to lose a position of power, or to look foolish, is no excuse for violence - either on the personal or national level. ("I had to beat him up, or people would think I'm a wimp." is a favorite bully justification.)

      We must find those responsible and obtain justice with as minimal damage to innocent people as possible.

      And bombing people has nothing to do with justice, or with minimizing damage to the innocent. Current U.S. actions are comparable to firing into a crowd of people in an attempt to bring down a murderer standing in the middle.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    72. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      No. But it is not the enemy I want to pay respect, it those who happen to be his neighbors.


      Beleive me, I wish we could separate it all out, but it is so difficult in this type of situation. It kills me to see what is happening to people there who are only trying to live there. There was a story on the news about a week ago about an 8 year old boy in Afghanistan who only wants to be able to sleep without fear--first of the tabliban, now of the bombing. I wish I could just send a plane over and pick him up and bring him to the US...but the world sucks that way I guess.

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    73. Re:Actually... by jafac · · Score: 2

      You say that we can kill all the terrorists, but the only thing we'll accomplish by doing that is pissing off another whole generation of people - not just the relatives of the terrorists, but the relatives of the people who were not terrorists who were killed "accidentally" (no, it does not matter if it was an accident, a bomb missed it's target, or if the Taliban actually slaughtered them in the middle of the night and put US bomb fragments in the rubble - it's our word against theirs, and believe it or not - we're LOSING this propaganda war!)

      In my opinion, this is going to cause many more muslim countries around the world to start hating the US and fostering extremist groups. And many non-muslim countries will likely get back on the fence until it's just the US and UK, and possibly Russia.
      Eventually, we'll probably have to play the nuclear card, JUST to get the oil we need.
      Eventually - the US will be victorious, and we'll kill all the terrorists. But hundreds of millions, possibly billions will die in the process.

      I'm not one of those whining anti-globalist "blame america first" club members. But I think we're going about this all wrong.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    74. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The American Friends Service Committee is a front group for the Communist Party, USA.

      There are doubtless a few rather irrational Quakers still involved.

      There are a lot of rather cynical athiests standing behind the dupes.

    75. Re:Actually... by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      I have to agree with the above, and also note that most everywhere I've travelled most people have distinguished between Americans as individuals, American popular culture, the US government, and US multinational corporations. And have had different, often shaded and nuanced attitudes towards each.

    76. Re:Actually... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Actually, I was referring to these very things in my post.

      My mistake, I misread. However, I am not certain that your list accurately reflects what "they" have said their motivations are. It seems more like the sort of motivations that people come up with in forums such as this.

      Do we have any good sources for "their" stated motivations and goals? It does seem pretty stupid of "them" that they are not being very efficitve of communicating their demands. How can we give them what they want if they don't tell us?

    77. Re:Actually... by enkidu55 · · Score: 1

      I am a person that is personally shocked and deeply affected by all that has transpired since Sept 11. That said, I am also a person that believes deeply in the freedoms that America was founded upon. People have been tossing about the effects of bombing during the month of Ramadan. I would agree that it should be a consideration except for one small fact. There is no way that any organized religion on the face of this planet that has any credibility at all could possibly condone the actions of Sept 11. Therefore, Ramadan is not an issue to me since the people that are hiding behind the shield of Islam do not actually believe in Islam at all. I personally think that not enough military involvement has been put into use yet. Look back to Vietnam and the Gulf. We may have driven Saddam back to Iraq during the Gulf war but he is by no means out of power. We lost Vietnam because the administration handcuffed our military. If we are truly going to win, then it is going to take a lot more effort, not just militarily but after the fact to change these people's views at a fundamental level. I am sorry but from a strategic standpoint, if they let up, they are only giving the moles a chance to dig deeper.

    78. Re:Actually... by bwt · · Score: 2

      The only reasons we seem to be surprised at how much we're hated out there is that we don't take the time to learn what our country has done over there, what past attitudes have been, past policies, past responses. Everyone knows America isn't well-liked in certain areas of the world... but precious few man-on-the-street Joe Average Citizens can tell you -why-. That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is.

      We are hated because a faction of the Islamic world has been raised in a mental pressure cooker to believe that anyone different from them is evil. They can't accept Israel because Jews are unacceptable to them. They can't accept a US presence in Saudia Arabia -- why? because we're not like them, of course. We believe that there is nothing wrong with Christians, Jews, and Muslims living near each other, be it in Manhatten or in Riyad.

      We don't believe in ethnic, religious, cultural tolerance they don't. They hate us because we respect "the individual" which means respecting people who choose not to be like them. That principle, also called freedom, is directly opposed to their principle of Islamic uniformity.

      I disagree with Katz. This is nothing new. The Christians tried it during the Crusades, Hitler tried it in Germany. Countless others tried it. As Bush said, they will follow its path all the way to history's unmarked graveyard of discarded lies.

      The only thing I am worried about is people who think that there is anything that we DON'T understand. The "we need to understand" people are in denial. The enemy's world-view does not allow peaceful coexistence with people who believe in individual rights. They place their culture above its members, which they demonstrate by suicide attacks. When confronted with such a fundamentally different world-view we have three choices: (1) adopt their culture (2) destroy their culture (3) accept ongoing conflict.

      I fear we will choose (3) instead of (2).

    79. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, just like a Canadian to be all logical and ruin our excellent and profitable killing spree.

      Seriously, excellent post. The States needs more sanity and less flag-waving wrestling fans. It would be nice if Americans started seeing people as "human beings", not as "White American" or "Other". That would solve a lot of problems.

      I hope they don't mod you down to "-1, Not With The Program" like they usually do to me.

    80. Re:Actually... by jafac · · Score: 2

      This is bullshit. It's all common knowledge that Saddam Hussein was trained by the CIA. It's common knowledge and reported in the press that we gave weapons to OBL during the Soviet occupation. I'm sick of the bullshit "conspiracy theory" that says that this information is being kept from Americans.
      It's not even hard to look up on the internet and find information about proposed Afghan pipelines and Caspian natural gas reserves.

      Even during the Kosovo conflict - a fair number of people knew about the $5B Strasi mining complex.

      This stuff is covered on The Discovery Channel documentaries for christ's sake. Give it a rest. There is no Zionist Conspiracy. The US are not puppets of Israel, and the big evil corps are not in some plot to profit from the US manufacturing villains and then bombing their third world countries.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    81. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You Americans are SO dense when it comes to understanding why you are hated. Everywhere. Not just in the Middle East, but in Canada, Europe, Asia, EVERYWHERE, even by "friendly" countries. By the way, we don't hate you individually, just as a society.

      America is a dangerous, self-centred, ignorant bully. Plain and simple. The people you pick on and interfere with - they fear you and hate you. The people who hang on and ride your coat-tails - they fear and hate you, but wish they could be you.

      In Canada, we like to think we're above the kind of international behaviour that makes America so despised, but more and more I see Canadian society as one of the pathetic coattail riders. We SO want to be in America's position, not so that we can redress any wrongs, or "do it right", but simply to have, and to be able to abuse, all that power.

    82. Re:Actually... by jafac · · Score: 2

      The question is, how big of a piece of pie does anyone need to be happy?
      Give them a piece of pie, and they'll want two.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    83. Re:Actually... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 2
      Your comment on DUAL POLICY ignores the fact that foreign policy and domestic policy and and always have been two entirely separate areas. A country is supposed to represent its own citizens in its domestic policy and represent ITS OWN CITIZENS in foreign policy. Your country does the same, and I know that because EVERY country does this. The only way to prevent this is to have a world-wide governing organization. Hell, every state in the US would screw over every other state for its own resident's interests were it not for the federal government limiting that and preventing it from happening.


      So rather than complaining about our government doing its job to represent our people's interests, you should get together with everyone else out there who feels wronged and strengthen the UN and world trade agreements and force the US to play nice by rules that everyone can mutually agree upon and are maximally fair to all.


      But if the US doesn't respond to the standard whiny eurotrash/third world resident attitude don't be surprised : "fund the third world countries, give us money and forgive our debt, then pay us reparations for being evil and creating guns and weapons and selling them to us with the money you gave us, etc. blah blah blah". Look, you should have been looking out for your own interests before - why do you expect a free lunch? That's not the job of other countries, your OWN country needs to represent your interests as well as the US does for its own citizens (I'm mostly happy except for this fucking DMCA shit which I'm fighting to get repealed here).

    84. Re: Actually... by AvatarADV · · Score: 1

      Just as an aside... there's only 32 million Afghans, period. Do you really believe that there are less than 32 terrorists in Afghanistan? (Of course, that would only result from a completely random dropping of bombs, or a complete extermination bombinb... sure, our bombs miss sometimes, but they don't ALWAYS miss. ;p)

      Exaggeration is a good thing in moderation, but overdoing it makes you sound uninformed.

    85. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead of living in ignorance, you should scour the net or textbooks or other places for information about American Foreign policy. You see what CNN wants you to see, you believe what George Bush wants you to believe. You do not question the status quo. You use Microsoft because a nice "cut and paste" is more important than freedom and ideology. You disregard what Amnesty International tells you about the States because you don't agree and refuse to alter your worldview to include an unclean, chaotic reality.

      Check out Indymedia.org. It's a good start for curing American Ethnocentrism, which is spreading farther and faster than Anthrax ever could, and killing far more people. They ARE people, by the way.

      Bitterman

    86. Re:Actually... by Cassandra · · Score: 1

      There is no way that any organized religion on the face of this planet that has any credibility at all could possibly condone the actions of Sept 11. Therefore, Ramadan is not an issue to me since the people that are hiding behind the shield of Islam do not actually believe in Islam at all.


      A postponing of bombings during Ramadan would not be for the sake of the terrorists, but for the people of Afghanistan---those who have nothing to do with al-Qaida, but happen to be Muslims.


      Regarding Vietnam I disagree with you. I think the US lost because we turned the Vietnam people against us by killing too many innocents. This is exactly what we are about to do with the Afghan people now.

    87. Re:Actually... by j3110 · · Score: 1

      it wouldn't change the minds of the leaders, but I don't think they would have nearly the following in their countries if the US played nice. We have crazy fanatics in america, they just don't have the followers because people aren't that upset with the government. Bringing people together for insane acts requires a lot of hatred to play off of to begin with. Hitler made his own hatred, Bin Laden uses our involvement in the Mid-East to unite his people.

      --
      Karma Clown
    88. Re:Actually... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 1
      Agreed. I don't agree with some Israeli government policies, as I don't agree with many US government policies. I do think the US, Britain and the UN are all, for better or worse, obligated to help settle borders for the Israelis and Palestinians and help force a peace if necessary. They will eventually learn to get along, I believe, but it requires some sustained peace and the breeding out of the murderous attitude of many Palestinians that makes them think, like Osama bin Laden, that past injustices can be rectified by spilling innocent blood.


      Furthermore, we have to be a bit understanding - the Israelis tried to put a deal on the table to GIVE the Palestinians statehood and peace when Barak was in power. The response was the current Intifada2, which now has the whiny Europeans and even sometimes George Bush condemning the Israelis for defending themselves. I don't support the killing of civilians by Israeli troops, but this time, I have to say the conflict causing the casualties was reignited almost entirely by the Palestinians. Arafat should have negotiated when he had the chance. Should innocent civilians on either side die as a result of Arafat's blunder? No, it's not fair, but such is the nature of war.

    89. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad to see you're taking part in TROLL TUESDAY. Nice work, troll.

    90. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I was actually called a "commie pinko fag" yesterday."

      Charlie Daniels Band calling you names again, huh?

    91. Re: Actually... by bwt · · Score: 2, Redundant

      bombing and retaliation will not bring that about.
      that will only escalate the violence such that more
      people will die on both sides.


      This argument is crap. It's a classic pyramid scheme. Unless both sides have infinite resources, "escalating the violence" is a process with a finite duration.

      I'm worried that we aren't escalating the violence enough. We are faced with a choice: suffer perpetual attack from a culture that cannot accept peaceful coexistence or destroy it.

      You are postulating that the enemy can never be destroyed. You are wrong. That argument would have lost WWII, where we faced a much tougher set of opponents.

      The Taliban has 45,000 soldiers, entrenched in bunkers, willing to die in suicide attacks. At Okin awa, the Japanese had 100,000 soldiers, entrenched in bunkers, willing to die in suicide attacks. We defeated the Japanese Empire at Okinawa, we will defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan. But not with token bombing raids.

    92. Re:Actually... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 2

      And neither is Arafat. He is directly responsible for what is going on right now. This second Intifada was started by his failure to negotiate with Barak when a deal was on the table which would have brought peace and Palestinian statehood. The deal was rejected, the violence started, then Sharon was elected. Get it? The Israeli people are saying "if you don't want peace, then we will protect ourselves at all costs." I don't think they like Sharon either, but this is what Arafat has brought on them. The Israelis should NOT stand by while Palestinian terrorists attack Israeli targets, and suggesting otherwise is insulting as well as moronic. As for the settlements, I don't believe that they are being extended, nor is any land being taken to make room for them (certainly not now), but it's not particularly more right to suggest the Israelis living there should be kicked out than anybody else at this point.

    93. Re: Actually... by Cassandra · · Score: 1

      From what I've heard on Euronews most of al-Qaida have been smuggled out of Afghanistan by now. So actually I don't think I'm that far off, although I meant to write per thousand (in Swedish this is promille, which I happened to turn into ppm) and include the Taliban in the count.

    94. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there was much corruption and a signifcant amount of repression in the government of the Shah of Iran.

      He also brought a lot of enlightened modernity to that country.

      A lot of the people who fought against him were the same sort of people who would ban our freedom and establish a theocracy in this country. There was a left wing to the Iranian revolution. There were women's groups, which had gained legitimacy under the modernist government the Shah established. They were entirely wiped out when the Islamic fundamentalists took power. Feminists and progressives in Iran? Hah!

    95. Re:Actually... by jason-michael · · Score: 1

      I think when you find out "why" we are hated, the answer will be something you are not willing to accept, and so you will continue to preach this psychobabble. Osama bi Ladin hates us because he is psychotic. His followers hate us because they are also psychotic, a common reaction related to the persuasive quality of crowds. Bottom line, anyone who thinks there is a clear and justifiable reasoning behind the attacks on Sept 11th is also not playing with a full deck. It's one thing to disagree with the US's support of Israel, it's quite another to kill yourself and thousands of others to make a statement of protest.

    96. Re:Actually... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      If they tell us outright, that's a commitment on their part, and they risk those demands actually being met. Then their excuse for existing goes away.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    97. Re:Actually... by Unknown+Bovine+Group · · Score: 1

      Canada and Britain? Aren't they the 51st and 52nd states yet?

      --
      m00.
    98. Re:Actually... by enkidu55 · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's as simple as that. Many people just don't care for the idea that perhaps their country is wrong. The attitude I hear most often from US citizens when I comment on US foreign policy is one of indignation that anyone dare question the policies of the "Greatest Nation on Earth".

      I don't know which citizens you are talking to. (I would venture to guess that its not even that many) but I for one happen to think that there have been definite foul ups in Foreign policy over the last 30 years in the middle east. However, with that have also come some really great strides. There has been the attempt, albeit not fully recognized to modernize the economies and governments of a region that previously was agragrian in its existence. But all that being said, I still think that the course of action that is being taken is right and just and I support it 100 percent. I would also say that it needs to be taken at least 3 steps further, to complete military action and subsequently a complete rebuild of the nation. I think that until we can correct some of the errors of the past, (we did train the people we are fighting) they will continue to spew hatred into the minds of their people. And its surprising how convincing one is when he's the one holding all the guns.

    99. Re:Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      That politicians of one country use religion to distract and enrage their people against another country is hardly something new. It has been Standard Operating Procedure for millenia.

      One country has a bunch of people running around on animals in the desert, the other has machinery in orbit around Mars. The US dare not let itself engage in a Holy War since the end of WWII.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    100. Re:Actually... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      The only reasons we seem to be surprised at how much we're hated out there is that we don't take the time to learn what our country has done over there, what past attitudes have been, past policies, past responses. Everyone knows America isn't well-liked in certain areas of the world... but precious few man-on-the-street Joe Average Citizens can tell you -why-. That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is. If people knew -why- we were hated, if they took the time to learn about the past instead of repeating it, maybe we could find a way out of this that doesn't involve a billion dollars worth of explosions.


      What? You mean, we're not hated because of our absolute, pure, endless goodness? I mean, when we decide to rid the world of evil, why can't everybody just sit back and appreciate and love us? It's all in the service of God, anyway, we are His Redeemer Nation--we will save the world, save it for globalist consumerism. And the better we are, the more we're hated! How can that be? Why can't other nations just enjoy McDonald's and Disney and total bland homgenization and uniformity and conformity, the way we do? It's bliss, baby!

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    101. Re:Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > There is only one response that Sharon should be
      > making at this time 'How can we help'. Instead
      > Sharon ordered an invasion

      And the terrorists murdering Israel's own citizens, especially leaders, intending to provoke Israel to get other Mid East states against the US should be dealt with how?

      Where is the condemnation in these other countries? The breast beating about the horrible deaths of civilians? Answer? Nowhere. Civilians are the targets, not unfortunate bystanders.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    102. Re:Actually... by nicovl · · Score: 1, Informative

      You don't have to be a Muslim to hate the US!

      You just have to be intelligent and knowledgeable!

      Anyway... don't get mixed up if you are a patriot. The US as it presents itself in no way reflects the entire country. I'm sure some Americans hate the US!

    103. Re:Actually... by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, the MAD theory doesn't fly here. We have given them enough weapons to kill each other bit by bit over long periods of time. We don't give them nukes and shit that they could wipe each other out with at one stroke. The idea behind keeping them armed is so that we can keep them warring with each other, but not let either side ever really get the upper hand. Meanwhile, we make profits off of the weapons. In addition, we can justify our presence in the area as a peace-keeping force, which really acts as a big brother or protector of U.S. and allied based multinational oil corporations. The problem that bin Laden and the rest have with this setup, in my opinion, is that the US is controlling their turf and their resources. Does this mean the US is evil? Maybe, maybe not. The US is dependent on that oil to maintain quality of life for its citizens. Our leaders have to know that they can get that oil, gauranteed. If not, then our nation would go into a deep economic downturn. Our citizens are unwilling to accept that, we have been taught that we are the most successful nation in the world. We have been taught to consume as much as we can, because that makes the economy go round and round. So, if our government does not insure that we the people are fed, we will become unhappy. We might start taking a more active interest in the affairs of government. We might see that the individuals and their corporations are running the government at a profit for themselves rather than for us. They have been buying our ignorance and complacency for years. Not because they care, but because they have to keep us fat and happy until they have securely wrested control of the whole world. So no, Katz, globalization is not a nice happy attempt to help bring the poorer nations up to standard with the richer nations. It is actually a means for the elite to make sure that their position in the heirarchy of the one world government is as close to the top as possible. Any nation that opposes this power structure will be mischaracterized as a bunch of fundamentalist fanatics who "hate freedom". What they want is their freedom as a soveriegn nation to do what they decide to do, because they know that if the current power holders of the West acheive world domination, then the Middle East will be among its slaves. That is centralized control of power and resources. This centralized control is not necessary for Katz's so-called "cosmpolitan globalization", because that type of globalization would spring and is springing from the people. The problem is that powerful people are not interested in this natural plan. It would naturally elevate their slaves and diminish their power. That is not the capitalist way. The third world will remain subjugated if global capitalism has its way. We as US citizens are merely the Uncle Tom's of this brand of slavery, whether we choose to admit it or not.

    104. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The Ayatollah Khomeini had his reasons for taking
      > hostages two decades ago, and he became a hated
      > man then for protecting the freedoms of his own
      > people.

      They were diplomats. Even in war, you don't touch the diplomats -- you expell them. There is no valid reason to do this, certainly not by a thug like that.

      You people blather on and on and on about the soverignity of nations, even unto defending idiocy like the right of a people to vote themselves into slavery, yet you turn around and reject the most basic principles of soverign nations and their interaction.

      Then again, critical thinking never seems to raise its ugly head around here too much.

    105. Re: Actually... by btlzu2 · · Score: 1

      In my own mind, I don't think I'd call you a pacifist. To me a pacifist is someone who thinks that there's a peaceful solution to everything and is somewhat unrealistic (IMO) in their peaceful solutions--we'll analyze what we've done to cause this, we just have to be nice to them and give them what they want. As Henry Kissinger said on Fox News a few weeks ago, the people who say that we should look at what we've done to cause this are masochists. That's a little harsh, but there is a grain of truth there. It's like they're saying we ASKED for this.

      And besides, if you must have a label, you're an isolationist! :)

      --
      Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead.
    106. Re:Actually... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      What about our love of Saudi Arabia, and their oil?

      Israel - right wing and racist as it has become - is the ONLY democracy in the area. That makes them the good guys.

      The Arab dictatorships are blatantly anti-semetic, and are spreading Islamism. They hold us through payments to our politicians, through the oil companies. Hell, our President and Vice President are oil company executives! The Bush family is almost entirely finded by the Arab dictators!

      So Israel is our friend there, they are the democracy.

    107. Re:Actually... by Eugene+O'Neil · · Score: 1

      Would Hitler have ever gained the support of the German people if they had not been so embittered by the terms of the Versalles treaty?

      If you treat any group of people like sub-human monsters, sooner or later they will live up to your expectations.

    108. Re:Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > Sure it'll allow you to rally a bunch of young
      > college students to chant and hand out leaflets.

      I was a college student back when it was Nicaragua this, Nicaragua that.

      College students are like a little kid crossing the street for the first time when mommy doesn't want them to. They make their little pre-designed political statements based on a worldview that others out there are basically nice people, and just sit down with them for tea and they'll get along, and afterward they hear the applause. This emboldens them, and they confuse the emotional security of such approval with having a cold, rational analysis of the situation. It is nothing of the sort.

      It's similar to Hollywood stars, except that they get emotional support from sycophants and, more importantly, confuse their phenomenal financial success as being evidence of their great mental prowess.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    109. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "we actually are just about the only country actually actively trying to influence peace in that region"

      Please, read some Noam Chomsky before saying something so stupid.

    110. Re: Actually... by drsquare · · Score: 1

      "Should we really wait for a month to go by before attacking again? That gives them a chance to regroup and launch another September 11th."

      1) What difference does it make? Bombing civilians and Red-cross buildings has no effect on the terrorists, apart from possibly gaining them more support.

      2) Have you ever considered that the people behind the WTC destruction weren't actually in Afghanistan when they plotted/carries out the attacks?

    111. Re: Actually... by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is.

      You call this justice? Maybe even Infinite Justice? Let's look at the simple facts.

      When a murder is committed, the police conduct an investigation, collect evidence, ask questions, and finally build a case they think will convict. Then the suspect is arrested and brought to trial. All evidence is presented and both sides have a chance to argue their case. Then the jury deliberates and makes a decision. Finally, a judge determines a sentence in case of a guilty verdict.

      There's a similar process on the world stage. When the U.S. was attacking Nicaragua, the latter took its case to the World Court to stop the war. The Court decided in Nicaragua's favor and demanded that the U.S. stop all hostilities and pay substantial reparations for the damage it had inflicted. The U.S. ignored the Court and intensified the war. Nicaragua then went to the U.N. Security Council with a resolution calling on all states to obey international law. The U.S. vetoed the resolution as it has a permanent seat. Finally, Nicaragua went to the U.N. General Assembly with the same resolution which passed since there is no veto there. The U.S. ignored all this.

      Now airplanes are used as missiles, resulting in thousands of lost civilian lives and billions of dollars of damage. Does the U.S. take its evidence to court? Does it seek extradition? Does it go to the U.N. as demanded by treaties it signed? No. Instead, Bush displays cowboy diplomacy where he declares bin Laden "wanted, dead or alive." No evidence is presented; bombing simply commences on the country believed to be the home of the prime suspect. And we're not even targeting the suspect himself because, heck, we just don't know where he is!

      There were very good reasons for outlawing vigilantism in this country, and our judicial system is based on innocence until guilt is proven with hard evidence and in a court of law. This is about as far from justice as we could possibly fly. But what did you expect from a president that came to power via a military coup (several thousand "lost" military votes in Florida got him the state)?

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    112. Re:Actually... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 5, Informative
      And neither is Arafat. He is directly responsible for what is going on right now. This second Intifada was started by his failure to negotiate with Barak when a deal was on the table which would have brought peace and Palestinian statehood. The deal was rejected, the violence started, then Sharon was elected.

      You miss out one important step. The violence started the day that Sharon forced his way into the Mosque on the temple mount.

      Sharon's behaviour was a deliberate attempt to incite a violent reaction which he calculated would be to his personal political advantage.

      Sharon's strategy worked, he became Prime Minister before Netanyahu managed to complete his political comeback from the corruption allegations that had caused him to loose office.

      As for the settlements, I don't believe that they are being extended, nor is any land being taken to make room for them (certainly not now),

      According to Haaretz the number of settlements has doubled since the Oslo accords were signed. Confiscations of land to build settlements have taken place without any pause since the Sharon government came to power.

      The US has repeatedly demanded that Israel stop building settlements and withdraw from those built since Oslo. As always these demands have been ignored, the Israeli right being confident that they can get the Congress to vote them whatever subsidies Israel demands.

      but it's not particularly more right to suggest the Israelis living there should be kicked out than anybody else at this point.

      So if you come and take my house the fact you have taken it from me means that I have no rights whatsoever to demand its return?

      The Israelis occupying the West Bank and Gaza know that they are living on stolen land, in many cases they stole the land themselves at the point of a gun. What possible objection can there be to demanding that the land be returned to the people it was stolen from? Why should the US subsidize the settlers occupation? In Bosnia the settler's type of behavior was called 'ethnic cleansing'.

      The Barak peace plan was never a possibility, you only need to look at a map to see why. Israel would keep practically all the settlements and control all the borders of the Palestinian state.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    113. Re: Actually... by mi · · Score: 1
      Note that all this recent Palestinian violence started when Ariel Sharon came to power.

      This is a LIE. The violence started last September, when Mr. Sharon was an opposition leader. He "came to power" (or was democraticly elected) several months later (in February?) -- when the said violence showed the Israelis how inefficient the peaceful policies of the previous leaders were.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    114. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 1
      Hi Bitterman. You cannot point to anything in my post which indicates that I am ignorant of "American Foreign policy". Nor which would indicate that I watch CNN (which I can't stand).

      I'm not even using Microsoft right now.

      Are you sure you meant to address your post to me? Maybe if you weren't so busy playing Quake 2, "Bitterman", you'd have actually read my post and made some attempt to refute something in it, which you have not.

    115. Re:Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Canada

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    116. Re: Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Will the terrorists stop running, hiding, and preparing traps during Ramadan?

      Hmmm, let's think about this. In our "let's sit down with them for tea" model of the world, yes they will.

      Therefore, we should design foreign policy around this.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    117. Re:Actually... by dactex · · Score: 1

      Most of the regimes there opposing the US supplanted US placed or Supported regimes. If you want lists, I'll send them to you. I just didn't plan on writing a book.

    118. Re:Actually... by DumbSwede · · Score: 1
      It seems to me everyone who has an agenda to promote, starts by informing us that we are ignorant. If only we had read, studied or investigated more of the right kind of material -- as they see it -- then everything would be magically better.

      This person seems to imply they are not like Joe Average Citizen, so they must know the reasons we are hated, and yet they haven't list one reason (to help educate us hapless Joes). I have listened to many talking heads on television of late, most think they are educated in such matters, far more than Joe Average Citizen, and yet they are unable to come up with a consensus on why we are hated.

      If Americas policies in the world were somehow perfect as viewed by an omnipotent, unbiased, observer, I believe we would still be hated -- maybe by different groups, but still hated. The idea that if we just knew everyone on the planet better, our love and understanding would extinguish their hatred is a bunch of crap, some kind of quasi religious belief.

      Lets stop with the self hatred, dealing with the external hatred is hard enough. All these supposedly mightyly wronged other peoples of the world, what kind of world do you think would exist if they had the power we have? Think they would be as restrained? Think they would wallow in self hate? Think they would be issuing constant apologies? Think there would be less hate in the world?

      You are a naive, whinny, idealist. That, in a nutshell, is what the problem is.

    119. Re:Actually... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 1

      Do you know what the most popular restaurant in Paris is? McDonalds. The only reason SUVs don't sell well in Europe and Asia is the price of gasoline is higher. Every nation has shopping malls, and Must-See TV is syndicated around the world.


      As to your first assertion, I'd like some proof about the popularity of McDonalds in Paris. SUVs don't sell well in other countries for many reasons, fuel costs among them; but if someone is rich enough to afford a US $50,000 Lincoln SUV, do you think that person is going to care what fuel costs them?

      I am aware that every [first-world] nation has malls and plazas, but not on anywhere near the same scale; I hosted an exchange student from Hannover about five years ago, and she was amazed at the size of the local mall (the smallest of five in the area). Malls in Japan are, for the most part, more like open-air markets. Most importantly, malls in Europe and Asia are much smaller, and tend to have more locally-oriented shops.

      America isn't perfect. We have our Christian fundamentalists (abortion clinic bombings anyone?), we have poverty, we need to work out more and eat better (which again, would be a sign of consumerism and wealth), we even have a legislature that is showing less and less willingness to preserve the Bill of Rights. That said, it's still a pretty decent place to live.

      I admit I am feeling pretty nationalistic after 9-11. I'm a libertarian, I don't support capitalism at all costs, but I don't sing along with the brainwashed-politicly-correct Madison/Berkley/MIT dogma. That dogma being, no matter what the facts, you can feel good about yourself if you Blame America First.


      I never said, "Blame America First" -- I think that the actions of the terrorists on September 11th are absolutely inexcusable, and that whomever responsible needs to be found, tried, and executed; and I know that the destruction of the WTC/NY is not the fault of the U.S.; it's because a group of religious nuts, who treat their own people worse than they treat foreigners from the land of the Great Satan, have some crazy idea about a holy war.

      I also know that some Americans have a great deal to offer; look at the modern works of Hoffstadter, or the poetry of Kingsolver. Not all of America is bad -- but the mass of lemmings screaming for more oil, more malls, walls around our communities to feel safer is, to me at least, disgusting.

      I do not endorse the bombing of a largely innocent population (the Afghanis). The people in Afghanistan have no say in what their dictatorial government does, yet we attack them blindly because their totalitarian regime provided refuge for Bin Laden.
      I also do not agree with Bush's stance on Bin Laden's guilt -- I have seen no concrete proof that he is responsible, and until then there is reasonable doubt. The goal is to stop terrorism; not to become terrorists ourselves.

      Finally -- politically correct? Last time I checked, being PC was about not offending people; telling most of your countrypeople that they are fat, wasteful, ignorant slobs isn't exactly the best way of going about that.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    120. Re: Actually... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > cynical athiests

      I am a cynical athiest. What's your point?

      If you seek to know the problems of believing in gods that don't exist, look around you.

      CYNIC, n. A blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are, not as they ought to be. - Ambrose Bierce

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    121. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, i was going to mention William Walker, who worked intimatelt with the US backed Salvadoran death-squads (remembered th slaughtered nuns?)

      He reappeared in 1999 in Kosovo as an OSCE 'observer' (the famous setup of the Racak 'massacre')and we know fully well the US involvement there: in 1998,the CIA called the Kosovo Albanian thugs 'the biggest and best armed terrorist organization in the world'.
      6 months later, its cafe au lait in France
      between US officials and terrorists whose faces appeare on Interpol most wanted list.

      The US has a long history of promoting terrorism when it suits it, we cant be surprised when karma
      bites you in the ass.

      Our good buddy Beener was good in Afghanistan, he was an ally along with thousands of muhajedins in Bosnia and Kosovo where he was often seen in the 90's.
      So much so that Beener got a passport from the muslim Bosnian govt around 94-95....

      yup...were friends with all kind of scum..

      z

    122. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's Quake 3.

      But thanks for promoting American Terrorism against small, insignificant countries anyway. It's nice to see mind control at work.

      Love your 50+ posts to this thread.

      Bitterman
      Bombing Hospitals for Jesus since October 2001.

    123. Re: Actually... by tahpot · · Score: 0
      Don't be so quick to judge. We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is.

      No, you don't be so quick to judge. Your attitude is exactly what the Sept. 11 attacks were about. The ignorance of Americans. You just generalised the whole people of afgahnistan as having no concept of justice. I know no-one likes to say it, but the US did have it coming for a long time. And don't mod this as troll just because I have the guts to admit the US isn't the prettyboy people wish it was.

    124. Re:Actually... by rkent · · Score: 2

      Did we ask why Hitler hated Jews? No. Would it have helped? No.

      Hello, of course we take it as read that Hitler was a nut, the real question is, "why was Germany in a position that an extremist Nut could come to power?" And the answer is, "the absurd treaty they were forced to sign at Versailles."

      Hate to break it to ya, Mr. Patriot Man, but events do have causes, and even if we destroy all the terrorists now, if our policies (and even that very act of destruction, hm) create MORE terrorists every day, then we're still fighting a losing battle.

    125. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 1
      "Mind control" is when 5000 American civilians are murdered, and yet somehow they get you convinced that it's so-called "American Terrorism" that is the problem. "Mind control" is when (some) people get cowed into apologizing to people who murder them.

      Repeat after me: "Thank you sir, may I have another?"

      P.S. So now I've made 50+ posts to this thread, have I? I guess I can add "can't count" to the list of misapprehensions (i.e. I watch CNN, I use Microsoft...) you've made in this exchange.

      P.P.S. Oddly you still haven't refuted anything I've said about this subject - should we halt bombing on Ramadan? are Muslims the world over just itchin' for an excuse to side with Osama? If you had nothing of substance to add, why did you respond?

    126. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > 5000 American civilians are murdered

      I LOVE that the operative word is "American".

      Before we're done with the Turbantops, it'll be 1000 of them for every 1 of us.

      And that's the way it should be.

      Thanks for your support.
      George

    127. Re:Actually... by CKW · · Score: 1


      Again, no amount of understanding the root of the problem will make that go away.

      True, but it will prevent it from happening again!!!

      If we unknowningly allow our government agencies to screw over *another* country that eventually collapses and produces more extremists, we'll be right back where we started.

    128. Re:Actually... by rkent · · Score: 5, Insightful

      [ warning: this posts actually attempts to reason about the conflict between Israel and Palestine - it could get long! ]

      But to the peaceniks who really do think that dropping support for Israel will end the violence in the Middle East,

      I'm not a "peacenik," and I don't think that leaving Israel high and dry would solve everything, but I do think that America should use its sway to seriously pressure Sharon to change some Israeli policies. Having only been alive since 1978, I won't pretend to know everything about the Israel/Palestine conflict, but it seems like one reasonable demand on Israel is that they withdraw from the occupied territories in Palestine, immediately and completely.

      I don't say this because I think it'll get Osama Bin Laden out of his cave proclaiming a deep and abiding love for America, but rather because it's just The Right Thing To Do. The lands are internationally recognized as belonging to Palestine, and the preponderance of the world urges this withdrawal every single year, but America and Israel basically give them the finger in the name of "maintaining security for the Israeli state." Well, that's about as acceptable as it would be for the US to go occupy BC, Sonora, and Chihuahua because we didn't like Mexican immigration policy or something. It's just not the way you deal with issues.

      That said, if we insisted on the withdrawal from gaza and the west bank, it would obviously have to be accompanied by a strong security force to defend Israel proper to avoid genuinely giving in to Islamic extremists. Israeli security MUST be maintained, that is true. But not by occupying parts of Palestine in a campaign of attrition.

      I don't think this argument is ignorant or antisemitic, but some people attribute both of those modifiers to any argument except total, unwavering support for every action by the Israeli government. But this is a state that occupies other nations' internationally recognized territories, and is willing to summarily execute foreign nationals without providing evidence of guilt of any crime, let alone a trial. If we are going to use US resources to defend a country, it should be one which adheres to values that we as Americans ostensibly hold.

    129. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 1
      [5000 American civilians are murdered] I LOVE that the operative word is "American".

      Actually the operative word is "civilians".

      But the fact that they were (mostly) American is also important to the U.S. Government, of course. You got a problem with that? We are, after all, talking about the actions of the U.S. Government here. Which people should the U.S. Government try to defend, if not Americans?

      What exactly is the purpose of a government anyway, in your opinion, if not to defend the citizens within her borders?

      Why do you begrudge the right of Americans - and their government - to be pissed that Americans are murdered? Is it because (a) you are a self-hating American or (b) you are a non-American who hates and resents America? Let me know....

      Before we're done with the Turbantops, it'll be 1000 of them for every 1 of us.

      Nice straw man. Who brought up "Turbantops"? Oh I know: it was you. Who exactly has implied that killing lots of Afghanis is our goal in the first place (besides you)? Our government is fighting against the dictatorial government which rules the Afghans - not against the Afghans themselves.

      If you really cared about the so-called (by you) "Turbantops" as much as you are pretending to here, you'd be all for liberating them from their brutal regime. Instead you gripe and moan about "American Terrorism".

      I guess you want Afghanis to remain subjugated to a brutal, murderous dictatorship after all. How callous you are; Afghanis are people too, you know.

      Thanks for your support. George

      It's true; you really don't have anything of substance to add, do you?

      Well, too bad. Have fun perfecting those rocket jumps, you "American Foreign policy" expert you.... ;)

    130. Re:Actually... by mscheid · · Score: 1

      You're missing an important distinction here: Bin Laden (or any other extremist leader) is not the same as the people following him.

      As history teaches us, people show an increased tendency to follow extremists when times are bad. Your other example is actually a good one: Hitler the Germans. After WW1 Germany was forced to pay giant amounts of money to the allies, causing the effects of the world economic crisis to be felt much more intensely in Germany. Communists and fashists became very popular, and in the end Hitler gained domination.

      Now compare to what happened after WW2. The Marshall plan helped Germany and other european countries to develop a stable economy, thus increasing welfare in those countries. Result: Stability for nearly 60 years and counting...

      Back to the main topic. Doesn't it seem reasonable that economic growth and increased welfare in Afghanistan could have prevented Bin Laden's success? Unfortunately, globalization as organizations like the International Monetary Fund understand it won't help there (I'll show mercy and suppress my urge to write about economic theory here ;)

    131. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right it simply means one american life is equal to thousands of non americal lives.

      Keep your globalization in your pocket(read US). Rest of the world don't want it.

    132. Re:Actually... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      So our asking for Osama was a death sentence in their system.

      Don't be so naive.

      Bin Laden's son is married to Omar's daughter. Al Qaeda is the Taleban, the Taleban are Al Qaeda. Al Qaeda is just one of the factions that forms the Taleban, just as the US Marine corps is part of the US military.

      Without Bin Laden's funds the Taleban would still be illiterate opium farmers. Without the Taleban Bin Laden would have been dancing on the end of a rope in Saud long ago.

      The Taleban did not give up Bin Laden because he is an absolutely indispensable part of their military.

      But above all the Taleban did not give up Bin Laden because they approve of and support his aims and his methods. The Taleban have murdered tens of thousands of their own people. They have started pointless wars with every one of their neighbors except for Pakistan. Why would they be reluctant to start a war against the great Satan - particularly when the great Satan is the other side of the world and you are a land locked country that the infidels can only reach through sacred Muslim soil?

      These are the type of loonies who blow up all the ancient artifacts then complian that the tourist trade has died.

      The Taleban were loosing their grip on power due to the famine their mismanagement has caused. Remembering that the soviet invasion caused the Mujahedin factions to unite they are hoping to see the same effect.

      The Taleban have no knowledge of the West except their own propagnda. They have not seen the television pictures of the WTC collapsing. They believe we are evil fools and cowards. They have absolutely no understanding that the difference between US and soviet weapons is as great as that between the cannon and the spear.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    133. Re:Actually... by hurst · · Score: 1

      What percentage of our casualties have been civilian so far, 99.9%?

      99.9% of Afghan casualties reported by our stinkin mainstream media are civilian. Not the same thing as the actual percentage. Just one more thing that pisses me off.

      I'm so glad that someone sees the perspective on this matter. Someone above said something to the effect that more baby afghans have died than Americans have died of anthrax. This is such a load of horseshit. Six-thousand of our people died on 9/11. Why don't their deaths have meaning to these people? Grr.

    134. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, west knows every thing and others are ignorant cus they don't watch CNN? right?

      god have mercy on these 'one view' morons!

    135. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 1
      What the heck does a U.S. response to an attack on her own soil have to do with "globalization"? If U.S. responds, that is "globalization"?

      Man...the definition of this word has been mangled beyond all recognition.

      Every government in history has responded to attacks on their own soil with retaliation. If that is "globalization" then the word has no meaning whatsoever.

      And yes, from the point of view of the U.S. Government, the life of an American is "more important" than the lives of non-Americans who would murder us. I ask again: You got a problem with that?

      Just how self-loathing are you, anyway?

    136. Re:Actually... by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      If Ramadan is so important there is a simple solution. Turn over everyone associated wtih al-Qaida. Why should we go out of our way? The Afghanis as a nation need to take responsibility for what occures to their own country.

      All I hear on here is the intolerance and ignorance of Americans, like everywhere we go its our way or no way at all. The US constantly goes out of its way not to trample on the beliefs of others.

      On Thanksgiving Day in Saudi Arabia it was Americans who were forced to leave the country and go onto a ship simply to have a prayer. How many people have been forced to leave the US and go on a ship so that they could practice their religion.

      As an aside, in the Spring we had an intern who was Islamic. On his first day here when he was being introduced he refused to shake hands with any of the women here. We have some pretty liberal femenist types working here, but surprisingly nothing was mentioned of it, even in private conversation. Thinking back now on it I wish it were challenged. That being said, he was a good kid, but sometimes you should do the old 'when in rome do as the romans do' thing.

      And reguarding Vietnam, the reason the US lost was because winning would have likely brought China into the conflict. One Korea was enough. Ironically, I think if China really wants a free trade agreement with the US we should make them march into Afghanistan with a couple hundred thousand troops and do some grunt work.

    137. Re:Actually... by seer · · Score: 1, Interesting

      But this is a *war* and there are bound to be civilian casualties. I'm sure not all Germans were Nazis, but we had to attack that country for the better of the rest of the world (and for the security of our own nation). Civilians die during war--it's not a good thing, but a fact of war. What percentage of our casualties have been civilian so far, 99.9%?

      Duh! 5000+ civilians already died in America, right? If this is "just war" and "civilians die during war", then we have nothing to complain about, right? We were just attacked in a war that we didn't notice was taking place because we'd rather watch baseball.

    138. Re:Actually... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      yes, west knows every thing and others are ignorant cus they don't watch CNN? right?

      The Taleban are ignorant because they have intentionaly cut themselves off from all external information sources.

      I would never rely on CNN alone, particularly given its recent post AOL acquisition decline. I have 5 US news channels, 4 foreign, I usually read the US and UK press, I also follow the Israeli press which despite the obvious problems of bias tends to be much more evenhanded than the US media. In addition I receive briefing papers from many groups in the region.

      As a trained inteligence analyst I also know how to extract data from these sources.

      If the Taleban were only slightly less ignorant they would not be currently having the crap bombed out of them.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    139. Re:Actually... by _Mustang · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You miss out one important step. The violence started the day that Sharon forced his way into the Mosque on the temple mount.

      Factually incorrect on three levels.
      First - Sharon had no need to "force" his way anywhere. While obviously not a Muslim, the reality here is no different than when a non-Christian enters a church in that he has as much right to enter as does any other member of a democratic society.
      Second, that mosque is built on the remains of the Jewish temples.. If it were the other way around, I can guarantee you that the Muslims would have torn it down.
      Third is the truth that the violence started a long time before that. Arafat may be the "Chairman" of the PA now, but how do you think he began his "illustrious career"..

      Sharon's behaviour was a deliberate attempt to incite a violent reaction which he calculated would be to his personal political advantage.


      Quite possible; but last I checked mind-reading hadn't become reality as yet so I at least must refrain from making statements such as yours.
      But then how do you explain Arafat and his lack of activity in regards to dealing with the terror groups such Hamas and Islamic Jihad? It wasn't until the U.S came down hard on him that any action was seen by the PA to reign them in.

    140. Re:Actually... by mi · · Score: 1
      The violence started the day that Sharon forced his way into the Mosque on the temple mount.

      Well, when I visited the mosque in question, I did not have to force my way. Not at all. It is (definitely, was) open for visitors... Why should Mr. Sharon have been excluded?

      Face it, this was just a pretext for Arafat et al to start violence -- the rest of the world was becoming convinced, they are not decent people during last year's negotiations...

      The trouble with this negotiations -- be it with Arafat or Islamic Jihad or whoever is that they refuse to aknoweldge Israel's right to exist. They will take whatever they can now, but will not rest until Israel is no more... Or until they are put to rest, so to speak.

      And every maniac in the Middle East is trying to somehow bring Israel onto agenda. Remember when Saddam Hussein fired missiles at Israel -- to rally up support for his occupation of a fellow Muslim country?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    141. Re:Actually... by seer · · Score: 1

      I guess that "support for peace in Israel" has to do with vetoing UN resolutions to obey World Law and walking out in global talks, right?

    142. Re: Actually... by Darby · · Score: 1

      Ah, so in your opinion, all the Muslims of the world are this easily duped.

      Well, this much is obvious. They're not alone though. Anyone who defines themselves in terms of a belief in some all powerful and good concious being who nonetheless tortures and murders people for his own amusement *is* easily duped.
      Islam isn't the cause for the world's major problems. Religion is.
      In terms of atrocities committed, Islam has a long way to go to catch up with Christianity.
      The essential problem is that once you postulate an all mighty power, then you create the ability to do atrocities not possible without such an incentive.
      If we could have a little sense and sanity in this world and eliminate *ALL* gods, the world would be a much better place for everyone.

    143. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      99.9% of Afghan casualties reported by our stinkin mainstream media are civilian

      Just to clarify, by "our casualties" I mean our dead here in America, not the casualties that we have inflicted!

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    144. Re:Actually... by seer · · Score: 1
      Ever see a MAP of what deal would have given the Palestinians?



      I didn't think so. Take a look some day. It was a JOKE! If they would have accpeted that, it would have been worse, because they would have no bargining chips left. You really need to read some history, buddy.

    145. Re: Actually... by MadAhab · · Score: 2
      Being "hard" or "soft" is not what war is about
      Nor is it about God. It's about winning the war. To paraphrase Patton, war is not about dying for your country; war is about making more of the other bastards die for theirs.

      But it's characteristic of the insane mindset of many sorry bastards out there that little has been said about how many muslims have waged war during ramadan, and very much about how evil the US is for doing so, even though we haven't done it yet. Muslims killing during ramadan, OK, US killing during ramadan, infidels! Just like how the US defense of muslims in the balkans is conveniently ignored.

      --
      Expanding a vast wasteland since 1996.
    146. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I listened to some afghani's explain why they hate us, seems that we helped them win a war some time back, then after theyed won with our money, we left 'em alone (mostly) and so they felt betrayed (as far as I can tell) because we aren't there to continue to take care of them and wipe their collective asses.

    147. Re:Actually... by alexborges · · Score: 0

      Do you know what the most popular restaurant in Paris is? McDonalds.

      Shit!.... Have you ever been to Paris???? I mean, its okay, you have your point of view and I respect it, but the most popular restaurants in Paris are, no doubt about it, Gyro stands in the vicinity of the Sorbone...dont let your inner Uncle Sam take over...shish!...
      Alex

      --
      NO SIG
    148. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      What the hell do you mean by 'had it coming'?

      That those citizens deserved to die for US's activities, right or wrong?

      No, you're not a troll, you're an idiot.

    149. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. My fault. We must do what needs done. We must nuke them fuckers. While we are at it why not slaughter all Muslims in America? I mean.. we gotta end this kindness, eh? Who really needs them fucking Muslims, eh? Not I, said the American.

      I'm sorry if you cannot see that an Afghan is not the same as a Taliban member. I'm sorry you cannot see that there are innocent Afghans caught in the middle of what the Taliban did to America and what America is trying to do to the Taliban.

      Please. Stop being an ignorant American.

    150. Re: Actually... by Einziger · · Score: 1

      Well according to Guilliani (did I spell that right?) you shouldn't really research the root cause because that's justification for what happened (the attacks). Instead we should just rally behind our govt. and just agree, eventhough with the bombing 7 million people are in danger of starving to death.

    151. Re: Actually... by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Quick question -- are you trying to say that if you don't "believe what Amnesty International tells you" or what Indymedia wants you to believe, then you are brainwashed and believe the "wrong" things? Since when does alternative = truth?

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    152. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      1) What difference does it make? Bombing civilians and Red-cross buildings has no effect on the terrorists, apart from possibly gaining them more support.

      That's not what they're doing. You're listening to Taliban's propoganda. The US is bombing Taliban targets in Afghanistan.

      2) Have you ever considered that the people behind the WTC destruction weren't actually in Afghanistan when they plotted/carries out the attacks?

      A) The US has concrete evidence for this.
      B) Does it matter? Afghanistan is known to be holding terrorists' camps, and support terrorists. Whether those terrorists are the ones to commit the Sept. 11'th acts, or not is irrelevant. Their goal is what's relevant, and the terrorists' goal is to destroy America.

      Its Us or them.

      You choose.

    153. Re:Actually... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Well, when I visited the mosque in question, I did not have to force my way. Not at all. It is (definitely, was) open for visitors... Why should Mr. Sharon have been excluded?

      As you know full well he was excluded because he had stated his intention to join a bunch of fanatics who were laying the foundation for a third temple.

      Sharon did not make his visit by invitation, he was accompanied by a bunch of thugs who beat up anyone in his path, including the somewhat elderly clergy who had tried to lock him out.

      Sharon was not an innocent tourist making a visit out of curiosity. He was intentionally making a political statement with the express intention of inciting violence.

      Sharon wanted violence and he got violence. He cannot now expect the rest of the world to have much sympathy for him, or for that matter to see the violence that he has deliberately incited to be any sort of justification for his responses.

      Sharon has already taken Isreal into one war that has damaged it severely, now he wants to take it into a second. He is deliberately forcing the US to choose between support for Israel and building the coalition against the terrorist attacks on the US. He is singlehandedly destroying the political influence of the Israeli lobby in the US.

      Sharon's policies are not only bad for Israel, they are a betrayal of the US. It is long since past the point where he should be replaced.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    154. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why should Sharon be excluded ?

      Two words: Sabra and Shattila (not sure of the spelling). Sharon is the only Israeli minister which was ever found guilty by the Israelian justice of passively allowing mass killing of civilian in palestinian refugee camp.

      Actually a few days before this, the Israeli moved closer to the camps (around Beyrouth in Lebanon) in order, they claimed, to protect civilians. Guess what, a few days later christian militia entered the refugee camps and started massive killings. Sharon was defense minister at the time and he had to go, and was found guilty of serious misbehaviour (to put it mildly) by the Israelian justice, which can hardly be considered to be driven by antisemitism. Of course Sharon was too clever to let his troops do the dirty work, he only considerably eased the work of the militia (once again showing the complexity of the Middle East, adding to it the fact that Arafat is far from controlling all palestinians, contrarily to what many american publications seem to take for granted).

      The penalty included the fact that Sharon could not be defense minister again for 20 years or so. Guess what, a few months ago, he temporarily took over the defense because the minister was travelling abroad, showing what he thinks of the judicial decisions that affect him.

      In short, this guy was condemned (very lightly) for lending a helping hand to people who committed a crime against humanity. Do you believe that the palestinians have forgotten this story?

      Now let us be fair, the palestinians, and Arafat do not have a clean past either. But the visit of Sharon was a provocation. I would not say it of any other Israeli politician that I know, alive or dead (even Begin which had a past of terrorist actions before Israel was founded). Sharon probably bet that this would bring him more votes than he would lose and he won the election. Now personnaly I would never vote for somebody with Sharon's past. Netanyahu was probably not easy to negotiate with, but any negotiation has to consider the serious security issues of Israel, and with him yes was yes and no was no, and Barak was too soft in my opinion. I don't consider Sharon able to negotiate anything (in any case the answer is no) and his past shows that you can't even believe a single word of what he claims.

      As a side note: At the time, the fairly recently elected french president Mitterand claimed that this situation would lead to "Oradour" (look it up if you want) like situations. This caused a serious arousal against Mitterand by french jews and in Israel, but Mitterand maintained his words and he was unfortunately proved true a few days later (then nobody asked him to retract his words BTW). It was one of the few occasions in which Mitterand, who had lot of defects, showed an impressive intuition.

    155. Re: Actually... by themurray · · Score: 1

      Actually I would like the bombing to stop after a nuke is deployed.

      I agree with pulling out of the UN, since everyone on it that has any power hates the US. Anyone would who put Sudan on the Human Rights Commission is a fool and is not worth dealing with.

      If that part of the world wishes to be closed minded and hate anything that does not follow their ideals of life, then they can rot on their own time.

      Globalization has become a tool for power politics and multinationals to increase their bottom line. A global government will never work unless they respect each and every area they control before the change over, so under the current politics this will never happen.

      We have have turned caused issues; but if this countries would be strong enough to stand on their own, then we would not have to attempt to help. When dealing with people, things have a tendency to go wrong. All sides have their problems.

    156. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about 'us' sponsoring terrorism in other countries?

      What about bombing of Sudan last year?

      When you bomb, its fight against terrorism.

      When they bomb, its terrorism.

      God, save us all from people like you('us').

    157. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 3, Informative

      What we must do, is:
      Pull out of the UN. Create a new world-organization that does not include nations who support terrorism. All member-states have to have a minimum standard of identifying citizens who want to cross borders, and serious laws against money laundering that are strictly enforced. Security is what people want. Security is the best way to ensure peace, and prosperity.


      What makes you think the rest of the world will follow and dismantle the UN? The rest of the world wants oil, and has other connections with arab nations.

      Pull out of Saudi Arabia. Pull out of Israel (since the Israeli government clearly is not interested in peace).

      The Israeli government, including Nobel peace prize holder Shimon Peres, is clearly interested in peace. Albeit being under fire, Peres negotiated terms to cease fire. Those terms were all violated, mostly by the Palestinian side, that refused to constrain the terrorists. Seeing those attempts failed, the Israeli government cannot negotitate under fire any longer.

      Develop alternative energy sources to power the Western economies of the 21st century.

      Easier said than done. On the bright side, oil seems to will have run out in a couple of decades.

      Stop all foreign aid and erect trade interdiction to all non-member states.
      Let the Arabs starve. Let them know that it's their extremists and their pandering to the extremists that got them into this position, the only way to ensure their own survival and prosperity is to become democratic nations,


      Arabs, in Arab countries, are already starving. The living conditions in most Arab countries are horrible. This does NOT generate Democracy. Democracies do NOT arise from such conditions. On the contrary, experience teaches that almost all totalitarian regimes initiated with starvation.

      and join the coalition, and find and eliminate their extremists, and stop sponsoring their propaganda in their schools.

      What makes you think they (The people) conclude that their regime, Propoganda, or extremists are responsible for this? The people are receptors of propoganda. Leaders control this propoganda.

      If they want to farm dust, and play in their oil, and lead mideval lives, they're free to do so. But we should completely cease all contact with those societies, and prevent those people from entering Western society so they can no longer terrorize us.

      This is a broad generalization. What will you do about the arabs already in Western countries? How will you prevent the enterance of Arabs into Western civilization through third-party countries, such as "neutral" European countries (France, for instance)?

      And Israel's problems should be Israel's alone. I, for one, am sick of taking it in the nuts for them. If they want peace, then they have to get rid of their own extremists.

      Makes me wonder what you possibly mean by "get rid of". Israel has constantly been the compromising side in the conflict. And the Palestinian side has constantly been the major source of violence. Yes, it is wrong to let settlers form new settlement, and give rough time to the arabs around, but its far more wrong to allow militant organizations roam the area freely, striking civilians with guns and bombs.

      Note that all this recent Palestinian violence started when Ariel Sharon came to power.

      As someone else pointed out, this is a blatant lie, as Sharon was elected after the recent violence was initiated, which happened after the Palestinians refused a huge compromise of the Israeli side with no compromise of their own.

      He and his extremist regime are just as nasty as the Jerry Falwells and the Mulluh Omars of the world.

      Especially the extremist Nobel Peace prize holders, who keep pressing towards a non-violent solution?

      If OBL wants to create a "pure islamist state" and use oil as a weapon to topple the West, I say, let him try, and let him fail on his own.

      OBL's state is not the primary issue. The deaths of more thousands he might bring is.

      The muslims of the world will soon find out that 90% of them don't want a pure islamist state, and when the west finds alternative energy sources, then they'll be crying like the oil industry did in the 80's - remember? OPEC cut back on supply, and demand dropped, and they went hungry.

      Hopefully the influence of arab countries will drop as oil runs out. However, this is not sure to bring down the politic power of arab countries, as they still pose the most major threat of instability, that the rest of the world fears so badly.

      In the end, what we'll have is a bunch of counter-revolutions in the middle east, Arabs who will overthrow these religious regimes, and they'll be much more strongly committed to democracy, because they had to fight to get it, instead of having "the man" impose it on them "against allah's will".

      This is one of the most rediculous claims I've heard. The worse you make these people's lives, the more totalitarian their regimes will look like. Its a fact of history. Nobody will try to implement Democracy where hardly anybody appriciates, or even knows what Democracy is. If you hope of an objective understanding from the "Arab People", you will be highly disappointed.

      And the world will be a better place, not only because of the better political climate in the mideast,

      How will all of your restrictions, separations, starvations, and other means will make the political climate any better?

      but because the western economies will be using less oil, and the environment may actually allow human life to exist on this planet.

      This, assuming your new source of energy doesn't contaminate the Earth far worse.

      I'd say you should re-think through your ideas.

    158. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the terrorists murdering Israel's own citizens, especially leaders, intending to provoke Israel to get other Mid East states against the US should be dealt with how?


      Well, the murder in question was assasinated quite neatly - some one walked up and shot him in the head with a silenced pistol. It was a hit; a precision job.

      In responce, Isreal rolls out the tanks. You're suggesting this was reasonable and prudent? Do you think the NYPD would call in the National Gaurd if some mobster put a bullet in Guliani's head (god forbid, etc.)? Get a grip.
    159. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmm... the same Kissinger that probably is the biggest massmurderer ever in history if you don't count Stalin and Hitler? Yummy.

    160. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Bin Laden has stated that driving the American forces out of the 'holyland' of Saudi Arabia (with the two 'holiest' sites Mecca and Median) was his primary mission.

      Medina.

      --- I love Wisconsni!

    161. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The US is bombing Taliban targets in Afghanistan."

      Oh.. that must be like when US wasn't killing civilians in Vietnam, Laos, Kambodja, almost all of Latin America etc etc.. :P

      Sheesh.. don't you learn? Talk about propaganda.

    162. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      What about bombing of Sudan last year?

      How is this relevant to the question whether or not to bomb terrorist support centers?
      If the US does wrong, and it does, its a completely different issue, and in any case, targeting civilians is not a legitimate answer. The US may inevitably harm civilians, but it does not target them.

      When you bomb, its fight against terrorism. When they bomb, its terrorism.

      It is all a matter of who is the target. The US is dropping humantiarian aid in Afghanistan, while bombinb military posts of an organization that actively supports targeting of civilians. Those military posts are right next to civilian centers, but those are clearly not the target.

    163. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT TERRORISM?
      By Dr. Robert M. Bowman, Lt. Col., USAF, ret.*

      A FEW YEARS AGO, terrorists destroyed two U.S. embassies. President Clinton retaliated against suspected facilities of Osama bin Laden. In his television address, the President told the American people that we were the targets of terrorism because we stood for democracy, freedom, and human rights in the world.

      On that occasion, I wrote: "Tell people the truth, Mr. President ... about terrorism, not about poor Monica. If your lies about terrorism go unchallenged, then the terror war you have unleashed will likely continue until it destroys us.

      "The threat of nuclear terrorism is closing in upon us. Chemical terrorism is at hand, and biological terrorism is a future danger. None of our thousands of nuclear weapons can protect us from these threats. These idols of plutonium, titanium, and steel are impotent. Our worship of them for over five decades has not brought us security, only greater danger. No 'Star Wars' system ... no matter how technically advanced, no matter how many trillions of dollars was poured into it ... can protect us from even a single terrorist bomb. Not one weapon in our vast arsenal can shield us from a nuclear weapon delivered in a sailboat or a Piper Cub or a suitcase or a Ryder rental truck. Not a penny of the 273 billion dollars a year we spend on so-called defense can actually defend us against a terrorist bomb. Nothing in our enormous military establishment can actually give us one whit of security. That is a military fact.

      "Mr. President, you did not tell the American people the truth about why we are the targets of terrorism. You said that we are the target because we stand for democracy, freedom, and human rights in the world. Baloney! We are the target of terrorists because we stand for dictatorship, bondage, and human exploitation in the world. We are the target of terrorists because we are hated. And we are hated because our government has done hateful things.

      "In how many countries have we deposed popularly elected leaders and replaced them with puppet military dictators who were willing to sell out their own people to American multinational corporations?

      "We did it in Iran when we deposed Mossadegh because he wanted to nationalize the oil industry. We replaced him with the Shah, and trained, armed, and paid his hated Savak national guard, which enslaved and brutalized the people of Iran. All to protect the financial interests of our oil companies. Is it any wonder there are people in Iran who hate us?

      "We did it in Chile when we deposed Allende, democratically elected by the people to introduce socialism. We replaced him with the brutal right-wing military dictator, General Pinochet. Chile has still not recovered.

      "We did it in Vietnam when we thwarted democratic elections in the South which would have united the country under Ho Chi Minh. We replaced him with a series of ineffectual puppet crooks who invited us to come in and slaughter their people -- and we did. (I flew 101 combat missions in that war which you properly opposed.)

      "We did it in Iraq, where we killed a quarter of a million civilians in a failed attempt to topple Saddam Hussein, and where we have killed a million since then with our sanctions. About half of these innocent victims have been children under the age of five.

      "And, of course, how many times have we done it in Nicaragua and all the other banana republics of Latin America? Time after time we have ousted popular leaders who wanted the riches of the land to be shared by the people who worked it. We replaced them with murderous tyrants who would sell out and control their own people so that the wealth of the land could be taken out by Domino Sugar, the United Fruit Company, Folgers, and Chiquita Banana.

      "In country after country, our government has thwarted democracy, stifled freedom, and trampled human rights. That's why we are hated around the world. And that's why we are the target of terrorists.

      "People in Canada enjoy better democracy, more freedom, and greater human rights than we do. So do the people of Norway and Sweden. Have you heard of Canadian embassies being bombed? Or Norwegian embassies? Or Swedish embassies. No.

      "We are not hated because we practice democracy, freedom, and human rights. We are hated because our government denies these things to people in third world countries whose resources are coveted by our multinational corporations. And that hatred we have sown has come back to haunt us in the form of terrorism -- and in the future, nuclear terrorism.

      "Once the truth about why the threat exists is understood, the solution becomes obvious. We must change our government's ways.

      "Instead of sending our sons and daughters around the world to kill Arabs so the oil companies can sell the oil under their sand, we must send them to rebuild their infrastructure, supply clean water, and feed starving children.

      "Instead of continuing to kill thousands of Iraqi children every day with our sanctions, we must help them rebuild their electric powerplants, their water treatment facilities, their hospitals -- all the things we destroyed in our war against them and prevented them from rebuilding with our sanctions.

      "Instead of seeking to be king of the hill, we must become a responsible member of the family of nations. Instead of stationing hundreds of thousands of troops around the world to protect the financial interests of our multinational corporations, we must bring them home and expand the Peace Corps.

      "Instead of training terrorists and death squads in the techniques of torture and assassination, we must close the School of the Americas (no matter what name they use). Instead of supporting military dictatorships, we must support true democracy -- the right of the people to choose their own leaders. Instead of supporting insurrection, destabilization, assassination, and terror around the world, we must abolish the CIA and give the money to relief agencies.

      "In short, we do good instead of evil. We become the good guys, once again. The threat of terrorism would vanish. That is the truth, Mr. President. That is what the American people need to hear. We are good people. We only need to be told the truth and given the vision. You can do it, Mr. President. Stop the killing. Stop the justifying. Stop the retaliating. Put people first. Tell them the truth."

      Needless to say, he didn't ... and neither has George W. Bush. Well, the seeds our policies have planted have borne their bitter fruit. The World Trade Center is gone. The Pentagon is damaged. And thousands of Americans have died. Almost every TV pundit is crying for massive military retaliation against whoever might have done it (assumedly the same Osama bin Laden) and against whoever harbors or aids the terrorists (most notably the Taliban government of Afghanistan). Steve Dunleavy of the New York Post screams "Kill the bastards! Train assassins, hire mercenaries, put a couple of million bucks up for bounty hunters to get them dead or alive, preferably dead. As for cities or countries that host these worms, bomb them into basketball courts." It's tempting to agree. I have no sympathy for the psychopaths that killed thousands of our people. There is no excuse for such acts. If I was recalled to active duty, I would go in a heartbeat. At the same time, all my military experience and knowledge tells me that retaliation hasn't rid us of the problem in the past, and won't this time.

      By far the world's best anti-terrorist apparatus is Israel's. Measured in military terms, it has been phenomenally successful. Yet Israel still suffers more attacks than all other nations combined. If retaliation worked, Israelis would be the world's most secure people.

      Only one thing has ever ended a terrorist campaign -- denying the terrorist organization the support of the larger community it represents. And the only way to do that is to listen to and alleviate the legitimate grievances of the people. If indeed Osama bin Laden was behind the four hijackings and subsequent carnage, that means addressing the concerns of the Arabs and Muslims in general and of the Palestinians in particular. It does NOT mean abandoning Israel. But it may very well mean withdrawing financial and military support until they abandon the settlements in occupied territory and return to 1967 borders. It may also mean allowing Arab countries to have leaders of their own choosing, not hand-picked, CIA-installed dictators willing to cooperate with Western oil companies.

      Chester Gillings has said it very well: "How do we fight back against bin Laden? The first thing we must ask ourselves is what is it we hope to achieve -- security or revenge? The two are mutually exclusive; seek revenge and we WILL reduce our security. If it is security we seek, then we must begin to answer the tough questions -- what are the grievances of the Palestinians and the Arab world against the United States, and what is our real culpability for those grievances? Where we find legitimate culpability, we must be prepared to cure the grievance wherever possible. Where we cannot find culpability or a cure, we must communicate honestly our positions directly to the Arab people. In short, our best course of action is to remove ourselves as a combatant in the disputes of the region."

      To kill bin Laden now would be to make him an eternal martyr. Thousands would rise up to take his place. In another year, we would face another round of terrorism, probably much worse even than this one. Yet there is another way.

      In the short term, we must protect ourselves from those who already hate us. This means increased security and better intelligence. I proposed to members of Congress in March that we should deny any funds for "Star Wars" until such time as the Executive Branch could show that they are doing all possible research on the detection and interception of weapons of mass destruction entering the country clandestinely (a far greater threat than ballistic missiles). There are lots of steps which can be taken to increase security without detracting from civil rights. But in the long term, we must change our policies to stop causing the fear and hatred which creates new terrorists. Becoming independent of foreign oil through conservation, energy efficiency, production of energy from renewable sources, and a transition to non-polluting transportation will allow us to adopt a more rational policy toward the Middle East.

      The vast majority of Arabs and Muslims are good, peaceful people. But enough of them, in their desperation and anger and fear, have turned first to Arafat and now to bin Laden to relieve their misery. Remove the desperation, give them some hope, and support for terrorism will evaporate. At that point bin Laden will be forced to abandon terrorism (as has Arafat) or be treated like a common criminal. Either way, he and his money cease to be a threat. We CAN have security ... or we can have revenge. We cannot have both.

      *Dr. Robert M. Bowman directed all the "Star Wars" programs under presidents Ford and Carter and flew 101 combat missions in Vietnam. His Ph.D. is in Aeronautics and Nuclear Engineering from Caltech. He is President of the Institute for Space and Security Studies and Presiding Archbishop of the United Catholic Church. Dr. Bowman can be reached at RobertBowman@MiddleEast.Org.

    164. Re: Actually... by pyramid+termite · · Score: 1

      The Taliban has 45,000 soldiers, entrenched in bunkers, willing to die in suicide attacks. At Okin awa, the Japanese had 100,000 soldiers, entrenched in bunkers, willing to die in suicide attacks. We defeated the Japanese Empire at Okinawa, we will defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan. But not with token bombing raids.

      Except that Afghanistan's a lot bigger than Okinawa, the native population there mostly supports the enemy and IS the enemy, unlike Okinawa, and the U.S. has to go 1,000 miles by land or air to get anything to the battlefield, where in Okinawa, they could just pull the ships right up. Major differences.

    165. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Oh.. that must be like when US wasn't killing civilians in Vietnam, Laos, Kambodja, almost all of Latin America etc etc.. :P

      Was the US ever claiming not to have heavy civilian casualities in Vietnam, etc?
      As someone pointed out, this is ont of the first wars where there's a serious attempt to not harm civilians.

      Sheesh.. don't you learn? Talk about propaganda.

      Well, I learn from facts, not made-up propoganda stories about how Vietnam was said to have very little civilian casualities.

    166. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not those people. USA! Hard to understand? How many millions have died by USA's hand these last decades? Can anyone even count? Time to realise that you've been very lucky the people of the world have been som patioen up until now.

      40 000 CHILDREN DIE EVERY DAY!!!! You make me sick.

    167. Re: Actually... by schwar · · Score: 1

      I also believe that most of what you've said is right.

      But even so there is no way that America will ever make such a dramatic change to the way it does business.

      There's just too much inertia behind the current system for any serious changes in direction to take place.

    168. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ehmm... that's "so patient"

    169. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Not those people. USA! Hard to understand? How many millions have died by USA's hand these last decades? Can anyone even count? Time to realise that you've been very lucky the people of the world have been som patioen up until now.

      Whether or not the USA is doing legitimate or illegitimate things is out of the scope of this discussion. The discussion is about what to do to terrorists. You want to call the US a terrorist country? FINE: Then target the US, not the civilians.

      You are trying to make it sound, as though killing US civilians is a proper and legimiate response to whatever it is, or is not, the US is doing.

      That is utter bull: The US's actions, regardless of their size, intensity, or evil, can serve as no justification to any action against US citizens, and until you realize that you are just one of Bin Laden's pawns.

    170. Re: Actually... by tahpot · · Score: 0

      I don't think the citizens deserved to die for US activiteis NO. They were the unfortunate people to get in the way of an attack by terrorists designed to hurt AMERICA

    171. Re: Actually... by tahpot · · Score: 0
      You want to call the US a terrorist country? FINE: Then target the US, not the civilians.

      Because of the way the world works, it is impossible to target the US with a military attack. So the terrorists used the American system to hurt itself (Large airliners)

      This meant civilians being killed, the same as the American campaign is.... ie: One red cross building has been hit twice already!!

      America is a selfish arrogant country, who was attacked by one of the poorest countries in the world.

      At the moment the poorest country is on top. That's what really pisses off Americans

    172. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is.

      Are you serious? You honestly think that bombing a country for the crimes of a few people is justice? Do you think bombing a country wihtout proof that anyone within that country is guilty, without expressing proof or evidence that links the terrorist attacks to afghanistan besides the nationality of a few terrorists, and without proper declaration of war or negiation with that country's administration is justice?

      I know justice is blind but does it have to be deaf and stupid too? IT IS WRONG TO KILL INNOCENT PEOPLE FOR THE CRIMES OF THEIR FELLOW CITIZENS! The US government is fighting terrorism with terrorism. THIS IS WRONG! Or have I been all wrong in assuming that killing innocent people is unethical, immoral and bad?

      I hope I am right, cuz it would suck living in the world the Bush administration wants to create. It doesn't have to be that way. We don't have to run engines off of oil. They can be run off hydrogen (water) or hemp based petrol or direct sunlight and electricity. Freedom doesn't have to be protected with a pack of lawyers, it can be protected effectively, if not extremely, with a gun or with education and common sense. Americans don't have to be mindless TV watchers. They could learn to read and write and use computers. Hell, humanity could survive and conquer a universe. That, to me, seems so much more satisfying that killing a few million arabs.

      I'm ashamed to be an American and I would rather die than fight or kill for people like you. I just wish you would realize that every innocent human has inherent rights to freedom, life, property, protection, and justice. Taking those rights away because they aren't an American citizen is no different than taking a citizens rights away. Everyone, including Mr. Bush and every member of his administration and everyone living or dying in afghanistan are equal. They are all flesh and blood and make mistakes just like you and me. And you are a hypocrite and don't deserve the rights that have been given to you if you think otherwise.

      How would you feel if the situation were reversed? If afghanistan had the ability to bomb us for a month because 20 Americans committed an act of terrorism against afghanistan, telling us they are just bombing our military targets, but of course innocent Americans would be dying because, uh, hello, bombs kill people. How would you feel about that? Do you feel? Do you think? ARRGH! See my dilema? I'm being told constantly that I'm supposed to support people like you. I just wish I could kick all y'all christian-bush-lovin-war mongers out of my country and get back to work.

    173. Re: Actually... by screwballicus · · Score: 2
      We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is

      It's sentiments like this that have directly resulted in the anti-americanism that currently exists throughout the world (and in America, too). I'm not talking about the anti-americanism of the bin Ladens of the world. I'm talking about that of the academics, the Noam Chomskys out there.

      No matter who is the speaker, nor who the audience, the above phrase reaks of a spectacular arrogance. When you say "people who have no concept of what justice really is", are you talking about the terrorists? If so, don't you think they, more than anyone else on earth have an extremely firm idea, in their religious dogma, of what is just and what must be fought for at all cost?

      More likely, when you say "no concept of what justice really is", you mean they have the wrong concept of justice. To take it further, you mean they do not have your concept of justice (and I will presume that your concept of justice necessarily the correct one any more than mine is infallible. That's a difference of opinion and it's vastly different from what you're portraying. Our problem isn't that bin Laden desires to commit evil or injustices, it's that he desires to commit good and fight for justice, except his good is our evil.

      Saying that bin Laden has the wrong idea about justice is all well and good. Anyone writing here would agree with you on that. However, saying that an entire people has "no concept" of justice is ridiculous. It's reminiscent of the arrogant ideology on which much of colonialism was based.

    174. Re:Actually... by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Good point... what is Americas biggest export, no not computer parts, but weapons. On the one hand they do seem to promote peace in these parts of the world, but then they sell these weapons all over the world... a questionable policy. Have they actually achieved peace... no, so it begs the question, is this a smokescreen, and is peace really intended.

      (Of course peace in this region is very difficuly so maybe not)

    175. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arafat may be the "Chairman" of the PA now, but how do you think he began his "illustrious career"..

      You're trying to make a distinction here, but either you're ignorant or misleading others 'cuz Sharon's "illustrious career" included unarguably terrorist actions. Check them out here. Here's a sample:

      Sharon's history offers a monochromatic record of moral corruption, with a documented record of war crimes going back to the early 1950s. He was born in 1928 and as a young man joined the Haganah, the underground military organization of Israel in its pre-state days. In 1953 he was given command of Unit 101, whose mission is often described as that of retaliation against Arab attacks on Jewish villages. In fact, as can be seen from two terrible onslaughts, one of them very well known, Unit 101's purpose was that of instilling terror by the infliction of discriminate, murderous violence not only on able bodied fighters but on the young, the old, the helpless.

      Sharon's first documented sortie in this role was in August of 1953 on the refugee camp of El-Bureig, south of Gaza. An Israeli history of the 101 unit records 50 refugees as having been killed; other sources allege 15 or 20. Major-General Vagn Bennike, the UN commander, reported that "bombs were thrown" by Sharon's men "through the windows of huts in which the refugees were sleeping and, as they fled, they were attacked by small arms and automatic weapons".

      And it gets worse, lots worse...

      As defense minister in Menachem Begin's second government, Sharon was the commander who led the full dress 1982 assault on Lebanon, with the express design of destroying the PLO, driving as many Palestinians as possible to Jordan and making Lebanon a client state of Israel. It was a war plan that cost untold suffering, around 20,000 Palestinian and Lebanese lives, and also the deaths of over one thousand Israeli soldiers. The Israelis bombed civilian populations at will. Sharon also oversaw the infamous massacres at Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps. The Lebanese government counted 762 bodies recovered and a further 1,200 buried privately by relatives. However, the Middle East may have been spared worse, thanks to Menachem Begin. Just as the '82 war was getting under way, Sharon approached Begin, then Prime Minister, and suggested that Begin cede control over Israel's nuclear trigger to him. Begin had just enough sense to refuse.

      The slaughter in the two contiguous camps at Sabra and Shatilla took place from 6:00 at night on September 16, 1982 until 8:00 in the morning on September 18, 1982, in an area under the control of the Israel Defense Forces. The perpetrators were members of the Phalange militia, the Lebanese force that was armed by and closely allied with Israel since the onset of Lebanon's civil war in 1975. The victims during the 62-hour rampage included infants, children, women (including pregnant women), and the elderly, some of whom were mutilated or disemboweled before or after they were killed.

      I'm no fan of Arafat, but I can't countenance spreading false information.

    176. Re: Actually... by webprogrammer · · Score: 1
      Muhammed lived in the 7th century, A.D., not the 9th as you seem to think.

      A "Jihad" is defined in the Koran as the struggle within one's self to do the right thing, not an excuse for holding wars as the taliban seem to think.

      Bin' Laden killed 6,000 people. Obviously, he doesn't follow/respect his faith, so there's no reason to believe he gives a damn about the holy days. Why should we?

      --
      Tim ODonnell (trying to be the most
    177. Re:Actually... by crealf · · Score: 1
      There was a story on the news about a week ago about an 8 year old boy in Afghanistan who only wants to be able to sleep without fear--first of the tabliban, now of the bombing.

      I don't know how this matches the point you were trying to make. After this, who will the boy tend to dislike/hate now ?

      One of the few things that might make a dictatorship look brighter is a foreign, external agression.

    178. Re:Actually... by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      Well-put. It has nothing to do with technology, it has to do with our (poorly-executed) attempt to make good in 1948 for what we stood by and allowed to happen during WW2.

      Yes, that's right. A Saudi millionaire hates the United States because Britain gave Palestine to the Jews. Doesn't this seem a little roundabout?

      The thing that the US is hated for in the middle east is its support of Israel's heavy-handed, brutal, discriminatory practices against the Palestinian people; every country on the security council (in fact, pretty much every country in the world) has agreed over and over that there needs to be resolution of the conflict, but the US vetos resolutions and Israel ignores them.

      Israel will only agree to a Palestinian state on its own terms, and the US support is one of the only things that keeps Israel intact despite this - this is why the US is hated.

      --Dan

    179. Re:Actually... by Lullabye · · Score: 1

      Horseshit. I don't think anyone really believes that pulling out of Isreal will create peace. However, it would be right, considering what the Isrealites did to the Palastineans was no better than what Hitler did to them. Some families could trace their homes back 4-5 centuries, so what right did Isreal have to decide their rights were worth nothing? And more importantly, what right did we have to support, and actually push for it.

      --
      "God is REAL ... unless previously declared as an integer"
    180. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      This whining recititaton of a trite falacy: If we are held in contempt then we must have done something to deserve that contempt.
      Which makes a hell of a lot more sense than We're being bombed just for the hell of it.

      You rely on a false dichotomy, reasoning that terrorists attack the United States "just for the hell of it" or that they attack us in retribution for our own acts. You exclude the former and conclude (modus tolendo ponens) the latter. Your contrived limit of two explanations is both a blatent failure of logic and a dishonest rhetoricial tactic.

      The Taliban hates us for those reasons, yes. But others hate us for the reasons ...this country's past misdeeds [:] ...The Bay of Pigs, the coup leading to the building of the Panama Canal, and (the biggest blunder in recent deades) Vietnam all play a part in this, as does our support of one side and not the other in Israel, our injecting ourselves into the affairs of Bosnia and Iraq and Columbia....

      Therein your reluctancy to provide examples is explained: You can offer no examples of United States actions for which terrorism is a rational response, and your pro-communist position would detract from the popular appeal of your remarks.

      Your ludicrous assertion that the acquisition of the Panamanian canal zone drives modern anti-american hostilities is a desperate attempt to buttress a failed argument.

      Recall Communism: Stalin, Lenin and Mao murdered tens of millions. Mao's aim of the Cultural Revolution was the destruction of Chineese culture, by means of killing intellectuals and smashing historical artifacts. In Berlin, there was a wall, and those attempting to flee communism through that wall were machine gunned to death on the spot as a matter of state policy. The prisoners of communist countries, their inhabitatants, who bravely opposed these policies were awoken in the night by state authorities and shot in the head.

      The United States in Vietnam and in Cuba sought to contain this menace. Your perverse labelling of these American actions as "misdeeds" reveals a consistant sympathy for the perpetratrors of mass murder. Your inclination to blame the victims of terrorist attacks for failing to understand the fanatical thinking of their killers supports that interpretation.

      The conduct of American foreign and domestic policy has indeed been flawed, notwithstanding your inability to name any of those flaws. Yet the flaws constitute a basis for anti-american hostilities in only the minds of demented fanatics.

      Your warm and fuzzy "If only we understood them better there would be peace" attitude is poorly reasoned and subversive attempt to strengthen the political position of terrorists.
      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    181. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Because of the way the world works, it is impossible to target the US with a military attack. So the terrorists used the American system to hurt itself (Large airliners)

      Not that it is legitimate, but it is far more legitimate, they can attack the US army, and declare war. There is nothing preventing this, except the knowledge that attacking defenseless civilians is safer.

      This meant civilians being killed, the same as the American campaign is.... ie: One red cross building has been hit twice already!!

      It didn't just mean civilians are going to get killed, the whole purpose IS to kill civilians. Whereas with American stirkes, civilian casualities are an unwanted side-effect.

      You seem to be ignoring the same idea of the targeting/goals of the sides. The American strike's goal of harming HARMFUL, EVIL people. And the terrorists' goal of harming innocent people. This is the first thing to review when determining how legitimate some operation is.

    182. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      That's the most illegitmate way I can think of to attack AMERICA. Who is America? The government? The people?
      Who are they attacking? Is there any actual connection between the attacked ones and the ones you claim are doing injustice?

    183. Re: Actually... by Nezalhualixtlan · · Score: 1
      "we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas"

      Actually we didn't want to get terrorized on 9/11. Actually we don't want to get terrorized ever. There is a problem though, and the problem is that this is war. Al-Qaida declared war on the US. The US has declared war back upon them and any supporters of them. Afghanistan's government, the Taliban, support Al-Qaida, therefore the ally of our enemy is a target. We didn't just fight Germany in WWII, their allies, all the axis powers were targeted. That's the way these things work. The United States Government is looking out for the best interests of its own people. Most all governments do that, unless they are run by tyrants.

      It sucks that innocent people die. It sucks when people who don't support their government die because of that government. But this is an unfortunate and inevitable evil in war. Those same people would probably have to die in a revolt against the government they don't support, in order to change it. How many American lives were lost in Vietnam, lives of people who didn't support the war? I'm betting quite a few. No one country has a monopoly when it comes to its citizens getting screwed by assholes being in control of their government. It's happened time and again all over the world. The best thing for them is that their government gets taken out, dismantled, recreated, and stabilized so that the people can begin the reconstruction and healing of their country. It still doesn't change the unfortunate fact that some innocents will die in the mean time, but again, that can't be helped. Sometimes the greater good outweighs the life of an individual. That's no consolation to that individual, but its a fact of this wonderful thing we call life.

      I'd be all in favor of a world pacifist order. I can't understand why it is so difficult for us to all just get along, even if we don't like each other, then to just not freaking kill each other. But then that's an idealistic fantasy. The reality of the situation is that as long as one person on this planet will resort to violence to solve their problems, someone else will need to use force to stop them. Perhaps we're all fundamentally flawed as a species, I don't know. But I think it's certain we won't stop fighting each other, until their is some other distinction we can draw to fight on, like a new species (extraterrestrial or something) that threatens us, or perhaps, planetary distinctions if we ever manage to colonize the solar system. Either way, its not going to stop. There are too many people in this world who are either hot-headed, uneducated, stubbornly hard-line or fundamentalist, greedy for money or power, or just plain old followers, for the world to change into a completely peaceful place. This has nothing to do with race, creed, or nationality (though some would like to make it) - it has everything to do with what it fundamentally means to be human. You find hate-mongers, peaceniks, war-hawks, tolerant, intolerant, rational, irrational (I could go on and on) people cross every race, religion, country, state, region, political party ecetera. As a species we're pretty much all the same, as indivduals no, but as a species, yes.

      And so they, Al-Qaida will continue to kill US civilians and military for as long as they are able. And so the US government must do what it can to stop their ability to do that. Force is an option, and will be used. Peacful reconstruction is an option, and should be used. Policy changes should be considered, but policy changes need to come from both governments. It will require compromise on both sides - otherwise one side will need to be completely destroyed. That's the reality.

      --
      But my dreams they aren't as empty, as my conscience seems to be...
    184. Re:Actually... by Absynthe · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Enjoy waving the bloody shirt...

      That propaganda technique will soon lose effectiveness. When the food trucks do not roll in in a few weeks because of U.S. bombing expect most of the country to die of starvation.

      That is called genocide. I won't be proud of that. I hope you won't.

      I don't understand you people. Do you think that if bin Laden dies everything will be OK? His life or death means absolutely nothing as far as future terrorism.

      We will play lets pretend and imagine that we have cowed every nation in the world into coughing up any person that is anti-american in their country.

      What do you do when terrorism continues?

      It comes from just where it came from last time...Florida.

      You will wind up figuring out that it is alot easier to pull a couple bases out of Saudi and telling Israel to get it's act together and make nice than dealing with the fallout.

      I have no idea even where to start with how messed up our logic is. I understand, I'm an American, I am pissed as hell but I have yet to hear one good argument for attacking Afghanistan. I know it feels like we have to attack someone, but in this case there is nowhere worth attacking.

      I'm the last person to apologize for the Taliban but they are what is there. Believe it or not they are a fairly popular government despite the fact that they are monsters. They put an end to 20 years of civil war. How do you replace that? A new government will be constantly under attack by the majority of the population who see whatever comes in as a U.S. puppet.

    185. Re:Actually... by InfinityWpi · · Score: 2

      Dude, whatever you're smoking, start selling it before they make it illegal. You call me pro-communist simply because I point out the Bay of Pigs and Vietnam as blunders?

      These two situations represent most of all what other countries don't like us for: Promising to do something, and failing to follow through. Castro is still there. After years in 'Nam, we left (although we never should have been there in the first place). Saddam Hussein is still in power. We got lucky with Milosivech over in Bosnia. Bin Laden won't be caught. And in all these cases, we wind up hurting innocents as much as the people we were there to fight.

      You call me pro-communist... I call you blind. This isn't about politics... it's about our image as a big, powerful country who consistantly fails to get results when they support something. Thats' why the whole 'coalition' thing is so important... alone, we'd fail. With others, we look like we have a shot.

      Naturally, you are the hardest type of person to argue with: The one who is convinced, come hell or high water, he is correct. When you ask me for examples, I give them. You then declare that they're not real examples and mean something else. It's people like you who wind up crashing planes into buildings: Because you're stymied by arguements that use facts and truth, and have to go on to bigger and more interesting actions to make people pay attention to you.

      Maybe if we all tried to be a little more open to the fact that we're human and can be wrong, we wouldn't be in this mess.

    186. Re:Actually... by rowdent · · Score: 1

      A lot of basics of war have been thrown out the window in the past to achieve certain goals. Napoleon violated protocol during his campaigns in Europe by attacking at night, but now it is a commonplace event. Just because our Western conception of warfare doesn't agree with what Khomeini did does not mean it was wrong. To him, these diplomats were representatives of the American Machine and he needed at least some leverage with the United States to secure his country's future. You cannot apply our rules of war to desperate people, because they don't have the resources to play fair. They need to get something done, and they do it. I'm not saying taking hostages or flying planes into buildings is at all justified, but in their minds desperate times call for desperate measures. The Iranians were not animals for taking hostages, but they were treated as such. We have to keep perspective in these situations, and remember that most of our countries have done far worse than 911 or the Iran hostage crisis.

      --
      "If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear." --George Orwell
    187. Re:Actually... by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Let me rephrase what you're saying real quick, so I can understand what you are telling me I should think:

      I don't like being called ignorant, or at least I take it personally when someone claims that people are ignorant. Being less ignorant will not allow us to make better decisions.

      Because I am Joe Average Citizen, I am offended that the person, whose views I am attacking, thinks he is not. Since this person did not list concrete factual reasons that prove that what he is saying is true, he is inconsiderate to Joe's like me. I am incapable of researching facts for myself, so I watch talking heads on television who believe they are better than Joe as well. I do not mind that they think they are better than me, because they are on television, they must be better than Joe. However, these talking heads cannot agree with each other either.

      People hate because they have nothing better to do. If God himself decided US foreign policy, with the intention of doing the best he could for all of the people of the earth, he could do no better than we have been doing. And, we would still be hated. Making an attempt to understand what other people want/need and work toward common goals is not only a waste of time, but automatically stupid because its similar to something Jesus or Budhha or whoever might have said.

      Let's stick our heads in the sand and live in denial about the price others pay for our decadent consumer driven lifestyle. If everyone else was in the position to rape the world like we do, they would take advantage of it like we do. So, it must be ok. I will not examine it, apologize for my part in it, or attempt to contribute anything positive to the world.

      I am whining because I don't like it when people try to show me that I'm an asshole. That's my problem.

      ......

      Well, now that I have figured out what you are saying. Let me ask a couple of questions:

      Why were you whining about the fact that the original poster didn't spoon feed you relevant research to back his claims when you did not provide any research at all to back yours?

      Why did you end your post by calling the original poster naive, after stating in effect that:

      1. You don't know shit.

      2. You not only depend on tv for your information, but also for your interpretation of that information.

      3. You believe that researching and trying to draw your own conclusions will not cure 1. above.

      Well, that may not make you naive, but it would seem to indicate that you prefer to keep yourself as close to naive as possible.

      I don't really have a problem with you and your views, but I don't really think you've found a perspective from which to make yourself very useful to anybody else. And, as they say, if you can't be used, you're useless.

    188. Re:Actually... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, no amount of understanding of *why* on our part will ever convince the people who destroyed the WTC to stop doing it. They don't care if we understand--they want us destroyed.

      Possibly true, but surely it's worth a try anyway. Understanding other points of view is never a bad thing. Everyone does things for a reason, real or imagined.

    189. Re:Actually... by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      I think you missed part of their point, Osama Bin Laden is not the only person in Afganistan, Palestine, Pakastan, or Iraq, and so being not the only person whom hates the US for what we have done. Part of the problem is that other people in the mid-east dont like us and so support groups like the Taliban, just like we supported Osama Bin Laden (and several members of the taliban) because we didnt like the communist. Our government is now using force and threat of force to get support on our side, and its not working, look at Pakistan and the protests and the take over of the airbase by activists, Pakistan leadership may support the US but a lot of the people dont. And they dont necesarily have the same views as Osama Bin Laden or the Taliban, except that they dont like the US.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    190. Re: Actually... by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      That's not what they're doing. You're listening to Taliban's propoganda. The US is bombing Taliban targets in Afghanistan

      Yes that's right. The
      BBC and the Red Cross are just Taliban mouthpieces. To bomb Red Cross installations once seems like carelessness; to do it twice must be the most amazing piece of bastard stupidity I have seen. Remember, the US army were given the locations of all the Red Cross buildings in Afghanistan.

      You couldn't make it up. All across America, people are commendably donating cash to the Red Cross. The Red Cross then use the cash to transport desperately-needed food to the Afganistan population. At which point, it is bombed out of existence by US military forces. You don't have to be an anti-US pacifist to see that something is seriously wrong there.

      To the best of my knowledge, this wasn't even reported in the US (at least, I couldn't find it on CNN.com). Was it free speech you were fighting for again?

    191. Re:Actually... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 2
      I'm not going to defend Sharon, as I believe he's a pretty evil dude. Like I said, his election was a sign of the frustration of the Israeli people - if the Arabs want hardball, give it to them.


      The Barak deal was a fair one. It's better than what they have now, which is nothing. They aren't going to get better than that. Of course Israel is going to control the borders - they don't want terrorist bombers sneaking in. What the hell would you do?


      As for the settlements, I agree that some of them are questionable and perhaps should go away. I don't support taking people's homes or throwing them off their land (either Palestinians or Israelis). This could have been worked out in some way when a peace plan was on the table. Now there is nothing on the table and almost no hope of getting it there. Barak was willing to deal, Arafat wasn't. It's that simple.

    192. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A deep fear of anything modern.

      By Western standards. You forget, cell phones, aircraft, etc. are modern. They accept that. However, they don't accept Brittany Spears, N*Sync, John Travolta, Microsoft, etc. as modern.

    193. Re:Actually... by snowlight-0 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well, the moderators are certainly being dumb today. Anyways...

      I am an american and I despise the US. I'm an anarchist, if you couldn't tell.

    194. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I hope we have the courage to defend the defenseless - and not sit on our butts when people are being murdered.

      Exactly. We did sit on our butts while the Germans and Japanese were butchering people left and right. You seem to not understand that we (US) didn't get involved in the war until Pearl Harbor, when the Japanese, followed quickly by the rest of the Axis Powers, declared war on us.

    195. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With Australia as the 53rd.

      But that's only because we figure it's easier to bring the system down from the inside. Plus it's easier to get access to more examples of incompetence and stupidy to laugh at.

      I think at the moment if Britain was really the 51st state, people might be clamouring for newly citizenised 'Blair' to see if he could do a better job as President :)

    196. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. We did sit on our butts while the Germans and Japanese were butchering people left and right. You seem to not understand that we (US) didn't get involved in the war until Pearl Harbor, when the Japanese, followed quickly by the rest of the Axis Powers, declared war on us.


      FDR and his Democrats held back in order to help the world cure itself of the Jew menace.

    197. Re:Actually... by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      Why not? We subsidized the entire colonization of the Western States at the expense of the Aboriginal Americans...

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    198. Re: Actually... by Saragon · · Score: 1
      You are half right.

      To be sure, many atrocities have been committed in the name of this or that "god", under the banner of religious "piety".

      Of course an atheist attitude has been equally reliable in producing atrocities, in the name of creating a "new man" -- or based on the idea that we are the masters of our own destiny -- or the idea that society is a blank slate for us to mold to our heart's desire -- or the idea that this or that race is "master -- or the idea of creating a perfect utopia on earth -- or some combination of the above.

      See Stalin, Pol Pot, Hitler, Mao for but a few recent examples.

      The evidence therefore being equivocal it would seem premature to blame "religion" for atrocities - when it was secular belief systems which caused most of the misery this past century.

      Perhaps, I would suggest, it is Ideology which is the true culprit here. Ideology - either in the form of "piety" towards a god, or with some "vision" of future human society - has been and will continue to be used as an excuse to commit evil. Such evil ought to be resisted, whatever the excuse; it is after all no more pleasant to be murdered in the name of some future Utopian Vision into which you don't fit for whatever reason, than it is to be murdered in the name of some God.

      Furthermore, the two motives are not even necessarily mutually exclusive to begin with.

    199. Re: Actually... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      Actually, the US itself also drops food in Afghinstan.
      As for hitting the same target by accident, I wouldn't judge it as 'bastard stupidity' before studying the facts.
      For example, how often do Taliban forces travel around it, how difficult is it to have near-100% hit rate on quickly moving targets?

      If you study the facts, you can get to the conclusion, that either the US bombs red-cross institutions, which serves none of its interests, or that it has a non-100% hit rate, meaning that inevitably the wrong targets will be hit, and inevitably, over time, the same wrong target will be hit twice.
      Its simple statistics.

    200. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find that the people who appear to have parts of their brain missing are those who see the issue as black or white - "war or surrender". Particularly if they then make either of the suggestions to the effect of "minimal civilian casualties", or (worse) "civilian casualties don't matter because they killed our civilians first".

      If anything the US has used this to justify it's own actions. "We can't question our foreign policy because it would be giving in", and "Don't complain about our foreign policy because it doesn't justify the attacks and you must be in league with the terrorists for blaming it all on us." Not unfamiliar sentiments in these times.

      Not going to war is not the same as doing nothing. A carefully targetted war is not the same as an attack on Afghanistan (although actions have made it clear that the US govt really wants the Taliban gone - not just bin Laden - or they would have made different decisions). There are many options open whether or not war is chosen as the path (using smarter weapons that don't keep hitting civilian targets, and preferably ones that don't fail to explode and sit around as land mines, would be a start).

      I think the point that many people seem to be unwilling to hear, is that there were reasons why the attack occurred (reasons which may justify anger, but NOT the attacks) and they are one issue that the US can deal with. It's not the entire response they should make, it's not a magical solution to their problems, and it's not surrender - it's making an effort to do what is right on a world scale. It would at least help if their policies and actions were examined again, instead of everyone pretending that they are irrelevant and unquestionable, and instead blaming jealousy or claiming it was simply "unprovoked".

      If the policies were found wanting and a change was made, it just might go some way towards preventing this sort of thing from happening again.

    201. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who say that the US should ONLY look at what it's done in their response are certainly being unrealistic.

      Saying that the US brought this on themselves, asked for this, caused this, or deserved this, however, are the increasingly sensationalist ways of making any view that is not completely pro-US look misguided.

      In reality, acknowledging US policy and history as a contributing factor is a reasonable point of view which could provide a solution that helps prevent it recurring. It can't be a surrender to terrorist demands; it must be (seen to be) done for the reasons of helping peace in the middle east. And it can't be the only response, terrorists must still be held responsible for their horrific actions.

      That's one of the fundamental problems here, media interpretation (particularly US) of this view is "if you say US foreign policy is wrong, you support the terrorists" whereas the reality of the position is that it says "US foreign policy is wrong, it contributed to the terrorist's actions, it should be changed or at least reexamined, but the terrorist's actions were still completely unreasonable and unjustifiable".

      Contributing Causes != Justifications. If only more people understood that.

    202. Re:Actually... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquote the poster:

      After WW1 Germany was forced to pay giant amounts of money to the allies, causing the effects of the world economic crisis to be felt much more intensely in Germany. Communists and fashists became very popular, and in the end Hitler gained domination.


      Actually.... the story is more complicated when you read further into it. Weinberg does a wonderful job covering this in A World at Arms, and I won't do it justice. But the gist is: During WWI, what European country suffered no enemy action on its territory? What European nation maintained the highest standard of living during the war? What European nation finished the war actually improved in industrial standings vis a vis its competitiors?



      Germany.



      The Treaty of Versailles imposed harsh reparations. But some were canceled, some were repudiated by the Weimar government, and the rest were rendered essentially valueless by hyperinflation ... hyperinflation that was encouraged by the German government, for precisely that purpose, as it turns out. For a defeated people, the Germans were treated reasonably well by the Allies. A few bruises on their ego, but remember: no one seriously even broached wholesale dismemberment of the German state.



      Now, the harshness of the Treaty of Versailles -- on paper -- provided a convenient rallying cry for all sorts of nationalist movements, including Nazism. And the fact that the German army did not have to fight a long, bitter withdrawal through Germany allowed the myth to arise that the military never surrendered and that the civilian government "stabbed us in the back". But the reality is, Germany ended WWI stronger than it began.



      By the way, this explains the long-recognized alleged "paradox": How did the Nazis -- one of the least effective governments, chaotic, disorganized, and openly contempuous of modern thinking -- turn a "beaten", "crippled" Germany into an industrial juggernaut that, quite nearly, conquered the world? Because in reality, Germany was far from crippled, even if they were beaten. The economic miracle is less a miracle when you understand the true state of the German economy.



      That doesn't mean the Treaty of Versailles played no role. Its harshness did inflame German passions. Its failure did harden Allied resolve and shape post-War policy. But these were matters of perception, not fact. The upshot is: Politics is perception. A convenient myth trumps any number of inconvenient facts.

    203. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This is like the old argument used in rape cases. She was asking for it. Bullshit. The USA is not to blame for the actions of others.

      How about a better analogy? How about: the USA unfortunately picked a bad time to pick up a bar of soap in a prison shower?

    204. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would point out that, though obviously killing innocent citizens was a considerable part of the terrorists plan, the targets they chose were a) financial and b) government.

      Not that it makes it any better, but it does make a difference to the perceptions and some of the false panic being spread by the media; these certainly weren't random attacks, they weren't about 'jealousy of democracy' (more arrogance only further increasing the hatred - if there was any 'jealousy' involved it was about the US being rich), and they weren't about striking at as many people as possible for publicity purposes (would that really convince anyone?). The Emmys needed only to worry about sensitivity; as far as security is concerned, the terrorists have little interest in them except as a 'publicity stunt'.

      Civilian casualties are an unfortunate side effect but there are ways of minimising them, and every one of them turns more people against the US and loses them the support of others. The military action isn't the be-all and end-all here, perceptions and image will have a major part to play in this campaign.

    205. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      World Trade Center - Major financial centre.
      Pentagon (and White House) - centre of US politics.

      The people killed may have been innocent, but the targets were very much chosen to reflect the terrorists' grievances. There aren't many other places that would be more obvious and more relevant to what they wanted.

    206. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would just like to point out that Giddens is an insomniac who waffles his easily/overly digested $hit to a secretary, and is published by his own company.

      &

      I thought all the terrorist funk had more to do with American (with the 99% backing of the rest of the world) actions in the Muslim world over the past 50 or so years. e.g. Backing the Saudi dictatorships, stationing troops on holy land, bombing the rap out of Iraq for the past 10 ish years and than not letting medicine or food (except occasionally for the cameras) in to the country.

      In hind sight it seems kind-a-funny that the US always justified embargoes saying it would somehow led to the end of these evil dictatorships, but it would seem these policies only further resentment.

      &

      "pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance"? what the....
      Can any one point me in the direction of a quote by a terrorist, terrorist organization or terrorist leader where the evils of "cosmopolitan tolerance" are pointed out, blamed for the problems of the world, or a used as a purpose for blowing things up ? This would appear to be a pretty common point of view that lacks any substance what so ever.

    207. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be all in favor of a world pacifist order.

      Wouldn't we all? (well, hopefully...) :)

      There are too many people in this world who are either hot-headed, uneducated, stubbornly hard-line or fundamentalist, greedy for money or power, or just plain old followers, for the world to change into a completely peaceful place. This has nothing to do with race, creed, or nationality (though some would like to make it) - it has everything to do with what it fundamentally means to be human. You find hate-mongers, peaceniks, war-hawks, tolerant, intolerant, rational, irrational (I could go on and on) people cross every race, religion, country, state, region, political party ecetera.

      Not sure about it having nothing to do with them, although it's not simply a case of delineation by a view on any of the issues. Violence and anger are spread across all the groups, but can be more centralised in one than another - not necessarily because of what that group stands for, but rather because of where it is located in the world and what the history is.

      Where religion is involved it's generally a case of either being too obsessive about one religion over any others (but that can equally apply to many other matters of debate - obsessive political views can be as bad), or, more often, the use of religion to justify or explain or build support for something that would have occurred anyway.

      Country can make a big difference, not because there's a fundamental difference in the people, but because there is a basic difference in the culture. If you grow up in a peaceful country, you might want to debate or sanction; in a war-torn environment a military answer seems appropriate. Again, this is not a 'fault' or problem with the country itself, it's an accident of history that has affected that environment. Whilst there will never be a completely peaceful (and free) world, the culture in much of the developed world is one which encourages a more peace-oriented mindset. If that aspect of the culture could be extended to areas like the Middle East we'd probably be a lot better off.

      But then I guess my mindset comes from growing up in Australia outside of a directly relevant wartime. Great line from a beer ad recently - "we fight wars but we never start them". We'll defend ourselves, we'll protect our weaker neighbours, we'll help out in the cause of what is right, but we don't see any reason to hate anyone or to want to start attacking them.

    208. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems pretty clear from the voluminous and varied commentary here that Americans DO know a fair bit about history, both their own and others. You guys seem to have a fair old knowledge of American foreign policy as well. Is this new? (I'm not an American) or has the popular (outside America) view of Americans as uninformed and insular always been a myth ?

    209. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the good old 'blame religion' response.

      You don't need an almighty power to commit atrocities. In fact if you want to commit atrocities AND believe in an almighty power, you either need to have a) a warped view of the religion that says it's okay, b) someone willing to do some spindoctoring to fit what you want with what the religion says, or c) no respect for that power or no expectation that you'll be declared worthy when it judges you.

      Religion has been used to excuse all kinds of things over the years, including some terrible stuff (rarely in line with the purposes and texts of the religion itself) and some great good. The modern day-to-day view of most religions is to follow the teachings without obsessing over the details. Let's leave the one-line vs. the entire Bible "gay is evil" stuff to the Falwells so we can ridicule them.

      If we eliminate all Gods then we eliminate a lot of hope for many people, huge donations to many good causes around the world (including often-neglected third world support), many services designed to help those in need, a huge social network, and most religious people are now free to do what they want without fear of judgement (if they want, which is probably unlikely, but might be fun).

      On the upside, no more televangelists.

    210. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A response from 'these people':

      They mean a lot. The death of anyone means a lot. 6000 innocent people dying in the US doesn't make any number of innocent people dying in Afghanistan 'right' or 'okay'.

      With starvation, or indeed with the past effects of US policies, the numbers could easily be comparable.

      Some may, sadly, be killed as a side-effect. But it is important (both morally, and in terms of the US's image) that the casualties are minimised and that the US is prepared to make reasonable compromises where it will save many innocent lives without assisting the terrorists significantly (for instance, a ceasefire to get aid in, minimising use of 'dumb' bombs that keep missing or fail to explode, etc.).

    211. Re: Actually... by btlzu2 · · Score: 1

      I would say that's a reasonable viewpoint myself. But all too often, people easily lean more towards it being purely the United States' fault that 5000+ of its own people were killed. I'd mod ya up if I didn't post, you weren't a AC, and I had mod points this week! :)

      --
      Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead.
    212. Re:Actually... by The+Milky+Bar+Kid · · Score: 1

      do you think enough understanding would have prevented Hitler from attempting world domination? I doubt it--ask Neville Chamberlain.

      How about asking the people who wrote the Treaty of Versailles? The people who agreed to Germany's surrender only if they could strip it of all it's resources, industry, and money, leaving a country so utterly destitute that they'd vote in a failed artist doing a bad Charlie Chaplin impersonation and his cross-dressing opium junkie friend to run their country.

      Compare that with Japan, and Germany post-WWII. In both cases, America stepped in and helped to get the country back on its feet. In both cases, now staunch allies of America.

      I'm not apologising for Hitler here, but just pointing out that very few situations just come down to 'he's a nutter - we'll just have to bomb him.' Here and now, we may have to bomb him. But if we don't want to spend the rest of our lives bombing terrorists, maybe we should look at eliminating the support for them in these countries - by not trying to screw them over for a change.

      --
      -- This post is about truth, beauty, freedom, and above all things, Karma
    213. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hehe... your description of foreigners reminds me perfectly of a description of the reality show "The Amazing Race" by a university lecturer.

      Basically they were saying that it would only work in America. Sure, the travel is nice, but only on an American show would you get such shouting, disagreement, anger, frustration, annoyance, irritation, scheming and dislike out of asking couples to perform some simple tasks. And the insular attitudes - regular expectations that other countries will speak English or use US currency (had someone ask me that on the way to Australia... I guess having Canada and Mexico accept it doesn't help, in the real world we use our OWN money!). Although Britain can be fond of jokes about "shouting louder" when a foreigner doesn't understand English :)

      Anyway, the point of the lecturer was that if the show was done in the UK, they would just get on with the tasks, and if it was in Australia, they would just want to know why they had to (or perhaps they'd all just pile into one car and arrive at the same time... our reality TV show contestants almost always end up as a bunch of good mates) :)

    214. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boy i hope i get to meta moderate this crap - its about as insightfull as rush limbaugh.

      BULLSHIT - you cant negotiate so you commit genocide ? replace bin laden with the jews and us with hitler and what do you get.

      this country makes me so fucking sick i could puke.

    215. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that the knowledge isn't there to be found, it's more that it's just not getting presented.

      I mean, now is the time when it might be most relevant to understand, but the news channels don't really give much of the story. There's little said about the other perspective except when they're "celebrating" the atrocities or they feel like pointing out the Taliban's terrible laws again. CNN seems awfully quiet on the accidental bombings of aid supplies and innocent people, yet these are things which will have an incredible influence on the perception of the US both within Afghanistan and internationally.

      It's propaganda in the same way people in the Middle East have it, except that they at least in the US you have the ability to seek out the other view if you wish.

    216. Re: Actually... by layingMantis · · Score: 1

      accidentally bombing a Red Cross installation once is pretty damn careless, considering the "smart", "sophisticated" military we are supposed to have. But twice?? How the fuck do you screw up that much?
      We saw missiles with vid-cams flying through doors in the Gulf War, surely we can avoid blowing up Red Cross camps repeatedly.
      One very justifiable conlclusion here that a person might make is that the reports of civilian getting killed by US bombs are not simply Taliban propaganda, but actually true.

      We probably did blow up that hospital. And by the way, isn't this (a protracted, hap-hazard bombing campaign of questionable effectiveness ) exactly what the American people really didn't want going in to this thing?

    217. Re:Actually... by Paua+Fritter · · Score: 1
      The United States in Vietnam and in Cuba sought to contain this menace. Your perverse labelling of these American actions as "misdeeds" reveals a consistant sympathy for the perpetratrors of mass murder. Your inclination to blame the victims of terrorist attacks for failing to understand the fanatical thinking of their killers supports that interpretation.

      So when communists kill lots of people it's murder, but when (anti-communist) Americans kill people, even millions of people, you can't even bring yourself to consider it a "misdeed"!!! Get real, comrade!! Stop for ONE SECOND and consider how anyone who is not an American would see this attitude? You're the irrational one, here, my friend. Or perhaps you hadn't heard of the millions killed in the Vietnam war (or as the Vietnamese call it, the "American war"). Of course, those poor dead Vietnamese should've been grateful that the US army had protected them from those nasty communists, namely themselves.

      The conduct of American foreign and domestic policy has indeed been flawed, notwithstanding your inability to name any of those flaws. Yet the flaws constitute a basis for anti-american hostilities in only the minds of demented fanatics.

      So ... the US invades or bombs country X (where X is any of a long list already posted in this thread), killing innocent people, naturally in a regretful, but ulimately "flawed" way. Then, if any of the orphans or widows of country X feel aggrieved enough to retaliate, that makes them demented fanatics!!! Get your hand off your dick and try to get out a bit more, is my friendly advice to you.
    218. Re:Actually... by mi · · Score: 1
      Having only been alive since 1978, I won't pretend to know everything about the Israel/Palestine conflict

      Well, let me give you some bits. I don't know, what one's age has to do with this -- not like books, etc. are not available....

      but it seems like one reasonable demand on Israel is that they withdraw from the occupied territories in Palestine, immediately and completely.

      Good, so you know, those territories are occupied. They were occupied during military operations. Operations, which were purely defensive -- Israel was attacked by neighboring Arab countries several times since its creation in 1948.

      It seems only reasonable to me, that an attacked country wants to keep some of the land it occupied while fighting off an aggression. At least -- for a while -- until the attacker sincerely says: "sorry". They have my recognition of the right to do what they please with the land...

      Well, that's about as acceptable as it would be for the US to go occupy BC, Sonora, and Chihuahua because we didn't like Mexican immigration policy or something.

      If Great Britain -- the Canada's Sovereign -- will start using British Columbia to attack United States, I'm sure BC will quickly get invaded by US -- with loud support from the enlightened of the world. Immigration policy, on the other hand, is a civil matter...

      But this is a state that occupies other nations' internationally recognized territories

      Only to defend itself -- everybody would. Including US in Afghanistan in 2001 or, say, in Sicily in 1944...

      and is willing to summarily execute foreign nationals without providing evidence of guilt of any crime, let alone a trial

      Israel first asks the foreign-nation-wannabe (PLO) to arrest and extradite them for trial. When they fail -- like Taliban failed to extradite bin Laden -- Israel hunts them and kills them -- like US is hunting bin Laden.

      Interestingly enough, the crimes attributed to this "executed" people are never disputed -- even by the harshest critics of Israel... The country is fighting a war. Those you call "executed" are, in fact, its enemy's army... Imagine every Japanese soldier brought to trial prior to being shot by a marine charging the beach.

      As for negotiations with Arabs -- how do you suggest a negotiation with someone, who continues to publicly state, that his ultimate goal is your demolition, destruction, removal?.. And not just publicly -- for the cheap popular support. That's why all negotion are dying so far -- after every concession, Israel asks: "Ok, is that it?" And the answer is always: "Yeah, for now..." "So, what do you want?" "Errr, we want all your land, we want your capital to be our capital, we don't want you to be there at all..."

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    219. Re:Actually... by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      couldn't agree more.

      Looking forward to his next chapter about the multinationals hijacking globalism. didn't they invent globalism, instead of hijacking it?

      let's not over-hype this globalisation thing as the root of all evil or the promise of all good things to come. especially: i don't see the point in mentioning globalisation with fundamentalism and democracy as if they were coupled issues, just because progressive (democrates are relatively progressive compared to fundamentalists of course...) elements in society embrace "progress" (read: globalisation) more easily.

      whatever. it's early in the morning (for me here in amsterdam) and my head isn't clear yet. i just get so bored by these stories. everyone has too many things to say about the 9-11 disasters, the world is filled with experts nowadays. i should probably shut up :-[

      the one good thing about katz is that his level of writing is way above the average /. reader, which is good for the level of discussion over here ;^)

      meneer de koekepeer

      Aiming for (Score:5, Redundant)

    220. Re:Actually... by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      but why should the usa be the one dividing the pie?

      meneer de koekepeer

      PS no flaming, i'm serious.

    221. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      You call me pro-communist simply because I point out the Bay of Pigs and Vietnam as blunders?

      You specifically sited those acts as examples of American "misdeeds", and it was that to which I replied. Now, with blatent dishonsty, you pretend to have been critisized for calling them blunders.

      it's about our image as a big, powerful country who consistantly fails to get results when they support something

      An easily refutable statement. To demonstrate that this claim, that we "consistantly fail to get results" is untrue, it is sufficient to site a single example of success. I choose American participation in the defeat of Germany in the second world war; we got a result.

      Your position is compromised by inaccurate claims and invalid reasoning. You could strengthen your arguments by ommiting false statements, for they do great damage to your writing. Advice: After every word typed, read what you have written and pause to reflect on its meaning. Ask yourself "Is what I have written bullshit ?" If your mind says "yes", then start hitting that backspace key.

      For example after you typed "You call me pro-communist simply because I point out the Bay of Pigs and Vietnam as blunders", you should ask yourself "Did he call me pro-communist because I pointed out that the Bay of Pigs and Vietnam were blunders?" In fact, and quite evidently, I declared you pro-communist because you labeled these acts in opposition to communism as american misdeeds. Did you discribe them as misdeeds ? You did. Enlightement would dawn, the bullshit alarms would sound within your head, revelation would follow: "What I have written is bullshit!". Reach then for the backspace key.

      Again you get yourself into trouble when you write that we "consistently fail to get results". Ask yourself "Do we consistently fail to get results ?, do we sometimes fail to get results ?, do we usually fail to get results ?" Had you considered the meaning of your words the bullshit alarms would again have sounded within your head. Because they did not, you are left defending an unmaintainable position. You could in further replies resort to dishonesty or insult to cover for this error. You could again misrepresent your own statements, or accuse me of having a violent character, or of consuming illegal drugs, and other crap like that.

      If instead you had examined and considred your own typing, then you would have no cause to issue face-saving dishonesties and libel. Had you written "sometimes..." or "usually fail to get results", you now would be in a defensible or plausibly defensible position. Because you do not scrutinize your own writing for bullshit, you are cornered into defending your own false assertions. Now I have identified your inaccuracies, and again, as before, you feel that to save face you must spew forth further inaccuracies in defense, extending your liabilities, dragging yourself deeper into a personally manifesting chasm of bullshit.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    222. Re:Actually... by koekepeer · · Score: 1

      you're right those are wrong things to do.

      but please separate issues here, and focus on the thread. i would mod this flamebait given a chance.

      meneer de koekepeer

    223. Re:Actually... by damaged · · Score: 1

      The lands are internationally recognized as belonging to Palestine, and the preponderance of the world urges this withdrawal every single year, but America and Israel basically give them the finger in the name of "maintaining security for the Israeli state."

      Have you any clue what the Golan Heights are like? It's a natural border... conceeding the mountainous Golan would be a huge tactical mistake. Sure, it may have belonged to other nations at one point, but it was taken for very practical reasons.

      Virtually all the land in the world is currently occupied by peoples who took that property by force. It's the way of the world. Maybe apologies should be made, but I don't believe giving back land taken in a war is the "right thing to do" if it leaves Israel exposed.

    224. Re:Actually... by nut · · Score: 1
      ...Sharon's behaviour was a deliberate attempt to incite a violent reaction which he calculated would be to his personal political advantage.

      Quite possible; but last I checked mind-reading hadn't become reality as yet so I at least must refrain from making statements such as yours.

      Actually you just did.

      ...Second, that mosque is built on the remains of the Jewish temples.. If it were the other way around, I can guarantee you that the Muslims would have torn it down.

      --
      Never trust a man in a blue trench coat, Never drive a car when you're dead
    225. Re:Actually... by vandan · · Score: 1

      You are Quite Correct in your statement that the western world don't understand why other don't like them.

      I attended a recent blockade of the WTC building in Sydney, named the 'M1' protest. The police were there in VERY large numbers, with their wacking sticks, and quite revved up and ready to put them to good use. The protestors all linked arms and basically stopped anyone from entering the WTC building for the duration of our protest. We had 13-year-olds in the crowd, and we were all quite peaceful, occasionally singing, and occasionally dancing to some pretty cool trance :) The police came in on foot, on horse-back, and in minibuses, and DROVE through the blockade in an attempt to disperse us. This was INCREDIBLY stupid, and I am supprised that someone was not seriously hurt / killed. It was obvious that they weren't just there to "keep the peace". They were there on behalf of the WTC to rough us up and encourage us to stay home, be nice little consumers, and shut our fucking mouths next time instead of have the audacity to protest against them. The media coverage was another thing. They showed many shots of protestors apparently "out of control" and needing to be subdued. I did not witness ANY of this. I think that the clips were VERY carefully selected and arranged quite out of context. I can assure you that any "out of control" action on our parts was as a result of even worse "out of control" action on the part of the pigs (cops for those who don't know) and the WTC. I was utterly disgusted at the commercial media coverage, and DEEPLY saddened as I realised that the corporate world do in fact control the media, and therefore the average Joe's perception of what is actually going on in the world.

      Another example, also involving the angelic WTC:

      I heard on community radio here in Sydney the other day that a reporter had made repeated attempts to discover the number of civilian casulalties in the "War on Terror" aka the "War on America's Enemies". It was apparently impossible to discover this figure. There are countless websites that give you hourly updates on the number of people killed in the WTC attack, but the information from the other side of the fence is being very carefully suppressed. And the reason is that the:

      a) American government
      b) WTC
      c) richest bastards in the world

      are all very closely linked, and control the information supply, at least in key areas like this. I saw on ABC news a week ago that the FBI is using Hollywood studios to edit their footage, and that the American govt speTo use another example or corporate control infringing on the rights of the living ...nds as much on propaganda as it does on weapons and ammunition. This is frightening.

      The difference between the Taliban and the WTC is that the WTC understand and control the media much better than the Taliban. But their ideals are the same.

    226. Re:Actually... by Medium+Errant · · Score: 1


      Israel will not be returned, the US will not drop its support for the state of israel, nor do half-measures (such as a divided state) have any possibility.

      Here is why:
      The US government has considered the middle east the single most strategic real estate in the world since WW II because of oil and gas. US policy in the middle east has two fulcra: Saudi Arabia and Israel, its two most problematic client states. Other nations enter into arrangements trading aid-and-defense for influence-and-military-bases (such as Qatar, Egypt), or are destablized by pitting them against each other.

      Israel is pivotal in casting US influence and in destablizing the region. Furthermore, Jewish-American political support is crucial to american
      politicians.

    227. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      that mosque is built on the remains of the Jewish temples.. If it were the other way around, I can guarantee you that the Muslims would have torn it down.
      . . .
      Quite possible; but last I checked mind-reading hadn't become reality as yet so I at least must refrain from making statements such as yours.

      spot the irony, stupid?
    228. Re:Actually... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      I'm not a "peacenik", as you call it, but I can honestly say I don't give a rats ass for Israel or any other country in the Middle East. As far as I'm concerned, we've no more right to interfere in the affairs of that particular neighborhood than the countries in the area have the right to interfere with what goes on in the U.S.

      So long as whatever nation or nations wins out continues to sell us oil I say let them slaughter each other. We're under no moral obligation to provide arms, broker peace, or attempt to maintain a balance of power of any kind. If the Jews and the Arabs are set on killing one another then they're going to kill one another regardless of what we do. Why should we back one particular side, or attempt to interfere?

      Perhaps because of past transgressions we'll remain a target of fundamentalist Islamic groups; undoubtedly this would probably be the case even if we hadn't forced Israel upon the Middle East, along with the Brits, 50 years ago. But at the very least we won't waste billions in aid and further dirty our name any more than we already have.

      Some argue that if Israel were destroyed then OPEC would be a real factor, even capable of denying the U.S. oil. Bullshit - money always talks, and the billions we spend on oil is too much for any nation to pass up. No matter who wins, they'll sell; they can't help themselves.

      So lets divest ourselves of a loser's game and walk away, saying "Pax Americana is over with, go ahead and massacre each other if that's what you really want".

      As an American I'm *tired* of this obsession our presidents have with measuring dick size through pissing people off, especially people in the Middle East. Every time we step into a situation like this we only mire ourselves deeper in the problems of others, problems we really don't need to add to our own.

      If we had to pay for our delayed entry in WW2, then I'd say that 50 years of supporting Israel just about covers it. Enough is enough.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    229. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      you cant negotiate so you commit genocide ?

      With all due respect, what is the right response when 5000+ Americans are killed? Let's talk it out? You are obviously living in a dream world.

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    230. Re: Actually... by pjpII · · Score: 1

      The objection to a war during Ramadan isn't a moral one. Its a tactical issue- if we keep bombing the Taliban during Ramadan, and we move in ground units during that time, we are going to face a much greater number of very, very, very devout foes who will be just fine with dying for their cause because of the eternal rewards that they will reap. If you think that the suicide bombings that were done during the Vietnam war were bad, wait until your up against a population that believes it is a holy act to die in battle.
      (Also people can get really pissy when they're haven't eaten since sunrise)

      Your additional assertion that if we lay off the bombings for a month, they're "have a chance to regroup and launch another September 11th". This is the kind of painfully stupid idea that fuels misguided wars like this. First, the bombings are probably doing nothing against actual terrorists. Any terrorist with half a brain left the country after September 11th, and all of the "terrorist training camps" we've been pummelling have probably been pretty damn abandoned. Second, the September 11th attacks took years of planning. They didn't happen over the course of a few months. Look at all of the attacks that bin Laden is supposedly responsible for- he is patient, and waits for the American public to become complaicent before he attacks again. And he has a lot of good targets that aren't in the US. Remember the Cole attack, the African Embassy attacks? The US is so far flung that you can attack it in pretty any country in the world.

    231. Re:Actually... by bribecka · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure it does match the point I was trying to make--except that the world is a crappy place a lot of times and bad things happen to people that shouldn't.

      I don't like the fact that this boy is scared of the bombing, but we sort of have no choice.

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    232. Re:Actually... by _Mustang · · Score: 1

      Actually you just did.

      Wish I could say that were true, but the statement was based on the various Muslim (organizations/groups/factions?) specifically vocalizing their intent to do just that and more to all the Jewish *entities* in the ME.

      With Sharon it is an assumption because he's never come out and said such "Yes, that's it.".

    233. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When bush says "The American way of life is not up for negotiation" this actually sums up the problem. The standard of life in the United States (and other G8 counteries) is of a result of excessive disproportionate use of planetary assets.

      The following statistics/article are quite telling:

      'Each Briton uses on average around twenty times as many resources as each person in the Third World '
      (The NI, September 1992)

      According to a recent study by the lndira Ghandi The Economist, 5/1/91 Institute of Development Research in New Delhi, the developed countries, whilst representing only 24% of the world's population, account for 48% to 72% of the global consumption of commodities which satisfy basic needs, such as cereals, meat and milk.

      "Thirty-six thousand young children die every day (one every 2 4 seconds) as a result of poverty.

      THE MECHANISMS OF INEQUALITY
      The unequal distribution of the worlds resources is created, maintained and increased in many ways. This is a brief outline of what is a complex subject in it's own right.

      CASH CROPS

      Although the impoverished nations seldom lack agricultural resources, these resources are rarely used for their own benefit, or even basic needs. Much of the fertile land in Third World countries is used to grow export or 'cash' crops, the profits from which do not go to those who toil to produce them. Coffee. cotton tea, animal feed, tobacco sugar, vegetables, fruit, heroin, rape seed, soya. cocoa. . the list is endless, and closely linked to the long legacy of colonialism. The farmers and labourers who produce these crops have little or no control over what is grown, or who it is sold to. They are usually paid poverty or even starvation wages, and so they remain poor.

      "The global consumer society casts a particularly long shadow over forests and soil. El Salvador
      and Costa Rica, for example, grow export crops such as bananas, coffee and sugar on more than
      one-fifth of the crop land."
      UN Food & Agriculture

      UNFAIR TRADE

      The prices for global trade are controlled by the rich nations, through the commodity markets, the stock exchanges, international trade agreements, tariffs and quotas... Impoverished countries, let alone individuals, do not have the economic leverage to influence these systems to their benefit. Simply opting out is not a practicality - whole social systems are reliant on the import of Western technology, which poor countries lack the industrial infrastructure to manufacture for themselves, because they have been kept poor by unfair trade Turning their backs on the West has almost always been followed by boycotts and vast international pressure How then do you reorganise a society to produce for local need unless it can be done overnight? And if it can't be done overnight, how do you escape from this vicious circle?

      DEBT

      Almost all Third World nations owe money to the rich nations, who enthusiastically and irresponsibly encouraged them to borrow during the 1970s. Interest rates rose dramatically, and as a result, those countries have been left paying interest bills that in many cases have now exceeded the value of the original loan.
      Little of this money reached the poor, (except perhaps in the form of bullets from a dictator's internal security forces) but it is they who are now having to pay. Countries unable to meet their debts have had Economic Structural Adjustment Programmes forced upon them by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, both of which are controlled by, and have their headquarters in, the USA. (ESAP is a euphemistic acronym translated by African campaigners as 'Eat Shit And Perish'...) ESAP's require the debtor nations to 'tighten their belts', and cut back on social and welfare programmes, education, health care and food subsidies, with disastrous consequences for the poor. Emphasis is then placed on earning foreign exchange for debt repayments by- you guessed it- yet more cash crop production, and the dropping of trade protection barriers.
      In 1993, for every #1 given in
      aid, rich nations took back #3 in
      debt payments"
      World Development Movement

      The net effect of all this is that economic power flows from the poor to the rich. . . and we end up in a situation where the richest fifth of the worlds population is able to monopolise 83% of its wealth, while the poorest fifth is left to subsist on only 1.5%. The gap continues to rise, and the consequences of this appalling situation regularly appear on our TV screens in the form of famine reports, wedged in the middle of adverts telling us that nothing is ever enough.

      Taken from http://enough.enviroweb.org/

    234. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      So when communists kill lots of people it's murder, but when (anti-communist) Americans kill people, even millions of people, you can't even bring yourself to consider it a "misdeed"!!!

      Communist tyranies and liberal democracies are not morally equivalent. Your implication that acts committed in defense of freedom and those committed to spread communism should be judged equally is ethically abhorent. Communism murders and enslaves, democracy promotes life and frees. Reciprocal acts committed with disimilar motive are not objectively equal.

      you can't even bring yourself to consider it a "misdeed"!!!

      You can not know what I consider and what I do not consider. You can only know what I state. Therefore, when you alone state what I have considered, you make a baseless assertion. Unable to supply real facts, it seems you resort to making some up. And you are not even good at doing that. You pretend to know what I consider through what means ? It could be nothing plausible.

      So ... the US invades or bombs country X (where X is any of a long list already posted in this thread), killing innocent people, naturally in a regretful, but ulimately "flawed" way. Then, if any of the orphans or widows of country X feel aggrieved enough to retaliate, that makes them demented fanatics!!!

      Grievances, rational or not, do not characterize one as a demented fanatic. Terrorist acts comitted against the innocent do. Lest you weasel on the definition of "Terrorist", causualties of war are not victims of a terrorist aggression.

      Get your hand off your dick and try to get out a bit more, is my friendly advice to you.

      People who enjoy smartass comments might appreciate that remark. Those who seriosly consider issues will notice that in the first part of that sentence you say something rude and insulting, and in the second part you describe this as "friendly" advice. The contradiction is obvious. As someone whose reasoning ability is so impaired that he is blind to self-contradiction, you have no credibility.

      You might believe that you can advance your views by implying that those who contradict you masterbate and don't leave their homes. In fact, you weaken your postion substantially by making such comments. Slashdot identities are anonymous. You can not know who I am, where I am, or where are my hands. Your assertion of what you can not know brands you liar. Your remarks, by association with you their author, a proven liar, are suspect.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    235. Re: Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we wouldn't want to get terrorised on christmas.

      Reminds me of the great Blackadder 4 bit about the Christmas Day soccer match during the war (amid his protestations about not being offside)...
      "We all came out of the trenches and for one morning just played football... we all advanced further across no man's land in that one game than we've managed to move the frontline in years of shooting."

    236. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You rely on a false dichotomy, reasoning that terrorists attack the United States "just for the hell of it" or that they attack us in retribution for our own acts. You exclude the former and conclude (modus tolendo ponens) the latter. Your contrived limit of two explanations is both a blatent failure of logic and a dishonest rhetoricial tactic.

      Man, someone's been studying argumentative logic way too hard. Unfortunately pointing out someone else's tactics doesn't tend to help the actual discussion.

      Okay, We're being bombed just for the hell of it. is not the only other option, but it is one of only two real options to your self-described but unevidenced trite falacy of If we are held in contempt then we must have done something to deserve that contempt.

      That being the option of 'we are not held in contempt'. The other basic set of options (presumably therefore your decision) being 'we are held in contempt but have not done anything to deserve it'. Seems unlikely given the rest of the thread including the list of countries bombed, issues with the US's handling of this matter, and statements to the effect of US policies, decisions and attitudes on the people in the region. Even IF those were all made in the best interests of some majority, they nonetheless provide a basis for anger in the countries that are negatively affected. The alternative view has some serious issues; for instance, what would make these people angry enough to now suddenly attack the US (likely to result in their own deaths in the retaliation) if the US has done nothing to offend them? If it is their religion, why decide to do it now? You may think that the US's actions are all fine and not deserving of any ire, but is that likely to be the perspective of other countries?

      Therein your reluctancy to provide examples is explained: You can offer no examples of United States actions for which terrorism is a rational response, and your pro-communist position would detract from the popular appeal of your remarks.

      Ah, therein we find the problem with your argument. We'll ignore the appeal to national pride and old commie hatred in the second part. But the first part evidences your own false dichotomy, based on the George W. Bush school of "if you're not with us you're against us". You need to paint anyone who dares question the US as trying to justify the terrorist actions. Whereas the rest of us in the real world just wonder if the US has been responsible for some of the anger that fuelled the attacks. It's easy to fight an argument when you pretend that the other side is saying what's easiest for you to respond to.

      Regarding the politics (or indeed religion, or anything), my view is that Communism is just another political system. A mostly failed one at that, certainly not one very open to freedom. Nonetheless, enforcing any political system onto another country is wrong. The US are okay to go fight the spread of communism but not communist countries just for the heck of it. Australia only got (rightly) involved in East Timor when the people there voted for democracy and Indonesia tried to prevent them from getting it.

      The United States in Vietnam and in Cuba sought to contain this menace. Your perverse labelling of these American actions as "misdeeds" reveals a consistant sympathy for the perpetratrors of mass murder.

      Good one. Who will support anyone you've managed to paint as supporting mass murder? Congratulations.

      Your inclination to blame the victims of terrorist attacks for failing to understand the fanatical thinking of their killers supports that interpretation.

      And again that implication of his own fanatical point of view, blame the victim. Couldn't be that he just thinks the US might have contributed, might hold some responsibility? It's like a little kid flicking the ear of a big bully; pretty soon he's gonna cop a punch in the mouth. The bully still deserves to cop a detention because the punch was not a reasonable response, but the little kid can't wander around all innocent and deny he did anything to cause it.

      The conduct of American foreign and domestic policy has indeed been flawed, notwithstanding your inability to name any of those flaws. Yet the flaws constitute a basis for anti-american hostilities in only the minds of demented fanatics.

      See, you actually agree with him, you just don't understand it. The terrorist response to those actions WAS the result of demented fanatics (or perhaps cold, calculating, misguided fanatics). And America has helped fuel their fanaticism through the flaws in foreign policy. It doesn't mean the US takes responsibility for the attacks, but it does mean they can't pretend to be all innocent. The remaining fanatics still need to be caught, but a review of American policies and past actions may still be in order, and may provide some ways to douse the anger and decrease the likelihood of future similar events.

      Your warm and fuzzy "If only we understood them better there would be peace" attitude is poorly reasoned and subversive attempt to strengthen the political position of terrorists.

      Darn, you had to ally him with the terrorists again. Let's stop twisting this into "If we understood them then we'd realise they were right to do this" and instead recognise it as what it is, "If we understood why they have a reason to hate us, we can figure out whether that reason is justified, and if it is we can do something about it to improve the situation".

    237. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, I half agree with this and half don't... :)

      I attended a recent blockade of the WTC building in Sydney, named the 'M1' protest. The police were there in VERY large numbers, with their wacking sticks, and quite revved up and ready to put them to good use. The protestors all linked arms and basically stopped anyone from entering the WTC building for the duration of our protest.

      Preventing someone from entering the building is outside the bounds of a peaceful protest. People have a right to not be deviated or prevented from getting to their destination due to another individual (think it technically comes under 'assault' which is a little harsh). If the police had to use force to break the blockade that is sad, but they have every right to do so as a blockade is illegal. If anyone was hurt or killed there would no doubt have been an investigation and probably a charge, but one of the things that would have become clear is that the person had 'brought it on themselves' by refusing to move.

      The police were not there on behalf of the 'WTC', if anything it was on behalf of the individuals working in the building (and probably particularly the higher-ups who may represent this 'evil WTC' group to you). They can't stop you protesting, they CAN stop you blockading.
      And when you step outside the law, don't expect the media to be on your side. The media attitude is not exactly reflective of what happened, but it does reflect how most people feel about the issues and protests, and there have been few remotely convincing arguments presented to change their minds.

      (referring to the cops as 'pigs' is unnecessary, it only reinforces people's views of you)

      The corporate world do control the media to some extent, but the media is happy enough to uncover corruption and wrongdoing where it's not directly in their own interests (generally, owned by the same guy, or an immediate sponsor). Here, they recognised that the protesters were making trouble (causing problems for workers) and could not provide them with good evidence as to what the corporations were doing wrong.

      The problem is that the Average Joe is not a protester, and not a corporation - these groups give the extreme views from which the Average Joe can hopefully decide on a reasonable point of view. To get back onto globalization, I liked Tony Blair's speech... protesting it does nothing; the opposite of globalization is useless to us, and globalization itself is going to happen anyway (most people seem to understand some benefits, or not see direct disadvantages). In itself it is not an evil thing; it's up to people to decide what they want it to be (and ensure they keep enough control away from the corporations). Stop trying to fight the inevitable, and work with it instead to shape it in the best way.

      On the issue of the war, I agree that the coverage has been biased. At least here we get to see other perspectives, and with Foxtel we can see how it is being reported on Fox or CNN... and notice when they avoid mentioning certain stories that aren't good for America's image.
      I don't think it's related to the government, WTC or rich bastards, except the ones owning the networks. Rather, it's the US media which is always greatly US-centric and at this time, highly pro-US. They don't want to report the negatives and, as some of the most expensive news resources in the world, a normally important information source is lost.

      Propaganda is actually important this time, not for the US people but in ensuring that the US's reasoning and aims are communicated to the people of Afghanistan. I would actually say the Taliban is more successful at controlling the media and propaganda because they CAN control of it over there; the US govt. can't, but at this time the US media is out of 'patriotism' (or bias) acting as if they were controlled anyway.

    238. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately pointing out someone else's tactics doesn't tend to help the actual discussion.

      When disecting those tactics reveals that they have lead to false conclusions, it is indeed a benefit. I do not assert, without explanation, that a statement is false. I explain why it is false, accounting for misteps in reason, my explanation serving as evidence of that statement's falsehood.

      what would make these people angry enough to now suddenly attack the US (likely to result in their own deaths in the retaliation) if the US has done nothing to offend them?

      Ingrained in human psychology is the conviction that suffering is inevitably a consequence of the sufferer's misdeeds. Theology and philosophy have worked to account for contradictions arrising from that belief without recognizing the cause of their failure: It is a false conviction. Institutionalized systems of irrational belief indoctrinate rationalizations explaining why, though, the innocent appear to suffer underservingly, their fates are a consquence of their own guilt. Divine retribution and original sin are examples such rationalizations. When the evidence of a victim's innocense is too powerful to deny, then we deny the suffering itself, a Panglossian dismissal of human pain as shadows in the best of all possible worlds.

      Overcoming your own inate conviction in the guilt of the victim is a necessary step to reforming your thoughts. Maintaining that the slaughter of American by terrorists must be a consequence of American policy is like saying that if your severed head ended up in Jeffery Dahmer's refrigerater, well then you must have done something to deserve that.

      Okay, We're being bombed just for the hell of it. is not the only other option, but it is one of only two real options

      Well, there you go again, with your conviction that we must somehow be at fault. You overlook the most obvious explanation: Bin Laden is a murderous villian out to kill the innocent. There are historical precedents:--Stalin, Pol Pot, Mao, Hitler. Each, just as Bin Laden, cast himself as a defender and portrayed his own crimes as retribution for alleged misdeeds of his victims. It was only the corrupt and feeble-minded who agreed. A ginned-up excuse for mass murder consitutes no cause for that act.

      You may think that the US's actions are all fine and not deserving of any ire, but is that likely to be the perspective of other countries?

      The existance of faults in United States foreign policy is not at issue, though you pretend otherwise. What is at issue is whether those faults are just cause for the murder of Americans. If you claim yes, then we can both agree that is your position on that issue. If you claim no, then their acts still require an explanation: the culprits are deranged fanatics.

      Whereas the rest of us in the real world just wonder if the US has been responsible for some of the anger that fuelled the attacks.

      We most certainly are responsible. Religious pluralism, democracy, and individual liberty are an affront to radical islam. By sustaining these practices within our country or by promoting them abroad we fuel the hatred which resulted in the terrorist attacks of September 11th.

      I submit the following as a test of your ideology. How can that ideology legitimize the first question without legitimizing the second:

      what would make these people angry enough to now suddenly attack the US (likely to result in their own deaths in the retaliation) if the US has done nothing to offend them?
      what would make these people angry enough to now suddenly kill all those Jews in the concentration camps (likely to result in their own deaths in the retaliation) if the Jews had done nothing to offend them?
      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    239. Re:Actually... by Paua+Fritter · · Score: 1
      Communist tyranies and liberal democracies are not morally equivalent. Your implication that acts committed in defense of freedom and those committed to spread communism should be judged equally is ethically abhorent. Communism murders and enslaves, democracy promotes life and frees. Reciprocal acts committed with disimilar motive are not objectively equal.
      So you are seriously supposing that when anti-communists kill lots of innocents that's ok? I'm sure that'd be a huge consolation to those millions of dead Vietnamese. In heaven now, they can think to themselves "phew! at least we were imprisoned in concentration camps, poisoned, bombed or burnt to death in the name of freedom and the promotion of life!".

      I didn't imply you were a wanker because you contradicted me, but because of your bullshit attitude that mass murder of communists, or mass murder by anti-communists is ok because it "promotes life" or some such double-think, and that citizens of so-called "liberal democracies" have a right to commit these crimes, as if the crimes against the people of Vietnam, for instance, were at all the work of "liberals" or "democrats" in any real (non-weaselly) sense.

      I think you've blown all your credibility by implying I'm a weasel, but despite that, I refuse to accept that when the armed forces of a powerful country commit a terrorist act, that it doesn't count as terrorism simply because the people were in uniform, and get a medal for doing what they do. Crimes committed in war are crimes just as much as in peace-time, didn't you know? I know that the US State Dept likes to define terrorism to exclude the actions of states, but I think the reason they prefer this definition over the dictionary definition is that it means that the US government's own crimes can by definition never be terrorist.

      Plus, I didn't imply you didn't get out much because you contradicted me, but because you seemed ignorant of the horrendous terrorist acts committed by Americans (and others) against innocent people in the name of anti-communism. Don't you remember "we had to destroy the village in order to save it"? Perhaps you simply don't know of the terrorist actions committed by yankee troops in Vietnam ("bombing it back to the stone age" was a popular slogan at the time, remember?), perhaps you're too young to know what happened, or just too brainwashed. That might explain your problem with sarcasm, too.
    240. Re:Actually... by DumbSwede · · Score: 1
      I like dialog, and this person has a right to express his feelings, though I seriously doubt his comments merit a mod 4 Insightful. Assertion one, we are surprised that we are hated because we don't pay enough attention to other cultures, point of views, etc. Isolated and by itself, there is not much to argue with, but there are two further assertions; if we understood these feelings we wouldn't do things that bring us harm, or we wouldn't respond with bombs.

      What I have come to understand about this culture that hates us, is that virtually nothing we do on the good side of the ledger will matter to them, and they will only ever tally grievances. To understand their point of view will only help avoid conflict with them if we accede to all their demands. This is not because they are Muslim, but because they are in an area of the world where dialogs like we are having here are not possible, so lets no pretend we can just present our case to their populace in a calm fashion.

      We have made bad decision supporting regimes that have not moved these societies to more open ones like our own. Yes I am a cultural snob. Western society provides the goods, both in material wealth and personal freedom. Trying to understand the views of those that don't live under such a system, is very much like trying to read an ancient text without a Roseta Stone.

      I believe that understanding why Radical Islamic Extremists hate us will not save us from conflict. I do not mean to imply that being ignorant about other cultures is good, or that less knowledge is desired, just that in this case, a supposed lack of familiarity with Islamic grievances on the part of the general public is not why we were attacked. It should also not prevent us from responding in kind.

      I responded vitriolically to this individual, because they assume a place of moral and intellectual superiority, and offer a "nutshell" solution that I don't believe is relevant in this case.

    241. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      You can offer no examples of United States actions for which terrorism is a rational response...
      the first part evidences your own false dichotomy
      There is no dichotomy, false or otherwise, in what you have quoted. If you must speculate about the basis for my beliefs, then do not pretend this passage which you have quoted supports that speculation.
      You need to paint anyone who dares question the US as trying to justify the terrorist actions. Whereas the rest of us in the real world just wonder if the US has been responsible for some of the anger that fuelled the attacks.

      You make irrelevent distinction between A) The U.S. having unecessarily provoked anger which led to the attacks and B) The U.S. being responsible, or partly responsible for the attacks.

      If you assert A then you necessary imply B. You feel as if you have been misrepresented because you fail to recognize the implications of your own statments.

      It's easy to fight an argument when you pretend that the other side is saying what's easiest for you to respond to.

      To repeat, I am just not buying this "We provoked their anger uneccesary which resulted in their attacking us, but we didn't cause them to attack us" distinction. When you can show that the former does not imply the latter, you will have evidence that I "pretend that the other side is saying what's easiest for you to respond to".

      In making the distinction which you do, you simply insert a link in the causal chain then claim the result to be something entirely different.

      Nonetheless, enforcing any political system onto another country is wrong.

      Suppose a country were practicing mass genocide on its population, and a second country intervened to impose a non-genocideal system of government on the first. According to the rule you offer this action to stop genocide would be "wrong." Perhaps in your world view stopping genocide is indeed "wrong." Let us assume otherwise, and reject your statement that "enforcing any political system onto another country is wrong."

      Communism is just another political system. A mostly failed one at that, certainly not one very open to freedom.

      The first sentence denies a distinction between Communism and other systems of government. The second sentence makes two such distinctions. It is a peculiar juxtaposition of contrary belief. If you had wished to make the point of your first sentence, it would have been better to present that sentence alone, for the combintion is nonsensical. If your point is that of the second sentence then it would have been clearer to present alone a statement such as this:

      Communism is a failed system of government mostly closed to freedom.

      The reader must speculate as to why, if that is your point, you accompanied it with an opposing statement. So let us speculate: Communism is indeed a failed system of government, you know this, and therefore feel compelled to admit it. However, part of you sides with communism, or is at least sympathetic to it. So despite your knowledge that communism is a failed system of government you have some emotional affinity for it. It is this emotional affinity which causes you to contradict your factual statements of the failures of communism by preceeding them with the the contradictory remark that "Communism is just another political system."

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    242. Re:Actually... by Jodka · · Score: 1
      Communist tyranies and liberal democracies are not morally equivalent. Your implication that acts committed in defense of freedom and those committed to spread communism should be judged equally is ethically abhorent. Communism murders and enslaves, democracy promotes life and frees. Reciprocal acts committed with disimilar motive are not objectively equal.
      So you are seriously supposing that when anti-communists kill lots of innocents that's ok?

      The difficulty is that you are one of those sorts who receives extremely low scores on the verbal comprehension part of the exam. That " when anti-communists kill lots of innocents that's ok?" is not implied by the passage with which you preceed it.

      you seemed ignorant of the horrendous terrorist acts committed by Americans (and others) against innocent people in the name of anti-communism.
      So there is a debate to be had about what would have been acceptable civilian casualty rates in U.S. military conflicts, what was the actual causualty rate, what was the magnitude of the opposing threat, and what would have been the consquences of non-involvment. Importanlty, what would have been the social cost of adjusting the civilian casuality rate ? If you have an argument to make on that subject, then lay it out. Until you succeed, vague and sensationalistic reference to "horrendous terrorist acts committed by Americans (and others) against innocent people" can not be invoked as evidence.

      Concern for civilian causualites is an important concern. However, you are discriminating in which civilian causulties you mention when critizing U.S. military action. This suggests that your primary interest is the political cause of particular U.S. adversaries, not reducing civilian casualties; You are looking for reasons to critisize U.S. action only when it opposes a particular system of government, one which you do not oppose.

      Those who bemoan the misfortune of civilian Vietnamese causualites but not civilian German casualties understand the threat of Nazism but not that of Communism. They claim theirs is a position of superior knowledge, but in fact it is a position of inferior understanding: inferior understanding of the threat posed by an expansionist communist state.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
  2. What type of... by ChadAmberg · · Score: 3

    What type of government could possibly wrap itself around globalization? That is the major stumbling block that I see. The UN has bumbled its way around enough to know that it isn't the answer. Perhaps smaller regional governments (The EU, Pan-African Congress, OAS, etc) are the first answer to get around the poisonous ethnic problems that have caused the latest conflicts in the world. After that, let the global government figure itself out.

    1. Re:What type of... by polar+red · · Score: 0

      >smaller regional governments (The EU
      errrm ... the EU has nearly twice as many citizens as US ...

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
  3. Thanx WIl... by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

    Wil Weaton submits yeasterday: "You know, I don't have a huge problem with Katz, and I don't really understand why some people do." Today there a JonKatz post.

    thanx Wil...
    :-)

    --
    I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
    I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
  4. social threefolding by johnrpenner · · Score: 2, Interesting

    globalism can be a boon or bane. social threefolding provides a framework for sustaining rights within a global economy: http://home.earthlink.net/~johnrpenner/Articles/St einer-Social.html

  5. A link that explains it all by Smoking+Joe · · Score: 1, Troll

    This might put things in perspective.

    --
    If the lameness filter actually worked, would you even be reading this?
  6. Globalization is next step, not communism by forkspoon · · Score: 1

    I would say that instead of communism coming after industrialization, we havee globalization, or the concentration of capital from everywhere in the hands of a few wealthy countries that make up a small percent of the world's population. This concentration of authority makes a proletarian revolution next to impossible because the bourgeoisie who "owns" the global capital is far away and impossible to destroy. Except through terrorim. Hundreds of years of imperialism, which is now refered to by "globalization", has shifted most wealth back to the few in the west and japan, and caused much of the world to live in poverty. Remember the "chaosland" in 1984, that wasn't part of the three superstates? This is our third world, and they are pissed. They have decided to either kill each other or kill us. Look at how many wars are going on today, none of them are between developed states. They are all out in the heart of darkness between confused, poor, economically depressed areas of the world. The current state of affairs is western cultures fault, we kept persuing imperialism and it does bother the people we take money from.

    Thanks,

    Travis
    forkspoon@hotmail.com

    1. Re:Globalization is next step, not communism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hundreds of years of imperialism, which is now refered to by "globalization", has shifted most wealth back to the few in the west and japan, and caused much of the world to live in poverty."

      Sure, all this wealth just shifted itself, a random act that could easily have gone the other way.
      Gee, you are so naive it is not even funny.

    2. Re:Globalization is next step, not communism by forkspoon · · Score: 0

      What are you saying shit face? The wealth was stolen from the natural and laborial resources of the third world by imperialists and turned into currency and capital for use by a select few.

      Thanks,

      Travis
      forkspoon@hotmail.com

    3. Re:Globalization is next step, not communism by wharrislv · · Score: 1

      Wow, if this isn't a troll I don't know what is. You're completely wrong, and you have no idea what you're talking about. Crack a book.

      College kids :/

      --
      http://wharris.poweredbygeek.net
  7. The Lexus and the Olive Tree by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This thesis has also been bandied about by Thomas Friedman in The Lexus and the Olive Tree.

    [Warning, liberal rant below]
    I believe that the forces of integration are long-term stronger and more stable than the forces of disintegration. I believe that the reason that the fringes of cultures are radicalizing is because the centers of cultures are drawing together.

    I am a giant proponent of the theory that ideas clash in a marketplace of public discourse and I believe that globalization is merely expanding that marketplace, and that the discourse that results will be beneficial. We're bound to have some bumps along the road. Heck, we're probably bound to go down some blind alleys, but in the end, increased communications and integration will help us all respect each other individually and discover what makes us all human.
    [End of Liberal Rant]

    Of course, I also believe that the free market is best in 90% of circumstances because it forces individuals to evolve and have goals. My biggest worry is that the concept of individual freedom will be found wanting in the global discussion.

    IMHO. HAND.

    1. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by Liquid(TJ) · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I've only read about two thirds of Friedmans book, for a class. I have read the end.

      I think that Friedman's book is more wishful thinking then a picture of the globalist world. It seems to me that in reality, the strait-jacket helps the multinationals, and if a nation's standard of living improves it's a by-product (and maybe a temporary one at that).

      I don't want to spend a lot of time on this, because I suspect Katz is going to cover it in part 2. But in a lot of places, Friedman's strait jacket isn't approprate, but the IMF and the WTO make countries reform thier economies to fit in it anyway, because it's what's best for the banker's wallets.

      For example, nations without public debt problems but lots of private bankrupcy could be handle thier problems internally with a little IMF help. But this keeps all the profit from economic improvement in the hands of locals. Individual, wealthy locals yes, but that's not who the IMF is looking out for. The individual IMF members seem to be more interested in making huge amounts of money for the americian and multinational corperations that they're about to buy controling interests in.

    2. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by hibachi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think it is far too quickly assumed that the centres of cultures are drawing together in the crusade for a one world economy. In developing countries, the people signing binding trade deals with western economic powers are hardly the centre of their culture. I would argue that the peasant and indigenous population in many countries comprise the centre of their cultures, while the well financed and well armed politicians, who sign away their labour and natural resources, are the fringe.

      Not every culture holds as its highest ideal the individual pursuit of wealth. The western global free market economy is not the only economic system. Radicalisation comes not only from the fringes, but often right square from the centre, from having an economic system imposed upon you by outside forces. It is important for a people to be able to define their own terms of participation in the global economy. When the terms are dictated by outside forces, and by and large for the sake of corporate profits, there WILL be a radicalised response.
      Cheers,
      Rev. Hibachi

    3. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by MagnaMark · · Score: 1

      I actually checked out that book from the library and started to read it but didn't get past the first sentence, which is (I shit you not), "What was it that Forrest Gump's mama liked to say? Life is like a box of chocolates: you never know what you're going to get inside." I'm sorry, but I refuse to finish the rest of a book, no matter how good, that begins with a quote from "Forrest Gump's mama".

      Anyway, that's beside the point. Friedman has also written many columns on this subject in the NY Times, and in one, he made the point that globalization is neither intrinsically good nor bad. It will be good or bad depending on how we manage or steer it.

      I think that is a good point, which leads to a couple of questions: How have we managed globalisation so far? And in what direction will we steer it in the future? And of course, who is "we" in the previous two questions? The UN? A handful of multinationals?

      I'm not going to answer those questions, except to say that it is obvious that globalisation could be managed much better than it has been and is being managed. And, I hope that "we" can steer it in towards a better course in the future.

    4. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Not every culture holds as its highest ideal the individual pursuit of wealth.


      Do you plan on going to live in one of these alternatives? I thought not.


      It is important for a people to be able to define their own terms of participation in the global economy.


      Amazing how a single letter can completely reverse the meaning of a sentence. I think it is important for people to define their own terms of participation in the global economy. But "a people" implies some kind of collective decision making and enforcement of that decision. This inevitably comes down to forcing people to stay where they are instead of letting them seek their own fortunes in whatever way seems best to them as individuals.


      Paul.

      --
      You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
    5. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by Fnkmaster · · Score: 2
      This is basically weak moral relativism. The other responder said it well - individual choice and freedom among other principles are absolute goods and take precedence over "a people" or "a culture" defining participation in anything. The Taliban should not be allowed to force isolation on the people of Afghanistan. The people of Afghanistan should be as free as possible to watch TV (assuming they can find one to watch) or use the internet, or to REFUSE to do those things on religious or other grounds.


      As soon as you bring hints of moral relativism into the equation, anybody can argue anything. If the Taliban isn't wrong to force isolationism and a despotic, islamist regime on their own people, how is it more wrong for us to force freedom and democracy on them? Just because the Taliban consists of other Arabs and Afghanis (no, they aren't all Afghanis in Al Qaeda OR the Taliban)? Why is it more okay for an ethnic Pashtun to force his radicalist religious interpretation on a moderate ethnic Tajik in Afghanistan than it is for the US to enforce freedom?


      Anyway, this kind of argument goes nowhere. Eschew moral relativism, make some decisions up front, then let's talk.

    6. Re:The Lexus and the Olive Tree by seven89 · · Score: 1

      "Not every culture holds as its highest ideal the individual pursuit of wealth."

      "Do you plan on going to live in one of these alternatives?"

      Prosperity is a fine thing, but it can be achieved without making the "individual pursuit of wealth" the "highest ideal" of a culture. On a personal level, I'd rather not spend my free time in the company of self-absorbed work-a-holics, regardless of how much "stuff" they've managed to accumulate. An asshole in a corvette is still an asshole.

  8. Aliens by JohnHegarty · · Score: 1, Insightful

    People are only divied when there is no outsiders. When a country is invalded any squabbling between states/counties is forgoton about.

    I would guarantee that if Aliens landed in the morning it would mean instant globalization , becuase there would be an outsider.

    1. Re:Aliens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I would guarantee that if Aliens landed in the morning it would mean instant globalization , becuase there would be an outsider.

      Just like when Pizarro and his 168 soldiers took on the Inca and his people?

      Or maybe more like Cortes against the Aztecs?

      Each of the intruding had the advantage of gaining the assistance of some of the locals dividing the local populace.

    2. Re:Aliens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if the aliens invaded multiple spots around teh world. If they invaded only the US, most of the rest of the countries would be cheering, either loudly or under their breaths, but would continue on with their lives.

      But if they landed in Sudan, well, after a day or two it wouldn't be in the news any longer, that is, until it became a percieved threat to Europe, the oil states, Asia, etc.

    3. Re:Aliens by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Er, no. Simple counterexample: Chiang Kai-shek versus Mao Tsedong, during the Japanese invasion in WWII. They didn't cooperate before, didn't really cooperate then, and didn't cooperate afterwards -- it was in both their interests to wait, conserve their forces while letting the US and British figure out how to drive the Japanese to unconditional surrender, and then resume fighting each other. Forget their differences? Certainly not.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    4. Re:Aliens by Theodrake · · Score: 1

      Maybe. What if their belief system matched that of the Taliban?

  9. pitting fundamentalism against cosmpolitan toleran by W.B.+Yeats · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Boy, I thought I had to go to a real news outlet like CNN or Reuters to get this kind of insightful journalism. If everyone would just repeat lines like those above 50 times, we might be able to squash all of the horrible ideas that have been cropping up which question the legitimate (and blessed)American Way of Life.

    Bah

    --

    And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
    Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

  10. Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anton+Anatopopov · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    Most people I know are against globalization. Even Americans who stand to gain the most. In the last 20 years, we have seen Europe replace its cafes and coffee shops with McDonalds and Starbucks.

    Local forms of clothing have been replaced with baseball hats and blue jeans.

    And religion has been replaced with shallow consumerism. This all makes sense from the point of view of Global Capital. But let us not forget it was capitalists who ended slavery in order to have a bigger market for their goods.

    The real problem of globalization is the American attitude which puts individual freedom above just about every other principle.

    In Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Japan, Russia etc our values are different. We put family and religion first. We do not care about your profit motive.

    We will eventually win, because we will eventually stop buying into your culture of greed. It may not happen today or tomorrow, but it will happen. And then your IRAs and pension funds will be worth nothing.

    1. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Brento · · Score: 2

      In the last 20 years, we have seen Europe replace its cafes and coffee shops with McDonalds and Starbucks.

      The only Starbucks stores in Europe are in the UK and Switzerland. Besides, if you think Americans enjoy that sort of thing, you're mistaken. We have citizens that are just as upset that Wal-Mart is replacing local hardware stores, and Barnes & Noble is bankrupting local booksellers. Nobody's excited about that kind of globalization, not even us.

      The real problem of globalization is the American attitude which puts individual freedom above just about every other principle. In Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Japan, Russia etc our values are different. We put family and religion first. We do not care about your profit motive.

      Huh? In one sentence, you say that we put freedom over every principle. In the next, you say you're different because you put family and religion first. I'm not sure how you can choose your religion without first having the freedom to choose it - unless, of course, you're in favor of state-sponsored religion that enforces your personal choice. The freedom of religion was the whole point over here in the US, and the driving force behind our nation's founding. If you see freedom as a value that jeopardizes family and religion, you don't understand freedom. The whole point over here is the freedom to choose your religion, your friends, and for that matter, the brands that you buy.

      We will eventually win, because we will eventually stop buying into your culture of greed. It may not happen today or tomorrow, but it will happen.

      What's stopping it? You're the ones buying our products. Nobody's holding a gun to your head at the Gap and making you buy their t-shirts. It's not like you don't have your own products to choose from. McDonald's isn't the only place to buy hamburgers, and Starbucks isn't the only place to get a cup of joe.

      --
      What's your damage, Heather?
    2. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by kraut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course people voted for it. Every day they buy a coffee at starbucks they are voting for it.

      If the majority didn't want it, it wouldn't happen.

      --
      no taxation without representation!
    3. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by geschild · · Score: 2, Insightful
      In Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Japan, Russia etc our values are different. We put family and religion first. We do not care about your profit motive.


      Please speak for yourself? For some reason religiousnous is a lot stronger in the USA than it is in many European countries and you better be glad it is because that way lies fundamentalism. I assume that since you read the text that you know what fundamentalism begets...

      Don't forget that a mere few hundred years ago Europe had it's inquisition and a few other religously founded nasties. What we are seeing now is the rest of the world catching up in a hurry and not very willingly.

      Globalisation in my book means that more people get to talk to more people. Everything else follows from that: trade, wealth, crime, etc. The thing is that above a certain amount of links to other people per person a society changes. That change is irreversible bar some global catastrofy.

      I can only hope we'll shake off religion as another bond to our primitive ancestory and move on. The only thing that wars have been ever fought over were economics and religion. We found out the hard way that it doesn't make economical sense for a democracy to wage war. We found out that it doesn't make sense to wage war over religion as well but for some reason the religion gets in the way with that argument. So Globalisation will work out but as said it will have its ups and downs. In the end I trust it will bring what it promisses: 'wealth' to go round for _everyone_.

      I'm not so much afraid of fundamentalism in its current form, in my view the _real_ threat to such a brilliant future is _corporatism_. That fight has it's own problems, mainly in visibility of the problem. But I digress.

      Karma? What's that again?

      --
      Karma? What's that again?
    4. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by baalz · · Score: 1

      Cafes and coffee shops are (partially) replaced by McDonalds and Starbucks because thats what the people who spend money want. Blue Jeans and baseball hats are spreading because thats what people who spend money want. People DO vote for such things quite literally with thier pounds, yet, etc.

      Yes, obviously freed slaves were a huge economic buying segment. There was much more money to be made selling things to appallingly poor people than to having free labor.

      You're damn right we put individual freedom above virtually every other principal, and you'd do well to remember that when you start complaining about your lack of freedom from American culture.

    5. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Every time one of you chooses to wear baseball caps and blue jeans, they have voted. There is no coersion involved.

    6. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by asianafro · · Score: 1

      "I can only hope we'll shake off religion as another bond to our primitive ancestory and move on."

      To tell you the truth geschild, I hope that we as a people can realize that money is as primitive a bond as any that we have inherited from our ancestry. We -as a wholistic, capitalist based society- have used other peoples to make our lives "easier" without the slightest thought about how that may affect other cultures. No worker in the Nike plant actually gets to wear Nike (or afford it for that matter). This has been passed down to us like a mantel ever since colonialism and before that. We need to realize that people are inportant in this world and not our luxuries in the manifestations of material goods.

      463t th3 pa5t, r3m8m83r th3 futur3...

    7. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't understand.

      Putting the value of freedom above everything else ALLOWS each individual to decide what they want in their lives as a priority. YOU only hear about the people who put profit as their priority. You don't hear about the MANY in the US that put family and religion above everything else. The seperation of church and state and our freedom is what allows us to do so.

      Just as I don't trust everything I read or see about other countries YOU should not trust everything you read or see about the U.S. Not everyone is polluting, money grubbing, suppressive bastards.

    8. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >In the last 20 years, we have seen Europe replace its cafes and coffee shops with McDonalds and Starbucks.
      How is this a bad thing? I don't remember the US banning French cafes, German beer gardens, etc.

      >Local forms of clothing have been replaced with baseball hats and blue jeans.
      How is this a bad thing? If we can lower the cost of clothing for the world's population, they can use the saved money to pay for things which are economically more beneficial than necessities ... like education or industrial technology.

      >And religion has been replaced with shallow consumerism.
      False.


      >But let us not forget it was capitalists who ended slavery in order to have a bigger market for their goods.
      False.

      >The real problem of globalization is the American attitude which puts individual freedom above just about every other principle.
      The US governmental system is that rights are from God and cannot be granted or taken away by a government or king. The US governmental system is that government exists at the will of the people and can be disolved if the people do not like it. These two foundations serve to protect the people against an oppressive government. The American attitude of freedom derrives from those two foundations.

      >In Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Japan, Russia etc our values are different. We put family and religion first. We do not care about your profit motive.
      In the US, we have personal freedom to put family and religion first as well as the freedom to try to improve our standard of living through productivity. How can such liberty be bad?

      >We will eventually win, because we will eventually stop buying into your culture of greed.
      Simple lesson: Profit does not equal greed
      profit equals improved productivity which leads to a higher standard of living.

      We will all eventually win by adopting things which raise the standard of living.

      Central planning governments have proved to not work in raising the standard of living.

    9. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Phillip2 · · Score: 2

      "What's stopping it? You're the ones buying our products. Nobody's holding a gun to your head at the Gap and making you buy their t-shirts. "

      Our kids are. Metaphorically of course.

      They are some what more sensitive to the propagandising of the the various corporate interests.

      Freedom is a fairly specious notion. When we had a King most people thought that we were free because we had a king, and hated the notion of democracy. Did they chose to have a king. Well in a sense. At least until we got around to cutting his head off.

      I think its over simplified to say "it exists, therefore we choose it". Clearly we have had some choice in the matter, but the choice is not made in a vacuum.

      Of course unlike some I don't see this in terms of American cultural imperialism. Most of the population in American were not asked any more than most of the British were during the time of our empire. It seems to me that there are a few who are profitting mightly from the situation, whilst most of us get on with the struggle to survive.

      Phil

    10. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Sebastopol · · Score: 2

      I can only hope we'll shake off religion as another bond to our primitive ancestory and move on.

      I concur, completely and wholeheartedly.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    11. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Europe and sorry to say buddy, people choose, adults have a choice, and they don't have to goto MacDo's for the kids lunch. It is simply laziness that causes them to do it. I do it sometimes to... If you don't want to buy into it, teach your children.

    12. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by jafac · · Score: 2

      I'll support your argument!

      Here, in my home town, a town which prides itself to it's unique identity, local stores, culture and flair, we had a restaurant chain come in and put in a Carl's Jr.

      Prior to opening, this store was vandalized, most likely by local college students part of some anti-globalization movement.

      Then the store opened, and you know what? They went out of business in 6 months, because people simply did not eat there. It wasn't part of the cutlure of this town.
      Even though it was the ONLY place downtown where you could pop in, buy lunch for $4, and get back to wherever you were working - all the other restaurants were locally owned, priced higher, slower service models. And they won out. The people's choice won, the market hath spoken.

      Carl's Jr. did not hold a gun to anybody's head. Sure, I bet they greased a few palms at City Hall to get a spot there. But they're out now. Tough titties. Find me a global store chain that can cop a local charm and appeal. It won't happen, as long as people are educated and aware of what's really important to them.

      Of course, no local organization sent agents to go blow up Carl's Jr.'s corporate headquarters either.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    13. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by jafac · · Score: 2

      Hey, let me remind you that Stalin and Pol Pot didn't have "primative religion" as a means to justify their genocides.

      I think that people looking to blame religion as the cause of all of humanity's problems really ought to look at humanity itself first.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    14. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We need to realize that people are inportant in this world and not our luxuries in the manifestations of material goods. "

      What does this has to do with Nike ?
      If you kick Nike out of these countries, people who worked there will end up without their jobs.
      How is that supposed to solve anything ?
      We have not used others peoples , we are paying them more than other local business are willing to pay.
      If that wasn't the case no one would be willing to work for Nike.
      Please, stop spreading this leftist crap...

    15. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      The fact that the peole of Europe are pooring there money into buying Starbucks, McDonald, ect proves you wrong.
      There would be no Starbucks in Europe(or anywhere) if people didn't spend there money there.
      We will win because we cater to peoples greed. If the cafes where cheaper then starbucks, then they could compete, but there not. Bottom line if a really good cup of coffee costs 5 Units of Currency, and a mediocore cup of coffee costs 2 Units of Currency, the Mediocore coffee seller will dominate.
      OTOH putting religion first has brought us so many wonderfull things, dark ages, crusades, war, overpopulation, just to name a few.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    16. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't be serious! Nike wouldn't be there unless you believed that by buying their shoes, you could automatically loose weight from your fat ass by sitting in that chair eating macdonalds, you basement geek!

    17. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by drsquare · · Score: 1

      You didn't vote for it? Every time someone buys something from McDonalds or Starbucks, they are supporting globalism. If people didn't want globalism, then they would stop going to those places. Simple.

      And religion has been replaced with shallow consumerism.

      Religion should never have been there in the first place, so this is a non-issue.

      The real problem of globalization is the American attitude which puts individual freedom above just about every other principle

      I don't see how that is a problem. Individual freedom is the most important principle there is.

      We put family and religion first. We do not care about your profit motive.

      If people didn't care about profit motive, then why does everyone go to Starbucks or McDonalds (It can't be because of their quality cuisine)?

      We will eventually win, because we will eventually stop buying into your culture of greed.

      If you anti-globalisationists are so sure of winning, what are you complaining about? Surely if everyone was against globalisation, then no-one would support these large corporations, and would shop at local shops. Correct?

      And then your IRAs

      What have the IRA got to do with this?

    18. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by drsquare · · Score: 1

      So, what are you advocating as a replacement for money? How would you go about trading things without such a common trading-thing like money?

      You say no worker in the Nike plant gets to wear Nike. Well, no-one forcing them to work there either.

    19. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Theodrake · · Score: 1

      I just read this after brewing a cup of starbucks French roast right here in my office. It's better then Foldgers and if I can find a good source I will try some other blends/brands from other countries. I love globalization. Without it I never would have had anything other then a cup of Foldgers.

    20. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone is polluting, money grubbing, suppressive bastards.

      Not everyone, but some of us are! Yay Stalinism!

    21. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Buggernut · · Score: 1


      Most people I know are against globalization. Even Americans who stand to gain the most. In the last 20 years, we have seen Europe replace its cafes and coffee shops with McDonalds and Starbucks.

      Local forms of clothing have been replaced with baseball hats and blue jeans.

      And religion has been replaced with shallow consumerism.


      So let them pick and choose, whether it comes to fast food, brands of coffee, clothing, or spiritual fulfillment. Opening up the borders only opens us up to more choices.

      We'd rather make our own choices, rather than leave it to you, the Taliban, the Christian Coalition, or any other oppressive forces to limit our choices or make them for us.

    22. Re:Globalization - We didn't vote for it. by Phillip2 · · Score: 2

      As I said people have some choice. But its an oversimplification to say "it exists therefore we choose it". Straightforward enough.

      I live in Europe too. What does that have to do with this?

      Phil

  11. anthrax--careful, John by regexp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It hasn't been shown to any degree of conclusiveness that the anthrax attacks were perpetrated by Islamic fundamentalists or fundamentalists of any sort. For all we know so far, it could have been some disgruntled biotech industry worker.

    1. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yee,

      I'm amazed. Did this post pass the automatic lame-test?

      congratulations!

    2. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In fact, there are a number of reasons to suspect that the primary perps behind the anthrax are American, including the way that the accompanying notes were written, and the fact that the targets included a planned parenthood, 2 democrats, media outlets, and the Supreme Court. The radical anti=abortion group The Army of God is on the suspect list. And it's completely homegrown American.

    3. Re:anthrax--careful, John by smallpaul · · Score: 2

      The Army of God is on the suspect list. And it's completely homegrown American.

      It sounds like a fundamentalist outfit. That's in line with the article's thesis.
    4. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Elvis+Maximus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I actually strongly suspect the anthrax attacks are not originating with al-Qaeda.

      For one thing, the letters strike me as funny:

      The date at the top is in the format "9/11/01". Only Americans write dates this way (everyone else writes "11/9/01"). Someone who lived here for a while would know we do that, but wouldn't they be more inclined to write "September 11, 2001" or some variation to avoid confusion? Why would they bother to do it our way?
      The letters clearly imply they are from Islamic fundamentalists, but do not begin "bismillah al-rahman al-rahim (in the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful)". Pious Muslims, fundamentalists and otherwise, begin every document, from class notes to business correspondence, this way.
      How come the writer can keep his lines nice and straight on the letter but not on the envelopes?
      The language seems kind of stilted, like what an American would suppose a foreign terrorist would say. "We have this anthrax. You die now." An Arabic-speaker would be likely to say, "we have the anthrax" as that is how you would say it in Arabic. "You will die now" is a construction that exists in Arabic, so it is an error an Arabic speaker is less likely to make.
      "Allah is great" is kind of an awkward construct. A Muslim might write "Allahu akbar" without translation, or "Allah is greatest," which is a better translation. The point of the phrase "Allahu akbar" is that God is greater than anything else, and this is not a distinction that would be lost on a dedicated Muslim whose English is good enough to write these letters.
      al-Qaeda never warned anyone about the embassies, the Cole, the WTC, or any of the failed attacks on other targets. So why do the letters announce they have anthrax in them and advise the recipients to "take penacilin now?"
      Not only does the author know what a 4th grade is (i.e., that we call it 4th grade and not 4th form, 4th year, etc.), but he/she realizes that it is a usual practice for a 4th grade class to write a Senator's office. A recent immigrant from an Arab country might come to know these things, but they would not come naturally to him/her. I would think the author would pick something he/she could feel more sure of.

      Also, some of the targets seem strange to me. A tabloid newspaper? That appeared to be, if not the first target, an early target, and is not exactly a symbol of America to people around the world. If I were an investigator, this is the one I would be looking at most closely. If I were a terrorist wanted to sow fear and confusion, I would send anthrax to random people's homes, or I would steal a load of Publishers' Clearinghouse sweepstakes applications and load them with the bacteria before returning them to the mails.

      It's all circumstantial, of course, but the al-Qaeda angle doesn't seem right to me. I'm betting it's some American guy or guys with a B.Sc. in microbiology.

      --

      -
      Give me liberty or give me something of equal or lesser value from your glossy 32-page catalog.

    5. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 1

      Read the BBC's Q&A on the anthrax situation. Here's an intentionally leading and provocative quote:

      What does this tell us about the source of the anthrax?

      These findings suggest that US-based terrorists are behind the attacks, rather than extremists from abroad or a foreign government.


    6. Re:anthrax--careful, John by geekoid · · Score: 2

      To remove the current warlords and replace them with a government desired by the afgahn people.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:anthrax--careful, John by toupsie · · Score: 2, Funny
      fact that the targets included a planned parenthood, 2 democrats, media outlets, and the Supreme Court

      Why couldn't it be Democrats upset over the Supreme Court decision that placed Bush in the White House? Planned Parenthood might be using the scare to boost fundraising (it is their beg for money time). Once NBC got Anthrax all the other networks were scrambling to find one of their employees with the disease so they can scream "Me too! Me too!" (who knows who they forced to shear sick sheep). Plus any right wing nutcase knows that Postal Service Employees are crack shots with semi-automatic rifles and they last people you want to piss off.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    8. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the Planned Parenthood anthrax was a hoax.

      That leaves government and media targets - precisely the targets which an outsider would aim for. And what kind of domestic American terrorist would chose the publishers of supermarket tabloids as targets? Whereas an outsider would chose these precisely because of their very high publication numbers.

      Of course, it could be an Islamic terrorist attack, or it could just as easily be an Israeli/Mossad settup disguised to look like an Islamic attack.

      Anyone who is more than casually familiar with domestic extremists in the USA should be very dubious of any claims of domestic bioterrorism. A few loudmouths talking about bioterrorism does not equate an actual ability to mount such attacks.

    9. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      The Planned Parenthood attack was odd in that it had handwriting that was the same as the other attacks, but didn't actually have any spores with it.

      Who could it be? It really could be anyone, from another foreign group to some lone disgruntled Tim McVeigh/unabomber type. I have heard that the Army of God recently made some threats before these letters were sent, and that's why they are on the suspect list. But a number of facts about the letters that were sent suggest that it was, in fact, an American who wrote them: see the post below us.

    10. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Will_Malverson · · Score: 1

      In fact, there are a number of reasons to suspect that the primary perps behind the anthrax are American, including [...] the fact that the targets included a planned parenthood

      Yeah, Abortion Rights are big on the list of things that Al Qaeda wants to protect from American interference.

    11. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      The date at the top is in the format "9/11/01". Only Americans write dates this way (everyone else writes "11/9/01").

      The date is actually written 09-11-01. That is a hybrid, in the US a slash us typically used.

      The use of the 09-11 form is quite likely deliberate since the US media frequently refers to the "911" attack.

      The note looks to me as if it was written by someone who was aware that it would be examined to identify the author and ws attempting to give as few clues as possible.

      I don't agree with CNN that the evidence of planning points to domestic attacker. Al Qaeda have demonstrated that they can plan attacks in considerable detail.

      The point of the 'warning' is quite obvious, the first attack was only discovered after the second letters were sent. The 'warning' in the second letters was to make sure that the attack was noticed. The message is not really a warning however since you only read it after you are infected and about to die.

      The landlord of one of the hijackers worked for the tabloid that was attacked. It might have been in response to some sort of slight.

      We know that the hijackers looked into hiring a crop dusting plane to drop some sort of agent on a city. They would not have done that if they did not expect to have the anthrax available.

      I suspect that Al Qaeda overestimated the potency of the Anthrax. They probbly expected that it would kill everybody in the building and that the origin would be obvious.

      What the Anthrax attacks mean is that there is no alternative other than bombing the crap out of Bin Laden and the Taleban until they are utterly destroyed. Otherwise it is only a matter of time before the loonies get hold of a nuke and try to use it.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    12. Re:anthrax--careful, John by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      > The date at the top is in the format "9/11/01". Only Americans write dates this way (everyone else writes "11/9/01"). Someone who lived here for a while would know we do that, but wouldn't they be more inclined to write "September 11, 2001" or some variation to avoid confusion? Why would they bother to do it our way?

      I am an american and I like writing it 2001/09/11 (or 2001.09.11) myself when I can because in a computer that gets ordered year first month second and date last. Not that this is against your arguement :), which I agree seems it is less likely Al Qaeda.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    13. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From there it's only a small step to ISO-8601, being YYYY-MM-DD. This is what I always try to use online. Back in highschool we had to use this in economics classes too BTW, I was told this is the international convention for accounting today.

    14. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The use of the 09-11 form is quite likely deliberate since the US media frequently refers to the "911" attack.

      This whole thing sounds like it's very deliberately tied in with the attack.

      It's most likely either someone in the US working for Al Qaeda who has been there a while, or someone else trying to stir up trouble. Many of these clues seem just TOO obviously tied to a suspect, which doesn't fit with the other well-planned aspects of the operation. (Then again, so did the placement of Arabic books or pilot training manuals etc. found after the attack).

      I don't agree with CNN that the evidence of planning points to domestic attacker. Al Qaeda have demonstrated that they can plan attacks in considerable detail.

      I thought they originally found the anthrax came from Iowa or something... surprising, however, that CNN should suggest this - most of the networks (perhaps even much of CNN) wants to tie this to the attacks, one big panic is all they need to deal with at once and it wouldn't do for the people to worry that there might be another enemy coming in.

      The landlord of one of the hijackers worked for the tabloid that was attacked. It might have been in response to some sort of slight.

      Personal revenge doesn't seem to be the way; or else why not send it to the landlord himself? It seems more likely that the tabloid said or did something to offend someone, or they were recognised as a good target to spread panic.

      We know that the hijackers looked into hiring a crop dusting plane to drop some sort of agent on a city. They would not have done that if they did not expect to have the anthrax available.

      There may be plenty of other options here, at least some of the anthrax forms wouldn't be effective. (if dropped from the air, would the anthrax spores not disperse too much to be effective? Or if they have this much anthrax, why so few letters - unless as a warning for something else planned soon?)

      I suspect that Al Qaeda overestimated the potency of the Anthrax. They probbly expected that it would kill everybody in the building and that the origin would be obvious.

      The origin looks a little TOO obvious, but that may be their way. Overestimating seems a little bit out of their style, but then they (someone)probably underestimated the US anger and response to the attacks or they would have immediately claimed their responsibility.

      What the Anthrax attacks mean is that there is no alternative other than bombing the crap out of Bin Laden and the Taleban until they are utterly destroyed. Otherwise it is only a matter of time before the loonies get hold of a nuke and try to use it.

      I think what the Anthrax attacks mean is, watch out, there's probably quite a few terrorist left in the US. Some clear evidence of their responsibility would be nice (and allow the solution here to be integrated with the 911 response) but since they can't even show the evidence from the first attack, I don't think we can expect to see any this time :)

    15. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would seem most likely.

      US-based doesn't, of course, necessarily mean a US citizen - it could still be a long-time resident planted by another group. Or someone else who wants to make it look like another group is responsible.

    16. Re:anthrax--careful, John by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      If I were a terrorist and I were going to write a letter that I knew law enforcement and everyone else was going to pour over, there's one thing you could count on: that letter wouldn't look anything like anything else I write.

      A lot of these details that supposedly reveal information about who wrote the letters, may be very artificial and intentionally misleading. It troubles me that people are making inferences from data that the perpetrator(s) knew would be analyzed. There's definate troll potential here.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  12. Wait until the aliens get here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think we'll see globalization really take off once the aliens come and try to capture the earth. That seems to really bring the human race together in to a collective in the movies.

    And once we kick their ass, then we'll all live prosperity forever with no poverty or war ever again.

    -s

  13. Contrast: The Economist by RobertGraham · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The Economist recently had an entire issue devoted to globalism. Some of these articles are at http://www.economist.com. The Economist is a weekly news magazine, much like Time/Newsweek/USNews, though it appeals to more educated people.


    JonKatz has an axe to grind; The Economist doesn't. JonKatz will certainly feed your paranoia that the big bad multinationals are out to get you, The Economist will provide a fairer, ballanced set of information.

    1. Re:Contrast: The Economist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      I read the Economist regularly, and it does provide quality information. However, it is one of the brashest proponents of the free market system, and very much has an axe to grind.

    2. Re:Contrast: The Economist by RobertGraham · · Score: 2
      it is one of the brashest proponents of the free market system, and very much has an axe to grind

      There is a slight difference. JonKatz doesn't have a firm grasp of the subject matter -- all he has is strong opinions. The Economist certainly has a pro-business slant, but this is based upon a firm grasp of the subject matter.

      This is why JonKatz engenders passionate dislike -- whether we are talking technology, economics, or any other field, his grasp of the subject matter is lower than his readership, yet he makes strong pronouncements based upon his ignorance.

      JonKatz appeals to young geeks who share is values and ignorance. I think it is a rite-of-passage: at some point, people mature and become educated and realize what JonKatz is all about (he certainly would have appealed to me when I was 15 years old).

    3. Re:Contrast: The Economist by Thunderhead · · Score: 1

      "The New York Times will certainly feed your paranoia that the big bad communists are out to get you, Pravda will provide a fairer, balanced set of information, tovarisch."

      - RobertGraham, Slashtot, circa 1960.

      --

      THS
      ---
      "Poor girl looks as confused as a blind lesbian in a fish market." - Simon R. Green
    4. Re:Contrast: The Economist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that big-bad-multinationals are out to "get us", they're just out to permanently secure their financial future through any means possible, no matter what the repurcussions, and that once entrenched, they will leave no possible way of recourse.

      We benefit now in the US of various consumer-oriented laws and facilities, and some other legal remedies. However, companies in the US do their best to either get exceptions to the laws (antitrust exemptions), or even better, coopt the Government to override them (DMCA, SCCCA) and explicitly provide protections for the companies and the bad things they want to be able to do. We can't even count on our governments to do the right things (Social Security budget being used to balance US budget; how the Tobacco settlements are generally being used) on their own.

      While I may have "voted", directly or indirectly, for Microsoft, AOLTimeWarner, RIAA, MPAA, et al., the system is rapidly changing to where I cannot avoid but be affected by them, and in this, I HAVE NO VOTE, and I HAVE NO WAY TO GET OUT FROM UNDER IT, because the act of trying to do that will be made illegal, also.

      If globalization were really the right thing to do, then we wouldn't have DVD zones, for example.
      At least if a country puts a silly VAT tax, in theory it is possible for me to try and get it overthrown. But when a consortium like the DVD Consortium manages to be able to use its Zones of Control, then I'm left with a great choice: don't buy DVDs.

      Granted, I do not need DVDs to survive.

      But the blacks in the South didn't really need to ride the bus, either, did they, because they could have walked, right?

    5. Re:Contrast: The Economist by bcboy · · Score: 1

      >The Economist certainly has a pro-business slant, but this is based upon a firm grasp of the subject matter.

      ... which they are entirely willing to lie about when it suits their purposes. I've seen some pretty outrageous stuff in The Economist. An article about California's energy crisis offered a explaination that left out about half the story, and "data" that had been plotted in a way that prevented one from seeing that their position was baseless (by using different units in two graphs it prevented one from immediately seeing the holes in their story).

      I used to think The Economist was fairly reputable. But there's really no publication you can read at face value. You have to research things yourself if you really want the story.

    6. Re:Contrast: The Economist by tomdarch · · Score: 1

      Two things to clarify:

      1. The Economist does have some axes to grind - look closely and figure it out yourself.

      2. The Economist is technically a NEWSPAPER - don't make the mistake of calling it a magazine if you're ever in their offices (at least in London) I'll save you the greif now. (By the way, their bookshop right off Picadilly is pretty spiffy, if you're into econ and business books)

    7. Re:Contrast: The Economist by drauh · · Score: 1

      Example of multinational greed: On a program about Jamaica on PBS TV recently, McDonald's the US multinational corporation (MNC) wanted to establish a restaurant in Kingston. There already was a local Jamaican restaurant in Kingston bearing the name "McDonald's" which sold Jamaican food, and the restaurant had been there > ~5 years. There had been no exposure of the "McDonald's" (MNC) brand in Jamaica when that local restaurant was established. But McDonald's the MNC brought in the big legal guns to put the little local restaurant out of business, or to change their name. Greed is fundamental to business/capitalism: The most important aim for a business/capitalist is the attainment of profit.

      --
      This is a tautology.
    8. Re:Contrast: The Economist by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Don't tell me you are trying to compare the DCMA with Civil Rights...

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    9. Re:Contrast: The Economist by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      Economist take into account *ideal* and *theoretical* perspectives on what would work, but they still dont take into account that corporations are going to be the biggest influence on the global economy and they have the least interest in helping distribute wealth to poorer countries rather then extracting as much cheap labor as they can from poorer countries so that they can extract wealth from the richer countries as they can.

      But that said, in the long run globalisation will prove to be a good thing, but in the short term it will lead to several problems and hickups in the economy and hurt the economy in several ways before it becomes a stable thing. Japan as you may recall had a hiccup in its economy some years ago, and that was caused by removing laws that restrict global trade. Part of the problem is that opening trade puts you at the mercy of others, and it will work best when all major contributors open their trade and economy to the world, if one country refuses to do this they hurt the other countries by not buying products from them but selling products to them, then what they are ending up doing is taking wealth but not giving any back. Now that is what the WTO and world courts are for, so that countries can sue each other for doing this, but this does not apply to corporations, only countries. International corporations are formless and live in countries as opposed to being one and are not as limited as governments are in their trade. This is and has always been a problem, and that is the liability that corporations have, but this changes with time and with trial (that is when someone goes after a corporation and sets precedence in global law).

      Again, economists are the idealists (not so much practicality or detail in ideas some of the times), and those against globalisation tend to be the cynics. I tend to think it will work if its done right, and time eventually sculpts things to work right (evolution and/or revolution sees to that), not that there shouldnt be concern, the concern is in the details. As I believe it was Ralph Nader had said, we want globalisation our way, not the way international corporations want it.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    10. Re:Contrast: The Economist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You have to research things yourself if you really want the story.


      Mod+++!!!

    11. Re:Contrast: The Economist by skbenolkin · · Score: 1

      True dat. Particularly with this issue, there's no one who doesn't have an axe to grind. Read what The Economist has to say, since they do provide more information than [insert major news souce here], and then check out William Greider's piece in The Nation. What you shouldn't ignore is that there are major points of conflict between democracy and what is called globalization. How these conflicts are resolved affects us all and thus deserves our careful thought.


      2 cents
      --
      "Frederick, is God dead?" --Sojourner Truth
    12. Re:Contrast: The Economist by skbenolkin · · Score: 1
      --
      "Frederick, is God dead?" --Sojourner Truth
  14. A media problem? by JonKatz · · Score: 1

    Isn't this a media problem.As the media itself have been swallowed up by cost conscious companies, the number of foreign bureaus and the quality of foreign reporter goes down..we get little news from overseas...

    1. Re:A media problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whatsa matter?

      Didn't the check for your most recent article in Brills Content come in yet?

      Yeah, that's a media problem.

    2. Re:A media problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but is that because they don't have quality material available, or just that they don't think it's pro-American enough to show a different perpective?

  15. Globalisation for Greed by MosesJones · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Iraq - supported against Iran during the Iran v Iraq war, seen as an ally of the west and an aid in getting cheaper oil and controlled oil prices... invade Kuwait (dictatorial regime) and the west turn against Iraq (with "democratically" elected president) because of the risks to oil revenues.

    Afghanistan, supported Taliban and Mujahadin against the Soviet Union when they invaded, pushed as "freedom fighters" and "liberators". Soviets leave, so does all of the assistance from the west. Saudi Arabian national accused of leading a group on terrorists in which several (all non-Afghans) commit dreadful attrocities. West decide to invade Afghanistan and attack not the terrorist leader but the previously supported Taliban movement. This of course is unrelated to the desire to have access to the Caspian Sea oil without having to pay Russian pipeline charges.

    It might sound a harsh judgement but these are still the facts. Both of these now supposedly "evil" regimes were previously funded and supported by the very people now set against them... the opinions and views of the Taliban and Sadam Hussien have not changed. It is just now politically and economically sensible to take these views.

    Having a recession..... start a war, increased employment, increased public spending (defence), flag-waving support to gloss over your lack of leadership.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's hard to take your argument seriously when it contains such glaring historical mistakes. The US did not support the Taliban against the USSR because the Taliban did not even exist at the time. Certainly some of the Afghani rebels eventually joined the Taliban, but to say we supported the Taliban is like saying that because we supported Poland during the Second World War we supported the Warsaw Pact.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    2. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      please stop this ridiculous tripe.

      The West has not invaded Afghanistan yet. We have not supported or even recognized the Taliban government. They were not the ones in power when we helped them against the Soviets. This oil motive conspiracy is so ludicrous.

    3. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      START a war?

      Last I checked we weren't the ones flying Afgani airliners into downtown Kabul to get this thing started. If I recall correctly they're the one's who started things up.

    4. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Having a recession..... start a war, increased employment, increased public spending (defence), flag-waving support to gloss over your lack of leadership.

      Uh, ok. I guess the terrorists who attacked the WTC did so because of the economic downturn then, right?

    5. Re:Globalisation for Greed by MosesJones · · Score: 3, Informative


      Errr no it isn't. This is exactly what happend

      Last year $43m was sent...

      also from CNN Last paragraph Lots of the Taliban are ex-members of "freedom fighters" including their leader.

      It isn't the same as supporting Poland as there you are supporting a country, integral in itself. Here we are talking about various nutters with guns who we happen to like. Lets not kid ourselves that the currently popular "Northern Alliance" are not a bunch of murdering thugs as well.

      Fund murderous thugs and eventually you get your reward. Previously they had a common enemy (the USSR), then they had each other, then they had their previous paymasters. Same situation as Iraq.

      --
      An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    6. Re:Globalisation for Greed by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

      All great points. The USA is most definitely reaping what they've sowed.

      However, as a still-outraged American, the only cure for this is to fight the war to get the people who harmed us. The American people will settle for no less. Then we need to leave all these countries all alone.

      What American policy-makers have failed to grasp in the last 150-200 years is that our way of life did not just spontaneously appear. When the first settlers came over here, they had the benefits of European technology, laws, and customs. The USA developed technology because our forebearers already had everything else we used.

      Now, see, we're wanting to force our high-tech way of life on these poor people that have lived the same way for thousands of years. They forget that this technology took that same thousands of years to evolve. Even when the Moors invaded Europe, they didn't bring such a leap in technology to the continent.

      A truly wise President and Cabinet would realize that all this meddling is hurting the balance of the world and that we could get by with just buying other nations' products, but they're all power-mad buffoons that want to own the world the same way they own shares of MSFT. That will be the downfall of the USA. (I have spoken! forsooth!)

    7. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2

      I can't believe you would actually reply with that. That gift was in the form of humanitarian aid to the people of Afghanistan who are STARVING TO DEATH. I'm sure you would be the first to cry bloody murder that the US government would allow a famine to continue while it had so much extra money on its hands, but when they do, it sure makes a convenient argument against them later.


      Basically, in your scenario, the US could do absolutely no right. There are, to my knowledge, three broad options the US could pursue in regards to Afghanistan:

      1. Ignore it. Of course, this raises the cry that the US ignores people in suffering (and it would be true). Guess we can't do that.
      2. Topple the ruling regime. This is, on the other hand, just a means to oil in the Caspian Sea, right? It has nothing to do with any sort of self-defense or humanitarian need, we just need more oil. So that's out.
      3. Allow the Taliban to remain in power, but just send humanitarian assistance. Well, we tried that, but as you noted, that is propping up a barbaric regime. So that's no good.

      So then, please enlighten me as to which of these three options is acceptable to you, or give me a fourth which I have not considered. As far as I can tell, you've ruled out every possible course of action.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    8. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      Then we need to leave all these countries all alone.

      Wrong. In one of his few moments of coherence, the poster above noted that the US's immediate withdrawal from Afghanistan following the war with the USSR is one of the reasons Afghanistan has been fighting a civil war for over a decade. Your solution -- go in, get what we want, and then leave the country a bombed-out mess -- is exactly the opposite end of the spectrum from a well thought out, effective foreign policy.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    9. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      this mod on this comment just proves what kind of leftist bent moderators have. Here's a clue moderators: this is OFFTOPIC. Globalization has just about nothing to with this. Also, it is flamebait of the worst kind.

      btw, you should have replaced "start a war" with "get attacked and have 5000 US citizens mass murdered".

    10. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Paolomania · · Score: 1

      This of course is unrelated to the desire to have access to the Caspian Sea oil without having to pay Russian pipeline charges.

      It is interesting that you should bring up Caspian Sea Oil, as Salon ran an article the other day on just how difficult and economically unrewarding it would be to try to get at Caspian and Central Asian Oil through Afghanistan.

    11. Re:Globalisation for Greed by astar · · Score: 1

      Perhaps a little light.

      The Taliban was created by Pakistan with US agreement after the war with the Soviet Union wound down. Apparently, the Afgans have a tribal society and the tribes do not like each other and so they needed outside help to get a psuedo-government.

      A little reported fact is that the Afgan state by international law now includes about half of Pakistan. Presumedly, there is a quid pro quo for Pakistan support of the Taliban in that the Taliban will not press their claims for their territory. Presumedly, this is why Pakistan wants the new governemtn to have "moderate Talibans" in it. This particular mess I would guess is left over from the British and their geo-politics.

      The intent of the grandparent author was perhaps to remind us that we have trained and funded our opponents and even perhaps continue to protect them, the last IMO. I cite one recent Russian statement and two Macedonia statements, as follows:

      bin Laden's top collaborator is an Egypian. His brother is in Kosavo. He has recently trained 50 Islamic terrorists at a KLA terrorists training camp. The camp is in the US controlled area of Kosovo. The reports are recent and post-date WTC.

      Less well documented, the KLA a few months ago got caught in Macadonia territory and their people were going to be captured by the Macadonian army. The KLA personnel included Islamic fundamentalists and private US military advisors. KFOR rescued them, driving them off in air-conditioned buses.

      There are some signs of change here in that the American ambassador to Russia is reported stating that the KLA must now be considered terrorists. But I think that just validates the inconsistency of US policy now.

      On terrorism, first of all we should want to avoid Katz's tendency to see this in terms of British Clash of Civilizations geo-politics. But this is a big subject.

      On globalism, Putin's speech at APEC on globalism is one I can agree with. But good luck finding any reporting on it in the US. I would include it here but the lameness filter would get me.

    12. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elflord · · Score: 1
      Your completely missing the point. The problem is the general pattern of flip-flopping. One day, Osama is a "freedom fighter", the next day he's a terrorist. Noriega on the other hand turned into an "evil drug lord". As for foreign aid, I'd like to see what it was spent on. A documentary (beneath the veil) showed the Taliban using a soccer field built with foreign aid money as an arena for public executions.

      The good news is that the US appear to have learned from their mistakes in that they are exercising due caution in supporting the northern alliance. One hopes they don't try to turn these guys into heros.

    13. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $43 million was not given to the Taliban.
      $43 million in aid (cash, wheat, medicine) was allocated and provided to the people of Afghanistan through NGOs and UN related agencies.

      Here's my support :

      Colin Powell's press briefing [May 17 2001]

      Subsequent, detailed press briefing [May 17 2001]

      CNN report [May 17 2001]

      Salon Correction

    14. Re:Globalisation for Greed by flufffy · · Score: 1

      all this switching around can get complicated. one of my 'favourite' examples was from the angolan civil war (long ago, ask someone), in which you had oil refineries owned by western multinationals (such as gulf) being defended by cuban troops from attacks by apartheid south african (i.e. western backed) guerrilas.

    15. Re:Globalisation for Greed by krazy_kc · · Score: 1

      Actually, that "humanitarian aid" had nothing to do with starving people. It had to do with the war on drugs. We gave a repressive regime 43 million dollars to do with what they will, because they said they would get rid of poppies, the main crop of the average Afghani.

      As far as your three choices none of them are good. I'm not smart enough to figure out what the cure all solution is. I'm more concerned with our motives. The policy we are trying now (toppling the Taliban) does nothing for "the people of Afghanistan who are STARVING TO DEATH", we can either topple the regime and run like we did last time, leaving civil war, and power to he who has the most guns (the Northern Alliance we are so happy to support now, is an Alliance of warlords, one of whom ran an extremely brutal Soviet regime, these guys really enjoyed rounding women up in groups and raping them). We can stay and prop up our own puppet (that's worked well for us in the past, check out Vietnam, Central America, the Phillipines). Regardless, it's not going to help "the people of Afghanistan who are STARVING TO DEATH" because they are starving due to a lack of infastructure, poor harvests, and 30 years of continued warfare. How a few more years of us bombing them will help I don't know.

      Besides all that, why are we targeting Afghanistan? There are lots of other places where people are starving. There are lots of other places that support terrorists (like our new favorite ally Pakistan). Not one of the hijackers was Afghani, and when we do rid Afghanistan of terrosist bases and camps (if we can) they will continue to sprout up elsewhere, because there will be just as many, if not more, people willing to do atrocious things to the United States. What does attacking Afghanistan, particularly targetting the Taliban over the Northern Alliance, gain us long term? Why are we not putting pressure on Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Syria, the countries that are providing the leadership and capitol for these terrorist groups?

      These are the things that bother me most about our current policies.

    16. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      One day, Osama is a "freedom fighter", the next day he's a terrorist.

      Well, yeah. One day he's repelling a Soviet invasion in Afghanistan, the next he's bombing US embassies, attacking US ships, and murdering 5000 US civilians. People don't necessarily stay the same. I don't see why our view of them should.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    17. Re:Globalisation for Greed by kaladorn · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Here we are talking about various nutters with guns who we happen to like. Lets not kid ourselves that the currently popular "Northern Alliance" are not a bunch of murdering thugs as well.

      Has it occurred to you that the US has been remarkably slow to engage front line Taliban units to open up a path to Kabul for the Alliance? This they could have done weeks ago. They do not. Why, do you think?

      Because they probably realize the problem of having the Alliance take-over. But there really are not 1000 good choices and having Abdul Haq hung wasn't a real good thing either.

      I'm not sure the doddery old king is the answer, I'm not sure the Northern Alliance or a Pakistan puppet government is the answer. I'm not sure weeding out even moderate Taliban supporters is wise. I think the answer is very complex.

      I suspect it involves some moderate Taliban members, some of the Northern Alliance, maybe the King, the UN (UNMOs and Nato troops too), and a lot of outside attention. Media, Education, funds to rebuild but with strings attached on the human-rights/democracy front.

      The Afghans (tribes anyway) are a rowdy lot. They have a militant tradition, like their guns and a good fight. But they also love their families and no one really wants to be killed and most people would like a chance at security, stability and a future for their children. If a rebuilt Afghanistan can offer these opportunities, even if it takes 10 years to get rolling, then its worth it. For us in the West and for the Afghanis themselves. It won't be easy, and it can't be exactly another "America in the East" (not that you'd necessarily want that anyway), it will have to be something that combines the interest groups and binds them into a framework that gaurantees a few social changes and some basic human rights. But if we can at least get that, or a start towards that, some peace and stability, then we can probably rob the bin Laden's of the world of a fertile recruiting ground.

      Knowledge, wisdom, education - these are the weapons which can be used to change the world. Guns, planes, and bombs are only a (sadly necessary) first stage. The real trick lies in the rebuilding. And that requires architects, builders, and leaders of the community - not soldiers and airmen.

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    18. Re:Globalisation for Greed by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1


      That's a problem if and only if we bomb it out in the first place. If we stop meddling military action wouldn't be necessary.

      Our try at being the keeper of the free world is obviously failing, since - and don't yell ethnic prejudice, because the empirical evidence is there - there are some cultures in the world that just don't know how to be free. Their religion, their traditions, everything about their cultures keeps them from appreciating the advantages of freedom.

      I hate to sound like such an elitist bastard, but how can you argue? Look at all we've done to encourage democracy in 'emerging nations' and prop up the third world, then they turn to fundamentalism and totalitarianism because they can't grasp the advantages of democracy or the concept of freedom. They want it all, now, and we didn't even get it all immediately.

      Furthermore, they won't just leave. Between homeland and freedom, I'd always choose freedom, so why won't they? A piece of dirt is not worth more than free will. To them it is. That's a fundamental value that all the diplomacy and all the copies of PC World and Sports Illustrated we can print won't change. There comes a point when you're dealing with a stubborn person that you just give up and stop trying to convince them of your POV, so extending that to a culture, IMO it's time to throw our hands up and say, "f**k it all". I'm tired of my tax money paying for ungrateful dictatorships and the people that are too stupid to overthrow or get out from under them. Not everyone can fight, but everyone can walk.

    19. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      What in the world makes you think we aren't putting pressure on other said "terror supporting" countries?

      Hmm, and from what I have seen, the $43 mil /did/, in fact, make a hefty dent in the world heroin production.

    20. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      Actually, that "humanitarian aid" had nothing to do with starving people. It had to do with the war on drugs. We gave a repressive regime 43 million dollars to do with what they will, because they said they would get rid of poppies, the main crop of the average Afghani.

      As a poster noted below, the $43 million was given in aid (including food and medicine) through the UN and through non-governmental organizations. The US government did not write a $43 million check paid to the order of "The Taliban, Afghanistan."


      As far as your three choices none of them are good. I'm not smart enough to figure out what the cure all solution is. I'm more concerned with our motives.

      That's a very Chomskian viewpoint - "I don't know what to do, but what the US is doing is wrong." The problem is that by rejecting all three of those options, you reject every option. Those three options basically boil down to the three stances we could take: Friendly (send aid), Neutral (ignore), or Hostile (attack). What else could we possibly do? I am not advocating, by the way, installing a US puppet. I am advocating that the US militarily remove the Taliban from power and provide security forces while a coalition government can be formed (either by the UN or another similar organization).


      Besides all that, why are we targeting Afghanistan? There are lots of other places where people are starving.

      Yes, but only one of those places hosts a group that murdered 5000 US civilians.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    21. Re:Globalisation for Greed by JohnVH · · Score: 1

      Actually they were not South Africa guerrillas. The troops fighting in Angola were from the South African Defense Force (i.e. they were part of the South African government military forces).
      Also, the South Africans were fighting alongside American soldiers (Possibly CIA, I don't remember) who pulled out at the last minute and left the South Africans to fend for themselves. I heard about this first hand from ex-SADF friends of mine who were there.
      I was living in South Africa during that period and vaguely remember the news reports and my parents talking about the situation (I was pretty young at the time).

    22. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Last I checked we weren't the ones flying Afgani airliners into downtown Kabul to get this thing started. If I recall correctly they're the one's who started things up.

      Be very careful who you define "they" as.

      Virtually none of the people believed to have been involved in the planning of the WTC/Pentagon attack were Afghans, but Saudis, Egyptians, and people from other regions of the Middle East. But no Afghans. Many came from countries the U.S. counts as allies right now.

      So... why is the U.S. bombing Afghanistan again? It won't wipe out al Qaeda; indeed, it appears to be strengthening support for Usama bin Ladin as a fighter against what is perceived, rightly or wrongly, as an imperial West.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    23. Re:Globalisation for Greed by flufffy · · Score: 1

      thanks - interesting!

    24. Re:Globalisation for Greed by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      That's a very Chomskian viewpoint - "I don't know what to do, but what the US is doing is wrong."

      I've read a lot of Chomsky, and that's not what he's been saying. The first step is to ask the right questions. If you don't, you can't possibly hope to make an informed decision. The first question that must be asked is "Why were the crimes of Sept. 11th committed?" Only then can we hope to stop the violence.

      Hint: It has nothing to do with America being the land of the free and the home of the brave.

      More hints: Palestine and Isreal. 10 years of sanctions and bombing of Iraq. U.S. military bases in Saudi Arabia. Supporting oppressive regimes that are friendly to oil interests.

      As Chomsky has made very clear, there are more choices than attack, aid, or ignore. But any solution should start with the basic premise of "first, do no harm."

      Bombing an already starving population ruled by an oppressive regime right before winter sets in is going to result in the deaths of millions of civilians by winter's end. Is that helping or doing harm? We haven't taken out the Taliban, and now there's talk of keeping some of the "moderates" in poower to rule with the Northern Alliance. Hello?! The Northern Alliance is the world's major heroine producer.

      Before the U.S. began its viscious revenge (God bless America -- He's on our side), Afghanis were at least receiving U.N. food aid and aid from Pakistan. That stopped soon after 9-11. In fact we demanded that Pakistan stop its food shipments to Afghanistan and close its borders to contain the anticipated massive refugee flight.

      Yes, but only one of those places hosts a group that murdered 5000 US civilians.

      And that's the key isn't it? That the U.S. has murdered -- either directly or through military training and aid -- millions of civilians in the past fifty years alone isn't a problem because they weren't U.S. civilians. We've overthrown democratically-elected governments, targeted civilians with cluster bombs, and flagrantly disregarded international law and U.N. resolutions to keep the profits flowing. But as long as we always export our terror, all is well.

      Keep reading. ZNet. IndyMedia. Listen to the rhetoric Bush is spouting. Take a Bush speech and replace "God" with "Allah" and "U.S." with "Islam" and you can't tell him apart from bin Laden.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    25. Re:Globalisation for Greed by krazy_kc · · Score: 1

      As a poster noted below, the $43 million was given in aid (including food and medicine) through the UN and through non-governmental organizations. The US government did not write a $43 million check paid to the order of "The Taliban, Afghanistan."

      I never meant to imply that it wasn't food that we sent. I meant to imply that our reported reason for giving the aid was to fight the war on drugs.

      My post was meant to question our motives, and whether or not they are well placed.

      The problem is that by rejecting all three of those options, you reject every option. Those three options basically boil down to the three stances we could take: Friendly (send aid), Neutral (ignore), or Hostile (attack).

      I didn't reject all three options I said that I didn't know what the correct option is, and that these aren't good. I am not an expert in the area of foreign diplomacy, or foreign aid. I do have a suspision that starting with a "Hostile" response to the recent terrorist attacks is self-defeating and it seems it only takes us down a path of more terrorist attacks, not less.

      Yes, but only one of those places hosts a group that murdered 5000 US civilians.

      This is categorically untrue. The state dept. lists Sudan as a primary location of the al 'Qaeda network. Cnn notes "Bin Laden is a totally multinational enterprise, said terrorism analyst Magnus Ransdorp. He has tentacles and followers all around the world." The fbi on their most wanted terrorist lists Lebannon and Pakistan as homes to high level terrorists.

      While it is naive to think that Afghanistan is not a good place to go looking for terrorists bases, it is the lack of stability, continuious warfare, and natural landscape that make it good places for bases. There are many other places that have these same traits that will become hotbeds for terrorism training when Afghanistan is no longer plausible.

    26. Re:Globalisation for Greed by jessemckinney · · Score: 1

      Actually, the US is the largest supporter of the Taliban. Colon Powell (sp?) personally went and talked to the Taliban leaders earlier this year. They made a deal regarding the heroin production in Afganistan. I believe the amount was $43 million U.S. Dollars. The largest monetary supporter of the Taliban: the US.

    27. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      I've read a lot of Chomsky, and that's not what he's been saying.

      You're right, that's not what he's saying. Another thing he's not saying is any sort of solution to any problem ever. I did not mean to imply that I was paraphrasing Chomsky, instead, I tried to give my viewpoint on what he is adding to the debate. In my opinion, that addition is just a litany of abuses the US has committed with neither the balance of the US's good deeds or any sort of solution to the problems whatsoever.


      The first step is to ask the right questions. If you don't, you can't possibly hope to make an informed decision. The first question that must be asked is "Why were the crimes of Sept. 11th committed?" Only then can we hope to stop the violence.

      That, IMHO, is not the way to go about it at all. While understanding the reasoning behind the organizations that committed these crimes is certainly crucial, making it our main focus risks turning the debate into a question of "What can we do to make them happy again?" Unfortunately, there is nothing that we can do to accomplish that. The main problem most Islamic terrorists have with the US is its support of Israel, and we simply cannot just drop Israel. Our support of Israel is the only thing that has ever brought the Israelis and Palestinians to the peace table, and withdrawing that support risks catastrophe far beyond assassinations of Palestinian officials and bombings of Israeli pizza shops. If we withdraw our support from Israel, do you think the Israelis will just give up, get in some boats, and try to find a country elsewhere? Hardly. The Israelis will defend themselves to the utmost - and that would likely include the use of nuclear weapons. So please do not make the mistake of thinking that just walking away from the region will make everything ok.


      Bombing an already starving population ruled by an oppressive regime right before winter sets in is going to result in the deaths of millions of civilians by winter's end. Is that helping or doing harm?

      Allowing a decades-long civil war -- one in which more civilians are killed per day than in the entire US bombing campaign combined: is that helping or doing harm? The fact of the matter is that the US has been in the past, is in the present, and will continue to be in the future the largest single supplier of humanitarian aid to the Afghani people. I don't remember hearing that in any of Chomsky's speeches.


      Keep reading. ZNet [zmag.org]. IndyMedia [indymedia.org]. Listen to the rhetoric Bush is spouting. Take a Bush speech and replace "God" with "Allah" and "U.S." with "Islam" and you can't tell him apart from bin Laden.

      Well, I haven't read ZNet, so I can't comment on that until I check it out, but IndyMedia is without a doubt one of the most irresponsible "journalistic" sites on the web. Let's not forget the incident in which they claimed that footage of Palestinians celebrating on Sept. 11th was shot in 1991, despite the fact that it contains 1995 model vehicles. As for the speeches of Bush and Bin Laden, to say they're interchangeable is beyond gross oversimplification. Even if you think that Bush is truly a terrorist in democratic garb, and that he means to rule the entire earth, his speeches are about punishing criminals and aiding the Afghan people. Bin Laden makes no such claims to generosity - he only wants to help if it involves killing Americans or Jews.

      You'll notice there are a couple things to which I didn't respond; I'll try to do so later tonight if I have time. I just wanted to at least put this stuff into the debate before I left work.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    28. Re:Globalisation for Greed by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      Another thing he's not saying is any sort of solution to any problem ever. ... In my opinion, that addition is just a litany of abuses the US has committed with neither the balance of the US's good deeds or any sort of solution to the problems whatsoever.

      First, with big media, the U.S. doesn't need any help singing its rare humanitarian deeds. But pointing out the inconvenient facts is very necessary if you intend to make good decisions and have real debate. While his goal is to provide facts and analysis and let the reader form their own opinion, he does sometimes offer solutions. Two clear unambiguous examples are Nicaragua and East Timor: stop the attacks and military support and bring in humanitarian aid. It doesn't get much clearer than that.

      While understanding the reasoning behind the organizations that committed these crimes is certainly crucial, making it our main focus risks turning the debate into a question of "What can we do to make them happy again?"

      The men that flew those planes aren't going to be made happy, so there's no use trying to appease them. However, we can take steps to assure more men and women like them don't stand up to take their place. It's not about keeping terrorists happy; it's about not pissing off more regular people such that they become terrorists.

      The main problem most Islamic terrorists have with the US is its support of Israel, and we simply cannot just drop Israel. Our support of Israel is the only thing that has ever brought the Israelis and Palestinians to the peace table.

      I wish I knew more of the history of Israel, so I cannot address the topic well. I can say, though, that on the surface the UN resolution calling on Israel to return to its pre-1967 borders (when it invaded Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza Strip) is a good start. Everyone but the U.S. and Israel has ratified it. Chomsky, Fisk, et al claim that the U.S. has vetoed every Security Council issue trying to create a solution. The U.S. stance is an Israel with a subordinate Palestine or continued hostilities -- there is no middle ground.

      What I can say is that we give an obscene amount of military aid to Israel and Turkey, and both are carrying out terrorist and/or genocidal campaigns in the region, just as Saddam Hussein did to the Kurds in northern Iraq before ever invading Kuwait, turning the U.S. against him, or rather the Iraqi civilians.

      Allowing a decades-long civil war -- one in which more civilians are killed per day than in the entire US bombing campaign combined: is that helping or doing harm?

      Neither. If we bomb, we kill millions. If we do nothing, yes they kill themselves, but we are not aggravating the situation. Now, I think there is middle ground, but that answers your question. Again realize that as a result of our bombing entirely one third of Afghanistan's 22 million people may die of starvation during winter -- 7 million people.

      Instead of spending $40 billion on bombing them, why not spend the same $4 billion we send to Israel (for weapons) on food aid for Afghanistan and pocket the remaining $36 billion. Once people aren't starving in the streets they tend to value life higher and would probably be very open to UN run elections for a democratic government. That's one option among many.

      The fact of the matter is that the US ... will continue to be in the future the largest single supplier of humanitarian aid to the Afghani people. I don't remember hearing that in any of Chomsky's speeches.

      Actually he has mentioned that the U.S. and UN supply humanitarian aid. Unfortunately all of it was cut off once the U.S. threatened to bomb. The aid wasn't getting them to sustainability; it was keeping people from starving. No more aid, starvation begins. And as covered many times, the food bombs we dropped were a PR scam, a mere bandaid applied to an amputated leg.

      IndyMedia is without a doubt one of the most irresponsible "journalistic" sites on the web. Let's not forget the incident in which they claimed that footage of Palestinians celebrating on Sept. 11th was shot in 1991.

      Please check your facts. To summarize, someone posted a rumor in the public forum of one of the 48 or so IMC sites. The following day an editor called CNN to confirm the rumor but got no reply. Later, someone posted a followup comment that the rumor was indeed false by simply examining the footage. The rumor was just like your posting. It was never put in the features nor touched by the editors. Blaming IndyMedia would be like blaming Andover.net for a false rumor posted by an AC on Slashdot.

      [Bush's] speeches are about punishing criminals and aiding the Afghan people.

      That's wonderful, but his actions speak louder. He hasn't set back the Taliban, nor found bin Laden, and he's killing the Afghan people. And law is about justice -- meaning presenting evidence to an impartial trial for judgment -- not revenge.

      "You are with us, or you are with the terrorists." Bush wants no middle ground.

      "God is on our side." Bush claims to be Christian, yet the first lesson of Christianity is forgiveness. Vengeance is of the Old Testament.

      "Hand over bin Laden or we'll bomb you. There will be no negotiations." ... "We have exhausted all diplomatic avenues." How can you have diplomacy without negotiating? So Bush made one lame attempt: a childish ultimatum.

      Bin Laden makes no such claims to generosity - he only wants to help if it involves killing Americans or Jews.

      I have the same disdain for bin Laden as I do for Bush, and I never said he was a nice guy. But he did make four clear points in his speech as to why so many Muslims would want to inflict pain on the U.S. While he may privately want all of Israel to go away, he asked only for us to stop supporting them. While he may want to rule the world, he only asked that we remove our military bases from Saudi Arabia.

      And I'll say it again: we still have no evidence linking bin Laden to 9-11. Sure, some of his money probably helped pay for the flight schools and tickets, and that makes him partly responsible. But then realize that part of your taxes paid for the bombs that destroyed the two Red Cross buildings and the UN Land Mine Removal Headquarters. Should the UN bomb your suburb to punish you?

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    29. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elflord · · Score: 1
      Well, yeah. One day he's repelling a Soviet invasion in Afghanistan, the next he's bombing US embassies, attacking US ships, and murdering 5000 US civilians.

      Or, as he'd see it, "repelling a US invasion in Saudi Arabia". The problem with "freedom fighters" is like this is that they're more interested in imposing their own agenda than in "freedom".

    30. Re:Globalisation for Greed by Valdrax · · Score: 2

      No, it's like saying the French supported the United States in the Revolutionary War because they funded a bunch of colonists. It's a nitpick, but not a "glaring historical mistake." The people we funded became both the Taliban and the previous Afghani government they toppled over, and Osama bin Ladin was very much a part of the anti-Soviet forces when he was a young man.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    31. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2

      I wasn't making a moral judgement on who is right and who is wrong. The fact is that at one time he was fighting with our allies, and later he started fighting against us. There's no duplicity here; when he started attacking Americans abroad and then at home, he became an enemy.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    32. Re:Globalisation for Greed by elefantstn · · Score: 2

      I disagree. The colonists who fought Great Britain almost unanimously became the United States, and their leaders were transformed wholesale. Now, to say that the because the French funded a bunch of colonists, they supported the Confederacy -- I think that would be a fair comparison.

      And it's really not a nitpick. Letting an error like "the US supported the Taliban" go gives implicit agreement to the suggestion that the US supported this regime until it was convenient not to. That is entirely not the case.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
  16. GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOTS by cryofan2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The western democracies carved out a place where there could exist such a thing as a middle class. Where a working man could make a living for himself and his family. The western democracies are a haven for capital: they are stable and work by the rule of law.

    So that is why there is work here.

    We compete on the gloabl stage for work. We offer a business advantage over third world competitors in that we are stable and are run by the rule of law. And because we have this advantage over 3rd world, that is the only reason why we have work here at all. Otherwise we would have no work here because we CHARGE HIGH WAGES.
    People, that is a GOOD THING! WE WANT HIGH WAGES!

    WE DON'T WANT LOW WAGES!

    But big corporations want both stability/the rule of law AND low wages. So therefore "open borders immigration" and globalization is what corporations want because it LOWERS WAGES!

    Our politicians want to give them that because the corporations PAY THEM.

    Can you please see that this is a process of negotiation! That there are CONFLICTS OF INTEREST between corporations and the citizens of western democracies?

    When you go to buy a car and the salesman says he wants 100K, you don't just pay him, do you? YOU NEGOTIATE!

    The problem is that corporations have poured so much money into propaganda through so many means that people like Katz beleive the pro-globalization propaganda. Or maybe, Katz is being paid by business lobbies to write pro-globalization propaganda.

    Jon Katz, do you take money from corporate lobbies?

  17. Yes by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Can governments preserve the environment, keep work secure and equitable, ensure fair wages, control capitalism, distribute new technologies equitably, respect diverse cultural values, contain greed and restrict the imagery that Americans love but that frightens and offends large segments of the world population?


    Yes, as long as we retain our sovereignty and don't turn that over to a multi-national body. I think it would dangerous to allow a multi-national organization like the U.N. to have final say in matters of law and of military over the U.S. We have the longest running democracy of any nation, and it works. Thus, I think its dangerous for countries like Britain, with long-established laws, to turn over power to multi-national institutions like the EU. Let each country govern itself and come to agreements with other countries, but never turn over power or the right to have final say to these organizations. Doing so is a recipe for disaster; it places more power into the hands of fewer people, it makes it more likely for a despot to control more lands, and it takes away from people the ability to govern themselves. The right to self-govern is supreme in the U.S. and hopefully will remain so.


    By doing so, we ensure our government responds to us as a people and has control of the military. As long as we have an elected government that controls the military, we don't have to worry too much about the power of other countries, and other multi-national organizations. But if we give up any power to multi-national organizations, we lose ability to govern ourselves, and we lose the freedoms we have worked for over 225 years to create and preserve.

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

    1. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Insightful ??? Shite actually!

    2. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that one of the issues of globalization is that corporations, having no ethics, are quite happy to run along and move their organization to anywhere that they can get the best return on investment.
      If this means taking advantage of a cheap workforce, no labor laws, no benefits, then so be it.

      Globalization of government institutions actually takes care of this - it enforces a level playing field for countries. The difficulty of firing employees in Germany becomes the same as India.

      Don't get all misty eyed about sovereignty and self government - we lost those a long time ago - about the same time that political parties accepted donations (of any sort) from corporations

    3. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right to self-govern is supreme in the U.S. and hopefully will remain so.

      I think that the Civil War dispelled this myth. If the right to self-govern was paramount, then states would have the right to secede from this country and rule themselves.

    4. Re:Yes by BlackGriffen · · Score: 1

      Your post shows a frightful amount of ignorance to the history of the United States. Believe it or not, but there was a similar debate concerning adopting the constitution and abandoning the articles of confederation. The opponents strongly feared a centralized federal government. The proponents saw the social, economic, and military benefits of strengthening the central government past the point where it had to beg the member states of the union for money (sound familiar?). One of the problems with the United States today is that it has basically become a half-assed world governing body in which only 4% of the world's population has a direct say. We treat the rest of the world about like Great Britain treated its colonies. In case you're not familiar with mercantilism, the idea is that the mother country imports raw materials from the colonies and exports finished goods to them. Great for the country, bad for the colonies. We're even worse, though. We get raw materials and have them manufactured in foreign countries, and pay less than they're worth for them. What makes this possible is the difference between the values of different currencies (an artificial situation at best). Trade traditionally moves goods from places where the concentration is high, and thus demand is low, to areas where the concntration is low, and thus demand is high. The only thing maintaining our current situation is the fact that labor over seas is abundant enough that people are willing to work for the pittance we offer. It's an unstable situation that won't last. So you see from the economic situation that the people of the world who don't live in the U.S. are justifiably dissatisfied with the fact that they are to some extent or another governed by the U.S. but their interests aren't being considered. Two things will stabilize this issue: One: adopt a world currency to help level the economic iniquities. Two: make a world government in which all people are represented. Right now all governments have representation in the UN, but not people. The powers of such a body should be: The power to tax (all taxes must apply the same to all people [i.e. income taxes are fine, but taxing one country more than another is not fair]), raise an army, approval of all treaties, policing of seaways including regulation of ocean fisheries, regulate international commerce, run a police force with international authority, run a court system, etc. History is riddled with convergence. Before humans, animals such as primates and wolves organized based on the family group. The family group extended to the tribes/clans/gens. Clans eventually fused in to city states, that controlled empires. Empires slowly morphed in to modern nation states. Soon, it will be time for the nation state to go the way of the dinosaur, and be replaced by a global governance. --BlackGriffen

    5. Re:Yes by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Yes, as long as we retain our sovereignty and don't turn that over to a multi-national body. I think it would dangerous to allow a multi-national organization like the U.N. to have final say in matters of law and of military over the U.S. We have the longest running democracy of any nation, and it works.

      I guess that at least partially depends on how you define "democracy". Heard of the Magna Carta?

      But I digress... I think that there certainly are some dangers in moving towards a more global government, but there are/were similar dangers when the various states decided to become the USA.

      At some point people have to get over the idea that they are the most important person around and recognize the rights and needs of others. The USA has done pretty well at doing this within the confines of its borders. We recognize that even if everyone in town things things should be run in some manner, the sate government/courts can overrule them (with various limitations), who in turn can be overruled by the federal system. We generally think of this as a good thing.

      I see no reason why this can not and should not be applied at a higher level. Of course there need to be limits and checks and balances and all that sort of thing, but there is no fundamental reason why this could not work in a fair and managable manner.

    6. Re:Yes by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1
      History is riddled with convergence. Before humans, animals such as primates and wolves organized based on the family group. The family group extended to the tribes/clans/gens. Clans eventually fused in to city states, that controlled empires. Empires slowly morphed in to modern nation states. Soon, it will be time for the nation state to go the way of the dinosaur, and be replaced by a global governance.
      Strange, dinosaurs are gone, but families, city states, and empires are still around. The nation state won't disappear, nor should it. However, there will be layers added on top. Well, really some have already have been added, so better to say that more and stronger layers will be added.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    7. Re:Yes by The+Milky+Bar+Kid · · Score: 1

      Yes, as long as we retain our sovereignty and don't turn that over to a multi-national body. I think it would dangerous to allow a multi-national organization like the U.N. to have final say in matters of law and of military over the U.S.

      Ahahahahahahahahaha...

      Sorry - I think you've got your organisations the wrong way round. the U.S. can't be controlled by the U.N. - it's RUNNING the frigging U.N. It always has. Have you ever seen any sign of the U.S. government bowing to the U.N. on an issue where it had a disagreeing view?

      In Australia, I'm more worried about the U.S. using the U.N. and the World Trade Organisation to shove U.S. law down our throats (the first amendment tastes kinda nice, but the Sonny Bono clause sticks in my throat). Not that our government can't make a mess of things well enough on their own.

      As long as we have an elected government that controls the military, we don't have to worry too much about the power of other countries, and other multi-national organizations.

      Go to opensecrets.org, and find out how much those multi-national organisations pay your senators.

      --
      -- This post is about truth, beauty, freedom, and above all things, Karma
  18. Anti-Globalists by Alien54 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    globalization - pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance

    Not quite.

    Many anti-globalists are in fact in protest against the prospect of the Disney Planet, McEarth, and the Microsoft World. They are in protest of the potential economic, political, and social rape of the economies and resources of people around the world for the mere financial profit of a few corporations. They are against the corporate democracy where only they voices of the corporations count, and yours do not.

    If you are fighting against Microsoft, you are to a certain degree fighting against globalization. This is a much bigger and more complex picture than so quickly sketched above.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Anti-Globalists by Spagornasm · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest problem with the anti-globalization movement is its own protests. Every time a protest is planned, cities have to beef up their police forces because a lot of the protesters take it as an excuse to party and wreck the place!

      In governments where leaders are elected (like the US and the EU) there is absolutely ZERO excuse for violent protest - because you have the right to be heard. Just because people don't care doesn't mean you have the "right" to attack police officers and break store windows.

      The biggest folly of all, though is the inate cowardice of many of these same protesters. They know that at least some prominent politicians favor them in western democracies, so they don't fear a backlash - but where were they in Shanghai? Terrified of the police response to a protest supposedly in China's best interest! If they're afraid to really stand up to enemies of the people like the government of China, then as far I'm concerned, their movement will be stuck as an annoyance, rather than a legitimate political gripe.

      --

      When nuance becomes the only objective we lose the ability to function
    2. Re:Anti-Globalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      These are the same anti-globalists who will complain about McEarth, but buy KFC. They will bad-mouth Disney world, but flock to the new Star Wars movie.


      If the anti-globalists (excluding hypocrites) were a majority, they would have nothing to complain about. For all intents and purposes--including Microsoft--we still live in a free economy. It allows you to use Linux and make your own hamburgers.

    3. Re:Anti-Globalists by aquarian · · Score: 1
      If you are fighting against Microsoft, you are to a certain degree fighting against globalization. This is a much bigger and more complex picture than so quickly sketched above.

      No, it's really a much smaller and simpler picture, and nothing to do with "globalism." I'm fighting against bad software, which Microsoft happens to make. If Toyota made crappy cars, I'd be fighting against them too.

    4. Re:Anti-Globalists by Alien54 · · Score: 1
      I'm fighting gainst bad software, which Microsoft happens to make.

      So I presume you are in favor of a Microsoft World?

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    5. Re:Anti-Globalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quit crying about loss of culture.

      Do not advocate the stopping of information flow from one country to another. With information comes culture/ideas from the originating source of the information.

      Please continue advocating land use restrictions in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and the rest of California so that it becomes impossible to exist there on your much loved 'proletariat' wages.

    6. Re:Anti-Globalists by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      While I do not condone violent protests, I would say that mere elections are insufficient justification for opposition to them. Very many countries hold elections where the results are rigged or meaningless. (e.g. you could vote in the Soviet Union, but there weren't any real options) It is easy for a government to adopt enough of the appearance and rhetoric of a truly democratic government to meet criteria you set if you are only concerned about the external appearance, and not the internal functionality.

      A relatively nit-picking argument, to be sure, but one which has been abused in the past, and so deserves mention and consideration.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    7. Re:Anti-Globalists by RayChuang · · Score: 2

      Then what do you want us to do, go back to being isolationists?

      Sorry, bud, but that is not going to work. With the explosive growth in both commnications and transportation technology during the 19th and 20th Centuries, goods can be delivered between any shipping port within three weeks by boat and 24 hours by airplane. Information can be spread around the world in mere seconds, thanks to our modern telecommunications networks.

      Given the rapid movement of people, goods, and information, being isolationist is just about impossible to do. Heck, thanks to satellite phones we can even broadcast video from the even the most remote locations.

      --
      Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  19. NOT the biggest, most important story by whjwhj · · Score: 2

    Either way, September 11 makes it clear that globalization - pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance - is the biggest, most important story in our lifetimes

    Global Warming is by far the biggest, most important story in our lifetime. We'll all learn that soon enough.

    1. Re:NOT the biggest, most important story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Global Warming is by far the biggest, most important unproved theory in our lifetime.

    2. Re:NOT the biggest, most important story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like Global Cooling turned out to be the biggest, most important story of our parents' lifetime?

    3. Re:NOT the biggest, most important story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The MOST important story should have been "Global Cooling", tought in all the schools during the 1970s.

      It's too bad we haven't learned anything from it.

    4. Re:NOT the biggest, most important story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show me 2 sides of scientists that agree with that and then I'll agree that it's consensus. Until then, it's theory.

      Enough of your communism environmentalism.

  20. Bad side of globalization by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Informative
    In my own humble, ininformed, and probably stupid view, the reason Fundamentalists gain so much support is that Globalization is basically capitalism, whereas the societies where it fails are those where people are so dirt poor that they can't afford the products or services offered by cosmopolitan societies. People no better or worse for the fate of their placement of birth, limited access to opportunity and ability to be brainwashed by zealous ideologues.

    It was discovered that one of the great causes of discontent and unrest in Central America in the 60's was unintentional, where Peace Corps workers left out magazines, loaded with american advertisements, where locals saw them. The indiginous people, uninitiated to the ways of Madison Avenue, would see what american had, what their country and culture lacked and it erroded their faith in their own noble cultures. They had to have cars, they had to have women with come hither looks, they had to drink Tanqueray, they had to have a Timex! Discontent breeds revolution, revolution creates upheaval and all the ills (hunger, disease, orphans, maimed bodies, etc.) Enter the "fundamentalist", whether it's Daniel Ortega spouting the promises of Marxism and reclaiming the land in the name of the people, or some Mullah in Afghanistan preaching a glorious afterlife littered with nubile virgins to people desperately poor, the appeal is the same: Anything is better than what we have now.

    The bitterness of people in the middle east has been a long time simmering. From european colonialism to corporate colonialism to the shameful double standard of Israel vs. Arabs (and yet these people come from the same blood, but tell them that.)

    Now the West loses billions of dollars in upset commerce, tourism, etc., and it's the poorest people on earth the US is pitted against in a war which consumes even more billions of dollars. (With hopes from some that war will stimulate the economy(!))

    Jimmy Buffett had it right, if you ever have listened to the Feeding Frenzy CD. Drop a bunch of money on these people, then drop a bunch of catalogs, for the cost of one B-1 bomber we could have full employment, they could have all kinds of toys and we'd have peace. Well, peace if that bully in Israel would stop the acts of war against the palestinians.

    My $0.02 anyway...

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Bad side of globalization by Spagornasm · · Score: 1

      Well, peace if that bully in Israel would stop the acts of war against the palestinians.

      Do you mean that bully whose tourism minister was gunned down outside a hotel? The same one whose country was willing to give away vast tracts of land for a palestinian state, but instead got the intifada? Gimme a break - Israel is as much a victim of terror as all of us in DC and NYC.

      --

      When nuance becomes the only objective we lose the ability to function
    2. Re:Bad side of globalization by smallpaul · · Score: 2

      In my own humble, ininformed, and probably stupid view,

      You make it pretty hard for a guy to flame you for being uninformed.

      the reason Fundamentalists gain so much support is that Globalization is basically capitalism, whereas the societies where it fails are those where people are so dirt poor that they can't afford the products or services offered by cosmopolitan societies. People no better or worse for the fate of their placement of birth, limited access to opportunity and ability to be brainwashed by zealous ideologues.

      This "poverty breeds fundamentalism" view is not supported by the facts. It is usually the middle class and upper middle class that leads the revolution for or against fundamentalism. Where are the fundamentalists from sub-saharan Africa? Why aren't poor Nigerians blowing up planes? Look at Bin Laden and the university-educated students. Do they cite poverty as an issue? The issues are much more subtle and poverty is only one issue, if even that.

      Drop a bunch of money on these people, then drop a bunch of catalogs, for the cost of one B-1 bomber we could have full employment, they could have all kinds of toys and we'd have peace.

      Sorry. It doesn't work that way. Our billion dollars would be turned into weapons and turned back towards us. Nation building isn't about dumping cash into a cauldron of discontent and factionalism.

      Well, peace if that bully in Israel would stop the acts of war against the palestinians.

      Yeah, the fault is all Israel's. The fact that many Palestinians are dedicated to the distruction of the Israeli state and the murder of all Jews isn't relevant. This issue is simple like the other one: just tell those evil Jews to stop beating up on the virtuous Palestinians.

    3. Re:Bad side of globalization by thenerd · · Score: 1
      Do you mean that bully whose tourism minister was gunned down outside a hotel? The same one whose country was willing to give away vast tracts of land for a palestinian state, but instead got the intifada? Gimme a break - Israel is as much a victim of terror as all of us in DC and NYC.

      As of Friday 10th August this year, I quote:


      More than 560 people on the Palestinian side and more than 150 on the Israeli side have been killed since hostilities broke out in September 2000.


      Source: BBC News

      It would appear that while Israel is a victim of terror, more Palestinians have actually been victims than Israelis. A lot of people never seem to acknowledge this.

      thenerd.
      --
      The camels are coming. I'm in love.
    4. Re:Bad side of globalization by FFFish · · Score: 2

      "The indiginous people, uninitiated to the ways of Madison Avenue, would see what american had, what their country and culture lacked and it erroded their faith in their own noble cultures."

      Good god... the indigenous geeks have the same reaction when they see Japanese tech magazines! I know I get PO'd whenever I see the neat shit they have in Tokyo, that I'll never be able to lay hands on here in North America.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    5. Re:Bad side of globalization by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      That statistic doesn't say that they're innocent victims. I don't call throwing rocks or firebombs, or shooting at buses, innocent activities.

      Hell, that number even includes work accidents (the Israeli euphemism for when an activist (the media euphemism for terrorist) gets his viscera scattered over a wide area when building his own bomb), no?.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    6. Re:Bad side of globalization by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Good god... the indigenous geeks have the same reaction when they see Japanese tech magazines!

      I felt similarly when a friend traveled to Japan and brought back a really really cool Sony portable boom-box. I checked with the Sony store in Chicago and found the model was Europe and Japan only all the models that were available for US sale weren't anywhere near as neat with features.

      I also felt that something was amiss when I returned from my first tour of Europe and realized public transportation there blows the socks off what we have in the US. IMHO it's convenient to have a car, but if we had in the US the kind of rail and subway services they have throughout Europe, I'd happily give up my product-of-a-global-economy, maybe I'd still have a scooter, but that would be it. It truly sucks to have to drive 12-13 hours, besides the fact of losing an entire day to the activity, to go some of the places I used to when I lived in Michigan. No rail and sporadic bus service.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    7. Re:Bad side of globalization by FFFish · · Score: 1

      Well, part of the reason the Euros can do public transportation so well is that they are willing to walk. And part of the reason they're willing to walk is that shopping malls are uncommon.

      When everything you need is within a few blocks walk of your home, you don't need to go to shopping malls. And because you're walking in your neighbourhood, you're willing to walk from the bus to the library, from the bus to your workplace, from the bus to the theatre.

      Of course, it also very much helps that the buses come by frequently. None of this bullshit wait-half-an-hour that we have here.

      And, too, it helps that gas is bloody expensive over there, as is insurance and parking. It costs so much more to drive that there's hella incentive to use public transportation. Or to walk.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    8. Re:Bad side of globalization by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      I take it you've never heard of Yitzhak Rabin, assassinated by a Likud (conservative) sympathizer, principally for his stance on making peace with palestinians and arab neighbors, a stand in conflict with extreme conservatives (as large and fast growing segment of the Israeli population) who will tell you that it's their promised land they it is the palestinians who are the usurpers and should be driven out. There's been spectulation, which I wouldn't rule out, that the assassination of Rabin was aided by Israeli government agents sympathetic to the conservative cause (not too unlike theories about the Kennedy assassination.)

      It's also worth pointing out that the mainstream palestinians weren't the ones who claimed to have carried out the attack, a reprisal for the apparent assassination of palestinian leaders. Israel has been making all palestinians suffer for the acts of a few. Up to 1947, IIRC, the land was called Palestine, not Israel.

      Before globalization could benefit people in that part of the world, they need rational people to settle the differences equitably and peacefully. As we have seen, those desperate to call attention to political causes have taken advantage of vulnerabilities of globalization. Such irony.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    9. Re:Bad side of globalization by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      view is not supported by the facts. It is usually the middle class and upper middle class that leads the revolution for or against fundamentalism.

      And it is the poor who are the footsoldiers, without whom the mullahs would just be wackos standing on a street corner annoying people.

      Why aren't poor Nigerians blowing up planes?

      Different lands, different methods. Most of Africa isn't even developed enough, as there are still inter-tribal conflicts (Tutsi vs. Hutu) and other score settling going on.

      Our billion dollars would be turned into weapons and turned back towards us.

      Only if we continue to represent ourselves as a foe. It wasn't always that the USA was thought of as an evil country by these people and I expect the USA won't always remain thought of so. Nation building, which you refer to begins with treating people with respect and addressing grievances. However, it the US had spent 1 billion in Afghanistan after the Soviet pullout, building levees, educating farmers, building infrastructure, there would be significantly less support for "fundamentalists" or other rabble rousers. IIRC, the Taliban didn't arise in Afghanistan, but came in from outside the country and filled a power vaccuum, left by warring tribal factions and a weak central government.

      Yeah, the fault is all Israel's. The fact that many Palestinians are dedicated to the distruction of the Israeli state and the murder of all Jews isn't relevant. This issue is simple like the other one: just tell those evil Jews to stop beating up on the virtuous Palestinians

      many funny how you treat that word as all. You overlook that the country was named Palestine prior to 1947 and that the Israelis have been carving out the Promised Land at the expense of those who have been living there for hundreds of years. There's a significant and growing orthodox jewish population which believes they shouldn't even make peace with the palestinians as they are squatters anyway. It's also very disturbing the highly excessive amount of force and violations, of what we so proudly would call civil rights, that has been used on a daily basis for months. Americans should be shocked and appalled by the treatment palestinians have recieved, which even the UN has condemned, yet we're indifferent to.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    10. Re:Bad side of globalization by smallpaul · · Score: 2

      And it is the poor who are the footsoldiers, without whom the mullahs would just be wackos standing on a street corner annoying people.

      You have no evidence to that effect. I'll point out again that there are lots of poor people in the world who don't blow things up. Mexico is pretty close to LA. You don't see Mexicans crossing the border with munitions strapped to them.

      However, it the US had spent 1 billion in Afghanistan after the Soviet pullout, building levees, educating farmers, building infrastructure, there would be significantly less support for "fundamentalists" or other rabble rousers. IIRC, the Taliban didn't arise in Afghanistan, but came in from outside the country and filled a power vaccuum, left by warring tribal factions and a weak central government. .

      So your claim is that the US now has the responsibility to directly pay to alleviate ALL poverty EVERYWHERE in the world because if we don't, they may grow up to be terrorists. Does that seem right to you?

      Americans should be shocked and appalled by the treatment palestinians have recieved, which even the UN has condemned, yet we're indifferent to.

      I don't know anybody indifferent. There was an excellent article in Harper's magazine just before Sept 11. But what exactly do you expect the US to do? The Israelis believe that they have a God-given right to the land and they believe the Palestinians have no right to it. The Palestinians have an equally xenophobic view. US presidents have spent thousands of hours sitting down with the leaders of both parties. It isn't as if the US has come down on the side of Israel. Actually the US has always asked both sides for moderation and to use non-violence. I'm not saying that the US' hands are clean but neither are the Palestinians', the Lebanese, the Saudi's or anyone else.

      Nasty shit happens in the world and did before so-called globalization and it will if we ban so-called globalization. So let's put blame where blame is due: on fundamentalism and xenophobia of all kinds!

    11. Re:Bad side of globalization by thenerd · · Score: 1
      That statistic doesn't say that they're innocent victims. I don't call throwing rocks or firebombs, or shooting at buses, innocent activities.

      OK, you'll probably baulk at the source of this, and claim it is biased, and it may be to an extent, but the following has been researched by educated, credible people:


      As of 2/13/01, number of Palestinians killed since the beginning of the new Intifada: 368

      Number of Palestinians killed under the age of fifteen: 56

      Number of Palestinians killed over the age of fifty: 20

      Number of Palestinians murdered by Israeli security forces AFTER being captured, or simply shot at close range without any provocation whatsoever: 32

      Number of Palestinians murdered by Israeli settlers: 22

      Number of Palestinians who died because they were not allowed to get medical treatment: 8

      Percent of Palestinians killed who were NOT involved in demonstrations or clashes: 44%

      Ratio of Palestinian civilians killed to members of the Palestinian security forces killed: 9 to 1

      Number of Palestinians who were officially targeted for assassination by the Israeli Army: 10

      Number of innocent bystanders who were killed during these assassinations: 5

      Number of human beings who were either killed or injured by "terrorist acts masterminded" by the most recent Palestinian to be assassinated by
      the Israeli Army: 0

      Number of journalists either shot at or beaten up by Israeli soldiers of settlers: 44

      Percent of Palestinian Red Crescent ambulances hit by live ammunition: 68%

      Number of cases in which Palestinian ambulances were not allowed to go through a road block: 109

      Number of Olive trees and Fruit trees uprooted: 25,000



      [Sources: The information is from reports of the Health, Development, Information, and Policy Institute (HDIP). These reports can be found at http://www.hdip.org]

      Now I'm obviously not advocating terrorist activity, I think the intimidation and murder of innocent people is a profoundly wrong thing. I never forgive the taking of an innocent life.

      However, why is it so difficult to believe that a lot of innocent Palestinians have been hurt or killed? Ariel Sharon has been involved in the killing of many people and is not the best person to trust, this report may give food for thought, it certainly did for me.

      I don't believe that all Palestinians are innocent, and I don't believe that all Israeli's are guilty. But I have to wonder why there is so much forgiveness of murder for one side, and not the other? Is it because the Palestinians do not often have as white a skin as the Israeli's? Is there racism at work here? Terror is terrible, but why paint it as one-sided, simply because one is organised and the other is not?

      thenerd.
      --
      The camels are coming. I'm in love.
    12. Re:Bad side of globalization by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      It wasn't a "country called Palestine" before 1947 -- it was a mandate set up by the League of Nations and run by the British called Palestine. Before WWI, it was part of the Ottoman Empire.

      The Palestinians lived there for a long time; so did the Jews. In 1947, 2 countries were set up by UN mandate -- Israel and Palestine. After Palestine's Arab buddies attacked Israel, Palestine was gone -- either annexed by Jordan or occupied by Israel. You don't see the Jordanians giving up any land to help rebuild a Palestine state, although the Israeli's do allow Palestinian self-government (although not a true Palestine state) in Gaza and the West Bank.

      If the Arab world is all up in arms about a fellow Arab not having a country to call their own, why don't we see anyone helping the Kurds?

      You can argue both sides as to who doesn't want peace. Of course there are hardline orthodox jews who want nothing to do with a creation of a Palestinian state. There are also Palestinians who want the Jews gone from the middle east as well. Until the leaders of both sides are strong enough to negotiate a resolution to the problem, these extremist groups -- the ultraconservative jews on one side and Hamas, Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad on the other -- will continue to drive the issues that result in deaths on both sides of the argument in that region.

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    13. Re:Bad side of globalization by terranwannabe · · Score: 1

      I understand that what you're saying - that Central American people became greedy for American consumer products. But is this necessarily a bad thing? It's not as if "all the ills (hunger, disease, orphans, maimed bodies, etc.)" didn't exist BEFORE the Peace Corps came. As long as the people are repressed by a dicatatorship, they do not have the opportunity to prosper - unless they are friends with the ruling class. Explain to me the European and corporate colonialism - the last time I checked, every single country in the Middle East was a fully independent sovereign nation. In fact, most (if not all) of these countries make it incredibly hard on corporate colonials who try to do business.

      You suggest that we have a double standard towards Arabs and Israelis, but the bottom line is that we have the right as an independent nation to support other governments like our own. Israel is a democracy (however fractured) and Palestine is a dictatorship. There's no reason to be neutral in that conflict, just like there was no reason to be neutral in World Wars I and II.

      Finally - acts of war against the Palestinians? As memory serves, Arafat was the one who sponsored a jihad against the Israelis. During the proffered cease fire, it was Arafat who for some strange reason could not keep his loyal troops from fighting. It was Arafat's security services who prevented AP reporters from filming anti-American rallies after September 11th. It is Arafat's official newspaper Al-Hayat Al-Jadidah that serves as the voice of the Islamic terrorist groups Fatah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad. It was Arafat's press that on September 12th called suicide bombers "the noble successors of their noble predecessors...the Lebanese suicide bombers who taught the US Marines a tough lesson in Lebanon...the salt of the earth, the engines of history...the most honorable people among us." It is preposterous to suggest that Arafat is completely innocent in the Middle East conflict - in fact, he is undeniably guilty.
      -----------

      --
      If I have not seen as far as others, it was because giants were standing on my shoulders. --Hal Abelson
  21. "why we are hated" by Saragon · · Score: 1
    I don't know who you speak of when you refer to "we" being "surprised" about how much we're hated. I'm not "surprised". Most people I know aren't "surprised". So: speak for yourself.

    The question is not one of "surprise" over "how much we are hated" in the first place. The question is one of how to respond to this "hatred"..,.er, I mean, murderousness, to be more precise. When someone is trying again and again to murder as many of your people as possible, you don't sit around sipping espresso musing about "why we are hated". You fight back.

    And you certainly don't listen to armchair sociologists who try to convince you that the way to defend yourselves against murderers is to "learn" about "why we are hated". Do you advocate that black people being lynched by the Klan "take the time to learn about why they are hated"?

    Thought not.

    1. Re:"why we are hated" by rhakka · · Score: 1

      that's a terribly ignorant view..

      there two sides to our reaction to the events that have smacked us in the face, as a country and as a westernized society:

      first, our responses must of course be dictated by self preservation. Some argue that is a military response and some would argue for a peaceful settlement, regardless, that response is the first side of this issue.

      however, *not* to understand why we are hated in the first place and to understand the people who are attacking us is the equivalent of burying our heads in the sand. We have angered a lot of people. They consider themselves at war with us, and it's not only MTV and McDonalds they are fighting. They are a people *we* are responsible for killing, through supplying weapons to Israel and countless regimes through the years, financial support to their enemies, etc etc. And we've done similiar things throughout the world, propping up dictators and supplying revolutionaries with weapons.

      If you refuse to look at that, refuse to understand it, and refuse to acknowledge its role in our current situation, then all you are doing is perpetuating it. And make no mistake, this "war on terrorism" is not one our military, or police will win. Ask any country that has had to deal with terrorist attacks for the last half century or so like Ireland or Israel: you can only stop a few. Either we deal with the root causes for these groups declaring war on us, or we settle in to be "at war" for a good long time to come.

    2. Re:"why we are hated" by Saragon · · Score: 1, Insightful
      first, our responses must of course be dictated by self preservation

      Precisely my point.

      however, *not* to understand why we are hated in the first place and to understand the people who are attacking us is the equivalent of burying our heads in the sand.

      Perhaps I wasn't clear. I wasn't advocating that we intentionally "not understand" the people who are attacking us. I was merely saying that, right now, the question is irrelevant, seeing as how they are trying to murder us and all. The solution right now is to fight back. Perhaps after that is done, it will be a good time to sit down with some espresso and muse about why those people "hated us".

      We have angered a lot of people.

      I suppose that's true. I suppose that could explain why they (some of them) try to murder us. The response is the same, regardless: fight back.

      They consider themselves at war with us, and it's not only MTV and McDonalds they are fighting.

      I suppose that's true. I suppose that could explain why they (some of them) try to murder us. The response is the same, regardless: fight back.

      They are a people *we* are responsible for killing,

      Wha? Who? Be specific.

      Are "we" responsible for killing the terrorists who hijacked those planes on 9/11? No? Then who? You are very vague about who "they" are here. Who is "they"? Saudis? Afghans? Egyptians? It was mostly Saudi and Egyptian nationals who were the hijackers. How many Saudis and Egyptians are "we" "responsible" for killing, in your view? Please cite your sources.

      through supplying weapons to Israel

      Oh boy. So we are wrong for supplying weapons to Israel? Why? Because you would like to see Israel destroyed?

      financial support to their enemies, etc etc.

      Yeah, when you have no real examples of substance to put, just throw in an "etc etc." to cover it up.....

      And we've done similiar things throughout the world, propping up dictators and supplying revolutionaries with weapons.

      Again: I suppose that's true. I suppose that could explain why they (some of them) try to murder us. The response is the same, regardless: fight back.

      If you refuse to look at that, refuse to understand it, and refuse to acknowledge its role in our current situation, then all you are doing is perpetuating it.

      No, on the contrary. As you can see, I advocate fighting back against the people who are trying to murder us. If successful, this plan of mine (to kill the people trying to murder us before they can do so) will not "perpetuate" anything at all. If they are dead, they cannot murder us, see?

      In any event, you failed to answer my closing question:

      Do you advocate that black people being lynched by the Klan "take the time to learn about why they are hated"?

      Let me know....

    3. Re:"why we are hated" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The question is one of how to respond to this "hatred"..,.er, I mean, murderousness, to be more precise. When someone is trying again and again to murder as many of your people as possible, you don't sit around sipping espresso musing about "why we are hated". You fight back.

      Jeez, that's EXACTLY the argument of the Afghanis. Why ARE we flattening their country again?

      When they attack us, that's bad. When we bomb them, that's good. Hmmm... One of the Al Queda leaders and his family were assassinated by the States a couple months before the WTC attacks. I guess RETRIBUTION is wrong now (at least when they do it). But then again, we all know OUR glorious culture is the only one worth keeping. ALL the rest of the world are nothing more than garbage people. You WILL be assimilated.

      Double standards galore. Vive la Slashdotte.

    4. Re:"why we are hated" by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > however, *not* to understand why we are hated in
      > the first place and to understand the people who
      > are attacking us is the equivalent of burying our
      > heads in the sand. We have angered a lot of people.

      No, we haven't angered many people at all.

      As throughout history, there are a few powerful people who stir up hatred in the hoi polloi in order to try to accomplish their political goals by force.

      The observation was made. It is like black people "trying to understand" their enslavers. One needn't do that; one can simply use force to free onself. Indeed, one has no moral obligation whatsoever to do it gently.

      Gulf war? Sorry, understood that.

      Vietnam war? Sorry, understood that.

      Korean war? Sorry, understood that.

      World War II? Ahhhh, here's a good one where we tried to understand what "made the German people mad." Gave up a chunk of Czek and it did nothing.

      Guess what? Guess what? It wasn't about understanding "what made the German people mad." It was about Hitler riling up his own people for the purpose of mounting (or threatening) an invasion so he could grab land as a part of solidifying his political power and appearing as a hero.

      OMFG, our whole liberal worldview comes crashing down! Nooooo! Not that.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    5. Re:"why we are hated" by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      I suppose you are right...if a culture that currently has a space ship in orbit around Mars and cures half the diseases that are cured each year is on the same plane as a bunch of murderous thugs who oppress their own people, especially women, killing them for the most idiotic and contrived reasons in the name of a bizarre interpretation of the concept of a god (who, really now, should be doing his own dirty work.)

      No, there are no moral differences between us. All relevant viewpoints are equally valid interpretations of equally valid world views.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    6. Re:"why we are hated" by Saragon · · Score: 1
      Jeez, that's EXACTLY the argument of the Afghanis.

      It is? Enlighten us, please, which "Afghanis" have made this argument? Perhaps you are talking about the Talibs who rule over Afghanis as members of their dictatorial regime.

      In that case, I agree. I would expect nothing less than for the Taliban to make the same argument - we are trying to kill them so they should fight back. They are correct, they should fight back, because this is war.

      All that remains is to discover who will win. I hope that the U.S. will. Don't you?

      Why ARE we flattening their country again?

      I don't know. Because PC idiots demand it? Because PC idiots suggest that we should stop attacking because of our enemy's (i.e. the people we are trying to kill) holiday?

      When they attack us, that's bad. When we bomb them, that's good.

      Perhaps you lack the capacity to discern the role which time plays in this little analysis of yours. The attack of September 11 occurred "before" we started bombing sites in Afghanistan. You might want to look into that whole concept of "before". It might be very enlightening.

      We are fighting back because they attacked us. This is a simple application of cause and effect. If there had been no attack of 9/11, we would not be fighting this war right now. Perhaps you believe otherwise.

      One of the Al Queda leaders and his family were assassinated by the States a couple months before the WTC attacks.

      I would be interested to see a link to this story. Thanks.

      In any event, let's assume it is true. Then one could understand, from a realpolitik point of view, that Al Qaeda might consider that an act of war. One could understand that they would seek vengeance. One could even understand them selecting a civilian target such as WTC to take out.

      Of course, by doing so, they are diving into the war with both feet. They are acknowledging that this is war, and communicating that fact to us.

      Now it's our turn. We should fight back, and try to win the war. Right? No? Why not?

      I guess RETRIBUTION is wrong now (at least when they do it).

      If you are calling the attacks of 9/11 "retribution" for something, then YES, of course, from our point of view it was wrong. It wasn't? It was "right" to blow up the WTC and kill 5000 along with it?

      From our point of view, it was wrong. We should fight back. Anything less is suicidal.

      But then again, we all know OUR glorious culture is the only one worth keeping.

      Yes, it is. If you disagree you are free to get the hell out. I would encourage it.

      Double standards galore.

      Sorry, war is hell. When they kill 5000 of us then we are justified in fighting back. You call that a "double standard", but what the hell is the alternative?

      Not to fight back?

      Just let them keep killing us so that we don't get accused of (gasp) a "double standard"? Again: that is suicidal. You yourself may be suicidal but don't expect your fellow countrymen to pay any attention to such a sentiment.

    7. Re:"why we are hated" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you would support African missile strikes on Washington in retaliation for KKK "terrorism" against "their people", then? Or doesn't it go both ways?

      And, space ship around Mars? Who cares, when they're just developing space technology as the ultimate weapons system anyway.

      And half the diseases in the world were MADE by the Americans. Like the Anthrax that's so scary right now... Has the same fingerprint as American Military-made Anthrax from a lab in Utah in the 1950's. Thanks, US Government!

    8. Re:"why we are hated" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spell check, please, Mister Troll.

      Thanks.

    9. Re:"why we are hated" by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > So you would support African missile strikes on
      > Washington in retaliation for KKK "terrorism"
      > against "their people", then? Or doesn't it go
      > both ways?

      Your analogy is completely bogus. Any Africans upset the KKK is attacking "their people" would see that the US government, and many states, have fierce laws against those attacks, both in general (laws against murder, threats, etc.) and specific (witness the proliferation of hate laws that increase the penalties for crimes based on racial hatred.)

      The Taliban do nothing to stop the "KKK" in their own country, Osama et al.

      > And, space ship around Mars? Who cares, when
      > they're just developing space technology as the
      > ultimate weapons system anyway.

      I care. We would still be doing this without military development as a side benefit. As for ultimate weapons systems, be glad you live in a country where fundamentalists with 30 year old weapons just can't waltz into power.

      > And half the diseases in the world were MADE by
      > the Americans. Like the Anthrax that's so scary
      > right now... Has the same fingerprint as
      > American Military-made Anthrax from a lab in
      > Utah in the 1950's. Thanks, US Government!

      Can't comment on the validity of your fact, but "making half the diseases" is sophistry. As for anthrax, well, another American invention, the passenger jet, killed a lot more than Anthrax has. Shall we get rid of them, too? Oh, wait, that's just military development in disguise, too.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    10. Re:"why we are hated" by slavetrade55 · · Score: 1

      Agreed, 100%. I love how people accuse the US of engaging in destructive cultural imperialism when all that really means is that they oppose repressive theocracy as a better way of life, and similarly try to spread our own way of life, which is basically the kind that sustains the entire well-fed and relatively happy western world.

      Leftist Activists: "Who are we to say that the American system is better?"

      Well....when you have a system that provides freedom and an unsurpassed quality of life for the balance of its participants, then I am inclined to believe that it is a better system than say, a radical repressive theocracy wherein people believe its better to die for god in suicide attacks against infidels than to live on planet earth.

      We are morally justified in fighting back. If we do otherwise then we simply invite our own deaths. It seems very simple to me.

    11. Re:"why we are hated" by Saragon · · Score: 1
      Troll? Guilty as charged, probably.

      Spell check?

      Perhaps you will kindly point out which word(s) in the above post I have misspelled. I can't seem to find any. Thanks!

  22. "capitalist" democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Capitalism and Democracy are not wedded to eachother. They don't even get along. To start an argument with a fallacy like this is simply a waste of time.


    Multinationals are virally invasive to the democratic process, and never more so than right now in the U.S., where the media is almost totally under the control of multinational corporations, and corporations and a corporation-bought congress sustain the so-called public broadcasters.

  23. Caucasian Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Globalization is nothing but neo-imperialism perpetrated by caucasian countries mainly old imperialist powers such as UK and new imperialist powers such as US. Sept 11 is nothing more than another event in a series started by bombing of Sudan, Iraq and others. Problem is when neo imperialist powers bomb, its justified, when they get bombed its fundamentalism.

    Stop perpetrating the 'ethical' myth. Might is the name of the game. Neo imperialist powers are mighty and thats why they can get away with whatever they want including slavery, racism and brutal genocide in Veitnam and other countries.

  24. Re:pitting fundamentalism against cosmpolitan tole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    die now

  25. Mushy thinking, hard to push away by curt_k · · Score: 1

    Well, Jon Katz's scree here is just lame; so lame, in fact, that it's hard to rebutt it, because he says so little beyond bland, basically amorphic conjecture. A few points: There is a conflict between democracy-cosmopolitanism and Islamic fundementalism, but that is not a relatively deep explanation for why we were attacked on Sept 11 or why we are hated. We are primarily hated for foreign and economic policies and actions, policies and actions that are anti-democratic and often terroristic. "They" are Islamic fundementalists (probably, there has been no really good evidence I've seen, but assuming); but "we" are not truly democrats (small "d").

    We were attacked primarily for colonialistic policies and actions in the Middle East. We have been treating the people there like dirt and only relevent as obsticles or aids to our power and wealth drain from the region. This is standard colonialism. The only thing that's remarkable is that we pissed off some people who are crazier than we are: there was a weird convergence of us being assholes to a region and peoples and some of those people being crazy, twisted fuckers with a lot of money. What's remarkable is that we weren't attacked before, say, by Central Americans.

    The stupid, ahistorical, aconscious discussion of viewing the Sept 11 attaks as "fundementalism versus democracy" is not only -- well -- ahistorical, aconscious and stupid -- it's dangerous. If we stay this stupid, history will repeat itself, the history of Sept 11, and the history of us killing people, terrorizing people, and destorying civilizations, like we are again doing in Afghanistan now -- how many innocent people will we starve? How much further will we set back Afghan civilization? How much further will we destroy our own domestic security? My answers to all the above: A lot. Enough to make me literally sick to my stomach.

    Jon Katz, get an historical perspective. You're dangerous and ignorant otherwise. http://www.zmag.org (website for Z Magazine) is a good place to check out. I dare you.

    Curt.

    1. Re:Mushy thinking, hard to push away by cyberon22 · · Score: 1

      You believe that terrorism is a rational political strategy under certain circumstances. Katz suggests that it is a cultural response to the unwinding social fabric of globalization.

      I fail to see how you can afford to be so dismissive of Katz, or consider that resorting to ad hominem attacks somehow increases the persuasiveness of your view over Katz's.

    2. Re:Mushy thinking, hard to push away by curt_k · · Score: 1

      A few responses: No, I do not believe that "terrorism is a rational political strategy under certain circumstances." I think I made it clear in my post that the people who did this were dispicable and that what they did is disgusting. Are there realistic basises for many, many people to be very hateful of the US? Yes. Does that mean that they should slaughter innocent people. Of course not -- and neither should we.

      Second point: Yeah, you're right on the ad hominem thing. I just get really pissed off to see such vapid, dangerous ideas (such as Katz's ideas here) float out into the cultural collective atmosphere. I must say, I think such thinking is substantially responsible for allowing the evils that we do, which leads to the evils done to us, which all leads to many, many innocent people being killed, societies being wretchedly damaged, and people living in fear for their lives and those of their families.

      Third point: I'm not so much being "dismissive" of the ideas Katz wrote about, but saying that they are inadequate to the discussion. Sure, there is cultural conflict. Given. Is that an adequate and our best understanding of what the hell's been going on around the Sept 11 attacks. No. If viewed as such it's, as I said, dangerous. Lack of good information, good debate, and good democracy has got us into this disgusting mess.

      Curt.

  26. Fundamentalism vs. moral relativism by zeus_tfc · · Score: 1

    I think a large part of our conflict stems from our open, largely tolerant culture. The openness of our culture tends to promote moral relativity in that what is "wrong" for one person or culture may not necessarily be "wrong" to another. Fundamentalists from a rigidly structured society would, I'm sure, view this as threatening to their culture and way of life. I'm not saying our culture is better in any way. We hesitate to label anything "wrong" or "bad" (aside from big business) even if there is serious harm induces. (Jeff Dahmer was just palately challenged.) I think if you apply this to current events, perhaps it allows you to understand the hatred for the USA in the Middle East.
    Of course, Americans aren't really liked MOST places.

    A co-worker of mine had an interesting opinion on that. He said that we get most of our views on foreigners by the people we see in our own country. In other countries, they see mostly our richer, overbearing, (dare I say, snobbish?) citizens, and form their opinions base on them. We in the US tend to see immigrants, who tend to be poorer, and trying to make a better life for themselves, and we form our opinions on other countries based on them.
    I thought that was really interesting.
    Opinions?

    --
    "...At the end of the day"..."when everyone goes home, you're stuck with yourself." RIP Layne Staley
    1. Re:Fundamentalism vs. moral relativism by Theodrake · · Score: 1
      I've only been to a few countries, but in every single one the common person treated me with respect. They didn't care that I was an American. Some were upset with US policy, but didn't blame me and really had some respect for the US.

      The only people that seemed to really be upset where the educated people that blamed the US for the problems with their government. That the US didn't buy enough of their goods. Or the US didn't side with them in their border dispute. That the US was deliberately keeping the world oil prices too high. That the US was deliberately keeping the world oil prices low. That the US was making the dollar too strong. That the US was making the dollar too weak.

      To these peole no matter what we did it was making their life worse. It was all our fault.

    2. Re:Fundamentalism vs. moral relativism by Eugene+O'Neil · · Score: 1

      I don't think people in the middle east hate us because of our open, tolerant culture. They hate us for supporting regimes in the middle east that are anything but open and tolerant, and the fact that most average Americans are so utterly ignorant of the atrocities committed with American money and American guns that we actually think people hate us for being "open" and "tolerant".

      We do indeed have an open, tolerant culture, but only within our own borders. The kind of tolerance we display in the Middle East is usually delivered via cruise missile.

  27. It's our arrogance is why others hate us. by Deagol · · Score: 2
    Our corporations fight for the right to have a McDonalds in every country on the planet, snuffing out traditional staples of living, yet tax the shit out of imported food (sugar, bananas, etc.).

    We preach about free trade, yet Shrub gets his panties in a bunch when some country can sell us steel for cheap.

    Our companies fight tooth and nail for the ability to sell to the entire world, yet want people in the US (the richest general population on the planet) to only buy products domestically (no buying cheap drugs from Canada, region-enforced DVD players, etc.).

    We, as a society, can't have it both ways, yet we try so damned hard to have it that way. We dictate to the world our standards which enrich our corporate world (NAFTA, WTO, intellectual property right protection, etc.), but balk at the idea that someone else may produce a better mouse trap for less.

    It sickens me, really.

    1. Re:It's our arrogance is why others hate us. by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Not just steel for cheap -- steel for below manufacturing cost. That's called dumping, and is forbidden under the usual trading laws because it's basically done to damage competitors, followed by raising prices once they're dead.

      Go talk to Gephardt and his union friends about free trade.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:It's our arrogance is why others hate us. by bwt · · Score: 2

      Our companies fight tooth and nail for the ability to sell to the entire world, yet want people in the US (the richest general population on the planet) to only buy products domestically (no buying cheap drugs from Canada, region-enforced DVD players, etc.).


      We have the biggest trade deficit of any country in the world. Sorry to interrupt your rant with facts...

      And regarding McDonalds, it's a franchise, so when a McDonalds exists in another country it's generally because locals own it and because locals eat there. I guess these people would rather have fast food than abide by your desire to see them retain their "traditional staples of living". If you don't like McDonald's -- don't eat there.

    3. Re:It's our arrogance is why others hate us. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have the biggest trade deficit of any country in the world. Sorry to interrupt your rant with facts...

      True, if you look at the value of goods imported/exported. However, that is not what matters: the value chain makes it interesting. In "old times", importing goods meant profits gained in another country, and loss of money in the importing one. Today, profits/money/capital travel also - if the foreign low wage manufacturing site is owned or controlled domestically, the profits flow back (and they are higher: low wages, low environment protection costs...). And that's the point: The US has the trade deficit, because its corporations manufacture seemingly domestic goods outside the US, for lower manufacturing costs, and "import" them => a "trade deficit" resulting from exploitation.
      And regarding McDonalds, it's a franchise, so when a McDonalds exists in another country it's generally because locals own it and because locals eat there.
      McDonalds is not a franchise. It offers the franchise model, but at least outside the US there are more McDonalds corporate owned than franchised. And even franchised: what difference does it make? The profits are even guaranteed for the McDonalds corpartion then, even if they are less, and guess where they end up?

    4. Re:It's our arrogance is why others hate us. by HenryCase · · Score: 1

      We have the biggest trade deficit of any country in the world. Sorry to interrupt your rant with facts...

      True, if you look at the value of goods imported/exported. However, that is not what matters: the value chain makes it interesting. In "old times", importing goods meant profits gained in another country, and loss of money in the importing one. Today, profits/money/capital travel also - if the foreign low wage manufacturing site is owned or controlled domestically, the profits flow back (and they are higher: low wages, low environment protection costs...). And that's the point: The US has the trade deficit, because its corporations manufacture seemingly domestic goods outside the US, for lower manufacturing costs, and "import" them => a "trade deficit" resulting from exploitation.
      And regarding McDonalds, it's a franchise, so when a McDonalds exists in another country it's generally because locals own it and because locals eat there.
      McDonalds is not a franchise. It offers the franchise model, but at least outside the US there are more McDonalds corporate owned than franchised. And even franchised: what difference does it make? The profits are even guaranteed for the McDonalds corpartion then, even if they are less, and guess where they end up?

  28. Our way only, or ... by jandersen · · Score: 0
    - perhaps this one doesn't make it through either, but ...



    Are we in the West ready for Globalisation? So far the 'Globalisation' has been all about elbowing our own ways of life and, not least, our multinational companies into other countries. That was easy when the countries in question had few resources. But we can't do that when it comes to the stronger countries, like China. We will have to find compromises - we will have to allow other countries to influence us. It's like people, really - who wants to accept the viewpoints of somebody that's a selfish and inflexible jerk? We have to give as well as take.



    Apart from that - it is popular to talk about 'Capitalism' as if people knew what it is all about. Has everybody forgotten that capitalism isn't just about all having equal opportunities; in fact, that's totally alien to capitalism. Instead it has a lot to do with exploiting the ones that are weaker in order to make more profit. And this hated and despised 'Communism' - at the kernel it wasn't about suppressing people, but about sharing and helping the weakest; and it isn't dead just because the Soviet abomination fell apart. In fact, it doesn't really seem to be about to die at all - just look at China.



    So, I ask again - are we really ready for REAL globalisation? Namely the process where we not only spread our way of life, but also accept to change in the process? And perhaps even learn from (gulp) the Communists?

  29. Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by MosesJones · · Score: 5, Insightful


    You don't have to be a religious nut harbored by a goverment abroad to be a fundamentalist. In all this hype against Islamic terrorists there appears to have been a careful glossing over of the 2nd worst act of terrorism on US soil.

    Why wasn't a war declared on the sort of organisations that McVeigh belonged to, and the sort of anti-goverment far right views that are regularly expressed on right wing talk shows ?

    Right now I'd say the smart money is on the anthrax being produced in the US, not in another country. And on the US most wanted terrorists one of them was born in Indiana. If this is truly a war on terrorism then we can look forward to seeing the CIA, MI5, French Secret Service and several others all being labelled as such.

    After all what would you call someone who bombed a Red Cross depot ?

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      He was an extremist, not a fundamentalist. His objections to the Federal Government were simply that, whereas fundamentalists tend to view EVERYTHING through a basic prism. For instance, the Saudi-funded madrassas cheerfully teach students that their teacher and the Koran know everything, and that there is therefore no need to learn about the outside world from other sources, or to approach an issue from any other angle.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by MosesJones · · Score: 2

      Errr this is definately semantics here.

      Timothy McVeigh viewed federal goverment as "evil" and as a valid target. He viewed everything through a basic prism that appeared to be "The goverment is out to get me". Same with the Branch Davidians etc etc etc.

      Do you seriously think that McVeigh "learnt from the outside world" or "approached the issue from other angles" ? The nutcase blew up a building.

      Compare and contrast

      Bin Laden says "US is evil, the US is a valid target, civilians are valid targets"

      McVeigh attacks US civilians, US goverment and declares it a valid target.

      Take McVeigh, dress him up like an Afghan tribesman, don't change his words, don't change his actions...

      Spot any differences ? The only one I can see is that Bin Laden has denied being involved in the attacks in the US, whereas McVeigh eventually admitted his.

      --
      An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    3. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      Why wasn't a war declared on the sort of organisations that McVeigh belonged to, and the sort of anti-goverment far right views that are regularly expressed on right wing talk shows ?

      Actually, it was, under the Clinton adminstration, and the number of radical anti-government groups in the US severely declined.


      After all what would you call someone who bombed a Red Cross depot ?

      Not this again. That Red Cross building had been abandoned months ago and was being used by Taliban forces. The Red Cross itself issued a statement confirming that fact.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    4. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by bradasch · · Score: 1

      Most things can be put in perspective, just like you did. For instance, one could claim that americans see everything through the basic prism of the corporate news-media. Therefore, most americans are fundamentalists.
      My point is, extremists or fundamentalists tend to act the same way, and in their practical results are the same. There's no need to make a difference between them.
      Besides, most americans are choosing not to approach the question of terrorism by many angles. The main mass of citizens in the US still wants the senseless bombings. Just like bin Laden wants to get rid of America.

    5. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by mjh · · Score: 2
      Why wasn't a war declared on the sort of organisations that McVeigh belonged to, and the sort of anti-goverment far right views that are regularly expressed on right wing talk shows ?

      Becuase, the last time that I checked, none of those organizations, nor the governments of the states that McViegh lived in, nor the right wing talk show hosts, none of them were refusing to turn McViegh over for investigation and prosecution. If you want to say that the federal government should be attacking talk show hosts, and right wing organizations, then you've got to demonstrate that those organizations were not complying with demands made of them.

      The taliban is under attack, and rightfully so, for thumbing their noses at the world. They harbored a known terrorist. A terrorist linked to the bombing of the USS Cole, and two US Embassy's in Africa. All of which are soverign pieces of American soil. These attacks, alone, can be seen as an act of war. And the Taliban's refusal to turn over Bin Laden, could easily be seen as the act of a co-conspirator. Yet the US maintained restraint.

      The Taliban are not being attacked simply by association with Bin Laden. Their refusal to turn him over was the last straw that demonstrated that they wish for him to continue, and that they will never actually turn him over. And *still* the US has a simple policy: turn him over and we stop attacking.

      You're analogy to McViegh is wayyy off.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    6. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by dair · · Score: 2
      Not this again. That Red Cross building had been abandoned months ago and was being used by Taliban forces. The Red Cross itself issued a statement confirming that fact.
      He means the other Red Cross building, which was bombed on the 15th.

      -dair
    7. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by alexborges · · Score: 0

      Oh give me a break!

      That is an inmensly stupid comparision because it looks like you are implying that McVeigh was also a "less bad" terrorist when he was as inmensly small dicked as the taliban.

      Alex

      --
      NO SIG
    8. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by alexborges · · Score: 0

      You're analogy to McViegh is wayyy off.
      So like....McVeigh was a 'better','nicer' terrorist?
      Alex

      --
      NO SIG
    9. Re:Timothy McVeigh was a fundamentalist... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you need to learn basic reading comprehension. No one said McVeigh was "nicer"; they are just pointing out that the analogy is highly misleading, if not downright dishonest.

  30. Globalization is a tool, like deCSS by dpilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So far when we speak/write about globalization, we're talking about the corporate side of things. But if you really look at it, globalization is little more, and nothing less than an ability to transcend national boundaries. This has historically meant travel, expensive travel, restricting it to the Rich and corporations. Hence that's where we focus our rants on globalizations.

    But two things have happened. First, transportation has gotten cheaper, so it isn't the province of merely the Rich. Second, the Internet has given us Virtual Travel. These changes ease globalization for all, including bringing it into the price range of more people/groups.

    So one can argue that globalized corporations are Evil, though others would contend against that.
    Most would argue that globalized institutions like the Red Cross are Good.
    Then how about other globalized groups like the Mafia and El Quaeda?

    Globalization isn't just for corporatization, any more.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  31. CLUELESS!! by Random+Q.+Hacker · · Score: 1

    1. Not everything revolves around technology, but we all appreciate John Katz catering to the Slashdot crowd. Sorry, but the current mess has NOTHING to do with TV's and Camcorders. It has EVERYTHING to do with egos, power, and revenge.

    2. "Democracy is open-minded" and "Fundamentalists Aren't"? Can we not be open minded enough to understand that some people want (or are at least willing) to live under other forms of government? Are we so close minded to think that sticking to ones religious roots is a bad thing? Sure, the Taliban are a bad example, but that doesn't justify your criticism of all fundamentalists. You may as well be criticizing the right of all religions to exist.

    3. Do you have an editor (or egg timer) that reminds you to write new articles, regardless of whether or not you have anything to say? Kind of a "Keep Jon's ego inflated" timer? I know I was just rarin for a Slashdot article on globalization with next to no content or research, pulled straight from your ***.

    4. Have a nice day. :-)

    1. Re:CLUELESS!! by operagost · · Score: 1

      I may be ignorant, but I can't comprehend how the women in Afghanistan (yeah, that other half of the population) would prefer to live the way they do, if anyone gave a damn what they think.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  32. oh the irony by n3r0.m4dski11z · · Score: 0

    "Boundaries mean different things now, including the inescapable fact that they are highly porous. This enrages political, social and religious fundamentalists, as we are hurriedly learning. They turn to religion, ethnic identity and nationalism to build "purer" traditions -- and a few turn to violence"

    religious fundamentalists? i hope you count the us goverenment in that catagory. because all those things apply to them as well. the governement is the one thats not diverse, violent and trying to build purer traditions. who censors us? what body is mostly elderly white men that have the most to loose if the world changes?

    sure the taliban are violent but so are americans. they are the same! throw an arab into an arkansas christian community and you'll see what i mean.

    "The conflict is here, and we seem to be unwilling and unknowing combatants. We, along with our leaders, are astonished at just how much we seem to be hated out there."

    ahahahaha unknowing? try ignorant. did anyone care when the us goverment masacared x people in y land (vars are better because it happens so much that im sure you can plant your own examples).

    astonsihed how much your hated? you havent spent much time in other countries have you? the reason americans are hated by most of the countries of the world is because they have done negative things to most of the countries of the world. in canada i know they are trying to get us to sell them lumber at whatever cost they want to pay. same goes for fishing rights off our shores. you americans have this idea that everythign is your god given right and that your narrow twisted philophies are in some way right.
    the ends do not justify the means.

    this is a sick world and an even sicker war.

    --
    -
  33. Come see the violence inherent in the System! by Frank+Sullivan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The battle isn't changing - only the battleground is.

    The real fight is the ongoing friction between ever-larger units of society - the individual, the tribe, the nation, and now global society. Individuals chafe against the constraints of their own culture. Then as representatives of their own culture, they struggle against the crush of nationalism. Beyond that, the nations are fighting the coming globalism. This is not a fight that will ever be clearly resolved.

    I think by nature humans are individualist and tribalist. However, the lines of those tribes are becoming more and more fluid. I belong to several tribes - SF fandom, Open Source programming, Unitarian Universalism, etc - that overlap some, but are really separate groups, each with their own struggle. As an Open Source advocate, i'm fighting against globalist corporatism on one level. As a Unitarian, i'm fighting against it on another. And against my own tribes, i'm fighting to protect my own identity.

    Our tribes give us our connection to society. That connection is what gives us meaning and purpose, beyond mere survival. Nationalism and globalism simplify the survival question by improving our standard of living, but they don't give us much to feed our spirit. And both nationalism and globalism work to crush our tribes, which get in the way of convenient homogeneity.

    As for the Middle East, look at what they're getting. They see the worst of globalism - Coca-Cola and Britney Spears - while getting nothing of the best of it, like freedom of speech and a growing economy. And we're crushing the strong and beautiful tribe of Arab and Islamic culture. No wonder they are fighting back! However, i don't think the medievalists like bin Laden can win in the long run, either, because they don't offer anything BUT tribalism.

    There's a key... globalist culture provides huge economic incentives to participation, but you pay with your soul. It's great to have a Starbuck's everywhere so you can always get good coffee, but it sucks that Starbuck's is putting the funky individualistic cafes out of business. T-shirts are wiping out tribal dress because they're cheaper (unless you're a geek like me, where the t-shirt and its logo IS your tribal dress. I'm wearing a Klingon Kultural Ekchange shirt under my business casual).

    I could go on. Does any of this make sense?

    --
    Hand me that airplane glue and I'll tell you another story.
    1. Re:Come see the violence inherent in the System! by blair1q · · Score: 2


      If you don't like Starbucks,

      START YOUR OWN FUCKING COFFEE SHOP FRANCHISE.

      Globalization isn't about utter homogeneity, it's about consistency of infrastructure and interface.

      --Blair

    2. Re:Come see the violence inherent in the System! by humblecoder · · Score: 1
      As for the Middle East, look at what they're getting. They see the worst of globalism - Coca-Cola and Britney Spears - while getting nothing of the best of it, like freedom of speech and a growing economy. And we're crushing the strong and beautiful tribe of Arab and Islamic culture. No wonder they are fighting back! However, i don't think the medievalists like bin Laden can win in the long run, either, because they don't offer anything BUT tribalism.

      The problem with your argument is that nobody is forcing people around the world to embrace American culture. People are embracing this culture because they want to. Nobody is forcing people to drink Coke, eat at McDonalds, or hang out at a Starbucks. The question you have to ask is why are they embracing American culture. My theory is because America represents freedom & prosperity & leisure, and by buying American products, perhaps somehow they can live the "American dream" in a small way...

      Or perhaps it is just that they actually like American products on their own merits!

      Some cultures are threatened by the encroachment of this global culture on their way of life. They fight this either by closing ranks and keeping their people from coming in contact with it (ex: pre-industrial China, Taliban, Soviet Russia), or they fight it by letting their people choose for themselves what they want to embrace and hoping they make the "right" choice.

      There's a key... globalist culture provides huge economic incentives to participation, but you pay with your soul. It's great to have a Starbuck's everywhere so you can always get good coffee, but it sucks that Starbuck's is putting the funky individualistic cafes out of business. T-shirts are wiping out tribal dress because they're cheaper (unless you're a geek like me, where the t-shirt and its logo IS your tribal dress. I'm wearing a Klingon Kultural Ekchange shirt under my business casual).

      This kind of reminds me of the _South Park_ episode where the town rallies around the local coffee shop to try and prevent the out-of-town chain coffee shop from opening a store. In the end, the local shop goes out of business because (gasp!) the out-of-town coffee shop has BETTER COFFEE!

      I kind of feel the same way when it comes to my "consuming preferences". I give my business to the shop that best satisfies my needs. If it is a local place, so be it. If it is an out-of-town place, that doesn't bother me.

      Actually, I live in a rural college town where there are a lot of "pressure" to support local businesses. While I have sympathy for their cause, the fact of the matter is that many of the local business could use a little competition. Many of them charge high prices, have terrible selection, and have inconvienent hours.

      Recently, I tried going to the local hardware store to pick up a few things, and much to my surprise, they were closed! It turns out they close at 6pm on weekdays. I ended up driving 30 minutes to a national hardware chain store to get what I needed. The same local hardware store is fighting to keep the national chain from expanding into our town! Needless to say I have very little sympathy for the local store.

      At the end of the day, it's about selling a product or service that the customer wants. It seems that some local business have forgotten this little lesson. Maybe a little competition will help them to remember...

    3. Re:Come see the violence inherent in the System! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      START YOUR OWN FUCKING COFFEE SHOP FRANCHISE.

      Sure, until Starbucks notices you on the radar screen and either buys you out or starts a media blitz campaign in your area, utterly destroying your business by brainwashing your customers into thinking 'Brand-name == Good'.

    4. Re:Come see the violence inherent in the System! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      People are embracing this culture because they want to. Nobody is forcing people to drink Coke, eat at McDonalds, or hang out at a Starbucks. The question you have to ask is why are they embracing American culture. My theory is because America represents freedom & prosperity & leisure, and by buying American products, perhaps somehow they can live the "American dream" in a small way...

      Or, maybe it's their children who's embracing McDonalds, Starbucks, etc. It's the same situation conservative America has with Marilyn Manson, Dungeons and Dragons, Pokemon, etc. All these do is show the "fundamentalists" how poorly they've indoctrinated their children into their "fundamentalist" beliefs. What's worse, it's really the Marketing that they buy into, not the culture (take a college-level course in marketing and you'll know the various techniques that's used to brainwash people into believing the hype). Why else is M$ Windows XX so popular?

    5. Re:Come see the violence inherent in the System! by blair1q · · Score: 2

      No, you miss the point of my post, which is:

      COMPETE OR DIE!

      If you can't compete, you have no justification to complain other than envy, failure or a sense of entitlement.

      Starbucks isn't a government. It doesn't have an army. All it can do is put stores next to yours and provide a better product and experience at a better value. And if it can't, you win. And if Starbucks is as bad as you say, then you can't lose, right? And if you don't compete with them, it's either because you know you can't, or because you know you can but you're scared to (which means you know you can't, because they aren't scared of you, which is also part of the free-market equation).

      --Blair

  34. assertion failed !(moderator==editor) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (score : -1, offtopic) Incorrect!
    Technically, STFU is always ontopic when dealing with mentally diseased media whores like JonKatz.

    Judges would have accepted "Troll".

  35. Re:longest running democracy??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sure that this claim can countered.

    Question - when do you consider that democracy actually started? From the early start when voting was confined to those that owned land, or from the time when every citizen in society was allowed, encouraged even, to vote?

    In the USA I make the beginning of democracy 1965 - not that long a time to have held the moral high ground for, is it?

  36. Define your terms better! by Philbert+Desenex · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You need to define your terms better - your article, as it stands is gibberish.

    You confuse at least two types of "globalism":

    1. little-g "globalization" constitutes stuff like manufacturing jobs moving to "third world" countries, highly mobile capital moving to whatever stock market around the world is hot, economic things like that. Pretty much irresistable.
    2. Big-G "Globalization" constitutes a political and legal transfer of power from elected governments and the citizenry the governments represent, to appointed, corporate entities. Organizations like WIPO, WTO, RIAA, ICANN and Microsoft constitute the appointed, corporate entities, while DMCA, SSSCA and UCITA constitute the organizational framework that the new, corporate-oriented power structure apparently means to use.

    little-g "globalization" could conceviably take place without Big-G "Globalization", I suppose, but because "globalization" currently comes along with US and Western Europe coporate entities (Ford, Microsoft, British Petroleum, Duetche Telecomm) and US-oriented Popular Culture (Coca Cola, blue jeans, Britney Spears, Hollywood movies), and "Globalization" derives its names and ruling class from US corporate entities, it's easy for some folks to confuse the two. Apparently, you (Jon Katz) haven't made this distinction too clearly.

    1. Re:Define your terms better! by pere · · Score: 1

      I agree. And you could probably have added five more meanings.

      But the author is not alone in not defining globalism. Look at the Slashdot-replies!

      Globalism discussions is usually as meaningful as discussing if hackers are good or bad. When the participants define the words totally different, you usually get - as you say - total gibberish.

  37. Globalism is blanding out the world by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

    I've driven through most of the country and I was disappointed by the uniformity of all the small towns I passed through. Each was just a slight variation on the theme of McDonalds + WalMart. The only thing different as you cross the US is to see what the local Grocery store chain is. The US is a huge country - but without the variety of other parts of the world the same size. Globalism will just mix all of the worlds cultures together until we get one big old bland McCulture of mass media and the lowest common denominator... At least that's my fear.

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
  38. Globalism and the Nation State by puppetman · · Score: 1


    I consider this article by Katz highly simplistic. And to equate globalism with Sept 11th. Rather, blame American foreign policy, which one Canadian feminist called "soaked in blood".

    Katz misses the whole threat of globalism - transnational corporations (TNCs) have in effect stolen power and the ability to make public policy from the nation-state.

    TNCs are starting to eclipse smaller countries in terms of revenue, and with the ability to move capital and investments (and thus jobs) across the globe in the blink of an eye, nations are finding that they have to pander to these corporate monstrosities. As National Cash Register said, "We aren't an American company. We are an transnational company currently headquartered in the United States."

    In globalism, we are making the same mistakes made during the Industrial Revolution. First, we focus on investment and capital, and let labor and the environment go to shit. Next, we'll try to incorporate some basic labor laws into the global picture. Then maybe we'll have a global agreement on the environment. That is, if TNCs don't block them.

    Interesting reading on the subject includes The Myth of the Good Corporate Citizen by Murray Dobin, and The Ingenuity Gap, by Thomas Homer-Dixon.

  39. It Amazes me by KingKire64 · · Score: 1

    People talk about why we are hated and what we did in the past and they always point to us, its our fault. What happened to nationalism? I dont blindly follow our governemnt but i also dont feed into what the media says. We do the best we can. Yes we do screw up but everyone does. We follow the rules and gerenaly dont lie. But other countrys dont follow the rules and lie. "Government sanctions have killed over a million Iraqies" Thats the biggest load ive ever heard. Iraq can trade thier oil for food they just cant get moeny for thier oil. Saddam has killed hundreds of thousands of more people with biological waepons then we ever killed in total. An the Media will glorify anything for a buck. The Groups in the middle east lie to reporters and ambassadors b/c they know that there are a certian amount of gullible ppl who will believe them. Well it you have a military base with the words "Civilian hospitial" written on it, does it mean we should not attack it? No, but then the tell the press and other countries that we destoryed a civilian hospital. People always question what our government says and does yet never seem to question the oppisition. Since when do we as americans put more faith in what our enemy says about us. If you feel simpathic to the enemy move over there, because we are at war and the PROPAGANDA IS EVERYWHERE... Dont be the fool that followed Hitler.

    --
    "All I can tell the "lesser of two evils" folks is that if they keep voting for evil, they'll keep getting evil."-Lp.org
    1. Re:It Amazes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nationalism is good for you. But in global affairs, it has restricted value.

      When you attack another country, it's in national interest. What if all 166 plus countries start attacking each other for their national interest?

      Welcome to global world buddy! Leave your arrogance and arms at your home. If not, CNN will bring more bad news home - some time in Afganistan and sometime in neighbouring cities and towns.

      What goes around comes around.

  40. think globally, act locally by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    has already been the motto of many of us for a long time.

    What makes Katz think that the US is cosmopolitan? How is George W Bush saying that athiests are not patriots that far from the rally call of Islamic fundamentalism.

    It's the recourse of the fundamentalist to ignore the doctrines of his chosen cloak when it suits him. "Thou shalt not kill" is pretty unequivicable.

    To be global means to be respectful of diversity as much as anything yet nation states promote secular culture. Liberals wish for some sort of Eden, capitalists dream of a global market and religious types dream of a homogenous homeland of the righteous. There is almost no common ground.

    It's only the liberals, who probably eschew some sort of higher power, that think twice about the killing part.

    Want to save lives? Try not killing animals for food, billions of deaths per year. Try not driving your car so fast. the Sept. 11th death toll was two weeks of US automobile deaths yet I see no "war" on reckless driving.

    We try to teach our children to be forgiving (turning the other cheek I believe Christians call it [ha!]) and yet the response to events is to kill more people either through bombs and rockets or starve them out in refugee camps.

    The source of current Islamic anger, of course, is the US occupation of the holy lands following the, er, cosmopolitan Operation Desert Storm. The world pays the price for US/UK interventionalism in Middle Eastern politics. Saddam, Osama, Pol Pot, Pinochet and numerous others all financed and encouraged by US/UK foreign policy and then demonised once their usefulness expires. Here's an idea, if you want to get your hands dirty send in your own troops, not arm a bunch of locals who will want a payback for the sacrifice of them and their brothers.

    If the powerful wanted peace there would be peace.
    If the powerful wanted no poverty there would be no poverty.
    If the powerful wanted less crime there would be less crime.

    Feel free to go on dreaming that might is right but get ready for your come uppance because there is always someone mightier than you, if not today then tomorrow.

    Only a fool thinks he isn't one.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    1. Re:think globally, act locally by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      It's only the liberals, who probably eschew some sort of higher power, that think twice about the killing part.

      Unfortunately Conservatives appear unable to think once about killing people.

      It was not a liberal who wrote 'war is diplomacy by other means'. The easiest thing to do is to start a war, the hardest is to stop one.

      If you want to see what pig headed aggression achieves look at the result of Sharon's policies. Since taking power he has ordered the assasination of almost a hundred Palestinians. As a direct result the Palestinians are now assasinating cabinet ministers.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    2. Re:think globally, act locally by operagost · · Score: 1
      You quote the Bible as if you understand it, but you don't. Jesus said to forgive one's enemies, it's true, but he also said that "there is no government on earth that God himself has not established". We're talking about the United States defending its citizens here, not some militia hopping on a plane to Afghanistan and taking matters into their own hands. I give the United States governing authority over me with the understanding that I will be adequately protected from violence. Even a pacifist- byt the TRUE definition- will fight. However, he will stop short of the elimination of his opponent at any cost. I feel that, considering all the non-American lives taken by the Taliban, that the United States, is doubly justified.

      I'm not quite sure where vegetarianism and reckless driving fit in here. I suppose most veggies think that eventually everyone will think that somehow it's cruel eating an animal but not a plant, but for now most of us are happy to eat whatever tastes good and is healthy.

      I don't see how you can equate reckless driving with war. FYI, many states are now passing new laws targeting "road rage" and distracted drivers, but I suppose you ignored that in an attempt to make your absurd argument fit.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    3. Re:think globally, act locally by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      you are right in that I'm not a biblical scholar and never will be.

      My use of driving figures & animal killing are for reflection. To respect life is to respect life. If we are only angered by the methods of death then why bother. The murder of 5000+ people and the destruction of some buildings has started a pseudo war. Convenient for the western powers. They get to take the moral high ground and by perpetuating the conflict they can channel investment into swords and not ploughshares. Israel can get on with the eradication of Palestine (convenient for the UK & the US).

      You know, it would come as little surprise to find out that the western powers organised the whole thing. Remember that only 30 years ago the UK govt. set bombs off in Dublin pubs to discredit the IRA. The US sells arms and trains all sorts of unsavoury murderers, selling cocaine to US citizens to finance arms sales to terrorists.

      think about that the next time you open those love letters.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  41. Bin Laden real complaint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This supposed terrrorist action..really boils down to the fact that the world is becoming one global village....Bin Laden, a traditionalist musilm, thinks that it will destory islam...rather some argue that it will heighten the spread. We will see?

  42. A problem with definitions by Saragon · · Score: 0
    What is "globalization"? Mr. Katz makes a brief allusion to the (actual) dictionary definition, but his functional definition in this piece appears to be "pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance", which (one gathers) he got out of a trendy book he just read on the subject.


    The problem is, what precisely does "fundamentalism" vs. "cosmopolitanism" have to do with what is referred to as "globalization"? If that is the correct definition of "globalization" then why is the typical anti-"globalization" protestor, at least in America, a disaffected lower-to-middle-class teenager from...you guessed it...a big city? One would think they are "cosmopolitan", and yet they don't like "globalization" (or, their conception of it), not one bit. How can this be?


    Are they really "fundamentalists" at heart?


    Well, perhaps if one realizes that the political desires and philosophies loosely described by the term "socialism" are themselves fundamentalist movements - and hence, that's where much of the opposition comes from - then this piece begins to make sense.

  43. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by phaze3000 · · Score: 1
    Capitalism is the force that exploits workers and pushes wages down, not globalisation (although many who would call themselves Communists are also anti-globalisation). If all governments were based on Marxist principles, then globalisation would not have the effects you describe.

    Please note I'm not speaking for or against Marxism, merely pointing out a flaw in your argument.

    --
    Blaming GW Bush for the Iraq war is like blaming Ronald McDonald for the poor quality of food.
  44. Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by toupsie · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Can governments preserve the environment, keep work secure and equitable, ensure fair wages, control capitalism, distribute new technologies equitably, respect diverse cultural values, contain greed and restrict the imagery that Americans love but that frightens and offends large segments of the world population?

    Does Government also need to change your diaper Katz?

    The only thing Government really needs to do is keep itself out of my life and my affairs! What is the benefit of a bunch of faceless, bumbling, job secured bureaucrats lead by a bunch of glad handing, ass kissing, donation grubbing, pandering politicians ensuring my security from those evil, efficient, beneficial product producing capitalists? None so far in my life.

    I want to live in a Representative Republic not a nanny-state Socialist monstrosity like Hitler's National Socialism of the 1930s. Its not the Government's role to "distribute" technology that is the marketplace's job. If you don't have the technology you need in your life, get a second job or create your own technology! Its not the Government's job to "ensure fair wages", you get paid what your labor is worth at the time. Don't like what you make, take a risk and start your own business. Its not the Government's job to "contain greed" as greed is relative to the observer and who's opinion of greed are we going to use? The Dali Lama or Gordon Gecko? Its not the Government's job to tell me whose culture to respect. I sure as hell do not respect cultures that force female circumcision or require women to wear suffocating clothing for religious reasons.

    Restrict the imagery of Americans love but it frightens the world? "F" the rest of the world. If the rest of the world was as successful, productive and entrepreneurial as the USA has been in the last 225 years on the Earth, we would be in a much better world. If there is a benefit from cultures outside of ours, we would have already stolen it, modified it, incorporated it and claimed it was ours from the start. We have excelled in our nation while being historically isolationist from the rest of the world. It is only the last 80 years that we have been truly interested in "world affairs". Mainly because we were saving the world from itself in two major, global wars.

    The "world" has a tremendous chip on its shoulder regarding America. You can almost feel the jealousy burning through their collective souls. Here we are, an infant nation, only 225 years old and we are numero uno, the top dog, the Alpha Male of nations. Think how long France, England, Spain, Italy, China, Russia, Egypt, etc. have been around -- thousands of years! That must really hurt emotionally that the new kid on the global block has stolen the show. That's why they call us arrogant. Not because of our bravado but because of the lack of motivation to be what America has become -- a social, economic, military and cultural powerhouse. No American should hold their head in shame for that.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by j-beda · · Score: 1
      I want to live in a Representative Republic ...Its not the Government's role to "distribute" technology that is the marketplace's job...

      But what if everyone else in the neighbourhood, city, state, country, or world, does not want to live in such a social setup? Where are you then?

      Not because of our bravado but because of the lack of motivation to be what America has become -- a social, economic, military and cultural powerhouse. No American should hold their head in shame for that.

      It is the lack of ethical growth, particularly outsde of the country's borders, that causes us to be ashamed.

      I paraphrase: "We hold these truth's to be self evident, that man was created with certain unalienable rights..." Yet often we show little respect for the rights of those outside our borders. If tomorrow we woke up and the enire world were one big USA - how much current USA foreign policy would be struck down as unconstitutional? If we delt with local politics in California like we have delt with the mid-east, could we get away with it?

    2. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by toupsie · · Score: 2
      But what if everyone else in the neighbourhood, city, state, country, or world, does not want to live in such a social setup? Where are you then?

      Moving to a place where my values are represented.

      It is the lack of ethical growth, particularly outsde of the country's borders, that causes us to be ashamed.

      You are right, it is so unethical to feed the world, assist other countries in times of natural/unnatural disaster, provide medical treatment for the world, defend weak nations against rogue nations, etc. Its amazing how often people completely refuse to acknowledge the overwhelming good that comes out of America. I don't understand what perverse thrill you must get to hate your country and your home.

      If America is so horrible and evil, why hasn't the UN moved out?

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    3. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by j-beda · · Score: 1
      You are right, it is so unethical to feed the world, assist other countries in times of natural/unnatural disaster, provide medical treatment for the world, defend weak nations against rogue nations, etc. Its amazing how often people completely refuse to acknowledge the overwhelming good that comes out of America. I don't understand what perverse thrill you must get to hate your country and your home. Your point that the USA has done enormous good is valid. In many instances, the USA has selflessly acted worldwide and helped millions of people.

      If you can't understand why people would be upset with the many instances where the USA has not acted in the most honorable manner, I don't know how I can help communicate that to you. In some sense, the great social/ethical/moral successes of the USA act to make the failings more painful.

      If you found out that your parents were cheating on their taxes, or your brother was embezzeling from his company, or your sister was cheating on her spouse, or your grandfather stole lollypops from infants, wouldn't you be a bit ashamed? Would you feel less ashamed if you were a rich, powerful, and generous family that was active in the local community and was kind to small animals?

      I don't get a "thrill" from my fealings about the country. And I don't "hate" the USA. But my pride in the country is lessened by some of its actions. Even if one thinks the USA is the greatest country in the world, the fact that it could be so much greater in so many ways makes me dissapointed. I don't understand why some people have such difficulty in being critical of their own governments. I do not deny the good that is done in my name, why do so many deny the bad that is done in theirs?

      If America is so horrible and evil, why hasn't the UN moved out?

      'cause then they'd never get their back dues? :-) Actually, I think we paid up quite a bit in the last few years, are we "in good standing" yet?

    4. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by toupsie · · Score: 2
      If you can't understand why people would be upset with the many instances where the USA has not acted in the most honorable manner, I don't know how I can help communicate that to you. In some sense, the great social/ethical/moral successes of the USA act to make the failings more painful.

      Then all I ask of these people that feel that America has done wrong by them is to immediately cease all contact with American foreign aid and American products.

      There was no excuse for the atrocity of 9/11/01 nor was America in *ANY* way responsible for the terrorist attack. Trying to point the finger of blame at the US for these ISLAMIC terrorists is completely deluded. This was an act of hate and America was the victim of the crime. Its like blaming a woman for being raped because of the clothes she wore.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    5. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Then all I ask of these people that feel that America has done wrong by them is to immediately cease all contact with American foreign aid and American products.

      Oh pishaw!

      If you think the only people to feel that the USA has made errors are those to whom we give foreign aid, then you are very wrong. Many friends, allies, partners and even (as Bush recently called Canada) "family" have been critical of the USA's policies in any number of areas. Cut off trade with all of them and the USA will be hurt pretty bad too.

      And there are many people in the USA who have felt that the USA has had bad foreign policy - it is their DUTY to speak out.

      There is something mighty wrong with a country if it cannot handle dissent, and in general the USA is perfectly able to do so. This is one of its strengths. Unfortunately, one of its weaknesses is a tendancy to give little weight to the opinions of those outside the country.

      There was no excuse for the atrocity of 9/11/01 nor was America in *ANY* way responsible for the terrorist attack.

      There was no excuse for the atrocities committed by Germany in WWII, but the whole rise to power of the Nazis probably wouldn't have happened if the Great Powers had not imposed the terms for peace that they did after WWI. Avoiding the rise of problems such as these should be at least part of our foreign policy. Behaving in such a manner that a minimal number of people feel that such actions against the USA are justified might not be such a stupid idea.

      This was an act of hate and America was the victim of the crime. Its like blaming a woman for being raped because of the clothes she wore.

      This is true. But when a rape is reported and the crime is investigated, it is possible that you might find out that the victim is responsible for other unrelated crimes. What do you think happens then? Surprise, surprise, the "victim" might be brought to justice too. Just because the USA was the victim of a nefarious deed does not automatically whitewash all past and future misdeeds that the USA was or may be involved in.

      What sort of responsible citizen would ever want their government to not act in a fair, just, equitable manner whenever possible?

    6. Re:Can we suck up to Big Brother even more? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we do!

      Because we are suffering because of your violent success. Your success is dripped with bloods of people who died in Nagasaki-Hiroshima, Vietnam and countless other places.

      But you have a point. A mighty pig need not explain his reason for excesses. And rest of us will wait till pig gets an answer from another violent boar stronger than you.

      I liked your honesty! Better than pseudo 'ethical bullshit' your leaders talk about. You are bad and you are admitting it.

  45. hahahaha by cetan · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    Globalism is one of those notions much kicked around and little understood, shrouded in hysteria and knee-jerk cant


    Never in my life has Katz been more dead-on about everything he's written about Globalism.

    --
    In Soviet Russia...michael would be rotting in Siberia!
    1. Re:hahahaha by cetan · · Score: 1

      heh. that was a pretty pathetic troll on my part.

      --
      In Soviet Russia...michael would be rotting in Siberia!
  46. Free London School of Economics Course by mindpixel · · Score: 4, Informative

    The London School of Economics is giving a Free course called "The Globalisation Debate" at the onlineline University course clearinghouse "Fathom.com. Their system doesn't permit direct linking, so you will need to search on Globalisation, or the school. Here's the course description:


    Globalisation is a fervidly contested and often misunderstood concept. It has occupied and divided economists, sociologists and anti-capitalists alike. Anti-globalisation protestors have regularly and successfully picketed World Trade Organisation summits as part of their stand against the might of globalisation. Yet, many economists tout the benefits of increased trade, sophisticated telecommunications networks and cross-border investment to developing countries, pointing to the gains workers and unions throughout the world stand to make from closer integration.



    Most people seem to know whether they are for or against globalisation, without pausing to consider what exactly it is and where its effects can be seen. Globalisation might be a term too slippery to be closely defined, but it is a vibrant debate worth engaging in.


    In this seminar two major sociologists put forward their versions of globalisation. For Anthony Giddens, it is a phenomenon characterised by fundamental changes in the world economy, the communications revolution and trade between nation-states in physical commodities, information and currency. For Leslie Sklair, globalisation should be seen as a new phase of capitalism, one that transcends the unit of the nation-state. In an interview, he introduces the globalisation debate and stakes out his position within it. Sklair builds on these arguments through a flash image gallery, which explores how the idea of globalisation is used by transnational corporations.


    The course is taught by Leslie Sklair is a reader in sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science and is responsible for the doctoral programme in the sociology department. He has been a visiting professor at New York University, San Diego State University and Hong Kong University, and has lectured on globalisation all over the world. His Sociology of the Global System (1995) has been translated into Japanese, Portuguese, Persian, Chinese and Spanish. He has conducted fieldwork on transnational corporations in Mexico, China, Hong Kong, Egypt and Australia, and in Europe and North America.

    1. Re:Free London School of Economics Course by mindpixel · · Score: 2

      Not that anyone noticed (if you did I'd like to hear about it)... but the course is taught by TWO socioligists, and the second is the director of the school:

      Anthony Giddens is the director of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He started his academic career at the University of Hull, and went on to study for an M.A. in sociology at the LSE; by 1976 he had completed a Ph.D. at Cambridge University.
      Giddens has held numerous teaching positions within sociology, including at the University of Leicester and the University of Cambridge, and has lectured extensively at many overseas universities. He has received 10 honorary degrees throughout his career. More recently he was the BBC Reith Lecturer in 1999.

      Giddens is the most widely read and cited social theorist of his generation, authoring 34 books and countless articles and reviews. He co-founded the academic publishing house Polity Press in 1985 and still stands as chairman and director of Polity Press Ltd. as well as the director of Blackwell-Polity Ltd. He also stands as the chairman and director of the Centre for Social Research.

      Giddens is well respected for developing the theory of structuration, and has been at the forefront of developing ideas in left-of-centre politics, helping to popularize the idea of the "third way," and travelling to many countries around the world to talk to political leaders and heads of state about the development of third way politics. Frequently referred to as "Tony Blair's guru," Giddens has also made a strong impact on the evolution of New Labour.

  47. Misguided by theirpuppet · · Score: 1
    Typically misguided. Should have been authored by Dan Rather or Peter Jennings.


    There is no tolerance in the so-called 'democracy' of the US. The Media is owned by the same corporations that successfully lobby congress (because the people don't vote).


    'Spreading Democracy' by the US Government, is supporting dictatorships and fascist regimes that make their countries more amenable to US Foreign Investors and Globablization.


    Globalization is not what you hear about in the 6 o clock news. Globalization makes it possible for once US based corporations to now extend themselves as transnational, thus averting the laws of any specific country. They can easily close up shop, and often do, and open up in a third world country without labor laws.

  48. Great on Paper by BurkeChowdah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The real thing to examine is this: Is globalism really good, or is it similar to Socialism and various other ideas in that is looks excellent on paper, but in practice, never seems to work out just right. There are many ideas like this that appear to be the solution to everything, but when put into practice, become a big mess. My thought is that many of these things deserve a closer look before being put into practice so that we can avoid slogging through a mess.

    Ed

    --
    (insert attempt to be witty here)
    1. Re:Great on Paper by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Very good idea. With regard to Chicago school free-market capitalism, you can start by looking at "The Chicago boys and the Chilean 'economic miracle'".

      Then you can look at Vandana Shiva's talk about free-market's assault on India: everything from the destruction of indigenous jobs by heavy subsidizing of imported soya oil to companies patenting and attempting to forbid Indian farmers to grow crops that the Indian farmers themselves had developed! Basmati, Neem: natural products developed in India, but patents were taken out on these things by U.S. companies. Ever heard the name Monsanto? Unless you try and take a closer look at what people in India are saying, you won't: you're not going to hear about this from U.S. media- or 'globalized' media, for that matter. When was the last time you heard the name Bhopal? And yet more people died at Bhopal than in the WTC terrorist attack- by now, more than twice as many. Bhopal was caused by intentional negligence motivated by a desire to cut costs and economize, the better to compete in the global market... to this day, the reaction of Union Carbide has been to hush it up, even to the point of refusing to specify the poisons involved, which would help medical relief efforts that are _still_ relevant... but saying what was in the poison gas would be bad PR and possibly lead to some form of liability, so silence is still kept...

      Yes- do please take a closer look at these things. The more you look, the more you see- and it matters.

  49. why is this on slashdot? by turbine216 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    This article has NO BUSINESS being posted here!! The ONLY line that actually makes it seem worthy of being posted is this:

    In a globalizing world -- one of its cornerstones being the Net --

    You know what really pisses me off? The fact that Katz has this odd tendency to "slip" a little internet reference into every one of his rants, hoping to qualify it for slashdot's front page by faking some type of geek-quotient. Who does this guy think he is? So what if he got his ass kicked in high school enough to write a book about it? Who cares if he was a "media critic" for one of the world's silliest rags? How does any of this help him qualify as some sort of god-damned pinnacle of geekiness? Does he have some type of controlling interest in slashdot's funding? WHY DOES HIS CRAP CONTINUE TO APPEAR ON THIS SUPPOSED "NEWS" SITE, WHEN IT IS QUITE OBVIOUS THAT NOBODY RESPECTS HIS OPINIONS? He's the world's biggest karma-whore - it's as simple as that - only he's doing a really bad job of whoring these days.

    1. Re:why is this on slashdot? by kko · · Score: 1

      They snubbed my articles on TV about Band of Brothers and Mr. sissy-punkass-blabbermouth-poopy-pants Jon Katz gets to show off his lack of brains!!! Hey someone at Slashdot start rejecting Mr reporterboy's sh*tty articles....

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
  50. Globalization by argv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The increase in religious fundamentalism is, in my opinion, the result of the spread of Western liberal culture through the Internet, television etc... The liberation of women from their historic roles, secularism and commercialism are anathema to many religious groups; including not least Christian fundamentalists in the United States.

    Globalization is primarily a commercial function, and I don't believe it has a thing to do with the radicalization of opinions in the third world. Most people are happy to work for next to nothing for a rapacious Western conglomerate because their only other choice IS nothing.

    Anti-American feelings in the Islamic world is primarily a response to U.S. support for Israel. Finland has some global corporations and you don't here people screaming "Death to Israel, death to Finland!".

    Finding a way to reconcile Israel with her Arab neighbors would be a good start in reducing radicalism in the Islamic world. Religious fundamentalism is something we should not worry about, hell, maybe they're right.

    Economic globalization is a fundamental choice that each nation is free to make, and again is none of our business.

  51. Katz misses the point again. by rberton · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Religion has historically been used as a motivator for war. From the Inquisition to the Holy wars in Turkey it has been used to get men to fight, but it has never been the reason to fight.

    In this case as well you are seeing a reaction to rampant captialism (globalization) wrapped in the wonderfully motivating skin of religious fundamentalism.

    Middle Easterners do not hate the working man in America. They hate the huge multi-nationals and their US military police force that secures them further profit at the expense of lives and sometimes countries.

    This country has been living off of the fat of the rest of the world for 2 generations or longer. Wouldn't you resent a country that swoops in bombs and kills many of your population and then sets up your government for you, all in the name of oil profit?

    How come there is no Italian or Japanese military base on US soil? How come there is NO other countries military base on US soil, yet we have 60+ major military installation in other countries in the world?

    Globalization is the problem not the solution.

    1. Re:Katz misses the point again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You err in believing that religion is the reason for war. Trade and national survival are the reasons for war. Look at any war, the crusades, the cold war, the Tamil rebels. It doesn't change. Furthermore, trade and national survival are intimatly intertwined. Why has America gone from fighting Great Britian to close trading partners? Obvious now isn't it.

    2. Re:Katz misses the point again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How come there is no Italian or Japanese military base on US soil? How come there is NO other countries military base on US soil, yet we have 60+ major military installation in other countries in the world?

      Because we won the last big playground fight. And we seem to be the only country willing and with the force to keep fighting, for better or worse. Could the EU be doing what the US is doing now? No.

      The EU couldn't even figure out what to do in its own backyard about Yugoslavia's implosion and resultant atrocities, other than issue "stern condemnations" regarding ethnic cleansing.

    3. Re:Katz misses the point again. by rberton · · Score: 1

      Never said that religion is the reason for war. It's just the opposite, religion is a tool to get the common man to fight. Profit is the reason for war.

  52. Re:bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    US democracy only exists since 1965 (Voting rights act of 1965). Before that US only paid lipservice to the idea.

    Problem with taking the moral high ground when you don't deserve it.

  53. Post WWII vs Cold War by dpilot · · Score: 2

    For a better view of why we're hated, consider the USA's actions after WWII and contrast them with our conduct during the Cold War.

    After WWII, we learned from the mistakes of post-WWI and helped both Europe and Japan rebuild. We were taking what we talked about with the American Dream and helping others achieve it. Let's ignore for the moment whether the American Dream should be exported or not - that's not the point. The point is that we were doing what we were saying.

    During the Cold War that all changed. While talking American Dream, our conduct was "Enemy of my enemy is my friend." We turned a blind eye towards their bad habits, and supported them if they were against the communists.

    Defining yourself by what you are not is a terrible way to live a life, IMHO. That goes for a person, an organization, or a country. Perhaps we had to pursue our anti-communist foreign policy, but to have done so in so single-minded and negative a fashion, without similarly acting on our own positive beliefs was unwise. The aftereffects of our negative foreign policy are coming back to roost.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  54. Wrong again, Watson by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    No, it's not arrogance, it's our indifference. American idly has stood by while Ariel Sharon put the theories of the most hardline and Israelies into practice buy overreacting to every incident connected to the palestinians, even when it's bait provided by those outside the PLO means of control.

    I spent two hours in Nice, France, a few years back, talking with a palistinian on the run. He had a number tattooed on his arm from when he had been imprisoned in Israel. He was clearly frustrated because the land which had been in his family for generations had been siezed and his family had been displaced by the occupiers. There's a lot of injustice happening in Israel, and that the US has actually done very little to help the palestinians. Worth noting, however, that most arab states have done little contructively, either.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  55. It's Not Unusual... by Spud+Zeppelin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...for people to come out and lambaste Katz, but it's unusual for me: I prefer to do my Karma Whoring in more meaningful ways, like occasionally posting useful information.

    But not this time! Katz, you have clearly gotten in over your head. The non-sequitor upon which this essay is based is an utter disaster. How can you conclude there is ANY relationship at all between a cosmopolitan world-view and acceptance of free trade? I can think of several respected scholars (former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, for one) who firmly believe that the notion of national identities, particularly in business, are passe, but still support the use of tariff mechanisms by nations to protect their domestic social institutions. Read The Work of Nations sometime for insight into Reich's concept of "Strategic Trade."

    I realize that the two columns you do here are only a small component of your journalistic work week, but it would behoove you to contemplate that before undertaking an essay on the interrelationship between societal openness and macroeconomics, when you obviously didn't have the opportunity to thoroughly research the macroeconomics piece. What eludes me is how the views of such prominent a figure as Reich could fly under your radar!?

    --

    MOO;IANAL.
    There used to be a picture linked here.

    1. Re:It's Not Unusual... by lumpenprole · · Score: 1
      How can you conclude there is ANY relationship at all between a cosmopolitan world-view and acceptance of free trade?

      Because to the outside viewer, it's an obvious one. Free trade is a concept pushed by economically solvent countries which also happen to be fairly societally liberal. Seeing the connection yet?

      To poor countries, this is how we appear: "Sure the sum total of our cultural output may be McDonalds and Sex in the City, but look at us! We're rich! Rich beyond you're wildest dreams!" To them, it's all a piece. We're the rich spoiled kids who have no morals and get to do whatever we want. It's not a matter of whether Reich thinks so or not. That's how they see us.

      In contrast, we see them as dirt-eating lunatics, with no grasp on reality. Probably because the reality of life in most poor countries would give the average American nightmares for years.

      The connection may or may not be a causal one, but it seems pretty obvious to anyone who lives in the middle east. During the gulf war, there was a lot of talk about how Kuwait was the most liberal of the countries in that area, especially in the area of Women's rights. Any coincidence that they had the highest wealth per capita of any country in that area? Most of the middle east didn't think so. There was a lot of anti-Kuwaiti sentiment right before the invasion. The only reason other oil-belt countries sided with us was that Hussein implied they were next.

      --
      Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
  56. Political Scientists by ronny_magic · · Score: 1

    Didn't we used to call these people political philosophers?

    Also, it seems to me that globalisation is too large a subject to be resolved in a few editorials. here are Oxfam's more considered views on the subject.

    1. Re:Political Scientists by david614 · · Score: 1

      Yes *we* did. As a professional poltiical scientist, I prefer the new title.

      Thank You.

      D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
  57. I know a few reasons by KernelBloat · · Score: 1

    Isn't the U.S.A the only country to use nukes in war? And they used it on Japanese civilians? ...After the war was won?

    95% of U.S. mass-media is American-centric. Where is the stage for non-U.S. opinions inside the U.S? There is no healthy introspection & that leads to bigotry and pride.

    The United States has the most prisoners per capita in the world. The state is promoting, paying for and organizing what amounts to racial cleansing with its war on drugs. You see, black men and white men statistically consume the same amount of drugs, yet in jail black men who were convicted for drug charges outnumber white men 40 to 1.

    The war on drugs has dragged into Central America & Mexico creating armed conflicts where none would have been. Think about it: drug lords would not exist if the prohibition on drugs didn't inflate the prices the way the prohibition on alcohol raised alcohol prices (artificial scarcity).

    Millions of civilians in Iraq are dead and dying because of the blockade imposed on the country by the United States. It's true that it would all end if Saddam Hussein would just give up his power, but they knew he never would. Millions dead... Is that the only answer you could come up with?

    How about going to school in Europe and taking American history?

    1. Re:I know a few reasons by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      You're a big meanie.

      NO) It was right for the US to nuke Japan. It saved lives.

      YES) The US media is US-centric--and it sucks.

      YES) The war on drugs is wrong.

      NO) The blockade was a UN program. (Notice that 'N' there isn't an 'S'.)

    2. Re:I know a few reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't the U.S.A the only country to use nukes in war? And they used it on Japanese civilians? ...After the war was won?
      Is that what you learned while taking American history in Europe??? read THAT book of yours again.

      The war on drugs has dragged into Central America & Mexico creating armed conflicts where none would have been.
      ever here about the communists and the shining path fighters??? read THAT book of yours again.

      Man, know your history THEN post.
      NOW GO..... and read all those books I told you to....GO!!!

    3. Re:I know a few reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would love to see the beating you'd get if you told veterns of the Pacific war that "the war was won" when we used the Atom bomb. My grandfather was supposed to be among the first marines to attack the Japanese mainland had the war not ended when it did, and there are millions more like me. Millions of Japanese were likely saved as well. Your statement is quite arrogant since you have absolutely no idea to what lengths many Japanese would have gone had we invaded with ground troops.

    4. Re:I know a few reasons by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      NO) The blockade was a UN program. (Notice that 'N' there isn't an 'S'.)

      Hiding behind the UN security council is futile. The US and the UK have been responsible for rejecting any proposed changes to the blockade.

      While the US position has some justification, pretending that the US is not the principle mover in the matter is the type of behaviour that discredits the US abroad.

      The concern I have is that by insisting on continuing the blockade long after it has proved to be failure the US has made it much harder to get the security council to approve future actions.

      The UN is very valuable tool for US foreign policy. It is the only organization that can deflect the criticism of the US acting as a rogue superpower, unaccountable to any authority.

      Unfortunately some of the US right do not like the UN because they dislike the idea of any fetters on US power. So they have picked stupid quarrels with the UN and severely weakened US influence.

      While it my make the US right feel good to wave their flags in other countries faces it is not the type of behvaiour they tollerate when other countries engage in it. The same senators that blocked payment of US dues to the UN lathered themselves up into a fury of self-righeous indignation when they lost their seat on the human rights panel to France. The statements made at the time were entirely ignorant of the fact that the term 'human rights' actually orginated in France based on the work of Voltaire, Rousseaux etc. Also conveniently ignored was the fact that the seats on the commissions are allocated geographically, the US was not eligible for the Africa seat taken by Sudan.

      Desert storm was a success largely because the US took great care to operate behind the shield of UN resolutions. Even Bin Laden has not complained about the US driving Saddam out of Kewait, his complaint is that the troops remained in Saudi where they are propping up the regime against internal dissent.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    5. Re:I know a few reasons by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      You are the first person in about a year of my arguing this to best me. Good post.

      I guess I'm wrong.

      But, this leads to what America's role in the world should be. From my perspective America just can't please anybody.

      As an American, personally, I go out of my way to learn about world events, to get opinions from other peoples, and to find those with good opposing views. As a country I think we're perfectly happy to do good, to even go to others for guidance and to be held responsible. (Go ahead and argue that we don't.) But the world seems critical, not helpfull.

      I'd like some opinion beyond the after the fact, 20-20, "that thing you just did was wrong." I want to know, what should are country be doing?

      I just want to give up and become an isolationist sometimes.

    6. Re:I know a few reasons by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      But, this leads to what America's role in the world should be. From my perspective America just can't please anybody.

      It is called diplomacy. Colin Powell and Madeline Allbright are good at it. George W. Bush and the Republican right are lousy at it. Fortunately Bush appears to have started to understand that there is a positive value to diplomacy and that unilateralism only damages US interests in the long term.

      The US has the worlds largest arsenal, in fact with the latest increase the US spends more on arms than the rest of the world put together - including all the Nato allies.

      There is a limit to what can be achieved by arms. Brains are much more effective. Bin Laden's strategy is actually very similar to that of Saddam and Castro. If you can survive despite the best efforts of the worlds only superpower to destroy you, you gain credibility, nobody will oppose you rule at home.

      What Bin Laden does not understand is that Castro survived because he had the protection of another super power. Saddam survived because the cost of deposing him was too great for the dubious benefit of installing a different dictator. Bin Laden will be destroyed because he has antagonized every one of the major powers (US, UK, Russia, France) and every one of the local powers.

      I'd like some opinion beyond the after the fact, 20-20, "that thing you just did was wrong." I want to know, what should are country be doing?

      First, stop using rhetoric for domestic consumption when you are abroad. Foreigners do not like being told that the US is the inventor of freedom, the only country that believes in freedom or the only country that God lives in. The US has made significant contributions to the progress of liberty, it is not unique in doing so.

      Second, do whatever it takes to settle the festering disputes with Cuba, Iran, North Korea, etc. The 40 year dispute with Cuba is simply demeaning to a great power. End the sanctions, open the boarders and Communism in Cuba will go the same way as the USSR. Iran has two governments, a democratically elected one that is moderate and progressive and a self perpetuate Shite version of the Taleban. The West has to seize the opportunity to support the democratic moderates. North and South Korea had already begun a reprochment under the Clinton Administration which the Bush administration choose to disrupt because they needed the spectre of a North Korean attack to push their stupid ABM scheme.

      Third and most important, the US must become an advocate for democracy abroad and not just at home. Too often the US uses the rhetoric of democracy as no more than a cover for its own interests. In many cases the US has attacked and subverted democratically elected governments which it beleived threatened its interests.

      The case for democracy that needs to be put is that it is a much more stable form of government than any of the alternatives. Political stability and an honest civil service are the two most important factors determining the economic situation of countries.

      Jimmy Cater may have a limited reputation at home, but he is by far the US president most widely respected abroad since WWII. He had the bad luck to have to handle the oil price shocks and the Iranian Embassy seige but he was intelligent and honest. He achieved the first peace settlement in the Middle East. Since leaving office he has helped a large number of the countries that have made the transition to democracy.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  58. The other problem of globalization. by Dram · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The problem of globalization is this; our culture gets to countries before our money does. There is nobody in the world that wouldn't want to make the income of the average middle-class American. What people don't want is to be inundated with western culture and ideas.

    Not only do people not want our way of life, they are not in a position to accept our way of life. It is well known, within political science, that a republic must have a strong middle-class and third world countries do not have one, it is part of the antiquated definition of being third world.

    However globalization is doing something that the world's poor like and the American middle-class hates, it is equalizing the wealth. Poor countries, like Singapore, are getting western blue collar jobs dumping sizable amounts of wealth into those countries. While on the other side of that it is making all blue collar professions in the west all but disappear and as this happens the only thing for blue collar workers to do is get better educated and find a white collar job. While they do this they flood the market driving the wages down for what use to be a staple for middle class life. Now both the middle and lower classes are both in white collar jobs making the destination all but nonexistent.

    The disappearance of the middle class in America and the west is a frightening but all too real consequence of our global economy. No longer will we have an American upper, middle, and lower class; we will not have an Egyptian upper, middle, and lower class, or distinct classes for Europe or China or anywhere else. We will have a World upper, middle, and lower class. This means that the much of the world's poor will be brought above the poverty line at the expense of the West's affluent middle class. And this is a threat to the stability of our Republic that nobody relizes.

    1. Re:The other problem of globalization. by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Nobody? It seems to me that keeping people poor and angry has its political advantages. For instance, would it be to Saudi Arabia's advantage to fund Palestinian infrastructure and growth, and thus take away a very useful issue (the endless struggle... of somebody else... which they're not helping that much... against Israel?) from their own domestic politics? As long as the status quo continues, they've got a country against which they can redirect their media.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:The other problem of globalization. by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

      Not only do people not want our way of life, they are not in a position to accept our way of life.

      Strongly disagree. I wouldn't be a bit suprised if Bin Laden was a closet Britney Spears fan. These people have no hope, and see us, rightly or otherwise, as largely to blame. Blowing themselves up is a last ditch effort at generating a life with some sort of meaning and identity. We need to kill them with kindness, in the form of media, jobs and education. Don't worry about their culture, they'll take what they like and chuck the rest.

      ...that a republic must have a strong middle-class and third world countries do not have one...

      Too true. So maybe instead of roping them off as some cultural museum piece, we should get them working, which will in turn get them curious about something beyond putting a bullet in the head of a member of some rival tribe.

      --
      **>>BELCH
  59. Ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is quite ironic that you, while questioning the hate of others, spread hate yourself.

    A question one could ask is why you hate the Afghan people so much? What have they ever done to you? Oh yeah, they hijacked airplanes and crashed them into the WTC. Following this argument, was it the American people that was responsible for the Oklahoma bombing? Should we bomb Washington because of that terrorist act?

    Sorry, but your ignorant view of the world doesn't really cut it any longer.

    1. Re:Ironic by Bouncings · · Score: 2

      I never said I hate anyone. I didn't say anything specifically about Afghanistan. We didn't "hate" the German people when Nazism threatened us. We didn't "hate" the Japanise either.

      The simple fact of the matter is, the controlling factions of Afghanistan have committed an act of war, a war crime at that, and we must respond. If you disagree with this, I have an exercise you might try. Have someone hit you. You don't hate them, so you won't retiate. They hit you again, only harder. You don't retaliate, again, because you don't "hate."

      Eventually one of two things will happen. You will defend yourself at the expense of someone you "don't hate." Or, you will be very seriously injured. This is no different. We can have a few dozen Afghan innocents die, or just keep letting Americans die. I'll take the former. If you think war means hate, I suggest you go sing "Give Peace a Chance" around a bond fire with some middle east militants and see if how long you live.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    2. Re:Ironic by CBravo · · Score: 1

      In reality one thing will happen. Both parties will defend theirselves and the best defence is offence.

      You hereby have a circle of violence that is inescapable. The US fights it's war (with planes) and the [group] fights their war [guerilla/terrorist]. If you don't end this circle and decrease that violence some way you end up being unhappy. Killing won't make 'm go away unless you commit genocide (please don't).

      So the goal should be to create a situation that is sustainable for both countries/regions. At some point this feeling should be mutual.

      --
      nosig today
    3. Re:Ironic by joss · · Score: 2

      > the controlling factions of Afghanistan have committed an act of war

      Really ? There were 0 (count em) Afghanis involved on Sept 11. Maybe you refer to their refusing to hand over the chief suspect without evidence, or at least refusing to hand him directly to USA. They offered to turn him over for trial to the UN, but this offer was rejected. Is this the act of war you are referring to ?

      The Taliban are assholes. Unfortunately the bombs have strengthened their grip on the country. Foreign aggression always has that effect. For instance, the USA didn't rise up against Bush as a result of attacks. Even if the fundamentalists had dropped curried goat as well as plane-bombs on the US, I doubt they would have won our hearts and minds and inspired us to overthrow our unelected government.

      > We can have a few dozen Afghan innocents die, or just keep letting Americans die

      If it were this simple, I would respect your logic if not your principles. Unfortunately there are c. 1,000,000,000 muslims in the world, most of them do not live in Afghanistan. Many of them see this action as an attack on their spiritual bretheren. It is very likely that 100000-1000000 innocent people will starve as a result of the US action (the deaths through bombs are likely to be relatively low). Maybe you don't care about these people and think the price is worth it, but there is a good chance that some other people in the world don't care about you (and me) either, and think that killing more Americans may be the only way to express their distaste for this action. After all, it's the only language we seem to understand.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    4. Re:Ironic by drsquare · · Score: 1

      "I have an exercise you might try. Have someone hit you. You don't hate them, so you won't retiate. They hit you again, only harder. You don't retaliate, again, because you don't "hate.""

      I have a more accurate exercise. Have someone hit you, then they run off. You don't know where the person is, so you go round headbutting people at random.

      That is much more of an analogy to America's actions in Afghanistan.

    5. Re:Ironic by MadAhab · · Score: 2
      >There were 0 (count em) Afghanis involved on Sept 11.
      There were zero on the plane, and zero (apparently) involved in the overseas contingent. But the "controlling factions of Afghanistan" means "The Taliban". Given that no one seems to be able to draw a clear line where the Taliban ends and the murderous Arabs in Afghanistan begin (unless it involves support from Pakistan that's every bit as fickle as any we've given anyone), it's pretty ludicrous to maintain that there were zero involved. I just didn't see them roasted alive with thousands of innocents from my apartment window.
      > Unfortunately the bombs have strengthened their grip on the country. Foreign aggression always has that effect.
      Right, which is why Hitler and Hirohito are still running the show. Dead people are notorious for having poor grips on power. You might as well just mouth words you've heard, like "violence never solves anything". Bullshit. It solves a hell of a lot when its use is required, its scope limited, its force conclusive, and its aims just. It is a dangerous game, but its not exactly safe waiting around hoping the bad guys come to their senses before they nuke a city.
      > Unfortunately there are c. 1,000,000,000 muslims in the world, most of them do not live in Afghanistan
      Right. About 15% live in countries that EACH have more than a billion people, the rest of whom are not muslim, and the goverments of which have few if any scruples about hanging terrorists from the nearest tree at any time.

      I like universal brotherhood, too, but not when medieval theocracy has anything to do with the game plan.

      > It is very likely that 100000-1000000 innocent people will starve as a result of the US action
      It is very likely that they would have starved anyway. I don't know if you heard, but the Afghans have been waging a civil war for a decade, there's a horrible drought, and even their sympathetic Muslim neighbors in Pakistan don't want any more of them coming in until they get their shit together and stop behaving like medival thugs.

      And who has delivered the most food aid to Afghanistan? Their "good Mulsim" oil sheik brothers in Saudi Arabia? No, they're too busy drinking jack daniels and cavorting with eastern european whores while they cry about the corrupt west and fund terrorists by leaving money in paper bags at the service entrance. The United States has been sending the most food aid to Afghanistan.

      > After all, it's the only language we seem to understand.
      We also understand rebuilding nations we didn't destroy, letting people practice and preach whatever religion they choose, and allowing individuals to participate in the political process. Fuck you, twit.
      --
      Expanding a vast wasteland since 1996.
    6. Re:Ironic by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > Many of them see this action as an attack on their spiritual bretheren.

      Because their thuglike leaders tell them to believe this. It is the age-old path to power. The leaders see it as an opportunity to solidify power by directing the people's rage against others. They use the Palistinians similarly, which they also do not actually care about, and frequently persecute.

      Also, I highly doubt most are seeing it that way. "Massive protests" seem to have a few dozen or hundred individuals. They interview some of these people and they look and sound like a drugged up Gomer and Goober Pyle.

      "They're killing your Islam brothers because they hate Islam!" doesn't go very far when the facts are laid out.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    7. Re:Ironic by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > Have someone hit you, then they run off. You
      > don't know where the person is, so you go round
      > headbutting people at random.
      >
      > That is much more of an analogy to America's
      > actions in Afghanista

      No, that is a bad analogy, too.

      An accurate one is they hit you, then run hiding behind other people, saying "I'm gonna hit you again!" and planning to do so, if not actually doing so.

      Then you come in and suggest to let them continue hitting them because, occasionally, one of the people he's hiding behind gets hit too.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    8. Re:Ironic by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Somehow, I don't see Iran and Iraq becoming buddies to fight America. Or Kuwait and Iraq. Or Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Or Egypt and Iran. Or Turkey and Iraq.

      "Muslims" are not a single political or religious entity any more than are "Christians" or "The West".

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    9. Re:Ironic by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      McVeigh was practically working solo. After he was caught there was simply no one else to go after. If he were working under the orders of the President, and the President refused to turn himself over then perhaps your comparison is valid.

      This has nothing to do with hating the Afghan people. The Taliban were given more than enough chances to turn over bin Laden and dismantle any terrorist network within their borders. We've more than given them enough avenues out of this, they refuse. The Taliban have decided that the lives of THEIR OWN citizens is worth less than the life of a known terrorist. And yet, the US are the bad guys here.

      Remember, the a war against terrorism has been declared. This isn't just about bin Laden. Afghanistan is known to be a terrorist haven more than any other country. They refuse to comply with pretty much the rest of the world in making life difficult for terrorists. They want to run their country, well, with that comes all the responsibility there in. The death of Afghani civilians falls on the shoulders of the Taliban.

      Remember, if 5 weeks ago bin Laden were turned over, and all terrorists in Afghanistan were kicked out, not a single bomb would have been dropped.

    10. Re:Ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if we want an accurate analogy, let's try for one...

      You're in a group of friends at school and the 'leader' of this group has been stopping members of another group from getting to the tuckshop at lunchtimes.

      One of your group cops a black eye. He doesn't know exactly who did it, but the description he gives points closely to a member of the other gang.

      Your leader goes over to the other gang's leader and demands that the kid be handed over for a bashing.

      The other leader requests that your gang provide proof before they will consider handing him over.

      Your leader refuses and demands again.

      The other leader suggests that he might consider handing his gang member over to a teacher for punishment.

      Your leader refuses and announces open season on the other gang (possibly in part because he was losing face due to the leader of a smaller gang, that's helping you out, being so much better at it than him).

      Your gang goes and attacks the kid, the kid's friends, the leader of the other gang, random members of that gang, and the occasional innocent kid employed by those members to fetch food for them from the tuckshop.

      Fundamentally, all you get out of it is one black eye, a lot of bruises, some spilt food from the tuckshop, and perhaps the hope that it might be the last gang war.
      Whereas it might be preferable to make sure that the other gang's members, and the rest of the schoolyard, recognise that your gang is much better, and only the bullies and (if necessary) the devoted followers of the other gang ever have to get hurt.

  60. Actually...no by samael · · Score: 2

    And yes, we can and will kill all the terrorists.
    Actually, you won't. Because killing them will just make their neighbours hate you more and turn them into terrorists.

    1. Re:Actually...no by Bouncings · · Score: 2

      Because killing them will just make their neighbours hate you more and turn them into terrorists.

      Two points: (A) We aren't running out of bullets, (B) not every neighbour has a death wish or $200,000,000.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    2. Re:Actually...no by bwt · · Score: 2

      Actually, you won't. Because killing them will just make their neighbours hate you more and turn them into terrorists.

      So kill the replacements and repeat until the pyramid scheme fails. What is so damn hard to understand about this?

    3. Re:Actually...no by samael · · Score: 2

      Unless you actually don't want to become a country in a permanent state of war, there's no problem with this.

      For more information read about the Irish 'troubles'. It's not a problem if you're happy to go in and cause massive civilian death, but if what you want is quick resolution and the resumption of peace with minimum civilian casualties, then you need to persuade both sides that shooting at each other just causes problems.

    4. Re:Actually...no by bwt · · Score: 2

      Unless you actually don't want to become a country in a permanent state of war, there's no problem with this.

      What part of "until the pyramid scheme fails" do you not understand?

      For more information read about the Irish 'troubles'.

      The IRA is the organization that just disarmed itself, right? You were saying?

      Besides, each side in that conflict wanted peace. The only question is under what terms. I think negotiation can work in many situations. Al Qaeda isn't one of them.

      It's not a problem if you're happy to go in and cause massive civilian death, but if what you want is quick resolution and the resumption of peace with minimum civilian casualties, then you need to persuade both sides that shooting at each other just causes problems.

      Let's work backwards through your statement. Since we cannot persuade them to accept peaceful coexistance, a quick resolution with minimal civilian casualties is impossible, so we have no choice but to accept massive civilian death. That is the reality, deal with it.

      Of course, we aleady new we had no choice but to accept massive civilian deaths, since 6000 of our civilians are already dead and it is impossible to undo this fact.

      What we can affect is which civilians die as a result of their hatred. The ones that take up arms to fight us seem like good choices. I'm told that 5,000 Pakistanis are preparing to cross into Afghanistan. I would drop cluster bombs on them once they get a couple miles across the border.

  61. Maybe why Jon Katz has an axe to grind... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's no longer working for "the multinationals" as a successful journalist. Why that is, I don't know, but it seems the guy has really taken a slide. Now he posts bitter, lunatic rants on Slashdot for a living. And for someone of his background, they're very poorly written. So I wonder about the state of his mental health. I'm really not trying to be mean... I'm serious.

  62. You miss the point by BeBoxer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You miss the point that even if we 'kill all the terrorists', more of them are created every day. You say they hate us because we're powerful, wealthy, intelligent etc. If that is the case, then there are only a few future paths for the U.S. 1) Continue business as usual, and be prepared to deal with the fact that we will always be hated, and will always be the target of violence. 2) Give up our power, wealth, education, etc and turn ourselves into a third world country. 3) Try to spread our wealth and success to the rest of the world.

    Most of the brainwashed American masses think that option (1) is the patriotic option, despite the fact that it puts us in the losing situation of trying to fight the whole world and will probably end up in option (2) in the long run. A true patriot would realize that the only long-term path with any semblance of national security is (3). Note that (3) is not what most corporations think about when they are going overseas. They are most certainly not interested in exporting any of the things which make America a very livable place, such as environmental protections, labor laws, etc. Rather they are looking to avoid all of the pesky government 'intrusions' that try to make them act the least bit responsible or decent. They want the 'right' to pollute as much as they want, pay the lowest possible wages, and run like hell taking all of their capitol as soon as the next country looks like it will accept more pollution and even lower wages. Or as soon as they have extracted all the natural resources. Then people like you wonder why the masses in these countries aren't grateful that we gave them our pollution and paid them slave labor wages and strip mined their country.

    That's why 'globalization' is such a hot topic. Corporations talk about a level playing field, but what they are really looking for is a way out of the basic regulations that keep America from being a 3rd world country. The Blame America First Club, as you like to call it, wants globalization to mean exporting our labor and environmental laws, our democratic government, as well as capital investment. Corporations are interested in maximizing profits by avoiding labor and environmental regulations. Usually this means avoiding any true democracy as well, since most people actually like things like being paid a decent wage and having clean water to drink and vote accordingly.

    When

    1. Re:You miss the point by Bouncings · · Score: 2

      It's capitalism, not social policy, that has made America wealthy. As my numbers point out, if we dedicated 1/4 of everything we make to the rest of the world, it wouldn't accumulate anything but even the lowest paying sallary for a few months.

      If, no the other hand, we embrace global trade and commerce, we can increase our wealth along with everyone else's. I'm not a pecismist, I'm a realist, and I can see a very good future for the world. No one is suggesting that globalization can't involve environment protection, can't have minimum wage regulations, and can't respect others' cultures.

      If you want to know why capitalism doesn't make us hated around the world, consider Japan. No more than 5 decades ago, Japan was our mortal enemy. Now we are close allies and business partners. Do Japanise people hate us for bringing our capitalistic values to their society? NO. And neither do the wealthy few from Saudi Arabia who profit from trade with America.

      Two observations: If you add up all the non-American charity, in the world, it comes to less than half of our charitible efforts. That is, we GIVE twice what the entire rest of the world gives combined. We gave Afghanistan their independence, by giving them weapons and training to fight the USSR.

      We give Muslims trillions of dollars in money for oil. We give them charity, foreign aid, and technology. It's good for us, it's good for them. The fact that THEIR economic systems do not promote a strong middle class is their problem and their choice, not ours. We are blamed because we promote capitalism and trade in Saudi Arabia. But when we refuse to trade and refuse to invest our values in Iraq, we are blamed.

      See a double standard there?

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    2. Re:You miss the point by bradasch · · Score: 1

      We are blamed because we promote capitalism and trade in Saudi Arabia. But when we refuse to trade and refuse to invest our values in Iraq, we are blamed.

      Sorry, but you have a very bised view of things. Saudi Arabia is going in national debt (that is, they're importing more than exporting). That's right, the biggest and richier producer of oil in the world is begining to owe money to the US. When did this started? Casually, after the US started "promoting" capitalism there.

      Don't be so naive. The US isn't out there being altruistic. You're taking more than giving.

    3. Re:You miss the point by section321 · · Score: 1

      Economic growth and development is not happening in many of these countries because they lack the institutions to make growth happen. Who wants to invest in building a factory in Pakistan? By the time you pay off all the people to make the job happen, your cost has skyrocketed.
      Many less developed countries are not going to enjoy a better standard of living until they are ready to make the changes necessary.

    4. Re:You miss the point by Slothrup · · Score: 2
      We give Muslims trillions of dollars in money for oil. We give them charity, foreign aid, and technology. It's good for us, it's good for them. The fact that THEIR economic systems do not promote a strong middle class is their problem and their choice, not ours. We are blamed because we promote capitalism and trade in Saudi Arabia. But when we refuse to trade and refuse to invest our values in Iraq, we are blamed.

      But we don't promote capitalism and trade in Saudi Arabia, and we sure-as-hell don't promote democracy. Saudi Arabia is ruled by a hereditary elite that gets the benefit of the trillions of dollars of oil that we purchase from them each year, and trickles down a small fraction of that wealth to "the little people" in a manner that's not at all capitalist. There can be no free enterprise without freedom. The good things about capitalism have nothing to do with global mega-corporations making fistfuls of money for their shareholders and upper management, and have everything to do with "two guys in a garage."

      --
      The difference between theory and practice is that, in theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
    5. Re:You miss the point by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      The problem in Saudi Arabia is that the oil industry, the biggest money-maker in the country, employs (almost) only foreign workers. They are french, german, english, american, dutch, etc. These 1st world countries are the only ones with people skilled enough.

      Maybe if SA could teach their people HOW TO READ they might get a job somewhere!!

    6. Re:You miss the point by Bouncings · · Score: 2

      Their economic system sucks, and as I said, it doesn't promote a strong middle class. It is imposed by their government, we support their government. That is certainly true.

      However, I assure you that if we withdraw support for the Saudi Arabian government, and it were to callapse (which is still unlikely), a democracy would not replace it. Another totalitarian government would impose itself, and probably be more brutal than the existing one.

      If we impose a democracy, we will be blamed for imposing our values on other countries. In Israel we prop-up a democracy that's even supported overwhelmingly by the people in Israel. Yet we are blamed for over-involving our selves in the middle east. If we prop up a democracy in Suadi Arabia, the outrage will be even louder.

      One of the basic principals of democracy is education. One cannot exist without the other, and visa versa. We should probably push Saudi Arabia's government to properly educate its public, but establishing a fair economic system any time soon there is simply not realistic.

      What we are doing right now isn't perfect, but it isn't an atrocity either. We are promoting our interest in the region, that interest being oil.

      --
      -- Ken Kinder ken@_nospam_kenkinder.com http://kenkinder.com/
    7. Re:You miss the point by Stonehand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      According to my 2000 NYT Almanac, a full 40% of the Saudi labor force is on government payroll. That's more than on oil, even (25% industry, construction and oil combined). 40%?!

      Hint: they've got a reputation for corruption, and it's not completely unearned.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    8. Re:You miss the point by kinghype · · Score: 1

      Sorry freind, but it is you that missed the point. When you say that "corporations are most certainly not interested in exporting any of the things which make America a very livable place," lets not forget, what makes America a very livable place is the self-rightious, individual drive for $, land, gold, and liberty. These corporations are opening the conceptual door in each third world country that they venture in, by showing the people in these countrys our red, white, and blue insignia of the entity, whether its a man, corporation, or government, that's just out to get there own. Lead on Coke, McD's, etc., and continue to show the world the concept that binds: self-interest blanketed by legalisim.

    9. Re:You miss the point by come_sucker · · Score: 0

      No you're missing the phucking point. Corporations have every right to fuck up any goddamn country they want to. This is based on the principle that they own a government that can fucking nuke any country who tries to resist their rape. We know perfectly well that the most sucessful entities are those who don't give a rat's ass about anything other than propergating themselves (look at the homeless, virii, trolls, ....). We would be better off if one monolithic corporation were to make the most of the human population into their slaves while the the owners fuck their 72 black eye'ed virgins. Liberals like you should be fucked just like those virgins because you think that people should deserve "equality". How about a nuke in your ass to show you how equal you are with everyone else?

    10. Re:You miss the point by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      (3) is not what most corporations think about when they are going overseas. [snip]

      This is such a whiny bleeding heart rant I almost can't type from giggling.

      Ask yourself this: Do the people in said foreign nations benefit from working for Nike (etc)?

      Are they not better off now than they were as cow herders and rice farmers? I would say so. Take a look at average lifespan.

      And then give up your TV, VCR, clothing and whatever else you bought for cheap at Walmart and only buy American (then you'll complain how high prices are!).

    11. Re:You miss the point by jafac · · Score: 2

      When a corporation goes into a third world country with exploitation on their mind - whose fault is it that those people are not protected by labor laws, etc?

      THEIR government's fault. What the fuck are we supposed to do about that - overthrow all these third-world governments and force labor-protection laws down their throat?

      Fuck you. It is NOT my fault that Nike chooses to take advantage of and exploit people who refuse to join with the rest of humanity and live in the 21st century.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    12. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What should you do? Boycott Nike products. Organise protests. Get the government to pass legislation governing imports of goods that weren't produced ethically. Easy. But you're too much of a self-centred jackass to do that, aren't you?

    13. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > We give Muslims trillions of dollars in money
      > for oil.

      We give a handful of people trillions of dollars. There's no "trickle down."

      > The fact that THEIR economic systems do not
      > promote a strong middle class is their problem

      No, it has become our problem, and will be our problem until there is a middle class in Afghanistan. The continuous poverty is a source of Taliban power, which in turn will continue to be a terrorist threat to the US until we remove their power by providing the Afghanis with an alternative. Of course, now that we're in a protracted war with the Taliban, we're only adding to the hatred.

      An okay analogy would be the Taliban is like the drug dealer - there's no way to make money unless you come over here and deliver this package, fight against the Americans, etc. If we could only provide a way, while at the same time helping the US economy, to establish businesses over there (probably after we're done bombing), we could provide a clear alternative to violence.

    14. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It is NOT my fault that Nike chooses to take
      > advantage of and exploit people

      It is if you're buying their product.

    15. Re:You miss the point by bwt · · Score: 2

      You miss the point that even if we 'kill all the terrorists', more of them are created every day.

      If you kill them faster than they are created, eventually they are totally gone. The more you "escalating the violence" the faster this occurs.

    16. Re:You miss the point by jafac · · Score: 2

      nope.
      Only if I'm on their board of directors.

      If those factory employees want better wage and environmental protection, then they should work to form a government to protect them.

      My government protects me from corporate abuses. Why can't their government protect them?

      Oh yeah, because their government sucks! That's my point.

      And no, I do not wear Nike shoes. Because in my free country, I am not forced to buy products from a given company if I do not like them - either the product's quality or value, or whether I disagree with that company's labor practices. My reason for wearing a different brand of shoes has to do with fit and comfort. Yours may be different, yippie for you. But you're not helping these people by crippling their only source of income. The only way these people can be helped is if their government protects them.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    17. Re:You miss the point by spliff · · Score: 1

      This is precisely why the Bush administration passed on the Kyoto treaty, to my understanding, at least. The treaty would relax environmental regulations in place like India, while tightening them here, making it difficult for manufacturing jobs to be maintained, much less created, in the US. I grew up near Detroit and *lots* of people lost there jobs after NAFTA was passed. This supposedly means lower manufacturing and reatil costs, but the big question is of course, is it worth it? For Corps, undoubtably yes, for Joe Schmoe, I'm not so sure.

      --
      Some of us have fallen in love with the notion of giving without reserve-Raoul Vanegiem, Revolution of Everyday Life
    18. Re:You miss the point by bitrott · · Score: 1

      Did you know that Canada and Mexico are the 2 largest importers of American goods? Did you know that Candada's pollution problem is minute compared to America's? Did you know that Mexico's pollution problem is easily solved with GATT trade laws? Did you know that neither Canada nor Mexico is suffering unduly from our influences and that BECAUSE of globalization they are benefiting the way they are. Where is the abuse? Lesse, you don't want us "Imperializing" other countries, but we're supposed to export democracy before even CONSIDERING exporting. We have no problem importing their wares (wares NOT made my American companies), but we ourselves aren't allowed to make a buck either(been to a pier 1 lately)? Both sides of this are so confused, you're all losing it.

    19. Re:You miss the point by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Killing terrorists creates more terrorists, because terrorists have families and friends. I would imagine that most terrorists became terrorists because their families and/or friends were killed or starved to death. As a person in this situation, you see that you are next, whether you sit back and take it or stand up to fight it. So, might as well stand up and fight it, because you're fucked anyway. But that doesn't mean you have to fight fair. When your enemy is about a billion times stronger than you, you have to be creative. So, you get some of your friends together, raise some capital from helpful allies and get some commercial airline pilot training from your enemy. Then, you fly your enemy's plane into big buildings. Now, tell me again how the way to get rid of terrorism is to kill all of the terrorists. When the fact that they were facing death was what made them a terrorist to begin with. Go ahead, tell me again.

    20. Re:You miss the point by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Unfortuanetly, it's hard to find out if they're a terrorist until they've flown a plane into a skyscraper.

    21. Re:You miss the point by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Do African countries benefit from IMF granted foreign aid, when they can only produce goods for export? How about the fact that the only people in those countries that benefit from that aid are the thieves who collaborate with the IMF to enslave their people? Meanwhile, the people continue to starve, and the country goes further and further into an unpayable debt. That is the spread of global capitalism. Nike is just a bit player in this game, and as such plays a minor and possibly more helpful role to the third world people of the world.

    22. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Did you know that neither Canada nor Mexico is
      >suffering unduly from our influences and that
      >BECAUSE of globalization they are benefiting the
      >way they are.

      Fuck you asshole. I'm Canadian, and if you ask any man on the street what they think of NAFTA, they'll tell you it's been BAD for Canada. It's turning Canada into the Jew Ess Eh. Go to http://www.canadianliberty.bc.ca and start educating yourself.

    23. Re:You miss the point by bwt · · Score: 2

      No. That's when we were able to break through our own denial. The simple fact is that the organization that did it has been openly waging a declared war on us for years.

      Hint: the people who dance in the streets celebrating the mass murder of civilians are the ones.

    24. Re:You miss the point by Olinator · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth Jafac:
      My government protects me from corporate abuses. Why can't their government protect them?

      Oh yeah, because their government sucks! That's my point.

      Why does their government suck?

      Gee, could it be the fact that our government systematically and illegally destabilizes and undermines and blatantly overthrows any attempts at local democratic self-rule in third-world countries, preferring instead to prop up easily-controlled ,corrupt militaristic regimes?

      " Coming to grips with these U.S./CIA activities in broad numbers and figuring out how many people have been killed in the jungles of Laos or the hills of Nicaragua is very difficult. But, adding them up as best we can, we come up with a figure of six million people killed-and this is a minimum figure. Included are: one million killed in the Korean War, two million killed in the Vietnam War, 800,000 killed in Indonesia, one million in Cambodia, 20,000 killed in Angola ... and 22,000 killed in Nicaragua. These people would not have died if U.S. tax dollars had not been spent by the CIA to inflame tensions, finance covert political and military activities and destabilize societies.

      "Certainly, there are other local, regional, national and international factors in many of these operations, but if the CIA were tried fairly in a U.S. court, under U.S. law, the principle of complicity, incitement, riot, and mayhem would clearly apply. In the United States, if you hire someone to commit a murder your sentence may be approximately the same as that of the murderer himself.

      "Who are these six million people we have killed in the interest of American national security? Conservatives tell us, "It's a dangerous world. Our enemies have to die so we can be safe and secure." Some of them say, "I'm sorry, but that's the way the world is. We have to accept this reality and defend ourselves, to make our nation safe and insure our way of life."

      "Since 1954, however, we have not parachuted teams into the Soviet Union - our number one enemy - to destabilize that country... Neither do we run these violent operations in England, France, Sweden, Norway, Belgium, or Switzerland. Since the mid-1950s they have all been conducted in Third World countries where governments do not have the power to force the United States to stop its brutal and destabilizing campaigns.

      "One might call this the "Third World War." It is a war that has been fought by the United States against the Third World. Others call it the Cold War and focus on the anti-Communist and anti-Soviet rationales, but the dead are not Soviets; they are people of the Third World. It might also be called the Forty-Year War, like the Thirty-Year and Hundred-Year Wars in Europe, for this one began when the CIA was founded in 1947 and continues today. Altogether, perhaps twenty million people died in the Cold War. As wars go, it has been the second or third most destructive of human life in all of history, after World War I and World War II.

      "The six million people the CIA has helped to kill are people of the Mitumba Mountains of the Congo, the jungles of Southeast Asia, and the hills of northern Nicaragua. They are people without ICBMs or armies or navies, incapable of doing physical damage to the United States the 22,000 killed in Nicaragua, for example, are not Russians; they are not Cuban soldiers or advisors; they are not even mostly Sandinistas. A majority are rag-poor peasants, including large numbers of women and children.

      "Communists? Hardly, since the dead Nicaraguans are predominantly Roman Catholics. Enemies of the United States? That description doesn't fit either, because the thousands of witnesses who have lived in Nicaraguan villages with the people since 1979 testify that the Nicaraguans are the warmest people on the face of the earth, that they love people from the United States, and they simply cannot understand why our leaders would want to spend $1 billion on a contra force designed to murder people and wreck the country."
      -- John Stockwell, former CIA official and author

      For decades, our government -- with all its military and financial clout -- has deliberately shat upon other peoples in their efforts to attain the very freedoms we take for granted.

      And you have the gall to suggest that this is their fault?

    25. Re:You miss the point by bwt · · Score: 2

      Killing terrorists creates more terrorists, because terrorists have families and friends.

      What part of "kill them too" do you not understand?

      Now, tell me again how the way to get rid of terrorism is to kill all of the terrorists. When the fact that they were facing death was what made them a terrorist to begin with. Go ahead, tell me again.

      Round 1: Kill the Taliban and Al Qaeda
      Round n+1: Kill everyone who takes the place of those killed in round n.

      There are two possibilities: either the sequence eventually converges to and stays at zero killed in round N and beyond, or the sequence doesn't. Since there are a finite number of people, the second case isn't possible because it requires infinite people.

      So long as there are generally more people killed in round n than n+1, the total number of living terrorists decreases with each round.

      In fact, at some point, the number of living terrorists gets so small that they cannot maintain political influence sufficient to persuade any government to tolerate them. Soon after this occurs, subsequent rounds can be handed over to the local government.

      The "never ending cycle of violence" argument is a pyramid scheme.

    26. Re:You miss the point by clone304 · · Score: 1

      You seem to be right about many of the side effects, but maybe you are still missing the point.

      Yes, if we impose our form of government on other countries, we will be "blamed" for imposing our values on other countries. It would be undemocratic to impose our form of government on another country.

      Yet, instead of doing this, we are supporting totalitarian forms of government in an attempt to "promote our interest" in the region. What our actions show is that we really don't care what form of government other countries have, as long as we pull the strings, because our people and our corporations are dependent upon the resources of other countries.

      When our government supports another government in order to make sure that that government allows our corporations to exploit the resources of that country, are we still being democratic? Is the will of our corporations the same as the will of our people? In some cases yes, is it democratic for we as a people to attempt to control the people of another country? I say, no. Not if we really believe in democracy. But, we do so, because we believe it is in our self-interest.

      So, this is why many people in the don't like the US and the US people. Because, we, as a people and as a nation, claim to support democracy, but instead attempt to control others for our own self-interest, which is a side effect of capitalism.

      In other words, you just claimed that we should not impose democracy on the world, because people would really hate that. And, instead suggested that what we are doing is better, ie. imposing the opposite of democracy and calling it freedom. Well, freedom for us anyway. Wink, wink.

      Your logic is fucked up.

    27. Re:You miss the point by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Ohh yeah, in my last post what I meant to be saying, in essence, was:

      Why are we imposing anything on anybody? Is this not the opposite of freedom? Does this not show that we are the most arrogant nation in the world. We seem to believe that we are destined to rule over the world, police it, and exploit it. Only we, apparently, have the right way of thinking, because we have the most successful society in the world. The interesting thing, though, is that, in the case of the third world, our message is not "do what we do and you can someday be as successful as we are". It is "do what we say or else because we have the god-given right to run the world how we want to".

      Democracy cannot be imposed, or it would not be democracy. So, you're right in that. But, we can't call ourselves democratic and impose anything, or we are no longer democratic. You see?

      It's hard to be democratic. You may not always get your way. Too bad. That is what many in the world are trying to say to the US. Too fucking bad you arrogant fucks. You aren't going to get your way. Maybe we will and maybe we won't, but we certainly have the tools of oppression under our control. We don't seem too hesitant to use them either. Bomb away, Bush! Protect democracy, protect Freedom!! Yee Haww!!!

      Is any of this sinking in?

      Freedom != me imposing my will on you

      And if that equation is wrong, maybe the Afgans DO "hate freedom". They certainly hate our version of freedom, which applies to them according to this equation:

      Freedom == I will do whatever I want to you

    28. Re:You miss the point by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > That's right, [Saudi Arabia] the biggest and
      > richier producer of
      > oil in the world is begining to owe money to the
      > US. When did this started? Casually, after the US
      > started "promoting" capitalism there

      This has got to be one of the silliest things I've ever read. OMFG, Saudi Arabia is having problems because people are buying up VCR's and TV's and DVD's left and right.

      My friend, my friend. That is called "success", and means your country is so wealthy that it can afford to waste money on trivial luxuries.

      It is not a bad thing, except in a world view where things like that cannot happen because we all know Socialism or Communism is the True Path To Secular Success And Security.

      Pardon me while I go drive a nail thru my foot to stop all the laughter.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    29. Re:You miss the point by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      We could, of course, open corporations there that pay $5/day, an enormous improvement to the lives of almost everyone there, allowing them to climb out of third world status much the way US and Britain themselved did before the coming of...

      Oh, wait. We should pay them $20/hour so we don't "take advantage" of them, thus ensuring no one wants to build a factory there.

      Nevermind. I forgot how my socialist mind shoots itself in the foot from time to time.

      Oh, wait! Socialism to the rescue! We'll FORCE companies to open factories over there.

      Where'd that little doggie go? I wanna kick it and hear it whimper and die.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    30. Re:You miss the point by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > Meanwhile, the people continue to starve, and the
      > country goes further and further into an unpayable
      > debt. That is the spread of global capitalism.

      That has absolutely nothing to do with capitalism, and everything to do with foolish government intervention in the economy.

      A poor country would do well to simply open its doors to foreign corporations. Unfortunately, there is typically far too much domestic hoo-ha and hand waving about socialism, blah blah, to make this work. Oh, and don't forget to implement rediculous environmental measures that we never did for 150 years after our own industrial revolution. If you do, we'll applaud you from our ivory towers as you natives jump thru our hoops. If not, boo, hiss!

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    31. Re:You miss the point by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how going into a poor country, setting up a factory, and saying, "Hey, come work for us. We'll pay you $5/day."

      They live wealthier lives, and live longer, even counting the unregulated dangers of the factory, and so do their children.

      But this is Newsspeak, where freedom is tyrrany, and capitalist greed providing demonstrable benefits over socialism or living in the dirt is bad.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    32. Re:You miss the point by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > for Joe Schmoe, I'm not so sure.

      If his new, Mexican-made GM car is cheaper to him, now, at his new, lower-wage job, then it was when he worked at the factory, then yes. He does benefit.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    33. Re:You miss the point by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      If you boycott every company that goes into a thrid world country to set up shop, how are you ever going to get them out of the third world? Should the developed world just wait for them to figure it out on their own? Maybe we should just give them the money?

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    34. Re:You miss the point by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Whatever. I'm sure that the freedoms that the Red Chinese brought to North Korea are better than the freedoms the South Koreans have. I know that the South Vietnamese are much happier now that Ho Chi Mihn managed to unify Vietnam into a free Communist country. And I am sure that the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot would have eventually made Cambodia (oops, I mean The People's Republic of Kampuchea) a freer and better place if we had just left him alone.

      I guess if Communism = Freedom, then your arguments make sens.

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    35. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, a real pyramid scheme.

      Fictional scenario:

      Rumsfeld: Hey, George. I just got this awesome plan to add more land to our empire.

      Bush: I'm listening.

      Rumsfeld: Great. Here it is: First, we go on live, internationally broadcast television and declare war on Britain in order to free Britons from the evil grasp of Socialism. We declare that anyone who resists will be bombed to kingdomcome.

      Bush: That won't work, Don. We...

      Rumsfeld: Of course it will! When everyone and their dog loses someone they love and gets mighty pissed at us, they'll act violently through their parading in the streets. We, in turn, bomb the hell out of them because, you know, we're acting in self-defense and they're all, you know, unpredictable when they're agitated. For all we know, they could be plotting to blow up our buildings just like those Arabs!

      Bush: Don, that's got to be the stupidest idea I've ever hear...

      Rumsfeld: Wait! Eventually, every one of them over there will be dead, and we could march our ground forces in to "clean up" after ourselves, and seeing how everyone's dead, we can claim Britain as ours!

      Bush: But, doesn't the U.N. currently call things like this genocide or something?

      Rumsfeld: Yeah, but so what? We OWN the U.N.! No body's gonna tell us what to do.

      Bush: AWESOME IDEA!!! Let's hop to it immediately!

    36. Re:You miss the point by BeBoxer · · Score: 2

      But you are changing the subject. We were talking about globalization, which is largely the theory and practice of international trade treaties and trade-related organizations, such as GATT, NAFTA, FTAA, etc. I'm not talking about trying to go in and forcibly change the Saudi government. I'm talking about using trade treaties to favor the countries which behave in a manner which is in line with our values. Rather than endorsing treaties like GATT and NAFTA which explicitly prohibit the tying of tariffs to things like social policy, we should be doing the opposite. We should be using our considerable leverage in the world market to make the world a better place, not just enrich ourselves and plan on killing anybody who tries to stop us.

      I would also disagree that we our promoting our interest in the Middle East. We are promoting the interests of a very small number of legal fictions known as corporations. It is not in the national interest to maintain our current dependence on Saudi Arabia. In no way is it in my interest to have the nations energy supply be dependent on a despotic and corrupt regime with a medieval government. It's foolish and shortsighted for us to continue along the path we are on.

    37. Re:You miss the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the simple views are always the best.

      And every time you accidentally miss them and hit the nearby Red Cross building, how many more does that create? How long will the US bomb, and how many misses will it take, before other countries decide that the bounds of a war against terrorism have long been surpassed?

      Are we still talking about terrorists then? Which ones are terrorists and which ones just have a legitimate grievance against the US for attacking them? Are we only killing the ones who fight back or do we take a decision about the ones who just don't like the US so might do something one day like burning a flag or something? Maybe the kids who don't know better than what their media tells them? What about these eeeeevil people who dare point to US foreign policy as a contributing cause to this?

      Now, maybe it's easy to spot the Al Qaeda membership passes. But the US is clearly after the Taliban as well. And having got them, that turns quite a bit of Afghanistan against the US. Then how does anyone even know who the terrorists are? Seems like a bit of a problem when the original batch weren't stopped in the first place.

      I don't think the problem is having too many people turning into 'terrorists' - rather, the problem is that if the US doesn't pursue the war against them properly, then their enemies become more and more justified in their responses.

    38. Re:You miss the point by The+Milky+Bar+Kid · · Score: 1

      Whatever. I'm sure that the freedoms that the Red Chinese brought to North Korea are better than the freedoms the South Koreans have. I know that the South Vietnamese are much happier now that Ho Chi Mihn managed to unify Vietnam into a free Communist country. And I am sure that the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot would have eventually made Cambodia (oops, I mean The People's Republic of Kampuchea) a freer and better place if we had just left him alone.

      Your argument appears to be:
      1. US government treats some people like shit. (You're at least not rebutting this point)
      2. Communist governments treat EVERYONE like shit.
      3. Therefore, it's fine that we treat some people like shit.

      No-one's been arguing that the USA's worse than communism. It just that America has been calling itself 'Defender of Freedom' for years - and we're pointing out that it's not quite as good as we say.

      Heck, if we thought the US was that bad, we wouldn't criticise it. We don't criticize China here, because it's not worth the effort. We criticize America in the hope that it can change.

      --
      -- This post is about truth, beauty, freedom, and above all things, Karma
    39. Re:You miss the point by bradasch · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but this has nothing to do with Socialism or Communism. It's simply exploitation. What you call "success" is making SA (and other countries, for that matter) poorer. I don't think that the common people in SA is rich enough to the point of throwing away money. But the government is.

      And that brings me to the point again: this external policy the US is applying to other countries wouldn't be accepted for one second if someone did that to the US. See, for that matter, the recent event of Brazil's breaking the patent for some medications. Now, with the anthrax running loose, the US considers it too. Before, Brazil was the devil stealing your rights. Now, it's business as usual. So, before you shoot yourself in the foot, stop and think for a while. You might regret it after.

    40. Re:You miss the point by jafac · · Score: 2

      I think that the events of September 11 prove that these people are hardly incapable of harming the US or it's interests.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    41. Re:You miss the point by Persistence · · Score: 1

      The EU (via ECHO and the member states) is by far the biggest foreign aid provider. Your numbers don't add up, or how do you define charity? Also, it should be added that per capita the US contribution of foreign aid is one of the lowest among the industrialized countries (a substantial reduction was made during the Clinton term).

    42. Re:You miss the point by 17028 · · Score: 1

      Great, but unfortunately that sticky black liquid lies under their real-estate. At least the US doesn't go in and just annex the country like a true imperialist country would. Yea yea, I already know what you are thinking. No, doing business with a country is not "imposing our will on them". Not more than you are imposing your will on your local stores when you choose where you shop. You are excersising force in selecting where to shop, but the store can still choose to do business with someone else if they don't like your money. It may be immoral to do business with a corrupt regime, that much I'm willing to grant, but hardly imperialistic.

    43. Re:You miss the point by bitrott · · Score: 1

      Brave and racist to boot! Why you're going to make quite a name for yourself Mr. Anonymous.

  63. Globalization is inevitable by juju2112 · · Score: 1

    I think that globalization is inevitable.

    The only reason cultures are significantly different is that up until now, distances significantly impeded communication. If the global communication infrastructure stays in place for a few hundred years, it's almost unavoidable that cultures and languages start to meld together.

    That's globalization to me -- the assimilation of all cultures into one culture. It's long term, though, like evolution. So it's not something most people would notice unless they really thought about it.

  64. Facts about globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Most people do not want it, but none get to vote about stopping it. People that believe that God is above all else the priority in life are at odds with those that find that such morality is "in the way" of material progress or wealth.

    2. Globalization by its nature will standardize on lowest common denominators and eventualy make social outcasts or criminals of those that are above that. While people like to say they "value differences", they are seeking to eliminate them at the same time.

    3. It eliminates freedom. It circumvents the individuality of countries to establish laws based on their people or history. For example; the US Constitution prevents the government is designed to prevent an oppressive government from from spying on its own citizens, so they just had Canada do it and swapped information. In a global government, the Constitution would have little power.

    4. It eliminates choice. If the U.S. suddenly decided to outlaw books, I could move to another country. If it's a world government, then there's no where I can go.

    5. It eliminates quality. It's the small local church that meets the needs of the people, not the mega churches. It's the local store that treats you like a person, not Walmart. Why do you think people are moving to the rual areas to "regain a higher quality of life"? Surely it can't have anything to do with old fashion values and worship?

    6. Different views, different beliefs, different values, competition, protecting individuals all cost a lot of money and effort. THAT's NORMAL! Sure my life would cost less and have less conflict if I ignored private property laws and took someone elses car when I needed it, or if anyone that didn't have my values were jailed.

    7. How do you choose WHICH things to make global? The majority? Well certainly USA commercialism is not held popular by the majority of the World's population. Religion? Well the USA was founded on a belief of God but many people can't even tolerate saying "God Bless America" or prayer in public anymore. Capitalism? Well most of the wisdoms in the world point out that there's more to life than material posessions, and they have no lasting value (you can't take them with you when you go). Values? Most traditions and long held values do not support sexual choice, premarital sex, divorce, gambling, etc.

    No matter how you do this, it will likely offend large segments of the populations that hold any values other than modern "anything goes as long as it does not hurt others".

  65. Re: Globalization vs. Corporatism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think globalization is necessarily the problem, it is that a multi-national corporation as it now stands is not responsible to anyone.

    I think the global corporate market is more akin to Japan's Zaibatsu corporate conglomerates.

    What we have now is an extreme bastardization WAY beyond what anyone envisioned 100 or 200 years ago when they laid the foundation for our current systems.

    I think most of the world really is more like the "company towns" of the 1800's. It is finally starting to happen again in the US, except that the towns aren't merely towns and cities, but nation-states.

    All the mumbo-jumbo about the "market" and how it "elects" its "leaders" is a pile of crap. The Market as it stands is not what Keynes and Smith had in mind. eBay is what they had in mind.

    We really do have now is trans-global corporate socialism. What is good for the Company is automatically double-plus good for all.

  66. Incomplete analysis by jtseng · · Score: 1

    Your view on this is correct but the ignorance of the greater part of the American (and perhaps Western) population is only part of the problem. There is no question in my mind that we have to understand past American and Western foreign and colonial policies and attempts to impose Western culture and values have made these people distrustful and angry of us. Look at China: Taiwan has a vibrant Chinese culture that readily welcomes other cultures because it understands and gets along with others while the Mainland Chinese cast a suspicious eye towards them because they feel it will subjugate its own.

    At the same time, ignorance goes both ways. Islamic fundamentalist schools teach extremism in the absence of presenting other points of views(Jewish and Christan schools are not entirely innocent of this). Fundamentalism twists holy scriptures in perverse ways without a rational counterbalance.

    There are people who do get both sides of the story and want to accept and embrace the best aspects of American and Western culture (eg. pluralism, rule of law from what I saw in the news). But they are frustrated at how the US is supporting regimes that run counter to these values, thus making us look like hypocrites. I understand that some of these regimes are safety valves that keep the fundamentalists in check. But these regimes have to either be told to change gradually but definitively or have to be toppled.

    Finally, money helps. One of the many reasons young Arab and South Asian boys go to maddrassas (?) is that their families are poor and these places provide food and shelter w/o realizing their minds become poisoned. And once these students graduate, they see how government officials horde loads of cash for themselves while they usually remain dirt poor. These people need financial help.

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

  67. Facts on Globalization by orblee · · Score: 1
    I was always one to agree with globalization - in many ways it's like the ideal of Star Trek with a single world government and so no money - however, the idea doesn't work in practice.

    The WTO (essentially THE prime mover of globalization) was never elected or ratified by any single government. You have to pay to enter it, and the more you pay, the more voting rights you have.

    Fair enough, you may say. A bit cruel, but it's only like shareholders in a company. However, there are very strict rules and if you break these rules (on IP rights for instance) you are dismissed from the WTO. It explicitly states in its rules that to trade with the WTO, you need to be a member state. Considering the US, UK, and all of Europe is part of the WTO, with the US having the largest voting rights, how is that fair?

    It has also created bad effects for member states as now, to be competitive, you have to have your industrial workers in third world countries being paid peanuts. You could argue that this has brought costs down for the consumer, and it has to some degree, but these products need to be shipped from A to B and stricter quality control needs to take place. Also, as fuel prices and other taxes increase, the costs of transporting these goods increase. Many of these third world countries have other industries but all industries rely on each other as the society members have relationships to each other. Only the trans-national corporations with their factories survive, killing off other local enterprise, and so increasing the costs of these other industries as the country gets more impoverished. So, eventually we have to buy from elsewhere, destroying that industry. And so it goes around...

    I don't know what the answer is, but especially with the current terrorist crisis, we can cope for a while without the easy and free movement of trade. All countries will be hard hit, but seeing as we're all heading into recession, I can't see the problem with re-creating new industries.

  68. More on the problems of Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a very good book on Globalization.

    "When Corporations Rule the World" by David Korten

    The consequences of Globalization, as presently pursued, make the attacks on the WTC almost look like "small beer" in comparison.

  69. global slavery by umeboshi · · Score: 1

    don't bee fooled
    doobee concerned -- we're little children in the romper room gone astray

    melting pot == lake of fire
    USA == Great Satan (trying to cover our asses while we poison and _relentlessly_ bomb third world people)

    now some comedy --
    jethro tull -- aqualung
    the song before hymm 43 == my god
    my god - the answer to life, the universe and everything (the whole general sort of mish-mash)

    the white knight (potus) is talking backwards
    and the red queen (red cross) 'off her head'

    a hookah smoking caterpillar is talking now

    they've got the guns, but we have the numbers
    gonna win yea we're taking over :)
    :)
    :)
    rejoice :)

    1. Re:global slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better chew on another tab of blotter acid. You're still making some kind of sense.

      -AC

  70. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    Basically true, in a fundamental way. But socialism will probably never work until some sort of Great SoftWare OverLord is around to run things fairly. Until then, we just have to keep a lookout for our own interests.

  71. Countries the USA has bombed since 1945 by fantomas · · Score: 1

    somebody care to confirm / deny the following list? -
    "The USA has bombed the following countries since 1945:


    China(1945-46 & 1950-53)

    Korea (1950-53)

    Guatemala (1954, 1960, 1967-69)

    Indonesia (1958)

    Cuba (1959-60)

    Congo (1964)

    Peru (1965)

    Laos (1964-73)

    Vietnam (1961-73)

    Cambodia (1969-70)

    Grenada (1983)

    Libya (1986)

    El Savador(1980s)

    Nicaragua (1980s)

    Panama (1989)

    Iraq (1991 - 99)

    Sudan (1998)

    Afghanistan (1998, 2001)

    Yugoslavia (1999)"


    Quite a list anyway.


    1. Re:Countries the USA has bombed since 1945 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure of 'bombed' as in with planes/missles. But replace bombed with covert operations and that list is actually short, missing a few interventions in the Dominican Republic, Haiti and one very important (to this conflict) intervention in Iran.

      A lot of the interventions were of the nature of the escapade in Iran. The CIA instigated a coup against the democratically elected Prime Minister Mossadegh (sorry, I'm spelling it wrong). The CIA replaced him with the Shah who continued Iran's course of modernization but also allowed no democracy. The crime: Iran was of the opinion that colonial control of oil fields should be over and that the Iranian people should receive the fruits of the land and labor. Instead of ballots the Iranian people received (made in USA) bullets. Thousands were killed.
      When the Iranian people finally got it together to overthrow the Shah and his US-armed secret police and army, there were two currents in the revolution: shiite fundamentalism and leftism. The US government feared what a leftist government would do with a large supply of oil, and figured that a fundamentalist government would be more easily controllable (ref. Saudi Arabia). So the CIA paid for the Ayatollah's plane ticket from Paris to Tehran. The CIA helped the fundamentalists take power in Iran, once again meddling and continuing the misery in the region.

      Even though Iran is Shiite instead of Sunni, the success of the Islamic fundamentalists in Iran gave a big push to fundamentalism thoughout the region. Prior to the Iranian revolution, the biggest movements for change in the Middle East were nationalist movements like the PLO.

      Every time we drop a bomb, assassinate a president, starve a child, there are repurcussions that may take generations to surface.

  72. Another brainstorm thingy by jfonseca · · Score: 0
    --
    Broken Hearts are for Assholes. - Frank Zappa
  73. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by Maryck · · Score: 1

    I think you kinda missed Katz point. One of the first things he says is that globalization is a term that has many conotations, depending on where you are coming from. The dominant, and most negative meaning for the word equates to corporatism, which is exactly as you describe: companies forcing their will on weaker sovereign govts in order to make a greater profit elsewhere.
    However, globalization can also refer to the continuing spread of ideas and community around the world through mediums such as the internet. Although some of these ideas can be negative (American consumerism comes to mind), there are also a lot of ideas that benefit from a wider audience.

  74. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by elefantstn · · Score: 2, Funny

    Dear, sweet Lord. Never in my most imaginative, feverish nightmares would I have dreamt that someone would actually accuse Jon Katz of being a pro-corporate shill.

    --
    If it ain't broke, you need more software.
  75. Not very smart by sondergleichen.org · · Score: 1
    What you do here is absolutely dangerous. Globalization has lead in many countries to increasing poverty and threatens democraty. If you would have read "The Globalization Trap" you would have argued more competent.

    What you do here is exactly the same polarization like Bush does: "whoever is against globalization is against technology, democracy -- simply a terrorist.

    That is not the way we have to discuss this problem. If you want to talk about the WTC attacks, then please take "The Clash of Civilizations" by Samuel P. Huntington as base for that. Because that is what happened here.

    Globalization is a serious problem, you should not mix it up with emotionally overloaded topics like the terrorists attack. We need solutions for that that really help. Your article implicates the call to defend globalization agains the terrorists. But that is not the question we have to discuss.

    Some facts from the first book I mentioned:

    • Globalization and especially global finance market has threatened the democracy in Sweden, Germany -- they were forced by investors to reduce social standarts.
    • Remember "Operation Peso Shield" -- a enormous thread even for US economy caused by global fincance markets.
    • The US imports more "cultural goods" then any other nation -- that is what other cultures feel threated by. Not everybody likes Beverly Hills brainwashing
    • Globalization is advancing much faster then local democraties can develop and often democratic leader argue that they are forced to do certain things pushed by global markets -- this somehow a very dangerous tendency
    • global finace marktes almost managed to crash the introducing of the EURO
    • globalization has caused a dramatic increase of environment polution -- imagine 1Billion chinese to start driving cars instead of bicycles!
    • globalization has lead to more poor and hungry people -- even if we assume that some states could increase economy this does not mean that the people (and that's what it should be about) could increase their living standart! Don't let you be fooled by statistics.

    Cheers! Kolja

  76. Re:The media whore, again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Ah, I knew it couldn't be too long before Katz started raking over the bones of the victims of September 11.

    As are half the columnists in the world. At least flame them while you're at it. There's no fundamental reason for Katz not to talk about it, except that you don't like him.

  77. Re:FUCK DMITRY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what makes it worse is he was writing a sensible, rational reply to a fucking JonKatz article.

    It even had the word 'hypermedia', but still he managed a sensible reply. Yet despite this, that fucking AC wrote that shit. I would call for a ban on ACs, but then how would I be able to crapflood with a simple tick of the box?

    I'm just impressed that he hasn't given up and started with a new nick. But even that might not help with Taco et al monitoring IPs

  78. Read this... by eventhorizon5 · · Score: 1

    I did an entire web site on this issue and other related things just recently. Please, don't take the information in the site the wrong way, since it's based on lots of other sources. Enjoy :) Read it here: http://www.tliquest.net/truth

    --
    #Secret Windows Source Code, in MS C% - if (uptime >= "24 hours") then bsod() else print "Windows License Violation!"
  79. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    Katz is helping to create a Globalization straw man. He attacks the straw man of "McDonalds Globalization", and meanwhile globalization by subverting the rights of ownership of American/WEstern Democracies citizens (they/we OWN our respective countries, defacto) continues.
    Yeah, I know, it's a new idea for you...

    Globalizations SHOULD really be about stoping immigration and the subsequent lowering of wages.

  80. this is one-dimensional crap by stew-a-cide · · Score: 0

    How is globalization always on the side of 'cosmopolitism' plurality and modernity? Globalization, in many ways, is just another word for 'Americanization'. Here in Canada for instance, globalization has meant (and/or is leading to) privatization and inequity in or healthcare system, gutting of welfare, loss of control over our own industries, etc... all in the name of striving for the lowest common denominator (e.g. the American way). Maybe if you're at the bottom of the barrel, no-holds-bared capitalism and greed if a good way to work your way up... but for those of us already there it's a big step backwards...

    Despite what you may have been told, the US is NOT the most modern, advanced, accepting, equitable, etc. society in the world... and we dpn't all want to be like you.

  81. Corporate responsibility by hiroko · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I believe that most (if not all) of the downsides of globalisation stem for the way that most big corporations take no responsibility for the environment and human welfare. Their remit is to maximise shareholder value, and that's what they do.

    IMHO, governments should bring the corporations back to an ecologically and sociological responsible position through regulation. This way their duties to the shareholders would be leveled with duties to the environment and society.

    I'm not against commerce and the synergies available in large companies, but there must be a way to get those large companies to help distribute the benefits to _all_ the stakeholders - rather than just the senior execs and major shareholders.

    --
    Just because you can't, doesn't mean you shouldn't.
    1. Re:Corporate responsibility by WillAffleck · · Score: 1

      Exactly. What most people are unaware of is that corporations used to be chartered.

      Originally, if a corporation did not act for the greater good of humanity, they could be dechartered, dissolved, and sold off in parts.

      When these laws were dismantled mid-20th century, a great disconnect occurred. This mostly took until the last quarter of the century to become apparent.

      Additionally, the actions which granted corporations greater legal rights, as if they were persons and not merely the pooling of people's assets without risk of loss behind those assets pooled, added to these problems.

      This is what writers such as William Gibson and others warn us of, in their works about the possible futures we face.

      --
      Will in Seattle
  82. MOD PARENT UP by de+Selby · · Score: 0

    +4

  83. Globalisation is good!!! by gadders · · Score: 1

    I could write loads here about how and why, but instead get the reasons from someone who can explain it better:

    http://slate.msn.com/?id=56497

  84. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by johnrpenner · · Score: 2


    bombing the afghans is like bombing sicily
    to get rid of the mafia...

  85. What we've done or who we are? by Pinky · · Score: 1

    I'm not so certain that the gripes are mostly about what the US has done or about what the western world is. I would argue that the center of the conflict is one of ideologies. Consider the differences between the two cultures I have stumbled upon by talking to my newly immigrated Arabic friend.

    Western view on religion's role in ethics:
    ethics or being ethical has little to do with being religious, ie: it is quite possible to be ethical and not be religious. Ethics should be derived through a mixture of intuition and case studies.

    Middle eastern view on religion and ethics (from my understanding)
    It's just about impossible to be ethical and not be religious. The two are one and the same. There might exist some cases where a person can be ethical and not religious but that person is not an ethical person. (From my understanding it's akin to being accidentally ethical)

    Western view on religious ceremonies:
    Any religion that requires shows of devotion from its followers is suspicious. God should not care how he is worshiped. Perhaps these shows of devotions are for the church leaders and not God?

    Middle eastern view of religious ceremonies:
    Essential to proving your devotion to god.
    Westerners who don't observe religious do-dads are either lazy, undevoted or scared to be devoted because they secretly know they are unethical (see above).

    weeee, isn't religion fun.

    So anyways, this is what's I've gathered and I'm not sure it's completely accurate since it was picked up by listening to how many friend argued ? and of course this is a survey of one, which doesn?t help. Also I'm not certain of how regional the views are either.

    At any rate, if the views expressed are accurate for about 25% of the population of most countries then the western world has a serious image problem - ie: just about everyone is unethical or if you push it, evil and it can't be resolved entirely by simply being good.

    anyway.. comments welcome.

  86. Cultural vs. economical globalization by nvainio · · Score: 1
    You confuse at least two types of "globalism":

    You have a good point. I hope moderators notice it.

    More definitions: I sometimes make the distinction between cultural and economical globalization. First type of globalization means globalizing culture, "the world village" of Internet, people's possibility to travel around the world and increased information/knowledge about things on the other side of the globe. Economical globalization means multinational companies, increased power of big companies, and free trade. Unfortunately, economical globalization has the side effect to kill small local businesses. (Replacing small cafés with McDonald's, as somebody put it.)

    With economical globalization I see much more problems than with cultural globalization. But of course those are connected with each other.

  87. NATO funding & Taliban ... by flufffy · · Score: 1
    There was a piece in the NY Times by a Tim Weiner a while back which is now archived and costs a fee, but which is also available here.

    Here's an excerpt:

    The Afghan resistance was backed by the intelligence services of the United States and Saudi Arabia with nearly $6 billion worth of weapons. And the territory targeted last week, a set of six encampments around Khost, where the Saudi exile Osama bin Laden has financed a kind of "terrorist university," in the words of a senior United States intelligence official, is well known to the Central Intelligence Agency.

    The C.I.A.'s military and financial support for the Afghan rebels indirectly helped build the camps that the United States attacked. And some of the same warriors who fought the Soviets with the C.I.A.'s help are now fighting under Mr. bin Laden's banner.

    From those same camps, the Afghan rebels, known as mujahedeen, or holy warriors, kept up a decadelong siege on the Soviet-supported garrison town of Khost.

    This was written in 1998.

    Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it (as somebody once said ...).

  88. um, my calculations come to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    8 years- for the street lights.
    where do I gather my bonus points?
    Can I trade them in for a 55 gallon drum of Sarin?

  89. what about global religons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Katz and Giddens has missed an important point. Religons like Islam and Catholicism wholehearted embrace globalism. Catholicism claims to be the universal church -- and has followers in every corner of the global. Latin was a global lanuage long before the web. Similarly a pilgram at Mecca would find worshippers from every country.


    There might well be a conflict between fundamentalism and the US but the fundamentalists are just as much in favour of globalism as are the Americians. Even terrorists nowdays are globalist -- just witness the IRA training rebels in columbia.


    cheers
    Neil Broderick (ngb@orc.soton.ac.uk)

  90. Now I understand! by pubjames · · Score: 2

    why their wealth, their entertainment, and their freedoms have made so many others unhappy.

    Oh yes. Your argument makes so much sense. Now I understand. America is hated because the rest of the world is jealous.

    Of course! That's why everyone hates the Swiss! They have the highest Earning Power (GDP per capita) in the world. All that fresh air and beautiful scenery too! And their public services are so efficient. Bastards! The only thing I don't understand is, since they obviously must be really hated, why haven't they had any terrorist attacks yet?

    1. Re:Now I understand! by bwt · · Score: 2

      Now I understand. America is hated because the rest of the world is jealous.

      Why on earth do people believe that America has a monopoly on being hated? The Islamic militants hate anyone unlike them, whether it's (a) the US (b) Europeans (c) the Soviets (d) the Israelis (e) India (f) the Pakistani government (g) moderate Muslim governments.

      They hate us (and everyone else) who values individual rights and respects individual choice, even though such choice may be used to reject muslim fundamentalism. This conflicts with their belief that the Islamic fundamentalist culture is more important than the individual, which explains why they ask people to sacrifice themselves in suicide attacks.

    2. Re:Now I understand! by pubjames · · Score: 2

      Why on earth do people believe that America has a monopoly on being hated?

      They don't have a monopoly, but they have a pretty dam big slice of the market. It's not just about Islamic militants, a lot of other groups rightly or wrongly don't like the US.

      The point of my post was the illustrate the fact that putting down these feelings to jealousy is in fact ridiculous.

  91. Nothing new under the sun by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1
    Interesting article, Jon.

    Most people here on Slashdot would probably consider me pretty "fundamentalist" if that's what we're labeling people today who have belief systems that have certain absolute, set-in-stone values that they are unwilling to bend on in ANY circumstance. Unfortunately, I'll have to keep what that belief system is a secret until the later into this schpiel, or most of you will just stop reading, having immediately labeled me as an idiot for what I believe.

    So, I've labeled myself a "fundamentalist" now, so what do I think about technology? Technology, awesome! I work with it everyday, love it, there's absolutely nothing wrong about trying to learn more about our universe and how to make our lives easier, healthier, and more productive and exciting. If we didn't have technology, we'd all be dying from anthrax right now, there'd be no way to track down terrorists in dark buildings in the dead of night in a land halfway round the world, etc, etc, etc.

    Globalization, is stupid. Now, I will tell you finally, that I am a Christian. Yes, the kind that believes the Bible is absolute truth. Yes, I'm sure I've offended a lot of you just now; get over it. In the Old Testament, there's a story about a guy named Nimrud, who gathers all the people of the earth at that time (not long after Creation, so there weren't that many people as there are today, obviously), and they attempted to build a monumental tower, the tower of Babel. It's goal was to unite all humanity, and be their 'stairway to heaven', a monument to humanity's greatness. God did not like the fact that Nimrud was trying to elevate humanity to a god-like position, because we are flawed creatures, and NOT gods. So God dispersed everyone throughout the earth and made them speak different languages so that they could not all 'unite' and try to promote themselves to a false sense of godliness.

    Now, whether you believe that story is true, or just an interesting story, does not matter. What matters is the application it has towards what globalization does to humanity. It corrupts humanity. It gives us a false sense of security in our human-ness. It makes us feel as if we're greater than our weaknesses by our own power. It's been said before that absolute power, corrupts absolutely. I would say that distributed, global power making, distributes the corruption globally, absolutely. We cannot escape it. You slashdotters hate 'group-think', right? It's been made fun of in numerous Simpsons episodes. So why would we want to see it on a grand, worldwide scale?

    Being a "fundamentalist" Christian does not make me an opponent of technology, in fact, all Christians should embrace learning and exploring God's universe to learn more about it's design, and about how wonderfully and fearfully made we are. But trying to use science and technology to elevate ourselves to a position of godhood is simply ridiculous. We didn't create ourselves, we didn't even cause ourselves to "evolve", if you believe in Evolution, that was completely apart from our own power. So why would we want to try and "all get along"? Group think will never accomplish humanity's agreeing on one standard, unless that standard is complete anarchy, because ultimately, you cannot tolerate everything, and have everything be in agreement. At some point, as we have seen with the awful events of Sep 11th, that tolerance of everything, breaks down into a complete polarization and lashing out of one belief system (fundamentalism) versus another belief system (globalization). Fundamentalists are not to blame here, the attempt to "globalize" is. I DO NOT condone AT ALL the random killing of innocent civilians to get your point across as Osama and Sadam are doing. That gets you nowhere, and is completely counter-productive to accomplishing the goal of 'enlightening' everyone to the evils of globalization.

    However, trying to create a global coalition of nations that all want to bash on Afghanistan is already beginning to break down. Globalization just does not, and will not, work to create a better human existence. Trusting in ourselves to all get along, all the time is a pipe-dream, and those who believe it CAN be accomplished would do well to look back into distant, and recent history to see the numerous civilizations and leaders that tried to pull this off and failed miserably in trying to do so (Nimrud - as I mentioned above, Alexander the Great, Egyptian Pharoahs, Persian Kings, Ghengis Khan, Napolean, and Hitler). Everyone who's tried, has run their country into the ground doing so, and those countries are still suffering the consequences of their leaders at one time or another trying to 'control the world'. None of them are majorority world powers today, and I fear that the United States of America will be the next one to take its place in history as a failed attempt at world domination.

    1. Re:Nothing new under the sun by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1

      P.S. Yes, I hit the Karma cap. Yes, I don't care if you mod me down to -1. Yes, I'm not trolling or copy pasting this tirade from elsewhere on the 'net. Yes, I post intelligent, funny things on Slashdot, and do not mind getting modded down when I post something from the heart that no one else agrees with.

    2. Re:Nothing new under the sun by j-beda · · Score: 1
      So why would we want to try and "all get along"?

      Umm, because that's what Jesus seemed to be trying to teach us to do?

      If your point is that trying to dominate the world is not a good idea, I could agree with you, but if you say we shouldn't be trying to acheive worldwide peace, harmonoy, and justice, I think that you are fundamentally wrong.

    3. Re:Nothing new under the sun by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1

      Ok, point well taken, I agree that we should all 'get along' according to Biblical teaching, but that will never happen with a secular viewpoint, as I'm sure you would agree with me on, because the viewpoint has to come from a Biblical basis, not a humanist basis. Thanks for pointing that out.

    4. Re:Nothing new under the sun by j-beda · · Score: 1
      Well, just because we are failable doesn't mean we shouldn't be trying, and I would suggest that we are better off encouraging even "humanists" to try to succeed in these sorts of things than trying to discourage them.

      Aditionally, since we can never know the true thoughts and motivations of anyone, we can only know their words and deeds. (Heck, I have trouble enough figuring out my own thoughts and motivations!) Presumably God does have this knowledge and acts and judges accordingly. Thus it is certainly possible that many of those perceived to be "humanists" are directly working towards "God's plan". Discouraging others from trying to do good deeds cannot be a great idea.

    5. Re:Nothing new under the sun by cavemanf16 · · Score: 1

      While doing good deeds is certainly an important thing to promote, I just wouldn't be able to agree that promoting everyone to tolerate everything is a good idea. For one thing, if you have no solid basis for what you believe in, and by this I mean a source outside yourself that offers incontrevertable, multiple, cross-referenced truths, then any thing could be considered a 'good deed' despite how disasterous it might be. Hence we have radical Islamic fundamentalists crashing planes into buildings killing innocent people, because Allah 'commands' that they do it. People loving and helping their friends, neighbors, and business aquaintances is one thing, but trying to get them to agree on whether certain religious practices of another culture half-way round the world are right is another. That is where the 'great' civilizations in the past have failed - trying to unite all humanity under one banner of humanity-believing-anything-we-wish as god, rather than God as God.

    6. Re:Nothing new under the sun by majestyk2000 · · Score: 0

      Well, I for one don't know that I share your complete conviction in 'Bible as truth', but I sure respect your willingness to not care that other people don't agree with you. You go, man.

    7. Re:Nothing new under the sun by j-beda · · Score: 1
      I just wouldn't be able to agree that promoting everyone to tolerate everything is a good idea.

      I certainly didn't mean to imply that. There are however quite a large number of things that quite a large fraction of the world's population do agree are good, and I think it is worthwhile supporting efforts to promote those ideals.

      Often however, I do feel that people have a tendancy to let the "perfect" (ie some given ideal such as those laid out in the bible) be the enemy of the "good" (ie some subset of the ideal, such as access to health care). There is much good that can be accomplished, even by people who disagree on what might be perfect.

    8. Re:Nothing new under the sun by eventhorizon5 · · Score: 1

      Sweet... You're very right on what you're saying. I'm a Christian too, and support competitive markets which stimulate technological growth (that's what Micro$oft is destroying) and also personal freedom, and the constitutional structure of the US. I'm just freaked out right now that the 'New World Order' headed by organizations such as the UN, CFR, Tri-lat, and Bilderberg is becoming more visible each day, which has been a prophesy in many chapters of the Bible, described as a One World Government, communistic politically that would lead the world into its own destruction. A great source I found about it is at http://www.endtimes.com

      Christ rox :)

      --
      #Secret Windows Source Code, in MS C% - if (uptime >= "24 hours") then bsod() else print "Windows License Violation!"
  92. Its not just the US, its lots of others too.. by MosesJones · · Score: 2


    The UK doesn't exactly look too good here, 300 years or so of buggering up the country makes the US' 30 years look pretty small cheese in comparison.

    The point here is that it is important to do things now with a _clue_ about where it could end up.

    Right now is a classic example, the "Northern Alliance" who China regard as supporting terrorism in China. Are a bunch of nutter thugs from whom the Taliban split because the Taliban are religious nutters not just straight nutters. Do we want those people in charge ? No thank you.

    How about using a sensible concept in a country like that like "democracy" and "subsidy". Help to build a democratic goverment and build all those cheap Nike factories in Afghanistan. Make sure the oil revenues are evenly distributed rather than just to the rich elite.

    In Kuwait the west defended a dictatorial regime with a poor human rights record, especially against immigrants from the 3rd world, and replaced it with... exactly the same regime.

    How about replacing a bunch of nutters with a demoncratic goverment.... that _we might not always agree with_. But that has a vested interest in peace.

    Option 4) Work _with_ the other countries in the region, have Pakistan involved in determining the make up and format for elections (I know miltary dictator setting up a democracy), have Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, Syria et al involved in this process.

    Remember this was a war against _terrorism_ NOT against the Taliban, their crime is harbouring a terrorist... who they OFFERED to handover to a neutral country (ala Libya and the Lockerbie suspects).

    Bombing the Red Cross is _not_ the sort of act that will increase stability in the region.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:Its not just the US, its lots of others too.. by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      Option 4) Work _with_ the other countries in the region, have Pakistan involved in determining the make up and format for elections (I know miltary dictator setting up a democracy), have Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, Syria et al involved in this process.

      I'm afraid that won't work. Pakistan, besides already being a military dictatorship as you previously stated, were until the threat of US military force, the Taliban's biggest backers. They (and by "they" I refer to the Pakistani government) are not interested in the peace and well-being of Afghans, they are interested only in keeping Afghanistan out of sight and out of mind. Supporting the Taliban regime was for them a way to have a government in Afghanistan they could control, and they didn't really care what they did to their people. There is nothing now to suggest that they care enough about Afghanistan to want to set up elections in that country (and provide the necessary security to keep it stable), especially when they haven't even managed to set up elections of their own.


      In regards to your previous point, I think the US is being very cautious about the Northern Alliance, and does not plan to just turn over power at the end of the conflict. While I obviously don't speak for the State Department, I think their plan is to help the Northern Alliance ground troops, and then include them in a coalition government, but not necessarily have them just set up a new (and most likely unsavory) regime.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    2. Re:Its not just the US, its lots of others too.. by MosesJones · · Score: 2

      I'm not saying JUST Pakistan, I'm saying lots of stakeholders looking for a way to get peace. Rather than the west dictating what is meant by peace, "success" etc etc.

      Sure Pakistan want a regime that suits them, so do China, so do the US, so do Saudia Arabia etc etc. So why not take a novel approach and have them involved in supporting the process, along with the Afghan people. Have the UN run Afghanistan for 5, 10, 15 years or whatever until it is a stable country, and I mean _really_ run it. Not just have "peace keepers" or whatever. Send in beaurocrats (know any IRS men to send :), send in sports coaches, architects, fund Nike to build that poor person exploiting factory there... then enforce human rights.

      Basically I'm suggesting this is a large problem, and previous attempts (Rwanda anyone, Somalia ?) have been appaulingly badly handled. Why not try _really_ getting involved, rather than just bombing the crap out of them when it goes wrong.

      --
      An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    3. Re:Its not just the US, its lots of others too.. by bwt · · Score: 2

      Option 4) Work _with_ the other countries in the region, have Pakistan involved in determining the make up and format for elections (I know miltary dictator setting up a democracy), have Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, Syria et al involved in this process.


      Ummm... That is exactly what we are doing. What do you think this coalition thing is?

    4. Re:Its not just the US, its lots of others too.. by tonan · · Score: 1

      It's difficult to listen to any of your ranting, let alone agree with any of it. It seems you hold comtempt towards Americans in general, although I'm sure you'll disagree.

      Very few people make the decisions you speak of. And even these people answer to a higher power; stockholders, consumers, voters, lobbyists. I wonder, if someone like yourself was in power would anything be different? I seriously doubt it. A great leader (good or evil, but then again, that all depends on which side of the fence you're on) strives to maintain a delicate balance of power/wealth and social acceptence in order to survive. There is no 100% pure and good answer, you're gonna need to make sacrifices and piss people off with EVERY decision you make. Think you can handle that? Piss enough people off on either side (liberal or conservative, globalism or fundamentalism), and you're considered an evil, corrupt leader.

      Do you actually think that politicians and other leaders blindly make decisions without exhausting all possible options? There are reasons choices are made and not made. Everyone welcomes new opinions, but not when they blatently defames without thought put into it, like yours.

  93. God....damn. by mystery_bowler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For those of you who can't stand being enlightened, avert your eyes. Here's some truth for you:

    The fundamentalists hate Western culture and they want everyone who lives a life any different from theirs to die. They want Western culture destroyed and will willingly put themselves to death to further their cause.

    Why? Because the want their culture to be the dominant one, that's why. It's as simple as that. When one Northern Alliance soldier was asked why he was fighting the Taliban, he said "Because they are not from my tribe." Tribes. That's all this is.

    We, and by we I mean the whole of Western society, are a tribe. That's all we are in the eyes of those who want us dead. We are a tribe and the fundamentalists can never belong to our tribe because our way of life is incompatible with theirs. But the fundamentalists can't slow down the spread of our tribe because people the world over and absolutely dying to become part of our tribe. The fundamentalists have been passed over and left in the "has-been" section of the primitive world. And, because of fear, lack of understanding, desperation, whatever, the fundamentalists seek to tear apart the society to which they can not belong.

    As I look around the room where I work, I see people who wouldn't assume that they are the same as me. We've got different color skin, different religious backgrounds. But to these terrorists, these religious extremists...we are the same. And we are not them. And thus, we must die.

    I want to take a moment to address another couple of statements I read in this thread, without bothering to make multiple repies.

    Yes, we've most likely killed more Afghan civilians than whoever is putting Anthrax in the mail has with their attacks. From all accounts, that still leaves more than 5,000 civilians on our side. If you want to draw parallels between agressive acts, you'd better include all of them.

    Violence creates more violence. Indeed. But what choice do we have? It is obvious that there are people in the world who hate us so much, they would like nothing better than to kill our people. No political or humanitarian acts will ever stop this way of thinking. The very existence of our nation is a threat to the way of life for extermists such as the terrorists holed up in Afghanistan. Therefore, the only choice we have is to make an example of the Taliban. An example that illustrates a point to other governments: "If you don't keep it under control, you won't stay in power."

    Back to globalization. Pay close attention to this, because it's 100% pure truth. We can't stop globilization of Western culture. Why? BECAUSE OTHER PEOPLE WANT IT! The Japanese imported music, movies and baseball just to be more like us! Envy for our success and relatively secure life will drive other cultures to want to be like Western cultures. We don't have to be active in the globalization of Western culture...it'll happen without us.

    --

    My sigs always suck.
    1. Re:God....damn. by icey5000 · · Score: 1

      Irrational responses don't help anyone. Yes they do (necessarily) have a narrower world-view with respect to tribalism. However, 'they' don't want to kill us all either (generally speaking). Frankly, your world-view scares me as much as theirs does. Lets kill them first or just bully them about until they obey is a pretty uncivilized attitude -- it seems to justify their actions pretty cleanly to me.

      As for the death counts. I don't know the actual numbers, but Western military actions have been happening in that region for CENTURIES. Yes, the terrorists murdered 5000 people at once. Yes, that was wrong. But eye-for-and-eye its a foolish, dangerous and ultimately pointless way of accounting.

      As for you comments on violence. What other choices do we have? Many. A better question is: how exactly is bombing Afganistan anything except a huge waste of time and money? What exactly are we trying to accomplish? Whatever it is it won't prevent future terrorist attacks and it won't reduce their hatred of us.

      As for your take on Western culture, I don't disagree. Our culture symbolizes affluence and the leisurely life (don't laugh too much) around the world. The problem comes from the perception (reality?) that this affluence is at others expense.

    2. Re:God....damn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't just export culture either. Think anime.

      :)

    3. Re:God....damn. by mystery_bowler · · Score: 2

      There are parts of your statements I don't disagree with. Like saying that the problem is the perception that the affluence we of Western cultures (re: The U.S.) comes at the expense of others. I agree, that's a significant part of the problem.

      And I also don't believe for a second that the majority of Muslims (or any other religion in the world, for that matter) want us dead. That's not what I'm saying at all. What I'm saying is that these extremists want us dead and our society destroyed. And there is absolutely nothing we can peacefully do, politically or otherwise, to change that. There is no reasoning with these extremists because their end goal is the complete and utter destruction of our (re: most average Americans') way of life.

      Oh, and as far as military action in the Middle East for centuries goes...don't forget war amongst the tribes, fueding warlords, etc, etc. It ins't just the West that's been fighting there.

      If there were effective alternatives to forcefully protecting ourselves, then I'd love to hear them. And just what is the West trying to accomplish in Afghanistan? Exactly what I said, the West is trying to make an example. It's just common sense that you can't stop people from hating. But, you can make it clear to other nations that a given government will not be allowed to exist if said government either turns a blind eye to terrorists operating in its borders or, even worse, endorses and supports terrorists. Terrorists, in this view, are seen as active extensions of a given government, which is how they should be seen.

      You know, it's a real tragedy that we can't stop people from being afraid of the spreading of a culture they either can't or don't want to be part of. And it's an even bigger tragedy that those people can't be reasoned with or peacefully placated.

      --

      My sigs always suck.
    4. Re:God....damn. by broken77 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      What I'm saying is that these extremists want us dead and our society destroyed. And there is absolutely nothing we can peacefully do, politically or otherwise, to change that. There is no reasoning with these extremists because their end goal is the complete and utter destruction of our (re: most average Americans') way of life.
      I suspect that this number is not as high as you think it is. I would compare it to the number of "Christians" who want to see all non-wasps killed (e.g., extremist KKK-type organizations). I would submit to you that the numbers you speak of are inflated in this day and age, because of United States and others' aggression (which you can read more about from links I provide below). So in response to "we can do nothing" etc., I would disagree. (1) We can try to remedy the wrongs we've done in the past, (2) We can make sure not to do them again in the future. I believe these 2 things alone can help quell the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalists who want to see us dead and hanging from posts.
      Oh, and as far as military action in the Middle East for centuries goes...don't forget war amongst the tribes, fueding warlords, etc, etc. It ins't just the West that's been fighting there.
      But that's irrelevant. What they do amongst themselves has nothing to do with justification for us fighting with them.
      If there were effective alternatives to forcefully protecting ourselves, then I'd love to hear them.
      Who says we have to use force at all? I personally think this whole scenario could have been avoided, had we not been conducting ourselves in such a horrid manner. To me, the only way to achieve security is to not give anyone a reason to do this again. We will never be able to squash everyone who wants to do harm to us. The only course of action is in not giving them the motivation.
      And just what is the West trying to accomplish in Afghanistan?
      Good question. Decide for yourself. But I strongly urge you to question the reasons the government and mainstream media are giving to you. Remember, they do not always tell you the truth. Sad fact of life. Suggested reading for this question, and the other issues surrounding the attacks (if you haven't read already, sorry if you have): I could go on...
      But, you can make it clear to other nations that a given government will not be allowed to exist if said government either turns a blind eye to terrorists operating in its borders or, even worse, endorses and supports terrorists.
      Like, say, Emmanuel Constant? I wish I had other examples to give... :-( Anyone else? Little help?
      --

      I modded the Troll Investigation and I got

    5. Re:God....damn. by blair1q · · Score: 2

      See?

      That's how it works.

      We export the freedom, they freedom back bits of their culture until we find those we really, really like.

      That's why it's a good thing to have the power to knock off the assholes who would oppress other people. So those other people have someone to come to for that kind of help. And if we have to keep doing it again and again and again, then just think of it as a more explosion-intensive version of doing the dishes.

      --Blair

    6. Re:God....damn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You asked about a choice?

      It's simple. Stay within your country boundaries. And play with nukes you built in your labs.

      Stop interfering with rest of the world.

      World was better with out slavery, racism and nagasaki- hiroshima.

      What you gave to rest of the world? Violence, pollution and nuclear bombs.

      4 billion yrs of work is going to go smoke in few hours thanks to you!

      Your selfishness is making you blind!

  94. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by smallpaul · · Score: 2

    We compete on the gloabl stage for work. We offer a business advantage over third world competitors in that we are stable and are run by the rule of law. And because we have this advantage over 3rd world, that is the only reason why we have work here at all. Otherwise we would have no work here because we CHARGE HIGH WAGES. People, that is a GOOD THING! WE WANT HIGH WAGES!

    High wages for Westerners. Screw the poor elsewhere! They want to work for us but don't let them! Let them starve instead. We want them to work for us to lower the price of our goods. But don't let them! Let's have our products be overpriced instead! The most important thing is to protect the wages of the middle class.

    Even if a person were as short-sighted and narrow-minded as that, it would still be no argument against globalization. The economics of the situation are that when we send money abroad those people become consumers and they buy stuff we make like K-rad computer games and Intel processors. So they can escape poverty, we get cheaper basic goods and we get paid to do more interesting work than working in a t-shirt factory. What a ripoff, eh?

    If you don't believe the economics, just look at recent history. Ross Perot claimed that NAFTA would send tons of American jobs to Mexico but until the recent slowdown there was virtually no unemployment in the US. We know that low-end jobs did move to Mexico. But we also know that new, high-paying jobs have been created in the tech sector in the last several years. That seems like a good trade to me!

  95. Similar war within our own borders by AllieA · · Score: 1

    the conflict now underway between the United States and some extremist fundamentalists was inevitable. Cosmopolitans welcome technology and cultural diversity, while fundamentalists find it disturbing and dangerous.

    I find it ironic that people are so horrified by bin Laden's holy war against American "technology and cultural diversity" (aka, freedom), yet don't blink when Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, and other extreme fundamentalists declare war on the very same thing here at home. In case you haven't noticed, it was American extreme fundamentalists who have launched campaigns to filter the internet, ban books, control television, outlaw homosexuality, and do everything they can to silence anyone who disagrees with them. Instead of blowing up the WTC, their followers blow up abortion clinics, kill doctors, and call for a holy war against homosexuals.

    What bin Laden and other terrorists have done to our country by declaring a holy war and killing our citizens is appaling and should be dealt with through a forceful retaliation. But don't be so naive to think that there aren't factions within our own country (with the assistance of members of congress who are on their payroll) who aren't engaging in the same thing here at home.

    Right now, Americans are living in the same fear that those who have been targeted by this country's right-wing fundamentalists have been living in for years. Fear for their lives just because of who they are, and because war has been declared on them.

    1. Re:Similar war within our own borders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look in the mirror if you want to see the true face of fundamentalism. Just because you call yourself a liberal or a progressive and claim to be for more "freedom" does not mean you are not censoring, restricting, and attacking the freedom of others.

      Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson may be weird, funny-mentalist Christians, but they never once restricted my freedom of speach, freedom of the press, or freedom of association whilst I was a student on a university campus (or ever). The left, on the other hand, gutted my freedom in these three areas massively and constantly, either indirectly through the university administration, or directly through the use of naked force and physical violence.

      When funny-mentalist Christians get this kind of power, then we can compare notes. They make a lot of noise but have little power outside of certain very restricted geographical areas in the USA. They have never curtailed my freedom, and I doubt they have ever curtailed yours either, except in a purely theoretical or rhetorical sense. You are just another leftist hypocrite.

    2. Re:Similar war within our own borders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would one smoke to be able to type this:

      "What bin Laden and other terrorists have done to our country by declaring a holy war and killing our citizens is appaling and should be dealt with through a forceful retaliation. But don't be so naive to think that there aren't factions within our own country (with the assistance of members of congress who are on their payroll) who aren't engaging in the same thing here at home"

      with a straight face? Jerry Fallwell has infected 13 innocent people with Anthrax? Tammy Faye has a hidden store of weaponized biowar materiale? Get a grip! You may dislike their political stance, but comparing someones free POLITICAL expression to the murderous attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and likely 19 other targets they failed to eradicate with airliners full of innocent civillians is REPULSIVE. Fundamentalists, be they islamic christian or martian have a CIVIL RIGHT to express their political opinions. At least in our country, Comparing that to open warfare is... yeesh, words simply fail me. bk425

  96. globalism resources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    here are two pages that deal with the subject. one and two.

  97. Myths about the anti-globalization protesters by Private+Essayist · · Score: 2
    I've been following the news about anti-WTO protests and the like, and what I've noticed is that the media is consistently portraying matters in an inaccurate way (big surprise, I know). This conflict is often portrayed as those who want free trade on one side, and those who are anti-globalization on the other side. That's just not true. They also make the claim that the protesters are only a bunch of spoiled, liberal rich kids who know nothing about conditions in the third-world countries they are supposedly protesting for. That's just not true. They also make the claim that people in the third-world are very much in favor of globalization that this is what they need to get out of poverty. That's just not true.


    The reality is quite different. Although there are all sorts of groups among the protesters, including, for instance, union members protesting loss of jobs in this country, the general view of the anti-WTO crowd is NOT anti-globalization. Most agree that free trade can be a very good thing. What they are protesting is the MANNER in which free trade is being pushed.


    With trade organizations taking precedence over local government regulations, environmental and labor laws are being pushed aside in the name of free trade. In such a case, there will be some people in those third-world countries who will benefit, while many common people have it even worse. Think of the child laborers making Nike shoes, for instance. The owner of the factory is doing quite well with free trade, but that 8-year-old working the machine in the corner is not having such a nice life. So the protesters are basically saying, 'Have free trade, but do it in a socially-responsible manner that upholds the worth of the individual.'


    Since capitalism and free trade in a pure form doesn't really care about the worth of the individual except as the individual provides work or cash, the media lies about the situation to color people's perception of this debate. They reduce the complex arguments down to "Free Trade Bad," which is not at all the message being argued.

    --
    ________________
    Private Essayist
    1. Re:Myths about the anti-globalization protesters by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

      Institutions like the WTO will become the interfaces with which we can address exactly the kind of grievances you're illustrating. Right now the situations you describe are already happening, and there is no one place to address these problems.

      --
      **>>BELCH
  98. It seems to me... by PhReaKyDMoNKeY · · Score: 1

    Not much will come of idle discussion of the issue. bin Laden hates the U.S. so much, he twisted his own religion to give himself an excuse to declare war on it (or maybe it happened the other way around, regardless...). He's not going to stop trying to get us infidels unil he's dead and buried. I'm definitely not a pro-war person, but it's simple math. His one life for countless others. Indiscriminate bombing is certainly not the way about it, though. Hopefully the ground troops we've put in there will be able to take him down/out/whatever, but I fear there may be too many casualties: their civilians and our soldiers.

    I dunno.. just another example of why religion is the deadliest force on earth.

  99. When your dog turns on you you put it down. by Shivetya · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is no difference.

    The real greed is on their side. While we seek only money, the seek power and to take freedoms that others have as proof of their power.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  100. Read "Power Politics" by Arundhati Roy by MarkWatson · · Score: 1
    Arundhati Roy has just written a short and very, very interesting book "Power Politics" in which she discusses the extremely negative effects of globalization on India.

    Of particular interest is how the US government (including a trip by Clinton) strong armed the Indian government to play ball with US companies like Enron. She also explains clearly the tactics used to bribe local officials to make deals that are very, very bad for their own countries.

    Anyway, Roy is a great writer who uses personal experience and a lot of research to tell an interesting story that would surprise most US citizens.

    -- Mark Watson www.markwatson.com

    1. Re:Read "Power Politics" by Arundhati Roy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arundhati Roy's popularity is engineered by emperialist press for single reason - she attacked communmism is her first novel 'god of small things'.

      Don't you see the pattern?

      Milan Kundera(attacked socialist govt in Czech), VS Nuipaul(criticizes Indian culture and gets Nobel for it), Salman Rushdie(critices Islam), this is what emperialist forces read and promote.

      Hey, what about giving Noble to Allen Ginsberg for writing Howl? BTW it is still banned in US airways.

      So much for democracy, freedom and equality.

  101. Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    violence begets more violence - he who lives by the sword shall die by the sword

    John, did you notice that a lot of people who don't live by the sword get killed by those with swords? I hate to suggest you might be a bit naive, because I suspect that perhaps you understand this truth but if all of us sheep were to disarm, you think the wolves would disarm too? Sorry, but I have to think not.

    I am in agreement that we must understand the nature of the problem on a deeper level than most people seem interested in thinking about it. Only then can we address some of the issues that give the bin Laden's of the world a fertile ground to recruit terrorists from - the dispossessed, the downtrodden, the hopeless. I also agree that certain parts of this 'war on terrorism' could lead to a widening of the conflict... up to and including a nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan.

    But to suggest that we can allow 6000 murders to go unpunished or unprosecuted is equally reprehensible. I don't (frankly) care what excuse bin Laden has (or the hijackers) - 6000 murders is still 6000 people slaughtered with malice of forethought. The kind of individuals that could do this won't hesitate to do it again and they're far enough gone that attempts at "understanding" will only give them time to work more of their evil. Similarly, waiting for the UN to accomplish anything (ha ha, World Court, good joke...) is pretty utopian and also allows these villains to work their evils.

    It boils down to this: If you are a human being, you have some right to life. Those who would abbrogate your right to life for whatever cause are probably evil. They need to be brought to account. Is that all that needs done? Not by half. Afghanistan and a few other places need rebuilt. They need rebuilt not to make them anti-Islamic or to make them capitalist, but rather to make them a place where the women are not oppressed and where reasonless fundamentalism doesn't reign and where terrorists are made unwelcome. That is why we must dismantle their government and their terrorist networks and seek to bag bin Laden.

    Innocents will get killed. Some new bad feelings will be created. But appeasement or ignoring the problem because the solution might be costly (as we saw clearly in several historical periods) has lead to more death and destruction than a lot of forthright actions. The horror of war is a universal constant, but the horror of the Taliban and Al-Queda is greater.

    And instead of focusing on the few civilian deaths (yes, they are rotten...), try to focus on this: This is probably one of the few wars in history where anyone has TRIED to distinguish between civilian and military targets. No firebombings of Hamburg/Mecca. No Nuclear bombings of Hiroshima/Kabul. There is a conscious effort NOT to hurt those already brutalized by war. Will some be hurt or killed? Probably. But not all that many and the Americans should be lauded (along with their allies) for at least making a firm attempt not to kill those who aren't involved. Ask the Taliban to stop parking military vehicles and HQ inside of civilian neighbourhoods if they value their people. And if they don't, this is further evidence they need removing. I notice Al-Queda and the hijackers don't distinguish between civilian and non-civilian targets. Bin Laden himself said all Americans (and by extension, the rest of us in the civilized capitalist democracies) are his enemies, whether we carry a gun or pay taxes.

    I don't know about you... but when a man declares me his enemy without ever meeting me just based on his assumptions about me, and is willing to kill me for that, I'm more than willing to see him prevented (permanently) from doing harm to me or others like me. He is willing to assign my life and the lives of those he uses as pawns a value of zero or less... so I am forced to consider him a fundamentally broken mind and an evil the world can do without.

    Thomas B. Canada

    --
    -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    1. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by johnrpenner · · Score: 2


      i have to say i'm in agreement with most of your post, and that you have made the effort to respond thoughtfully.

      one thing i would have to respond to though:

      > Ask the Taliban to stop parking military vehicles
      > and HQ inside of civilian neighbourhoods if they
      > value their people.

      if this were true - that a terrorist holds a baby
      in front of themselves as a 'shield' -- then just
      WHO is the person who would continue to shoot their
      bombs there anyways? babies and children have died
      from these 'accidents'.

      a dead child is a tragedy both here and there.

      but because we live here, we only see our dead,
      and they only see theirs. :-(

      bombing the afghans is like
      bombing sicily to get rid of the mafia.

      j.

    2. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      > if this were true - that a terrorist holds a baby
      > in front of themselves as a 'shield' -- then just
      > WHO is the person who would continue to shoot
      > their bombs there anyways?

      It's more like a person starts shooting at us picks up a baby when we respond, and they continue shooting at us. Well, at that point, you have to do something. You take your best shot and try not to hit the baby, but you make sure you get the mofo.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
    3. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 1

      if this were true - that a terrorist holds a baby in front of themselves as a 'shield' -- then just WHO is the person who would continue to shoot their bombs there anyways? babies and children have died from these 'accidents'.

      John, you'll pardon me for saying this, because it isn't a happy topic any way you look at it, but I'd at least consider it.

      Here's why: If you allow a terrorist to leverage you by using a hostage (or by hiding behind his population), then you give him free license and all of them will adopt this tactic (since it works). If it doesn't work, then why bother? So in a sense, letting them use it succesfully once encourages its use again and again. Futhermore, if you are afraid of causing a single casualty in the war against these villains, then inevitably you will see greater death and destruction as they are allowed to continue (they hide behind their people, we don't strike, they plan more strikes against us by proxy and their agents carry them out). This is (unfortunately) very much a case where if we don't defend ourselves (ha ha, we're Canadian..... what I really mean is if the U.S. and Britain don't defend us...) and actively persecute those responsible, we end up showing ourselves as fine targets for further atrocities. If we believe in the value of life, we must stand up for the dead. That particularly applies to those in the WTC at the moment. It may also apply to Palistinians unjustly killed by the Israeli army (not all of them probably... but some) and Israelis bombed by Palistinian suicide bombers. And for every other living being struck in this type of crime. Only by standing up and saying "Yes, we really really really hate our options sometimes, but we have to pick the least bad" (and this sometimes means bombing targets near civilians... sadly) can we truly stand up for our convictions that a better world cannot be built on a foundation of ignoring mass murder.

      a dead child is a tragedy both here and there

      Yes. But sometimes the choice is a risk (or even a certainty) of one type of tragedy to prevent another. Sometimes life offers one precious few good options. I think this is one of those, to some extent. I don't like the idea of collateral damage, and we should never be casual about it or the prevention of it. But OTOH, we cannot allow mass murder to go unpunished, nor can the International community hold itself up as a champion of justice and freedom and all that if it does not strike against those who would kill, who would hold their people in bondage, who would murder their own in a genocidal fashion. These things we cannot abide, even if the cost of our action is a degree of tragedy, for the other alternative is to admit that these things have a place in our world and thus a far greater tragedy is accepted.....

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    4. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      Similarly, waiting for the UN to accomplish anything (ha ha, World Court, good joke...) is pretty utopian and also allows these villains to work their evils.

      The U.N. and World Court are ineffective because the U.S. is constantly working against them. Look at the history with Nicaragua and Israel. The U.S. ignored international law in its war against Nicaragua (remember the Iran-Contra scandal?), and the U.S. and Israel have consistently stood alone in voting against peace resolutions in the Middle East.

      But to suggest that we can allow 6000 murders to go unpunished or unprosecuted is equally reprehensible. I don't (frankly) care what excuse bin Laden has (or the hijackers) - 6000 murders is still 6000 people slaughtered with malice of forethought.

      So if the U.S. took actions that it knew would cause the deaths of thousands of Afghani civilians, then Afghanistan would be obliged to retaliate against the U.S.?

      Innocents will get killed.

      So Afghanistan should begin bombing Washington?

      This is probably one of the few wars in history where anyone has TRIED to distinguish between civilian and military targets. ... There is a conscious effort NOT to hurt those already brutalized by war. Will some be hurt or killed? Probably. But not all that many.

      Once we announced we were going to bomb Afghanistan, 1) all food aid stopped from the U.N., 2) all aid stopped from Pakistan, 3) massive numbers of starving refugees fled to the closed Pakistani border. At the time, an estimated 6 to 7 million people were on the brink of starvation. It is expected that if bombing continues into winter such that crops are not harvested, several million people will starve before spring.

      The U.S. planners expect this to happen, as do the U.N. and many top aid organizations. So the U.S. took actions that it fully expects will result in millions of civilian casualties. Sure, they (probably) aren't targeting them with their cluster bombs, but they're killing them by direct action nonetheless.

      I understand your desire for security from people like bin Laden, but you must understand that U.S. foreign policy created him and his network. If we didn't treat the Muslim population like worthless garbage, there wouldn't be so much enmity toward us, and his network would not be able to recruit.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    5. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thomas B wrote: "It boils down to this: If you are a human being, you have some right to life. Those who would abbrogate your right to life for whatever cause are probably evil."

      This is true, However guilty US is of imerialism and state terorism that guilt must be put on distinkt people or atlest the armed forces.

      Kollectiv guilt is not an accaptable way to think. And Kollektive punishment is always a krime. But the cynism of sep 11 was, howewer spectacular, not unice.

      The US, and the rest of the west, have regulary sacrifised millions of inocent lifes to protect ther imperialist intrest.

      As unfar it was to the victims of sept 11, as unfair it is now to the inocent afgans. As much Bin Laden is hated for sept 11, as much will people hate the west for this, as well as erlier, imperialist terrorjobs. Just as much Bin Laden must be brougt to justice, so must the leaders of the west. As much Bush gets suport from emotionaly upset people, so will Bin Laden :-(

      Globalisation, as defind by powers in the west, is not cosmopolitan, it is an intensified imperialism. And the struggel is not democracy and cosmopolism versus fundementalism. The strugel is democrasy, solidarity and kosmopolism versus imperialism and faschism. Faschism might profit on fundamentalism, but first and most, it profits on imperialism.

      Imperialism both as 'holy enemy' and as the invisable hand that instals faschists in power. It's alot of talk about if democracy can survive the terorist threat or if it will kill itself by protecting itself. The question we have to ask is:

      • What do we like the most?
      • Democrasy or our imperialist privilige?
      • Freedom or other peopels mony?

      Big biz, who get the mony and don't need freedom have ther choose made, nowe it's your turn to take a stand.

      /Lars

    6. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by mrogers · · Score: 2
      It boils down to this: If you are a human being, you have some right to life. Those who would abbrogate your right to life for whatever cause are probably evil. They need to be brought to account.

      [snip]

      Innocents will get killed. Some new bad feelings will be created.

      Please tell me the irony was deliberate. You cannot in one breath claim that there is a universal right to life, and that anyone who violates that right is evil, and in the next breath claim that innocent deaths are a reasonable means to an end. It is hypocrisy, plain and simple.

      It is this kind of muddy thinking that perpetuates the cycles of revenge in the Middle East, in the Balkans and in Northern Ireland. Sadly, a new cycle of revenge is being created between America and the Muslim world. Do you think the deaths of innocent civilians will make Osama Bin Laden sorry for what he has done? Or will they attract more people to his cause? Do you think that killing the family of a potential terrorist will make him hate you less?

      Even if the United States manages to kill the individuals responsible for the September 11 attacks, it will have created thousands of new enemies in the process. Look at what is happening already. Pakistanis are crossing into Afghanistan to help drive out American invaders who aren't even there yet! British Muslims are travelling to Afghanistan to join what they believe is a holy war. They give the same justification for their actions as the American government: their culture is under attack, and they must defend it through retaliation.

      As a relatively rational culture, the United States must take the decision to break the cycle of violence. You cannot persuade religious fundamentalists of the correctness of your point of view by bombing them! All you will achieve is to persuade previously moderate people that you are a violent hypocrite.

    7. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      I dont think you understand what was originaly meant by that saying "by the sword". Its not a literaly sense that you are living right next to a sword or have a sword right by you. What was meant by living by the sword is like saying "following the rules by the book". Its like someone who uses a sword for everything, from not just defense and offense but also to end descrepencies, it has the general meaning rather then specific. Living by the gun would probably be what was done by cowboys (and cowgirls) in the old west, not by common people who keep a gun in their house in case of an emergency. Living by the sword is probably what samarai and knights could be considered to be doing, not common people who may practice as a hobby. "Live by the sword, die by the sword", simply means if you go around using a sword to solve all your problems, you will die with it (its not really to do with defense, its more general then that).

      But to get back to what he was saying by violence begettes violence, is that for example, if person A kills person Bs brother, then person B being very emotional and angry (whether their brother was the one who caused it or not) will kill person A, person As father in turn will get angry and emotional and kill person B, and it continues on and on and on as a family/tribal fued, or take that up a notch to the national level and you have a continuous war between people who dont know a diffrent life style. If you look at what its about, its about a virus infecting these peoples minds, the virus is the death of a friend or family member, one person kills someone elses family member and they basicly infect the people in their family with this virus.

      But he is not refering to self defense or offense so much, but he is refering to the cycles of *revenge* rather then justice. An eye for an eye leaves the world blind (so to speak).

      > They need rebuilt not to make them anti-Islamic or to make them capitalist, but rather to make them a place where the women are not oppressed and where reasonless fundamentalism doesn't reign and where terrorists are made unwelcome. That is why we must dismantle their government and their terrorist networks and seek to bag bin Laden.

      The problem I am seeing here, is that a number of afgans support the taliban, even more so now that they are being bombed. Sure they more then likely lack enough education to make a proper decision in the manner but that fact is going to remain and fixing it will take time, it could take a generation of people, and installed governments in the past times we have dont it have failed, the only time it seemed to work is in Japan and Germany after world war 2, but every other country that america has tried to install governments (or help rebels take over a government and replace with their own form) in has turned corrupt and has caused rebels to attack them. Especially in central-south america.

      > This is probably one of the few wars in history where anyone has TRIED to distinguish between civilian and military targets.

      Their has been a number of times where they claim to be trying. Since we are not the military generals we dont know for sure if they do it on purpose at all or if they are accidental, but it almost doesnt matter (on purpose or not) because innocent people will die (and have died), no amount of effort will prevent that, only reduce it, but you have to wonder where the morals lie in that, is the amount of people make the diffrence? If so, there is a lot of things that kill more people in america then terrorists. If what makes a bigger diffrence is that they were killed by people from another country whom dont like us, then this is not about the number of people its about pride and revenge. And yet a third way to think about it, is the means of death, the way those people died in a horrible way, versus someone who passes out (and away) because their lungs cant take anymore smoking, but car accidents also kill a lot of people in america, and even drunk driving accidents are higher. I'm not trying to say that we shouldnt be bombing and attacking the Taliban and Al Qaeda, I'm saying we should not try to lay it off as moral or ethical, we are laying out some evil because of their evil. And yes, evil is destruction (dictionary defintion), and we are set out for destruction, so we are set out to do some evil our selves. The Taliban/Osama Bin Laden have a virus in their minds about destruction, and they have spread it to many of us here, and so we shall continue to spread it, there is no way to control a mass of people to prevent over reaction and to take control of a situation, instead we have no choice but the allowance of a lashing out.

      > I don't know about you... but when a man declares me his enemy without ever meeting me just based on his assumptions about me, and is willing to kill me for that, I'm more than willing to see him prevented (permanently) from doing harm to me or others like me.

      And I would hope vice versa as well, if you declare someone your enemy without ever meeting them just based on assumptions about them and you are willing to have them killed for that, I'd hope you then be more then willing to prevent yourself from doing harm to them.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    8. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by 17028 · · Score: 1

      And your suggestion is? Can you suggest an option for the US that would make massmurderers who can kill over 5000 civilians in a premeditated action stop? And if there was such an action, which there isn't, would it be right to take it? No, because then we are saying "everyone who can kill more than 1000 americans will get their wish granted".
      I feel sorry for the innocent Afghanis caught in the cross-fire, but not taking action would be even worse. Appeasement in the face of evil purpose is tantamount to suicide.
      That's not to say we can't simultaneously take action to help people and improve relations with Islamic majority nations in different ways.

    9. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by mrogers · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately I think you're right - there is no single action that will stop the terrorists. However, retaliation comes closer to granting the terrorists' wishes than almost any other action. These people want a holy war between the United States and Muslims everywhere. The United States might not be destroyed by such a war, but its suffering would be 100 times worse than the current terrorist campaign.

      Retaliation is what the terrorists want, because it justifies further atrocities and wins them support among their own people. Why else would they commit an act so terrible that it is almost unthinkable not to retaliate? Osama Bin Laden wants US forces removed from Saudi Arabia, and to achieve that aim he intends to make the United States as hated in the Arab world as Israel. Saudi Arabia would not allow Israeli bases on its soil, and if Bin Laden achieves his aims it will not allow American bases either. If Bin Laden can make the United States act as badly towards Muslims as Israel has done (albeit in the face of terrible provocation) - if he can make the US invade a Muslim country and kill innocent Muslim people - he will achieve his aim. If he can turn the people of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia against their own governments, he will achieve his aim.

      Appeasement in the face of evil purpose is tantamount to suicide.

      Only if your enemy has the power to destroy you. Bin Laden does not have the power to destroy the United States through terrorism, but he has the power to draw it into a long and terrible war which it cannot win.

    10. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 1

      I suspect part of my original thinking did not come through clearly enough.

      Pursuit of someone who kills N people in a terrorist action isn't "retaliation". It's pursuit of a criminal to bring them to justice PERIOD. Not pursuing them is saying "you've killed people, but killing one person is a crime, killing 1000 is a statistic." You cannot set that precedent. You cannot so denigrate the value of a human life that you are not willing to stand up and say "someone who takes these lives must be hunted down and brought to account".

      Yes, if this conflict is poorly spun (and bin Laden is a good infotruthspeak spinner), then we could have a lot of problems. But letting him go after he did this was never an option. And with a state to harbour him that itself is guilty of murder and oppression, I don't see as we had much choice but to act. The trial will come after the direct attack is done and when all that remains is the aftermath. Therein lies the real challenge.

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    11. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 1

      I understand the dangers inherent in a cycle of violence. However, in our societies we define the murder of an individual as a very serious offense (perhaps even capital). How can the murder of 1000 people be less serious? Must we not pursue it with the maximum vigor possible?

      Further, there is a quantifiable difference between:
      1) attacking an unsuspecting civilian population with weapons of mass destruction
      2) attacking an identified military force (enemy national or terrorist) with precision munitions and targeted strikes

      In the first case, I don't care who I kill. The more the better. In the second, I try NOT to kill non-combatants. Sure, if they end up dead that is a bad thing and their relatives won't see it any way but that way.

      But the difference is in part in the intention, in part in the degree. I cannot abide a logic that suggest we do nothing because in selecting a particular course of action we may have a small number of very unfortunate side effects. That argument would have you sit on your behind awaiting the perfect (ie never happen) solution with no sad collateral effects such as unintended civilian deaths. And that is basically saying that those 6K people who died don't matter because the fact we may kill a few hundred innocents in the pursuit of a longer term good has detered us from acting.

      We have to try VERY hard not to kill those not involved, though identifying the "involved" in the Afghan situation is a little dicey. But for the good of that region, it must be liberated (and I do use that word deliberately, because you cannot call the Taliban government anything short of monstrous in terms of the way it treats dissidents, those of other faiths, and women). And rebuilt. Rebuilt with input from those who live there, but rebuilt to respect other nations right to exist, to respect the right to life of other nations populations, to respect the rule of international law and the rights of the individual Afghan to have some sort of security, opportunity, and freedom from oppression.

      Is this a hard task? Hooo boooy. Yes. Japan and Germany are the scale we're talking here. This is not a weekend project. This is generational. But look at how successful we were in Japan and Germany. They are now among the most democratic and to a large extent non-aggressive nations in the civilized world. They have benefitted from the reconstruction and the increased education and economic opportunity, which have strengthened the cause of freedom and social justice. Are they perfect? Nope. But they're a lot better than they were. And they're a lot better than Afghanistan now. But it took decades.

      Any death is a horror. But sometimes (as I said) life leaves you ten bad choices and one of them is just less awful than the others. That's the one I think we're trying to take here. Could it cost us badly if things don't pan out? Oh yeah. Could it cost us a lot even if it does pan out, given it wasn't a perfect option to start with, oh yeah! Don't get me wrong: This is a nasty little adult situation - no white knights, no cavalry to the rescue. The only way to get out of this with any redemption is by winning the military fight quickly, carefully, and getting to work saving the millions of innocents with a vengeance. And rebuilding something that can eventually join the international community as a worthwhile member. That's what we've got to do and it will be the Devil's own bit of work to accomplish.

      But we don't seem to have too many good options, now do we?

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    12. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 1

      Please tell me the irony was deliberate. You cannot in one breath claim that there is a universal right to life, and that anyone who violates that right is evil, and in the next breath claim that innocent deaths are a reasonable means to an end. It is hypocrisy, plain and simple.

      Calling it hypocrisy does not make it so. It is only hypocritical if you are utopian. Every human has (IMO) a right to life. So killing them isn't a good thing. However, part of ensuring the right to life of the greatest number of humans is pursuing those who violate that right. If the pursuit has bad side-effects, they must be weighted in the decision. But so must the consequences of not pursuing those who violate this right. This is a situation where I forsee no "winning" strategy, just losing and losing worse. Losing worse is doing nothing and letting slaughter go unattended. Letting murderous animals plan further attacks and execute them with the sponsorship of a corrupt and monstrous state. That is the worst case. Fighting a war that risks a small number of civilian deaths, while bad, is the "least bad" if it can bring the killers to account, remove the monstrous state from power, and in the long term offer options for the many survivors and refugees.

      It is this kind of muddy thinking that perpetuates the cycles of revenge in the Middle East, in the Balkans and in Northern Ireland. Sadly, a new cycle of revenge is being created between America and the Muslim world. Do you think the deaths of innocent civilians will make Osama Bin Laden sorry for what he has done?

      Did I ever suggest that it would? No. So what makes you think I am that out of touch? bin Laden is "broken". We can't rehabilitate him. He has chosen his path. I believe his "faith" (the maltreated and selective variant he espouses) will sustain him in any horrific action. Guilt won't be something he feels, or at least he'll be able to assuage his guilt with his other convictions. The best thing we can do with him is render him incapable (jail or otherwise) of doing any further harm. I leave it to his God and mine to sort out the status of his eternal soul.

      Or will they attract more people to his cause? Do you think that killing the family of a potential terrorist will make him hate you less?

      Anyone who has relatives killed in war will feel animosity. That is natural. BUT... if a murderer walks into a grocery store and starts gunning down schoolgirls, do the police shoot him or do they worry that his brother might hate cops after that? They shoot him. The risk he presents is such that the risks that _may_ follow are weighed less. Similarly, bin Laden before Sept 11 was a dangerous guy. But that wasn't enough to merit his hunting down. Now he's a mass murderer and an international icon of fundamentalist hate. Those deaths call out for an accounting, for justice.

      The difference between justice and revenge is mostly a matter of perspective and motivation. A state imprisoning or killing someone can risk that person's relatives becoming villains out of rage and hurt. But that doesn't remove the need of a state to pursue crime. Similarly, the coalition community, acting in the abscence of a true international government (and any real effective international power group), are taking the steps to pursue a mass murderer and his associates. Is there a risk? Surely. Does that suggest we should not pursue this course? Nope.

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    13. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by kaladorn · · Score: 1

      The U.N. and World Court are ineffective because the U.S. is constantly working against them. Look at the history with Nicaragua and Israel. The U.S. ignored international law in its war against Nicaragua (remember the Iran-Contra scandal?), and the U.S. and Israel have consistently stood alone in voting against peace resolutions in the Middle East.

      Really? So, let me ask you this: If all your neighbours voted to tar and feather you, and only you and one of your friends voted against it, does that mean you are the problem? A peace enforced from without and without the consent of both parties is not a peace - it is an ultimatum.

      And on the other hand, do you really think it is only US intransigence that hobbles the UN? Not the fact it represents 160+ interests, each with their own lobby groups, some led by some very unpleasant folk, and representing populations with some real questionable standards of education and free discourse? You don't think corruption, incompetence, and personal ambition have hobbled UN performance as much as US action? If you don't acknowedge the UN has far more wrong with it than the US's stance, then you're either poorly informed or intentionally misleading yourself.

      So if the U.S. took actions that it knew would cause the deaths of thousands of Afghani civilians, then Afghanistan would be obliged to retaliate against the U.S.?

      If the US were to INTENTIONALLY slaughter a large number of Afghans without having a provocation in the form of a massive attack on their population, then yes. You're attempting the moral equivalence ploy and it ignores key distinctions. The coalition is NOT intentionally targeting civilians. bin Laden (Taliban supported and funded) did and do in their continuing attrocities. The coalition didn't throw the first punch in this round. bin Laden and the Taliban did, striking without warning. These are rather important distinctions. Similar to why shooting someone trying to kill you is not murder... even if it is unfortunate and tragic in a human sense.

      So Afghanistan should begin bombing Washington?

      Hmmm. I thought the Pentagon was in Washington. As I recall, they crashed a plane into it. I'd say they started this round by bombing Washington.

      For the record, I'm not sure you can use the corrollary consequences of this (ie the refugee tragedy of unknown and varyingly estimated extents) as a reason to not do this. If that was the case, are you saying all a murderer has to do is hide among a population of the downtrodden and starving in order to evade justice? If so... I see a new trend for terrorists. (Actually, it is an old one because these places look like they are good recruiting beds too). Without putting too fine a point on it: WHERE DO YOU THINK THE LARGEST AMOUNT OF THAT AID COMES FROM?

      The United States. In terms of gross dollars, the US is the most generous nation on earth. Perhaps even per capita. And yes the flow of that aid is impeded. If they hadn't given it (to people who are willing to bomb their cities....), then it wouldn't be sitting there waiting to be shipped and those people would still be starving.

      The Taliban have brought their people to this juncture and trying to place the blame on the heads of the US is like trying to blame society for the actions of a sociopath. It is misplaced blame. The US has a hard challenge in getting the Taliban and bin Laden fast enough to save the bulk of the refugees and avoid a major widening of the conflict. But that doesn't begin to suggest we shouldn't be doing it, just how we should be doing it and what the parameters of our operations are.

      --
      -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
    14. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 0

      > I understand the dangers inherent in a cycle of violence. However, in our societies we define the murder of an individual as a very serious offense (perhaps even capital). How can the murder of 1000 people be less serious? Must we not pursue it with the maximum vigor possible?

      It doesnt make sense though if that maximum vigor requires the death of more people.

      > In the first case, I don't care who I kill. The more the better. In the second, I try NOT to kill non-combatants. Sure, if they end up dead that is a bad thing and their relatives won't see it any way but that way.

      As our goverment and even Timothy McVeigh put it, its collateral damage. No amount of effort will ever have zero "collateral damage", so it is to be acceptable part of "war".

      > I cannot abide a logic that suggest we do nothing because in selecting a particular course of action we may have a small number of very unfortunate side effects.

      And as far as I have seen no one is suggesting we do nothing, even the anti-war demonstrators are not saying we should do nothing. War and pacificism are not the only choices (although some would like you to believe it), and the way we proceed to war is not the only way to do it. Right now we proceed as a vigilante with a group of other vigilantes (coalition), that is not the only way to bring the terrorists to justice, but we act unilaterally in this case because we can push around other countries rather then do what ever american in our country has to do to persue justice by looking toward the law and order. But bush being a texan thinking he is a cowboy on a bounty hunt rather go unilateraly with his posse. But at the same time, the world is not civilized and looking to law and order only applies as a means for civilized people to act.

      > And that is basically saying that those 6K people who died don't matter because the fact we may kill a few hundred innocents in the pursuit of a longer term good has detered us from acting.

      It sounds like the only way you think their deaths will matter is by justifying their deaths. If we kill innocent people, even if its just one innocent person, we justify the deaths of all innocent people, we send a message that the death of innocents requires the death of other innocents.

      > We have to try VERY hard not to kill those not involved, though identifying the "involved" in the Afghan situation is a little dicey.

      Agreed, a lot of afganistans and those in pakastan think that our government is wrong and support the taliban. And as bush laid clear, "you either are with us, or with the terrorists", to match the *single* binary neuron in his brain.

      > But for the good of that region, it must be liberated (and I do use that word deliberately, because you cannot call the Taliban government anything short of monstrous in terms of the way it treats dissidents, those of other faiths, and women). And rebuilt.

      Its to bad that countries have to have terrorists present in their borders before we start thinking about helping them, and in that case we dont help them we "rebuild" them. These terrorists are there because we supported them originally when they went against communism, the time they were there they recieved support from their people and polarized the people to their view of the world. Even a number of the women over there believe that is the way they are supposed to live (just as a number of republican/conservative women think they should not have abortion as a choice because of their religion). Getting rid of the taliban doesnt magicly make them into liberal people, rebuilding their country as far as I can tell only involves aid and throughing up a monarchy government, I dont know about you but I have not heard anything else, the only education I have heard about (in any media) is some christian missionaries who want to bring more people into their faith. But in the end we are not doing this because the Taliban is bad to its people, and that is something you have to remember, we support governments that are bad to its people, we support Saudi Arabia for example. We are doing this to combat terrorism, to get the suspect Osama Bin Laden.

      > Japan and Germany are the scale we're talking here. This is not a weekend project. This is generational. But look at how successful we were in Japan and Germany. They are now among the most democratic and to a large extent non-aggressive nations in the civilized world. They have benefitted from the reconstruction and the increased education and economic opportunity, which have strengthened the cause of freedom and social justice.

      Yes that is true, and I believe that would be the right path, and I am not against doing that, but I never heard any one in an official position in government suggest this is what is going to happen to afganistan, and generalized terminology like "rebuilt" is not that same as saying "marshall plan" (that rebuilt germany and japan). Its easy to assume that because we are in a modern time that people would do the right thing, but that is not the case.

      > This is a nasty little adult situation - no white knights, no cavalry to the rescue. The only way to get out of this with any redemption is by winning the military fight quickly, carefully, and getting to work saving the millions of innocents with a vengeance. And rebuilding something that can eventually join the international community as a worthwhile member. That's what we've got to do and it will be the Devil's own bit of work to accomplish.

      I agree, and if only it were that simple and justified. And devil would fit in here. We use a bit of evil to kill evil. We are not being good sameritans trying to change the world for better, instead waiting till the world starts to decay and when it rots and gets disgusting enough that it starts to hurt our society then we go and do something about it. We are not being and really have never been the good guys (like you say no white knights) in the world community, and we are not being good guys now. We have always done things for self interest and/or greed, while that does not make us the bad guys, I tire of people making us sound like good guys when they wish to justify the actions of our government. Life is hell, and we are all devils doing what makes us feel good, civilized society tries to sculpt things so doing what feels good doesnt cause as many conflicts. My enjoyment comes from being in the middle of it all to see who wins out in the end, I've never said I am against war or against killing of innocent people, just want to point out how evil it is at its core, the evil likes to adorn good (evil comes from with in), the good dont like to adorn evil (if we were good inside there would be no evil).

      > But we don't seem to have too many good options, now do we?

      Nope we had good options in the beginning but we didnt care for them, and that is why every thing is bad.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    15. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by mrogers · · Score: 1
      Pursuit of someone who kills N people in a terrorist action isn't "retaliation". It's pursuit of a criminal to bring them to justice PERIOD.

      True. But killing anyone who wasn't involved in the original terrorist action (which is inevitable when you bombard a city) is retaliation and is no more morally justifiable than the original terrorist attack. Innocent people are innocent regardless of what their government has done. You might say that civilians have a responsibility to ensure their government behaves in a moral way, and they should be "punished" if they do not uphold that responsibility. Well, the same argument was used to justify the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and frankly it makes more sense when applied to a democracy than it does when applied to a dictatorship of priests and warlords. I reject the argument regardless of which side uses it - there is no heap of innocent bodies tall enough to justify adding more.

      The trial will come after the direct attack is done and when all that remains is the aftermath. Therein lies the real challenge.

      I hope you're right, but I fear that the aftermath will last so long that Osama Bin Laden will be long dead and forgotten by the time the war is finally over. Pop quiz: whatever happened to Gavrillo Princip?

    16. Re:Hmmm.... that's a nice quote... but.... by mrogers · · Score: 1

      I like your argument about the murderer in the grocery store - it's the best argument I've yet heard in favour of the war, because it's the only pragmatic argument I've come across. (The rest have all been revenge-oriented.) But perhaps your story would be closer to reality if the police deliberately shot the murderer's landlord and his family because they were unable to find the murderer himself. Many people would not regard that as justice.

  102. Globalization has been around a long time by RayChuang · · Score: 2

    Jon,

    I think you kind of misjudge that globalization has been a recent trend.

    I say that is completely wrong. After all, during the zenith of the Roman Empire in the 1st and 2nd Centuries AD the entire Mediterranean Sea was under Roman control, so Roman culture homogenized the culture of that part of the world. The same happened when Islam spread starting the 7th Century AD, which by 1000 AD created an fairly homogeneous Moslem culture that went from southern Spain to the west, down the east coast of Africa to the south, and much of central Asia to the east. And Arab merchants based in the Arabian Peninsula in those days became extremely wealthy, just like the multinational corporations of today.

    In short, the globalization of today is just repeating what happened 1000 to 2000 years ago, only we have faster means of goods transport.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  103. 3. exporting capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can exporting capitalism to third world countries not help them to economically advance?

    First and foremost, realize that most third world countries have locally based companies which are much worse than international companies when it comes to pollution/exploitation.

    Secondly, please go to a third world country and see for yourself, instead of hearing soundbites, before you comment.

    Please retreat back to your ivory tower.

  104. Globalization and Afghanistan by Coocha · · Score: 1

    Those Afghans who feel jaded by the spread of globalization should look at Japan. After WWII, Japan's economic development had nearly halted. However, they chose to embrace the ideas of globalization and free trade, and by the 80's they were setting new precedents in efficiency (look up the 'just-in-time' system of manufacturing, developed by Toyota). The popular opinion among many Afghans is that the United States' dominance in world economics is what is holding them back. But if they attempt to accept globalization as a form of progress, they too will have to opportunity to grow. Granted, this is where fundamentalism vs. cosmopolitanism comes into play, but bombing them certainly won't help them to think any differently, about us or their situation.

    --
    May the threads progress competently.
    1. Re:Globalization and Afghanistan by clone304 · · Score: 1

      That's a nice little fairy tale, but it's not really true. When we destroyed Japan, we went in there and built it back up. We spent a lot of money and many years rebuilding their infrastructure and teaching them how to manufacture quality goods. This is not the current game plan of globalization. During the 80s there were many in America that felt that we had done the wrong thing with Japan, because now Japan was out-competing us. I don't think the corporate globalists are going to do anything like that today. Sure, they may build up a certain area, but they maintain control. They DON'T teach the natives and then put them in control.

      Also, the Japanese did not embrace "free trade" as the current corporate globalization proponents do. They actually have had some of the stiffest import/export regulations and tarrifs. They embrace "free-to-trade-as-we-choose", not the current US corporate backed "trade-with-no-borders" stance. The current free trade stance actually serves to break down national trade regulation and tarrifs. The only benefit of this is to the corporation, who wants to bully its way into a nations markets. Oddly enough, this is destructive to developing nations, because they can't compete at the level of the multi-national corporation. The reason Japan did as well as it did is because their government strictly regulated all international trade, so that it would benefit Japan. And this is how it should be. The US has done the same, when it was wise to do so. Yet, now, when it is convenient for US corporations to disallow the trade regulations of other countries, America is all about "free" trade.

      This is done so often by the corporate controlled governments. They use the word "free trade" to promote policies which effectively say: No country can decide their own trade policy, because we, the corporations, must be free to trade in any markets we choose, without limitation. However, what "free trade" should mean, and sounds like to some is: You are free to trade as you please.

      The second, would allow the people of a nation to protect themselves from the exploitation of global corporations by restricting how those foreign (to them) corporations can play the game. THAT is freedom. The first meaning allows corporate power to run rampant. It ties the hands of whole nations of people. That is NOT freedom.

  105. Globalization is not new. by kevinodotnet · · Score: 1

    Although I concur with the culture portion of Jon's comment "Technologies from movie cameras to TV sets to the Net are the means by which culture and wealth travel from one part of the world to the other.", I have to disagree with the wealth portion.

    Globalization is only the newest noun for an age-old economict process formerly known as colonialism or imperialism. The only difference is that instead of a colonial power demanding that it's colonies trade exclusively with it, we have a global hegemony of economic clout demanding that all countries capitulate to the World Bank and IMF. Same game, different names but it has always been moving wealth around the world.

    Lots of people like to believe that The Net has started a revolution. In fact, it's only spead up the existing trade processes.

  106. REMEMBER!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imperialism conflicts with Star Trek's Prime Directive!!

    Dex-

  107. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by Cassandra · · Score: 1

    Are you implying that the government in Sicily sympathize with the mafia?

  108. Fully Stocked Red Cross Depot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same as Somalia, it may have been a Red Cross depot once but now it is just a spoil of war for the Taliban. Winter is coming on but they have not distributed any of that stuff. They knew we were coming and yet they did not get those needed supplies to the people who need them most.

    Truth is the first casualty of war.

  109. katz die die die by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Die you evil spawn of a pigdemon

  110. The Alternative? by anzha · · Score: 0, Troll

    I thought at first I'd skip the Katz article: I'm not exactly a fan of his, but...I broke down and read, primarily for the readership's reaction. Hmmm. Interesting.

    How many of you guys have actually thought what it means if we steer away from globalization? Let's say we disentangle. What happens next?

    The US says "Screw you guys, I'm going home." Europe decides that untangling itself is a good idea. etc, etc.

    That would mean that the world gets poorer, not richer. The sweat shps close: but nothing takes their place. The poor get even poorer. And so do the rich. Or even more so, the rich get even richer.

    An example: the US funds a massive amount of money into alternative energy sources as a way to pull out of the Middle East. The revenue that would have continued to flow into the ME dries up. An equal investment in robotics is funded: have machines do what the "sweat shops" in Africa do for clothing. Those close. Develop cheap and very good recycling technologies: the need for a great deal of third world resources goes away. Toss in cheap asteroid mining and that ought to clean the rest up. (very sfnal, yes, but...)

    What happens? We see the Have Nots no longer needed. Therefore ignored. Therefore without the capital, they can't make the investments to develop their own systems and then things get poorer...and then...

    Seems a lot like damned if you do, damned if you don't.

    --
    Do you know why the road less traveled by is littered with the bones of the unwary?
    1. Re:The Alternative? by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      "That would mean that the world gets poorer, not richer. The sweat shps close: but nothing takes their place. The poor get even poorer. And so do the rich. Or even more so, the rich get even richer. "

      I was very active in the anti-sweatshop movement when I was in school. This is a common misconcetion that we encountered. We didnt want the offending companies to *close* the factories. We wanted the companies to pay the workers a living wage, respect local labor laws, respect the workers right to form a union, etc.

      You'd be surprised how often people end up missing or dead when they try to unionize when working in sweatshops. Or when the workers do form a union at great threat to their personal safefy, the factory closes putting everyone out of a job. Or how, even though $1 a day (or equivalent low wage) may go a lot further in the 3rd world than in the US, it still wont cover basic expenses. Or how little effect workers wages has on the final cost of a product.

      So in theory globalization may be a good thing, improving life for people in poor countries, in practice the companies involved do not take it upon themselves to actually improve living conditions. And the people working in the factories dont make enough to invest much in their own economies to make a difference.

      -J5K

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  111. Movie, "Life and Debt" by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Life and Debt, an interesting documentary (haven't seen it yet) about the globalization process effects on Jamaica, with special emphasis on the IMF. Turning it essentially into nothiung more than a tourist trap, with all local industry disappearing and a huge debt load. An example - IMF policies require you to end farm subsidies, while the US can (and does) subsidize farm products. Local farmers can't compete go out of business.

  112. Globalization is an abused word by albamuth · · Score: 2
    When Neo-liberals use the term "globalization" they mean the globalization of the free flow of capital and resources, free from tariffs and cumbersome transportation costs. The purpose is to make private property control the primary agent in the world theatre.

    The International Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders represent a different kind of "globalization", for which we used to use the term international. For example, many people make the claim of being an "internationalist", which means that they are loyal to no flag and their ethics are inclusive of the entire world population (but not necessarily a "one-world-government"). I wager that Doctors Without Borders would prefer to be called Internationalist rather than globalist.

    Most opponents of "globalization" are not isolationists (a common straw man of neoliberals). If anything, they want to see even less restrictions on movement, communication, and goods than multinational corporations lobby for, but as a means of feeding people, not extracting profit. Central to this view is the idea of open borders--free and easy immigration for all. Anyone notice how long those people were marooned off the coast of Austrialia? Or how long refugees rot in camps in the U.S.?

    The reason that multinational corporations oppose that kind of globalization, the globalization of population movement, is that they would lose the very profitble factor of geographic advantage -- the ability to pay a sweatshop worker in Burma $0.12/hr rather than a union worker in the U.S. $9.00/hr. So multinational corporations form PAC's and fincance politicians that want to lower trade tariffs while restricting immigration at the same time. And let's not forget IMF policies forbidding the nationalization of industries (or forcing privatization of State industries), cutting of social services, and leveraging loan promises against environmental protection.

    As much as politicians make pretty speeches about "the New World Order" and globalization's bounty of technology and prosperity, the fact is that they are being bankrolled by multinational corporations. Listen closely and you'll hear that they are really saying nothing substantial at all.

    If you start talking about Al Qaeda and the Russian "Mafiya" being globalized then you digress from the commonly accepted meaning of the word (and thus have an uphill semantic battle to fight). They are multinational organizations, for sure. The reason why those groups and corporations are multinational rather than international is that multi- signifies that they have membership/property in various nations, rather than having an ethical inclusiveness to ALL nations. Corporations and terrorist/crime organizations have selfish ethics (ie. a corp's loyalty is to it's stockholders, mafia's is to it's family, a terrorist network is loyal to their cause, etc.) Internationalists are loyal to the Earth and it's inhabitants, regardless of whom they are.

    --
    [pink beam of light]
  113. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Profit Motive forces wages down.

    Lower expenses (wages are corporate expenses), either directly or by "increasing productivity" for given price for produced items = increased profits, which means happy investment advisors.

    Or, lower prices = more product sold, higher net profits (or greater market share, which means maybe next time you don't have to lower prices as much).

  114. Sorry, but the terrorists were NOT poor by Brian_Ellenberger · · Score: 1

    As it has been pointed out many times, the WTC attackers were anything but poor. bin Laden has 100's of millions and the people who actually hit the WTC were middle class all the way.

    Brian Ellenberger

  115. Liberals: It's a new decade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    time to come up with a new idea to indoctrinate college students with.

    Globalization was the 1990s idea.

    It might take some time this decade to come up with a single sentence soundbite friendly evil to preach against.

    Remember: Facts are not necessary to back up this idea.

  116. now that we're read it... by Hooya · · Score: 1

    "...we are all now dumber ..." -- from the 'nudie magazine day' movie.

  117. Not That Kind of Globalization by Delifisek · · Score: 1

    Later or sooner Worl became one country.
    But not that kind.

    US takes more than %50 percent of global GMT. This is not good. In USA people had lots of rights, enough money for the life, insurance etc etc.

    But what about typical 3.th world country? Nearly noting. Their %5 or %10 percent of population living like USA people. But others have noting.

    Thats the creating fundemalists. (in any form).
    If we look the history. In the Middle Age West is poor East is rich. Then West creates Crusaders
    Please tell me what is the difference between Middle Age Crusaders and Current Taleban or someting.

    Current fundemalists had noting to loose. That makes them angry. Plus Islamic religion makes them fearless.
    So what we got?. An angry, fearless warriors.

    I think no body really understood in the Afganistan. In Afganistan US and others lost the control. Rebellion is not really against the US or Chirtians, Rebellion against the living poor, bad live.
    If that Capitalist plundering continues Next is Pakistan.

    Then count other Islamic Country's.

    Before the everything else, we must increase life quality in all areas in the world. Then start to talking about Globalization. Look EU, their life quality nearly equal, then merging people is not too hard. Other wise every time we found a Taleban, Osama, Saddam or someting like that.

    --
    [My english is better than most other people's Turkish, so please point out mistakes politely. Thank you.]
    1. Re:Not That Kind of Globalization by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
      Interestingly, the free-market globalization process is creating 'slaves by proxy'.

      If you can get cheaper labor in another country by moving jobs there and then tactfully overlooking conditions for work that exist there, you get cheaper labor: the 'slavery' is technically done by somebody else, and you don't ask how it's done. It's a proxy, and the people can lie inventively and say that they meet OSHA regulations or some such thing, but who is checking? Certainly not the company that benefits more by _not_ asking inconvenient questions.

  118. Don't forget the Tet Offensive by Wntrmute · · Score: 1

    Attacking during holidays is nothing new in warfare.

    1. Re:Don't forget the Tet Offensive by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Your link is a bunch of made-up bs!

      A country we were fighting wouldn't ever take advantage of a cease fire we did in order to recognize their holiday.

      Fraud! Fraud!

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  119. Great Rules for Writing by Speare · · Score: 4, Funny

    In Part Two: Have multinationals hijacked globalism? (Yes.)

    Great! Glad you answered that one. Now I don't have to read the second of two parts.

    JonKatz, here are some "Great Rules for Writing" from William Safire in the New York Times:

    Do not put statements in the negative form.

    And don't start sentences with a conjunction.

    It is incumbent on one to avoid archaisms.

    If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.

    Never use a long word when a diminutive one will do.

    Unqualified superlatives are the worst of all.

    De-accession euphemisms.

    If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.

    Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.

    Never, ever use repetitive redundancies.

    Also, avoid awkward or affected alliteration.

    Last, but not least, avoid cliches like the plague.

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
  120. Loss of diversity by naspa · · Score: 1
    This is the most acute and visible side effect of globalization. As people who have travelled to US know, multiple nationalities, religions, and ethnical backgrounds do not mean diversity. Actually, after one generation, the diversity is less than what you would see in many other nations, even taken independently.

    People associate anti-globalism with fundamentalism, or being against democracy, or being rooted in envy towards western way of life(consumption slavery) or towards material abundance. In fact what one feels most is the tide of low quality TV and films, the swamping of industrially manufactured and processed fast food, local governments playing into the global agendas of IMF and WB. What this means in the end is loss of diversity - everybody watching the same channels, wearing the same clothes and speaking the same language everywhere!


    I am sure there are people saying that this wouldn't be a bad thing (after all, the world spoke one language before Babel), but the (debatable) truth IMHO, is that it is diversity, not uniformity that breeds innovation and growth, and perhaps that's why it is harder to preserve.

    -naspa

  121. Globalization is inevitable by dybdahl · · Score: 1

    Nobody can stop globalization, and discussing against it is so difficult for most people, that the discussion will die and turn to more manageable issues.

  122. The Biggest Problem with Globalization by invid · · Score: 1

    The biggest problem with globalization is the lack of representation given to the general populations of the nations of the world. The members of the United Nations are not elected. The people who run the WTO are not elected. We have decissions that effect us all being made by people who do not represent us. This is a problem.

    There is a power vacuum in the world that has been filled by the United States. While the United States has done a relatively good job at this (for those who don't agree, please read your history books about other global powers) there is the problem of authority. The authority that the United States holds over the world comes from power. It does not come from the choices of the citizens of the world. This is a problem.

    We may have to start looking at a global government with representatives voted for by all the citizens of the planet. Clearly, some structure is needed to give a voice to the people of the world. Without it, we must prepare for more frustation and violence.

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
  123. I think the point is missed. by ticktickbonk · · Score: 1

    Globalization is not hated for what it should be, but for what it is. Communism and National Socialism are great ideas in theory, but the greed of individuals in those systems turn them sour. Globalization promises, in theory, increased wealth and quality of life for everyone in the world, but so far in practice has yielded corporations a way to get cheap labor in countries with lax human rights and environmental controls. The most recent issue of Wired was a good example of this globalization, in its article on Flextronics manufacture of the Xbox. Cheap labor ($4 an hour) for technical manufacture jobs. Globaliztion has so far amounted to increased wealth only of the countries where the corporations originate. I think fear of this process is founded just looking at the record so far.

  124. Mod this up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't anyone defend America without being called a flamer or a troll? He/She/It hits it right on the head talking about a young country that has surpased all nations since the beginning of time and most have had a several thousand year head start. That must boil the blood on the Europeans.

    1. Re:Mod this up! by toupsie · · Score: 2
      Thanks! I was shocked to see me being called a "Troll" for laying it out. Guess we have a problem with Globalization of moderation on Slashdot. Too many "Blame America Firsters" given access. Notice how every Pro-American culture message has been labeled as "Flamebait" in this forum.

      As for He/She/It, I am an American He with no excuses or apologies for my culture.

      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    2. Re:Mod this up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you have culture? bombing rest of the world who don't even need you? hah!

  125. Red Cross Depot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would that be the Red Cross depot that had armored cars and Taliban soldiers headquarted in it?

    The Taliban moved all its military eqipment in Kabul TO the civilian areas, including and especially high profile ones like the Red Cross center. There were NO Red Cross personnel there, only Taliban forces.

  126. Where's the tech?? by cryptomancer · · Score: 1
    Katz opens his mouth.. again.. on another dubious subject (in that the choice of topic, to bring it up, and things said about it are dubious), and what comes forth? A whole lotta trash from every corner trying to be political, quote news sources (which do not make good sources), or somehow analyze the socio-economics of this next Katz topic.

    This is still Slashdot, right? Not some Forbes-Forum? Not the CNN chat room? Where's the Tech?? Yes, Globalisation has an impact on everything else socio-politico-economico-trollio, but what about someone pointing to how satellites enable round-the-world communication? How ocean-lay'd fiber lets international markets trade? How those multinational corp's would be dead without the internet? Or even- why they might not be dead without it. (gasp!)

    So, how about it? Anyone wanna think aloud about TECH's impact on globalisation, and globalisation's impact on tech? I mean come on, what's really driving up the size of the bandwidth pipe? broadband users' desire for pr0n? :P

    --cryptomancer, "Being a programmer, I understand how globalisation has affected my distributed app's latency.."

    --
    Yes, we understand these tags always apply: fud, dupe, typo, slashdotted, topic name
  127. Re:Globalization by 8string · · Score: 1

    That sounds real spiffy. "Finding a way to reconcile Israel with her Arab neighbors would be a good start in reducing radicalism in the Islamic world."

    Golda Meir: "How can you make peace with a people that hate you more than they love their own children?"

    Religious fundamentalists of _ALL_ religions mess up the world for all of us. They spread hate in the name of God instead of love. That's equally true for christians, muslims, jews, hindus, you name it.

  128. Wealth is the issue by icey5000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think that the underlying issue is fundamentalism vs democracy at all. Or even fundamentalism vs technology. Access to technology and distrust of globalisation are issues here in the West too. People that can't afford a good education or computers are scared. They know that they are competing at a strong disadvantage in our economy. This makes them, and the large number of people in many industries who have had stagnant wages over the last 20 years, (justifiably) afraid of globalisation.

    But, take it a step further. If you are living in a place where you don't have decent access to clean water, let alone the internet, how will you react to globalisation? Remember, the message you will hear is the importance of technical skills and knowledge -- things you don't have and can't get. Any rational person (or even not-so-rational) will be afraid. Especially if you feel powerless to do anything about your situation.

    This is where fundamentalism kicks in. Its leaders offers two things these people want: easy answers and a voice -- a way to express their frustration and fear to a society (the West) that they perceive (largely correctly) as indifferent to them and their needs.

    Democracy (or lack thereof) is irrelevant in this situation. The issue is fear and poverty. Why would you ever support a program (globalisation) that you feel is against your own interests? If you felt that fundamentalism would help defend you from it , wouldn't you support it?

    The question for Westerners is twofold. First, are they wrong about globalisation's effects on them? And second, what are we willing to do address their (real and perceived) concerns.

    If globalisation is to be a good thing, all parties need to benefit and feel that they are benefitting. Otherwise, we are having a discussion about imperialism and exploitation: which is exactly what many of these people feel we are discussing.

  129. Lets Get Our Heads Straight by NHVirtuoso · · Score: 1

    "...Religious fundamentalism is something we should not worry about, hell, maybe they're right...." Congratulations you just iterated the problem. Hell! Maybe they're right. Maybe maybe maybe. Guess what? Globalization, terrorism, radicalism, right & left wing-ism (yeah I know its not a word, dont jump on it) are all surface issues. What needs to be addressed is the ideology in which Fundamentalism takes root. Yes, I advocate freedom of speech, freedom of religion (in particular!) and every other human right detailed or otherwise in the Constitution. But tell me this: if a group of people from a small New Hampshire town firmly believed that there were Green Aliens playing jazz on the dark side of the moon, and they were marching on Seabrook to take control of the power plant because they believed a core meltdown was the only thing that could generate enough energy for these aliens to reach the earth, would we do anything less than laugh at them and hurl them in a jail cell? Yeah well guess what we should be doing to Religious Zealot Fundamentalists. I dont care if your culture hasn't 'progressed' (or 'regressed', however you want to look at it) to the point America and the rest of the free world has. If the tenets of your ideology involve the violation of human rights, thats where the line needs to be drawn. We need to say "Sorry, you're WRONG". Not "Well, they might be right! Maybe the fact that Fundamental Muslim religion sees the US, having the most morally sound and just economy and justice system in the world, as bad enough that they can justify killing unsuspecting innocents in violent acts of terrorism!". Sorry buddy. No way. The point of this whole shpeel is this: I dont have to defend an ideology firmly rooted in preservation of human rights. You can argue that we impose the burdens of pollution and underpaid workers on third world countries till yourface turns blue and it doesnt matter. Corporations dont kill people. Corporations dont place people in our service against their free will. Corporations dont rape people. Corporations expand and build facilities in concordance with the local laws of the countries they occupy. They offer jobs at a specific wage, and those jobs are *rapidly* filled because, while it is an absurdly minimal wage to *us*, it is a generous wage compared to the wages offered by native businesses or not having a wage at all. We need to stop tolerating idiot ideologies. Yes, Im saying Fundamental Muslim Religion is wrong. I think all religions are self-imposed mental bondaeg, but thats not todays topic. At the very least, we must stop tolerating ideologies that allow for the violation of human rights.

    1. Re:Lets Get Our Heads Straight by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
      With regard to your claim,
      "Corporations dont kill people. Corporations dont place people in our service against their free will. Corporations dont rape people. Corporations expand and build facilities in concordance with the local laws of the countries they occupy."

      In your vehement assertion that corporations do not kill people through malice or negligence, don't force obedience through criminal or economic pressure, and that they obey the law even when the local law may be bribery or 'negotiable', do you get your proof...

      ...from the corporations themselves?

  130. Re:Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the US really has no other choice but TO support Israel. The US is home to many Jews. The region is also important to Christians. Which I'm suprised isn't played up more.

    Christianity DOES cut itself off from its "holy land" if it gives up on Israel.

    Islam, Judaism and Christianity need to figure out a way to share the area, instead of acting like 2-year olds fighting over a blanket.

  131. Re:Globalization by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Finding a way to reconcile Israel with her Arab neighbors would be a good start in reducing radicalism in the Islamic world. Religious fundamentalism is something we should not worry about, hell, maybe they're right.

    Only problem is that most arabs do not believe in "reconciliation" but "elimination". Sorta what the nazi's had in mind.

    Religious fundamentalism is something we should not worry about, hell, maybe they're right.

    The primary cause of the problems in Israel is the result of unyielding, inhumane and illogical positions of the fundamentalist Jews and the fundamentalist Muslims.

    The cause of most wars and genocide thoughout history are almost always traced back to religious fundamentalism or, its substitution, nationalism.

  132. So why'd the dog turn on you in the first place? by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

    There is no difference.

    If you treat other countries as your inferiors, they will treaet you as oppressors. We're not dealing with dogs here - we're dealing with humans, as vicious and angry as they may be (in the case of the Taliban and al Qaeda).

    --

    Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
  133. fa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What would JonKatz do without JonKatz? This nitwit is totally in love with himself.

  134. Fundamentalism vs cosmopolitan tolerance by eap1935 · · Score: 1

    I rarely read anything by Katz, and I certainly have never replied, mostly because he usually manages to say something vaguely annoying withing the first paragraph. It's usually not anything I can put my finger on, but I get annoyed anyways. This time I can put my finger on it. This conflict does not pit fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance. This is a conflict between fundamentalism and imperialism.

    My return address is out of date, so don't even bother sending flames there.

  135. LABOUR LAWS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US has Labour Laws??? HAhahahaha!!

    I think not. Not worth their name anyway.

  136. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by bwt · · Score: 2

    That's why we aren't targeting the Afghans.

  137. Have multinationals hijacked globalism? by haizi_23 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'd actually say that the whole globalization movement has it's genesis in multinationals -- i.e., chartered corporations like the Dutch East India company. So, has it been hijacked by them? Not really, it's been their cause all along.

    I don't see that any of *our* institutions have successfully promoted abroad. And I think it's fair to say that our State department, and the various commercial interests that lobby our government don't want to see a replication of this country's freedom (limited as it is) in the developing world. Free people are too interested in their own welfare and promoting their own interests. Global corporations want things like: cheap labor, cheaply extractable natural resources, captive import markets, etc. Freedom interferes with these things, because people naturally want to maximize their own country's autonomy.

    From what I can see, Globalization in practice amounts to exporting unproven economic theory, and forcing developing nations to be the laboratories of capitalism, whether or not it serves their interests.

    I'd be interested to hear counterexamples, if people can think of instances where the transfer of Euro-American social institutions has produced the kind of relative stability/prosperity that we enjoy.

    -w

  138. MOD PARENT UP! by elefantstn · · Score: 1

    Thank you for a fantastic summary of why so many naive leftists' proposals for the Middle East are wrong. The only thing that ever got Israel to the table with the Palestinians was American support - absent that, the Middle East will disappear in a puff of (possibly nuclear) smoke.

    --
    If it ain't broke, you need more software.
  139. What should we do. by Catskul · · Score: 1

    It may seem selfish and greedy to protect contries so that we can protect our oil prices, but those contries have a tremendous power over us. Currently our country and way of life cannot continue if we were to be cut off from that oil. We are currently working to eliminate our demendency on it, but untill that happens, if we want to keep our way of life, we have to maintain a presence in the Middle East. It cant simply be argued out by philosophies, it simply is a fact that we need that oil.

    I challenge anyone who sees otherwise to come up with an alternative.

    --

    Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    1. Re:What should we do. by smcv · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Currently our country and way of life cannot continue if we were to be cut off from that oil. We are currently working to eliminate our demendency on it, but untill that happens, if we want to keep our way of life, we have to maintain a presence in the Middle East. It cant simply be argued out by philosophies, it simply is a fact that we need that oil."

      Americans and oil... Someone posted elsewhere on this thread about SUVs and Starbucks and MacDonalds, and one reply said "yeah, SUVs haven't taken off in Europe, but that's because gasoline's expensive there".

      You ever wonder why our fuel's expensive, when we're so much closer to the main source? Possibly deliberate taxation policies, to make the alternatives comparatively cheap and encourage research into them? European governments tax oil for a reason. It's not going to last forever, you know. (Estimates of the number of years' worth we have (at current usage) vary, but rarely have 3 digits in them; and by "we" here I don't mean Europeans, I mean the world.)

      Observe huge strikes and blockades of refineries by UK truck drivers last summer, in protest at fuel tax rises. These basically stopped the UK for several days, but had precisely no effect on tax levels. If the government here just wanted the money, they could have dropped fuel taxes a bit and taxed something less conspicuous (or lots of less conspicuous things) instead; but they didn't. Does it sound like they want to hold on to that particular tax, for reasons other than just getting the money?

      Yes, cars are part of The American Way Of Life. Yes, in a country that big, I suppose they have to be. But that's no reason to be excessive about them... it is possible to live in a fairly American-ish way while not using as much oil (see: UK, France, Germany, I can't be bothered to list the rest of western Europe but you probably get the idea).

    2. Re:What should we do. by Catskul · · Score: 1

      I understand your point about conserving oil, and agree that some of your suggestions should be taken, but even in a situation of reduced oil consumption, the US and European contries would be crippled. Pubilic Transportation even would become extremely costly. Even if everyone particpating in public transportation we are still depenedent on the Middle Eastern Oil.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    3. Re:What should we do. by Nezalhualixtlan · · Score: 1

      I think we should start looking for alternatives more aggressively. Look to conserve, look for renewable resources. Put some effort into that, then we don't need to rely on them for oil. But of course, that won't solve the problem, because if them having oil and control over it doesn't matter to the US any more, the US will just drop them. That would shatter any economies they have. The US would get blamed again, even though they wouldn't meddle there anymore. And the problems wouldn't go away.

      --
      But my dreams they aren't as empty, as my conscience seems to be...
  140. labor vs capital by Johnny5000 · · Score: 2

    One of the major problems of traditional globalism is that it opens the borders to investments, allows goods to be shipped easily across borders, etc. In other words, it's easy to move production to areas with low labor costs, little or no environmental protections etc.

    On the other hand, it does not allow labor to easily cross the borders. Globalization will allow American companies to build factories right across the border in Mexico. All the dollar-a-day jobs you can handle. However, if someone doesnt want to work one of those jobs, they're NOT free to cross the border to find a higher paying job.

    -J5K

    --
    The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  141. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's this venn diagram thing....

  142. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by Cassandra · · Score: 1

    Sure, but I was rather pondering this isomorphism thing...

  143. Low IQs of muslim populations by nukebuddy · · Score: 1

    The, _without exception_, existence of low average IQs of countries with large muslim populations might help explain the _behavior_ of muslim populations:

    Country IQ % Muslim

    Malaysia 92 59*
    Turkey 90 100
    Indonesia 89 88
    Iraq 87 97
    Lebanon 86 70
    Morocco 85 99
    Iran 84 99
    Egypt 83 94
    Qatar 78 95
    Sudan 72 70
    Tanzania 72 35
    Ghana 71 30
    Nigeria 67 50
    Guinea 66 85
    Sierra Leone 64 60
    Ethiopia 63 50

    Country average IQs from:
    http://home.att.net/~eugenics/lynn.htm

    Religious statistics from:
    http://www.xist.org/global/religion.htm

    * Religious statistics for Malaysia:
    http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/irf /i rf_rpt/1999/irf_malaysia99.html

    -nb

    1. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah but they had to take the tests in English...

    2. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by nukebuddy · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward wrote:
      yeah but they had to take the tests in English...

      What are you talking about?

      -nb

    3. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by ellem · · Score: 1

      The AC is saying that the people from those countries had to take the IQ tests in English which would account for their (and apparently your) low IQs.

      --
      This .sig is fake but accurate.
    4. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by nukebuddy · · Score: 1

      ellem wrote:
      The AC is saying that the people from those countries had to take the IQ tests in English which would account for their (and apparently your) low IQs.

      Why would people in non-English speaking countries be administered IQ tests in English (assuming they're verbal which isn't necessarily the case)? Don't you think that would reduce the validity of the tests?

      -nb

    5. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by ellem · · Score: 2

      I think the AC was making a joke. You can't hear it but there are some people in my office laughing at you right now.

      --
      This .sig is fake but accurate.
    6. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm the AC -- you're dumb as a Eithiopian nb

    7. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's not fair.
      IQ-tests have a lot to do with culture.
      And the FAMILIARITY with symbols and numbers.

      hmm, maybe I'm wrong..
      America doesn't rate that high...guess that explains bush ;)

    8. Re:Low IQs of muslim populations by nukebuddy · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward wrote:

      that's not fair.
      IQ-tests have a lot to do with culture.
      And the FAMILIARITY with symbols and numbers.

      The subject of Bias in Mental Testing has been exhaustively reviewed.

      hmm, maybe I'm wrong..
      America doesn't rate that high

      The US's average is dragged down by Blacks, Latinos and Native Americans.

      -nb

  144. But... by samael · · Score: 2

    (A) Neither are they. do you really want to live in a country under siege?
    (B) It doesn't take either. Look at the trouble the Irish paramilitary groups caused Britain over the last 30 years.

    1. Re:But... by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      And we've been letting the terrorists bite our heels for 30 years, too. Pan Am, other plane flights, many bombings in Europe, people with machine guns opening up in civilian areas of airports.

      Had the IRA blown up a soccer statium and killed 6000 people, I think things might have started going differently.

      They, and Osama, and the Taliban, rely on the inherent decency of Britain and the US. That we won't wholesale slaughter innocents. That we will spare religious buildings and civilian areas. Witness the asinine sophomoric debate about whether we should blow up a mosque that's hiding a Taliban who shoots anti-aircraft missles at planes, then ducks back inside.

      Do you think the Taliban debates these things?

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  145. Stick to the thesis, please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The foreign policy of 1 nation != Globalization.

  146. Back that up liar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Saddam has killed hundreds of thousands of more people with biological waepons then we ever killed in total."

    Hahahahahaha... your ignorance marvel me.. Would you care to give some sources for that claim?

    You DO know that the US has used more weapon power against Iraq since AFTER the Gulf"war" (slaughter), than were used during the WHOLE Vietnam war, don't you?

  147. Maybe they are the same? by nicovl · · Score: 1

    Globalisation and Fundamentalism are both about the same thing. Power!

    From the beginning of time till today the whole world has evolved around one thing: Power!

    Nothing has changed and nothing will until we really get down to the core issue (Power!) we keep those who have power, very happy and very safe by squabbling about all this crap. We need to learn to understand them and what they want. We must learn to see the real hidden agendas.

    Spend some time thinking about being someone in power. Think about how you would read these articles. We read things and think... do I agree or disagree, what is my opinion? They read it and they think... how do I keep my power and keep these people happy and maybe, if I can, gain more control over them. How do I use this to my advantage!

    It is impossible to be anywhere in the lower 95% of the chain without being strongly abused by those at the top 5% of the chain. To get in the top 5% of the chain you have to play their games as well as they do. You must be part of them. Someone who has any ethics and real goals besides power will soon loose a foothold in this part of the chain and would be forced to back down or just be totally destroyed.

    Politics is nothing more than words to distract us, to delude us. Politics is the twisting of words. I know because I can do it myself!

    In the end it's about one thing... Rich or Poor... Powerful or weak! Every place in world, every moment in time.

    Don't forget it!

  148. JonKatz' Gloabalization eq Americanization by ellem · · Score: 2

    Of course what Katz' is calling Globalization is in fact Americanization. Dropping McDonald's in Red Square or in a cave in Kabul. The pervasiveness of our media. Baywatch, Starwars, AOL, yadda yadda.

    Many see this as evil, or imperialistic. How can we (USA) impose ourselves on the rest of the world? we don't respect culture (hey, we renamed our war didn't we?) and we trash all that we (USA) do not hold dear.

    You mutilate your women by cutting of their clitoris -- we condemn you. You beat women who show their ankle -- we condemn you. You cane people who spray paint cars -- we condemn (and sue, and force you to change your local laws) you.

    Guess what... USA is the biggest, loudest, strongest, wealthiets, fattest, healthiest, best looking country in the world. We do what we want. You can follow if you like, you don't have to, unless you want to do business with us. Then you'd better learn English (American) and get ready to know that 36 inches is a yard because we don't like the metric system.

    Large, loud people often get noticed. People who get noticed tend to garner followers. How do we tell the Japanese not to be just like us when thy want to be just like us? Or the Mexicans, or the Russians, Germans, Brits, etc.

    People want to be Americans. They want to be movie stars. They want to hit homeruns. American culture is cool, and glamorous, and proabably a better way of life than they have.

    The thing of it is is that the Globalization isn't being forced down anyone's throat. Sure the American way of life is portrayed, in our media, which is the conduit for its expansion, as better than it really is but America practically invented Marketing; what did you expect?

    The funniest part of this is that America is essentially still isolationary (is that a word?) but we tend to get dragged into things. The fact is that a lot of people want to be American. It looks good.

    My argument is not dissimilar to people who say that cigarette ads don't make people smoke. They don't. So America is well marketed, and people want to be a part of that.

    Whose fault is that?

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
  149. No religion? by Buggernut · · Score: 1

    It won't happen. As long as humans are emotional beings, there will always be many who will look to some sort of a spiritual escape from the rational, material, factual world.

    Hopefully, with globalization, like with other consumer goods, one day, one will be able to comparison shop and pick and choose the spiritual fulfillment of their liking from a wide range of available choices, regardless of geographic location, instead having one forced upon by the powers that be that run the state.

    This, I imagine, is one of Osama bin Laden's biggest fears.

    1. Re:No religion? by Sebastopol · · Score: 2

      It won't happen. As long as humans are emotional beings, there will always be many who will look to some sort of a spiritual escape from the rational, material, factual world.

      True, indeed. People are emotional. Personally I believe in a world where one day science will answer everything, and even be able to understand how our brains are capable of limitless creative query. However, even if science can explain the spritual part of the brain, we will still feel spiritual involuntarily. Unless it can be turned off, like a lobotomy or severing the optic or aural nerves. ...I'd be the first in line to experiment with this.

      After some good discussion on /. on Sept.11, my attitudes towards religion became a few degrees less hostile. Although I'm still embarrassed by God Bless America slogans, I see nothing wrong with other, less fascist religions like zen and theravada buddhisms. (although, whacking zen students with a paddle during meditation seems as fascist as church-sponsored genital mutilation, so maybe i'm on a limb...)

      I think globalization under the guidance of Nader would bring us a safer more closely night global community. OF course, Mr. Nader would probably disagree with my desire to use him as the point-man to lead the globalized free world.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  150. Katz, are you a moron? by shaunak · · Score: 1

    "Either way, September 11 makes it clear that globalization - pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance - is one of the most important issues in our lifetimes. "

    Globalisation is not pitting fundamentalism against cosmopolitan tolerance. The people opposing globalisation are not always radical religious fundamentalists out to get you. Take a look at India. We have people dying here of starvation. One way or another, globalisation caused it. I don't say globalisation is good or bad - I'm not trolling here. I hope to make it clear (so clear that you should understand it) that most of the people against globalisation are doing it because of the starving millions, not because they have their religion to propagate.

    "People with a host of grievances against technology, multinational corporations and capitalist democracies have made globalism a dirty word"

    Yes, they have grievances against technology because technology doesn't mean jack when you're dying of hunger. And please don't talk of GM food and the advantages of scientific research - the 'green revolution' already happened in this country.

    Yes, they have grievances against multinational corporations like Enron because they bribe the politicians and secure contracts like the one in Maharashtra. They are sucking the blood out of half dead corpses with their exhorbitant charges. Enron charges about 900% more than the State electricity board does (without subsidies).

    Yes, they have grievances against capilist democracies because if you look closer, they don't know what democracy is - they never get to practice it, and couldn't care less - for them, utopia is a frugal meal that couldn't amount to 300 calories per day.

    --
    -Shaunak.
  151. International Law a Prerequistite to Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There will be no peaceful globalization without real international law. The current implimentations of globalization pretty much ignore human rights and environmental issues, threatening any given culture's ability to set its own standards in these areas (basic sovereignty). The current U.S. actions against Afghanistan are, in fact, a prime example of how there really is no international law, other than the strong will do as they please. Without just and enforced international law, the current state of globalization is nothing more than a new face to colonialism.

  152. So, so wrong by graybeard · · Score: 1
    In fact, you could argue that globalism seems to expose the limits of democratic structures: Can governments preserve the environment, keep work secure and equitable, ensure fair wages, control capitalism, distribute new technologies equitably, respect diverse cultural values, contain greed and restrict the imagery that Americans love but that frightens and offends large segments of the world population?

    OK, argue away. But you are begging the question, is it even proper for governments to "preserve the environment, ...."? I, for one, don't think it's Uncle Sam's job to "distribute new technologies equitably".

    Actually, this quote is classic Katz: anti-US logorrhea that seems to make a point, but actually is moronic. I challenge anyone to name a non-democratic government that does any of these better than the US. I'll give you the last one, I don't doubt there are lots of places that have a firm grip of the press.

  153. Unrestricted Migration of Labor by Ivan+Raikov · · Score: 1

    Open the gates: Let the huddled masses go free -- the best way to show globalization can benefit the poor and rich is to allow an unrestricted migration of labour

    Financial Post - Canada; Oct 30, 2001
    BY SAMUEL BRITTAN

    For all the effect they have had on hostile opinion, the many books and articles showing the benefits of globalization might as well have been printed in invisible ink. Most people's reactions are based on their political prejudices or favourite newspapers.

    What is needed is a dramatic gesture, which is worthwhile for its own sake and would demonstrate that the free movement of capital and labour is of benefit to the world's poor.

    The trouble is that there is too little globalization rather than too much. There was far more economic free movement a century ago than there is today. The big difference is, of course, in migration policies.

    Many countries then allowed free inward and outward movement of labour. Today, legal migration is tightly restricted and, in practice, a focus of illegality and criminal violence. The resemblance to traditional drugs policy, where prohibition produces the very evils it claims to prevent, is all too obvious.

    My proposal is to abolish the distinction between economic migrants and asylum-seekers -- who in the U.K. are not permitted to work for the first six months and are provided with vouchers at sub-benefit levels -- and allow anyone who so wishes to seek his or her fortune in any country of choice. This goes far beyond the ideas of David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, of merely extending the number of work permits.

    Like nearly all economic liberalization, the free movement of labour would increase the world's national income and would particularly benefit people in poorer countries, where even those who stayed behind would find a brisker demand for their services. Although the best results would be obtained at the lowest cost if this change were generally adopted, many Western countries could move unilaterally.

    Would there be any quid pro quo? Not as such. Recipient countries could impose a minimum qualifying period for state pensions. The main counterweight to liberal migration policy would be a relentless policy of exposure and punishment for anyone, irrespective of origin, who incited violence not merely against religious or racial groups but against any individuals, irrespective of the country in which they resided. Most human rights charters have provisions for amendment in emergencies.

    The obvious European country to initiate a laissez-faire policy would be Ireland, which has a low population density and needs the safety valve of immigrant labour for a potentially overheated economy. But even the U.K. has a lower density than, say, the Netherlands, which is not obviously suffering from a low quality of life.

    Given the extreme hostility to immigration in Germany and Italy, a common European Union immigration policy is unthinkable except on highly restrictive lines; but one can live without it. It is hardly likely immigrants will try to smuggle themselves from the U.K. and Ireland into some smoulderingly hostile German city.

    The potential concession that an economic analyst has to make is that wages of workers competing with migrants could be relatively or even absolutely depressed. A high-quality and under-publicized research study -- Migration: An Economic and Social Analysis from the Home Office -- shows that native wages have not been depressed in the U.K. Immigrants have tended to perform three types of job. They have worked in public services, especially health, where pay is determined by the government. Wages are well below market levels and the effect of newcomers is to reduce shortages. In London, 23% of doctors and 47% of nurses are non-U.K. born. At the other extreme, "in relatively low paid and insecure sectors (such as) catering and domestic services, unskilled natives are simply unwilling or unable ... to take the large number of available jobs."

    Companies benefit from immigration "but it is not likely that natives are significantly disadvantaged: If migrants do not fill these jobs they simply go unfilled or uncreated." An estimated 70% of catering jobs are filled by migrants.

    There are also the highly skilled information technology workers. According to the Home Office study, the inflow of these technicians has enabled the IT sector to grow faster rather than to depress pay in it.

    The study confirms migrants are more polarized than the rest of the population, with larger concentrations of wealth and poverty and high and low skills. Not only are they highly concentrated in London and the southeast, but there are also large clusters both in wealthy Kensington and in the impoverished East End. "Levels of entrepreneurship in self-employment also appear to be high among migrants," it adds. It is not only Pakistani and east African businesses that have been attracted to the U.K.: About 150,000 French entrepreneurs are said to have arrived since 1995.

    In general, earnings behaviour follows what is known in the United States as the "assimilation hypothesis." Wages in a particular age cohort start off lower for migrants but, as skills are acquired, eventually overtake those of comparable native workers. And, contrary to the popular view that immigrants are a burden on the public purse, they contribute 10% more to government revenues than they receive in government expenditures.

    About 400,000 people arrived legally in the U.K. in 1998 with the intention of staying a year or more; but some estimates suggest that up to another 200,000 entered the country illegally.

    The net effect of strict official restriction and feeble enforcement is, as one would expect, nightmarish conditions for those who depend on criminal gangs to enter the country. Harriet Sergeant, in Welcome to the Asylum, explains how the process leads to "slavery and child labour." She advocates a government drive for better statistics and better control. But given that very few illegal immigrants are in fact sent back, the alternative laissez-faire policy might make surprisingly little difference to the net numbers but would ensure that arrivals are recognized as human beings.

    The author's main objection is that the U.K. would be swamped by, for instance, the 25% of Slovak citizens who say they want to emigrate. But would they in practice? If evidence from the European Union is anything to go by, it is surprising how few people would make the leap.

    The present policy has reached a dead end. Why not try five years of laissez-faire, then review the strategy?

  154. Typical American Dualism by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
    Cosmopolitans welcome technology and cultural diversity, while fundamentalists find it disturbing and dangerous.


    Yup, it's good old American progress against those evil regressives/reactionaries, yet again. We are Good, they are Evil. Nothing new here, folks, move along, take a number for your bombings, please.

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  155. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the fuck has making the planet more cozy for business has to do with a couple of skyscrapers being blown to hell?

  156. Re:Globalization by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    It's not about 'giving up' on Israel. No one in their right mind is calling for that. It's about Israel maturing and being encouraged if not eventually forced to deal with the Palestinian crisis in a constructive manner rather than endless cycles provocation, attack and retaliation.

    --
    **>>BELCH
  157. We didn't vote for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, as an analogy, every day you are NOT out there protesting against DMCA, you are actively supporting it?

  158. Good observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While that's pretty much how I've been viewing all this, I congratulate you on putting it together so well. I found this particularly sharp:

    "there was a weird convergence of us being assholes to a region and peoples and some of those people being crazy, twisted fuckers with a lot of money."

    Crudely phrased, yes, but that's sort of appropriate. There are no pure and noble parties involved here.

    A foreign entity has finally retaliated against America's bullying. Tragically their response was not only spiteful and destructive but, worse than that, more than likely to encourage the very sort of imperialistic policies which angered them in the first place.

    The good news: much of the world loves America now.

    The bad news: it isn't because America is any better, but because the world has discovered something even worse.

    -AC

  159. Clarification? by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

    Just curiosity: what was particularly liberal about your rant?

    1. Re:Clarification? by Paradox+!-) · · Score: 2

      As a general rule, assertions that humanity is progressing and that expanded integration among people is good are considered liberal.

      Note, in this context, liberal applies in both its 19th century and 20th century sense.

      This is different from liberal polices (labor standards, environmental regimes, etc.) which are responses to liberal idea(l)s.

    2. Re:Clarification? by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I suppose the confusion was that I know many 'conservatives' would probably agree with your 'liberal rant' but then a more accurate designation for their political philosophy would probably be 'classical liberals', 'libertarians', and 'neo-conservatives' that have a liberal philosophy in both 19th and 20th century philosophical senses (libertarian and progressive) but are completely at odds with 'liberal' politics (in the most narrow 20th century political sense) To further muddy the idealogical waters even the pesimistic philosophicaly conservative 'paleo-conservatives' are seeking to conserve a liberal (19th century sense 'liberty') political & social structure.

  160. Globalisation vs. Fundamentalism by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1
    This is not a new viewpoint. In his book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, Huntington makes a similar point, but enlarges it to include differences of viewpoints between the Western, modernist traditions and even more cultures. This, of course, is part of a whole cannon of works of that period attempting to debunk Fukuyama's viewpoint, espoused in his book The End of History and the Last Man. Fukuyama still believes that the whole Middle East dustup is the exception that proves the rule to his theory.


    My opinion? Fukuyama would be correct if people actually did act rationally. But, having grown up among many fundamentalists (of the good, Christian variety :-), I know that people will often do things against their own best interests in the name of their religions, their cultures, and their personal identities. It's not even clear that there is any apparent march toward traditional, western rationality - look at how quickly things devolved in Yugoslavia.


    Today, there are enough cultural (Notice how that word starts with "cult"? Same Greek root!) differences and irrationality about to make Huntington's thesis look more believable at this time.

    --
    That is all.
  161. Re:Yes Indeed by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    I think that one of the issues of globalization is that corporations, having no ethics, are quite happy to run along and move their organization to anywhere that they can get the best return on investment.
    If this means taking advantage of a cheap workforce, no labor laws, no benefits, then so be it.


    Globalization actually makes it possible to enact labor laws, benefits and so on, on a world-wide basis. If all you can see is a Nike shoe factory moving to a 3rd world country, depriving us poor Americans of good paying jobs while exploiting the locals, well, I'm sorry to tell you but they're doing that already. Globalization will provide an interface with which to address those concerns. Right now there is nothing.

    And I'm still not clear on the anti-global trade folks' position, is it the seeming loss of American jobs you decry, or the seeming abuse of foreign work-forces? If corporations spreading world-wide brings about the sort of disasters you protest-addicts seem to envision, who will buy their products? How will they survive? Who will profit, and then what?

    --
    **>>BELCH
  162. What Bin Laden said by jdfox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bin Laden actually doesn't care about the Palestinians or Iraq or any of that. He wants the world remade in his view--he points to the Taliban as the ultimate form of society. In an interview a few years ago, he said his ultimate goals were not to get the US out of the mideast, but to have a jihad in Egypt, a jihad in Israel, a jihad in Bosnia--basically a Jihad everywhere that will replace all governments with a fundamentalist Muslim one such as the Taliban. It's a different kind of globalization, really.

    That's not globalization. He doesn't want to remake the world in his view, and he doesn't want to take over the world. He wants Muslims to retake the Muslim world, which he sees as having been colonized by the West. He really doesn't care what happens to us in the West, so long as we leave Muslims alone.

    Again, no amount of understanding the root of the problem will make that go away. The only thing that these people (the terrorists) understand is having a bomb dropped on them so they can't do anything anymore.

    But you're saying this on the basis of your own understanding of the problem. If that understanding was proven incorrect, then I presume you would revise it. So crack open a book, and maybe you'll learn that your CNN black-hats-white-hats view of the world doesn't stand up to critical scrutiny.

    It's a sad commentary on humans, but its the truth--do you think enough understanding would have prevented Hitler from attempting world domination? I doubt it--ask Neville Chamberlain.

    You're talking about "understanding" after the fact, but you're neglecting the understanding of bad situations before they turn into wars. A better understanding of Germany after WWI would have meant a less onerous Treaty of Versailles being imposed, preventing the perfect conditions for an extremist nationalist rising like the Nazis.

    Similarly, better understanding of what a pile of shit the US has made of its foreign policy in the Muslim world will prevent future Bin Ladens from rising. It's called "fixing the roof while the sun is shining". No-one is asking you to understand the rain in your living room better, only to understand that if you had fixed the roof last week when the hole was pointed out to you, it wouldn't be there now.

    Of course Bin Laden would still exist, even if we had understood the problem better. But he would not have had the army of supporters, both passive and active, that he now commands. Further use of your "bombs are the only language these people understand" analysis will lead to an unending stream of them, more than you and your gov't will ever be able to find, let alone bomb.

    1. Re:What Bin Laden said by bribecka · · Score: 2

      That's not globalization. He doesn't want to remake the world in his view, and he doesn't want to take over the world. He wants Muslims to retake the Muslim world, which he sees as having been colonized by the West. He really doesn't care what happens to us in the West, so long as we leave Muslims alone.

      I don't mean to say that he wants to rule the world. Quoting this article (and I've seen news reports of the same vein): The infidels must be driven out of the Muslim world by a jihad, and strict Islamic rule must be established everywhere that Muslims live.

      I take that as, well, pretty much everywhere. Muslims live in the US, Britain, France, Japan, everywhere.

      I'm all for "Fixing the roof while the sun is shining", but in this case, the sun set long ago.

      --

      Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

    2. Re:What Bin Laden said by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      I agree. The biggest muslim country in the world is Indonesia. There are more muslims living in India than there are Arabs. So does he mean muslims everywhere, or just muslims in Arab lands? And what about Arabs who are not muslim? There are a lot of Christian Arabs in Lebanon and elsewhere, where do they end up? I can't imagine they would be comfortable living under a Taliban-like regime.

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
  163. Globalism is not a political movement by Zeinfeld · · Score: 3, Interesting
    As usual we have a buzz word laden piece by Katz that shows zero insight (and another part to come, God help us).

    Globalism is not and has never been a political movement. It is no more than a social and political trend that began with the Industrial Revolution. Geography is less of a constraint than it was in past. Airline travel, the telephone, satelite TV and the Internet mean that you can live in one country and have the same communications access as if you lived in another country on a different continent.

    Anti-globalism is a political movement of sorts. There is no real cohesion between the aims of the various factions however. In many cases the aims are completely opposed.

    Bin Laden is not an anti-globalist in any meaningful sense, he is anti-US but his political aims are global. He wants to return the world to the middle ages one country at a time, starting with Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and Palestein but continuing on to Andaloucia (Spain), Africa etc.

    Some of the anti-globalists are anti-democratic tin pot nationalists who want to declare independence for their little fragment of a nation state so that they have a better chance of getting power themselves.

    Other 'anti-globalists' are tin-pot union leaders looking for some form of protectionism that will discriminate against goods produced by foreign workers.

    Most of the 'anti-globalists' are not protesting about the process of globalisation however but the limited form in which it is taking place. As they see it the West is busy exporting the working practices and political structures of the nineteenth century while trying to deter democratization that might threaten Western interests.

    As a political critique it was far more accurate in the 1970s than today. The list of dictators supported by the West and in particular the US is very long. The US subverted democratic governments in Chile and the Congo and replaced them with mass murderers.

    US administration policy since the cold war, and in particular since the Clinton administration has been to end support for most of the worst regimes. Marcos, Pinochet, Suharto and the rest have been consigned to the dustbin of history. It is therefore somewhat strange to start an unfocused 'the US can do no right' movement at this time. There are several areas where the US is standing on the wrong side of history, proping up the gulf dictatorships for example, however US foreign policy is much reformed.

    The biggest problem of globalism is ex-patriate meddling in their former home countries, particularly in the second and third generations. Sean Connery's calls for an independent Scotland made from a Spanish golf course are ridiculous and harmless enough. The funding of the IRA by Irish Americans or the Sikh separatists in India by Bradford shopkeepers was not. The problem with ex-patriates is that they can believe all the propaganda they like, they can fund all the murder they like and live in perfect safety far from the consequences of their meddling.

    The funding of Israeli settlements by US Jews and the funding of extreemist Madrasah schools in Pakistan by Saudis are just another example of a type of meddling from a long distance that is hated by the majority in the countries that are subjected to it.

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    1. Re:Globalism is not a political movement by Theodrake · · Score: 1
      This is a much better post then anything I have said, but it is what I was trying to say (since I've already posted to this thread I can't mod this up, so I'll respond). To often it is one person or group (oliarchy) that wants the old way because it means more power. Power based on birth or association not skill.

      In the US it is based more on merit then who you know, who your parents are, or what organization you belong too. Yes, those things help, but ability is more important to success and power.

      I believe some other anti-globalist are more anti-anything new. Or the more common term bigots. People who don't like people that don't behave or look like themselves. The change is bad mentality.

    2. Re:Globalism is not a political movement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      baloney!

      Yes, it does if you are of 'special' color. Otherwise you will end up in prison industrial complexes for cheap labor.

  164. STOP the 43 million to the Taliban myth !!! by Augusto · · Score: 2

    Please stop spreading this stupid rumor.

    It's almost as bad as the Nostradamous non-sense.

    It was started by an article written by "Robert Scheer", and it's factually wrong.

    Did the White House give the Taliban $43 million?

    > Eli Lake, who covers the State Department for UPI and who wrote an accurate report about the $43 million grant last May, calls the notion that the White House gave the money to the Taliban as a reward for their anti-drug efforts " just absurd." He notes that one of the Bush administration's first actions upon taking office was to shut down the Taliban's mission in New York, in compliance with UN sanctions.

    --

    - sigs are for wimps.
  165. Free London School of Economic Course by mindpixel · · Score: 2

    Fathom.com which is trying to be the international university course clearinghouse has a FREE onlie course called "The Globalization Debate". Maybe some of you are serious enough about this to take the FREE course and see some examples of well considered and balanced opinion on globalisation.

    Here's the course description that I include here because the Fathom site would not allow internal links:

    Globalisation is a fervidly contested and often misunderstood concept. It has occupied and divided economists, sociologists and anti-capitalists alike. Anti-globalisation protestors have regularly and successfully picketed World Trade Organisation summits as part of their stand against the might of globalisation. Yet, many economists tout the benefits of increased trade, sophisticated telecommunications networks and cross-border investment to developing countries, pointing to the gains workers and unions throughout the world stand to make from closer integration.

    Most people seem to know whether they are for or against globalisation, without pausing to consider what exactly it is and where its effects can be seen. Globalisation might be a term too slippery to be closely defined, but it is a vibrant debate worth engaging in.

    In this seminar two major sociologists put forward their versions of globalisation. For Anthony Giddens, it is a phenomenon characterised by fundamental changes in the world economy, the communications revolution and trade between nation-states in physical commodities, information and currency. For Leslie Sklair, globalisation should be seen as a new phase of capitalism, one that transcends the unit of the nation-state. In an interview, he introduces the globalisation debate and stakes out his position within it. Sklair builds on these arguments through a flash image gallery, which explores how the idea of globalisation is used by transnational corporations.

    Leslie Sklair is a reader in sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science and is responsible for the doctoral programme in the sociology department. He has been a visiting professor at New York University, San Diego State University and Hong Kong University, and has lectured on globalisation all over the world. His Sociology of the Global System (1995) has been translated into Japanese, Portuguese, Persian, Chinese and Spanish. He has conducted fieldwork on transnational corporations in Mexico, China, Hong Kong, Egypt and Australia, and in Europe and North America.

    Sklair's latest book, The Transnational Capitalist Class, aims to provide the first systematic, research-based sociological analysis of the relationships between processes of globalisation and the major transnational corporations that are widely considered to dominate the global economy. Using the Global Fortune 500 as an example, the book focuses on the extent of globalisation in these corporations.

    Anthony Giddens is the director of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He started his academic career at the University of Hull, and went on to study for an M.A. in sociology at the LSE; by 1976 he had completed a Ph.D. at Cambridge University.

    Giddens has held numerous teaching positions within sociology, including at the University of Leicester and the University of Cambridge, and has lectured extensively at many overseas universities. He has received 10 honorary degrees throughout his career. More recently he was the BBC Reith Lecturer in 1999.

    Giddens is the most widely read and cited social theorist of his generation, authoring 34 books and countless articles and reviews. He co-founded the academic publishing house Polity Press in 1985 and still stands as chairman and director of Polity Press Ltd. as well as the director of Blackwell-Polity Ltd. He also stands as the chairman and director of the Centre for Social Research.

    Giddens is well respected for developing the theory of structuration, and has been at the forefront of developing ideas in left-of-centre politics, helping to popularize the idea of the "third way," and travelling to many countries around the world to talk to political leaders and heads of state about the development of third way politics. Frequently referred to as "Tony Blair's guru," Giddens has also made a strong impact on the evolution of New Labour.

  166. Red Cross Got What It Deserved... by toupsie · · Score: 2
    After all what would you call someone who bombed a Red Cross depot ?

    Smart. After the events of the last two days, the Red Cross needs to be eliminated as a criminal organization. It has taken $100 million of the $550 million donated to it for 9/11 recovery and decided that American victims of the 9/11 ATROCITY don't deserve it. Children in my neighborhood scrambled around, hitting up every person they saw for money for the Red Cross. Its sad to know their hard work and heart felt desire to help was for nothing. Now we find out that the Red Cross is going to misappropriate that money for other purposes. If you or I took $100 million and diverted it for purposes other than the intended, I think we would be in deep trouble. What is even worse, there is no guarantee that the Red Cross will use majority of the money donated for the 9/11 Atrocity will be used for the victims. Very disturbing to say the least!!!

    <SARCASM> Also, painting BIG RED CROSSES on your buildings tend to make them easier to hit. </SARCASM>

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:Red Cross Got What It Deserved... by alexborges · · Score: 0

      I understand everyone feeling a lot of pain about 9-11. Its okay.... but to think that NY city damnified is a better place to spend dollars than any other (REALLY) bad warzone is pure biggotry and just goes to show how selfish can you be when your soil has been attacked.

      What, you think NY was hard??? How about Bosnia, Congo, Africa in general. Or Americans deserve more???

      Its so incredebly sad to understand you....

      Alex

      --
      NO SIG
  167. Absolut Horse Shite by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you're at least capable of watching the latest Disney travesty while munching on your favourite mass-produced soy beef surrogate while browsing porn on your laptop, then chances are pretty good that

    A. You're not starving

    B. You're not being shot at

    To a college age budding intellectual, it must surely seem that starving and being shot at is hugely preferrable to a Microsloth McWorld. Thing is, you're already there in your McDorm fomenting acts of McDissent curtesy of the hard-earned McDollars of your McParents. Those who really are starving and/or being shot at might relish the idea of a chance at that which you are so eager to dismiss.

    When Palestinians and Israeli's can argue religious ethics over french fries in a middle eastern community college before the start of their Film Survey class in which they will deconstruct the socio-political undercurrents of Dumbo, then we can ask them if they'd like to give it all up to become rock-throwing McAnarchists.

    --
    **>>BELCH
    1. Re:Absolut Horse Shite by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

      "To a college age budding intellectual, it must surely seem that starving and being shot at is hugely preferable to a Microsloth McWorld"

      Of course not, first you need to think about shelter and food before think about democracy and political / economical stuff. But if you have shelter and food, certainly you can worry about the political /economical reasons that make other people poor, homeless, oppressed and / or killed and act on consequence. That doesn't mean to throw rocks against stores or tanks, or going to Palestine to be killed by Israeli or Palestinian extremists.

      Apathy is not the answer.

      --
      Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
    2. Re:Absolut Horse Shite by Valdrax · · Score: 2
      To a college age budding intellectual, it must surely seem that starving and being shot at is hugely preferrable to a Microsloth McWorld. Thing is, you're already there in your McDorm fomenting acts of McDissent curtesy of the hard-earned McDollars of your McParents. Those who really are starving and/or being shot at might relish the idea of a chance at that which you are so eager to dismiss.

      Straw man.

      No one is suggesting that starving or being shot at is preferable to corporate abuse of customers and workers. In fact, the suggestion that that is the only alternative to giving globalization a thumbs up is rather ridiculous.

      Anti-globalization protests are about labor abuses, environmental abuses, cultural domination, consolidation of markets, and the exploitation of the poor at the hands of the rich. The alternative that protesters are asking for is not anarchy and starvation; it's dignity.

      Granted, some of the idiots involved do engage in a little rioting, which Big Media pounces on to ridicule the message. *sigh* It's a shame how some of the protestors act, but their message is no less true.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  168. One of the primary errors here... by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "equitable spread of technology and a free-market economy"

    Jon, you can't have equitable spread of anything and a free-market economy unless you have a really strange definition of equitable (most dictionaries will not include 'I got mine' as a definition).

    Economies are inevitably controlled in some fashion- one term for this is 'dirigiste' (sp?) which means 'directed'. One result of this is the evening out of the ungovernable boom and bust cycles of free-market capitalism. There is plenty of reason to think that a worldwide ungoverned boom and bust cycle would be a bad thing.

    Globalization does not have to mean uncontrolled freemarket Chicago School capitalism- it is just a convenient label for this, as uncontrolled freemarket Chicago School capitalism pushes for a global boom (as was once, foolishly, written about in Wired, in the 'Long Boom' issue) without a moment of thought for the resulting global _bust_ that will follow.

    Equitable spread of technology yes- but free market economy is the last way you're gonna get that.

  169. Clinton: Globalization can help win lasting victor by baby_head_rush · · Score: 1

    By PAUL GEITNER
    The Associated Press
    10/30/01 12:47 PM

    GHENT, Belgium (AP) -- Global trade can help win the war against terrorism if the West spreads the wealth it generates more equitably, former President Clinton told a conference of globalization critics Tuesday.

    "Not everyone who's angry is angry at the civilized world and wants to destroy it," Clinton said. "A lot are angry because they can't be a part of it."

    Arguing for more globalization, not a retrenchment in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, Clinton said bringing terror suspect Osama bin Laden to justice is not enough.

    "We need to reduce the pool of potential terrorists by increasing the number of potential partners in the 21st century world," he said.

    He called on Western nations to foot the bill to raise living standards and improve education in the developing world to promote equal opportunity.

    "Global trade is not bad, but there's not enough," Clinton said. "We need to spread the benefits and reduce the burdens quickly to all the people."

    Clinton was invited to the University of Ghent by the current president of the European Union, Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, who has sought to organize a debate on "ethical globalization" ever since anti-globalization radicals rioted outside an EU summit in June.

    Rather than the attacks overshadowing the discussion, speakers agreed that solving problems like the growing gap between rich and poor -- what Clinton called "the dark side" of globalization -- has become even more urgent.

    "In a way, the Western world saw the price of poverty flashed up on its TV screens on Sept. 11," Verhofstadt said.

    "Poor unstable countries and regions that fall prey to gangs of criminals" like bin Laden's al-Qaida network are part of the price, he said.

    Some speakers expressed fears that the U.S.-led military response to the attacks would divert resources and attention from anti-poverty programs.

    "It's a no-win situation for us," said Dr. Owens Wiwa, a Nigerian activist who expects a tougher time raising money for Africa's AIDS crisis.

    Naomi Klein, a best-selling Canadian author and anti-corporate activist, said she was afraid the war atmosphere would make it harder to be publicly critical of globalization.

    "People are afraid that being critical of the market is seen as being anti-American, even treasonous," she said.

    But she said she felt that the needs of the poor and excluded would have to be addressed.

    "It's become a security issue," she said.

    ------

    On the Net:

    http://www.eu2001.be

    --
    Oliver's army is here to stay Oliver's army are on their way And I would rather be anywhere else But here today
  170. STOP MAKING SENSE! by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2, Funny

    Noooo! I woOOOooOoOooOn't listen! Feel my pent up, middle-class trust-fund hippy wrath in AAAALLLLLLL CAAAAAAAAAAAAPPPPPPPPPS!

    YAAAAAGGGGHHHHHHH! (bamf)

    Er, sorry. I'll go now.

    --
    **>>BELCH
  171. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by mi · · Score: 1
    bombing the afghans is like bombing sicily to get rid of the mafia...

    No. It would've been the same if the government of Sicily (and/or Italy) refused to prosecute and/or extradite the mafiozos.

    Nice try, though, very catchy...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  172. The answer is simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drink more Coke. Coke is the one.

  173. A little offtopic, NAFTA by Silver222 · · Score: 1
    You know what pisses me off about NAFTA? GM can pump cars back and forth across the border, but I can't send a birthday gift to my mother in Canada without being charged duties on it. Can someone explain to me how that works?

    --
    "It's not a war on drugs, it's a war on personal freedom. Keep that in mind at all times." Bill Hicks
  174. Not so fast by eander315 · · Score: 1
    In fact, as British political scientist Anthony Giddens writes in his eerily prescient book Runaway World: How Globalism is Reshaping Our Lives, the conflict now underway between the United States and some extremist fundamentalists was inevitable. Cosmopolitans welcome technology and cultural diversity, while fundamentalists find it disturbing and dangerous.

    The word "fact" does not belong in that sentence or anywhere near it. Everything there is opinion, and cannot be proved otherwise. It appears that Katz has just read this book, and feels the need to repeat everything in it. He should be a little more responsible when writing an article that will be read by thousands.

  175. So Sad... by daviskw · · Score: 2

    I've read a goodly number of the responses to Katz's article today. The only thing I can really say is that most people responding to this thread probably need to brush up on the recent middle east history. I would start at about 1900 and work my way forward. Take a look at it with an uncritical eye and see what you come up with.

    The number of factual errors propogated by people who are absolutely convinced that they are right is astounding.

    Two things need to be said though, and they need to be said at as a global point of discussion.

    The first is that while the US has, in a lot of cases, really botched things in certain areas in the Middle East. They are not now, nor have they ever been at the root of all that is evil in these countries. A Good number of these countries have governments more closely resembling the Catholic Church during the Spanish Inquisition and it is unfair and incorrect to assume that this has anything to do with US policy in the Middle East.

    Second, the US supplies a good majority of all relief to all disastors that occur anywhere in the world. In most cases, civilized countries will welcome that aid and that relief, even if they don't like us very much. In the middle east and in France they will take that relief and then spit at us as we leave.

    So, before you all resume your American Policy bashing please do two things. Brush up on your history and please remember who is paying for the food supplies being dropped in Afghanistan even as we bomb military targets.

    Keep in mind two questions as well. First, if Bin Laden had decided to bomb the Kremlin would Afghanistan even exist now? Two, if Bin Laden had decided to bomb the Forbidden City would Afghanistan even exist now?

    --
    Beware the wood elf!!!
    1. Re:So Sad... by bwt · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The first is that while the US has, in a lot of cases, really botched things in certain areas in the Middle East.

      Nothing we have done was in any way justified any part of the violence committed against us. Nor do the things that most enrage the terrorists fit into that group:
      • We rightly support Israel's right to exist.
      • We rightly maintain a military force in Saudi Arabia with the approval of the Saudi Arabian government.
      • We rightly support the embargo against Iraq, which refuses to abide by the weapons inspections it agreed to as a condition for peace after it invaded Kuwait.
    2. Re:So Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aw Come On!

      The three worst incidents of modern history are slavery, racism and nagasaki-hiroshima. And we all know who caused them.

      Killing someone and then buying funeral services just the way they are doing after bombing Afganistan is not ethical.

      Brother, you need to undertsand what mutual respect, curtural diversity and organic decentralized global village mean. Please stop sending global aid along with death, guns and missiles to rest of the world. They never asked for it; they never will! Stop encroaching on others personal integrity.

    3. Re:So Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right! You are right! You are only right!

      Rest of the world! Billions of people world wide are wrong!

      Great! Now please keep your righteousness in your trousers. Don't spill it beyond your country borders !

      Please!

    4. Re:So Sad... by daviskw · · Score: 2

      I'm not your brother.

      Slavery has been around since well before Budha was born. Racism is built into the species. Nagasaki-Hiroshima were the exclamation points to the end of a terrible time that we didn't start and would have been nothing compared to the Japanese lives lost had we invaded.

      Mutual respect is a value which can only exist if both sides have it. So far Arabs have no respect for us. Cultural diversity is slang for "I want to live in a tent and sleep with sheep." Organic Decentralized global village is a code word phrase for I'm so full of shit I got it comming out of my eyes.

      Your post is the post of a Moron.

      --
      Beware the wood elf!!!
  176. Re:Nazi pig! by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    Wrong-o, pal!. Warts and all, we're THE leading (if not the sole) exporter of freedom and liberty in thought and deed in the modern world. We're it. If you feel down-trodden now, wherever the heck you are, we're the only chance you have.

    Nazis! Hmph. Indeed...

    --
    **>>BELCH
  177. More (and more and more) by samael · · Score: 2

    The IRA is the organization that just disarmed itself [newsday.com], right? You were saying?
    That would be the organisation that disarmed itself because
    A)The Brits stopped shooting and started talking
    B)Ireland is no longer in an absolutely terrible economic situation which was blamed largely on the British.
    Back when the Brits were shooting the IRA, each one they shot caused 3 more to step up to take their place. Believe it or not, when you kill someone you alienate their friends, family and pretty much everyone in the surrounding area.

    1. Re:More (and more and more) by bwt · · Score: 2

      That would be the organisation that disarmed itself because
      A)The Brits stopped shooting and started talking

      Correct me if I was wrong, but Al Qaeda initiated the use of violence here, correct? You can believe it's our fault if you wish, but nobody will give a damn about your opinion if you do.
      B)Ireland is no longer in an absolutely terrible economic situation which was blamed largely on the British.
      I really don't care what is "blamed" on the US. We are the LARGEST contributor of foreign aid to Afghanistan. We did not cause Afghanistan's economic devistation. They caused it themselves. For example, the international community built a soccar stadium in Kabul and they use it for public executions instead of sports.

    2. Re:More (and more and more) by samael · · Score: 2

      You can believe it's our fault if you wish, but nobody will give a damn about your opinion if you do.

      Oh, bloody hell. I don't believe it's your fault.

      Fucking hell, thousands of innocent people died in an act of utterly unwarranted agression.

      I just don't nevessarily believe that the uncontrolled agression and a 'we will keep on shooting people until there are no people left to shoot' is the best way of solving the situation.

      And I don't believe it's possible to 'kill all the terrorists' as the original poster stated. You need to make it clear that you won't put up with unwarranted attacks and then solve the root cause of the attacks (which, in my opinion is grinding poverty, lack of education and tyrannical government in the Arabic region. Educated, rich, democratic societies tend to produce protesters, not terrorists).

    3. Re:More (and more and more) by bwt · · Score: 2

      You need to make it clear that you won't put up with unwarranted attacks and then solve the root cause of the attacks (which, in my opinion is grinding poverty, lack of education and tyrannical government in the Arabic region. Educated, rich, democratic societies tend to produce protesters, not terrorists).

      Bin Laden is multi-millionaire. Lot's of the Al Qaeda terrorists are/were college educated (and the Sept 11 ones could have put their flight training towards getting a rather lucrative job as a pilot). The Taliban REJECT the luxuries associated with economic success.

      If those were the root cause, then the leading terrorist countries would be the likes of Honduras, Bangladesh, and nations of Central Africa. Your argument is basically recycled from the class struggles of the cold war. It's a new conflict, please get a new argument.

      The root cause is that the militant islamic culture has a world-view that disallows peaceful coexistence with others. It really is that simple. They basically say this openly.

  178. Completely incorrect by drsquare · · Score: 1

    I wholly support globalisation, but I detest MS, Disney, McDonalds etc. Not because of globalisation, but because of crap, over-priced, dumbed-down products.

  179. Globalisation misunderstood? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, especially misunderstood by this moron. Globalisation is about opening up local markets to the global economy, NOT fundamentalism versus capitalism. It has absolutely nothing to do with the Sept. 11 attack. It seems that some people are not able to discuss any topic without in some way associating it with the war against Afghanistan. Sorry but Globalisation is mainly an economic issue. Globalisation is when you go on holidays to some exotic remote location and go shopping for something authentic and typical of the culture to bring back home, only to find the exact same trinket on sale in the duty free when you get back.
    Bush has taken on globalisation as a means to sustain the massive profit making Americans were enjoying before the dot com crash, by enabling investors to get into new markets and large international companies to compete head-on with the local industry.
    Bush claims that globalisation will help third word countries, but if it does that is just incidental, Bush isn't here to help third world countries, he is here to make rich Americans richer.
    I think if investors are going into a market and making an honest profit that's good for everybody, but anytime anyone makes a massive profit, say 50% return in one year, there is always going to be a loser. Guess who the loser will be?

  180. Democracy? by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

    How about using a sensible concept in a country like that like "democracy" and "subsidy"

    Exactly how are we to create a democracy and who would we subsidise? The fact that the Northern Alliance is a bunch of thugs is true but there is not really much else to work with there. You have to work with what exists. Afghanistan is a tribal/feudal society, I doubt that it has the cultural preconditions to support the democracy you envision - a king and a "loya jirga" council of tribal leaders (or 'warlords" as they are alternatively called) is Afghanistans best hope of stablity and some modicum of peace.

    Remember this was a war against _terrorism_ NOT against the Taliban,

    That is really a distinction without a difference. The Taliban and Al Queada are hopelessly intertwined and the destruction of one requires the destruction of the other. The Taliban was supposedly willing to give *one* terrorist up to a neutral country which would have done very little to stop terrorism. I doubt they would have even carried through but I bet the negotiation would have lasted until the Afghan winter.

    Bombing the Red Cross is _not_ the sort of act that will increase stability in the region.

    It might if there are secondary explosions after the Red Cross warehouse is bombed. I think it is obvious that the repeated bombing of the Red Cross warehouse is NOT a mistake. But I have a hard time coming up with a rationale for the bombing which is a PR fiasco and undermines our ability to act in the region. The only thing I can come up with is that we have good intelligence that the Taliban is using those warehouses to shelter it's military assets. We can hit anything we want in Afghanistan so the only hope the Taliban has of preserving high value targets is to put them places we will CHOOSE not to hit: like residential neighborhoods, mosques, hospitals and Red Cross warehouses. Another possiblity is that we intend to starve the Taliban out in the coming winter but that seems very unlikely since the core leadership and army would probably survive just fine and only innocent civilians would suffer - sadly that is exactly what we are doing in Iraq but if it was our intent in Afghanistan I doubt the government would be doing so much to highlight the plight of those same innocent civilians.

    As a side note, I think the sanctions against Iraq are poorly thought out, lead to the suffering of innocents, are never likely to accomplish our goals, and spark Arab resentment (on the street - I doubt the governments of Iraq's rivals are *really* upset by it). But it is galling to have this pointed out by the same people that opposed the use of military force and wanted to "give sanctions more time to work" and who now ignore the real issues that caused us to impose sanctions in the first place. Iraq is a "rogue nation" it supports terrorists and is actively seeking to develop chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. It has already used such weapons (chemical) in the past and would almost certainly use them again in the future if it wasn't afraid of a punishing response from the much maligned U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia and the gulf states.

  181. Nobel Laureate Speaks Out, and other thoughts... by _Ender · · Score: 2, Informative
    Interesting to see this kind of debate on Slashdot, but I recently read an article dealing with the FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) - ostensibly the embodiment of globalization to a large degree. Joseph Stiglitz is the man to speak out against it, this year's Nobel Prize winner in Economics. What does he know about globalization, you might ask? Well, he also served as the chief economist for the World Bank, that is, until he resigned due to his advice being largely ignored. What's the significance of the World Bank? The World Bank was setup to help aid countries in need of financial assistance. The problem, however, is that as a condition for giving loans to countries, the World Bank forces countries to accept Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) which essentially restructure the countries economy to be very free-market oriented (ala globalization). So, in a sense, it gives us some first-hand evidence of how these free market tactics help out countries. The results? By the World Bank's very own studies, more than half of their projects fail: many countries being put into more debt and poverty than they were in before accepting the free market illness of the Structural Adjustment Programs. We're not just talking about wages dropping as a result, either, but with the privatization of education and health care in these countries people can no longer afford to get medical assistance or an education. If that's your idea of democracy, I pity you if you should lose your fortune (which for the truly rich of the world is mostly inherited and not really earned) and thus have no hope of life afterwards.

    But what does Stiglitz have to say? Well, feel free to read the whole article (linked below), but here's a quote from it:

    More than ever, given the current context, the United States should focus on fiscal policies and aim government spending at combating the effects of the terrorist attacks. The recovery of the economy, which could take a long time, depends on effective stimuli from the government, he said.

    Globalization, in its fully implemented form, would take government out of having any role whatsoever in controlling such things. Thus, the money-bearing entities would truly control the world. In essense, we would also be dissolving ourselves of an active role in our own government, as well, as we would be placing power in corporations (which are not democratically controlled by us) rather than the government we purport to democratically elect. Erazim Kohak has some interesting words to think over, as well (from Voices of Democracy, see below):

    "The demands of the privileged on the finite resources of individual societies as well as of the globe as a whole have accelerated the pauperization of the underprivileged... In the days when populations appeared finite and resources infinite, the affluent north and west of the globe dismissed the problem with the consolation that increasing prosperity of the prosperous would marginally generate prosperity for the deprived. Popularly this came to be known as the 'trickle-down' theory which John Kenneth Galbraith is said to have described as feeding the bird by giving oats to the horse. Unfortunately, that theory has worked only to assuage the consciences of the privileged, not to alleviate the lot of the deprived. In the past fifty years, the gap between the haves and the have-nots has increased precipitously. The global south today is desparately poor and getting poorer, the affluent north is opulently affluent and becoming more so... We can't run a world polarized between incredible wealth and desperate poverty."

    I would encourage people to look at the other criticisms that have been proposed, both of globalization raping the already destitute nations to further enrich the rich and of its effects on a true sense of democracy for any nation, including the United States. Some recommended reading:

    --

    "Try that in Windows!"
  182. Re:GLOBALIZATION IS ABOUT HAVE EXPLOITING HAVE-NOT by Theodrake · · Score: 1
    Salaries in the US have increased because of globalization. Why because I can purchase things cheaper and therefore make my salary stretch farther.

    Look at the cost of toys. The cost of toys is very cheap in America because we import most of them from china (low wage). If you want expensive toys we have a tendency to import them from Germany (high wage). Most people want quantity over quality, but they are both available.

    Next why does a programmer in US or Europe get paid more than one in Venezuela or India. It is because my employer knows it will get paid well for the software it produces. A software company in either of these countries knows that their software will most likely be stolen. Further the level of graft is unpredictable and can be exhorbitant. Business doesn't mind paying graft, it just wants to know how much it will cost and that what they own/produce won't be confiscated by the government.

    This all comes down to the rule of law. The fact the in our Western civ culture we have a respect for law and property provides a security that is only matched by the number of children in the 3rd world. I depend on my retirement, 401k, and yes Social Security (all property) to provide sufficient funds to retire and live well. In 3rd world countries you depend on your children to provide in your old age.

    In our modern world our covenent is with corporations not God. I make a deal with my employer to provide a retirement account. I make a deal with my government to provide a social security check. I make a deal with my mutual fund managers to increase the value of my investments. I promise to work hard and increase the value of my employer. I promise to support the law and institutions of my government.

    When we all play by these rules we all do better. No longer do I depend on the whims of a god to provide for me and to protect me from my enemies.

  183. Oh, puh-lease... by Balinares · · Score: 2

    Do you know what the most popular restaurant in Paris is? McDonalds.

    Do you know what the most popular OS in NYC is? Windows.

    Flawed logic? Yes. Serving shit for a low cost will get you many customers who want to fill their bellies (as opposed to, say, 'have dinner'). Perhaps defining 'popular' as "whee, I'm hungry but on a low budget, let's enter there" as opposed to, say, "Okay, I'll meet you guys at that place across the town, it's worth the trip, you'll see" is an interesting bias in itself. Globalized shit may look popular because it's globalized, but the culture thus invaded WILL see it as shit first and foremost. Mind you.

    Stop applying American logic to other cultures if you don't want them to hate you.

    Bleh, and the worst is that I know this post will be modded (-1, flamebait) in less time it takes to say "Two royal cheese and a big coke please". Oh, to hell with it.

    --

    -- B.
    This sig does in fact not have the property it claims not to have.
  184. Clinton's thoughts... by _Ender · · Score: 1

    Here's what former President Clinton had to say about Globalization and how it relates to the September 11 tragedy, more specifically, how he thinks it can be used to "win the war":

    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines01/1030-05.ht m

    --

    "Try that in Windows!"
  185. Dangerously naive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > the conflict now underway between the United States and some
    > extremist fundamentalists was inevitable. Cosmopolitans welcome
    > technology and cultural diversity, while fundamentalists find it
    > disturbing and dangerous.
    You really think so?!? I get this impression that the terrorists managed just nicely with modern technology -- using it in disturbing and dangerous ways, certainly.
    This is the same misconception that is so widespread, that OBL and friends have a problem with democracy and cultural diversity and free trade and all that, when in reality it is just against American foreign policies and dominance in the middle east!
    These folks couldn't care less about how the USA administrates itself internally or what rights and other niceties Americans enjoy, or alternatively how they are making each other's lives miserable -- it's the America as seen from where they are that matters to them. That's why they attacked the symbols of American power projected abroad, the US economic potential and the Pentagon.
    There was an interview (Fisk?) with OBL where it turned out he didn't even know the term "globalization"!
    Of course the bin Laden gang are badly deranged criminals that have to be stopped, and they don't have the best of the Middle Eastern people at heart -- but that doesn't make their recruitment power less convincing for the muslim in the street. There is nothing they would like more than all-out war between the US and the muslim world. And more and more it looks like they are getting it. Not good.
    There is no easy or quick solution, but the overpowering imperative should be to keep this a just war in the eyes of reasonable people. That means taking the concerns of our islamic allies, concerns based on past experience, very, very seriously. That means first of all, that the impending humanitarian catastrophe (famine) which the aid organizations predict is addressed (They know what they are talking about dammit, remember Rwanda?) while there is time.
    I am not hopeful.

  186. Collective greed of human consciousness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Title - Collective greed of human consciousness

    They call it globalization
    I call it collective greed of human consciousness.

    It all started eons of years ago
    When there was just one Adam
    And just one Eve
    Life was beautiful
    And souls were in peace.

    And then came greed
    desire to pursue
    desire to seek
    desire to see

    His greed joined her greed
    and they succumbed to the temptation.
    Temptation to taste the forbidden fruit
    and they ended up expelled from Garden of Eden.

    Eons of years later
    in this never where land
    where there are millions of Adam
    and millions of Eve
    and some in between.

    In small towns
    rural urban lands
    in deserts of Africa
    and prairies of North America.

    In Adolf Hitler?s Germany
    in headquarters of United Nations
    in the garage of mister Packard
    and labs of bioengineering MNC?s.

    desires are getting together
    noble, not so noble desires
    wish to enquire, probe or create
    touch the untouched.

    break boundaries
    hold God?s genital in your hand
    mutilate your vagina
    and taste female ovarian fluid.

    It starts just like that
    an innocent child?s prank
    to dissect toad?s internals
    take his guts out
    and make blood sausage out of it.

    Or to play a little game of adventure
    call it love of infinite proportions
    kiss his thighs desperately
    even though it is a beast.

    greed is getting bigger than us
    it manifests itself in corporate profits
    in stock markets, in mutual funds.
    in NIKE sweat shops running in xy countries.

    No one can control it
    not you, not me, neither CEOs of giant corporations
    no presidents, prime ministers or NGOs
    And I don?t even want to mention God here.

    Sure we can try
    to stop sun from rising
    to keep our greed within our pockets
    to tie our hands before they kill any one.

    try not to fuck xy country on the name of globalization
    (is it colonization?)
    try not to fuck environment on the name of globalization
    (are they urban metros or lethal gas chambers?)
    try not to fuck immigrants on the name of globalization
    (is it slave trade?)
    try not to fuck average American on the name of globalization
    (are they lay offs or cost restructuring?)

    They call it globalization
    I call it collective greed of human consciousness.

    Process Notes ? Idea is to talk about globalization and propound hypothesis that our collective greed has become strong enough to create its own identity and this virtual meta entity is running almost all major businesses, public institutions and political behemoths such as IMF or World Bank. It has its own corporate profit agenda dictating bio engineering efforts, arms industries and environmental degradation. Even people in influential positions such as CEOs feel quite helpless against this ?collective greed of human consciousness?. Please let me know if this poem conveys this hypothesis.
    Ravi
    ------

  187. Don't forget oil. by Keith+McClary · · Score: 1

    Simple facts: They hate us because we're powerful, wealthy, intelligent, educated, and yes, free.

    No, they hate you because you keep invading them to secure your supply of cheap oil.

  188. Borders are evil... by DaoudaW · · Score: 1

    After living abroad for seven of ten years, I've often commented that "borders are evil". Just look at all the heartache that results from people smuggling, border-skirmishes, etc, around the world. Virtually every border I've seen creates some level of inequity/conflict between close neighbors living on opposite sides.

    But recently I've found myself agreeing more and more with the anti-globalization activists. Why? Because I now see globalization as not being a process of breaking down borders but rather one of extending Western hegemony! This kind of globalization is allowing the dominant culture to ride roughshod all others.

  189. History? by rppp01 · · Score: 1

    Well, not to split hairs, but Mohammed lived and died in the 600s. He also taught that they shouldn't fight against others unless the enemy took up arms against them.

    We don't know who did Sept 11. The Presidency does, and isn't saying a word on it. Bush wanted to do this 'war' on the Taliban even before Sept 11 (see BBC) and said he would have continued even if bin Laden had been handed over (see BBC, CNN)

    Who are we to define what justice is to these people? If bin Laden is guilty, then show the Taliban, and he will be handed over. Prove it in a court of law (which Collen Powell said couldn't be done - see CNN, BBC, ABC, CBS, etc...) Show the world he is guilty. Don't show it that the US is just looking to flex its military muscle for oil and regional gains. Which is what it is doing.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  190. I have two things to say about Ramadan bombings. by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 1


    1. The Yom Kippur War.

    2. The Tet Holiday Offensive.

    Yes, I would LIKE to respect their religion.

    But has anyone expanded the radical notion that we are dealing with them in the underhanded, dirty ways that we haven't with anyone else because for practically all of history they have pointed to everyone else and said "kill"?
    For literally centuries, the other tribes of the world have been at arms length with them becasue these nations have been impossible to deal with. I mean, we really don't have this intense hatred with Africans, and after all, we enslaved their people, and bred them. What about the Russians? Nope. Just politics. There is not nearly as much venom as could be between the Europeans and Africans. And that was more recent and more horrific.

    Its just that these people have been taught to be butchers for the longest time so long that they have prophecy about it... after all they site grievances a thousand years back. That was a time when we were all barbarians. What a shock if some Christians did nasty things. Considering that all of humanity did nasty things too.

    But I can't feel sympathy for them when there are people that are laughing about "the yuppies that jumped out to their deaths" in front of a Mosque IN LONDON. That should be a surefire indication that we should never have listened to them, especially when they use the words OBLIGATION and KILL in a sentence together.

    But honestly, none of this will matter when many of you are reading about the US in other countries. You think it won't happen to you in Norway, France, Nicaragua, or wherever. Just watch with morbid fascination. We'll burn in nuclear hellfire for your entertainment. You'll watch and laugh, thinking of a justification or a reason... knowing all the while that many of our sons died to keep your people out of the grip of a madman like Hitler. And only the Brits will be with us to save the world from all of the psychos with nuclear weapons. Of course, they'll get hit too. Then you'll realize what a mess it was. Then you might send troops. Or you might negotiate. But by that time, they'll be aiming for you... just because you're not like them. Not Muslim. Which is reason enough. Then all of civilization will be gone... and we'll be in a museum like the Romans and the Greeks. Reset the clocks people, time to start all over again.

    Just keep in mind that the Romans would have never taken this kind of crap. Or the Greeks. They understood the importance of civilization.

  191. scap goating is no excuse for murder and hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The use of scap goats is never a reason
    for hate. The scap goat is an excuse for
    hate. The hater wants to hate. He/She will
    hate even if the scap goat doesn't exist.

    If the scap goat does not exist the hater
    still will hate the one he/she hates. They
    will merely find another scap goat.

    There is no excuse for murder.
    Any call for Jihad is a METHAPHOR for
    an INTERIOR battle in one's own consciousness.
    Mohammed knew this, why don't the moderns?
    Scap goating is an excuse of the Godless.

  192. On a more positive note by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

    We can stay and prop up our own puppet (that's worked well for us in the past, check out Vietnam, Central America, the Phillipines).

    Or on a more positive note: Germany, Japan, Italy. Aside from vietnam even the nations you cite as failures were unlikely to be any better off and would perhaps of been worse off without our involvement. And from the point of view of the "boat people" even vietnam was apparantly better off under the rule of a US puppet government and in a state of war than under the subsequent totalitarian dictatorship.

    The policy we are trying now (toppling the Taliban) does nothing for "the people of Afghanistan who are STARVING TO DEATH... How a few more years of us bombing them will help I don't know.

    Is it supposed to? Toppling the Taliban is not primarily being done to benefit the Afghan people though in the long run it likely will. It is being done to remove a threat to us.

    Besides all that, why are we targeting Afghanistan? There are lots of other places where people are starving.

    Um... You see, there used to be two really big towers in New York City and then one morning.... But I guess you knew that. We are attacking Afghanistan because they are allies with and are protecting the organisation that attacked us. Al Queada will "pop up" in other places but those other places will either seek to arrest them or if they harbor them will share Afghanistans fate. Terrorists other than Al Queada already exist or will pop up in other places but the governments of those places will either seek to supress them or if they are supporting them will keep them on a short enough leash to prevent them from doing something stupid like attacking the U.S. and inviting the same kind of hell that the Taliban will suffer.

    Also, we are "targeting" those other nations. Take the example of our "new favorite ally Pakistan" First off the terrorists that they support didn't attack America and when some terrorists that did attack America (in the first Trade Center bombing) where found in Pakistan they were arrested and turned over to us. Pakistan did not offer to turn them over to a neutral muslim country, or claim that Pashtun hospitality demanded them to protect their "guest" regardless of their crimes - they turned them over. Secondly I think we did address the fact that Pakistan supports terrorists, especially since while the terrorists supported by Pakistan are not the ones that attacked America they are in fact part of the same network. It is pretty clear that in the first few days after the Trade Center attack Pakistan was offered a choice, help us destroy the Al Queada network (that arguably you support) or there would be dire consequences. I don't know what exact consequences were threatened (or hinted at) but General Musharefs statement defending his decision to his people hinted that Pakistan had to support the U.S. or it would potentially "lose it's 'strategic assets'" That's code for it's nuclear missles. While Musharef was still pondering his decision the Pentagon very pointedly did NOT rule out the use of nuclear weapons in response to the attacks. It would be silly to even consider using nukes on the Taliban but what if another nuclear power refused to cooperate that was a known financial and military supporter of one of Al Queada's constituent organisations?

    As for Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria - Saudi Arabia and Egypt do not support terrorists, quite the contrary, they had already been seeking to destroy their indigenious terrorist groups. I would imagine that they are under a great deal of pressure to seek out and crack down on financial and political backers of Al Queada but it is hard to see what more they could do. Syria as well is probably under a great deal of pressure, they support terrorism against Israel and may continue to do so under the protection that our practical need for Muslim coalition partners provides. But are probably running like hell from any group associated with bin laden or espousing direct attacks on the U.S. who knows they may already be providing us with intelligence on some of their past 'clients'

  193. Re:You miss the point -- you aren't even trying!! by seer · · Score: 1
    Do Japanise people hate us for bringing our capitalistic values to their society? NO.

    Do the Muslims hate the Japanese for installing the Saudi's? Do they hate Japanese for having their troops there for the last few decades? Do they hate Japan for their foriegn policy? Nope. Something to think about!

    We give Muslims trillions of dollars in money for oil.

    Nope! Bzzt! Wrong! We give trillions to A FEW PRINCES!!! We don't give oil money to farmers or even oil workers! We give it to the opressive, almost feudual gov't.

  194. no we can't by rppp01 · · Score: 1

    How can you kill something that has been around as long as there has been aggressive people? Terrorism is a bully in the playground. It is the police officer intimidating the crap out of you by aiming his scanner gun at you while you know you are doing the speed limit. Terrorism is leveling cities and killing all inhabitants in the name of god or pope or allah. Terrorism is running over protestors with a tank.

    Please. We won't kill them all. That is why this whole damn thing is a joke. It would be like making everyone stop hating each other. It can't and won't happen.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
    1. Re:no we can't by clone304 · · Score: 1

      Actually, terrorism as the world is currently used by most of the world is more synonymous with the little kid on the playground who is always being beat up and threatened learning how to fight dirty in order to teach the bully a lesson (eg. kicking the bully in the nuts). It may not take out the bully forever, but it sure as hell causes him pain. The bully thinks he owns the playground, but in this fight learns he may not be playing the right game. Should the bully pulverize the little kid for being so despicable that he would stoop to kicking someone in the nuts in order to fight back? Or might the bully gain some enlightenment from realizing that as long as he rules the playground with an iron fist, little kids will be trying to kick him in the nuts. Better buy a big cup America, the nut-kicking has only just started.

    2. Re:no we can't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, the key to winning is for the bully to realise that his picking on little kids is doing nothing for his image, to change the way he works with them where necessary, and to help the little kid grow in confidence, understanding and respect to a point where he doesn't need to lash out.

      Then the bully will find himself perceived as the nice big kid, friend to the schoolyard; prepared to protect anyone from being bullied but not actively going out to hurt anyone. And if anyone tries to set themselves up as a new bully, he'll have not only himself to stop them, but all the other kids prepared to back him up.

  195. So Katz by mrfiddlehead · · Score: 1

    Is it globalism or globalizm? Globalisation or globalization? Bloody yanks.

    --
    :wq
  196. Oh-freaking-kay by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

    I've ignored this thread long enough.

    No evidence is presented; bombing simply commences on the country believed to be the home of the prime suspect.
    We went to the folks in charge in that country and said "Give him up. Don't talk, don't dick around, just give him up" and they said "no." We said "The clock is ticking." they said "no." We said "Time's running out." they said "Tell you what... We'll try him in OUR OWN courts" we said "That's not the deal. Give him up. the hourglass is running out of sand, folks." They said "We'll give him up to a neutral third party." we said "Time's up." We are now attacking those who protected the guy who sent the planes into the buildings. What part of this did you manage to avoid learning? Bombs didn't fly the day the planes crashed. (Like when our embasies were bombed under a certain other administration.) Heck, they didn't fly the next day or the next week. I believe your perspective is a little warped.

    Oh, and if you insist on the old west metaphors, picture the sherif standing in front of the saloon saying "Come on out or we'll burn the place down." Don't want to get burned alive? Come on out. Simple, really. And as for "vigalantism" keep in mind that the UN and NATO both gave us the green light before the first fuse was lit.

    --


    This space intentionally left blank
    1. Re:Oh-freaking-kay by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      Close but not quite.

      Bush: Surrender bin Laden to us -- not the UN, not the Hague, not Nuremberg -- to the U.S.: judge, jury and executioner. There will be no negotiations. We're going to start bombing if you do not comply.

      Taliban: Show us evidence and we'll try him ourselves.

      Bush: No!

      Taliban: Okay, show us evidence and we'll hand him over to a third party.

      Bush: No!

      Taliban: Fine, show us just some of the evidence and we'll hand him over to a third party.

      Bush: No!

      Taliban: We'll hand him over to a third party, and at some future time please show us some of the evidence.

      Bush: No! ... OMFG, we tried every diplomatic means at our disposal, but they didn't cave in to our non-negotiable demands. Time to bomb.

      We are now attacking those who protected the guy who sent the planes into the buildings.

      No, not really. We're blowing up vacant training camps that we paid for, air fields, UN and Red Cross buildings (oops), and residential areas (sorry). And there's that "little" humanitarian crisis of 7 million starving civilians and refugees.

      Have we nabbed bin Laden or crushed the Taliban? No. We haven't found him let alone captured him.

      "Come on out or we'll burn the place down."

      Nice metaphor, but it's not complete. You forgot that the saloon belongs to an innocent man; his wife, two children, and twenty patrons are also inside being held hostage by three gunmen that robbed a bank. Are you willing to have the sheriff murder 24 innocent civilians to execute 3 thieves?

      That's precisely why we have laws that everyone must obey, and provisions for apprehending law breakers that do not include killing anyone that had the misfortune to be standing near them. I don't care how much you want revenge, you don't get to murder to achieve it.

      And as for "vigalantism" keep in mind that the UN and NATO both gave us the green light before the first fuse was lit.

      Reading through the latest UN Security Council Resolutions (1368 and 1373), I see no endorsement of military action. They mention steps to curb the financial activities of terrorist organizations and a desire for multilateral information-sharing agreements. They both conclude with the standard, "Decides to remain seized of this matter," meaning the Security Council must be petitioned for any new action to be taken.

      Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, "To defeat terrorism, we need a sustained effort and a broad strategy that unite all nations, and address all aspects of the scourge we face. The cause must be pursued by many countries working together, using many different means - including political, legal, diplomatic and financial means."

      Note the distinct lack of "military" as one of the options. Once again the U.S. is taking unilateral action against international law and treaties the U.S. has signed. Nothing new here.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    2. Re:Oh-freaking-kay by MisterPo · · Score: 1

      Very well put Zero, I cannot believe that you have only been given a (Score:1). It is really strange but so many people seem to conveniently forget the fact that Bush has been very unwilling to negotiate with the Talibans, who up to this point have done *nothing* illegal.

      I am all for punishing the people responsible for the Sept 11 events but, you cant simply go around muscling governments who have asked for dialogue and negotiation. What is the evidence that has been shown to Tony B and others that *cannot* be shown to the Taliban government?

      Personally my opinion of this whole mess, is that the "Coalition" is playing into the hands of the terrorists. The US military bombing the shit outta a country that has nothing and the media reporting it all only causes sympathy for the Talibans. Having Red Cross warehouses blown up multiple times doesn't help either......

      That fundamental (I hate that word, it should be swapped with orthodox) Moslem government was losing power/popularity anyway and now it is *gaining* support, especially from neighbour sympathisers.....not good.

      You are right, a policy of "political, legal, diplomatic and financial means." *is* the way to approach it. Something has to be done.

      Regards,

      Po

  197. media! by joshuaos · · Score: 1
    The only reasons we seem to be surprised at how much we're hated out there is that we don't take the time to learn what our country has done over there, what past attitudes have been, past policies, past responses.

    Right here, you've hit the root of the problem. And that is a media that is centrally controlled and top down, and run for capitalistic interests. The most important kind of activism right now is media activism, because people won't be motivated to change something if they don't know what's going on.

    When I started reading slashdot, I felt very connected to the geek world, I felt like I knew exactly what was going on. So I started another slash site to cover a broader range of issues. It's starting to grow, but it's a snowball that's hard to get started.

    Anyway, this site I've started is terradot, and I hope to see you all there.

    cheers, Joshua

    --

    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!

  198. You've got it wrong! by kaffiene · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Guys, the reason the US is hated in the middle east is not because the rest of the world hates freedom (sorry Dubbyah) and it's not because the US has lots of modern technology (sorry Katz). It's because US foreign policy has been a kind of terrorism on the middle east.

    US funding of Israel and the US habit of vetoing the hundreds of UN resolutions that otherwise would have been passed against Israel have both funded and ligitimised the loss of countless Arab lives.

    I would guess that a lot of the rest of the world (I'm a New Zealander BTW) would be unimpressed at other bits of US foreign policy: ignoring the world court when it finds against them (e.g.: bay of pigs), the treatment of Cuba (the Red peril is past, okay?), the unjustified bombing of the pharmaceutecal capabilities of the Sudan (which supplied 90% of the anti-malarial drugs in that country), using trade as a weapon (that why New Zealand was drawn into Vietnam, for example)

    I am amazed and saddened by the lack of insight Americans have into the misery caused by American foreign policy. I'm not saying that everything American is bad - far from it, I'm all for the global village and US technology has had a lot to do with making that happen. What I am saying is that Americans should wake up. To say that someone would attack you because they either hate freedom or are jealous of big American cars is either dangerously naive or willfully blind.

    Wake up! Read ZMag for some insight.

    1. Re:You've got it wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This is quite true.

      President Bush said on the night of the 11th that "America was targeted for attack because we're the brightest beacon for freedom and opportunity in the world."

      A day or so later one of the Taliban gave 3 reasons as to why we're a target for terrorism. None of them had to do with our way of life or Freedom.

      The reasons were

      • Our support of Israel
      • Our troops in Saudi Arabia
      • Our continuous bombing of Iraq

      Americans are some of the most educated people in the world. We need to truly understand the REAL reasons that terrorists are targeting us. But our government knows how to gain public support and that is to portray this as an assault on Freedom and Liberty.

      The only group that seems to be after my freedom seems to be my own government. They want to read my email, change the 'unreasonable search and seizure' laws (etc etc) in order to *protect* me from terrorists. The terrorists themselves don't seem to give a rats arse about what kind of freedoms I have. They claim they want the US-led western world to get our noses out of their business.

      As Americans, if we are to support our government's response we should do so with a true understanding of why we're involved.

      If you understand our policies, support them and are OK with giving up freedoms to achieve these ends then I can respect you. People I don't respect are those who are ready to give up their liberty because the TV tells them that their way of life is under attack and they don't even question it.

      Somebody is attacking our way of life here. It's just not who we think.

      Truth is the first casualty of war.

      By the way, here are some links that give alternate views about the Israeli Palestinian conflict than what we are usually spoon-fed by our media. The first 3 are from Jewish groups opposed to what the Israeli government is doing. The 4th link is to an Amnesty international site that may open your eyes a bit to the war crimes our ally Israel is committing. (The last link may have a space in it due to the slashdot textarea box. It's a valid link though.)

      http://www.cactus48.com/truth.html

      http://www.ajds.org.au

      http://www.tikkun.org

      http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/israel_and_occ upied_territories/

      Have a nice day.

  199. Palestinian Holocaust Deniers by Dermot+the+Forg · · Score: 1

    Just reading through the whole forum I can't help but notice that criticizing the roles of Israel, and its chief supporter the US, is tantamount to being a holocaust denier, as reflected in the replies and the moderation they receive.

    Millenia of historically documented persecution and torture should never exempt any race or nation from being reprimanded.

    Israel is the aggressor occupying Palestine. The US, far from being "the only country trying to bring about peace in the Middle East", arms and funds Israel and it's persecution of the Palestinians. Yes, the Palestinians retaliate, wouldn't you?

    That does not make me an anti-semite.

  200. earlier globalization 1844-1914 by peter303 · · Score: 2

    Many of these issues came up during the 19th century. I chose 1844 as the starting point because that was the invention of the first world-wide-web, otherwise called the telegraph. And around that time came the railroads with that caused the modern form of the corporation- an economic organization that could manage something that large. Close behind followed banks, steel, petroleum, and so on.

    Europe was at relative peace between Napolean's defeat in 1815 and 1914 except for a skirmish here and there. Likewise America found peace after 1865 and became a global force. At the turn of 1900 economist were talking about the end of real war. International trade was at levels not seen until the 1980s. This was the golden age of those silly Ivory-Merchant films.

    Then came the one-two punch of the Great World War and the Great Depression almost eliminated global trade. People couldn't believe that this could happen after the glorious start of the 20th century. Will the 21st century begin with a global collapse too.

    As Santayana said, ignoramouses like Katz are doomed to repeat history?

  201. Justice? by xmda · · Score: 1

    We are bringing justice to a people that have no concept of what justice really is. Justice? Who are we to decide what justice is? Or right or wrong? We cannot possibly see the situation as they do and the other way around. The *only* possible solution is... eh, well, I don't know!

  202. This just in... by toupsie · · Score: 2
    Not only does Katz have an axe to grind it appears that today's Moderators hate capitalism and western civ!!! I can't believe this post was modded as a "Troll". Every post in this forum that says, "America is good" or "Capitalism is a good economic system" has been either moderated as "Flamebait" or "Troll". Sad, sad, sad.

    If Western Civ, Capitalism and America are Flamebait and Troll food, how about we ship these moderators to Afghanistan and so they can hide in the caves with the noble anti-western Taliban. Get a feeling what life without Western Civ is like. Hopefully, they will get a virulent infection in their multiple body piercings during their soul searching.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    1. Re:This just in... by ktambascio · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more...

  203. Life and Debt by AntiChristX · · Score: 1

    For a fresh look at one way globalization negatively affects the third world without attempting to attach a media buzzword to the WTC attacks, see the film "Life and Debt," playing in Chicago and various other cities. It shows in detail how Jamaica's economy has been crippled by IMF loans, and how the average Jamaican lives and works. Quite a startling view of one of the negative aspects of globalization. Given a 3-star rating by Ebert in an excellent review that begins like Katz's, asking questions defining the scope of a nebulous topic, but then actually goes to attempt to answer those questions instead of further shrouding it "in hysteria and knee-jerk cant".

    To all of the foaming-at-the-mouth geeks out there who have never left the U.S. or, god-forbid, travelled to a Muslim country: Shut the fuck up. Please. I know you all think you're geniuses, and can espouse the proper doctrine for solving the world's toughest problems--like Israel v. Palestine, or which is the toughest S.O. unit, Delta Force or the Pipe-Hitting Niggaz down the block--but you forget that you're just a bunch of fucking losers.

    --
    AntiChristX
    Daring to remain below 5 karma indefinitely
  204. Ehm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Israel that are occupying Palestine ground and not the other way around. It's the palestines that are DEFENDING themselves.

    You know, I thought you americans were fond of self defense in form of attacks against another country.

    1. Re:Ehm... by Fnkmaster · · Score: 2

      Oh yes, that's a good logical argument. Do you know anything about the current state or history of the region at all? Palestinians regularly attack Israeli civilians and Israeli tanks regularly roll into areas where Palestinians live. Your analysis is beyond facile, it's not worth responding to. Get a clue, come up with a good solution and until then shut the fuck up.

  205. Is Katz naive or just arrogant? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Globalization that is at the moment being forced upon people is driven by corporate greed, as many have already stated. What amazes me, is that not even someone as anticorporate as slashdotters don't realize how globalization is bad for freedom.
    It is dangerous how well the american propaganda has worked. In speeches USA preaches "freedom, democracy and free trade", but in reality it's "freedom for corporations to do what they want, makshift democracy and free trade for american companies".

    Here where I live your precious globalization is threatening my freedom and my healt. it is threatening our enviroment and the people who are less fortunate. And it's not even that we would want anything different from the so called American values. For god's sake, I live in europe and we love our freedom as much as you do. We just don't go around preaching about it while we try enforce capitalist totalitarism (SSCA anyone? It's not just you can't copy your mp3's, it could be used for something much more sinister).

    Wake up. You're not free, you are consumers.

  206. Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope! The taliban said they would hand him over if they were showed evidence. Which didn't exist.

  207. What an oddly inappropriate foray into the lexicon by Self-Important · · Score: 1

    "Globalism"??? What a curiously inappropriate word to use in describing the reasons behind the 9/11 fundamentalist backlash, as well as broader anti-American sentiment. I think the word you want is "imperialism", Katz. And Webster, the small, lovable black child from 1980's sitcom fame, told me that it is a far more descriptive term in describing U.S. foreign economic policy. You see, the people of many, many nations tend to resent the way that the United States hijacks the economies and governments of developing nations in an effort to maintain it's hegemony. Have you ever heard of the World Bank? "Papa Doc"? No?

    And surely "globalism" is the wrong term to use when we speak of the U.S.-run puppet government that will supplant the Taliban once it has been bombed back to the stone age. For less-public examples of hegemonial hijacking, we need only look to the puppet governments of Haiti, Chile, El Salvador, and a host of other nations. See if you can do a "Google" search on "Papa Doc" or "Baby Doc", and then try to infer how this father and son tag-team could have received American sponsorship while they robbed, raped, and executed their alleged constituents--the people of Haiti.

    This recent military action has absolutely nothing to do with opposing viewpoints, a dichotomy awaiting union. Also, this recent American military action has nothing to do with poppy plants and the morphine and heroin trade in the same way that the Gulf War had nothing to do with American corporate oil interests.

    Research Afghanistan and you will find that it has no real agricultural infrastructure--regardless of it's governments "laws" against it, Afghanistan's people grow poppy plants meant to be processed into substances for eager American and European veins. They do not grow corn, rice, or wheat to feed the people who live there. In fact, Afghanistan is the world's largest exporter of heroin. Think of it as a business opportunity awaiting American investment! Maybe *that's* what you mean by globalization!

    You ignorant, ignorant man. I think you should cuddle up with some genuine historical fact and some practical knowledge of American governmental and economic processes before you presume to guess why it is fundamentalists hate America.

    Love,

    Self-Important

  208. Well.. you proved my point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thinking you and your culture is more worth than others is the very essence of nazism. Idiot.

    I hope you are aware that most europeans think you are really pathetic. I couldn't name ONE European country that is LESS democratic, has MORE repression, HARDER sentences for even the pettiest crime, WORSE social security, MORE crime, FATTER people, MORE scruple free corporations, EVEN HAS death penalty, whose people has LESS knowledge about the outside world and so on and so on. The only reason the leaders of the world are kissing USAs ass is your overwhelming MILITARY dominance. Hmmmm.. rings a bell. Except the Germans were quite slim.

  209. "Globalism"? "We"? by eego · · Score: 1

    There are two points I'd like to bring forward here.

    Firstly: Globalism. You defined globalism as either the spread of good or the spread of bad, or at least that is how I interpreted it. I believe that globalism is neither, that rather it is the spread of a single culture across the planet. Not necessarily the so called "Western" culture, for I think westerners have a great deal to learn from those in the East. Globalism is, I believe, better defined as "the access to and influence of particular groups of people (posses if I may) on other groups of people, creating a new group of "globalist" people. I.e., those who have been influenced by other cultures and have modified their way of living to reflect, in particular, the good things they see in other cultures."

    The second point I'd like to bring forward is the use of the word "We".
    The author of the article here on Slashdot appears to be what I'd call a typical American. As a British resident, Irish citizen and Swedish national, I feel I have the right to comment on this. I have been many places and seen many things, including but not limited to Western Europe, the United States, northern Africa and the Middle East. I know that the "We" you speak of is not defined by where you live or where you were born, but rather by what you believe and which culture you "belong to". I don't believe the Taliban are fighting America or technology or "The West" in particular, I think they're fighting against the idealised way of Western "civilisation." There are many people here in Britain, in America and other western countries who are open minded towards those in the Middle East who may have different religious and cultural beliefs than most westerners, contrary to popular belief. It is the closed minded, "America is the best thing since sliced bread" type of people who not only the Taliban but people like me despise.

    Anyway, nuff said. I'll start flaming soon if I'm not careful... People may hate me for this, but my first responce to the attacks on the World Trade Centre on Sep 11 was: Good for the Taliban, it's about time the Americans wake up and realise they're not the only people on the planet. And yes I am very sorry that so many people had to lose their lives because of it, and my condolences to those who suffered the consequences.

  210. Why america? by themadhatter · · Score: 1


    A lot of you wish for the american people to considder exactly why they are hated. You should remember that the american people are not to totally to blame, it is the Federal Government. Believing it is acting in the best interests of America and the Democratic ideal, it has done some horrific deeds.

    Take Iran for example, In the early '50's iran was considdered a shining beacon of democracy in the middle east, having a democratic and popular government. This popular and democratic government made the decision to nationalise the countrys oil industry, which was TOTALLY owned by the British. This, of course got the backing of the countrys communist party. As a reaction, with the hysteria in the US over communism in the '50's, the CIA, along with MI6 replaced this democratic government with a horribly oppressive government under the shah. This can be directly linked to the islamist revolution in '79. Through your own imperialist greed, you created anouther poor and socially damaged nation. America, as usual, proved to the world it had learned nothing from this exploit by repeating the act in Chile, putting pinochet into power, who murdered thousands.
    The reasons you are hated are many and varied, and unfortuantly, just.

    Madhatter

    --
    Eat right. Stay fit. Die anyway.
  211. Hypocrisy from the bourgeoise by nabucco · · Score: 4, Informative
    Katz's statements and many of the OBL discussing points are absurd. It sounds like all of you people are bourgeoise from the United States who get most of your news from US corporate-owned media. I know George W. Bush said in his first press conference that these attacks happened because "they hate freedom", but that's equally ridiculous as well. All of the posters who say "They will hate us no matter what" seem to know very little about who "they" are or why they feel as they do.

    In Osama Bin Laden's message to the American people, which the White House asked newspapers and television to not show, he said the primary reason this happened is because the US military has been occupying his homeland, Saudi Arabia, for a decade. This is usually breezed over in American media, if mentioned at all, but it's what set him against the US to begin with. This is a quite rational, political reason, in fact he got kicked out of Saudi Arabia by the US-friendly monarch of Saudi Arabia for advocating American withdrawal. This makes a lot more sense than the loopy reasons being thrown about here and elsewhere. The people who talk like that have counterparts in the Muslim world, who say we're "evil crusaders bombing Afghanistan because we hate Islam, and no matter what anyone does, the US will always hate Islam and arabs". Someone made a reply here in which they cynically said that OBL never mentioned the Palestinians before 9/11. They have a decent point, this may be so, and many leaders in Islamic countries have used the nexus of Israel and the Palestinians to try to rally broader support from the Muslim world.

    Regarding Katz's statement - first, I'm set back by his arrogant view that America is the torch-bearer of cosmopolitan enlightenment, and the world is blessed by the spread of our enlightenment. This is the same kind of manifest destiny, imperialistic, colonial idea that America and the European powers held in centuries past - what results from this type of colonialism? South Africa. The Vietnam War. The antagonisms between Hindus and Muslims on the Indian subcontinent that the British antagonized.

    Katz's view on the benevolence of multi-national corporations, capitalism and technology are repulsive to me as a working class American, who knows what reaction a third world nation, who's corrupt bourgeoise politicians borrow from the US and Europeans in the name of the country, only to have the WTO turn around and demand that the country pay up for the money the corrupt bourgeoise of the country stole. What do you think the money borrowed by Pakistan and other countries went towards, building roads in poor, rural areas? Ha! Then the WTO comes in, and has the government privatize all the public utilities (which means that they all become owned by foreign corporations), do away with social welfare programs and so forth.

    That's to say nothing of the laundry list of things multinational corporations have done in third world countries, I wouldn't even know where to begin. Perhaps Dow Chemical Union Carbide's gas spill in Bhopal, India which killed thousands and injured hundreds of thousands. I can't educate people as to what the US media has not been educating it's citizens of US involvement around the world in in a short post. You'll have to check out the role of Shell in Nigeria, Nike in Indonesia, Phillip Morris in Thailand (making the US use GATT to sell it's deadly tobacco drugs - and without warning labels, and too children, just like it did decades ago in the US). It's a laugh that the US is sending $1 billion to Colombia to fight drugs - how come we're not spending $1 billion on other drug-producing countries? Hell, the head of the US army "anti-drug" force was caught red-hand trafficking drugs into the US. The US began by stealing the Panama canal a century ago, funded the Colombian military for prior decades because it was "fighting Soviet communist proxies". The Soviet Union folds, but the same money and military support keeps flowing, but now the US military's PR department has changed the reason to "fighting drugs". I could go on and on forever.

    It's funny how the US is going to rid the world of fundamentalism when polls show that the US is the most religously fundamentalized country in the industrial world. If the federal government lifted church/state restrictions, the South and the West would put back creationist science, prayer in school and so forth quicker than you'd believe.

    A Christian nation like the US should know the bible verse Matthew 7:1-5

    Judge not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.

  212. Money Makes the World Go Round by ktlyst · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suggest that you read Barbara Garson's book, reviewed here by Salon.

    In it, she argues that no world government can regulate the financial industry. Every attempt leads to offshore loopholes. The financial industry actually regulates world governments. Every time a government votes to increase spending for health, education and other social services, the financial centers vote by sucking their money out of that country. Since capital is so concentrated these days thanks to mergers and consolidations, the effects are immediate and chilling.

    Many times, people are living in wretched conditions because their governments promised to secure loans given to private corporations that end up failing. Indonesia, for example, closed 250,000 clinics, 6 million children dropped out of school, and the infant mortality rate has risen 30 percent, in order to raise taxes to pay back bad loans.

    You can't help but think that that is going to have an effect on our ability to function as a civil society. People should have education and health care, it leads to technological breakthroughs and satisfying lives. Money should have a social cost associated with it. If that makes me a pinko commie, then so be it.

    It seems to me that our foreign policy in the last half of the 20th century was to secure low wages for industry and keep democracies out of power in Central and South America, SouthEast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. It's only fair that what's good for American citizens should be fair for our global brethren.

    Ghandi said, "There are many things I'd die for, but nothing I would kill for." The terrorists would act differently if they truly had social justice as an end and not chaos, but they'd have a lot less sympathy around the world if our monetary policy were different. I think there are other ways to solve imbalance than crashing a plane into a building. I just wish someone would point them out to me.

    I'd also suggest reading Warren Wagar's Short History of the Future, in which he argues that a corporate global economy is eventually superceded by local government/ communal anarchy. Many of his decade-old predictions have already come true.

  213. The Democratization of Capitalism by popdookey · · Score: 1

    We can grow tired debating the merits and mistakes of our current global economy. The evolution of an even more global economy is inevitable. How can it be better than it has been is the question to answer.
    I exist to espouse the values of Democratizing Capitalism. Rather than "flattening" the organizational structure, companies should distribute ownership and accountability to all employees. This means that we differentiate value by offering salaries commensurate with experience and education. We integrate team focus by equally distributing all the shares of the company. The ratios are debatable. Perhaps the financers are allocated a specific percentage as well as the founding figures. The bottom line is that no one has any more ownership than the employees, and every employee shares equally in ownership.
    Place this scenario in your work environment. If you know with certainty that you will share in the profits that you can help generate, you will do anything to help with costs. Make no mistake. I am not talking about your paltry share of some profit-sharing pool. I am talking about a collective employee ownerhsip of up to 66% of the company. Knowing that you will see a return for your productivity or frugality will certainly inspire appropriate action.
    Impose this scenario on any developing nation. Imagine yourself a manager charged with manufacturing bicycles in a stable Afghanistan. How much easier would it be to motivate your employees if they were partners? How much more inspired would they be if they knew that the majority of the profits generated would be returned to them. How much more trusting of you would they be if they shared in resource allocation and strategic decisions?
    Imagine yourself an impoverished "third world" citizen. One of your brethren approaches you to discuss a new opportunity. An English corporation wants to use your labor to manufacture bicycles. They will arrange the marketing, distribution, and supply of raw materials. You and your friends will supply the labor and management of resources. You learn that you and your fellow employees will own 66% of the company. Decisions you make can improve or destroy your job. But, these are decisions that YOU make. You have the power.
    You are a CEO. You need new markets. You need new raw materials and labor resources. The best way to penetrate a market is to manufacture in it. Managing risk is your life. Controlling employees in the hypothetical developing nation is pointless. What you need is partners. These partners can be your employees. With training, key locals or expatriates can be instrumental in organizing a workforce. Your risk becomes everyone's risk. If things go bad, you don't bring back your lilly management staff to try somewhere else. Your management staff is home and they have every interest in succeeding. They are building their own house, so to speak, and any shortcuts just weaken their own home.
    Capitalism and globalism are not bad. People who abuse the capitalist principles on a global scale are bad. These people need to learn that they can profit while sharing in the power. There is enough to go around.
    You all know who knows what's up at work. So often it's the "lower" level emloyees who have the least decision making authority. How much more money could they make for your company if there were improved ways to distribute the decision making? Wouldn't they be motivated to do so if they got something for it? How many of you managers would love for the "lower" level employees to have to understand the collective costs of their decisions? With more efficient means of communication, this perceptual knowledge gap could be filled.
    We are America. We should be loved around the world for the freedom we embody. This love becomes so hard when some jerk is making you work harder for that two dollar a day job making sneakers. "What kind of freedom is this that comes from America," you might ask. Until we change what most people around the world see in America, the unchecked greed factor under the guise of capitalism, then the resentment should not surprise us. When our Democratic values pervade our Capitalistic principles, we will see the peace we all seek.

    --
    Success without humility is an indulgence in arrogance
  214. Re:I have two things to say about Ramadan bombings by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

    This is the best post I've read yet. Sorry I don't have any mod points for you!

    --

    "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
  215. But by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

    ?We rightly support Israel's right to exist.?

    But also support Israel in attacking their neighbors, in killing civilians and suspected terrorist without a trial.

    ?We rightly maintain a military force in Saudi Arabia with the approval of the Saudi Arabian government.?

    But Saudi Arabia has a despotic, corrupt government.

    ?We rightly support the embargo against Iraq, which refuses to abide by the weapons inspections it agreed to as a condition for peace after it invaded Kuwait.?

    An embargo that made Saddam Hussein stronger, an embargo that includes water purification equipment and chemicals, medicines and books. An embargo that killed thousands of innocent people.

    Yes, those are the right things to do.

    --
    Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  216. Israeli support is not the cause. Think bigger!!! by 109+97+116+116 · · Score: 1

    Israel is partaking in the problem with terrorism, and know it better than the US will ever, but the US support of Israel is not why thousands of innocent people were murdered in this struggle between civility and savagery.
    Israel is simply a democratic and technologically advanced nation similar to the USA in a hostile region they were rightfully given to live in.

    Savages and civility historically don't live well together.

    (BTW, savage is not a bigotted term. Remember anything about the Barbary Pirates? They were NOT PIRATES AT ALL! They were sailors of ships in commisioned navies of north African nations of what is now Libya and Egypt etc. sent to overtake commerce ships and steal their loot and anything else they could because the nations and people refused to participate in any form of trade or production of goods to achieve the goods morally. Savages fits quite nicely considering they are only two generations out of the Barbary Pirate era.)

    The real issue here is not figuring out why innocent Americans and other nation's people were murdered in the WTC and the Pentagon. But since most people seem to think there needs to be a reason for evils perfomed against us, and many believe it is because of the US's support of Israel, or possibly some retaliation against our missile attacks that were retaliations for embassy bombings etc., I'll tell you what the real reason for the murder and burning bodies of American and other nation's people in the WTC and Pentagon was.

    It was to create a precedent of complacency and naivety toward small, short, but deadly attacks on innocent people around the world but especially on Americans.

    Terrorism is not a separate entity from war. It is the prime effective weapon of an underdeveloped foe. It is the only effective weapon that a population with no production of goods and services has. It is the cheapest form of warfare known to man.

    It is the warfare of cowards who allow themselves to remain simple minded and oppressed and indoctrinated to the point of allowing generations go by with no education so as to never have the collective intelligence as a nation to rise above the deceit and murder and feelings of hatred and jealousy toward other nations for things you don't have. These feelings can be easily planted in the fertile minds of people that are suffering in a failed sociopolitical system who are hungry for a better life by crazy power hungry men with notions of turning back the clock to a century where Islamic Fundamentalism ruled much of the world.

    If the Afghan refugees trying to club and stone their way into Pakistan were to turn their clubs and stones around and go after the very "government" that failed to provide for them what they need, they might be on the right foot, stepping ever closer toward a beautiful thing called liberty.

  217. Punitive vs. Corrective paradigms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the idea of "understanding" Bin Laden is not necessarily wimpy or wishy-washy. It's just a different paradigm from the punitive approach that you espouse. You seem to think that Bin Laden did something "evil" and therefore must be "punished".

    However, another approach is to ask ourselves what sort of social/psychological/neural factors led him and his followers to conduct their sick actions. Once we understand that, we can start coming up with solutions, and ways to help people recover from terroristic psychological disorders.

    Simply punishing them may not solve problem in the long run. Other terrorist groups can still pop up until we learn the mechanism whereby they emerge, and find a way to cure the problem at its root.

  218. Neal Stephenson did it better by Mittermeyer · · Score: 1

    If anyone wants an intelligent dense discussion of globalism and get the OS revolution's as a bonus, read the 1999 essay In The Beginning Was The Command Line. rather than bothering with Katz or his smarty-boy-of-the-moment.

    --
    ________________________________________ History Must Not Fall Into The Wrong Hands ___________________________________
  219. Offtopic: Who else? by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
    I scrolled down the page, and, because the way I had my browser set, all I saw was "Globalization". I didn't need to see "Features:" or the by_line to know this was a Katz story.

    I don't mind Katz. I don't hate his stories. Sometimes I read them and ponder them.

    But there is no doubt (at all) that his stories run perpendicular to the rest of Slashdot. The usual Slashdot story is a reaction to and an invitation seeking the readers reaction to some product, policy, or controversy. There are other things, too, but mainly this is a "hey, there's a story over <a href=....>here</a> so make comments".

    Katz, though, creates a controversy or discussion point himself. That's very different. Actually, that requires a little extra. His stories aren't pointers -- they're the base.

    Anyway, who else would write a story about Globalization?

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    1. Re:Offtopic: Who else? by ainsoph · · Score: 1
      Anyway, who else would write a story about Globalization?

      I would. Its a relevant topic. I just got back from a trip through Asia and it opened my eyes to a lot of things. I am in the Seattle area, and when the WTO thing went down, I thought, wow thats cool, but knew not really the issues. Once you see US policy from the "ground zero" (like the month each I spent in Cambodia and Laos, or the four months I spent in Nepal) you tend to question a lot of things like "Why do we need Coca-Cola atthe base of Mount Everest?"

      Slashdot is news for nerds, but I welcome stories about my world, and discussions about things that affect us and cherish those who start those discussions. I want it along with the news of Mozilla. A well rounded person is an intelligent person.

    2. Re:Offtopic: Who else? by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
      Neat. However, when the WTO thing went down I thought, "Kooks" not "cool". And wife is Cambodian -- grew up in pre-Communist Cambodia and was sent to the child-slace labor camps from 8 to 10 years of age, lost her dad, climbed over the mountains to Thailand and made it over here a few years later. I think the LEAST problem over there is whether or not their is a (indigenously owned and licensed) Coca-Cola stand.

      Oh, when I said, "Who else?" I was thinking about who among Timothy, CmdrTaco, Roblimo, Cliff, Michael...

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    3. Re:Offtopic: Who else? by ainsoph · · Score: 1
      However, when the WTO thing went down I thought, "Kooks" not "cool".

      Agreed. The Cambodian thing is terrible, I read "First they killed my father" countless times when I was there. I spent most of my time in tears. Yet the Cambodian people are amazing! I could not imagine how it happend.

    4. Re:Offtopic: Who else? by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
      Yet the Cambodian people are amazing! I could not imagine how it happend.

      Remember the WTO thing you thought was cool? The same, exact philosophy behind the anti-WTO/pro-isolationist ideology (in the vein of Marx, Lenin, Mao, etc.) was adopted by Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge (Red Cambodia) followers. The operative philosophy was anything western or educated went against the agrarian ideal...the solution being killing anyone who was educated, spoke English/French, were artists, etc. This was to purge Cambodia and return it to the farming ideal. Millions died, a generation lives without any real sense of cultural identity. Not cool.

      And, I'm not kidding that it's tied to the most radical WTO rioters.

      Religious fundamentalists may be on the hot seat these days, but political fundamentalists are just as capable of extremism.

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  220. US is the biggest Terrorist State by Max+the+Merciless · · Score: 1

    Chomsky spoke at MIT about The War on Terror. He points out that the USA is the biggest terrorist state, and has been for years. This is very clear to those living outside the US of A. (like me)
    The US is the rogue state. Millions of Afgani's are about to starve and freeze to death, because the US wants to prove its "Credibility" and seize control of Central Asian oil.
    Most likely India and Pakistan will be exchanging some mushroom clouds pretty soon. And USA boys will be bogged down for a decade with their high tech toys. Did ya hear Lockheed won the billions to make more death machines... can anyone say "Military-Industrial Complex"

    Come you masters of war
    You that build all the guns
    You that build the death planes
    You that build the big bombs
    You that hide behind walls
    You that hide behind desks
    I just want you to know
    I can see through your masks

    You that never done nothin'
    But build to destroy
    You play with my world
    Like it's your little toy
    You put a gun in my hand
    And you hide from my eyes
    And you turn and run farther
    When the fast bullets fly

    Like Judas of old
    You lie and deceive
    A world war can be won
    You want me to believe
    But I see through your eyes
    And I see through your brain
    Like I see through the water
    That runs down my drain

    You fasten the triggers
    For the others to fire
    Then you set back and watch
    When the death count gets higher
    You hide in your mansion
    As young people's blood
    Flows out of their bodies
    And is buried in the mud

    You've thrown the worst fear
    That can ever be hurled
    Fear to bring children
    Into the world
    For threatening my baby
    Unborn and unnamed
    You ain't worth the blood
    That runs in your veins

    How much do I know
    To talk out of turn
    You might say that I'm young
    You might say I'm unlearned
    But there's one thing I know
    Though I'm younger than you
    Even Jesus would never
    Forgive what you do

    Let me ask you one question
    Is your money that good
    Will it buy you forgiveness
    Do you think that it could
    I think you will find
    When your death takes its toll
    All the money you made
    Will never buy back your soul

    And I hope that you die
    And your death'll come soon
    I will follow your casket
    In the pale afternoon
    And I'll watch while you're lowered
    Down to your deathbed
    And I'll stand o'er your grave
    'Til I'm sure that you're dead

    --
    * * Always question "the National Interest" - 9 times out of 10 it is a cover for evil
  221. Bravo by cosmosis · · Score: 2

    Bravo! Could not have said it better myself

  222. Re: Bombing Sicily to get rid of the Mafia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the US would have to issue an ultimatum to them first... "hand over the Mafia or we bomb you"...

  223. Collateral Damage vs Military Casualties by Genjuro+Kibagami · · Score: 1
    Something that strikes me as quite peculiar in relation to the current uproar over collateral damage and Afghani civilian casualties in the air campaign over Afghanistan is that there seems to be no acknowledgement from those that wish to move to the ground war phase without further aerial raids that the likely outcome of such an action is to be immense casualties in US Military ground personnel. (see Vietnam)

    Civilian casualties are a terrible thing, of course, there is no denying this, the vaunted technology of long range precision guided weapons is not perfect and there will be mistakes and collateral damage, this cannot be avoided, only minimised. I find it interesting on this particular note that much fuss is made of the mistakes with the precision guided weapons, but very little is ever said about their intended effects, how effective is the campaign in this fashion? is this information being made available?

    The "fog of war" in any dramatic modern situation results in large amounts of misinformation from both parties. The US Military is likely to want to exaggerate about the effect of their strikes and the Taleban is likely to want to exaggerate about their lack of effect whilst simultaneously playing up the collateral damage angle. Perhaps in hindsight it would be useful to examine former situations with similiar tactics and terrain, does anyone know now that Kosovo is no longer such a publically visible issue what the real effectiveness of the Allied airstrikes on Serbian military assets on the ground was? Afghan and Yugoslavian terrain aren't terribly far removed from one another and the complexity involved in the operations should be comparable.

    Anyway, back to the original topic, it seems awfully lacking of intestinal fortitude to suggest that US Service people should put themselves in the undeniably infinitely more dangerous situation of engaging the Taleban and Al-Qaeda ground forces in order to minimise what so far appears to be not a huge amount of error on the part of the Allied airstrikes. I have watched the issue quite closely, and whilst I realise that it's one thing to belittle the problems that the civilian population of Afghanistan is having on the ground over there from 16,000km away, and entirely another to remark on it while there are cruise missiles landing nearby, I still have faith in the ability of the US military to do the job that they were sent to do in the best way possible.

    I am not even a resident / citizen of the US, and still I would be far more accepting of collateral damages to the civilian population of Afghanistan than Military Casualties from the volunteers in the Allied forces.

    It just seems it's being ignored, that we can just send in the ground troops and the taleban will stick it's tail between it's legs and hand over Bin Laden, this is not likely to happen. The combination of largely, but not entirely, effective allied air power with precision strikes from special forces groups may not be the kindest to the people of Afghanistan compared with sending in an overwhelming ground based force but it appears to be the best way to minimise damage to the Allied armed forces.

    If you've got a rusty scalpel, and a sick person infected with a contagious cancerous growth, you may need to use the tools at your disposal to do the job, even if they're not perfect. I think everyone agrees that it's gotten past the point where it's sensible to adopt the role of the pacifist in the situation.

    It all just seems very one sided, I realise there are a lot of angles to the issue, I don't for one minute believe that in any fashion the citizens of the USA bought the events of September 11 upon themselves. US Foreign policy in certain areas of the world has been self serving, this is true, there have been wars fought largely for no other reason than it was in the US' best interests economically speaking to do so, the CIA and various other branches of the US government have taken part in some terrible snafus throughout modern history, etc etc etc, No amount of evil perpetrated by the US government or it's agents can justify direct, purposeful attacks designed to inflict the maximum attrition possible on civilians. There's simply no way around that fact. I can think of no rationale, modus operandi, or political ideology that can justify such a heinous crime.

    The ironic thing about the entire event is, well.. I'm going to ask you all to think back, does anyone remember a long long time ago in a galaxy far far away, the release of a movie called "Independence Day".

    This movie sucked ass, it was pathetic, it was so crap it could not possibly have been worse if it was filmed with the art directory of a red/green 3d film specialist in charge of production. This movie was hyped, hyped big time, by the time it came around, everyone knew about it and everyone went and saw it pretty quick. The first release of this that I saw was a handicam taped version from a US theatre, there's a scene in the movie where an alien spaceship absolutely annihilates the white house, the entire audience *cheered* when this happened. These were American people, residents of the US, watching a piece of blatantly nationalist film, and they applauded at the destruction of a symbol which before september 11 had been pretty much synonymous with corruption and greed.

    With the recent actions in New York and Washington the US government appears to have scored itself a major propaganda coup, outraged commentators across the country were speaking of the perpetrators "damning their cause" (assumedly anything vaguely related to modification of American foreign policy in the middle east) and Flag waving patriotism and national anthem recitals became the norm.

    Personally, if the attacks on september 11 had been on just one target, say the whitehouse, I think the response would have been pretty close to this, before the events of the past month took place. There was a lot of dislike and distrust for the government of the USA, now it appears as if all this has evaporated into a vague, slightly disconcerting patriotic mist. Guess nothing unifies a group of people like another group of people trying to kill them.

    Is it just me, or is it weird that W. shrub JR has not provided concrete evidence to the public at large of Al-Qaeda's involvement in the September 11 Attacks? Is it also really weird that on the FBI's most wanted page he is wanted for involvement *only* for the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, with no mention of the S11 attacks?

  224. There's a bigger problem, Jon Katz demonstrates it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notice the hipocricy: Fundamentalism vs. "cosmopolitan tolerance".

    In a country where this supposed "cosmopolitan tolerance" burns alive people in Waco texas, no justice. A women has her child asasinated while holding her infant child in her arms, and then she is asasinated. No justce.

    The problem is we have it in our heads that we are "good" guys, but if you look at the deeds of our nations, we are no better than anyone else. Who sponsored terrorists explosions and political destabilization in Chile in the 70's? We did, the United States of America.

    We do not tolerate anything but those things which we agree with. This is not any type of real tolerance, although we know tolerance is a good thing, we "know" we are good, therefore, we must be tolerant. At least, that's the only logic I can see one using to arrive at that conclusion. If you look at the way we "tolerate" those we hate(like the million plus Iraqi's who have died since the start of the gulf war), it is clear that we do not have a cosmopolitan tolerance.

    The liberals tell the conservatives to shut-up and vice versa, both sides arguing things that are completely foreign to most Americans. The liberals, in the name of tolerance, fight against christians rights to express their religion in public places. That's tolerance? The conservatives fight against a homosexual man's rights to be express himself in public places. That's tolerance?

    We live in a filthy house, why can't we clean it up before we assume we have all the answers. We are quickly becoming a nation of facists, blindly believing everything the leadership says, assuming that he who was once disliked, even by members of his own political party, is now deified. And for what? Because he was president on the day of a great tragedy.

    He and the parliment of whores have nullified the fourth amendment. He has started a war on a sovereign nation, because of the act of a terrorist organization. He has done this, in violation of national law, which he arbitrarily enforces and breaks.

    This is a horrible time. We are not good guys, they are not good guys, we have all screwed things up so badly.

  225. Re:I have two things to say about Ramadan bombings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world is watching and helping out where appropriate. Most countries comparable in size/importance (UK, Germany, France, Canada, Australia) have committed to the war on terrorism. Most have been very careful to emphasise NOT committing to a war on Afghanistan, a war on Islam, or indeed a war on whoever the US decides to target.

    Seeing people laughing at these events (in the limited footage that was broadcast) is a prime example of those cultural differences; we feel more 'enlightened' and the death of any innocent is a sad event; many of these people have grown up in a background which is REALLY a case of "if you're not with us you're against us", and with death as a daily reality it just isn't as serious a matter to them. We don't hold the same long-term grudges, we don't have the same devotion to a cause, we have a free press that allows us to get both sides of the story (unless you're in the US, but at least they're ALLOWED to show the other side if they actually wanted...) :)

    Any religion (or political persuasion, or ethnic background, or sex, or sexual preference, or ...) can be this dangerous if you are devoted to proliferating it (and destroying all opposign views) above anything else. Islam is not that much different to what is said in Christianity, it's only the emphasis and obsessiveness that can make it more dangerous. And often in cases like this, the fundamental problem is a misinterpreted or corrupted view of the religion, and no free access to the truth.

  226. Re:There's a bigger problem, Jon Katz demonstrates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he is not even elected! he stole it with might in Florida.

  227. Re:Israeli support is not the cause. Think bigger! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sorry, but half of the world doesn't beleive Israel is a country. If you talk aboout globalization, you have to understand every body's view point not only of vested interests.

    Is democracy by the people, for the people and of the people or
    Is democracy by 'us' people, for 'us' people and of 'us' people?

    Rest of the world just 'cheap subservient labor'?

  228. Futility of it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Something that has struck me in these events since Sept 11 is the shallowness and lack of any answers all sides in the debate have shown. On the right, the idea is to go get em. Fine. The prime minister of Canada said a couple of weeks ago that the last century began with great battles over ideas, and this century is the same. Think about it a little. Ho many died in WW1? 18 million or so. WW2, 55 million or so. Not counting the huge numbers starved in Ukraine, etc. So this is what the right is really offering, a world war, with uncertain results, and many many deaths. Remember, 55000 americans killed on IwoJima alone. Is this all that can be done?

    Then the left. Remember the root causes. Poverty, injustice. Support for Israel is the problem, the poor palestinians. In canada, the left is saying the UN is the only one who can solve this. The debate here is whether those pitching paving stones at cops are terrorists, or principled dissent. I actually heard one of our left luminaries tell us to look at what the UN has done with bosnia and rwanda. The murderers are being brought to justice. Well, tell that to the 400000 butchered in Rwanda while the UN wrung it's hands (and got a Nobel peace prize). And remember, nobody though much of the Serbians sitting on a mountain picking off civilians, all the while quoting the history that was the root cause.

    World war or sitting on ones hands. The 'moderate' viewpoint is to appease, limit damage, try not to actually kill anybody. Make deals with thugs.

    Again in history, we have a clash of civilizations. Each side has good reasons to hate the other. Each side has weapons and means to hurt the other. Write a journal, this is history in the making. I hope some of us survive.

    Derek

  229. Listen to the Unibomber by loosenut · · Score: 2

    He may have been morally dispicable, but Theodore Kazinsky had a lot to say on the matter of globalization (or, more generally, the negative effects of industrialized society). Although the Manifesto was published in several major newspapers, not too many people really paid attention to what he was trying to say.

    I guess that's understandable, given that he was into blowing people up. Draw the parallel to the terrorists. The mass media is mostly dousing any legitmacy they may have in their criticism of the USA (mostly unvocalized criticism, but look at their target). Which is unfortunate, because we could learn a lot from our enemies.

    The corporations that now drive our industrial/technological society and gain the most from it are the key to understanding the fringe's criticism and hatred of the US. Rather than simply dismissing Kazinsky as a Luddite, consider that he and other dissenting voices may actually be trying to tell us something genuinely important.

    This isn't a troll. Read the Manifesto, and momentarly set aside the fact that Ted was a bomber (although, appearantly not insane). Well you are at it, set aside your attachment to your confortable lifestyle and try to look at the bigger picture.

    And if you really want to have some fun, take this Al Gore vs. the Unibomber Quiz.

    Good luck.

  230. Re:Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's more to it. Power houses are engineering 'clashes' for their own selfish interests. They want wars so that they can sell arms to run their economy.

    You will see more wars again and again almost one every five years. Reasons will be trivial such as bombing of Sudan last year. Later they will move even against European and Asian ccountries but they will start with Middle East countries as thats where they created play ground pain stakingly over last 50 years.

    Welcome to unipolar war based economy!

    "Fucking global vilage - one country at a time!"

  231. Democracy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.infowars.com

  232. America is acting in its self-perceived interests by mikey573 · · Score: 1

    Clarification of some issues:

    1) Ignorance of Americans of how their actions are perceived by others is a problem. - Agreed, the ignorance contributes to problems of ticking off other people.

    2) Seeking consensus on a global scale is both possible, AND the way to bring peace. - This is a key implication of what you have said. I disagree on that in a couple ways: First, you can't make everyone in the world happy. Second, America should act out of what is "right", not what the global consensus is. But the reality of situation is any nation-state will always act out of its self-perceived interests (whether they be right of wrong).

    ---
    Activists who protest for unilateral peace have not met a starving dog.

  233. Re:I have two things to say about Ramadan bombings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just keep in mind that the Romans would have never taken this kind of crap. Or the Greeks. They understood the importance of civilization.

    Yep right up until the point the barbarians destroyed theirs.

    Also please dont compare the United States to the roman or greek empires - thats an insult to the romans and the greeks.

    I wish i had mod points to hit you with - this is the best troll i have seen in weeks

    BTW anyone advocating genocide should get some photos of Auschwitz and take a LONG HARD LOOK at them -thats where that talk leads.

  234. the "war" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about anyone else, but I STILL have not seen ACTUAL proof of ANYONE's responsibility for the sept 11 incident (black boxes, cockpit voice recorders?)

    I would think THAT should have been the priority, rather than bombing places where a POSSIBLE suspect might have lived at one time

    the only people that could be proven to be responsible died in the crashes, it seems to me, and just because some may have been registered on the flights under names that may or may not be linked to what are considered "terrorist" organizations, I hardly see how they can be proven to be those specific individuals at this point

    where is the REAL proof?

    did I miss it? has it ever existed?

  235. Globalization is a new form of "colonialism." by LordMayhew · · Score: 1

    Pope John Paul II has taken the principle of the "General Welfare," as enunciated in the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution, and developed by Lyndon LaRouche in several recent statements, as the basis for his own renewed, strong attack on globalization, calling it a new form of "colonialism."

    See
    http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2001/2819e_pope vg lobal.html

    http://www.larouchepub.com/lar/2001/2840peru_eng in eers.html

    1. Re:Globalization is a new form of "colonialism." by LordMayhew · · Score: 1

      Sorry the links got messed up, I'll try again. Pope Brings `The Common Good' To Judge Globalization and War

  236. if I was the CEO of Bayer, and I was evil by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    I would paid someone secretly to send Anthrax out to high profile people. Then I make more money.

    Hell just think what would happen if you bomb UPS, and have anon threats that more UPS trucks will be bombed... I bet FedEx goes up, UPS down.

    Fortunes to be had. Just think if you wanted to be evil... You can be rich...

  237. When it's too late by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 3, Informative

    I tend to get sidetracked in these discussions.

    You are right in one respect, but wrong in another.

    Had the treaty after WW1 been softer, WW2 would probably not have happened. Germany underwent a lot of hardship after WW1, and that was the breeding ground we provided for Hitler. Germans felt unfairly treated.

    So, in a way, Chamberlain was doing the right thing - he was being understanding, for Hitler had reason to be outraged.

    Today, bin Laden arguably has reason to be outraged, too.

    The problem is that in both cases, the mistakes had been made and the process was beyond the point of no return. America can learn from this, and should immediately. Right now, you are upsetting the world, and the world probably will come knocking again and again until you learn your lesson.

    If you're gonna be a world leader, think and act globally. Stop your president from saying outragous, silly things like "wanted, dead or alive" and "either your with us, or you're with the terrorists". Granted, he's learning, but I only think he's learning how to restrain himself. Oh - and that's your misconception to correct if I'm wrong.

    When you occasionally travel abroad, bother to learn a few phrases in the local language - "thank you", "please", "hello", "yes", "no" and "do you speak english?" for starters.

    The list goes on and on. Your nation has an attitude problem almost as big as mine. Maybe it's about time you started doing things right?

    --

    Stop the brainwash

    1. Re:When it's too late by jdfox · · Score: 2

      I tend to get sidetracked in these discussions.
      You are right in one respect, but wrong in another.


      To whose post are you referring?

      (snip)

      The list goes on and on. Your nation has an attitude problem almost as big as mine. Maybe it's about time you started doing things right?

      The US is not my nation. When I wrote "we", I meant the West. Many countries are responsible for this mess, since they are too enthralled with US money to question their relationship with it in the wider sense. This includes Norway IMHO, as well as my own country.

  238. Real Americans .. by AftanGustur · · Score: 2

    As long as I am mayor of this city [Jersey City, New Jersey] the great
    industries are secure. We hear about constitutional rights, free speech
    and the free press. Every time I hear these words I say to myself, "That
    man is a Red, that man is a Communist". You never hear a real American
    talk like that.
    -- Frank Hague, 1896-1956

    --
    echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
  239. Re:Israeli support is not the cause. Think bigger! by 109+97+116+116 · · Score: 1
    Anonymous Coward missed the point.

    The whole point of my scribbling ramble was to offer people a logical alternative to the snap decision of deciding that supporting Israel was the reason for the WTC/Pentagon murders.

    Also I was attempting to show that terrorism is not merely done in retaliation for political stances, but is also used to commence war when you have no other means.

    People seem to think we need to analyze the situation and decide on a reason as to why we were attacked before we can justify striking out against world terrorism. That is not true. There is such a thing as right and wrong. Therefore if terrorism is wrong, and the U.S. is right to fight it, it should not require any more justification than that to fight terrorism in any nation. To assume any other option is ludicrous. Do police officers ask themselves if they can morally arrest a proven criminal if he's sleeping in his warm bed? I think not.

  240. Globalization by pfg23 · · Score: 1

    Obviously, technology is enabling everyone, and significantly corporation, to communicate and do business on a world-wide scale. I believe this is generally good, despite whatever heartaches and hardships crusty fundamentalists must endure. That however, even in full sober view of 9/11, is not the ultimate longest lasting problem. The most impactful problem will be that of unchecked corporate power. Corporations are not democratic, yet in the global economy, their resources and influence dwarf those of many duly elected national governments. Let's start to disassemble the ruse of corporate entitiy rights so that the entire world can live democratically, or at least give people, locally, a choice as to how they want to live. Ultimately, human rights trump property rights.

  241. MSN Source? Are you nuts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ummm... I don't know who slate is, but I don't need to check that oh-so-trustworthy source. I can just imagine the kind of drivel contained therein. If you rely on MSN's definitions of "globalization", "democracy", "freedom", etc., then you will never know.

    Besides, I can't view that using Mozilla.

    1. Re:MSN Source? Are you nuts? by gadders · · Score: 1

      It's an MSN site, but the author is Paul Krugman, who you can find out more about here:

      http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/

  242. Utter nonsense by GCP · · Score: 1

    "bin Laden arguably has reason to be outraged"

    He's made his reasons for outrage quite clear for years. He believes he is serving Allah in the promotion of a brutal, medieval, fundamentalist utopian vision of pure Islam everywhere in the entire Muslim world. The purer, the more pleasing to Allah. Going to extremes of brutality toward and oppression of all that is impure is merely striving for excellence.

    He believes that the Muslim world is in such shambles because it is not yet purified, and he intends to rectify that. He originally felt that the problem was just corrupt (meaning non-fundamentalist Muslim) local governments, but he has since been convinced that the larger problem is the corrupting influence the West exerts on the Muslim world.

    This "corruption" -- meaning open, tolerant, science-based, diverse society in which not just men (bad enough), but even women (unspeakable) are free to do, dress, speak, and otherwise behave as they please -- is the ultimate evil and must be fought. He sees the US as the most powerful vector of all of the above, qualifying us as the root of all evil. I take that as a compliment.

    Only in the last few years has he begun including all the various Muslim vs. non-Muslim regional turf wars in his list of "grievances", as he has begun to see the political expediency of uniting all Muslims behind him in his real agenda of driving out impurity and "purifying" the Muslim world.

    Superficial analysts like you look down his growing laundry list, pick out your favorites and say, "yeah, I can see why he's outraged at the US". You don't see it at all.

    "When you occasionally travel abroad, bother to learn a few phrases...."

    I'd guess you're a continental European from the regularity in which I hear that from continental Europeans. They must teach that in school to help defend against natural feelings of cultural insignificance. Your superficial analysis (perhaps intentionally) mistakes simple economic expediency in Europe for cultural sophistication. You find similar "sophistication" in places like the Himalayas and the Golden Triangle region of the Mekong.

    My small software company knows a lot more about giant Microsoft than MS knows about us. If I were European, perhaps I would credit that to our company's obvious cultural superiority to MS.

    If *you* ever bother go to Asia -- where I worked as an interpreter for years -- you'll see that the vast majority of Westerners who speak the local Asian language well are, surprisingly to most Europeans, Americans. I know who my competitors were, and though there were many skilled Europeans, they were outnumbered by skilled Americans.

    --
    "Those who have never entered upon scientific pursuits know not a tithe of the poetry by which they are surrounded."
  243. Media distortion of anti-globalization protesters by WillAffleck · · Score: 2

    Yes, this is quite true. They are distorting it. One of the problems is that the elite, the fat cats like Bush et al are presenting their opponents as if they were the same as the al-Queda group.

    They're not. A lot of people protesting against the WTO are people who have quite a few assets. Like me. We own stocks, we invest. But we see the dangers of the so-called "Free Trade" groups, and the implications of the laws to promulgate them.

    Sure, we want fair trade, equivalent transaction costs. But we don't think that we should be promoting lower labor standards or environmental standards on other countries. Because that is what is implied by groups such as the WTO.

    One good source for information on the objections to this "Globalization" would be ATTAC, an organization which crunches the numbers and has a number of much more informative publications on this subject. I've read some of their works when I picked them up in the original French on visits to Paris, but they have English and other language publications as well.

    --
    Will in Seattle
  244. Re:I have two things to say about Ramadan bombings by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 1


    I didn't say that I wanted genocide. That is a real stretch to infer that I even wanted violence out of this. I said that we should have never listened to them. We should not ever pay attention to racists. By my opinion of that alone, we shouldn't listen to the Israelis, because they are just as hateful and racist.

    We should put in place a method to protect ourself in that region, and then we should walk away from both parties involved. And definitely stop giving anyone money for guns. I am not a troll, I have been talking about this for years before the first intifada. So, I see what is going on, and I realize that this is a challenge to the very fabric of civilization... a challenge that we can't lose.

  245. Some final thoughts by PatientZero · · Score: 1
    If all your neighbours voted to tar and feather you, and only you and one of your friends voted against it, does that mean you are the problem?

    It would certainly seem that way, would it not? Assuming they were acting rationally, I would have had to do something for them to feel it necessary to tar and feather me. If 100+ nations agree that Israel should withdraw from the territories it invaded in 1967, and only Israel and the U.S. disagreed, don't you think maybe there's something to it?

    A peace enforced from without and without the consent of both parties is not a peace - it is an ultimatum.

    Possibly, but that was exactly why the UN was created. Europe and the rest of the world was sick and tired of long bloody conflicts. They created a process whereby two nations in disagreement could settle their differences without going to war. Part of the process is having the Security Council and/or General Assembly vote on a resolution and all UN members uphold it. If the U.S. doesn't like it, they shouldn't have set it up in the first place.

    The problem, as it has been from the beginning, is that the U.S. has a permanent seat on the SC and can veto any resolution at will. So the UN (some 160+ nations) is still partially at the whims of the U.S. (and France, the U.K., China, and Russia).

    And on the other hand, do you really think it is only US intransigence that hobbles the UN?

    No, not only, but primarily. That there are disagreements among member nations is part of the UN process -- not a problem. But I feel that five states having permanent veto power over a 160-member organization is a major problem. We don't give the two California senators veto power in the Senate simply because California is so populous. Why should the U.S. have that power in an organization whose charter is to maintain peace among all member states?

    If the US were to INTENTIONALLY slaughter a large number of Afghans without having a provocation in the form of a massive attack on their population, then yes.

    As my previous post stated, the U.S. is intentionally killing civilians -- not with their bombs (though that's debatable) but by starvation. That a terrorist organization whose leader is hiding in Afghanistan killed several thousand civilians is not a justification for killing more civilians. If you commit murder and then hide in the suburbs, the police don't make bombing raids hoping to take you out.

    The coalition didn't throw the first punch in this round. bin Laden and the Taliban did, striking without warning.

    You seem quite sure of your position. Did you see all of the classified evidence? Or are you just taking Bush and Blair at their word? I'm not comfortable doing that -- that's why courts of law were created. Gather and present evidence, then judge the case without bias. Letting the "victim" carry out a sentence against the accused without trial is barbaric.

    Similar to why shooting someone trying to kill you is not murder.

    No, that is a totally different situation. In that case, I am preventing an armed attack against me. In Afghanistan's case, we are retaliating against an entire population for a single act that some of their fellow citizens are accused of having committed. In your case the proof of my attempted crime is me pointing a gun at you. With Afghanistan, the proof is the good word of an unelected president with family business ties to bin Laden.

    I thought the Pentagon was in Washington. As I recall, they crashed a plane into it.

    You speak as if Afghanistan was responsible for the 9-11 crimes. Do you hold the U.S. government responsible for Timothy McVeigh's actions? Just because the accused party lives in Afghanistan does not mean the Taliban had anything to do with it. As well, the CIA funded and built those terrorist organizations to fight Russia, so the U.S. is as much to blame.

    If that was the case, are you saying all a murderer has to do is hide among a population of the downtrodden and starving in order to evade justice?

    If a murderer were to hide out among a crowd, the police would use snipers rather than grenades to avoid collateral damage. The steps that the UN ratified were akin to a sniper. Stop the money. Share intelligence. Apply political pressure and sanctions. The U.S. decided on its own to use grenades.

    In terms of gross dollars, the US is the most generous nation on earth.

    If you compare the dollars the U.S. spends on weaponry to that it spends on humanitarian aid, we don't look so rosy. If a crime syndicate donates some of its money to the Red Cross, do we call them generous? Sure, we were supplying some aid to Afghanistan, but we cut it off at the worst time: right before winter.

    You have to look beyond the small view presented by the media. Why is the U.S. even trying to topple the Taliban government? That's not our right; it isn't in the UN charter; and it goes against the UN resolutions passed for this very situation. The U.S. has installed puppet dictatorships and funded military coups in South America for decades. Why is this one chosen to be dismantled?

    Perhaps it's all that black gold in the Caspean Sea. The oil companies would love to have access to it, and there are three routes for a pipeline: Iran (no chance), Russia (no control), and Afghanistan. Once the Taliban is replaced by the Northern Alliance with U.S. help, Afghanistan becomes the prime candidate.

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!