This isn't about Libertarianism, it's about debunking your revisionism.Thumpalumpacus wrote:What's this? A "Libertarian" trusting the government?Seth wrote:They weren't "shifting" reasons, they were additive, brick by brick as the intelligence came in. First Sarin on the Kurds, then satellite images, on-the-ground intel, reports of Saddam's agents meeting with terrorists in France, discovery of thousands of anonymous bank accounts funded by Saddam and used to support international terrorists, then his belligerent acts in Kuwait, then his obstruction of UN inspectors, his creation of faux biowarfare facilities, his innuendo regarding nukes and so on and so on. Just because our leaders did not repeat the entire list of (mostly classified) information they had, and you did not, to satisfy your skepticism doesn't mean they didn't have valid and actionable intelligence. What the President told the press, and what the press chose to report and how they chose to report it have almost no connection to the reality of the intelligence and data available to our vast network of intelligence professionals in this and other countries upon which the President made his decisions.
So? What leads you to the belief that the general public is entitled to full disclosure of classified intelligence? That the Bush Administration addressed issues as they came up doesn't mean they didn't have actionable intelligence.The fact is that the reasons were shifted as objections were raised.
T
his "actionable intelligence" you keep bruiting about was wrong.
Some of it turned out to be wrong, in hindsight. But you don't prosecute a war based on hindsight, you go with what you have at the time.
So you say. Are you privy to classified information given to the President at the time? No? I thought not.It was wrong because the Administration made plain exactly what its expectations were regarding "evidence" and as a result negative indications weren't fed into the decision making process.
Where's the smoking gun? And Bush and Powell are making the decisions, that's what they are paid to do, so they can ignore skeptics if they deem their skepticism, like your skepticism, to be invalid and based on ideological bias rather than hard facts.Curveball was strongly suspected by personnel inside the CIA to be a plant, yet Bush and Powell waved his misinformation around, and ignored the skeptics inside the intelligence community.
Sure they are. The only question is whether we want to go to war based on those acts.
Yes, they are.
The Security Council shall, where appropriate, utilize such regional arrangements or agencies for enforcement action under its authority. But no enforcement action shall be taken under regional arrangements or by regional agencies without the authorization of the Security Council, with the exception of measures against any enemy state, as defined in paragraph 2 of this Article, provided for pursuant to Article 107 or in regional arrangements directed against renewal of aggressive policy on the part of any such state, until such time as the Organization may, on request of the Governments concerned, be charged with the responsibility for preventing further aggression by such a state.
The Constitution and the authority of our Congress to declare war (or authorize the invasion as in this case) supersedes UN agreements. The reference you cite is regarding actions by UN forces, and it does not restrict the US from going to war if it has what it considers causus belli, which we did, and which Congress duly acknowledged and for which it gave the President authority to take military action.It may have escaped your notice, but we're a UN member state, that is a lawful treaty we've entered, and under our own Constitution, that has the force of law in America.
Don't care. They are Communists and therefore they are automatically a danger to the planet and everyone on it, and the Communists among the Chinese need to be destroyed using whatever tactics manage it without destroying the rest of the planet.
Communism is not a "differing political view," it's a poisonous ideology that has as its core purpose the enslavement of populations to collectivism and the destruction of capitalism and democracy worldwide, by design and specific intent.I will never agree that destroying someone else is justified solely on the basis of differing political views.
Anyone who doesn't understand that is terminally stupid.
If and when they present open hostilities, I'll be glad to renew the oath I swore as a youth.
If and when the Communist Chinese present "open hostilities" as I suspect you intend, you will be a collection of loosely associated atoms in a high-temperature plasma and your oath will be meaningless. We must stop Communism BEFORE it engages in open hostilities, and we must recognize when it's engaging in COVERT hostilities with the intent to destroy our nation, which Communist China absolutely is doing right this very minute. Just today a Chinese national living in the US was arrested for illegally exporting computer chips used in satellites manufactured right here in Colorado Springs. He's undoubtedly an agent of the Chinese military.
The you're a fool because they mean to subjugate you or kill you. I won't let them do that to me.Until then, so long as they leave us be, we ought not be killing them for simply accepting a different political system, no matter how repulsive I find it.
That policy is a fine one when the country involved doesn't have thermonuclear weapons, the world's largest military, and ICBM's capable of delivering nuclear warheads to the US.If the Chinese want freedom, let them buy it with their own blood. I reject interventionism in the absence of incipient danger, and you should too.
Nukes change the parameters of the game substantially.