Originally posted by Ford Prefect
You know, the votes for Nader in the 2000 election were about evenly split between those who would have voted for Gore, and those who would have chosen Bush. The Nader factor was negligible.
Not so. The votes for Nader were
not evenly split between those who would have voted for Bush or those who would have voted for Gore. They were evenly split between those who would have voted for Gore and those
who would not have voted at all. Bush’s margin of victory (and I use that term loosely) was only about 507 votes. Nader’s total number of votes in Florida was in the neighborhood of about 98,000 votes. If Nader had not been running in the 2000 election, half of that 98,000 would have voted for Gore and the other half
would have stayed home and not voted at all. Those 46,000 votes would have swamped Bush’s miniscule margin (it’s simple math; 46,000 is a waaaay bigger number than 507, duh). If Nader had not run in 2000, Gore would have gained 46,000 votes and Bush
would have gained nothing.Ford, with all due respect, there is no way you can say that is negligible. If Nader had not been in the 2000 election, Gore would have won Florida in a walk and would have won the Presidency. A lot of people deny the effect Nader had on the 2000 election (perhaps even some Democrats, but not very many from what I’ve seen), but everything I’ve seen convinces me that it’s true.
Now to Rictor:
Originally posted by Rictor
The general view of the Democratic party is : "Don't you dare challenge our authority, or you'll end up like Nader, demonized on no rational basis."
Maybe so, but the view of the Republican Party is: "Don't you dare challenge our authority, or you'll end up demonized as a terrorist sympathizer like former Senator Max Cleland, dismissed as being out of the loop on the war on terror like former Bush counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke, or fired for being disloyal just for disagreeing with President Bush like former Bush Cabinet officers Bob Woodward or Paul O’Neil. And don’t you dare piss off the religious right or we’ll destroy you."
And you accuse the Democrats of trying to suppress dissent? Please.
Originally posted by Rictor
And anyway, the lesser of two evils is a child's game. If you always vote for the lesser of two evils, why should they give you anything but evil? If you can be trusted on to rubber-stamp whatever asshat is paraded infront of you, then what exactly is your use? They could run Reagan as the Democratic candidate, and you'de still vote for him cause he's someone other than Bush.
Well, gee, if I only had to choose between Bush and Reagan, and if Reagan was to the left of Bush, then, hell yeah, I’d vote for Reagan. The lesser of two evils is
not a child's game, that’s democracy in a two party system. If you refuse to make a choice for one or the other, you have absolutely no right to complain when the guy who you liked least gets elected. If you kept quiet on Election day, then you have no right at all to ***** about it. If you had a chance to vote for the guy who was slightly less to your disliking and blew it by staying home and masturbating on Election Day, then you can't complain at all when the guy you disliked more gets into office. Our two party system may not be a perfect system, but I have yet to see anything better anywhere in the world.
And I’ve traveled around the world quite a bit.
Originally stated by Stan Goff at Rictor’s link to the article here: http://www.counterpunch.com/seidman08062004.html
I'm not anti-war and neither are a lot of other people in this movement. We are anti-imperialist. I don't oppose the war in Iraq. I oppose the US occupation. To say I simply oppose the war- as war- is to deny the Iraqi's the right of resistance. I'm sure the Bush administration now opposes the war. They want the resistance to stand down. In this, they share a goal with pacifists, who say no one should fight. As long as there is a US occupation, I must defend the Iraqi's right, even duty, to resist.
Is this guy for real? What exactly are the insurgents “resisting” against? American soldiers who are only trying to rebuild Iraq and get its water running and its electricity working?
Is Goff actually saying that killing American soldiers who only went into Iraq to help the Iraqi people by getting rid of Saddam Hussein is a legitimate tactic of resistance? Forget Bush’s motives for invading Iraq. They don’t matter a damn here. How is killing American soldiers a “defensible right of resistance?”
How is killing fellow Iraqis who cooperate with coalition forces to rebuild Iraq, get its economy running and transform a nation scarred by a 30 year dictatorship into a functioning democracy a "defensible right of resistance?"
How is beheading civilian truck drivers and blowing up Iraqi policemen a "defensible right of resistance?"
Rictor, c’mon, this guy is a complete nut. Former Special Forces or no, this guy is simply talking out of his ass. Disagreeing with the war in Iraq is one thing. Saying that it's a legitimate tactic to kill American soldiers who are only trying to help the Iraqis is damn well another,
especially when you're essentially advocating the deaths of fellow American soldiers. And the way this guy tries to distinguish between being for the war in Iraq but being against the occupation makes absolutely no sense; it's nothing but a distinction without a difference.
Rictor, there is no way I can take this guy seriously.
Originally posted by Rictor
Not power, hegemony.
Unchallenged rule in a political, economic and military sense. World control, what every petty tyrant and dictator has been striving for since...ever. Because that’s what America has and is trying to keep.
Are you in favour of that? I'm not, and I don't see that as hating America, I see that as hating subjugation, of anyone by anyone.
Rictor, I’m still confused by your logic. If you so despise the idea of American hegemony (whatever that is), then why would you vote for Bush, a man who would continue to be so dedicated to perpetuating that same hegemony? Doesn’t that seem a little…incongruous? Maybe even hypocritical?
Or is your hope that Bush will so alienate the world that the unity of the world will prevent America from taking any meaningful action against our mutual enemy Al Queda? How is that going to help Europe? Or Africa? Or Asia? Or the Middle East? WE ARE AT WAR. Not just America is at war, but so is the rest of the civilized world. Osama bin laden wants to destroy you (meaning Europe) as much as he wants to destroy us (meaning America). If you rule out military action by America, who else will put boots on the ground when military action against Al Queda is needed? Europe doesn’t have the military forces and NATO only acts when America leads out in front.
I wouldn’t have gone into Iraq at the present time because I thought we needed to secure Afghanistan before moving on to any other military action. But I would have gone into Iraq eventually (perhaps a few years from now) once I was sure the Taliban was crushed completely and Osama bin Laden and Muhammad Omar (the leader of the Taliban) were both captured. I was convinced Saddam Hussein had WMD, but I didn’t support the war in Iraq because I thought that he wasn’t an imminent threat. I also knew that going into Iraq before America earned credibility from the Muslim world that the war on terror was not a war on Islam would only push more recruits into Al Queda’s camp.
But the fact remains, the Western world is going to have to face the danger of Al Queda. Wouldn’t it be more to the benefit of having American power on your side, Rictor? Or would you rather have Europe face Al Queda alone without America’s help? Do you honestly think that Al Queda will leave Europe and the rest of the world alone if you all abandon us?
If Spain is any indicator, then I fear for us all. The people of Spain voted the way their consciences told them to; I can respect that. But what I can't respect is appeasement in any form. If Al Queda manages to convince the rest of the world to abandon America’s fight on terror, we are all completely f*cked. It's like Benjamin Franklin (at least i think it was Ben Franklin who said it) said: "If we don't hang together, we will all hang separately."
I wouldn’t have gone into Iraq because I wouldn’t have opened a new front on the war on terror before we were ready. Whether or not Bush was wrong in saying that Iraq was part of the war on terror back in 2002, the fact is that Iraq
is part of the war on terror now. Spain (and the other countries abandoning the coalition, like the Philippines) made a mistake in leaving because their shows of weakness will only embolden Al Queda to frighten more countries into leaving.
Jesus Christ, didn't Europe learn ANYTHING from trying to appease Hitler back in 1938? You can’t negotiate with these Islamic terrorist fanatics. You can only fight them. If you surrender, they'll own you. Rictor, I'm guessing that you live in Europe, but you don't want to see Al Queda resurrect the Muslim Caliphate, which stretched all the way from the Middle East to Spain. Trust me on this.
And since when has America oppressed the rest of the world? When has America
ever had “unchallenged rule in a political, economic and military sense” or “world control”? I think you’re being slightly…I don’t know, delusional? I'm perfectly willing to admit that America has made some tremendous f*ck-ups in the realm of geopolitics. Hell, my parents saw friends and neighbors "disappeared" by the Latin American dictatorships' "dirty wars" in South America, much of which was instigated and funded by the CIA. But it's damn well another to say that America controls the world with an iron fist.
Please, if America was half as powerful as you think it is, we’d have stomped Al Queda, nuked Iran and Syria, and flat-out invaded "Old" Europe long ago.
Maybe I'm stepping out on a limb here, but I don't think any of those things are going to happen in the immediate future.

Rictor, if the next thing you tell me is that America is a greater threat to world peace than Al Queda, I’ll gladly refrain from insulting your intelligence…only because by then it’ll be crystal clear that you don’t have any.
Rictor, please, don’t make me refrain from insulting your intelligence.
