Needham
Full Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2013
- Messages
- 11,888
And you've got a PhD.Better than being a hypocrite.
And you've got a PhD.Better than being a hypocrite.
Think a little bit. A country where most of them are public employees, they earn 1 dollar a month, when seeking medical help in public free hospitals, there are no medicine nor surgical equipment, do you think the numbers are out of proportion?
Russia is not a rogue dictatorship it is a super power and needs to be treated as such. The US has destroyed many countries in the Middle East on false pretenses and there have been 0 consequences. It is sheer arrogance to assume that only the US is capable of wrecking other states in the name of national security.
Better than being a hypocrite.
Do you think Canada or Mexico are looking to accept Chinese missiles or troops? That's what's always missing from this analysis. Canada and Mexico benefit from their ties with the US and don't maintain them simply due to coercion.
If you think that there have not been consequences on the US for meddling in the Middle East, you better take a closer look at the long list of Americans on the Veteran Affairs list struggling to make it back into civilian life. Even we in Canada have to work to treat our own veterans' mental health issues from the trauma of war and then resinserting them into civilian society. THAT is also a cost of war hitting us at home. Physical scars may not be there, but amputated souls are there and take far longer to heal.
So the USA that dropped the Hiroshima bomb and the current USA are basically the same?USA dropped two nuclear bombs, not one, two on Japan, destroyed afghanistan, destroyed Iraq, 1 million casualties. Putin for all the "atrocities" he is doing now, doesnt even compare to that. Both are insane, but do you trust someone like the USA?
Senior decided to intervene during the arab war between Iraq and Kuwait/KSA (don't know what was in it for him except to keep hold of the petrol in Saudi and Kuwait) as this was the bread and butter for the USA in the arab world back then (still to this day)
For NATO, defensive alliance that went all the way to Lybia to attack Gaddhafi and kill him? that shelled Yugoslavia before? Doesn't seem defensive to me, if anything it was driven by specific agendas that found it easy to attack when they see fit until now when they are facing a madman with 6500 nuclear warheads at his disposal..
So, again, you do realize that Senior didn’t go it alone & what were these ‘b & b’ operations we were undertaking similar to the 91 invasion?Ensuring the petrol you discovered in the KSA remains fully within your control maybe? Or the fact that April Glaspie, your US ambassador back then informed Saddam that the USA has no opinion of what happens between Iraq/Kuwait? Only to back on that and go all war on Saddam?
So the USA that dropped the Hiroshima bomb and the current USA are basically the same?
What a country did 70+ years ago (to a country that committed atrocities of their own) decides how we think about said country now? Even if most of the people in that country now weren’t even alive when the Hiroshima bomb was instructed/dropped (and was a last resort and aimed at net savings of lives)?
And Putins actions now are not so bad because of what another country did decades ago?
Senior decided to intervene during the arab war between Iraq and Kuwait/KSA (don't know what was in it for him except to keep hold of the petrol in Saudi and Kuwait) as this was the bread and butter for the USA in the arab world back then (still to this day)
For NATO, defensive alliance that went all the way to Lybia to attack Gaddhafi and kill him? that shelled Yugoslavia before? Doesn't seem defensive to me, if anything it was driven by specific agendas that found it easy to attack when they see fit until now when they are facing a madman with 6500 nuclear warheads at his disposal..
Senior decided to intervene during the arab war between Iraq and Kuwait/KSA (don't know what was in it for him except to keep hold of the petrol in Saudi and Kuwait) as this was the bread and butter for the USA in the arab world back then (still to this day)
For NATO, defensive alliance that went all the way to Lybia to attack Gaddhafi and kill him? that shelled Yugoslavia before? Doesn't seem defensive to me, if anything it was driven by specific agendas that found it easy to attack when they see fit until now when they are facing a madman with 6500 nuclear warheads at his disposal..
Ensuring the petrol you discovered in the KSA remains fully within your control maybe? Or the fact that April Glaspie, your US ambassador back then informed Saddam that the USA has no opinion of what happens between Iraq/Kuwait? Only to back on that and go all war on Saddam?
That's probably one of the worst takes I've ever seen regarding the 1990 war. The 'Arab war' between Kuwait and Iraq....
Libya didn't involve all of NATO (and did include some non NATO). Yugoslavia was an exception and one I agree is outside of the remit of what NATO is supposed to do.
What a country did 70+ years ago should have been trialed, but the winners of the war dictate the rest I would say. Same for the second iraqi war, 1 million deaths, no-one sanctioned, do you think that is fair or right let's say?
So the USA that dropped the Hiroshima bomb and the current USA are basically the same?
What a country did 70+ years ago (to a country that committed atrocities of their own) decides how we think about said country now? Even if most of the people in that country now weren’t even alive when the Hiroshima bomb was instructed/dropped (and was a last resort and aimed at net savings of lives)?
And Putins actions now are not so bad because of what another country did decades ago?
It’s as if some don’t realize the calculus changes over time.Just to show how ridiculous this conversation is, it's the Japanese of all people that now want American nuclear forces stationed in their country. Things change throughout time and bothsidesism only serves Putin's propaganda at the end of the day.
Sanctions are generally actions taken at the national level. So countries that were not part of 'the west' or involved in the second Iraq war were free to sanction those who were. They didn't. Makes you wonder.
It's pretty much impossible to sanction 'the West', such is its economic dominance over the world economy.
How would a country like Indonesia or Gabon go about sanctioning the USA?
Numbers published by Dyson and Cetorelli are based on numbers collected by the workers working in assitance with the new iraqi government, I have no doubt these numbers are also manipulated. I worked in two children hospitals and I saw these numbers in practice.I'm quoting a study of a highly reputable university which probably put hundred times the effort in the research than you and me combined. I don't believe "think a little bit" is enough of a counter argument to be honest.
Especially since your argument is pretty weak from a logical standpoint, too. If I'm not mistaken, the infant mortality rate for Iraq was very high before the sanctions, too, and it didn't decrease after they were taken back. Maybe the families you're speaking about didn't get the help they needed before the sanctions were put into place either. After all, it was a pretty brutal regime and chances are that the poorest in the country belonged to the discriminated groups of people. And there are many more potential explations for it. They might all be true and it mgiht also be the case that none of them are. It's a difficult and complicated topic - that's what studies are for.
If you think that there have not been consequences on the US for meddling in the Middle East, you better take a closer look at the long list of Americans on the Veteran Affairs list struggling to make it back into civilian life. Even we in Canada have to work to treat our own veterans' mental health issues from the trauma of war and then resinserting them into civilian society. THAT is also a cost of war hitting us at home. Physical scars may not be there, but amputated souls are there and take far longer to heal.
Ever since you popped up in the other thread, you have shown to have zero undertsanding of the European context that explains why NATO became bigger since 1999. Tell me what the hell was that drunk Yeltsin even thinking by supporting Milosevic work and his genocidal when his predecessor Gorbachev was clever enough to abstain as Saddam was just becoming too much of a burden to support publicly in 1990-1991. And that is before we go on to discuss about Putin's warring methods from Chechnya up to now. Eastern European countries had plenty of reasons to join NATO because of the Yugoslavian wars and now have even more reasons to be more active into it because of the bald twat in the Kremlin. Once you taste freedom and the rule of law altogether, you don't want to let it go.
And for the 4,999,999th time, Ukraine is not a NATO member although they aspire to become one. Ukraine is more likely to become a member of the EU first and foremost, and that's the first big middle finger that the Kremlin deserves.
How small of a person you are. It's pathetic.
Cant take this as a serious post. You think soldiers dying and having ruined lives are the consequences I’m talking about? Time to remove the sanctions then because plenty of Russian soldiers have died.
Ridiculous post.
They wouldn't but of course, we saw what happened the last time a country in the USA's sphere tried to host missiles from another country.
Your problem is that you know jack shit about History and you have no respect about the fact that casualties hit everywhere in different ways. I don't know where in Asia you come from and I don't give a shit, but you seem to enjoy kissing ass to China and Russia just to crap on the West from the looks of it. Well, I have news for you: both countries and their sycophants worldwide can go feck themselves as they are now.
And what the feck are you even doing on a Manchester United fan forum? Take that crap to an Arsenal fan forum.
Strawman, my arse. You are a despicable person to begin with.The strawman doesn’t change the fact that it was a ridiculous post.
Strawman, my arse. You are a despicable person to begin with.
There was a deadly war before the sanctions. The Iran war, one that was largely driven by the US... And there was another war waged on the Iraqi people by the US(& some allies) after those sanctions were lifted. Both wars would be likely to contribute not only to deaths but also to malnutrition and medical shortages nearly as serious as the sanctions.I'm quoting a study of a highly reputable university which probably put hundred times the effort in the research than you and me combined. I don't believe "think a little bit" is enough of a counter argument to be honest.
Especially since your argument is pretty weak from a logical standpoint, too. If I'm not mistaken, the infant mortality rate for Iraq was very high before the sanctions, too, and it didn't decrease after they were taken back. Maybe the families you're speaking about didn't get the help they needed before the sanctions were put into place either. After all, it was a pretty brutal regime and chances are that the poorest in the country belonged to the discriminated groups of people. And there are many more potential explations for it. They might all be true and it mgiht also be the case that none of them are. It's a difficult and complicated topic - that's what studies are for.
The world was inherently different in 1997.
A lot has happened since then.
Funny that the tweet is from 'In Context' yet no context is supplied.
If you think that there have not been consequences on the US for meddling in the Middle East, you better take a closer look at the long list of Americans on the Veteran Affairs list struggling to make it back into civilian life. Even we in Canada have to work to treat our own veterans' mental health issues from the trauma of war and then resinserting them into civilian society. THAT is also a cost of war hitting us at home. Physical scars may not be there, but amputated souls are there and take far longer to heal.
That the world has moved on from the Soviet, but Russia hasn't?If expanding NATO in 1997 when Russia was at its weakest was already known to be provocation then what does that say about doing it today when Russia has recovered?
That the world has moved on from the Soviet, but Russia hasn't?
If you think that there have not been consequences on the US for meddling in the Middle East, you better take a closer look at the long list of Americans on the Veteran Affairs list struggling to make it back into civilian life. Even we in Canada have to work to treat our own veterans' mental health issues from the trauma of war and then resinserting them into civilian society. THAT is also a cost of war hitting us at home. Physical scars may not be there, but amputated souls are there and take far longer to heal.
Ever since you popped up in the other thread, you have shown to have zero undertsanding of the European context that explains why NATO became bigger since 1999. Tell me what the hell was that drunk Yeltsin even thinking by supporting Milosevic work and his genocidal when his predecessor Gorbachev was clever enough to abstain as Saddam was just becoming too much of a burden to support publicly in 1990-1991. And that is before we go on to discuss about Putin's warring methods from Chechnya up to now. Eastern European countries had plenty of reasons to join NATO because of the Yugoslavian wars and now have even more reasons to be more active into it because of the bald twat in the Kremlin. Once you taste freedom and the rule of law altogether, you don't want to let it go.
And for the 4,999,999th time, Ukraine is not a NATO member although they aspire to become one. Ukraine is more likely to become a member of the EU first and foremost, and that's the first big middle finger that the Kremlin deserves.
How small of a person you are. It's pathetic.
Why would that bother Russia if they didn't still harbour thoughts about the Soviet?But the world clearly hasn’t moved on has it? The anti soviet pact NATO has just kept growing since the Soviet Union ended.
Why would that bother Russia if they didn't still harbour thoughts about the Soviet?
Do NATO see the expansion as provocative? Evidently not, otherwise they wouldn't have got NM to join.
In 1997 yeah.I mean did we not just see a video from 1997 where the current US President said that NATO expansion would be seen as a hostile act?