ruisleipa
Member
+149|6507|teh FIN-land

Reciprocity wrote:

Yeah, once they'd taken Indochina, Australia was sure to fall under the sickle.  and then antarctica.  It's a good thing we won in Vietnam.

ATG wrote:

We did.
Double lol? Economic conditions implemented by the US certainly have taken their toll on millions of vietnamese, but militarily you didn't win, surely?

unless you guys know something the rest of the world doesn't?

https://cla.calpoly.edu/~lcall/204/8-10/fall_of_saigon.jpg

Last edited by ruisleipa (2010-04-14 00:47:12)

Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|7001

ruisleipa wrote:

Reciprocity wrote:

Yeah, once they'd taken Indochina, Australia was sure to fall under the sickle.  and then antarctica.  It's a good thing we won in Vietnam.

ATG wrote:

We did.
Double lol? Economic conditions implemented by the US certainly have taken their toll on millions of vietnamese, but militarily you didn't win, surely?

unless you guys know something the rest of the world doesn't?

http://cla.calpoly.edu/~lcall/204/8-10/fall_of_saigon.jpg
American consumer won the Vietnam War. The end goal of containing communism in SE Asia was pretty much met. Economic conditions on the Vietnamese? Please. I thought communists can sustain themselves.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
ruisleipa
Member
+149|6507|teh FIN-land

Cybargs wrote:

American consumer won the Vietnam War. The end goal of containing communism in SE Asia was pretty much met. Economic conditions on the Vietnamese? Please. I thought communists can sustain themselves.
Yeah right. And the goal of getting forced out of the country was pretty well met too right? riiight.

As for economic conditions - lrn2histori
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX

FEOS wrote:

You still haven't provided an ounce of evidence against the balance argument WRT foreign policy, for either the US or UK (as the US policy is founded on the UK policy). All you've done is say "it's drivel". Not exactly a strong counterargument.
The OP is just bald statements unsupported by arguments, evidence or facts, there is nothing to argue against.

Your attempt to smear Friedman isn't exactly stellar, either. Briefing players in the defense-industrial complex doesn't mean you are a part of it--he was in academia.
He's running a for-profit opinion centre, he'll change his tune according to his agenda and who is paying the piper.
There will be plenty of people willing to pay for 'independent research' which backs their agenda at the time and that is what STRATFOR produces.
Historical fact lines up pretty well with their assessment rather than your opinion.
For example? I see nothing in the OP connected with fact or history.

Really I can't be bothered refuting line by line a STRATFOR opinion, a Fox News item or a PNAC document.
Fuck Israel
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|7001

ruisleipa wrote:

Cybargs wrote:

American consumer won the Vietnam War. The end goal of containing communism in SE Asia was pretty much met. Economic conditions on the Vietnamese? Please. I thought communists can sustain themselves.
Yeah right. And the goal of getting forced out of the country was pretty well met too right? riiight.

As for economic conditions - lrn2histori
Sure Vietnamization destroyed the country by constant bombing runs, today it's a very very good market to enter to. Trust me, Vietnam is a booming when it comes to business. One of the largest growth industries in the world. lrn2econandglobalization. Now young little vietnamese boys and girls make mickey mouse tshirts for the American consumer.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
M.O.A.B
'Light 'em up!'
+1,220|6508|Escea

ruisleipa wrote:

Cybargs wrote:

American consumer won the Vietnam War. The end goal of containing communism in SE Asia was pretty much met. Economic conditions on the Vietnamese? Please. I thought communists can sustain themselves.
Yeah right. And the goal of getting forced out of the country was pretty well met too right? riiight.

As for economic conditions - lrn2histori
As far as I remember, a peace treaty was signed, which the NV then broke.

Militarily it was no loss, politically maybe.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

You still haven't provided an ounce of evidence against the balance argument WRT foreign policy, for either the US or UK (as the US policy is founded on the UK policy). All you've done is say "it's drivel". Not exactly a strong counterargument.
The OP is just bald statements unsupported by arguments, evidence or facts, there is nothing to argue against.
Bullshit. Utter bullshit. If that were true, you would be able to easily point out where their conclusions were incorrect and not substantiated by historical fact. Please do.

   

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Your attempt to smear Friedman isn't exactly stellar, either. Briefing players in the defense-industrial complex doesn't mean you are a part of it--he was in academia.
He's running a for-profit opinion centre, he'll change his tune according to his agenda and who is paying the piper.
There will be plenty of people willing to pay for 'independent research' which backs their agenda at the time and that is what STRATFOR produces.
Incorrect. He's running a for-profit enterprise, no doubt, but it's not an "opinion center". It's subscription-based, not ad-based or donor-based. If I paid the whopping $99 per year subscription fee, I'd have just as much "leverage" on Dr Friedman as anyone else who paid the subscription fee.

You're apparently in the minority:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratfor

STRATFOR's client list is confidential, but the company's publicity list includes Fortune 500 companies and international government agencies.[3]

Currently STRATFOR's products are oriented around individual subscriptions, of which the "Premium" product is the most comprehensive in content offered. Other packages, such as "Global Vantage", are tailored to appeal to commercial or governmental customers. They feature regional and customizable intelligence whereby users are able to partake in monthly teleconferences with STRATFOR's founder, Dr. George Friedman, and have the option of e-mailing STRATFOR's analysts with a "guaranteed response within 24 hours Monday–Friday".[4] Some of STRATFOR's work remains available free to the public.[5]

Media coverage

STRATFOR has been cited by media such as CNN, Bloomberg, the Associated Press, Reuters, The New York Times and the BBC as an authority on strategic and tactical intelligence issues.[6] Barron's once referred to it as "The Shadow CIA".
Even the vaunted "Beeb" cites them as an authority.


   

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Historical fact lines up pretty well with their assessment rather than your opinion.
For example? I see nothing in the OP connected with fact or history.
Then you are more than welcome to present facts to counter their assessment. To date, you've provided exactly none.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Really I can't be bothered refuting line by line a STRATFOR opinion, a Fox News item or a PNAC document.
If you can't be bothered to counter it with anything other than "it sucks, I don't agree", then perhaps D&ST isn't for you.

If you could be bothered to actually read any historical STRATFOR analyses, you'd see just how laughable your "insight" actually is. Try researching Friedman's analysis on the GWOT from Sept of 2005, for example.

Or look at the list of media citations they have...FNC is a minor player, while HuffingtonPost and other "left-leaning" outlets use them regularly. Your "analysis" fails. Again. Shocking.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6960|Canberra, AUS
I really don't see what the problem with the article. It makes very good, logically sound and insightful analysis, whilst constantly referring to historical events which are easily verifiable.

This is an opinion article, not an encyclopaedia entry.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Spark wrote:

I really don't see what the problem with the article. It makes very good, logically sound and insightful analysis, whilst constantly referring to historical events which are easily verifiable.

This is an opinion article, not an encyclopaedia entry.
I think the problem is that the end result of the analysis isn't that Israel is evil and the lapdog of the US. Anything short of that wouldn't meet predetermined world views of certain forum members.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX

FEOS wrote:

Barron's once referred to it as "The Shadow CIA".
Thats enough for me TBH.
If that were true, you would be able to easily point out where their conclusions were incorrect and not substantiated by historical fact. Please do.
There are no supposed facts in the OP to counter, just opinion.
If I paid the whopping $99 per year subscription fee, I'd have just as much "leverage" on Dr Friedman as anyone else who paid the subscription fee.
Pretty sure the 'international agencies' pay a bit more than $99, the 'opinion' will be tailored to them.
Other packages, such as "Global Vantage", are tailored to appeal to commercial or governmental customers.
There you have it, people paying $99 will get an abridged version of that.

Lets pick one topic.
The fundamental problem with the theory is that Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.
No it isn't. There has been no significant Arab anti-americanism prior to US support for the state of Israel.
Please point to Arab anti-americanism prior to US support for Israel if you can.
Until 1967, the United States gave very little aid to Israel.
Thats fudging the issue, for a start the US gave significant support to Israel prior to that, significantly supporting Israel in the UN in 1948 and vetoing anything remotely critical of Israel ever since. This is why the whole Arab world is fucked off with the US, its not related solely to financial aid.

Real history is interesting.
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlesto … /index.php
This is why the arabs are anti-american, recognising Israel and condoning theft of arab land in spite of prior agreements and outside the UN, not some BS made up to suit revisionist historians and the Republican party.
That Stratfor chooses to ignore crystal clear historical facts and make up rubbish is simply laughable.

This is the problem with the Stratfor 'analysis', it provides a few factoids, some bogus analysis which extrapolates from those factoids and produces conclusions which have no connection with the real world but which do suit the agendas of the people writing them and the people buying them.

I think the "The Shadow CIA" moniker is thoroughly apt.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-04-15 05:46:51)

Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Barron's once referred to it as "The Shadow CIA".
Thats enough for me TBH.
Because you know fuck-all about what that statement means. The CIA does all-source analysis. That's what that means. STRATFOR does all-source (open-source) analysis. Fucksake, Dilbert, could you take off your fucking blinders for one fucking second and look at one fucking thing objectively for once in your life?

Dilbert_X wrote:

If that were true, you would be able to easily point out where their conclusions were incorrect and not substantiated by historical fact. Please do.
There are no supposed facts in the OP to counter, just opinion.
Actually, it was replete with historical facts, from which they developed analyses. You stated there were no facts to counter. Wrong.

You have countered neither the facts nor the analyses derived from those facts. All you did was say you disagreed. You didn't offer how the analyses were incorrect or offer an alternative. Shit-poor counter, tbh.

Dilbert_X wrote:

If I paid the whopping $99 per year subscription fee, I'd have just as much "leverage" on Dr Friedman as anyone else who paid the subscription fee.
Pretty sure the 'international agencies' pay a bit more than $99, the 'opinion' will be tailored to them.
Other packages, such as "Global Vantage", are tailored to appeal to commercial or governmental customers.
There you have it, people paying $99 will get an abridged version of that.
That means those customers submit requests for information/analysis focused on certain areas. Just like happens in government with its own intelligence function. It's called an RFI (request for information) and its focused on specific questions, ie, "tailored to appeal to commercial or governmental customers".

Dilbert_X wrote:

Lets pick one topic.
The fundamental problem with the theory is that Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.
No it isn't. There has been no significant Arab anti-americanism prior to US support for the state of Israel.
Please point to Arab anti-americanism prior to US support for Israel if you can.
Until 1967, the United States gave very little aid to Israel.
Thats fudging the issue, for a start the US gave significant support to Israel prior to that, significantly supporting Israel in the UN in 1948 and vetoing anything remotely critical of Israel ever since. This is why the whole Arab world is fucked off with the US, its not related solely to financial aid.

Real history is interesting.
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlesto … /index.php
This is why the arabs are anti-american, recognising Israel and condoning theft of arab land in spite of prior agreements and outside the UN, not some BS made up to suit revisionist historians and the Republican party.
That Stratfor chooses to ignore crystal clear historical facts and make up rubbish is simply laughable.

This is the problem with the Stratfor 'analysis', it provides a few factoids, some bogus analysis which extrapolates from those factoids and produces conclusions which have no connection with the real world but which do suit the agendas of the people writing them and the people buying them.

I think the "The Shadow CIA" moniker is thoroughly apt.
I see you've chosen to completely ignore the rest of the article. You focus on the US recognizing Israel as the focus of Arab anti-Americanism, completely ignoring the fact that the US didn't even support Israel in the Eisenhower Administration (as was pointed out in the article), when the UK and France did (hence the point that there was little to no US support to Israel pre-1967).

The historical facts don't support your position Dilbert. Deal with it.

Last edited by FEOS (2010-04-15 08:38:02)

“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX
The CIA does shit analysis, thats the point.

The US supported the foundation of the state of Israel, an act which motivated the Arab nations to band together and launch a war - obviously they took it seriously.

Still waiting for someone to explain why it is 'Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.'.
Oh, its not true, hard luck.
Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

The CIA does shit analysis, thats the point.
You have no fucking clue of the quality of the analysis the CIA does. I'm sure you'll point to Iraq and say "See?!" and that argument is shit, and has been proven to be shit repeatedly. Even--for the sake of argument--if it weren't shit, it's a single data point. The CIA does volumes of analysis every single day. The vast majority of which is spot fucking on. Just because you don't see it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

Dilbert_X wrote:

The US supported the foundation of the state of Israel, an act which motivated the Arab nations to band together and launch a war - obviously they took it seriously.
The US and many other countries recognized (as opposed to "supported") the foundation of Israel. The only problem is that many of those other countries supported Israel in the early days far more tangibly than did the US...yet you (and the Arab street/press) totally ignore that.

Wikipedia wrote:

Eleven minutes after the Declaration of Independence was signed, President Truman de facto recognized the State of Israel,[12] followed by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's Iran (which had voted against the UN partition plan), Guatemala, Iceland, Nicaragua, Romania and Uruguay. The Soviet Union was the first nation to fully recognize Israel de jure on 17 May 1948, followed by Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Ireland and South Africa.[citation needed] The United States extended official recognition after the first Israeli election, as President Truman promised,[13] on 31 January 1949.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Still waiting for someone to explain why it is 'Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.'.
Oh, its not true, hard luck.
It was spelled out quite clearly in the article. Suggest you take remedial reading courses if it wasn't clear enough for you.

Alternatively, you could bother to fucking READ. Just a bit.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX
Still not seeing any anti-americanism prior to 1948.
You know, this bit.
The fundamental problem with the theory is that Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.
I see nothing in the OP which supports this.
Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

Still not seeing any anti-americanism prior to 1948.
You know, this bit.
The fundamental problem with the theory is that Arab anti-Americanism predates significant U.S. support for Israel.
I see nothing in the OP which supports this.
Do you not understand what the word "significant" means?

Do you not realize that during the Eisenhower administration, the US actually sided against Israel during the Suez Crisis?

Significant US support to Israel didn't start until after the Eisenhower Administration, Dilbert (as proven via sources). Simply de facto recognizing Israel's statehood--along with a slew of other countries--and not de jure recognizing it until well after many others is far from "significant" support.

By your response, it's clear you didn't bother to read the links provided. Yet again, an exercise in frustration due to your penchant to only read what backs up your preconceptions on a topic.

And there's plenty in the OP (and provided via links after) to support the position, but...see above.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX
Significant US support to Israel didn't start until after the Eisenhower Administration, Dilbert (as proven via sources). Simply de facto recognizing Israel's statehood--along with a slew of other countries--and not de jure recognizing it until well after many others is far from "significant" support.
The Arabs don't see it that way, they see reneging on an agreement and siding with an enemy which has effectively declared war on them as significant. That the US was the first country to do so is significant to them.

And the US thinks its just about money....

There's the problem, if Stratfor are either ignorant of this or choose to ignore it - I think the latter - then their reports are worthless.
Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

Significant US support to Israel didn't start until after the Eisenhower Administration, Dilbert (as proven via sources). Simply de facto recognizing Israel's statehood--along with a slew of other countries--and not de jure recognizing it until well after many others is far from "significant" support.
The Arabs don't see it that way, they see reneging on an agreement and siding with an enemy which has effectively declared war on them as significant. That the US was the first country to do so is significant to them.

And the US thinks its just about money....

There's the problem, if Stratfor are either ignorant of this or choose to ignore it - I think the latter - then their reports are worthless.
And again...the historical facts aren't with you on this.

Israel didn't declare war on anyone. Israel had war declared on them. The US was the first of MANY. Do the Arabs hate all those others? The Soviet Union was the first country to officially recognize Israel. Do the Arabs hate the Russians? Nope.

Facts don't support your position. You're either ignorant of them or choose to ignore them. Is it the former or the latter? Either way, I guess it makes your opinion on this worthless, eh?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX
The historical facts are simple enough.

Israel didn't declare war, they declared that someone elses country was theirs and were busy massacring and expelling them - close enough.
Isn't that what Hitler did with the Sudetenland?

The US was the first to recognise Israel, having promised other countries and the Arab nations they would do no such thing without discussion. There is a reasonable chance other countries would not have followed suit without the US lead, this is why the Arabs feel the US betrayed them and the Palestinians.
In fact the US decided to recognise Israel before they made their declaration.
https://i274.photobucket.com/albums/jj256/Dilbert_X/recognition_telegram.jpg
Pretty sneaky when they were supposedly pushing for a truce.
The Israelis would have know of this, there is also a reasonable chance they wouldn't have issued their declaration if they hadn't known US support was in the bag.

Other countries have also not supplied billions of dollars and billions of dollars of free weapons to Israel, nor have they spent the last 50 years meddling with and destablising the region, I guess thats a key part of the difference and why there is general antagonism to the US in the region.

This is the basis of arab-american antagonism, not some communist brainwashing plot. And you accuse me of tin-foil hattery....

There was no arab-american antagonism prior to US support for Israel to the detriment of the arabs and the palestinians, the Stratfor article is BS plain and simple.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-04-21 06:46:52)

Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

And again, you're confusing post-1967 US aid to Israel with pre-1967 US aid to Israel.

You're totally ignoring the fact that in the first major foreign conflict involving Israel, the US sided against Israel. You're totally ignoring the fact that the UK and France were the primary benefactors of early Israel. You're totally ignoring the fact that prior to the Johnson administration, US support to Israel was lukewarm at best. You're totally ignoring the fact that anti-American sentiment predates the Johnson administration. You're totally ignoring the fact that other countries did exactly the same thing the US did, at nearly the same time. You're totally ignoring the fact that many other countries de jure recognized Israel long before the US and provided material support to Israel long before the US did, yet they had/have no issues with Arab antagonism.

Thus, you're missing the fact that your argument falls on its face when presented with facts vice deeply held, emotion-based opinion.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX

FEOS wrote:

You're totally ignoring the fact that anti-American sentiment predates the Johnson administration
Yet again, provide some examples. There was no arab anti-americanism prior to 1948, you're saying post 1948 arab anti-americanism is inexplicable which is not true.

I'm not confusing anything, you're dismissing US support for the foundation of the state of Israel as trivial.

Look at it this way:

The Iranian President says words to the effect of 'I think Palestine belongs to the Palestinians, the Jews can GTFO and I support the Palestinians in clearing Palestine of Jews, the Americans can STFU' and the US gets all excited and threatens to bomb them into the stone age.

The US President says word to the effect of 'I think Palestine belongs to the Jews, the Palestinians can GTFO and I support the Jews in clearing Palestine of Palestinians, the Arabs can all STFU' - which is effectively what he said by recognising Israel in the circumstances at the time - but you dismiss it as trivial and irrelevant, any grievance the arabs have with the US is inexplicable.
Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

I'm not dismissing it, I'm saying there isn't the level of Arab animosity for the other countries that did exactly the same thing, is there? You say that is the reason for the Arab animosity. Therefore, there should be Arab animosity toward those other countries, as well. There isn't. Thus, the reason(s) must lie elsewhere. Sources have been provided that have shown that anti-American animosity grew among the Arab population well after the foundation and recognition of Israel. I really don't need to provide more examples.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX
Nope, first the US was negotiating with the Arabs and reneged on commitments they'd given.
Second, the US was the first country to recognise Israel - thats significant.
Third other countries haven't given Israel trillions of dollars worth of free weapons.
Fourth Other countries haven't blocked every UN resolution critical of Israel.
Fifth Other countries haven't supported other brutal, corrupt, repressive regimes besides Israel, eg Saudi Arabia, the Shah in Iran, Saddam in Iraq etc.
Its far more plausible than the arabs hating the US for no reason.

Sources have been provided that have shown that anti-American animosity grew among the Arab population well after the foundation and recognition of Israel.
Wait a minute, the article said animosity preceded any significant US act. Which is it?
I really don't need to provide more examples.
Still waiting for a single one.

I think I could make a stack of money from this intel thing, lets try it.

Doot doot dooooot doot doootooot incoming transmission from DILFOR doot dooot doot dootoootoootoot dooot.

DILFOR wrote:

Begin with the claim that German action against the jews generated anti-Germanism in the jewish world. This is patently unfounded. Jewish hatred of the Germans began in the 1930s-40s, well before the Germans did anything which could be considered hostile to the jews.

The first act which could be construed as anti-jewish was in 1974 when the Germans supported the Syrians in setting up a tractor factory, by sending blueprints, machine tools and suchlike. Why the jews in Israel would regard this as a hostile act is unfathomable but there you go. The clear conclusion is the jews despise success and hate freedom, having been indoctrinated in this chain of thought by communist infiltrators at the height of the US-USSR cold war.

Of course some people say the jewish holocaust is relevant, however all european countries and the USA participated in this, the germans merely took the first step, death camps were spread all across europe, it wasn't a particularly german thing. The Russians killed more jews anyway, this griping proves the irationality of their blind hatred.

Conclusions:

The jews are success-despising, freedom hating pencil-necked wieners who side with the USSR on all things.

The USA should send money, weapons and nuclear material to germany to help them continue their noble crusade against the jews.

You owe me $99

End transmission.
^ If agree this is BS then try thinking harder about the STRATFOR 'analysis'.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-04-26 19:56:45)

Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

Nope, first the US was negotiating with the Arabs and reneged on commitments they'd given.
Such as? You haven't provided an example of that.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Second, the US was the first country to recognise Israel - thats significant.
Actually, the Soviet Union was the first country to officially recognize Israel. I suppose that's insignificant?

Dilbert_X wrote:

Third other countries haven't given Israel trillions of dollars worth of free weapons.
Right. They must've used stones and poo to fight their first couple of wars.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Fourth Other countries haven't blocked every UN resolution critical of Israel.
Others have certainly supported the US's position, though.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Fifth Other countries haven't supported other brutal, corrupt, repressive regimes besides Israel, eg Saudi Arabia, the Shah in Iran, Saddam in Iraq etc.
Its far more plausible than the arabs hating the US for no reason.
That's odd. No other countries in the world have supported those countries? Really?

BTW, those countries you listed? Primarily Arab/Middle Eastern.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Sources have been provided that have shown that anti-American animosity grew among the Arab population well after the foundation and recognition of Israel.
Wait a minute, the article said animosity preceded any significant US act. Which is it?
The two positions are not mutually exclusive...except in your mind.

Dilbert_X wrote:

I really don't need to provide more examples.
Still waiting for a single one.
Then you need to read better.

Dilbert_X wrote:

I think I could make a stack of money from this intel thing, lets try it.

Doot doot dooooot doot doootooot incoming transmission from DILFOR doot dooot doot dootoootoootoot dooot.

DILFOR wrote:

Begin with the claim that German action against the jews generated anti-Germanism in the jewish world. This is patently unfounded. Jewish hatred of the Germans began in the 1930s-40s, well before the Germans did anything which could be considered hostile to the jews.

The first act which could be construed as anti-jewish was in 1974 when the Germans supported the Syrians in setting up a tractor factory, by sending blueprints, machine tools and suchlike. Why the jews in Israel would regard this as a hostile act is unfathomable but there you go. The clear conclusion is the jews despise success and hate freedom, having been indoctrinated in this chain of thought by communist infiltrators at the height of the US-USSR cold war.

Of course some people say the jewish holocaust is relevant, however all european countries and the USA participated in this, the germans merely took the first step, death camps were spread all across europe, it wasn't a particularly german thing. The Russians killed more jews anyway, this griping proves the irationality of their blind hatred.

Conclusions:

The jews are success-despising, freedom hating pencil-necked wieners who side with the USSR on all things.

The USA should send money, weapons and nuclear material to germany to help them continue their noble crusade against the jews.

You owe me $99

End transmission.
^ If agree this is BS then try thinking harder about the STRATFOR 'analysis'.
That is nothing whatsoever like STRATFOR's analysis. You know it. Everyone here knows it. It's just you lashing out because your emotion based anti-US and anti-Israeli position doesn't have a leg to stand on in this thread. The foundation of your position doesn't exist. You can't prove a damn thing because all you've got is emotion-based opinion and the counter to your emotional position can't be disproven because it's factual.

God that must burn you up.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,816|6391|eXtreme to the maX

FEOS wrote:

Such as? You haven't provided an example of that.
You should read this, even Trumans officials were pissed.
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlesto … /index.php

FEOS wrote:

Actually, the Soviet Union was the first country to officially recognize Israel. I suppose that's insignificant?
Pretty sure it was the US actually, in fact they planned in advance to do so.

FEOS wrote:

Others have certainly supported the US's position, though.
No-one has used a veto though, except the US.

FEOS wrote:

That is nothing whatsoever like STRATFOR's analysis. You know it. Everyone here knows it.
Its exactly comparable, you just can't see it because you don't accept what the whole of the rest of the world knows.

The STRATFOR article is BS, with no evidence or reasoning to back it up. It suits some people's agenda and because it looks official they can wave it around saying 'look look, we were right all along, the arabs ARE unhinged, we must give more money to Israel.
Fuck Israel
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6696|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Such as? You haven't provided an example of that.
You should read this, even Trumans officials were pissed.
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlesto … /index.php

FEOS wrote:

Actually, the Soviet Union was the first country to officially recognize Israel. I suppose that's insignificant?
Pretty sure it was the US actually, in fact they planned in advance to do so.
Incorrect. It was the Soviet Union. Sourcing provided earlier in the thread. They (and others) recognized Israel de jure well before the US did.

The US did not officially (ie, de jure) recognize the government of Israel until after their first elections.

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Others have certainly supported the US's position, though.
No-one has used a veto though, except the US.
If you look, all those vetoes are post-1967. Doesn't do much to support your theory.

Dilbert_X wrote:

FEOS wrote:

That is nothing whatsoever like STRATFOR's analysis. You know it. Everyone here knows it.
Its exactly comparable, you just can't see it because you don't accept what the whole of the rest of the world knows.

The STRATFOR article is BS, with no evidence or reasoning to back it up. It suits some people's agenda and because it looks official they can wave it around saying 'look look, we were right all along, the arabs ARE unhinged, we must give more money to Israel.
Let's see...historical facts back up STRATFOR's position. Those facts directly contradict your position.

I think I'll go with the analysis backed up by facts rather than the one that's backed up by nothing more than deeply-seated emotion.

You clearly didn't bother to read the STRATFOR analysis if you think it's pro-Israel. It's nothing of the sort.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular

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