Results 21 to 30 of 53
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January 19th, 2007 12:13 PM #21
Hehe...good Niky. I'm going to respond to this msg so I don't end up quoting your whole reply...
I agree with basically most of your points, except the part where you mistook my bringing up the Edsa Revolution as an example of where we need american intervention. I brought that up because I believe that a part of what swelled public support was HOPE...
I too have heard about the silent majority of moderate muslims who are supposedly shocked at the actions of their hardline comrades. The problem is, the fundamentalists are running the show. They have the same "you are with us or against us" philosophy that ironically, Bush embraces. When you have the fundamentalists in power, how do the moderates express themselves?
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January 19th, 2007 01:22 PM #22
For me just be prepared, let them strike first (for better public support), then hit hard and relentless. Take no prisoners..Kill em all..and let God sort it out!!
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January 19th, 2007 01:29 PM #23
Sorry about that... my brain went into steamroller mode as I analyzed the letter... (I mean: Muslim holidays bad? What the heck?)
True... one of America's greatest contributions to the world and in the advancement of democracy in the past century is the offer of hope. Hope of a better, more prosperous life through democracy and capitalism. Sad, during EDSA, that we had democracy before that, and we actually had to fight for it again.
As for how moderates are to express themselves, in a democracy, it's through the vote... although I have issues with the way the vote polarizes people in the US into the "with-us-against-us" camps. Hard for one side, too, when there are different choice espousing the same ideals (as happened in Bush's first election) they end up cannibalizing votes from one another... but when enough of the electorate knows what they want, the vote can go to the silent majority. A fact that I see as hampering America's ability to gain any true headway in Iraq, as politics is interfering with the war effort when America really needs to commit to it.
But amongst Muslims? Sad to say, the extremists will always get more media attention. Moderate Muslims, leading productive lives, forming a constructive part of their society, will never be the top of the news. The news loves controversy, scandal and strife. It's the noisiest at both ends (right and left) that get the most media, not the more sensible voices.
Islam is not a democracy, it's a religion. The moderates can't vote to shut up the extremists. It's just like Catholicism... we can't put the idea of women priests to a vote... we can't choose our Popes, it's done for us. (Sadly, Ratzinger appears much less open to change and reform than John Paul II, who helped to make the Church more relevant to the modern world)
It's nice to see, though, that there's more and more opening up of the Muslim world to the media, and more "human interest" stories about Muslim culture, and the way it is starting to embrace western ideas. Whether it can adapt fast enough, or if things will go to pot within the next few decades, well, that's a gamble.
But it's more of the Chinese dilemma... you can't attack this thing head on. You can just try all channels, diplomacy, show-of-force, cultural assimilation and dissemination and a free trade of ideas and goods, and wait for them to adapt to your world. Because the world isn't going to go the way of Islam... Islam has to adapt to the modern world. It might take the Muslim equivalent of Pope John Paul II or the Vatican II treatise, but it has to happen eventually.
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
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January 19th, 2007 09:10 PM #24Gorbachev did not end the cold war because he was holding on to power very precariously. Maybe it's the USSR itself as the reason for their demise, their many problems which are inherent to their type of government(communism).
Ronald Reagan may not be the direct reason for the end of cold war but he sure is one of the main components. Most of media outlets and journalists acknowledges it. As Tom Clancy dedicated one of his novel to Reagan as, "the president who won the Cold War". He is one shrewd leader. He made the Soviets react to all of his foreign policies and actions, unlike his predecessors like Carter, Ford, Nixon, Johnson who were the ones reacting to every soviet moves. In short, he fooled the Soviets.
Case in point : Reagan was able to engaged the Soviets into the arms race very deeply, it sure is dangerous but look at the rewards, all the communist countries in eastern europe fell one by one.
He made them to match his every announcement of increases in defense spendings or technological advances in military hardware. The soviets matched every american increases on conventional weapons such as fighters, bombers, tanks, howitzers, aircraft carriers, aegis cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and their nuclear weapons. In fact the soviets can ill-afford any drastic increases on military spendings without weakening their civilian budget due to their poor economy and inefficient bureaucracy/institutions/industrial complexes. Please remember that at that time it is estimated that the US economy is three times as big as the USSR.
One of the most ingenious act of Reagan was when he announced their breakthrough Star Wars Defense Shield against any incoming intercontinental ballistic missile. The soviets believed him so much, that they were trembling in fear and requested for disarmament/decrease of nuclear weapons while increasing their conventional weapons. Imagine the soviets spent so much money on their nuclear arsenal only to be destroyed later on. When in fact this Star Wars missile system is just a pigment of imagination of some pentagon bureaucrats that was still on the planning stages.
All of this because of Reagan who's got the balls and the brains to engage the Soviets into a war they cannot win, which is matching every dollar spent by the americans on their military.
Just my 2 cents...
Peace
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January 19th, 2007 10:27 PM #25
"You're thinking in Japanese! If you must think, do it in German!" - Asuka Langley Soryu (Evangelion)
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January 20th, 2007 12:06 AM #26
Just to add to what's already been said......
The Star Wars project wasn't all a figment of the imagination. The US actually made some (airborne) prototype laser weapons which succeeded in shooting down an aerial drone. They also had a missile carried by an F-15 that had enough range to reach space and destroy an enemy satellite. I've read about those two in aerospace industry publications before Reagan came up with the Star Wars moniker.
When Reagan started to build up the US military. It was mainly to reach parity with the Soviets in several areas, like the "600-ship navy". The US had been outnumbered beforehand. He also gave the green light for military weapon systems that had been languishing under Carter such as the M1 Abrams which was regarded as an expensive "supertank" at the time. The B-1 bomber, the F-117 Nighthawk (stealth fighter). Most of all, he improved the pay and benefits for all members of the US Armed Forces.
He was regarded as a good president. But, even he had his sinister moments. Take Iran-Contra....... I can't for one moment believe that he did not know anything about the Iran-Contra affairs.
I remember wondering why Ayatollah Khomeini decided to release the American hostages in Iran at the verge of Reagan assuming office. Reagan was considered a hardliner. But I doubt that would have been enough to scare the ayatollah. One reason may have been the ayatollah's stated goal of bringing the Carter presidency down after the failed rescue attempt of the American hostages. Once Carter lost, the ayatollah was satisfied. But, something that trivial....... It just didn't add up. Something else "under the table" had to be going on.
The usual antagonistic rhetoric went on between the US and Iran. But behind the scenes, Iran, the US, and Israel were collaborating on something which turned out to be the Iran-Contra affair. When that came out, I thought Reagan's presidency will soon be over. But, he had powerful and capable allies representing him.....Last edited by Jun aka Pekto; January 20th, 2007 at 12:17 AM.
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January 21st, 2007 02:09 AM #27
diba yun star wars defense system para sa mga UFO's.
tignan nyo after Reagan's term tumigil na mga haka-haka sa aliens and close encounters of the nth kind hehehe
and shortly after, nabuwag na din ang berlin wall. all the while the two superpowers were blaming each other for spying on each other's continents. yun pala somebody up there is testing their patience hehehe
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January 21st, 2007 10:54 AM #28
Well, humor aside, the Star Wars project was supposed to be an advanced form of anti-ballistic missile defense.
What Reagan wanted was to make a nuclear war winable. A dangerous concept to consider because it would 've trivialized the impact of nuclear weapons and might've set off another arms race with far more dangerous weapons.
OT
Speaking of UFOs....... We were driving from Fallon to Las Vegas during the early 80's. It was summer and twilight came late (almost 10pm). We saw something in the distance that looked like a UFO. I mean it's profile didn't look like any military or civilian aircraft we've ever seen. It shook up one of my wife's cousins so much so that she had to undergo several sessions with a psychiatrist.
It turned out the USAF was testing its then secret F-117 Nighthawk (aka Stealth Fighter) east of Tonopah, NV.
If anyone remember at the time, there were model kits trying to depict what the Stealth Fighter looked like. None of them came close.
Add: China recently blew up one of its own weather satellites with a missile, making it one of the countries besides the US and Russia with that capability. I'm betting Japan is getting just a bit more nervous.....Last edited by Jun aka Pekto; January 21st, 2007 at 11:00 AM.
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January 21st, 2007 11:34 AM #29
Don't get me wrong, it's not that Reagan wasn't an important factor... it's just that he wasn't the only factor.
Of course, coming from Jimmy Carter, yes, he was a much better one.
Gorbachev's loss of control was directly due to the reforms he initiated to try to bring the Soviet Union up to par with the west. He did have good control of the country beforehand, but as said, the mad arms race with the US nearly ruined the country, and he saw the need for reforms.
Ang pagbalik ng comeback...
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January 21st, 2007 12:29 PM #30Bakit kaya magre-reklamo ang Japan?!?!?!
The U.S. should voluntarily dismantle its own capabilities (missiles that can hit satellites, WMD) before the Americans start complaining about the weapons of other countries... (baka may magalit na nascent right-wingers sa comment ko).