Slashdot Mirror


Senator Arlen Specter Becomes a Democrat

Akido37 was one of many readers letting us know that US Sen. Arlen Specter has changed parties to become a Democrat. This gives the Democrats 59 seats in the Senate, and 60 if and when Al Franken gets seated from Minnesota. However, Specter said in his announcement that he will not be an automatic 60th vote for breaking Republican filibusters. While the senator's move seems to have surprised many Republicans, it is understandable to moderate Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, who said, "You haven't certainly heard warm encouraging words of how they [Republicans] view moderates. Either you are with us or against us." Specter noted that in his home state of Pennsylvania, 200,000 formerly Republican voters switched party allegiance last year.

35 of 1,124 comments (clear)

  1. Shift in dynamics by mc1138 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This does pose a dramatic shift in the balance of power. While a lot of votes do go on party lines, often most of what happens is self interest, with politicians doing what is most likely to keep them in office. Specter is just doing a better job of staying with the times rather than any real change in his personal convictions.

    1. Re:Shift in dynamics by evilbessie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He lies in the middle of the political spectrum and he feels that he might get a more of a chance to air his views with the democrats than with the republicans, who from the UK at least seem to be crazy right wing nut jobs at the moment, well more so than usual. Seems like a sensible move to me.

    2. Re:Shift in dynamics by cbreaker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They seem like crazy nut jobs here, too. Every time I hear another insane rant about "Obama's Fascist Regime" it pushes me further and further away from the Republican party.

      They are SO upset that they lost the election and they're going ape shit. Instead of trying to push their message with resonable thought, they force it on you with words of communism and "fascism."

      The more they do it though, the less people they will inevitably get to vote for them. You might get some simple people to believe the nonsense but not a thinking person.

      --
      - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
    3. Re:Shift in dynamics by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The leading competitor in the republican primary against him was Pat Toomney- an ultra right wing nutjob. He was going to take the primary due to the number of Pennsylvanians who reregistered as D to vote in the presidential primary, but he had no chance against any D in the general. Specter polls very well with both democrats and independents. If he wins the democratic primary (likely), he's an automatic win for the democrats against any republican likely to run. The only person who could possibly win the seat from him is governor Rendell (D), who won't be running.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    4. Re:Shift in dynamics by tbannist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's pretty much it. The Republicans have been reduced to the anti-Democrat party. As long as Obama remains reasonable and intelligent, the Republicans are left with crazy and stupid.

      I'd like them to take a little time, and find the party that used to be smart and conservative rather than the party that panders to the bottom half of the electorate.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    5. Re:Shift in dynamics by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So 100 days of Republican bitching has more of an effect than 8 years of relentless Bush Bashing?

      In retrospect, the left clearly did not bash Bush enough. Two failed wars, deregulation of banks that have destroyed the economy, deregulation of industry which has lead to increased polution, removal of personal civil rights, the loss of our standing in the world... This vs. Obama's slight change in the tax structure to let the super-wealthy bear a little bit more of the burden, and the attempt to provide federal assistance through the depression.

      The noisy ones on the extreme right wing of the Republican party should be ashamed of themselves, including but not limited to the folks on Fox who have clearly sold their souls.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
  2. Ugh... by Argumentator · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I may support Democrats more than the Republicans, I find the general principle of changing parties mid-term a disgusting and cowardly betrayal of trust.

    You were elected as a Republican, for better or for worse. You should either finish your term as one, or if you can no longer consider yourself a Republican, resign. At the next election, feel free to run as a Democrat or whoever the hell you want. But for this term, you should act for the people who elected you. That's the principle of representative democracy.

    I'd even accept the compromise of, when one leaves or is kicked out of the party, he/she should have the right to stay as an Independent member until the next election. But joining a party different from the one you were elected under, in the middle of your term, should be outright unconstitutional.

    1. Re:Ugh... by plague3106 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nonsense. Party lines are more harmful than they are helpful. Also, he doesn't ONLY represent republican voters in the state, he represents ALL the voters in the state. So your notion that switching midterm is disgusting is just plain stupid, and hows your zealotry along party lines.

      Personally, I'm inclinded to go with the founders, who believed parties were a bad idea. I think our history shows that to be true, and I'm in favor of doing away with political parties all together. Explain your ideas, don't just say "I'm a republican!" (or democrat).

  3. Re:And.... by brian0918 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The sooner this happens, the sooner an economic collapse could occur, and the sooner people might wake up to the idiocy of government intervention into the economy. Not likely, but a much better choice than this constant limping along that we get from bipartisanship and lip service to "freeing the market".

  4. Re:And.... by 0WaitState · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Prepare for some extremely Democratic legislation. (In the party sense, not the democracy sense).

    YEAH! Like universal health care, and an end to the 35% of health care expenditure that goes to parasite insurance companies! WOOT!

    (Just for reference, the US is the only western country to tie health care to one's employer. It is a strange combination, that has many perverse effects such as separating the consumer from the one paying the health care bills, and turning the bill-payers into care-denial organizations. The macro effect is that we spend more of our GDP on health care than any other country in the world, yet our population dies sooner (about 3 years' shorter life span).)

    --

    Remain calm! All is well!
  5. Re:Can't win as a Republican... by encoderer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To quote a smart man, "Gee - big surprise."

    The GOP has shrunk a great deal in the last 4 years. Moderates and Independents left the party. Millions of them.

    The result is a GOP that is far more conservative than it was as recently as the 2004 election.

    BushCo drove so many sane people out of the GOP that the only people left are of the dyed-in-the-wool variety.

    Such a party is not going to nominate a moderate. Specter knew that. Everybody knew that.

    The people of PA have re-elected Specter many times. By switching parties he's preventing a small group of very conservative voters from restricting the people of PA from electing somebody they've supported over and over in the past.

    This would all be moot if PA, like most states, had open primaries where registered dems and indies could vote in the GOP primary if they chose to do so.

  6. Re:And.... by Duradin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Republicrat or Democan, the only difference is where their pocket change comes from (and it doesn't come from We, the people).

    Sure, sure, they each use different issues to trap you into voting against the other guy (who really votes *FOR* anyone these days?). But each side knows they need the other and that no matter who has the majority the "big" issues can't ever be completely done away with (what would they run on then?).

  7. Re:Hahaha, good one. by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nope. Nobody on 'my side' has ever wanted America to lose a war. Try again. Here's a hint: you may want to stop looking at politics as something with 'sides' and realize we are all in this together.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  8. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the US pulled out of Iraq... who or what would be killing Iraqis? Other Iraqis? Sounds like an Iraqi problem, not a US problem.

    --
    Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
    altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
  9. Purpose of partisan politics by Argumentator · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are basing your argument on the classical philosophy that a vote, when cast for a person, essentially places trust in that person to serve as he or she sees fit, for the duration of his term.

    I call that position bullshit and reject it in principle. I refuse to place unconditional trust in a politician, or be so naive as to believe that he is indeed there to serve his constituency. Politicians will always do what is in their self interest (wow, just like the rest of us). That's why we have the party system, so we have an extra layer of protection. We don't JUST vote for Specter, just like we don't just vote for any Republican. We vote for both. We vote for Specter AS LONG AS he maintains the principles of the party he was running under, in this case, Republican.

    Partisanism has lots of problems, but I firmly believe that the extra layer of safeguarding against do-what-I-fuckin-like politicians makes it worthwhile. We don't place unlimited trust in the guy, we only vote for him as long as he maintains integrity to the party under which he ran.

    If someone WANTS to run under the platform of "unlimited trust", he should run as Independent. There's a reason why almost nobody gets elected as one.

    1. Re:Purpose of partisan politics by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's why we have the party system, so we have an extra layer of protection

      Nonsense. The party system we have was not designed. There is nothing in the constitution about political parties, and in fact George Washington argued strongly against political parties in his farewell address. Our party system evolved for one reason and one reason only, because it is easier to get elected if you're in a party than not.

      We don't place unlimited trust in the guy, we only vote for him as long as he maintains integrity to the party under which he ran

      Political parties don't fix this issue, they just shift it. Instead of placing trust in the guy you vote for, you place trust in the party you vote for. I don't see how one is better than the other. Well, I do, considering that a person can have a conscience and a political party cannot, I'd rather trust the person. (Of course, since it's politics, I don't really trust anyone.)

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  10. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Jaysyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Being a libertarian, I don't really have a dog in this fight, I think that most politicians are crooks. But do you have any idea how irrational & childish you sound?

    There is a huge difference between wanting your country out of a war & wanting your country to *lose* a war.

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  11. Re:Hahaha, good one. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >90% of Americans think that way. It's funny to sit on the outside and see Democrats fear monger about the Patriot act being a horrible piece of legislation that the Republicans put into place, then instead of repealing it when they took power the Democrats use it to put Conservative Idealists on a list of possible terrorists.

    --
    Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  12. Re:Hahaha, good one. by realnrh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And the debunked point hits again! Republicans are the only ones who actually want anything to fail. Find any Democrat of any national significance who has actually made a statement about wanting a collapse, please.

    --
    Long? What do you mean the signature at the bottom of every comment I post on Slashdot is too lo
  13. Re:And.... by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The correct term is universal health bureaucracy, there is no care involved.

    Says the guy who obviously hasn't yet had to face a serious health problem without coverage or with inadequate health insurance. I know, you shouldn't be made to suffer just because of the poor choices made by others to have genetic disorders, evil employers or the lack of foresight to grow older.

    If you think having government administered health coverage vs. private coverage will result in more bureaucracy, then you just haven't had to deal with your health insurance provider yet.

    --
    I am not a crackpot.
  14. Re:Hahaha, good one. by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are hundreds of regimes around the world doing worse. Some of them we even put in power. We do nothing there, why is Iraq different? THAT is the question. Why are we meddling there, and not in any place with real problems, like Somalia?

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  15. No sir by DesScorp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Eh. Specter is an old school reagan-ish republican."

    There is nothing even remotely "Reagan-ish" about Arlen Specter. The only principle Specter has ever had are the ones that keep Arlen Specter in power. Though it puts the GOP in a painful disadvantage in the Senate, I am well and truly glad to see him gone. Besides the shiny new (D) beside his name, the only difference in Specter is that now he'll have to stab the Republicans in the front.

    And Democrats, while you're happy about your new supposedly filibuster proof majority, consider this; if history is any indication, sooner or later you'll need Specter's vote on something. And he'll screw you guys too. When a whore leaves her husband for another man, does she ever really stop being a whore?

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  16. Re:And.... by tbannist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While I agree with you in principle, I think your numbers might be a bit off. The ones I find indicate the U.S. is paying between 20% and 50% more than the next highest country (per capita). U.S. citizens pay about twice as much for health care as the average of all the other industrialized countries. However, it places second to last in terms of effectiveness among the industrialized nations, only beating New Zealand. World-wide the U.S. ranks 37th world-wide according to the WHO, and the only North American or European country it seems to beat in terms of health care results is Mexico.

    So yeah, the U.S. system is a raw deal for U.S. citizens.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  17. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Garrett+Fox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the ideology we're talking about is the unconstitutional, moderate socialism that we have now thanks to both parties, then certainly it's broken. Maybe we could try capitalism and the rule of law next?

    --
    Revive the Constitution.
  18. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are hundreds of regimes around the world doing worse. Some of them we even put in power.

    You'd think we would have learned by now not to keep putting new regimes in power, just to have them become our Mortal Enemies (TM) 10 years later.

  19. Re:And.... by xaxa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Um, if my health insurance provider screws me over, I can sue them. You can't sue the government.

    Why not? British people occasionally sue the NHS (National Health Service). It doesn't make them very popular -- they're taking public money if they win -- but there's nothing to stop them suing, and sometimes they win.

    Amtrack, Postal Service, Social Security... Nope, they all suck.

    Because your right-wing governments don't fund them properly.

    I don't want my health care decisions handed over to the same group of losers that are wasting my retirement funds.

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought it was the insurance companies and the banks that wasted all the money, and it's the insurance company that's deciding your health care.

  20. Re:Hahaha, good one. by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

    okay, if we're going to play the "your side" game, you have to look at the other side as well.

    The side you refer to 'thinking the Founding Fathers' were on to something also believes in the erosion of civil liberties, consolidation of executive power, silencing those who dissent, torture, revoking habeous corpus, forced religion, racial profiling and exclusion, warmongering, etc...

    Read some of President Washington's work and tell me how ANYTHING from the last 8 years even remotely comes close to the Framer's vision!?!?

    Face it, both sides are out of touch with the Founding Fathers. Both "sides" are corrupted abominations that offer little in the way of serious social stability with in the original frame work of our Constitution.

    The Democrats have long understood and I think important elements of the Conservative movement (not the Republicans as of yet) now realize that we are fast approaching a 'there can be only one' point in history, where one side must finally confront and defeat the other.

    Mean while I think the general population of the US is finally coming to the inevitable "there can not be only two" point in history.

    There are way more issues than there are sides. Some of those issues the Democrats are more liberal, some of them Republicans are more liberal, hell some of them the Libertarians are more liberal on. Stop thinking of politics as a black and white game, all that type of thinking is doing is shrinking and isolating the once proud Republican movement. Learn to deal with nuance. Work to reform the party based on intellectual debate rather than 5 second sound bites of FUD and maybe we can see a healthy return of the Republican party.

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  21. Re:Hahaha, good one. by JebusIsLord · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "socialism" doesn't mean what the bulk of americans (ie "you") think it means. Most of Europe, Canada and South America are "socialist". We say "socialism" and you hear "communist dictatorship" which is something completely, completely different.

    Sort of like how "liberal" is slanderous to you guys... so weird.

    Stop thinking in black & white, flush the cold-war era propaganda from your mind, and you'll find there are some excellent lessons to be learned from a system not driven wholy by greed.

    --
    Jeremy
  22. Re:Hahaha, good one. by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes they can. Private industry can collude with others to prevent you getting a job. They can buy all the land around yours and refuse you access. They can pollute your land and kill you, then if you've got anyone left alive to sue them, they can beat them with hundreds of lawyers.

    In fact, it is the government that can't take your money, your freedom or your life without good reason. Private industry feels no compunction against doing so.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  23. Re:Hahaha, good one. by blitzkrieg3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not in so many words, no. Many Democrats have, however, called for us to pull out of Iraq under conditions that are equivalent (in my, and many other people's opinion) to admitting that we've lost.

    How is coming to the realization that we lost the same thing as wanting to lose? Did Japan's surrender that ended WWII before his entire country was destroyed mean that Emperor Hirohito wanted to lose? Did the fact that that James Madison signed a peace treaty with the British that under conditions that are equivalent to admitting that we've lost mean that he wanted America to lose the War of 1812?

    I wish as much as the most hardcore right winger that we were accepted with open arms in Iraq and that Iraqi citizens were willing to work with us to rebuild their country, but that isn't what happened. No one wanted to (or wants to today, for that matter) lose the war. What the Democrats wanted to do was stop sending our boys off to die overseas just to prove that invading Iraq was a good idea in the first place.

  24. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sheer incompetence that shows the Republicans couldn't rebuild New Orleans in the amount of time that it took to rebuild all of Europe after WWII.

    New Orleans is squarely in Democrat hands, the Republicans haven't had anything to do with it. The fact that you don't know that just goes to show how good the media is at covering for them.

    Really, though, I think jmorris was talking about CONSERVATIVES, which Republicans ain't. Which is why they lost so big in the last election cycle, their own "right wing" base won't support them.

    Or how about a 'politically cleansed america' where if you do scientific research or have a charity that doesn't follow the narrow government sense or morals you lose your funding.

    Actually, Conservatives believe in not giving any charities government funding, regardless of belief.

    As far as Scientific Funding.... Who was the first US President to dedicate Federal funds to embryonic stem cell research?

    Neighbours are allowed weapons sizeable to a small army and shoot trespassers with impunity

    Actually that sounds pretty awesome. :)

    Right wing republicans want a dictatorship in the US, run by religious law - very much indistinguisable from the likes of the Taliban.

    Can you give an actual example of a Conservative Republican who wants that? I don't think so. Hell, I'd be surprised if you came up with an example of a Conservative Republican, period.

    Its the Republicans that need to wake up and change their attitude or get the hell out of the country before they destroy it.

    Ahh there's that tolerance everyone on the left said was missing during the Bush years. I feel so accepted for my differing viewpoints. Really.

    Here's a news flash: At this rate, things are going to come to a head, one way or another. And only one side of this argument owns guns.

    --
    Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
    Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
  25. Re:Hahaha, good one. by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He said "Right wing republicans" not "Conservative Republicans"!

    Yes, I realize that. But the person he was responding to was talking about Conservatives, not "right wing Republicans"...

    Believe it or not, there is a significant difference.

    Yes, I believe I was the one making that very point.

    As to examples of Right wing republicans would want a dictatorship in the US, run by religious law:
    1. Pat Robertson
    2. James Dobson
    3. Newt Gingrich
    4. Rush Limbaugh
    5. All the Bushes
    6. Jimmy Swaggart

    If you'd of said Pat Buchanan, you may have had a point. But Rush Limbaugh? Seriously? You're saying RUSH LIMBAUGH wants a theocracy? He gets CONSTANT heat from the religious right over how areligious his show is! Next you're going to tell me Bill O'Reilly is a Conservative!

    One thing your obviously feeble mind doesn't grasp is this: If you wanted to believe that the Earth is only 6000 years old, that evolution was a load of bullocks, and so on, liberal minded people in general would not have a problem with this. Live and let live. The problem is you stupid fucknuts trying to force *everyone else* to either believe or at least publicly profess (on pain of imprisonment or death) your particular view of things.

    Damn, we started up the Inquisition again? Why wasn't I invited!? I loved the Pit and the Pendulum!

    Seriously, though... Lately the only "Agree with us or die!" point of view I've been seeing espoused vis a vis scientific belief has all been coming from the Global Warming camp...

    --
    Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
    Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
  26. Re:Reality based my ass by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Erosion of civil liberties? You mean the Patriot Act that Obama DIDN'T renounce once he was the one in the hot seat and would be responsible if something went FOOM!, is that what you are on about? The Patriot Act that DIDN'T actually do most of the things the crazies say it does?

    I have not said a word in defense of the Democrats or Obama. They are as complicit as the Republicans, IMO.

    The only solution is to push hard for a return to normal as soon as the Islamic threat is beat back.

    Islamic threat!?!? We are not at war with the Muslim religion, we are at war with extremists who use religion as a tool. The number of violent Muslims is insignificant compared to the number of socially respectable and respectful Muslims in the world. Claiming that the entire Islamic nation is terrorist is nothing short of bigoted drivel.

    As someone who leans Libertarian I find it distasteful but can't see a way around the problem.

    Here's a thought, how about not getting into unncesary foreign wars?!?!

    Are you insane or do you just believe if you repeat a lie enough it will become the Truth? Name one dissident who has been silenced.

    Joseph C. Wilson would be the obvious choice, since his story actually did make it public. There were many more smaller stories that did not gather the same level of press over the last 8 years, and with all likelihood many more that had been successfully supressed such that you nor I would never hear of them.

    many AMERICAN CITIZENS did BushHitler put in to gulags?

    I have never compared Bush to Hitler. Although oddly enough I have heard a few right wing talk show hosts make that comparison to Obama. And the answer is at least one, John Walker Lindh. On the other hand, he did make some huge investments in new prison and internment camps our west, there deffinately appeared to be a concern expressed by the Federal government that a significant number of people would need to be locked up in very short order.

    Try it in a real dictatorship and you can earn some actual Karma.

    When did I say anything about a dictatorship? I said Fascist. Two entirely different arangements. While they can overlap significantly, the two are not mutually inclusive. Not only that, but where they hell does this arguement come from? I'm specifically stating that I think President Bush did more to move the country in the direction of Fascism than any other President that I am aware of. I dislike the idea of Fascism AND dictatorship, so I will do all that is in my power to prevent the slide of the government in that direction. What Chaves and Castrol due is immaterial to my concern of the US government. Just because social norms in their country are even more unacceptable to me doesn't mean I should compromise my views of social norms here in the US.

    And I really don't think you even know what a phrase like habeous corpus even means if you think we have been violating it.

    Habeous Corpus is a legal action through which a person can seek relief from the unlawful detention of him or herself.

    How is that not an exacting contradiction to what we are doing through GITMO detentions and black site holdings? Hell, some of the GITMO prisoners have been legally cleared of wrong doing, yet we are STILL detaining them. Even US citizens like José Padilla have been denieghed the right to Habeous Corpus.

    I don't know what rock yuo have been living under, but come on out in to the light.

    I won't concede that waterboarding is torture

    So then you would be in favor of the US making reperations to the families of the Japanesse whom we executed after WWII for using waterboarding as a form of torture on US troops? You are also stating that it is there for acceptable to have any person any where, be it a member of our military, a citizen

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  27. Re:Reality based my ass by twostix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I won't concede that waterboarding is torture"

    Well that's big of you.

    Perhaps you should go back to 1946 and tell that to the Allies before they hang 'innocent' (according to jmorris) Japanese officers for doing it. Also make sure you tell the US and Aussie POWs (especially the high ranking officers!) who were on the receiving end of it that you don't 'concede' that they were tortured.

    Big fucking heros you American 'conservatives' are aren't ya.

    Except when *your* on the receiving end of any of your bankrupt ideology.

    "crossed the line to treason more than once"

    Good god.

    Was it treason when that fat fuck on Fox openly declared he hoped the navy rescue of that ships crew would fail? Or that your all critising Obama in *gasp* a time of war?!

    Right.

    Critising Bush = Treason.
    Critising Obama = Patriot.

    There's a reason your party is being completely dominated - You and your ilk and your muddled and *completely* morally bankrupt ideology ARE THAT REASON.

    It's a shame too, because I bet you only make up a tiny fraction of the party. It's always the extremists who are the noisiest and ruin it for the reasonable majority unfortunately.

  28. Re:Hahaha, good one. by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Your comments and opinions would be much more interesting and insightful if they had a basis in fact.

    Old Saddam kept order by gassing everyone that disagreed with him. I can't really see Americans dropping mustard gas, which is pretty much the ONLY way you are going to "win" there.

    Saddam gassed people to keep them from revolting, because if they wanted to change something, they had to revolt. The democratic way is to give people a way to change things without violence. Of course, if they don't accept the non-violent way, America has shown it is not afraid to kill them: see Fallujah

    It is about OIL, it has ALWAYS been about OIL

    Come back when you understand what the Iraq war is actually about.

    The petro dollar is pretty much the only damned thing we have left in the country.

    Demonstrating once again your naivete. The United States produces more than any other country, and has a strong industrial base. The only reason you could say that "the petro dollar is the only thing we have left" is if you don't actually understand how the US economy works.

    Let us look at the facts, okay? ..... FACT- Iraq is made up of THREE completely separate groups that frankly can't agree on shit. These are of course the Sunni, The Shia, and the Kurds.

    Let's look at the real facts. The power structures in Iraq are divided along tribal lines, not along religious lines. In fact, most of Iraq is secular. The fact that you think the Sunni/Shia division is most important shows that you've gotten your information only in passing, not from a deep investigation of the matter. In essence you know nothing about Iraqi politics.

    "Inside every gook.......while we make deals with China(true evil) is not only BS, it is kinda insulting,okay?

    Oh nice, fortify your position of ignorance with racism. Smooth. Not only have you demonstrated your ignorance on politics and foreign affairs, you've also shown you lack the ability to understand other people at all. Racist. I can't believe it. What kind of idiot are you? Wake up and enter reality already.

    And the hawks will blame the dems for not letting them "win" when the simple fact is you can NEVER win.

    They won't. Obama is continuing the war. You seem to have not noticed.

    In conclusion get some sense in your brain before opening your mouth and you will be a lot more intelligent. May sound harsh, but seriously, if you don't get over that racism, there's a special circle in hell for you. In this life too (more importantly).

    --
    Qxe4