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Main Forums => Politics => Topic started by: TechMan on January 30, 2014, 10:00:05 AM

Title: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TechMan on January 30, 2014, 10:00:05 AM
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nsa-whistleblower-edward-snowden-nominated-for-nobel-peace-prize-9093215.html (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nsa-whistleblower-edward-snowden-nominated-for-nobel-peace-prize-9093215.html)

Quote
Mr Snowden has been nominated by two Norwegian MPs for the Nobel Peace Prize, a gong the President himself won in 2009.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: geronimotwo on January 30, 2014, 10:25:17 AM
good for him.   question, how many nobel peace prize winners were unable to collect the prize because they couldn't come out of hiding?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RevDisk on January 30, 2014, 10:26:09 AM

He deserves it.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 10:30:41 AM
I'm not sure if Snowden meets the criteria for the Nobel (the theoretical criteria, not what the Nobel has become). Yet the irony of him being awarded the Nobel, just as Obama was, would be sweet indeed.
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 10:45:19 AM
The more his leaks reveal, the more I'm ok with him in general
Title: Re:
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 10:51:37 AM
The more his leaks reveal, the more I'm ok with him in general

That's been how I feel as well. At first I wasn't sure, in fact probably tending against, but the more stuff that leaks out, the wider my eyes are opening.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 30, 2014, 10:58:50 AM
My estimation of Snowden has grown over time, but not to NPP level.  This is just another means for lefty eurotrash to take a shot at America.  So, screw the lutefisk-chomper and the prancing pony of preening self-regard he rode in on.

On the "Whistleblower to Traitor" meter I see the needle nearly pegged at "Whistleblower" for Snowden.  If Congress had any regard for the Constitution, they would issue him blanket immunity and get him to testify in the open about all he knows.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fly320s on January 30, 2014, 11:09:52 AM
After Snowden wins, maybe there can be a meeting of recent winners. I'd love to see Snowden and Obama shaking hands.  =D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 11:18:17 AM
The more his leaks reveal, the more I'm ok with him in general


And intelligence people claim he's done an extraordinary amount of damage to our national security.
Snowdon a hero?  No.  He should have gone to congress.  Or if he really had to spill the beans he should have done it and taken the consequences as a man, not run off to China & Russia.
A late report I heard indicates he may have had help because they think he didn't have the expertise to do everything he did.  If true does that change anyone's mind?
Granted we are entering a era when our own government is becoming an increasing danger to our liberties, but we ought not lose sight of the fact that we still have real enemies in this world as well.
It seems there are two opposing .... "concerns" that clash.  I don't know where the best "balancing point" between security & freedom is, quotes from Ben Franklin notwithstanding ..... but what Snowdon did is more hurtful to our whole cause than helpful, and he is nothing more than a narcissistic little weasel.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fly320s on January 30, 2014, 11:31:50 AM
Let's see...

- Go to Congress with evidence that the government is abusing laws that congress passed.
- The same congress that can't/won't do anything about the numerous other violations by government.
- Then, stick around to stand up for what is right.
- ?
- Profit by not getting killed by FBI/CIA/NSA/Obama's personal drone.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 11:38:09 AM
Let's see...

- Go to Congress with evidence that the government is abusing laws that congress passed.
- The same congress that can't/won't do anything about the numerous other violations by government.
- Then, stick around to stand up for what is right.
- ?
- Profit by not getting killed by FBI/CIA/NSA/Obama's personal drone.

- release more secrets making it even easier for Al Qaeda to counter our security forces.  Given that they're already spreading over N. Africa and the mideast, it's not as if their threat is diminishing.
OTOH given the way we've been prosecuting this @ssh@t war we  might as well just throw in the towel and let radical Islam take what it will....the end result won't be much different.


 [tinfoil]
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: KD5NRH on January 30, 2014, 11:56:20 AM
what Snowdon did is more hurtful to our whole cause than helpful, and he is nothing more than a narcissistic little weasel.

Far less so, on all counts, than our last winner.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 12:39:51 PM
You know what, I'll just say it. I actually don't care that Snowden has made things a little easier for Al Queda. At some point we have to draw the line on when freedom is more important than safety. Freedom IS more important than safety. Freedom is also dangerous.

If you want to live in a free society, you have to recognize that you won't always be safe, and that in fact, your freedom may just kill you. If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for. I completely recognize the importance of international intelligence gathering. At some point though, we have to draw the line when intelligence gathering "for the safety of US citizens" has taken one step too far into freedom curtailment. For that matter, as a society that believes in the human right to freedom, we should also recognize when to draw the line when our umbrella approach to intelligence gathering overly infringes on innocent non-US citizens.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 12:40:33 PM

And intelligence people claim he's done an extraordinary amount of damage to our national security.
Snowdon a hero?  No.  He should have gone to congress.  Or if he really had to spill the beans he should have done it and taken the consequences as a man, not run off to China & Russia.
A late report I heard indicates he may have had help because they think he didn't have the expertise to do everything he did.  If true does that change anyone's mind?
Granted we are entering a era when our own government is becoming an increasing danger to our liberties, but we ought not lose sight of the fact that we still have real enemies in this world as well.
It seems there are two opposing .... "concerns" that clash.  I don't know where the best "balancing point" between security & freedom is, quotes from Ben Franklin notwithstanding ..... but what Snowdon did is more hurtful to our whole cause than helpful, and he is nothing more than a narcissistic little weasel.

You joking bro?

You think going to congress would have made a damn bit of difference?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 12:41:42 PM
- release more secrets making it even easier for Al Qaeda to counter our security forces.  Given that they're already spreading over N. Africa and the mideast, it's not as if their threat is diminishing.
OTOH given the way we've been prosecuting this @ssh@t war we  might as well just throw in the towel and let radical Islam take what it will....the end result won't be much different.


 [tinfoil]


What has he released that has helped al-qaeda counter us?

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on January 30, 2014, 12:55:15 PM
You know what, I'll just say it. I actually don't care that Snowden has made things a little easier for Al Queda. At some point we have to draw the line on when freedom is more important than safety. Freedom IS more important than safety. Freedom is also dangerous.
Totally agree.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on January 30, 2014, 01:20:09 PM
I actually don't care that Snowden has made things a little easier for Al Queda. At some point we have to draw the line on when freedom is more important than safety. Freedom IS more important than safety. Freedom is also dangerous.

If you want to live in a free society, you have to recognize that you won't always be safe, and that in fact, your freedom may just kill you. If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for.
This.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: KD5NRH on January 30, 2014, 01:28:40 PM
You think going to congress would have made a damn bit of difference?

Well, they did fix everything up with Fast and Furious...no wait.
They've dealt with the screwups from Benghazi...crap, yeah, I got nothin'.

If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for.

Because maximum security prisons are such safe places.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 01:47:57 PM

Because maximum security prisons are such safe places.

Did I say prison anywhere? Not that someone never allowed out of solitary unescorted wouldn't be relatively safer compared to the "more free" general population.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 02:12:04 PM
You joking bro?

You think going to congress would have made a damn bit of difference?


Believe it or not, as utterly incredible as it is for you (and maybe some others here) to believe, yes I do.
If you don't believe that our vaunted congress cares about errant intelligence agencies then please 'splain the Church Commitee and why the &&*^$$%%%$$ they hobbled the CIA to me.
Take the [tinfoil] off your kopf and smell the coffee.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: makattak on January 30, 2014, 02:17:39 PM
Believe it or not, as utterly incredible as it is for you (and maybe some others here) to believe, yes I do.
If you don't believe that our vaunted congress cares about errant intelligence agencies then please 'splain the Church Commitee and why the &&*^$$%%%$$ they hobbled the CIA to me.
Take the [tinfoil] off your kopf and smell the coffee.

Ok. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_Committee

Quote
The Church Committee was the United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, a U.S. Senate committee chaired by Senator Frank Church (D-ID) in 1975.
(emphasis added)

Is that enough explanation for you?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on January 30, 2014, 02:21:18 PM
If you don't believe that our vaunted congress cares about errant intelligence agencies then please 'splain the Church Commitee and why the &&*^$$%%%$$ they hobbled the CIA to me.
The mid 70's were a long time ago, friend. Frank Church himself died over 30 years ago.  I don't think anyone was saying that there never existed a congress that would try to do something about the NSA, just that our current congress wouldn't touch it unless forced by public opinion.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 30, 2014, 02:24:12 PM
Quote
If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for.

Yeah, right  ;/

Big Brother is way more likely to kill us than AQ.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 02:38:56 PM
You know what, I'll just say it. I actually don't care that Snowden has made things a little easier for Al Queda. At some point we have to draw the line on when freedom is more important than safety. Freedom IS more important than safety. Freedom is also dangerous.

If you want to live in a free society, you have to recognize that you won't always be safe, and that in fact, your freedom may just kill you. If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for. I completely recognize the importance of international intelligence gathering. At some point though, we have to draw the line when intelligence gathering "for the safety of US citizens" has taken one step too far into freedom curtailment. For that matter, as a society that believes in the human right to freedom, we should also recognize when to draw the line when our umbrella approach to intelligence gathering overly infringes on innocent non-US citizens.

I largely agree save for two things:

1.) One of the Constitutionally ordained duties of the government is to protect the country.
2.) The ever-present bug-up-the-butt*** drive many democrats such as Chuckie Schumer and Diane Feinstein have to disarm Americans.   500 years ago Machiavelli told his would be prince that "new princes when they come to power and discover their people have been previously disarmed, promptly arm them, and in  arming their people these princes make those arms their own."
In short; WE are this nation's true "Homeland Security"  NOT a bunch of uniformed goons at airports wand-raping 80 year old ladies and making 6 year old children undress.
The idea that some Man in Black dweeb in a concrete room is listening to 300+ million Americans is absurd; ain't happenin'.   Some how we have to figure out how to separate the wheat from the chaff and screw in some courage.
How many terrorist acts are done by Swedes?   By Italians?  By little old ladies with walkers and granny-glasses?
The greatest dangers we face are from Muslim nuts, and ever - more so now from home grown ones.
Target them.

Snowden is, as I said, a narcissist.  He may not have been acting alone; if that IS true, he wasn't acting as some sort of alarmist saviour trying to point out to Americans what was happening to our country, but as part of a conspiracy.
If he wanted only to sound an alarm, why go to China or Russia?  If his goal was beneficent, he wouldn't have done that, and no one is going to convince me he is some great patriot warning us some new iteration of redcoats are usurping our privacy.  He is one dweeb who had an in on one small aspect of our intelligence who exposed it without any consideration at all for the harm it would do to the whole, to America, or to the undercover agents who risk their lives in enemy environments to protect America.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 02:43:28 PM
The mid 70's were a long time ago, friend. Frank Church himself died over 30 years ago.  I don't think anyone was saying that there never existed a congress that would try to do something about the NSA, just that our current congress wouldn't touch it unless forced by public opinion.

The Church commitee also hobbled the CIA and many of the problems that allowed 9/11 to happen can be traced back to the 1970s and what F. Church did.
As to what our current congress would do, it has largely been, if anything, hobbled by Snowden's jackassery.  I know many people here think there's no one in congress who'd care to find out if our liberties are being usurped or not, but there are.   Do you really think that they will be able to do much in the aftermath of Snowden, when the agencies are scrambling to examine the damage and reconstitute the networks and reconfigure the security apparatus Snowdon shot to hell?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 02:47:07 PM

What has he released that has helped al-qaeda counter us?



According to newsreports I've heard AQ and others are now being schooled in the fine arts of how American Intelligence agencies work & collect intelligence, thanks to Snowdon's releases.
Does that make you sleep easier at night?
Do you believe that our enemies are never able to make good use of the information traitors such as Snowden  released?  Do you even know what Snowden released -- and if you don't then I wonder what the basis of your original question is.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: MechAg94 on January 30, 2014, 02:50:09 PM
- release more secrets making it even easier for Al Qaeda to counter our security forces.  Given that they're already spreading over N. Africa and the mideast, it's not as if their threat is diminishing.
OTOH given the way we've been prosecuting this @ssh@t war we  might as well just throw in the towel and let radical Islam take what it will....the end result won't be much different.


 [tinfoil]
I would say that Congressmen and Executive Branch politicians have probably let slip more damaging information with regard to Al Queda operations over the years than anything Snowden has done so far.  
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 02:52:28 PM
I would say that Congressmen and Executive Branch politicians have probably let slip more damaging information with regard to Al Queda operations over the years than anything Snowden has done so far.  

That could be true, but you don't make right the wrong Snowden has done by pointing out the wrongs others have done.   Doesn't work that way.   Find those leaky kongesskritters and line 'em up against the same wall as Snowden and I'd happily have the whole gang of 'em shot.  >:D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 02:56:15 PM
I would say that Congressmen and Executive Branch politicians have probably let slip more damaging information with regard to Al Queda operations over the years than anything Snowden has done so far.  

Snowden aside, if all the rest of us with clearances let slip what those bucket mouths have let slip over the years, we would be sent away to go make little rocks out of big rocks.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: MechAg94 on January 30, 2014, 03:00:51 PM
That could be true, but you don't make right the wrong Snowden has done by pointing out the wrongs others have done.   Doesn't work that way.   Find those leaky kongesskritters and line 'em up against the same wall as Snowden and I'd happily have the whole gang of 'em shot.  >:D
Aren't you the one suggesting he should have gone to Congress with his information?  He would get 15 minutes if that and be shuttled off to solitary and prosecuted with little or no say.  The Feds have done more to people who have done a lot less.  Also, hasn't it been established that the leading Congressmen knew all this stuff was going on?

You also asked why he went to Russia?  First, he needed a country that had no extradition treaty with us, then a country that didn't mind flipping off Obama, then maybe he wanted a country that wasn't a 3rd world @@@@hole.  Not many choices out there.  We are not actively in a Cold War with Russia and China is one of our major trading partners, so our own federal govt doesn't really consider them ememies do they?   ;)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 03:06:18 PM
Yes, he should have gone to congress.  Not every kongesskritter has leaked.  That sort have thing has been going on for decades; it isn't a new phenomenon.
Quote
....he needed a country that had no extradition treaty with us, then a country that didn't mind flipping off Obama, then maybe he wanted a country that wasn't a 3rd world @@@@hole.  Not many choices out there.  We are not actively in a Cold War with Russia and China is one of our major trading partners, so our own federal govt doesn't really consider them ememies do they? 


Thank you.  You made my point.   Only criminals would worry that a country would have an extradition treaty with us. ;) 

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Viking on January 30, 2014, 03:09:40 PM
Snowden aside, if all the rest of us with clearances let slip what those bucket mouths have let slip over the years, we would be sent away to go make little rocks out of big rocks.
How come they are allowed to blabber about these things while you aren't?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 05:27:41 PM
How come they are allowed to blabber about these things while you aren't?

Well, even though I have a clearance, I don't really know anything all that interesting. Politicians seem to be able to bypass (or get a free pass) on spilling classified material that actually is both interesting and critical. I don't know if their clearance process works the same as for your Joe Schmo average .gov or .mil employee. Maybe the non-disclosure agreement they sign doesn't have the same consequences as the one I signed.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 05:31:42 PM
According to newsreports I've heard AQ and others are now being schooled in the fine arts of how American Intelligence agencies work & collect intelligence, thanks to Snowdon's releases.
Does that make you sleep easier at night?
Do you believe that our enemies are never able to make good use of the information traitors such as Snowden  released?  Do you even know what Snowden released -- and if you don't then I wonder what the basis of your original question is.

Nearly everything that Snowden released that could conceivably help AQ is also present in the litany of tell all books by members of the intel community.


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/06/16/snowden-whistleblower-nsa-officials-roundtable/2428809/


He wasn't the first to express his concerns. And from what I've read, he raised concerns before he started collecting data.

The CIA also was warned about his activities in 2009, and did nothing.


THe most helpful things for Al-Qaeda have been perpetrated by the very folks who are demonizing snowden. Drone strikes against innocents emboldened them and strengthened support, etc.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 05:35:25 PM
Well, even though I have a clearance, I don't really know anything all that interesting. Politicians seem to be able to bypass (or get a free pass) on spilling classified material that actually is both interesting and critical. I don't know if their clearance process works the same as for your Joe Schmo average .gov or .mil employee. Maybe the non-disclosure agreement they sign doesn't have the same consequences as the one I signed.

Nothing they do has the same consequences as they do for the rest of us.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 30, 2014, 05:42:15 PM
Going to Congress would have been worse than futile.  Those Dem & GOP leaders on the intel committees already knew and are just fine with it.

Simple fact is, even if he is a slimeball narcissist, he is hewing closer to his oath(1) to support the COTUS than those congresscritters or any in the CIA or NSA who have allowed this to continue.  AQ and the splodeydope contingent is less dangerous to us, physically, and less dangerous to the COTUS than CIA/NSA/etc.

FTR, most of those willing to thumb their nose at tyrannical gov'ts are bastards.  It takes a special personality type to keep on pushing like that.  Most the anti-communist dissidents in the Warsaw Pact were such personalities.



(1) Not sure if contractors swear, but I believe most DOD & federale civilian employees make an oath to support the COTUS.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 06:08:06 PM
Going to Congress would have been worse than futile.  Those Dem & GOP leaders on the intel committees already knew and are just fine with it.

Simple fact is, even if he is a slimeball narcissist, he is hewing closer to his oath(1) to support the COTUS than those congresscritters or any in the CIA or NSA who have allowed this to continue.  AQ and the splodeydope contingent is less dangerous to us, physically, and less dangerous to the COTUS than CIA/NSA/etc.

FTR, most of those willing to thumb their nose at tyrannical gov'ts are bastards.  It takes a special personality type to keep on pushing like that.  Most the anti-communist dissidents in the Warsaw Pact were such personalities.



(1) Not sure if contractors swear, but I believe most DOD & federale civilian employees make an oath to support the COTUS.

Contractors are not sworn


Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 30, 2014, 06:16:35 PM
Contractors are not sworn

See, that's the problem right there.  If only he had been, he would have been a more diligent guardian of the COTUS, just like all those fine NSA and CIA employees that get paid directly from Uncle Sam are. 

Given our culture's ever-strengthening regard for old-school morality and ethics, as well as the high regard our culture places on honesty and honor, I see a simple solution: more oaths.

[mr_ed]More oats![/mr_ed]
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: MechAg94 on January 30, 2014, 06:16:48 PM
Yes, he should have gone to congress.  Not every kongesskritter has leaked.  That sort have thing has been going on for decades; it isn't a new phenomenon.

Thank you.  You made my point.   Only criminals would worry that a country would have an extradition treaty with us. ;) 


Technically he did take and release classified date which is a crime, regardless of the reasons.  
Tehcnically, the Minutemen shot at British Soldiers which was also a crime, but we don't generally go around calling them criminals.   =D


Ron Paul does a radio spot in the mornings down here.  I believe he said he thought we should just pardon the guy, bring him home, call him a hero, and put an end to the whole fiasco.  I doubt that would happen though.  
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 06:27:22 PM
Technically he did take and release classified date which is a crime, regardless of the reasons.  
Tehcnically, the Minutemen shot at British Soldiers which was also a crime, but we don't generally go around calling them criminals.   =D


Ron Paul does a radio spot in the mornings down here.  I believe he said he thought we should just pardon the guy, bring him home, call him a hero, and put an end to the whole fiasco.  I doubt that would happen though.  

THere was discussion at the NSA about pardoning him / granting him amnesty, because of what he HASNT released yet.

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 30, 2014, 07:19:58 PM
Quote
Well, even though I have a clearance, I don't really know anything all that interesting.

Oh, come on - surely you know some juicy stuff about dolphins and maritime weather  :lol:

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Gowen on January 30, 2014, 07:39:27 PM
Quote
Ron Paul does a radio spot in the mornings down here.  I believe he said he thought we should just pardon the guy, bring him home, call him a hero, and put an end to the whole fiasco.  I doubt that would happen though. 

Yea and within a week of him being in the US, he'd be found dead on his floor.  A incensed "patriot" would claim to have shot the traitor.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 07:43:45 PM
Nearly everything that Snowden released that could conceivably help AQ is also present in the litany of tell all books by members of the intel community.


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/06/16/snowden-whistleblower-nsa-officials-roundtable/2428809/


He wasn't the first to express his concerns. And from what I've read, he raised concerns before he started collecting data.

The CIA also was warned about his activities in 2009, and did nothing.


THe most helpful things for Al-Qaeda have been perpetrated by the very folks who are demonizing snowden. Drone strikes against innocents emboldened them and strengthened support, etc.

Do you think we're "deliberatly" calling in drone strikes against innocents?  
I understand that sort of thing is used by AQ and its sympathizers to garner support.  What I don't get is why we should hobble ourselves because of it.  What we SHOULD be doing is a better job of target selection, and what we SHOULD HAVE BEEN DOING was prosecuting the war far more aggressively from the start.  We fire bombed Dresden into ashes in WW2 and General Curtis LeMay practically leveled Tokyo.
But today we're somehow supposed to fight a war "but we better not kill anyone."
We also won WW2 less than half the time we've been putzing around in those mideast sandpits.

Yea once in a while we bomb some Muslim wedding ..... I suppose though those Islamic Terrorists AQ & their ilk have killed very many of their own kind as well.   And of course there's the Taliban & sharia law and the cr@p it gets away with.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 30, 2014, 07:56:10 PM
Quote
We fire bombed Dresden into ashes in WW2 and General Curtis LeMay practically leveled Tokyo.

And LeMay wanted to start WW3 with the USSR.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 08:01:28 PM
And LeMay wanted to start WW3 with the USSR.

During Bay of Pigs *  the Cuban Missile Crisis not WW2, and JFK rightfully chose another path.   Your point being?




* - edited by author to correct factual error.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 08:01:45 PM
Do you think we're "deliberatly" calling in drone strikes against innocents?  
I understand that sort of thing is used by AQ and its sympathizers to garner support.  What I don't get is why we should hobble ourselves because of it.  What we SHOULD be doing is a better job of target selection, and what we SHOULD HAVE BEEN DOING was prosecuting the war far more aggressively from the start.  We fire bombed Dresden into ashes in WW2 and General Curtis LeMay practically leveled Tokyo.
But today we're somehow supposed to fight a war "but we better not kill anyone."
We also won WW2 less than half the time we've been putzing around in those mideast sandpits.

Yea once in a while we bomb some Muslim wedding ..... I suppose though those Islamic Terrorists AQ & their ilk have killed very many of their own kind as well.   And of course there's the Taliban & sharia law and the cr@p it gets away with.

No, I don't think that. I was just illustrating that we've done many things, of which that is only one, that have emboldened al-qaeda


Let me ask you this... if a nation started sending drones into the US to kill people they considered "terrorists," how would you feel about it?

We can't keep fighting wars on nebulous things like "terrorism."

A war is fought against a nation. If we have not declared war against pakistan, syria, or whoever, we shouldn't be sending combat aircraft into them to bomb people. Period.

Once in a while, eh? Any idea just how many noncombatants we've killed in our drone strikes? There's not near enough oversight.

The WW2 argument doesn't hold any water either. Not only have we gotten more technologically advanced, but we were fighting those NATIONS, in their entirety. Here, we continually say "we're not at war with XYZ, and then prove we're lying by sending armed aircraft into those countries to kill their people.


But this is all thread drift... So, again, I'll ask you... what has Snowden revealed that has A.) helped al qaeda, and B.) cannot be found in another source, such as the aforementioned huge amounts of tell all books, leaks (inadvertant or deliberate) by congress, etc?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 08:02:16 PM
During Bay of Pigs not WW2, and JFK rightfully chose another path.   Your point being?

His point was, bringing LeMay into a discussion when you're trying to talk about good judgment and workable tactics is, well, kinda insane
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Gewehr98 on January 30, 2014, 09:32:23 PM
As a former member of the IC, I'm glad Snowden did what he did.  

They will have to re-evaluate the whistleblower protection rules, as a result.  

They will have to review the constitutionality of their intelligence and counterintelligence collection efforts.

They will have to review the Super Secret Squirrel court that's been granting all these collection activities.

That's good.

Congresscritters do not undergo security background checks.  They're granted access by sheer virtue of being voted into office.

Nothing vexed me more than sending one of my daily reports to the Beltline, only to see my exact wording on CNN a few days later.  

Turns out it was a Senate staffer.  With the permission of my wing commander, I ever-so-slightly changed the phraseology of my daily reports, with each slightly different copy sent to specific individual recipients, vs. a mass JWICS email to all addressees at once.

That's how we found out who the leak was.  

Many times I was approached by fellow 3-letter agency clowns, asking us to use our unique reconnaissance assets to do things which were patently unconstitutional.

I angered all of those twatwaffles by refusing and quoting the specific laws that forbade such activities.  Bastards.

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on January 30, 2014, 10:06:56 PM
Congresscritters do not undergo security background checks.  They're granted access by sheer virtue of being voted into office.

Nothing vexed me more than sending one of my daily reports to the Beltline, only to see my exact wording on CNN a few days later.  

Turns out it was a Senate staffer.  With the permission of my wing commander, I ever-so-slightly changed the phraseology of my daily reports, with each slightly different copy sent to specific individual recipients, vs. a mass JWICS email to all addressees at once.

That's how we found out who the leak was.  

Well, I guess that makes sense. If they had to go through a standard investigation, half of them would never pass. Do Congressmen and Senators all just get handed TS, or is that at least held back for those with need to know (intelligence committees, etc)?

That's a crackup on how you caught the staffer. I'm guessing nothing much happened to him.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 10:27:16 PM
Well, I guess that makes sense. If they had to go through a standard investigation, half of them would never pass. Do Congressmen and Senators all just get handed TS, or is that at least held back for those with need to know (intelligence committees, etc)?

That's a crackup on how you caught the staffer. I'm guessing nothing much happened to him.

They all get TS from what I understand, stuff above TS is briefed on a need-to-know (committees etc)

But the problem is, they bring their staffers to this *expletive deleted*it. And staffers cant shut up
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: HankB on January 30, 2014, 10:44:32 PM
Snowden is as deserving of the Nobel Peace Prize as previous winners Yassir Arafat, Algore, and Barack Hussein Obama.

As for whether he's a hero or traitor . . . releasing information on how fed.gov is spying on Americans (like most of us on this forum) can be plausibly regarded as patriotic . . . but once he started releasing details of our foreign intelligence gathering, IMHO he crossed the line into treasonous territory.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on January 30, 2014, 10:55:49 PM
once he started releasing details of our foreign intelligence gathering, IMHO he crossed the line into treasonous territory.
Part of the problem is that many programs that collected information on foreigners were indiscriminately applied to Americans as well.  Show how it is applied to Americans and you show how it is applied to everyone else.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 11:24:00 PM
His point was, bringing LeMay into a discussion when you're trying to talk about good judgment and workable tactics is, well, kinda insane

Curtis Lemay's tactics & judgement helped us win WW2.  He was the right guy at the right time in the right place for America in WW2.  
He may have been a great commander for the Strategic Air Command in general as well.
He had too much of an axe to grind during the Cuban Missile Crisis (I said Bay of Pigs before, right place wrong incident).  
One thing a president has to do is weigh the suggestions and other info each service commander gives him during a crisis situation.  JFK, as badly as he had bungled the earlier Bay of Pigs fiasco, had learned enough to take a more tempered approach and thus he did not go with Lemay's decision during the missile crisis.
This to Kennedy's credit.
Not all military commanders have the same temperment.  Note how Civil War commanders of the Union Army, Generals McLellan and later General Ulysses Grant differed in their approach to how to prosecute the war.
In fact, often a relatively minor incident can often reveal a lot.
During a early part of the Civil War, General Mclellan was trying to find a good river crossing for cavalry.  He wondered aloud "how deep the river was here."  A sort of meh, indecisve action on the part of a army officer.
A young lieutenant under his command, however, heard him, and immediatly rode his horse out into the middle of the river and yelled back; "this here, sir, is how deep the river is."
A more aggressive, take charge, "get the job done" attitude ...right?
President Abraham Lincoln would later replace Gen. McLellan.
The young officer who rode his horse out into the river?
His name was George Armstrong Custer.  :O
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 30, 2014, 11:52:09 PM
No, I don't think that. I was just illustrating that we've done many things, of which that is only one, that have emboldened al-qaeda


Let me ask you this... if a nation started sending drones into the US to kill people they considered "terrorists," how would you feel about it? 

The "moral equivelency" argument?  This is hypothetical and need not even be answered, IMHO. If we had an AQ-like group in America I'd call them terrorists without using quotation marks to muddy the issue.  Do you NOT think AQ is a vast network of terrorists? 
 

We can't keep fighting wars on nebulous things like "terrorism."

A war is fought against a nation. If we have not declared war against pakistan, syria, or whoever, we shouldn't be sending combat aircraft into them to bomb people. Period.
UNperiod.
Yes we damned well keep FIGHTING a war against the terrorists.  What would you do?  Sit back and let them blow up 3,000 Americans at a time?   Infiltrate America and conduct a far more active covert war against us?
Some Commander-in-Chief you'd be.
Wars are fought against enemies of this nation.  That may mean a foreign nation or some other type of enemy.  Our country's founders fought the Barbary Pirates in the early 1800s and that was the rough equivelancy of what we're doing now, so even they thought it was possible and beneficial to fight a war against a non-national entity.


Once in a while, eh? Any idea just how many noncombatants we've killed in our drone strikes? There's not near enough oversight.

The WW2 argument doesn't hold any water either. Not only have we gotten more technologically advanced, but we were fighting those NATIONS, in their entirety. Here, we continually say "we're not at war with XYZ, and then prove we're lying by sending armed aircraft into those countries to kill their people.

What, really, has WW2 really to do with this?  THEN we were at war with the Axis Powers.  Now we're at war with radical Islamists.  THEY'VE been at war with us since 1993 when they first tried to blow up the trade towers.
You just can't let an entity wage war against you and do nothing in response.
Youi may like the idea of living under Sharia Law but I don't. 
And anyone who tries to get me to live under Sharia Law is going to get a bullet in his brain if I am humanly able to put it there.
The idea we're proving we're lying by sending drones somewhere to whack terrorists is wrong.  It doesn't by any means prove we're lying.  Are you aligning yourself with AQ now .... you seem to be making their argument for them.


But this is all thread drift... So, again, I'll ask you... what has Snowden revealed that has A.) helped al qaeda, and B.) cannot be found in another source, such as the aforementioned huge amounts of tell all books, leaks (inadvertant or deliberate) by congress, etc?

AGAIN I will try to tell you that AQ is now being schooled in American intelligence tradecraft that they have picked up from Snowden's leaks.  You can listen .... or not.   
Neither you or I know where else this stuff could have been found out.  That is a highly speculative statement.  I do not think it needs an answer before I say Snowden was a traitor. 
That others have "leaked" stuff does not show AQ could have gotten it from them, since the content of those leaks has not been compared to what Snowden has revealed.  If you think otherwise then I suggest you provide this forum with the proof.   
And such leaks, "tell-all books" or whatever do not excuse Snowden.  An old bromide says "Two wrongs do not make a right."   
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 30, 2014, 11:58:02 PM
The "moral equivelency" argument?  This is hypothetical and need not even be answered, IMHO. If we had an AQ-like group in America I'd call them terrorists without using quotation marks to muddy the issue.  Do you NOT think AQ is a vast network of terrorists? 
 
UNperiod.
Yes we damned well keep FIGHTING a war against the terrorists.  What would you do?  Sit back and let them blow up 3,000 Americans at a time?   Infiltrate America and conduct a far more active covert war against us?
Some Commander-in-Chief you'd be.
Wars are fought against enemies of this nation.  That may mean a foreign nation or some other type of enemy.  Our country's founders fought the Barbary Pirates in the early 1800s and that was the rough equivelancy of what we're doing now, so even they thought it was possible and beneficial to fight a war against a non-national entity.


What, really, has WW2 really to do with this?  THEN we were at war with the Axis Powers.  Now we're at war with radical Islamists.  THEY'VE been at war with us since 1993 when they first tried to blow up the trade towers.
You just can't let an entity wage war against you and do nothing in response.
Youi may like the idea of living under Sharia Law but I don't. 
And anyone who tries to get me to live under Sharia Law is going to get a bullet in his brain if I am humanly able to put it there.
The idea we're proving we're lying by sending drones somewhere to whack terrorists is wrong.  It doesn't by any means prove we're lying.  Are you aligning yourself with AQ now .... you seem to be making their argument for them.


AGAIN I will try to tell you that AQ is now being schooled in American intelligence tradecraft that they have picked up from Snowden's leaks.  You can listen .... or not.   
Neither you or I know where else this stuff could have been found out.  That is a highly speculative statement.  I do not think it needs an answer before I say Snowden was a traitor. 
That others have "leaked" stuff does not show AQ could have gotten it from them, since the content of those leaks has not been compared to what Snowden has revealed.  If you think otherwise then I suggest you provide this forum with the proof.   
And such leaks, "tell-all books" or whatever do not excuse Snowden.  An old bromide says "Two wrongs do not make a right."   


That's not how it works.

YOU Made the statement that snowdens leaks helped AQ. YOU have provided no evidence to support that. YOU made the claim. I said I have seen nothing from his leaks that wasn't already available. Burden of proof is on you, bud.

As for the rest, you brought WW2 into this, not me. I was answering your stuff.



Pretty cowardly , that aligning myself with AQ comment. I spent 20 days cleaning up what they did, and 16 months in a shithole fighting islamic extremists. You can take that comment and shove it right up your ass. I've earned the right to have an opinion on the activities of my government, and I no longer believe that agencies who violate the constitution deserve any quarter when it comes to exposing their dubious activities.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 12:04:12 AM
You also have a distinct lack of reading comprehension. I used quotations around terrorists discussing a hypothetical american terror organization. The quotes were appropriate, and not meant to muddy anything. I never said AQ weren't terrorists. If anyone is muddying the issue, it's you. Your refusal to back up your assertions, and answering questions with questions (And thinly veiled insinuations that I support those murderous bastards) are offensive, and cowardly.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Gewehr98 on January 31, 2014, 12:05:51 AM
Quote
Only criminals would worry that a country would have an extradition treaty with us.

Bovine excrement.

If I was a whistleblower trying to get my government to stop doing unconstitutional crap, and knew the second I blew that whistle that I was a walking dead man (or my family for that matter), then I'd look for someplace elsewhere to stay alive, too.

It's funny (in a funny/queer, not funny/haha way) - as an intel employee you're always encouraged to keep an eye open and report wrongdoing under the Intelligence Oversight Act, etc.

There'd be a lot more reporting of such transgressions if folks inside the IC weren't afraid of getting disappeared.  



Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 12:07:30 AM
Tommygun you still have not answered what particularly aq knows now that snowden alone revealed that harms the usa.  That is kinda important if you are going to accuse a man of being a traitor.

But let us assume you are correct and that snowden released information useful to thwarting nsa and cia surveillance.  Well that information is now useable not only by aq but by american citizens.  Given the unconstitutional nature of that surveillance i call that a win for americans.  Perhaps we can make such techniques ubiquitous in america for americans.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:13:50 AM
YES IT IS HOW IT WORKS.
Fitz, did I not mention that commentors on cable news have claimed that AQ has been helped by Snowden's leaks?  You want annotated sources for what I have heard on TV news?
Sorry I ain't keepiong recordings around of what I here 24/7 on news so I can provide it to you on some internet forum.
You can take my word for it .... or not.  Take your pick.
Quote
YOU Made the statement that snowdens leaks helped AQ. YOU have provided no evidence to support that. YOU made the claim. I said I have seen nothing from his leaks that wasn't already available. Burden of proof is on you, bud.
To be precise, I DID NOT make the claim, I reported that I'd heard this reported on cable news.  
To me it makes a lot of sense that our enemies would use such revelations to learn more about how we operate.  Is it hard for you to believe this?  If you've served in the military (16 months fighting Islamists) I should think you might already understand this and comprehend the possible damage it does to us.
I made the comment about you aligning yourself with AQ because that is what it outwardly appeared to be doing, despite  your avowed service of " spen(ding) 20 days cleaning up what they did, and 16 months in a shithole fighting islamic extremists."  BTW, thanks.   I don't feel that entitles you to demean our war effort by claiming the things you have about our airstrikes.

My points about WW2 was that we fought that war (IMHO) with a greater sense of the danger our foes posed to us than we apparently do today, and we fought to win, without wringing our wrists every time we bombed a Nazi Japanese Islamic Wedding Party by mistake.  I think it will take the same attitude to win against the Islamists.
"War is Hell," as Sherman said.   It's a lot of things, few of them good.    And it's time we Americans ought to get our collective heads out of our butts and accept that war is as bloody nasty as it is, stop trying to play it nice and pretty like it's a video game, and annihilate the enemy.


Yes, you are entitled to your opinion -- never said yo weren't.  But I am entitled to mine as well.  
I just think mine was forged in a nastier part of hell than was yours .....
Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 12:20:10 AM
Tommygun the snowden revelations showed us that the absolute worst possible abuses intimated by the usapatriot acts were but a starting point.  The reality of those possible abuses and the orders of magnitude they went beyond shocked a lot of people normally willing to give govt the benefit of the doubt.   The intel community has tossed away its credibility and the goodwill of many supporters with both hands.  It will be a long time before they are trusted again if ever.  They brought this on their own heads.
Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:23:39 AM
Tommygun you still have not answered what particularly aq knows now that snowden alone revealed that harms the usa.  That is kinda important if you are going to accuse a man of being a traitor.

But let us assume you are correct and that snowden released information useful to thwarting nsa and cia surveillance.  Well that information is now useable not only by aq but by american citizens.  Given the unconstitutional nature of that surveillance i call that a win for americans.  Perhaps we can make such techniques ubiquitous in america for americans.
:facepalm:

What would you accept as evidence beyond the assertions I've already made?  Apparently nothing.



Bovine excrement.

If I was a whistleblower trying to get my government to stop doing unconstitutional crap, and knew the second I blew that whistle that I was a walking dead man (or my family for that matter), then I'd look for someplace elsewhere to stay alive, too.

It's funny (in a funny/queer, not funny/haha way) - as an intel employee you're always encouraged to keep an eye open and report wrongdoing under the Intelligence Oversight Act, etc.

There'd be a lot more reporting of such transgressions if folks inside the IC weren't afraid of getting disappeared.  

Do you think real life is a LeCarre' novel?   That covert agencies always skulk around killing people who blab?
Hell, guy, if I thought that I'd move to a remote Pacific island and in a way no one could trace me; screw extradition and all that.
If Snowden was so worried about consequences such as that he ought to have given his information to an American Media Outlet who would paste it across the evening news.  

You also have a distinct lack of reading comprehension. I used quotations around terrorists discussing a hypothetical american terror organization. The quotes were appropriate, and not meant to muddy anything. I never said AQ weren't terrorists. If anyone is muddying the issue, it's you. Your refusal to back up your assertions, and answering questions with questions (And thinly veiled insinuations that I support those murderous bastards) are offensive, and cowardly.


I ain't muddying anything Fitz.   You used quotes in a manner that invites misconstruction in a tendentious discussion.

As to my assertions I have pointed out where they came from.  You want more documentation?  Sorry this is not a college thesis.   No one in this thread has provided any source material for what they've asserted so if we can't keep this on a discussion level, we might as well just close this entire thread .... which come to think of ... might not be such a bad idea anyway.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 12:24:10 AM
YES IT IS HOW IT WORKS.
Fitz, did I not mention that commentors on cable news have claimed that AQ has been helped by Snowden's leaks?  You want annotated sources for what I have heard on TV news?
Sorry I ain't keepiong recordings around of what I here 24/7 on news so I can provide it to you on some internet forum.
You can take my word for it .... or not.  Take your pick.To be precise, I DID NOT make the claim, I reported that I'd heard this reported on cable news.  
To me it makes a lot of sense that our enemies would use such revelations to learn more about how we operate.  Is it hard for you to believe this?  If you've served in the military (16 months fighting Islamists) I should think you might already understand this and comprehend the possible damage it does to us.
I made the comment about you aligning yourself with AQ because that is what it outwardly appeared to be doing, despite  your avowed service of " spen(ding) 20 days cleaning up what they did, and 16 months in a shithole fighting islamic extremists."  BTW, thanks.   I don't feel that entitles you to demean our war effort by claiming the things you have about our airstrikes.

My points about WW2 was that we fought that war (IMHO) with a greater sense of the danger our foes posed to us than we apparently do today, and we fought to win, without wringing our wrists every time we bombed a Nazi Japanese Islamic Wedding Party by mistake.  I think it will take the same attitude to win against the Islamists.
"War is Hell," as Sherman said.   It's a lot of things, few of them good.    And it's time we Americans ought to get our collective heads out of our butts and accept that war is as bloody nasty as it is, stop trying to play it nice and pretty like it's a video game, and annihilate the enemy.


Yes, you are entitled to your opinion -- never said yo weren't.  But I am entitled to mine as well.  
I just think mine was forged in a nastier part of hell than was yours .....

Oh, ok.

So first, you're saying that because the news made a claim, it's true. Gotcha.

I cannot "understand" how this helped al qaeda because I have seen no evidence supporting that claim. You really have difficulty comprehending what you read.

LOL. Demean our war effort. Yes, because I have a problem with some aspects of our war, I'm demeaning our effort. You should call the Commissar and let him know I've badmouthed the Dear Leaders. We are under no obligation to praise every action that our leaders take, and ignore when they do wrong things.

Like, you know... spying on americans on a massive scale, breaking into american tech companies datacenters...

"According to news reports."

What a joke

According to news reports, I have a deadly evil assaulty weapon that is only designed to massacre children.

I don't believe the news. Neither should you. Have you taken a look at any of the stuff that has been leaked?





Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:25:19 AM
Tommygun the snowden revelations showed us that the absolute worst possible abuses intimated by the usapatriot acts were but a starting point.  The reality of those possible abuses and the orders of magnitude they went beyond shocked a lot of people normally willing to give govt the benefit of the doubt.   The intel community has tossed away its credibility and the goodwill of many supporters with both hands.  It will be a long time before they are trusted again if ever.  They brought this on their own heads.

Maybe...but if we can't trust anyone to defend this country, then it is time to throw in the towel.


And it's 2 "n's" in TommyGunn, BTW.  :P
Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 12:26:19 AM
Do you think real life is a LeCarre' novel?   That covert agencies always skulk around killing people who blab?
Hell, guy, if I thought that I'd move to a remote Pacific island and in a way no one could trace me; screw extradition and all that.
If Snowden was so worried about consequences such as that he ought to have given his information to an American Media Outlet who would paste it across the evening news.  


I'd say since he did a career in Intel work, he probably has a better idea of the dangers of blabbing than many.

As for the rest, are you joking now?

He DID give the information to the media.... that's why you're calling him a traitor, remember?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:29:35 AM
I'd say since he did a career in Intel work, he probably has a better idea of the dangers of blabbing than many.

As for the rest, are you joking now?

He DID give the information to the media.... that's why you're calling him a traitor, remember?

Apparently only a small amount of it.





Oh, ok.

So first, you're saying that because the news made a claim, it's true. Gotcha.

I cannot "understand" how this helped al qaeda because I have seen no evidence supporting that claim. You really have difficulty comprehending what you read.

LOL. Demean our war effort. Yes, because I have a problem with some aspects of our war, I'm demeaning our effort. You should call the Commissar and let him know I've badmouthed the Dear Leaders. We are under no obligation to praise every action that our leaders take, and ignore when they do wrong things.

Like, you know... spying on americans on a massive scale, breaking into american tech companies datacenters...

"According to news reports."

What a joke

According to news reports, I have a deadly evil assaulty weapon that is only designed to massacre children.

I don't believe the news. Neither should you. Have you taken a look at any of the stuff that has been leaked?






:facepalm:

I said I HEARD IT IN THE NEWS!  If it isn't true then show me how it isn't true.  
Gawd, people talk about "lack of comprehension" here but then jump right into it themselves. :facepalm: :facepalm:

As to "believeing" the news?   OK I don't believe the news.  
So there's no such person as Snowden (I heard him mentioned IN THE NEWS).
He never leaked any classified material (I HEARD THAT IN THE NEWS TOO).
He never damaged our intelligence community or aided AQ or defected to Russia (I HEARD THAT IN THE NEWS TOO).


Ok?
Reductio Ad Absurdem.


And now that I've done THAT, GOODNIGHT ALL!
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 12:30:38 AM
:facepalm:

I said I HEARD IT IN THE NEWS!  If it isn't true then show me how it isn't true.  
Gawd, people talk about "lack of comprehension" here but then jump right into it themselves. :facepalm: :facepalm:

As to "believeing" the news?   OK I don't believe the news.  
So there's no such person as Snowden (I heard him mentioned IN THE NEWS).
He never leaked any classified material (I HEARD THAT IN THE NEWS TOO).
He never damaged our intelligence community or aided AQ or defected to Russia (I HEARD THAT IN THE NEWS TOO).


Ok"
Reductio Ad Absurdem.


And now that I've done THAT, GOODNIGHT ALL!

Now that you've done what? Revealed precisely how tenuous your call of "traitor" is?

You heard on the news that snowden was a traitor. You blindly accept it.


You truly are an American
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:33:18 AM
Now that you've done what? Revealed precisely how tenuous your call of "traitor" is?

You heard on the news that snowden was a traitor. You blindly accept it.


You truly are an American

Thank you very much.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Viking on January 31, 2014, 12:46:55 AM

There'd be a lot more reporting of such transgressions if folks inside the IC weren't afraid of getting disappeared.  




Disappeared as in "Banana republic disappeared"?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Scout26 on January 31, 2014, 08:26:34 AM
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/war-whistleblowers-how-obama-administration-destroyed-thomas-drake-exposing


http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/after-the-whistle-revealers-of-government-secrets-share-how-their-lives-have-changed/2013/07/28/23d82596-f613-11e2-9434-60440856fadf_story.html

http://nypost.com/2013/12/30/state-dept-whistleblower-has-email-hacked-deleted/

http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guybenson/2013/09/09/video-benghazi-whistleblower-says-hes-been-punished-for-speaking-out-n1694699



I'm sure there are more out there.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: mtnbkr on January 31, 2014, 08:58:49 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Binney_%28U.S._intelligence_official%29

He got held at gunpoint for whistleblowing.

Chris
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Sergeant Bob on January 31, 2014, 09:02:06 AM
Methinks, someone hath....
(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi163.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Ft286%2FSergeant_Bob%2Fhomer-jump-shark.jpg&hash=334b6f0c159129b718c679732e3c9893319cc64b) (http://s163.photobucket.com/user/Sergeant_Bob/media/homer-jump-shark.jpg.html)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 10:07:42 AM
TG:

I was looking for some hard data.  Secondhand unknown third party accusations are pretty weak tea.

Uncle Buck: "Do you know where I can cash a third party out of state check?"
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 11:23:10 AM
Quote
If we had an AQ-like group in America I'd call them terrorists without using quotation marks to muddy the issue.

CIA
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RoadKingLarry on January 31, 2014, 11:59:49 AM
Don't forget
DHS
TSA
DOJ
FBI
BATFEIEIO
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:23:46 PM
TG:

I was looking for some hard data.  Secondhand unknown third party accusations are pretty weak tea.


OK I completly understand that.
So I am listening to Fox News and a host has a guest on who has a background in intelligence.  During the interview he states that Snowden's revelations are aiding AQ because the terrorists are now using them to reverse engineer how U.S. Intel gathers data so they, then, can avoid it.  
I file it away, being concerned, but never really think I will have occasion to use the info again.
Then this thread happens.
What do I do?

Another point; we're on an internet forum, which I regard (possible wrongly?) as an informal place to chat and exchange ideas and even enter into light hearted debates.  This is not a college thesis where I would be prepared, and be expected, to provide a source for every claim I make.  You are not required, nor is anyone else, to believe what I say if you have strong beliefs to the contrary.
I personally don't understand why the claim that Snowden's leaks have helped AQ should be received as some sort of wild-assed guess-work, or even totally discredited.
Is it so hard to believe AQ would make use of the data?  Do you think they're too stupid or ignorant to do that?  That's a pretty dangerous assumption to make; to underestimate your enemies.
Making use of intercepted data, or another country's security leaks is such S.O.P. (Standard Operating Procedure) that it is actually more interesting to find incidents where it DIDN'T happen, or didn't happen quite as it perhaps should have.
During WW2 we were intercepting Japanese diplomatic communiques and decoding them in what was called "Operation Magic."   The info we gleaned was called "Purple Intelligence" as was distributed to only 12 people high up in the government (one of whom was FDR) called "the twelve apostles."  
At one point some of this data was transmited to England.  The doofus who encoded it made an error and used an outdated code to transmit it.  The code he used was believed to have been broken by the Germans.
This was discovered by the British officer who received it, and he sent out the appropriate alarms.
What SHOULD have been the result of this?
Several things.  First the Germans, who we learned after the war DID glom onto this and inform the Japanese (they were allied at the time).  The Japanese at this point should have realized they'd been compromised and stop sending real info out over the compromised pathways.  If they'd been slightly more sophisticated (they likely WERE -- normally) they would use the compromised codes and pathways to spread disinformation; stuff they WANTED us to believe true.  
American intel, OTOH, should have began to doubt the veracity of any intel that was intercepted through the pathway/code that had been compromised.
BUT, apparantly, the Japanese somehow goofed and kept on sending out good vital intel over that network .... and we goofed too; there's no information claiming we started treating the "compromised" purple info as disinformation; we kept believing it real.  Bizarrely, of course these two errors cancelled themselves out.
If you put this in a movie, no one would believe it.

Quote
If we had an AQ-like group in America I'd call them terrorists without using quotation marks to muddy the issue.
CIA

Really?  The CIA is plotting terrorist acts against America and blowing up our buildings and killing innocents? [popcorn]

I really wish people would stop treating the errors and mistakes we make in the field as though it was actually our government's policy.  
It isn't.
Grow up.    
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 12:33:38 PM
Quote
I really wish people would stop treating the errors and mistakes we make in the field as though it was actually our government's policy.

 :rofl:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 12:51:25 PM
So. Tallpine, I am to understand you believe we deliberatly launched Hellfire missiles on Muslim Wedding parties?


Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 12:55:55 PM
Sending drones into a foreign country that we are not at war with like Pakistan to blow up people is an act of terrorism. Even if we hope that maybe there's a bad guy at that wedding and the 30 innocent men women and children we kill are just acceptable collateral damage. The US fed.gov is rapidly coming up on killing as many non-combatants in terrorist attacks as AQ killed on 9/11.

BUT WAIT, I kind of half remember someone on a totally non-biased tv show who said Snowden was a traitor so obviously it's totes the truth. And how dare you ask me to provide some type of evidence beyond a half remembered unqualified 3rd party saying something on tv?!?!?! This ain't college. Obviously you're an Al Qaeda sympathizer if you don't believe me.

So. Tallpine, I am to understand you believe we deliberatly launched Hellfire missiles on Muslim Wedding parties?




Yes, yes we have. Because Obama really believed that a Bad Guy was there. And we counted any Military Aged Male who happened to be there as well as a terrorist.

I saw some guy on tv who said so therefore it must be true.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 01:00:52 PM
So. Tallpine, I am to understand you believe we deliberatly launched Hellfire missiles on Muslim Wedding parties?




Oh, no - I'm sure they "just went off"  =D


And all those assasinations and regime changes were just misunderstandings  :angel:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 01:06:53 PM
Oh, no - I'm sure they "just went off"  =D


And all those assasinations and regime changes were just misunderstandings  :angel:

What regime changes would those be?  Obama being re-elected?


Yea we DID TKO Saddam Hussein.  He deserved it though -- as did his two misbegotten sons.



Seriously dude if you think we deliberatly whack Islam Weddings then that is some kind of sick, in my book.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 01:10:16 PM
Seriously dude if you think we deliberatly whack Islam Weddings then that is some kind of sick, in my book.

It's true though. They weren't targeted just because it was a wedding ceremony, but we have fired on them before if someone Obama wanted dead was a part of one.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: dogmush on January 31, 2014, 01:18:20 PM

Seriously dude if you think we deliberatly whack Islam Weddings then that is some kind of sick, in my book.

Is this serious?  We absolutely have.  There was a "high value target" (I don't remember the name) that we got intel was coming out of a cave to attend a wedding and we blew said wedding up.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 01:19:01 PM
Really?  The CIA is plotting terrorist acts against America and blowing up our buildings and killing innocents? [popcorn]

I really wish people would stop treating the errors and mistakes we make in the field as though it was actually our government's policy.  
It isn't.
Grow up.    

Our policy of assuming every fighting aged male is a terrorist if they happen to be in the blast radius of the missile is a little disturbing.  Mostly form an honesty and a valid numbers collecting/collateral damage assessment POV.  I am less worried about the actual deaths as I figure they are already sympathetic to America-hating scum and killing a few more won't matter much.  All that is not a "mistake we make in the field," it is gov't policy.  Collateral damage and the infliction of it is a choice, not a mistake.  We can choose not to fire.

More importantly, the CIA/NSA/etc. currently, as a matter of policy, treat the whole of the American citizenry as the enemy.  Totalitarian surveillance and data collection is not something you do to a friend or ally.  I figure viewing them as the enemy right back is only fair.  Call them terrorists, secret policemen, enemies of the citizenry, domestic surveillance thugs, vandals of the COTUS, or whatever you will.  They, individually, could have refrained from these unconstitutional acts but chose otherwise.  
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 01:19:07 PM
It's true though. They weren't targeted just because it was a wedding ceremony, but we have fired on them before if someone Obama wanted dead was a part of one.

OMG!  We killed people who were associating with terrorists!    :facepalm:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 01:22:00 PM
OMG!  We killed people who were associating with terrorists!    :facepalm:

From sign of mental illness ("some kind of sick") to shrugging it off in five posts (only two of which were yours).

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 01:23:11 PM
Our policy of assuming every fighting aged male is a terrorist if they happen to be in the blast radius of the missile is a little disturbing.  Mostly form an honesty and a valid numbers collecting/collateral damage assessment POV.  I am less worried about the actual deaths as I figure they are already sympathetic to America-hating scum and killing a few more won't matter much.  All that is not a "mistake we make in the field," it is gov't policy.  Collateral damage and the infliction of it is a choice, not a mistake.  We can choose not to fire.

More importantly, the CIA/NSA/etc. currently, as a matter of policy, treat the whole of the American citizenry as the enemy.  Totalitarian surveillance and data collection is not something you do to a friend or ally.  I figure viewing them as the enemy right back is only fair.  Call them terrorists, secret policemen, enemies of the citizenry, domestic surveillance thugs, vandals of the COTUS, or whatever you will.  They, individually, could have refrained from these unconstitutional acts but chose otherwise.   

You know, at first I was going to say that you're very wrong, but then I remembered something and I have to admit, and I must confess you're exactly right.
What was THAT?
Echelon.  
Remeber that?  a program between the UK and America; they'd spy on our electronic communications and we'd spy on theirs?
Because we all know a NICE government doesn't treat its own citizens and spy on them......................


It has a friend do it for them. >:D
Finally something we agree on..................... :P


You remember echelon, don't you?
I'm sure you were out in the streets vigorously protesting it.  :angel:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 01:24:08 PM
From sign of mental illness ("some kind of sick") to shrugging it off in five posts (only two of which were yours).



We need better sarcasm smilies here.................
Title: Re: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cassandra and sara's daddy on January 31, 2014, 01:34:42 PM
What regime changes would those be?  Obama being re-elected?




My understanding was we brought the shah of iran into power
Literally over his dads dead body

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I537 using Tapatalk
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 01:39:45 PM
OMG!  We killed people who were associating with terrorists!    :facepalm:

If you want to define "associating" loosely enough then pretty much everyone in a large number of countries is a viable target.

And just so we're clear, you've switched from denying it happened, to denying it was deliberate, to saying it was ok now right? Hard to keep track.
Title: Re: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 01:45:45 PM
My understanding was we brought the shah of iran into power
Literally over his dads dead body

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I537 using Tapatalk

Yeah, the list is so long I can't remember.  A lot of this stuff is now public knowledge after they released some documents a few years back.

IIRC, the Bay of Pigs and the Diem assasination were both CIA operations.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: KD5NRH on January 31, 2014, 01:48:23 PM
Collateral damage and the infliction of it is a choice, not a mistake.  We can choose not to fire.

Just like we can choose to use one of the largest intelligence networks in the world to figure out if there's a Chinese embassy in the way before programming the JDAMs, but that's just too much effort.
Title: Re: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 02:05:45 PM
My understanding was we brought the shah of iran into power
Literally over his dads dead body

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I537 using Tapatalk


That was decades ago, before the so-called "War on Terror."
Title: Re: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 02:06:08 PM

That was decades ago, before the so-called "War on Terror."

What makes you think we've stopped?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on January 31, 2014, 02:17:44 PM
You know, at first I was going to say that you're very wrong, but then I remembered something and I have to admit, and I must confess you're exactly right.
What was THAT?
Echelon.  
Remeber that?  a program between the UK and America; they'd spy on our electronic communications and we'd spy on theirs?
Because we all know a NICE government doesn't treat its own citizens and spy on them......................


It has a friend do it for them. >:D
Finally something we agree on..................... :P


You remember echelon, don't you?
I'm sure you were out in the streets vigorously protesting it.  :angel:

If you had a point, you might try making it.  Past malfeasance does not make up for present malfeasance in the Spok-without-a-goatee universe.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 02:30:47 PM
Spock, not Spok.
There are no more points to be made.   This has devolved into a useless thread.  We must agree to disagree.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: KD5NRH on January 31, 2014, 02:35:30 PM
There are no more points to be made.   This has devolved into a useless thread.  We must agree to disagree.

I disagree.

Well, actually I didn't even read what you said.  I'm just being contrarian.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 02:38:12 PM
I disagree.

Well, actually I didn't even read what you said.  I'm just being contrarian.


Yay!!!.    Thread drift.  :laugh:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RevDisk on January 31, 2014, 03:41:49 PM
Snowden is as deserving of the Nobel Peace Prize as previous winners Yassir Arafat, Algore, and Barack Hussein Obama.

As for whether he's a hero or traitor . . . releasing information on how fed.gov is spying on Americans (like most of us on this forum) can be plausibly regarded as patriotic . . . but once he started releasing details of our foreign intelligence gathering, IMHO he crossed the line into treasonous territory.

With respect, the foreign intelligence stuff matters not even a thimbleful of water compared to all the oceans in the world.

The crimes he has exposed have shaken the United States. The damage the NSA did by bribing RSA to weaken its cryptographic programs can't even be calculated. Ditto the wiretapping of Google's data centers. The Verizon leak may or may not have been significant, but Boundless Informant leak taught us that the NSA is systematically targeting US citizens. It acknowledged 3+ billion segments of intelligence information on US citizens. Upstream, which is illegal wiretaps on US fiber optic backbones. XKeyscore, yet another program that spies on American internet usage. The leaks that showed the NSA violated even their own rules, which are highly illegal and unconstitutional, 2,776 times between March 2011 and March 2012. The leaks showed hundred million dollar bribes to telcos. The leaks show that the NSA routine provides intelligence on US citizen to foreign countries. Leaks that they illegally monitor the SWIFT network. Minaret leak, that the NSA and other intelligence companies illegally monitored Sen. Frank Church when he was running the Church Commission that was looking into illegal conduct committed by the intelligence committee. SYANPSE leak, illegally mapping US citizens' social media contacts and email contact lists. Leaks about NSA talking points lying about terrorism justifying the agency's surveillance programs as well as lying about legality of various projects.

This organization's head admitted to committing perjury under oath when testifying before Congress. They've committed billions of violations of US laws, as well as our Constitution. They will likely cost the US economy tens to hundreds of billions in economic loses. They've become arguably the greatest threat that the United States has ever faced.

And you're arguing that he committed treason for exposing this, because a number of his leaks exposed various legal and illegal foreign conduct?


So. Tallpine, I am to understand you believe we deliberatly launched Hellfire missiles on Muslim Wedding parties?

Uhm. Yes?

In fairness, some were misidentified targets. It happens. Others were intentional strikes, because that's when clans get together. At social functions that outweigh everyday security concerns. Also, we have intentionally killed Americans because we believed they were probably terrorists, and in other cases because they were in the same building as suspected terrorists. Holder flatly admitted a US citizen minor was killed intentionally by the US government "for being in the wrong place." As we do not have corruption of blood (this is specifically a no-no under the Constitution), everyone involved should have been dragged up on murder charges.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/18/opinion/the-drone-that-killed-my-grandson.html?_r=0

The government's stance is that if you're killed, your family has no standing to sue.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 03:47:23 PM
Why do you love Al Qaeda Rev? This ain't no college thesis, get those facts the hell out of here.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Sergeant Bob on January 31, 2014, 03:51:59 PM
With respect, the foreign intelligence stuff matters not even a thimbleful of water compared to all the oceans in the world.

The crimes he has exposed have shaken the United States. The damage the NSA did by bribing RSA to weaken its cryptographic programs can't even be calculated. Ditto the wiretapping of Google's data centers. The Verizon leak may or may not have been significant, but Boundless Informant leak taught us that the NSA is systematically targeting US citizens. It acknowledged 3+ billion segments of intelligence information on US citizens. Upstream, which is illegal wiretaps on US fiber optic backbones. XKeyscore, yet another program that spies on American internet usage. The leaks that showed the NSA violated even their own rules, which are highly illegal and unconstitutional, 2,776 times between March 2011 and March 2012. The leaks showed hundred million dollar bribes to telcos. The leaks show that the NSA routine provides intelligence on US citizen to foreign countries. Leaks that they illegally monitor the SWIFT network. Minaret leak, that the NSA and other intelligence companies illegally monitored Sen. Frank Church when he was running the Church Commission that was looking into illegal conduct committed by the intelligence committee. SYANPSE leak, illegally mapping US citizens' social media contacts and email contact lists. Leaks about NSA talking points lying about terrorism justifying the agency's surveillance programs as well as lying about legality of various projects.

This organization's head admitted to committing perjury under oath when testifying before Congress. They've committed billions of violations of US laws, as well as our Constitution. They will likely cost the US economy tens to hundreds of billions in economic loses. They've become arguably the greatest threat that the United States has ever faced.

And you're arguing that he committed treason for exposing this, because a number of his leaks exposed various legal and illegal foreign conduct?


Uhm. Yes?

In fairness, some were misidentified targets. It happens. Others were intentional strikes, because that's when clans get together. At social functions that outweigh everyday security concerns. Also, we have intentionally killed Americans because we believed they were probably terrorists, and in other cases because they were in the same building as suspected terrorists. Holder flatly admitted a US citizen minor was killed intentionally by the US government "for being in the wrong place." As we do not have corruption of blood (this is specifically a no-no under the Constitution), everyone involved should have been dragged up on murder charges.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/18/opinion/the-drone-that-killed-my-grandson.html?_r=0

The government's stance is that if you're killed, your family has no standing to sue.

Wow...just wow! I mean that in a good way. Excellent job of boiling it down.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: fifth_column on January 31, 2014, 04:49:04 PM
With respect, the foreign intelligence stuff matters not even a thimbleful of water compared to all the oceans in the world.
<<snip>>
This organization's head admitted to committing perjury under oath when testifying before Congress. They've committed billions of violations of US laws, as well as our Constitution. They will likely cost the US economy tens to hundreds of billions in economic loses. They've become arguably the greatest threat that the United States has ever faced.
<<snip>>

Now that is a statement I can get behind!

The greatest threat to the country is the government, or at least large organizations therein.  If it wasn't for whistle-blowers, and those that refuse to engage in unlawful activities we'd be in much worse shape than we are now.  I'd like to think there is hope for salvation.

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: freakazoid on January 31, 2014, 05:05:31 PM
I personally don't understand why the claim that Snowden's leaks have helped AQ should be received as some sort of wild-assed guess-work, or even totally discredited.    

I'm in agreement with Ben,
Quote
You know what, I'll just say it. I actually don't care that Snowden has made things a little easier for Al Queda. At some point we have to draw the line on when freedom is more important than safety. Freedom IS more important than safety. Freedom is also dangerous.

If you want to live in a free society, you have to recognize that you won't always be safe, and that in fact, your freedom may just kill you. If you want to be safe, live in a Big Brother dictatorship where you are monitored 24 hours a day. You'll be safe and provided for. I completely recognize the importance of international intelligence gathering. At some point though, we have to draw the line when intelligence gathering "for the safety of US citizens" has taken one step too far into freedom curtailment. For that matter, as a society that believes in the human right to freedom, we should also recognize when to draw the line when our umbrella approach to intelligence gathering overly infringes on innocent non-US citizens.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Blakenzy on January 31, 2014, 05:28:15 PM
So... the lid has arguably been blown of. What consequences do you fellows see?  .gov clearly won't do anything beyond scapegoating and cover-upping, tightening up loose ends... how do you perceive the citizenry taking this up?

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 07:19:36 PM
So... the lid has arguably been blown of. What consequences do you fellows see?  .gov clearly won't do anything beyond scapegoating and cover-upping, tightening up loose ends... how do you perceive the citizenry taking this up?



So ... what's on TV tonight?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 07:55:26 PM
With respect, the foreign intelligence stuff matters not even a thimbleful of water compared to all the oceans in the world.

The crimes he has exposed have shaken the United States. The damage the NSA did by bribing RSA to weaken its cryptographic programs can't even be calculated. Ditto the wiretapping of Google's data centers. The Verizon leak may or may not have been significant, but Boundless Informant leak taught us that the NSA is systematically targeting US citizens. It acknowledged 3+ billion segments of intelligence information on US citizens. Upstream, which is illegal wiretaps on US fiber optic backbones. XKeyscore, yet another program that spies on American internet usage. The leaks that showed the NSA violated even their own rules, which are highly illegal and unconstitutional, 2,776 times between March 2011 and March 2012. The leaks showed hundred million dollar bribes to telcos. The leaks show that the NSA routine provides intelligence on US citizen to foreign countries. Leaks that they illegally monitor the SWIFT network. Minaret leak, that the NSA and other intelligence companies illegally monitored Sen. Frank Church when he was running the Church Commission that was looking into illegal conduct committed by the intelligence committee. SYANPSE leak, illegally mapping US citizens' social media contacts and email contact lists. Leaks about NSA talking points lying about terrorism justifying the agency's surveillance programs as well as lying about legality of various projects.

This organization's head admitted to committing perjury under oath when testifying before Congress. They've committed billions of violations of US laws, as well as our Constitution. They will likely cost the US economy tens to hundreds of billions in economic loses. They've become arguably the greatest threat that the United States has ever faced.

And you're arguing that he committed treason for exposing this, because a number of his leaks exposed various legal and illegal foreign conduct?


Uhm. Yes?

In fairness, some were misidentified targets. It happens. Others were intentional strikes, because that's when clans get together. At social functions that outweigh everyday security concerns. Also, we have intentionally killed Americans because we believed they were probably terrorists, and in other cases because they were in the same building as suspected terrorists. Holder flatly admitted a US citizen minor was killed intentionally by the US government "for being in the wrong place." As we do not have corruption of blood (this is specifically a no-no under the Constitution), everyone involved should have been dragged up on murder charges.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/18/opinion/the-drone-that-killed-my-grandson.html?_r=0

The government's stance is that if you're killed, your family has no standing to sue.

Holy cr@p, Revdisk.


If you want to define "associating" loosely enough then pretty much everyone in a large number of countries is a viable target.

And just so we're clear, you've switched from denying it happened, to denying it was deliberate, to saying it was ok now right? Hard to keep track.

I don't want to "define" associating so loosely that "anyone" qualifies as a target.   And I wasn't trying to say it was "right" to blow up an innocent wedding party, I was saying it was a bad mistake but ought not hamper our efforts against AQ.

However, if the war effort has become so mucked up and our goals have become so corrupted as some in this thread have pointed out, then perhaps we really ought to pull out of A'stan & Iraq and try to re evaluate what our country should stand for.
We are already allowing AQ to build up in North Africa and the mideast so I doubt it would really change a lot anyway; President Obama seems dead-set on ending the war which will give the Islamists a far greater opportunity than ever before to expand their territories.
It will also, I fear, have bad ramifications for our future in America. 
Without an avowed external enemy to worry about, our expanded surveillance agencies will certainly turn their attentions inward -- as some here suggest they already have.  I don't think they have for the large part, but they will....if you want to rake me over the coals again and point out (again) all the assaults against our privacy, fine, just keep in mind what I am saying;
YOU HAVEN'T SEEN ANYTHING  ...YET.
Compared to what's coming in the future, that is.
Have fun...and keep your powder dry. =D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 08:04:28 PM
Sending drones into a foreign country that we are not at war with like Pakistan to blow up people is an act of terrorism. Even if we hope that maybe there's a bad guy at that wedding and the 30 innocent men women and children we kill are just acceptable collateral damage. The US fed.gov is rapidly coming up on killing as many non-combatants in terrorist attacks as AQ killed on 9/11.

No, sending drones in  is an act in the prosecution of a war we've been fighting for over a decade.  That you don't agree with some of our policies doesn't entitle you to claim it's terrorism.


BUT WAIT, I kind of half remember someone on a totally non-biased tv show who said Snowden was a traitor so obviously it's totes the truth. And how dare you ask me to provide some type of evidence beyond a half remembered unqualified 3rd party saying something on tv?!?!?! This ain't college. Obviously you're an Al Qaeda sympathizer if you don't believe me.

How do you know the guy was unqualified?  You have the right not to accept the veracity of what I said but without knowing who the "expert" was you have no way of knowing what his bona fides were.  
As for "biased TV show" it was Fox News.  They are not perfect but they're a LOT better than MSNBC and CNN.


Yes, yes we have. Because Obama really believed that a Bad Guy was there. And we counted any Military Aged Male who happened to be there as well as a terrorist.

I saw some guy on tv who said so therefore it must be true.
:facepalm:   I wish I had an eidetic memory sometimes.   
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on January 31, 2014, 08:48:36 PM
So if the Russians find a Chechen who slipped across the Mexican border into America and blow up a wedding in say Iowa in order to kill him that's ok right? If our "War on Terror" gives America free reign to kill anyone we want in any country then logically that extends to other countries right? Or is America so sooper special that when we bomb other so reign nations it's ok but no one else can do it?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: JN01 on January 31, 2014, 08:57:09 PM


But this is all thread drift... So, again, I'll ask you... what has Snowden revealed that has A.) helped al qaeda, and B.) cannot be found in another source, such as the aforementioned huge amounts of tell all books, leaks (inadvertant or deliberate) by congress, etc?


So Snowden risked prosecution and fled to another country in order to reveal information that had already been released?  ???

I'm not sure how I feel about him.  Exposing corruption is a good thing, but I'm not sure about his methods.  Did he carefully pick what information he exposed, or did he indiscriminately turn over anything he could get his hands on?  What information has he held back, will he release it, and what will the impact of that be?

It is ironic that a guy who is worried about the government stepping on citizens liberties would seek asylum in countries like China and Russia.

Quote
So... the lid has arguably been blown of. What consequences do you fellows see?  .gov clearly won't do anything beyond scapegoating and cover-upping, tightening up loose ends..

Yeah, I don't really see the spy guys stopping what they are doing, they will just find another way to do it.  So will anything Snowden did have a lasting effect in the long term big picture?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 09:04:30 PM
So Snowden risked prosecution and fled to another country in order to reveal information that had already been released?  ???

I'm not sure how I feel about him.  Exposing corruption is a good thing, but I'm not sure about his methods.  Did he carefully pick what information he exposed, or did he indiscriminately turn over anything he could get his hands on?  What information has he held back, will he release it, and what will the impact of that be?

It is ironic that a guy who is worried about the government stepping on citizens liberties would seek asylum in countries like China and Russia.

Yeah, I don't really see the spy guys stopping what they are doing, they will just find another way to do it.  So will anything Snowden did have a lasting effect in the long term big picture?


No, that's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that most of the foreign stuff he released that I've seen isn't new info. THe domestic *expletive deleted*it is all new, but I don't see how much if any of that helps AQ.

As for what he's released, there was some talk from NSA high ups about granting him amnesty BECAUSE of what he HASNT released yet, so I think he's showing some discretion.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: freakazoid on January 31, 2014, 09:22:59 PM
President Obama seems dead-set on ending the war which will give the Islamists a far greater opportunity than ever before to expand their territories.

As opposed to before the war?

Quote
No, sending drones in  is an act in the prosecution of a war we've been fighting for over a decade.  That you don't agree with some of our policies doesn't entitle you to claim it's terrorism.

I don't think it was the merely sending in the drones part that made it an act of terrorism, although even that could be debated I think.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on January 31, 2014, 09:25:27 PM
Quote
No, sending drones in  is an act in the prosecution of a war we've been fighting for over a decade.  That you don't agree with some of our policies doesn't entitle you to claim it's terrorism.


Well, heck - hijacking planes and flying them into buildings was just another act in the prosecution of the Islamic war against the infidels  :angel:


I suspect "terrorism" has a slightly different definition depending on whether you are the terrorist or the terroree  ;)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ron on January 31, 2014, 09:30:54 PM
TommyGunn,

The GOP is not going to save us, change anything important if they regain power nor slow down the elimination of our rights.

They are every bit as much a part of the problem as the Dems.

You've been played. Your true patriotism and love of our nation has been used to co-opt you into supporting a political party that is every bit as noxious and anti constitutional as the Democrats.

  
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Blakenzy on January 31, 2014, 09:59:48 PM


It is ironic that a guy who is worried about the government stepping on citizens liberties would seek asylum in countries like China and Russia.


I think it is very ironic that a person who has exposed corruption and wrong doing against US citizens has to seek personal safety in countries like China and Russia.

What does that say about our Government?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 11:24:31 PM
TommyGunn,

The GOP is not going to save us, change anything important if they regain power nor slow down the elimination of our rights.

They are every bit as much a part of the problem as the Dems.

You've been played. Your true patriotism and love of our nation has been used to co-opt you into supporting a political party that is every bit as noxious and anti constitutional as the Democrats.

 ???  I said somewhere the repubs were gonna save us?
If Dubya had prosecuted the war as I think he should have it would be over -- would have been over -- before Obama became president.  At this point the republicans are only the lesser of two evils.  Unfortunatly they are the only possible alternative party to the dems.  If the libertarians would get off their obsession with legalizing drugs then maybe they might become a realistic possibility.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 11:28:56 PM
So if the Russians find a Chechen who slipped across the Mexican border into America and blow up a wedding in say Iowa in order to kill him that's ok right? If our "War on Terror" gives America free reign to kill anyone we want in any country then logically that extends to other countries right? Or is America so sooper special that when we bomb other so reign nations it's ok but no one else can do it?

And if the Klingons are attacked by the Andorians who take up residence in a secret compound in Nebraska the Klingons have a natural right to blow up Planet Earth in revenge for being dissed.
Only James T. Kirk can save us. [tinfoil]

Balog; "Inter arma enim silent leges."    It's a quote from Cicero.   
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: freakazoid on January 31, 2014, 11:29:29 PM
If the libertarians would get off their obsession with legalizing drugs then maybe they might become a realistic possibility.

I'm pretty sure that is not the focus of their platform.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 11:34:17 PM
Well, heck - hijacking planes and flying them into buildings was just another act in the prosecution of the Islamic war against the infidels  :angel:


I suspect "terrorism" has a slightly different definition depending on whether you are the terrorist or the terroree  ;)

So what?   Bin Laden may have believed in his own mind what he did was fully justified and probably inspired by Allah, but that doesn't mean he was right or that Allah had anything to do with it.


I'm pretty sure that is not the focus of their platform.
I didn't say it was, but unfortunatly a lot of people associate libertarianism with legalizing drugs.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 11:40:51 PM
Quote from: freakazoid
Quote from: TommyGunn on Today at 07:04:28 PM
President Obama seems dead-set on ending the war which will give the Islamists a far greater opportunity than ever before to expand their territories.
As opposed to before the war?

I think a great deal of AQ's expansion has happened in the past half decade or so.
But it is possible the way Bush Jr. prosecuted the war gave AQ the necessity & ability to flee from A'stan which might have been seen as a defeat at first.  Theoretically AQ could have used it as an excuse to decentralize and start up training camps across N. Africa and adjoining areas ...  I mean, aside from the natural aggressive desire of the Jihadis to expand their areas in search of a caliphate.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 11:43:02 PM
As opposed to before the war?

I think a great deal of AQ's expansion has happened in the past half decade or so.
But it is possible the way Bush Jr. prosecuted the war gave AQ the necessity & ability to flee from A'stan which might have been seen as a defeat at first.  Theoretically AQ could have used it as an excuse to decentralize and start up training camps across N. Africa and adjoining areas ...  I mean, aside from the natural aggressive desire of the Jihadis to expand their areas in search of a caliphate.

AQ had a well established presence in africa long before the war in A-stan
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on January 31, 2014, 11:46:12 PM
AQ had a well established presence in africa long before the war in A-stan

Was it as "established" as it is now?   From what I've heard AQ has expanded into a number of areas that it hadn't penetrated until fairly recently...I sorta thought N. Africa was one of them; I am including other terrorist organizations that are, shall we say, "allied" with AQ such as the group that attacked our diplomats in Benghazi.   
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on January 31, 2014, 11:53:45 PM
Was it as "established" as it is now?   From what I've heard AQ has expanded into a number of areas that it hadn't penetrated until fairly recently...I sorta thought N. Africa was one of them; I am including other terrorist organizations that are, shall we say, "allied" with AQ such as the group that attacked our diplomats in Benghazi.   

Correlation != causation. The very nature of terrorist organizations is that they shift.

But anyways, AQ and similar orgs have a long history in africa.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RevDisk on February 01, 2014, 01:14:25 AM
Holy cr@p, Revdisk.

I know, I understated the case. I'm kinda busy this week. I skipped over a lot of material.

In seriousness, anyone in the know knows not to cross the NSA. The CEO of Qwest learned that the hard way. He refused to play ball with illegal wiretapping, coincidentally went to jail for alleged insider trading and the US govt doesn't allow any of the NSA blackmail into evidence as it's classified. So did anyone foolish enough to work within the system as a whistleblower.

With respect, I don't think you or most people here understand. This isn't bad, it's just a lack of first hand experience. During my time in the military and government, I have worked with the NSA on a couple of occasions. Hell, when I was about 15 or so, I called them up, asked them to send me some books and they did. They sent me two meters of books, which took up an entire bookshelf of my youth. Even threw in some photocopies of some interesting open papers and whatnot. I joined the Army, went into Signal, and dealt with them on a regular basis because they handle the military's crypto.

Each and every single NSA employee I have ever met has been intelligent, thoughtful, competent, decent human being with a sense of humor. You have no idea how terrifying that was and is. Everyone on this board that worked for or with any part of the US government would find this as unnerving as I did. The NSA is more dangerous than any other part of the US government, including the military. For one simple reason. They're competent. Period, end of sentence. That should chill anyone to their very bones. Competency is bred out of any US government organization, in the long term. People that are intelligent, innovative, competent and generally decent human beings don't rise up the ranks and rarely end up as government lifers.

Historically, the NSA stuck to its knitting. Yes, they crossed the line here and there. But rarely and virtually never got caught. For decades, they were "No Such Agency" and black as a coal mine. The fact that they're making the news on a near daily basis is a complete 180 from their roots.

I suspect the decent individuals will start leaving. Any that stay will be less moral and decent. Competence will slip, because the less moral kind tend to be less intelligent, dynamic and innovative. But they'll still have a treasure trove of blackmail material that will put J. Edgar Hoover to shame. The NSA has been collecting dirt on politicians for a very long time. Decades of records. Ask Michael D. Barnes.

It's one reason why they hoover up so much US related material. Today's kid on FB may become tomorrow's Senator, billionaire tech CEO or maybe just a janitor that cleans the toilets at Realtek in Taiwan when the NSA wants to steal their signing certificate to assist the development a virus to slow down Iran's nuclear development. Yes, that would be Stuxnet. The NSA was wiretapping President Obama long before ANYONE thought he would ever become POTUS.

Funny part. I'm not sure how much I helped the NSA do all of these things. At DISA, I maintained infrastructure for the DoD and intel community. You're never supposed to know the contents of the stuff you handle, and 99% of the time, I never did. Well, except for the zOS IBM mainframe that processed their budget. That was a "fun" day. =D

Kinda 1984. I helped them build the platforms they used to spy on me and everyone I know. Oh, nothing complex or Jason Bourne. Swapping hard drives, rebooting routers, etc. Very mundane tasks.  


I don't want to "define" associating so loosely that "anyone" qualifies as a target.   And I wasn't trying to say it was "right" to blow up an innocent wedding party, I was saying it was a bad mistake but ought not hamper our efforts against AQ.

*shrug*

Couple points, sir.

1. You may not even know you're associated with real or perceived terrorists.
2. You don't have to be associated with terrorists to be a target.
3. You're assuming folks don't make mistakes. See children and US senators ending up on the No Fly list.

I'm not against intelligence, drone strikes or other such activities. I believe they need to handled better, and that US citizens should not be the targets. The US military and intel community should be our watch dogs, not our masters. This is not an insult, but an honor. If they bite their owner however, there's no choice but to replace them.  

At the moment, there is no oversight or accountability. None, zero. There are some ceremonial rubber stamps, that is all. Unlimited reach with no limits makes one sloppy, and lose focus. It shows, badly.


Btw, I apologize in advance if I sound patronizing or if I seem to be raking you over the coals, TommyGunn. Just that this sort of thing used to be more of my life than most and I kinda take it personal. Well, more accurately, this sort of thing *expletive deleted*ed my life.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on February 01, 2014, 02:00:51 AM
And if the Klingons are attacked by the Andorians who take up residence in a secret compound in Nebraska the Klingons have a natural right to blow up Planet Earth in revenge for being dissed.
Only James T. Kirk can save us. [tinfoil]

Balog; "Inter arma enim silent leges."    It's a quote from Cicero.   


So because we've declared an open ended war that definitionally cannot be won, we are morally in the right to kill anyone in any country in any way in your mind? What exactly is the difference in America blowing up innocents in a foreign country, and some other country doing the same? You just shrug and say "Meh, it's my country so we can slaughter all the women and children we feel like and I'm ok with it."
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Ben on February 01, 2014, 10:07:17 AM
Excellent synopsis Revdisk.
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 10:41:42 AM
RevDisk just gave al qaeda insight into our intelligence apparatus.

He's a traitor and should be punished
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 11:26:51 AM
So because we've declared an open ended war that definitionally cannot be won, we are morally in the right to kill anyone in any country in any way in your mind? What exactly is the difference in America blowing up innocents in a foreign country, and some other country doing the same? You just shrug and say "Meh, it's my country so we can slaughter all the women and children we feel like and I'm ok with it."
First, I reject the idea of a war that  "definitionally cannot be won."  ANY war "can" be won if it is prosecuted aggressively and intelligently.   I think I may have intimated a few times in this thread I don't necessarily believe this war has been fought that way.
If we cannot, "by definition", win this war against AQ, then how are we supposed to deal with terrorists who want to establish a caliphate and bring down America?
Your "morally in the right" phrase is interesting.....not too many people would, IMHO, talk about war in terms of "morality."   War is Moral?  Really?   I talked about WW2 and the bombing of Dresden & Tokyo, those actions nearly obliterating the entire city and killing countless thousand of supposedly "innocent" people.
Was THAT moral?
Back then it was justified under the concept of "total war."   More specifically, the respective leaders of the country had brought the wars on themselves through their violent actions and thus despite the fact it was American & British bombers that dropped the bombs killing the civilians, it was Hitler & Tojo who were morally responsible as they had precipitated the war.

On 9/11/01 AQ commited an act of terrorism against us that precipated what should have been an all-out war against them.  

What would your response have been? I'm not going to get snarky or sarcastic or anything, even though I often do make the mistake of doing that; I am honestly asking you what would you do to stop these "Islamofascists" or Jihadis (call them what you will, let's not quarrel over signage) effectively?  
If you accidentally killed an innocent (and if your response includes any kind of protracted violence then the odds of this go up) would you stop, or continue?  
Would you not pursue any kind of violent action at all, for fear of killing innocents?



Quote from: Revdisk
Couple points, sir.

1. You may not even know you're associated with real or perceived terrorists.
2. You don't have to be associated with terrorists to be a target.
3. You're assuming folks don't make mistakes. See children and US senators ending up on the No Fly list.

I'm not against intelligence, drone strikes or other such activities. I believe they need to handled better, and that US citizens should not be the targets. The US military and intel community should be our watch dogs, not our masters. This is not an insult, but an honor. If they bite their owner however, there's no choice but to replace them.

1.)  Possible .... but I really suspect people in A'stan usually know far more than they would be willing to tell outsiders about who they're collaborating with.
2.)  Is this through deliberat action on our part or misidentification?  Hard really to respond to such a general statement.
3.) Such is the nature of humankind; we make mistakes.  We made 'em in WW2.   I think I outlined one blunder we did regarding Purple Intelligence earlier in this thread.  Mistakes ought to be corrected and possibly we need to improve how we take decisions on drone strikes to reduce mistakes.  It is very difficult to get a good grasp on how badly we're performing because I don't think we know enough about the total picture of what all goes wrong vs. what went right.


RevDisk just gave al qaeda insight into our intelligence apparatus.

He's a traitor and should be punished

Fitz, the sarcasm really isn't helpful.  
If you're still a little burned about some of the things I said I apologize.



Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: dogmush on February 01, 2014, 12:11:56 PM
First, I reject the idea of a war that  "definitionally cannot be won."  ANY war "can" be won if it is prosecuted aggressively and intelligently.   I think I may have intimated a few times in this thread I don't necessarily believe this war has been fought that way.
If we cannot, "by definition", win this war against AQ, then how are we supposed to deal with terrorists who want to establish a caliphate and bring down America?

But we specifically DIDN'T declare war on Al Quieda. If we had we would probably be done already.  We declared a "War on Terror".  And as someone who's been fighting it for a bit now, we "definitionally" can not win it.There will always be terrorists looking to strike us or our allies.  Eventually they will get lucky and succeed.  We can not end international terrorism. 
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 01, 2014, 12:26:08 PM
Quote
Bin Laden may have believed in his own mind what he did was fully justified and probably inspired by Allah, but that doesn't mean he was right or that Allah had anything to do with it.


Just as you believe in your own mind that the USSA is right.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 12:50:05 PM
But we specifically DIDN'T declare war on Al Quieda. If we had we would probably be done already.  We declared a "War on Terror".  And as someone who's been fighting it for a bit now, we "definitionally" can not win it.There will always be terrorists looking to strike us or our allies.  Eventually they will get lucky and succeed.  We can not end international terrorism.  

I am not convinced that made any difference, really .... but I do think we should have declared war on AQ.
I understand the "rhetoric" is 'we're fighting a war against terrorism.'  In that, you're right, a war against an "ism" isn't going to be won as there will be another group and then yet another and .... so on. However, as I see it we're hardly even really fighting a war against AQ.  We haven't bombed Hezbullah or brother terror groups that have been harrassing Israel, or just about any other group one can talk about.
We are, IMHO, conducting a half-assed ...."struggle" against AQ. 
So when our courageous leaders call it a "war against terrorism,"  yeah,  maybe it's  :facepalm: time.

Just as you believe in your own mind that the USSA USA is right.
 FIFY

The old "moral equivelency" argument.  My belief=Bin Laden's belief.
Is anyone actually wrong in your universe Tallpine.
Do you agree with:
Tallpine's belief=TommyGunn's belief?
If you believe THAT, what's the point of debating with me?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 01, 2014, 12:59:08 PM
Quote
Is anyone actually wrong in your universe Tallpine.

You are  :P


You might take a look at that "golden rule" thing  ;)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 01:01:08 PM
You are  :P


You might take a look at that "golden rule" thing  ;)
And the Golden Rule applies to this debate .... how?  >:D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on February 01, 2014, 01:57:39 PM
The old "moral equivelency" argument.
You keep referring to the moral equivalency fallacy, but I don't think it means what you think it means.
You can't just cry "Moral equivalency! You are wrong!" every time someone makes any comparison.

There are valid moral comparisons that can and should be made.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: JN01 on February 01, 2014, 03:50:48 PM
I know, I understated the case. I'm kinda busy this week. I skipped over a lot of material.

In seriousness, anyone in the know knows not to cross the NSA. The CEO of Qwest learned that the hard way. He refused to play ball with illegal wiretapping, coincidentally went to jail for alleged insider trading and the US govt doesn't allow any of the NSA blackmail into evidence as it's classified. So did anyone foolish enough to work within the system as a whistleblower.

With respect, I don't think you or most people here understand. This isn't bad, it's just a lack of first hand experience. During my time in the military and government, I have worked with the NSA on a couple of occasions. Hell, when I was about 15 or so, I called them up, asked them to send me some books and they did. They sent me two meters of books, which took up an entire bookshelf of my youth. Even threw in some photocopies of some interesting open papers and whatnot. I joined the Army, went into Signal, and dealt with them on a regular basis because they handle the military's crypto.

Each and every single NSA employee I have ever met has been intelligent, thoughtful, competent, decent human being with a sense of humor. You have no idea how terrifying that was and is. Everyone on this board that worked for or with any part of the US government would find this as unnerving as I did. The NSA is more dangerous than any other part of the US government, including the military. For one simple reason. They're competent. Period, end of sentence. That should chill anyone to their very bones. Competency is bred out of any US government organization, in the long term. People that are intelligent, innovative, competent and generally decent human beings don't rise up the ranks and rarely end up as government lifers.

Historically, the NSA stuck to its knitting. Yes, they crossed the line here and there. But rarely and virtually never got caught. For decades, they were "No Such Agency" and black as a coal mine. The fact that they're making the news on a near daily basis is a complete 180 from their roots.

I suspect the decent individuals will start leaving. Any that stay will be less moral and decent. Competence will slip, because the less moral kind tend to be less intelligent, dynamic and innovative. But they'll still have a treasure trove of blackmail material that will put J. Edgar Hoover to shame. The NSA has been collecting dirt on politicians for a very long time. Decades of records. Ask Michael D. Barnes.

It's one reason why they hoover up so much US related material. Today's kid on FB may become tomorrow's Senator, billionaire tech CEO or maybe just a janitor that cleans the toilets at Realtek in Taiwan when the NSA wants to steal their signing certificate to assist the development a virus to slow down Iran's nuclear development. Yes, that would be Stuxnet. The NSA was wiretapping President Obama long before ANYONE thought he would ever become POTUS.

Funny part. I'm not sure how much I helped the NSA do all of these things. At DISA, I maintained infrastructure for the DoD and intel community. You're never supposed to know the contents of the stuff you handle, and 99% of the time, I never did. Well, except for the zOS IBM mainframe that processed their budget. That was a "fun" day. =D

Kinda 1984. I helped them build the platforms they used to spy on me and everyone I know. Oh, nothing complex or Jason Bourne. Swapping hard drives, rebooting routers, etc. Very mundane tasks.  


*shrug*

Couple points, sir.

1. You may not even know you're associated with real or perceived terrorists.
2. You don't have to be associated with terrorists to be a target.
3. You're assuming folks don't make mistakes. See children and US senators ending up on the No Fly list.

I'm not against intelligence, drone strikes or other such activities. I believe they need to handled better, and that US citizens should not be the targets. The US military and intel community should be our watch dogs, not our masters. This is not an insult, but an honor. If they bite their owner however, there's no choice but to replace them.  

At the moment, there is no oversight or accountability. None, zero. There are some ceremonial rubber stamps, that is all. Unlimited reach with no limits makes one sloppy, and lose focus. It shows, badly.


Btw, I apologize in advance if I sound patronizing or if I seem to be raking you over the coals, TommyGunn. Just that this sort of thing used to be more of my life than most and I kinda take it personal. Well, more accurately, this sort of thing *expletive deleted*ed my life.

It is interesting to hear the perspective of an insider.  So do you think that the genie can be put back in the bottle?   How do you keep tight reins on the intelligence apparatus?  Is there an effective strategy for getting good, timely, relevant information on our enemies while respecting freedoms, or does one have to be sacrificed for the other?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 01, 2014, 04:00:02 PM
First, I reject the idea of a war that  "definitionally cannot be won."  ANY war "can" be won if it is prosecuted aggressively and intelligently.   I think I may have intimated a few times in this thread I don't necessarily believe this war has been fought that way.
Fair enough. Can you define what victory in the War on Terror is and when it might possibly be achieved? How do we know we won and it's time to stop?
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 04:10:51 PM
I don't particularly care if my sarcasm is helpful in your mind at this point. Especially after some of your sarcastic nonsense (klingons, really? That's your deflection of an analogy?)

and it's about as helpful as any of the mindless flag waving, if you ain't with us you're against us *expletive deleted*  you've posted

You call into question peoples allegiances and then are surprised when they're no longer interested in having a discussion with you?

If you know how to win the war against al qaeda, then by all means , do it. I can recommend a recruiting station . Or perhaps you can run for office
Title: Re: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 04:23:02 PM
Fair enough. Can you define what victory in the War on Terror is and when it might possibly be achieved? How do we know we won and it's time to stop?


Well that's easy. The complete elimination of anyone who might eventually kill an American... Duh
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Gewehr98 on February 01, 2014, 05:03:18 PM
I actually had to Google "John Le Carre" - I had no idea who or what that was.  I live a sheltered life, I guess.

How do we go forward?

I know one thing that should be implemented, right now.

Decentralize oversight.  Get an oversight/IG office in each branch, way down below directorate level and where the worker bees are.

I don't care if you're gathering HUMINT, MASINT, ELINT, SIGINT, COMINT, whatever.  Create oversight managers, train them in the mindset of protecting the U.S. Constitution and civil liberties, then put them to work.

You submit a request or start a new activity, that local oversight manager has to sign off on it - AFTER researching the legality thereof.

We all believe in the basic goodness of humanity, but my own experience after 20+ years in the IC is that there are way too many in those 3-letter organizations with somewhat faulty moral compasses.

They think they're doing Gawd's work.  Hell, so did I.  But in the pursuit of scoring the big jackpot, they get even more hungry.  Moar. MOAR.  MOAR. "We can do this thing, it's not as bad as they say it is, and it'll save lives!"

The collection capabilities of the U.S. Intelligence Community, if you've not been numbed to it by prolonged exposure, are mind-boggling, to say the least.  

The day I retired, I signed a stack of non-disclosure paperwork, one clause that even forbade me from writing a book about my experiences until 75 years after I left.  

Smart cookies, they are.  They know I can't write that book from my dirt nap location.  

At first I thought, "Well, hey, they're just protecting sources and methods".   Maybe so, but they're also blocking the American public from knowing stuff that would really piss them off and rock the White House a hell of a lot worse than Snowden's piddly little disclosures.

Implement more stringent declassification guidance and schedules. We collect, classify, and hoard way more information than we discard.  

There are supposed to be yearly reviews of material for downgrade or declassification.  I say "supposed to" because it's in the guidance, the documents are even stamped with upcoming declassification dates or "OADR", but not always followed. The ten-year rule is a good one, if followed.  

In my neck of the woods, that review happened only after driven by a FOIA request coming through the door,  or some news event that made CNN or The New York Times.

"Classify and forget" seemed to be the mantra.  Hell, there's there's still classified material about the ethnic tensions in Bosnia and Serbia during the Austro-Hungarian era, predating WW1.  For Gawd's sake, why?

Revise whistleblower training, for both collectors and managers.  Remove the stigma, and remove the friggin' retribution from doing so.

"We're collecting on American citizens, that ain't right!" should be met with action to stop that activity until it can be checked out for Oversight compliance, not an automatic categorization of "He's a terrorist, giving Al Qaeda the keys to 'Merrica".

Your life is essentially ruined for doing The Right Thing.

I didn't do the whistleblower thing, because I personally shut down many of those nascent collection ambitions and ideas, which I know for a fact torqued the agencies that thought they were the greatest thing since sliced bread.  

That doesn't mean I'm in collusion with Al Qaeda.  Nor am I talking Walker Spy Ring here.  Those who would sell state secrets for financial gain, that's a different beast, bona-fide treason, and should be dealt with appropriately.  

That ain't Snowden.  

I hope the IC, not just the NSA, gets a thorough shake-down after the Snowden episode.  
  




Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 05:22:27 PM
Traitor
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 06:10:45 PM
You keep referring to the moral equivalency fallacy, but I don't think it means what you think it means.
You can't just cry "Moral equivalency! You are wrong!" every time someone makes any comparison.

There are valid moral comparisons that can and should be made.

I see no valid moral comparisons in how AQ perceives our war on Jihadism and how we perceive their attrocities.
Nor do I see any comparison between how some Afghani villager perceives out .... "intrusion" into their country to hypothetical intrusions by some foreign entities into our country for putatively similar motives.


Fair enough. Can you define what victory in the War on Terror is and when it might possibly be achieved? How do we know we won and it's time to stop?

As I believe I've said, "the war on terror" is a misnomer.   We are .... or rather should be .... conducting a war against AQ.   As previous posts indicate I don't really believe we're doing so well in that respect.


I don't particularly care if my sarcasm is helpful in your mind at this point. Especially after some of your sarcastic nonsense (klingons, really? That's your deflection of an analogy?)

and it's about as helpful as any of the mindless flag waving, if you ain't with us you're against us *expletive deleted*  you've posted

You call into question peoples allegiances and then are surprised when they're no longer interested in having a discussion with you?

If you know how to win the war against al qaeda, then by all means , do it. I can recommend a recruiting station . Or perhaps you can run for office

You know Fitz, I'll say it it again, if I rubbed you the wrong way I'm sorry.  The Klingon thing was a bit of sarcasm.  I'm sorry if you left your sense of humor elsewhere.   
In the end much of the irritable barbs I have posted are in response to some of the nastiness I have perceived on this thread.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 06:21:49 PM
I see no valid moral comparisons in how AQ perceives our war on Jihadism and how we perceive their attrocities.
Nor do I see any comparison between how some Afghani villager perceives out .... "intrusion" into their country to hypothetical intrusions by some foreign entities into our country for putatively similar motives.


As I believe I've said, "the war on terror" is a misnomer.   We are .... or rather should be .... conducting a war against AQ.   As previous posts indicate I don't really believe we're doing so well in that respect.


You know Fitz, I'll say it it again, if I rubbed you the wrong way I'm sorry.  The Klingon thing was a bit of sarcasm.  I'm sorry if you left your sense of humor elsewhere.   
In the end much of the irritable barbs I have posted are in response to some of the nastiness I have perceived on this thread.


The question stands... how would you prosecute this war on al qaeda. What is the end state, and when do you stop?

Keep in mind that the "Al Qaeda" moniker has been adopted, abandoned, and adopted again by several offshoots that, at various times, are tightly or loosely affiliated with the others, depending on the current internal climate, goals, engagements around the world, etc.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 06:30:30 PM

The question stands... how would you prosecute this war on al qaeda. What is the end state, and when do you stop?

Keep in mind that the "Al Qaeda" moniker has been adopted, abandoned, and adopted again by several offshoots that, at various times, are tightly or loosely affiliated with the others, depending on the current internal climate, goals, engagements around the world, etc.

Kill them and break their things.   Worrying about numerous ancillary groups is too distracting .... we didn't "get" every Nazi high command in WW2, some got to South America through ODESSA or DER SPINNER.   No one is about to suggest since we were creaming the Nazis back then we ought to continue THAT war against Neo-Nazis in the present.
For similar reasons we need to finish off the relevant AQ and Taliban assets in this war.
And remain on guard against the "offshoots" because I don't think they are Boy Scouts.
However, as I have said, I no longer believe we are up to this, as a nation. 
So it isn't going to happen.
Therefor, sadly, your inquiry is .... irrelevant.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 06:32:22 PM
Kill them and break their things.   Worrying about numerous ancillary groups is too distracting .... we didn't "get" every Nazi high command in WW2, some got to South America through ODESSA or DER SPINNER.   No one is about to suggest since we were creaming the Nazis back then we ought to continue THAT war against Neo-Nazis in the present.
For similar reasons we need to finish off the relevant AQ and Taliban assets in this war.
And remain on guard against the "offshoots" because I don't think they are Boy Scouts.
However, as I have said, I no longer believe we are up to this, as a nation.  
So it isn't going to happen.
Therefor, sadly, your inquiry is .... irrelevant.

Here again you show a lack of understanding

Al qaeda is NOTHING MORE than a vast network of the numerous ancillary groups. There IS no "al qaeda" army. it's a ton of small groups of no more than a few people.

Ignore them, and you've accomplished absolutely nothing. In fact, the BULK of the opposition against us in both Iraq and Afghanistan have not been affiliated with AQ.

Care to take a gander at how many insurgent groups are involved in A-stan and Iraq?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 06:34:35 PM
No, your knowledge of the subject matter is irrelevant.

Al qaeda is NOTHING MORE than a vast network of the numerous ancillary groups. There IS no "al qaeda" army. it's a ton of small groups of no more than a few people.

Ignore them, and you've accomplished absolutely nothing. In fact, the BULK of the opposition against us in both Iraq and Afghanistan have not been affiliated with AQ.

Care to take a gander at how many insurgent groups are involved in A-stan and Iraq?

OK then DO go after them.   Perhaps you should explain how YOU would prosecute this war since you seem to think what I know is irrelevant.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 06:35:51 PM
OK then DO go after them.   Perhaps you should explain how YOU would prosecute this war since you seem to think what I know is irrelevant.


I , unlike you, have not claimed to have those answers.

I do know that it's difficult, if not impossible, to win a war against that kind of enemy.

Problem with you is, you seem to think that any abuse is justified in the prosecution of that war, which i disagree with.

I don't think that an entire party of revelers who may or may not have a connection to terror is an acceptable cost to assassinate one guy. Nor do i think we should go into other countries and bomb them without a declaration of war on that country. Nor do I think that spying on americans is justified.

Apparently you do, and I suspect that's the biggest reason we'll never agree.

You're funny though. you're basically saying that we, as a nation, don't have the stomach for... SOMETHING. Something you can't define.

But DAMMIT, we're pansies and we dont have the stomach for it!!!
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 01, 2014, 06:41:02 PM
Quote
I see no valid moral comparisons in how AQ perceives our war on Jihadism and how we perceive their attrocities.
Nor do I see any comparison between how some Afghani villager perceives out .... "intrusion" into their country to hypothetical intrusions by some foreign entities into our country for putatively similar motives.


Obviously, you don't  =(
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 01, 2014, 06:42:22 PM
As I believe I've said, "the war on terror" is a misnomer.   We are .... or rather should be .... conducting a war against AQ.  

What you think we should be doing is not relevant. What is relevant is what we are doing, and according to our leadership we are fighting a Global War on Terror(TM). You say that this is not an unwinnable war. Tell me how it can be won, how we would know when to stop.

our war on Jihadism

Ah, so it's a war on Jihadism, is it? Ok. Jihadism is the belief in armed jihad. Tell me, how can a war against a belief be won?

Kill them and break their things.  

What things, exactly, do they have that we can break?  How many of them do we kill? Is it, even in theory, possible to kill them all?


EDIT:

Check out this medal here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_War_on_Terrorism_Service_Medal

What war is this, again?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 07:04:06 PM

I , unlike you, have not claimed to have those answers.
I never claimed I had all the answers.  Seems to me you and a few others here have claimed to have all the answers.  "Like the war being "unwinnable" for example -- and that is in fact an answer, albeit a bad one.

I do know that it's difficult, if not impossible, to win a war against that kind of enemy.

Problem with you is, you seem to think that any abuse is justified in the prosecution of that war, which i disagree with.
I don't think abuse is justified, I think it is inevitable.   
I don't think that an entire party of revelers who may or may not have a connection to terror is an acceptable cost to assassinate one guy. Nor do i think we should go into other countries and bomb them without a declaration of war on that country. Nor do I think that spying on americans is justified.  Apparently you do, and I suspect that's the biggest reason we'll never agree.


Actually I agree with the part about not spying on Americans.
As to "declarations of war" we've fought a number of wars without them.  I wish we had declared war, but I can't accept the notion that we didn't as an excuse not to fight the war.
I don't like blowing up entire parties to get one person....but such are often "targets of opportunity."   If the particular bad guy would oblige us and stand out in the open fine, get him.
Thing is, I listen to half the people complain about this war being concerned about hitting wedding parties and the like when we shouldn't be ..... the other half of complainers state the "rules of engagement" are so tough that warriors are often unable to engage the enemy when they do have them in sights. 
Which is it?
Why is it people today object to killing innocents ... as I said we whacked plenty in Dresden, Tokyo and elsewhere in WW2.  Is it because that was a "declared war" against soveirign nations that makes the difference? 


You're funny though. you're basically saying that we, as a nation, don't have the stomach for... SOMETHING. Something you can't define.

But DAMMIT, we're pansies and we dont have the stomach for it!!!

Your confusion over this will disappear when it is realized I never said that we're pansies.  Or it should.
IF you remain confused that's your problem.  Perhaps it is not I with the reading comprehension problem.  :P
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Balog on February 01, 2014, 07:34:39 PM
Is there any action in your mind that we are unjustified in taking? We have a "war" on terror, so you don't care if we blow innocent people up in countries we have no declared hostility toward. Is there anything you would object to? You keep referring to Dresden: shall we just kill every living person in every Middle Eastern country? Would that be an acceptable final solution, in your mind?
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: mtnbkr on February 01, 2014, 08:05:01 PM
Is there any action in your mind that we are unjustified in taking?

Whatever it takes. (http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11488.htm)  

Or are you soft on terrorism? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hz01hN9l-BM)

Chris
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 08:35:06 PM
The irony of your position is hilarious Tommygunn

We will do anything we can, including killing innocents, to bring to justice those killing innocents.


Meanwhile, troops get investigated over accidents, but the drones and whatnot can PURPOSELY destroy a party of people because of one HVT.

If a marine squad did it, they'd be in jail

But hey

At least we still have the moral high ground against those terrorists
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 08:53:04 PM
Also, regarding the ROE... You've served, so surely you know that a squad indiscriminately killing a large group to take out one guy is not right, nor allowed... And no one wants it to be. When we complain about the ROE and EOF, we are generally bemoaning the procedures we have to take for an ESTABLISHED hostile act
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 01, 2014, 09:53:43 PM
I still would like to know how we would know when to stop.
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 09:59:28 PM
Why do you hate America, achmed?
Title: Re:
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 10:40:25 PM
The irony of your position is hilarious Tommygunn

We will do anything we can, including killing innocents, to bring to justice those killing innocents.


Meanwhile, troops get investigated over accidents, but the drones and whatnot can PURPOSELY destroy a party of people because of one HVT.

If a marine squad did it, they'd be in jail

But hey

At least we still have the moral high ground against those terrorists

I  am *expletive deleted* happy that my position is so hilarious to you.   I'm not enjoying the idea of killing innocents, I am trying to get across that when you prosecute a war, CRAP HAPPENS.  

Is there any action in your mind that we are unjustified in taking? We have a "war" on terror, so you don't care if we blow innocent people up in countries we have no declared hostility toward. Is there anything you would object to? You keep referring to Dresden: shall we just kill every living person in every Middle Eastern country? Would that be an acceptable final solution, in your mind?

We do have a declared hostility (not a declaration of war .... but Congress did take a vote) on AQ.   I bring up Dresden for a purpose, yet it seems NO ONE seems to understand why.  
There's thing's I would object to in the pursuit of war.
Not attacking the terrorists when we locate them.
Aiding and abetting the enemy.
The countries we have "no declared hostilities to" are harboring the people who we do consider hostiles.  Would you have us declare war on Pakistan because they are harboring Taliban elements?  
Is that a practical solution in your mind?   I mean, we've known they're there for a long time and really, we didn't do very much about them until some scheisskopf decided to put a Hellfire missile on a Predator Drone, which heretofor was basically an airborne mobile recon platform.  
What we should have done was to prevent the Taliban from bugging out of A'stan .... guess Dubya couldn't have bothered to have the forces necessary to do that over there.

Given how the confusion and the "Fog of War" has complicated past wars, overall I think it is a minor miracle that this country has won the wars it did win.  There are several scenarios I can think of in which we would have lost the Revolutionary War, and others, as well.   IMHO we did lose the Vietnam War even though we won most every engagement on the ground.  We did not obtain our objective over there.   Whatever the reason, military...political...social, pick your choice.

We're gonna be damned lucky if we can break even in this current war.   A great deal has been done that has endangered our rights, but I see that as a reason to win the damned war and then set right what's wrong.  
It's easy to worry about what the NSA has done, but some here should be happy Abraham Lincoln did not have the NSA or the ELINT capacities it possesses.   He suspended habeus corpus, had newspapers shut down, had a recalcitrant kongresskritter deported to Canada, and instituted a number of other debasements of the U.S. Constitution.   Much of that was corrected after the war.



Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 01, 2014, 10:44:12 PM
You seem to be under the impression that this stuff is reversible. Not so. When was the last time a major overstep of fed authority was reversed?

Hint: not recently at all.

you live in a nation of moronic, lazy shitheads. That's why we need to expose and fight these oversteps, not allow them in the name of "OMG TERRORISM" then attempt to roll them back later.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 10:50:04 PM
What you think we should be doing is not relevant. What is relevant is what we are doing, and according to our leadership we are fighting a Global War on Terror(TM). You say that this is not an unwinnable war. Tell me how it can be won, how we would know when to stop.

Ah, so it's a war on Jihadism, is it? Ok. Jihadism is the belief in armed jihad. Tell me, how can a war against a belief be won?
To the first part, I believe I have dealt with it.  If you do not wish to consider my opinion "relevant" fine, I shall return the favor in kind.
"Jihadism" is the concept of fighting a religious war, a war with the goal of expanding the religious footprint of, in this case, Islam.  It is a great deal more than just a simple belief.  You fight it by fighting the Jihadis, and killing them.


What things, exactly, do they have that we can break?  How many of them do we kill? Is it, even in theory, possible to kill them all?

Take a wild guess what things should be broken.   And I don't know how many we should kill because I don't know how many there are.   It may be possible to kill enough of them to stop them from being an existential threat to us.


EDIT:

Check out this medal here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_War_on_Terrorism_Service_Medal

What war is this, again?  

Oh friggin' woopeee they put that inane phrase "Global War Against Terror" on a medal so we're NOT really fighting AQ & Taliban.      :facepalm:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 10:51:23 PM
You seem to be under the impression that this stuff is reversible. Not so. When was the last time a major overstep of fed authority was reversed?

Hint: not recently at all.

you live in a nation of moronic, lazy shitheads. That's why we need to expose and fight these oversteps, not allow them in the name of "OMG TERRORISM" then attempt to roll them back later.

Unless you count the Church Commitee.

I bet they thought what Lincoln did was ireversible too.  Especially after the effects of Reconstruction became known. >:D

Fitz, if we really are a bunch of lazy moronic shitheads, it's lost.  We won't be able to fix it either now or later.
Better hope you're wrong.
Title: Re:
Post by: cordex on February 01, 2014, 11:19:46 PM
Nor do I see any comparison between how some Afghani villager perceives out .... "intrusion" into their country to hypothetical intrusions by some foreign entities into our country for putatively similar motives.
Why not?

 I bring up Dresden for a purpose, yet it seems NO ONE seems to understand why. 
First of all, I've always understood the firebombing of Dresden to have been a British campaign.  Pretty sure that the US general in charge maintained targeted daylight bombings because of his vehement opposition to the idea of haphazardly bombing civilian targets in the dark.

Secondly, the situation today is completely dissimilar to WWII.  Resorting to desperation measures like firebombing and dropping nuclear weapons on civilian centers and the Vergeltungswaffen campaigns on the other side are not techniques that really carry over well to the strong side of asymmetric warfare.  When you are fighting for the survival of your nation, you can make the argument that dropping bombs on civilian targets - accidentally or intentionally - might be a legitimate technique to reduce the will and warmaking capability of your enemy.  And if you win the war, you might not even be prosecuted for your war crimes.  In the conflict we have today, wiping out a village to kill some visiting bad guys is more likely to radicalize additional enemies rather than force the nebulous force who doesn't necessarily care about that village anyway to sue for peace.

The countries we have "no declared hostilities to" are harboring the people who we do consider hostiles.  Would you have us declare war on Pakistan because they are harboring Taliban elements? 
That's the problem.  You want to fight today's war with last century's techniques which by any right should require a declaration of war on the nations we are bombing.
 
What we should have done was to prevent the Taliban from bugging out of A'stan .... guess Dubya couldn't have bothered to have the forces necessary to do that over there.
Respectfully, you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.  Again.  Even if the US war machine were even capable of sealing off the Afghanistan in the way you propose (and if you've ever seen topographic maps of the 1,600ish miles of Pakistan/Afghanistan border you would be wise to doubt our ability to do so) I would venture to say that the cost to the US taxpayer would make the budget for the war to date look like pocket change.

Take a wild guess what things should be broken.   And I don't know how many we should kill because I don't know how many there are.   It may be possible to kill enough of them to stop them from being an existential threat to us.
When you blow up a bunch of innocent people to kill an enemy, you often end up with more enemies than you started with.
Title: Re:
Post by: TommyGunn on February 01, 2014, 11:55:40 PM
Why not?
First of all, I've always understood the firebombing of Dresden to have been a British campaign.  Pretty sure that the US general in charge maintained targeted daylight bombings because of his vehement opposition to the idea of haphazardly bombing civilian targets in the dark.

Secondly, the situation today is completely dissimilar to WWII.  Resorting to desperation measures like firebombing and dropping nuclear weapons on civilian centers and the Vergeltungswaffen campaigns on the other side are not techniques that really carry over well to the strong side of asymmetric warfare.  When you are fighting for the survival of your nation, you can make the argument that dropping bombs on civilian targets - accidentally or intentionally - might be a legitimate technique to reduce the will and warmaking capability of your enemy.  And if you win the war, you might not even be prosecuted for your war crimes.  In the conflict we have today, wiping out a village to kill some visiting bad guys is more likely to radicalize additional enemies rather than force the nebulous force who doesn't necessarily care about that village anyway to sue for peace.
That's the problem.  You want to fight today's war with last century's techniques which by any right should require a declaration of war on the nations we are bombing.
 Respectfully, you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.  Again.  Even if the US war machine were even capable of sealing off the Afghanistan in the way you propose (and if you've ever seen topographic maps of the 1,600ish miles of Pakistan/Afghanistan border you would be wise to doubt our ability to do so) I would venture to say that the cost to the US taxpayer would make the budget for the war to date look like pocket change.
When you blow up a bunch of innocent people to kill an enemy, you often end up with more enemies than you started with.

Yeah  *sigh*  since I have, obviously, "no idea what I'm talking about," why is everyone so F'n' bothered by what I'm saying. [tinfoil] Guess I don't knbow how to fight this war, you guys don't, the U.S. govt. doesn't, the military can't without blowing up innocent people, so let's just pack it all in.

 Good bye and faretheewell.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 02, 2014, 12:14:17 AM
Why do you hate America, achmed?
Михаил, actually. :)

"Jihadism" is the concept of fighting a religious war, a war with the goal of expanding the religious footprint of, in this case, Islam.  It is a great deal more than just a simple belief.  You fight it by fighting the Jihadis, and killing them.
It's not a belief, it's a concept. Got it. And you fight it by killing the people that subscribe to it.

Can you point out a concept that has been defeated by killing people who believe in it?  Ever?

Take a wild guess what things should be broken.   And I don't know how many we should kill because I don't know how many there are. 
These guys live in tents and caves. They don't own things that are all that valuable. We can't destroy their industry or their economy. What is there for us to break that will impact them?

It may be possible to kill enough of them to stop them from being an existential threat to us.
How do we know that this has happened?

Oh friggin' woopeee they put that inane phrase "Global War Against Terror" on a medal so we're NOT really fighting AQ & Taliban.      :facepalm:
So the Commander in Chief says this is what we are fighting. You disagree. Clearly, what you say goes.

Er... What?

You fight it by fighting the Jihadis, and killing them.
You are constantly answering a question I did not ask and completely ignoring a question I did ask, several times.

Once again:HOW DO WE KNOW WHEN TO STOP FIGHTING?

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: dogmush on February 02, 2014, 01:38:27 AM

Take a wild guess what things should be broken.   And I don't know how many we should kill because I don't know how many there are.   It may be possible to kill enough of them to stop them from being an existential threat to us.



Islamic terrorism is not now, nor has it been, an existential threat to the United States of America. 

The can, if they're lucky, kill some Americans, and we should try to limit those occurrences, but to pretend that Islamic terrorism is even remotely capable of existentially threatening the USA would be laughable if it wasn't so often packaged with delusional fear justifying atrocities. *

*Not saying you personally, Tommygunn, but every .gov official that has used that phrase in the last 12 years was using it to bludgeon dissent against some US overreach or atrocity.  It's a clear sign in a conversation.
Title: Re:
Post by: Fitz on February 02, 2014, 04:16:04 AM
Oh!!! Prevent the bad guys from bugging out of Afghanistan?

Maybe when we finished that, we could have convinced the democrats to lower taxes, the Republicans to love abortion, and congress to get along with each other

You know, since we're clearly talking about fantasy at this point
Title: Re:
Post by: cordex on February 02, 2014, 09:32:37 AM
Oh!!! Prevent the bad guys from bugging out of Afghanistan?

Maybe when we finished that, we could have convinced the democrats to lower taxes, the Republicans to love abortion, and congress to get along with each other

You know, since we're clearly talking about fantasy at this point
Just line up everyone in the military who can carry a rifle shoulder to shoulder along the Afghanistan/Pakistan border and start marching northwest killing any terrorists or wedding parties they come across, and firebombing any Dresdens they see.

Easy.

Heck, while they are at it they might as well sweep across Iran, give Iraq another pass and clean up Syria and Lebanon. If they are feeling impolitic they can take a walk through Saudi Arabia, Jordan and go back to give Pakistan a run. Easy as that. Terrorism would surrender.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on February 02, 2014, 10:18:02 AM
Be careful not to match fallacy with fallacy when countering TG.

1. Yes, you can practically end the threat from adherents to an ideology.

Quote
Two men considering a religious vocation were having a conversation. “What is similar about the Jesuit and Dominican Orders? ” the one asked.

The second replied, “Well, they were both founded by Spaniards — St. Dominic for the Dominicans, and St. Ignatius of Loyola for the Jesuits. They were also both founded to combat heresy — the Dominicans to fight the Albigensians, and the Jesuits to fight the Protestants.”

“What is different about the Jesuit and Dominican Orders?”

“Met any Albigensians lately?”

The question is not "Can we forever remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"  The question is, "Are we willing to do what is necessary to  remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"


2. Yes, orthodox Islam is a threat to Western Civilization.  This says more about the moral weakness of Western Civ than it does about orthodox Islam's strength. 

It would be cheaper and make more sense to wage war against W Civ's internal rot.  Yes, that includes warring on much of the libertine agenda and the suicide pact of "tolerance."  For libertines, half of a libertine loaf is better than the bitter harvest they will reap when they succeed and thoroughly enervate Western Civ.




Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: mtnbkr on February 02, 2014, 10:37:04 AM
Be careful not to match fallacy with fallacy when countering TG.

1. Yes, you can practically end the threat from adherents to an ideology.

The question is not "Can we forever remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"  The question is, "Are we willing to do what is necessary to  remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"


2. Yes, orthodox Islam is a threat to Western Civilization.  This says more about the moral weakness of Western Civ than it does about orthodox Islam's strength. 

It would be cheaper and make more sense to wage war against W Civ's internal rot.  Yes, that includes warring on much of the libertine agenda and the suicide pact of "tolerance."  For libertines, half of a libertine loaf is better than the bitter harvest they will reap when they succeed and thoroughly enervate Western Civ.

I don't believe it is Orthodox Islam that is the threat, but the primitive tribal types who use Orthodox Islam as the excuse and vehicle to attack the West.  I have a few coworkers from that region.  To hear them talk, religion is only part of the problem.  The main issue is an ancient culture that requires revenge for any slight.

Every time we bomb a wedding party to kill one "high value target", we give a whole bunch of people reason to hate us.  Along comes an imam with an answer in the form of "join our sect and you get to kill infidels" and you now have 20 new "terrorists".

It's human nature coupled with a culture that believes in revenge for any slight.  This goes beyond Islam.  As long as we're in their homeland, killing their people, we'll never run out of primitive tribal types who want to kill us.  Orthodox Islam merely gives them the vehicle.

Chris
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on February 02, 2014, 11:02:52 AM
The question is not "Can we forever remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"  The question is, "Are we willing to do what is necessary to  remove the threat from adherents to an ideology/idea/religion?"
I'm not sure if you are actually advocating anything specific, but it is my fervent hope that he answer to your second question and the implied campaign of terror behind it remains "No!"
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 02, 2014, 11:15:59 AM
Quote
It would be cheaper and make more sense to wage war against W Civ's internal rot.  Yes, that includes warring on much of the libertine agenda and the suicide pact of "tolerance."  For libertines, half of a libertine loaf is better than the bitter harvest they will reap when they succeed and thoroughly enervate Western Civ.


So - if we make the wimenz wear burkas then we will have defeated the Jihadists  ???
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Bigjake on February 02, 2014, 12:36:41 PM
Quote
What we should have done was to prevent the Taliban from bugging out of A'stan .... guess Dubya couldn't have bothered to have the forces necessary to do that over there.

Picking nits,  but have you ever looked at a topo map of Afghanistan?  We couldn't keep moonshiners from bugging out of Kentucky,  Keeping the Hajis from going wherever they want is a pipe dream.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 12:47:15 PM

It's not a belief, it's a concept. Got it. And you fight it by killing the people that subscribe to it.

Can you point out a concept that has been defeated by killing people who believe in it?  Ever?
What is the difference between concept & belief that is earth-shakingly important in  the context of this thread?
You claim we fight it by killing those who subscribe to it ...... then ask what concept has been defeated by killing those same people.  This is a little bizarre and contradictory, to me.
So you can't kill concepts and beliefs.  There are still new Nazis around despite Patton's, Eisenhower's, and FDR's best efforts, but no one says they are a threat to us.  You can still buy Hitler's Mein Kampf in bookstores (well, not in Germany maybe) but few worry about it and consider it only a historical artifact of a brutal dictator.


These guys live in tents and caves. They don't own things that are all that valuable. We can't destroy their industry or their economy. What is there for us to break that will impact them?  


Haven't you ever heard of the bromide that the "purpose of an army is to kill the enemy & break their things?"
I guess not.
Obviously if AQ doesn't have an industrial complex you can't bomb it into oblivion, but you can still kill the people.
Surely you don't need my feeble input to figure that amazingly difficult concept.  :-X


How do we know that this has happened?

Certainly there must be someone up in military intel....somewhere....state dept. (Ack!)  that can recognize the end of a war when he(she) sees it.  How did we know WW2 was over?  Right, that little shindig aboard that battleship in Tokyo Bay.  
I believe there will be some tell, IMHO.  I don't know what it is.
Not that it matters, our illustrious Leader, Obama, has declared victory and is going to save the day by returning our soldiers home in the not too distant future.


So the Commander in Chief says this is what we are fighting. You disagree. Clearly, what you say goes.

The cmdr in chief was engaging in something called rhetoric.  I was not engaging in something called rhetoric .... though I might as well have been for all the good it does me here. :facepalm:
P.S.; the Commander-in-Chief is a boob.

Er... What?
You are constantly answering a question I did not ask and completely ignoring a question I did ask, several times.

Once again:HOW DO WE KNOW WHEN TO STOP FIGHTING?

Jehovah God will send his only begotten Son down from Heaven to instruct us when the fighting will stop. [popcorn]

Seriously, dealt with that one above.
I wonder if Patton knew when "the fighting would stop"?  I mean....someone gave him a date certain?  
Oooooops, there I go with that WW2 stuff again, gotta watch that.  
Because we all know we can't ever learn a thing from history, right?

 [tinfoil]
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 12:50:15 PM
Picking nits,  but have you ever looked at a topo map of Afghanistan?  We couldn't keep moonshiners from bugging out of Kentucky,  Keeping the Hajis from going wherever they want is a pipe dream.

We never applied our full modern military to stop moonshiners.
I've seen enough maps of A'stan to realize what a BIG JOB it would have been.  With modern airpower it might be close to possible to do something we did along the U.S. / Mexico border in WW1.
Would we catch every Haji?   I doubt it.   
Anyway, it's far too late to worry over this now.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 01:01:26 PM
Islamic terrorism is not now, nor has it been, an existential threat to the United States of America.  

The can, if they're lucky, kill some Americans, and we should try to limit those occurrences, but to pretend that Islamic terrorism is even remotely capable of existentially threatening the USA would be laughable if it wasn't so often packaged with delusional fear justifying atrocities. *

*Not saying you personally, Tommygunn, but every .gov official that has used that phrase in the last 12 years was using it to bludgeon dissent against some US overreach or atrocity.  It's a clear sign in a conversation.

As long as there are those struggling for their world caliphate, they surely will be a threat to our existance. 

I can't help but be reminded what some religions say about the Devil and what his most grandiose accomplishment was; convincing the people that he did not exist.

That way he can more easily separate us from Jesus and the Lord and defeat Heaven's minions.

Not that I think that the Islamists are trying to convince us they don't exist....
I think a lot of people here refuse to believe that they pose any threat to us.   Some believe that threat comes only from blowing up train stations  and flying 767s into buildings.  There's hard war and then there is soft war, and for those who don't understand the difference I recommend looking it up. 
The Islamists are engaging in a soft war in europe and so far it is largely working.   That is not a reference to a few bombs at train stations and whatever, it's a reference to something very different.

They are also engaging in a soft war here.
But most of us are neither aware of it, or are doing anything to counter it.

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Scout26 on February 02, 2014, 01:07:12 PM
How to win:  
1)  Declare it over.
2)  Get out.
3)  Stop Immigration from those countries/areas of the world that spawn terrorists.  (or at least screen them better)
4)  Stop illegal immigration and deport those illegals already here.  (Mexico does it on their southern border, why can't we?)
5)  Grow a pair and go back to the Eisenhower Doctrine of Massive Retaliation.
6)  Stop spying on Americans and prevent the NSA from doing it anymore and implement Ben's suggestions.  Their annual performance reviews should be nothing but stinging criticism from those they are assigned to "for not allowing them to have any fun".
7)  Reduce the budget of all .gov entities by 10% a year for at least 5 years.  (and eliminate the BATFEIO, TSA, and a few more DHS entities, put Customs back under Treasury (they are a revenue function, not an LEA).   The USCG back to Transportation.  And Border Patrol to Justice. (with the mandate of quick deportation of illegals.)  

Let them screw goats, camels and little boys while blowing up each other in their own lands.      

 
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 01:10:15 PM
OK, I am officially endorsing Scout26's suggestion for how to win.  :angel:
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 02, 2014, 01:44:27 PM
What is the difference between concept & belief that is earth-shakingly important in  the context of this thread?

You tell me. You are the one that brought it up. I was perfectly happy calling it a belief.

Quote
You claim we fight it by killing those who subscribe to it
No. You claim we fight it that way. If you can't remember your own words, look up the thread.

Quote
So you can't kill concepts and beliefs.  There are still new Nazis around despite Patton's, Eisenhower's, and FDR's best efforts, but no one says they are a threat to us.  You can still buy Hitler's Mein Kampf in bookstores (well, not in Germany maybe) but few worry about it and consider it only a historical artifact of a brutal dictator.
The war was not with the concept of National Socialism. The war was with Germany and it's allies, not all of whom subscribed to the ideology.

Quote
Haven't you ever heard of the bromide that the "purpose of an army is to kill the enemy & break their things?"
I have. I just don't see these guys having stuff that needs an army to break.

Quote
Obviously if AQ doesn't have an industrial complex you can't bomb it into oblivion, but you can still kill the people.
Surely you don't need my feeble input to figure that amazingly difficult concept.  :-X
We seem to have a little problem determining just who those people are.

Quote
Certainly there must be someone up in military intel....somewhere....state dept. (Ack!)  that can recognize the end of a war when he(she) sees it.  
Commendable faith, but without any basis in reality.

Quote
How did we know WW2 was over?  Right, that little shindig aboard that battleship in Tokyo Bay.  
The war was over when the other guy was unable to continue and said so in writing through an official representative. Armed jihad has no official representatives. It's a thing various people do. There is no way for it to surrender.

Quote
I believe there will be some tell, IMHO.  I don't know what it is.
If you don't know what it is, what makes you so sure it exists?
 
Quote
The cmdr in chief was engaging in something called rhetoric.  I was not engaging in something called rhetoric .... though I might as well have been for all the good it does me here. :facepalm:
P.S.; the Commander-in-Chief is a boob.
Clearly, you don't hold the current CiC in very high regard. However, he isn't the one who created the medal.

Quote
I wonder if Patton knew when "the fighting would stop"?  I mean....someone gave him a date certain?  
Actually, he did. Wars don't end on a specific date. Wars end when one of the sides surrenders.

What would the surrender look like in this case? Oh, wait. You don't know.

Seriously, the people who are awaiting Rapture are on more solid ground than you. They at least know what they are waiting for.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: roo_ster on February 02, 2014, 06:41:33 PM
I don't believe it is Orthodox Islam that is the threat, but the primitive tribal types who use Orthodox Islam as the excuse and vehicle to attack the West.  I have a few coworkers from that region.  To hear them talk, religion is only part of the problem.  The main issue is an ancient culture that requires revenge for any slight.

Every time we bomb a wedding party to kill one "high value target", we give a whole bunch of people reason to hate us.  Along comes an imam with an answer in the form of "join our sect and you get to kill infidels" and you now have 20 new "terrorists".

It's human nature coupled with a culture that believes in revenge for any slight.  This goes beyond Islam.  As long as we're in their homeland, killing their people, we'll never run out of primitive tribal types who want to kill us.  Orthodox Islam merely gives them the vehicle.

Chris

1. Muslim co-workers or exchange students are not particularly representative of "back home."  We in the West have repeatedly and foolishly thought such folk were representative of their kind.  And we have repeatedly been disappointed when we push a merely authoritarian regime over with their help...to end up with an even nastier regime that takes its Islam straight-up orthodox clit-cutting and throat-slashing.

2. Your buddies may be everything you say and what we would want in a sane & rational contemporary Islam.  Too bad they are a small and shrinking minority in the middle east.  When such folk take over, you got Ataturk's Turkey.  Not Switzerland, but not a muslim hell hole.  Problem is, they have been outbred by the orthodox muslims from the back country.  Again, Turkey is the model here.  When authoritarian but mildly modern or pro-west regimes falter and the folks in the back country have a say, they have almost always sided with orthodox Islam.

3. Orthodoxy is easier to defend, as it is supported by the source documents.  The heterodox and heretical variants of Islam may be able to co-exist with the West without rancor, but they lose the intra-muslim argument and get fewer adherents.  We see the same here in the USA with protestant Christianity.  The older denominations that have (theologically) liberalized have been dying for decades and are circling the drain.  The confessional and/or more orthodox denominations see growth.  The big difference is that the closer folk hew to orthodox Christianity, the more easily they coexist with decent classically liberal Western civilization.

4. The real & hypothetical "wedding party" collateral damage casualties were never ours to claim as allies or even neutrals.  If they are that closely tied by blood to a HVT we want to turn into dog meat, they are already our enemies.  Killing them may be "collateral" and may be inadvertent, but it will have roughly zero effect to increase opposition and even less effect on letting them have greater reach to hit us.

I'm not sure if you are actually advocating anything specific, but it is my fervent hope that he answer to your second question and the implied campaign of terror behind it remains "No!"

I would sooner see Islamic civilization snuffed out and forever shattered than see the same happen to Western Civilization.  And it would not be a campaign of terror, but of mass killing, destruction, displacement, and colonization of their lands with Western peoples.  The sort of thing that happened pretty regularly in history.  The sort of thing that Western Civ largely put an end to...but may be necessary for its survival.  [I would note that it would be the same sort of thing Islam did to large stretches of Christendom, Persia, and N India during the muslim expansion starting in the 600s.]

I would hope we could find the stones to do it, were it to come to that.  I care more for Western Civ and more for the folk who live in Western Civ than I do for Islamic Civ and its constituents.  Western Civ is just plain better and better for humans.  I would gladly compare human accomplishments in any realm of endeavor as well as metrics of material well-being and liberty to make back that up.

So - if we make the wimenz wear burkas then we will have defeated the Jihadists  ???

Are you being obtuse or just deliberately misconstruing what I wrote in the usual, "If you don't support  'Pot for 10 year old kids fornicating on Main Street' you are a puritanical statist" fashion?



To get back to the OP, I think Snowden's actions have helped to expose the ugly police state architecture in our gov't.  I support him as a whistle blower not because I have some love of muslim terrorists and his revelations may have harmed prosecution of the War on Somethingorother, but because I value liberty and Western Civ.  I would be perfectly fine with a robust classically liberal regime that could and did depopulate the middle east if it became a threat to our interests and/or liberty. 
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 06:55:34 PM
W. Horseradish, I've seen no better answers from you than you claim I've been able to provide you.
YOU tell me when this war will end.
If we weren't supposed to attack AQ & Taliban in response to 9/11, what would you have done?
Quote from: White Horseradish
Quote from: Tommygunn
What is the difference between concept & belief that is earth-shakingly important in  the context of this thread?

You tell me. You are the one that brought it up. I was perfectly happy calling it a belief.


Quote from: White Horseradish
It's not a belief, it's a concept. Got it.

Mr error.   I thought "It's not a belief, it's a concept. Got it"  was declarative, not sarcasm.

Quote from: White Horseradish
Quote from: TommyGunn
You claim we fight it by killing those who subscribe to it
No. You claim we fight it that way. If you can't remember your own words, look up the thread.

 
Quote from: White Horseradish, Feb 1, 2014, 11:14:07PM
And you fight it by killing the people that subscribe to it.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
That is from YOUR statement.  YOU said it.  Maybe you just didn't remember it?  Or perhaps you were being sarcastic?    If you don't believe you said it, check out your quote below, I included the time stamp to make it real easy.

Quote from: White Horseradish
Quote from: TommyGunn
So you can't kill concepts and beliefs.  There are still new Nazis around despite Patton's, Eisenhower's, and FDR's best efforts, but no one says they are a threat to us.  You can still buy Hitler's Mein Kampf in bookstores (well, not in Germany maybe) but few worry about it and consider it only a historical artifact of a brutal dictator.
The war was not with the concept of National Socialism. The war was with Germany and it's allies, not all of whom subscribed to the ideology.


I didn't say the war was against National Socialism.   I've reread the statement I made there and don't for the life of me get how you managed to get that meaning out of it.


Quote from: White Horseradish
Quote
Certainly there must be someone up in military intel....somewhere....state dept. (Ack!)  that can recognize the end of a war when he(she) sees it.  

Commendable faith, but without any basis in reality.

So everyone in .gov. is stupid?

Quote from: White Horseradish
Seriously, the people who are awaiting Rapture are on more solid ground than you. They at least know what they are waiting for

You're not even on loose ground here -- the rapture is a myth.
You don't have to like my answers.   I obviously don't like yours.  

All I would really like to know in this thread is how those who believe what we're doing is wrong would have dealt with AQ.   It's easy to criticize Drone Attacks when they kill one terrorist and ten innocent people.
Unless one can suggest some other equally effective or better way to do things it's pretty cheap to simply criticize and complain  that those who disagree engage in fallacies, etc.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 02, 2014, 07:22:57 PM
YOU tell me when this war will end.
Maybe never. You can't reach a goal when you don't know what that goal is. At best, it will end, like Vietnam, when there is enough of public derision for it in the US and we just recall the troops and say we're done.

Quote
If we weren't supposed to attack AQ & Taliban in response to 9/11, what would you have done?
We didn't attack either of them. We attacked Iraq instead. Saddam was a *expletive deleted*bag, but he was not a member of AQ. Hell, he wasn't even particularly religious.

A much smaller scale effort to find the exact people responsible and bring them to justice would have been more appropriate, IMO. Israelis managed it with the Nazis, since you are so fond of WWII examples.  And they did it without wiping out piles of random civilians and invading countries.

Quote
I didn't say the war was against National Socialism.   I've reread the statement I made there and don't for the life of me get how you managed to get that meaning out of it.
You say "There are still new Nazis around despite Patton's, Eisenhower's, and FDR's best efforts"
Nazis are members of the National Socialist Workers Party and believers in the National Socialist ideology. The parallel you are drawing is with believers in the ideology of armed jihad. Except that war was declared not on the National Socialist Workers party, or National Socialism, it was declared on Germany and it's allies. And it was Germany and Japan that surrendered.
 
Quote
So everyone in .gov. is stupid?
I don't know that. Being stupid and not knowing something aren't the same thing, though.

Quote
You're not even on loose ground here -- the rapture is a myth.
So far, given your inability to explain what it is, the victory in this war also seems to be a myth.

Quote
You don't have to like my answers.  
You don't really have answers to the main questions I'm asking.


Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 07:41:11 PM
Quote from: White Horseradish
We didn't attack either of them. We attacked Iraq instead. Saddam was a *expletive deleted*, but he was not a member of AQ. Hell, he wasn't even particularly religious.


What the **** kind of statement was THAT?  I am pretty sure I remember American Forces going into A'stan .........
Statements like this make me think this website is in The Twilight Zone for sure.

Quote from: White Horseradish
A much smaller scale effort to find the exact people responsible and bring them to justice would have been more appropriate, IMO. Israelis managed it with the Nazis, since you are so fond of WWII examples.  And they did it without wiping out piles of random civilians and invading countries.


OK, FINALLY  a actual real answer.  

Quote from: White Horseradish
You say "There are still new Nazis around despite Patton's, Eisenhower's, and FDR's best efforts"
Nazis are members of the National Socialist Workers Party and believers in the National Socialist ideology. The parallel you are drawing is with believers in the ideology of armed jihad. Except that war was declared not on the National Socialist Workers party, or National Socialism, it was declared on Germany and it's allies. And it was Germany and Japan that surrendered.


Yes, becaus we WEREN'T making war on a concept or belief ... or whatever.   Patton's best efforts weren't after "Nazi-sim" they were against the German Army.   To put a fine point on it, Patton retained a number of known Nazis in lower offices after the war ended because he realized they had been forcibly impressed into the Nazi system, and also that if he removed every "Nazi" just to be vindictive, the whole structure of what was left of the German beuracracy would collapse, making a bad messy situation even worse.
Same in Japan; we were fighting the Japanese Army.

 ???    You still seem to be reading me upside down or backwards or something. ???

Quote from: W.H.
You don't really have answers to the main questions I'm asking.


No I don't: I also don't have a crystal ball.   Or a Ouja Board.  
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 02, 2014, 07:51:48 PM
They hate us for our freedoms, so all we have to do is get rid of our freedoms.  ;)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 02, 2014, 07:53:09 PM
They hate us for our freedoms, so all we have to do is get rid of our freedoms.  ;)

Washington DC or Al Qaeda?  >:D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Bigjake on February 02, 2014, 07:58:27 PM
They hate us for our freedoms, so all we have to do is get rid of our freedoms.  ;)

In that case,  we win!  'Murica!!
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 02, 2014, 08:03:16 PM
Washington DC or Al Qaeda?  >:D

Yes!   
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 02, 2014, 08:41:12 PM
Yes, becaus we WEREN'T making war on a concept or belief ... or whatever.   Patton's best efforts weren't after "Nazi-sim" they were against the German Army.   To put a fine point on it, Patton retained a number of known Nazis in lower offices after the war ended because he realized they had been forcibly impressed into the Nazi system, and also that if he removed every "Nazi" just to be vindictive, the whole structure of what was left of the German beuracracy would collapse, making a bad messy situation even worse.
Same in Japan; we were fighting the Japanese Army.

Exactly. It is exactly unlike the current situation. Why did you bring it up if it's completely different?

 
No I don't: I also don't have a crystal ball.   Or a Ouja Board.  
Since when is either one of those required to set a goal?

You do realize I'm not talking about a date, but about some condition or event?

Seriously, what is so hard about this? Would you play a game not knowing how winning is defined? Would you bet money not knowing what the condition of winning is? (By the way, if the answer is yes, I want to play a game with you. You give me money, and then I tell you if you won or not. I'll know I won when I see it. )

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Tallpine on February 02, 2014, 09:42:54 PM
Fezzik: Inigo?

Inigo Montoya: What?

Fezzik: I hope we win.

Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: cordex on February 02, 2014, 10:12:53 PM
I would sooner see Islamic civilization snuffed out and forever shattered than see the same happen to Western Civilization.
That's a false dichotomy.

And it would not be a campaign of terror, but of mass killing, destruction, displacement, and colonization of their lands with Western peoples.
A rose by any other name ...
You realize that you literally just defined genocide, right?

The sort of thing that happened pretty regularly in history.
Oh, well then that makes it okay.

The sort of thing that Western Civ largely put an end to...but may be necessary for its survival. 
The sort of thing that would change Western Civilization to merely Western.  Put another way, whatever good Western Civilization is would be lost were they to play out your fantasy.

[I would note that it would be the same sort of thing Islam did to large stretches of Christendom, Persia, and N India during the muslim expansion starting in the 600s.]
Oh, well then that makes it okay too.

I would hope we could find the stones to do it, were it to come to that.
One of us is in the wrong place, Roo_ster.  When I find myself associating with people who have genocidal wet dreams I need to determine if I am spending my time in the right places.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RevDisk on February 02, 2014, 11:19:55 PM

I'm not sure why folks keep bringing up "Final Solution" rhetoric over and over again. There's 1.62 billion followers of Islam, which is 23%. They'd likely object to genocide, and that's a lot of people. Only 300 million Muslims live in the ME, 250 million Muslims live in Africa, over a billion live in Asia.

Even if we used every nuke in our arsenal and borrowed all of Russia's nukes, you wouldn't get more than about 60% of all Muslims and the rest would be thoroughly justified in any form of retaliation. At the moment, a handful of the 1.62 billion Muslims are active enemies of the US. Maybe about oh, two hundred. Rough guess, could be much lower. That care more about attacking America than any other target. You have about maybe 5,000-10,000 actual hardcore terrorists that don't see the US as a primary concern, but would definitely attack US interests if the opportunity presented itself. Then toss in about a hundred thousand wannabes, suckers, suck ups, useful idiots and other fluff. They're a source of money, supplies, low grade intel and low grade gopher work.

Folks on this board love to flatter themselves that the US is their primary target. It's generally not. It's completely unsurprising that they tend to care about their own neck of the woods far more than distant places they've never seen, but a lot of Americans are shocked at that. This is also why the Sunni wahabbi sect (which includes the Brotherhood, AQ and a hundred other groups) tend to kill oh, twenty or thirty Muslims for every one American. Hasn't anyone stopped and pondered why we've mostly only caught lone nuts? Think of all of the terrorists actually caught since 9/11. How many were actually part of hardcore AQ, Brotherhood or Wahabbi terrorist cells? How many were folks with mental issues, and basically went postal while screaming Allah Akbar? Any that weren't strict loners were teams of ... two?  DC snipers and the Boston bombers are the only "cells" I remember being caught. I remember the FBI breaking up a handful of groups that may have turned into active terrorist cells. I also remember them essentially crafting terrorists from scratch a number of times as well.

Even AQ's masterstroke of 9/11 relied ENTIRELY on outdated thinking. Old days, folks hijacked a plane to send a message. You had a better chance of surviving by just sitting still and waiting for the police/military to handle it. Now, NO ONE is going to hijack a commercial plane and crash it into something. The other passengers would beat them to death in about 30 seconds. Sure, they could switch to something else. Blowing up pipelines, sinking a ship in a major harbor, suicide bombing some malls, whatever. But it's hard and not many people want to travel across the world to blow themselves up, especially when it will bring the wrath of the US military on their network. Safer and simpler to try to go after easier targets.

Instead of spying on ordinary Americans, we'd be best served to take all of that budget and toss the overwhelming majority into screening visa holders, tourists and folks applying for citizenship. Basically looking for general mental health instead of fundamentalism, but that's a large factor. If someone is fundamentalist enough to kill a bunch of innocent folks, they're generally not very right in the head to begin with.


It is interesting to hear the perspective of an insider.  So do you think that the genie can be put back in the bottle?   How do you keep tight reins on the intelligence apparatus?  Is there an effective strategy for getting good, timely, relevant information on our enemies while respecting freedoms, or does one have to be sacrificed for the other?

Everything Gewehr98 said. It boils down to needing a feedback loop. Only major thing I'd suggest differently would be to make it mandatory to refresh folks doing the oversight every X years. FISC judges should only serve 4 years, same with Select Intelligent Committees members, and same with IGs. Decentralized IG, with actual power to do anything other than crushing whistleblowers, is the most important step. They should be empowered to bypass all bureaucracy and report directly to the Select Intelligence Committees, with a mandatory CC to POTUS.



Unless you count the Church Commitee.

I bet they thought what Lincoln did was ireversible too.  Especially after the effects of Reconstruction became known. >:D

Fitz, if we really are a bunch of lazy moronic shitheads, it's lost.  We won't be able to fix it either now or later.
Better hope you're wrong.

NSA spied on the Church Committee, obviously it wasn't that effective.  ;)

Jokes aside. Church Committee did help expose a bunch of illegal programs. Their only meaningful gesture was getting a ban on assassination of political leaders. Rumsfeld, the guy who later became Secretary of Defense, was instrumental in ensuring the Church Committee did not meaningfully curtail intelligence agencies. One of Rumsfeld's minions, Robert Ellsworth, went around downplaying everything. "They were very specific about their effort to destroy American intelligence [capabilities]. It was Senator Church who said our intelligence agencies were 'rogue elephants.' They were supposedly out there assassinating people and playing dirty tricks and so forth... Well, that just wasn't true."  It was a lie back then, as much as it's a lie today.

Our intelligence agencies are still assassinating people without oversight, violating US laws, etc. Oh, there's a couple hoops, which probably make it worse for America because it lends the illusion of legality to their actions. FISA courts are a rubber stamp. Out of 33,949 requests since 1979, they have turned down 11 requests. That's not a typo. They've said "No" 11 times and "Yes" 33,942 times. An astute person might say, hey, those numbers don't seem to match. Yea, that's because the US government said "Pretty please", and the FISA courts said "Well, ok" in 4 of the 11 cases so really they said "No" 7 times. 

That's 0.0002% denial rate, spread across three and a half decades. Or a 99.9998% approval rate. That's an excessively high approval rate for totalitarian states, let alone an allegedly Constitutional republic. I'd almost rather we shut down the FISA courts and let the intel folks do their stuff illegally. At least it'd be more honest.



There's a bloody good reason why the NSA was monitoring Senator Church. Because he told us today's headlines nearly 40 years ago.

"In the need to develop a capacity to know what potential enemies are doing, the United States government has perfected a technological capability that enables us to monitor the messages that go through the air. Now, that is necessary and important to the United States as we look abroad at enemies or potential enemies. We must know, at the same time, that capability at any time could be turned around on the American people, and no American would have any privacy left such is the capability to monitor everything—telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn’t matter. There would be no place to hide.

If this government ever became a tyrant, if a dictator ever took charge in this country, the technological capacity that the intelligence community has given the government could enable it to impose total tyranny, and there would be no way to fight back because the most careful effort to combine together in resistance to the government, no matter how privately it was done, is within the reach of the government to know. Such is the capability of this technology.

I don’t want to see this country ever go across the bridge. I know the capacity that is there to make tyranny total in America, and we must see to it that this agency and all agencies that possess this technology operate within the law and under proper supervision so that we never cross over that abyss. That is the abyss from which there is no return."
-Senator Frank Church (August 17, 1975)
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: KD5NRH on February 03, 2014, 09:59:38 AM
5)  Grow a pair and go back to the Eisenhower Doctrine of Massive Retaliation.

This.  When someone attacks, and you show the world a cratered wasteland where they used to live, nobody wants to be next just to make a statement.

I'll grant that it takes a lot to make some of these countries more wastelandish, but it's worth it.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 03, 2014, 11:47:38 AM
Exactly. It is exactly unlike the current situation. Why did you bring it up if it's completely different?

 Since when is either one of those required to set a goal?

You do realize I'm not talking about a date, but about some condition or event?

Seriously, what is so hard about this? Would you play a game not knowing how winning is defined? Would you bet money not knowing what the condition of winning is? (By the way, if the answer is yes, I want to play a game with you. You give me money, and then I tell you if you won or not. I'll know I won when I see it. )



"What's so hard" about it is I don't know WHAT SPECIFIC EVENT would be.   Again to the tired WW2 analogy; it's like expecting me to know the name of the Battleship the treaty will be signed on, what deck, where on the deck, where the ship will be.....when it can't even be gauranteed the ship will survive the war.
Our goal in Vietnam was to prevent S. Vietnam from falling into the communist world.  We lost that war because we did not obtain that result, irregardless of how many battles we won on the ground.
This whole question is moot since it seems our fearless leader is throwing in the towel anyway.
I suppose that, had I to guess, were we to continue the war we would eventualy run out of viable targets.  There can only be so many members of AQ.  There would always be stragglers but they -- presumably -- would no longer constitute a viable force.


Quote
Exactly. It is exactly unlike the current situation. Why did you bring it up if it's completely different?

I keep trying to explain that inspite of what I consider nonsensitical public rhetoric for the masses, and in spite of Dubya's service medal, we are conducting a war against AQ & the Taliban.  
Earlier wars were fought by politicians who used nonsense rhetoric as well.  "The war to make the world safe for democracy," was one of them.   Do you think that was possible?   We sure don't have a world that's "safe" for democracy -- or any othe ocracy, today, do we?
And yes, fighting WW2 was unlike fighting AQ.
A closer analogy, I suppose, would be the Barbary Wars of the early 19th century, conducted against pirates, not countries.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 03, 2014, 12:28:41 PM
"What's so hard" about it is I don't know WHAT SPECIFIC EVENT would be.   Again to the tired WW2 analogy; it's like expecting me to know the name of the Battleship the treaty will be signed on, what deck, where on the deck, where the ship will be.....when it can't even be gauranteed the ship will survive the war.

  All those answer the question of "where?" (on a ship, deck, etc). I'm not asking "where". I'm asking "what?" 

The WWII (or any declared war) answer to this is "surrender". What is the answer here?


Quote
Our goal in Vietnam was to prevent S. Vietnam from falling into the communist world.  We lost that war because we did not obtain that result, irregardless of how many battles we won on the ground.
Right. We lost it because we gave up and went home. Which is what I think is a very likely end to this. However, I'm not asking how this is likely to end. I'm asking how we would know we won.


Quote
A closer analogy, I suppose, would be the Barbary Wars of the early 19th century, conducted against pirates, not countries.
Actually, they were conducted against the Barbary States, which were Tripoli, Algiers and Tunis. And they ended in treaties with rulers of those states. They also had goals  - freeing the hostages, monetary restitution, and not paying tribute. Once those things happened (no matter where or when), it could reasonably be said the US won.



Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 03, 2014, 12:36:40 PM
Quote
What is the answer here?

Paucity of enemies? [tinfoil]

As I've already said though this is really moot as Obama is doing: "Right. We lost it because we gave up and went home. Which is what I think is a very likely end to this. However, I'm not asking how this is likely to end. I'm asking how we would know we won. "


"Perzactly."
We're giving up and coming home.
That being true, your question will never have an answer.  
It will be pointless to keep prodding for an answer.  At this point speculation is pointless because BOTH of us KNOW that no matter how assinine or brilliant such speculation may be, it will never obtain.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 03, 2014, 02:15:44 PM
Paucity of enemies? [tinfoil]

That's better. Only thing left to figure out how many is a paucity. Also, how to get there if new ones keep appearing.

"Jefe, would you say that I have a plethora?"  =D

Quote
That being true, your question will never have an answer.  
So this war cannot be won. Which is what I (and a couple of other folks) have been saying all along.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 03, 2014, 07:14:05 PM

That's better. Only thing left to figure out how many is a paucity. Also, how to get there if new ones keep appearing.

"Jefe, would you say that I have a plethora?"  =D
So this war cannot be won. Which is what I (and a couple of other folks) have been saying all along.

Minor correction:  Obama is throwing in the towel.
Not that it makes a lot of difference ... really.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: White Horseradish on February 03, 2014, 07:25:43 PM
Minor correction:  Obama is throwing in the towel.
Not that it makes a lot of difference ... really.
Nope, it does not. Anyone else would do the same thing, since it's the only practical thing that can be done.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Scout26 on February 03, 2014, 08:01:09 PM
Right after (helped) we overthrow the Taliban would have been the time to leave.  "Here's the keys to your country, let another group of shiiteheads take over, and it will get ugly."

I do remember a quote from an Air Force General shortly after 9/11, is was something to the effect of "Yes, we can bomb them back to the Stone Age, it'll take about 10 minutes, but then what?"

Because that's what were up against, a 6th Century philosophy and way of life.  We ain't gonna make them Jeffersonian's anytime in the near future.  The best we can do is:  Stop sending them money by developing our own energy resources.  Which could have the following potential effects:
1)  Their ability to pacify their people with the current "Bread and Circuses" that use to keep their populations in line, will be dramatically reduced.
2)  Contrary to popular belief, it ain't the poor that go out on Jihad, it's some rich bastard that gets them stoked up and sends them out to die for Allah, while providing them with food, shelter and spending cash.  Bin-Laden wasn't some beggar, he had mounds of cash.  Same with Saddam sending checks to the families of homicide bombers.  And Iran sponsoring Hezbullah and a couple of other Jihadi type groups.  Cut off the cash, cut off the threat.
3)  Idle hands are the devils workshop, so lots of suddenly unemployed Arabian Utes, and the "Arab Spring" really goes viral in places like Saudi Arabia.
4)  Oh, and we can tell them to GFThemselves, food is now 2x or 5x the price of a barrel of oil.  Get Canada and Argentina in on it, and form OFEC.  (Organization of Food Exporting Countries.)  Enjoy eating your oil.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 03, 2014, 08:36:52 PM
Right after (helped) we overthrow the Taliban would have been the time to leave.  "Here's the keys to your country, let another group of shiiteheads take over, and it will get ugly."

I do remember a quote from an Air Force General shortly after 9/11, is was something to the effect of "Yes, we can bomb them back to the Stone Age, it'll take about 10 minutes, but then what?"

Because that's what were up against, a 6th Century philosophy and way of life.  We ain't gonna make them Jeffersonian's anytime in the near future.  The best we can do is:  Stop sending them money by developing our own energy resources.  Which could have the following potential effects:
1)  Their ability to pacify their people with the current "Bread and Circuses" that use to keep their populations in line, will be dramatically reduced.
2)  Contrary to popular belief, it ain't the poor that go out on Jihad, it's some rich bastard that gets them stoked up and sends them out to die for Allah, while providing them with food, shelter and spending cash.  Bin-Laden wasn't some beggar, he had mounds of cash.  Same with Saddam sending checks to the families of homicide bombers.  And Iran sponsoring Hezbullah and a couple of other Jihadi type groups.  Cut off the cash, cut off the threat.
3)  Idle hands are the devils workshop, so lots of suddenly unemployed Arabian Utes, and the "Arab Spring" really goes viral in places like Saudi Arabia.
4)  Oh, and we can tell them to GFThemselves, food is now 2x or 5x the price of a barrel of oil.  Get Canada and Argentina in on it, and form OFEC.  (Organization of Food Exporting Countries.)  Enjoy eating your oil.

Yup. A strictly "military" solution to islamic extremism isn't really possible IMO. You have to deincentivize the activity.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Fitz on February 03, 2014, 09:47:51 PM
Clearly, Mr Ciaramella hates america and loves terrorists.

https://www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2014/feb/03/dea-parallel-construction-guides/
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: Sergeant Bob on February 03, 2014, 11:01:15 PM
"Jefe, would you say that I have a plethora?"  =D

That would be "Three Amigos"! =D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 03, 2014, 11:17:57 PM
Right after (helped) we overthrow the Taliban would have been the time to leave.  "Here's the keys to your country, let another group of shiiteheads take over, and it will get ugly."

I do remember a quote from an Air Force General shortly after 9/11, is was something to the effect of "Yes, we can bomb them back to the Stone Age, it'll take about 10 minutes, but then what?"

Because that's what were up against, a 6th Century philosophy and way of life.  We ain't gonna make them Jeffersonian's anytime in the near future.  The best we can do is:  Stop sending them money by developing our own energy resources.   Which could have the following potential effects:
1)  Their ability to pacify their people with the current "Bread and Circuses" that use to keep their populations in line, will be dramatically reduced.
2)  Contrary to popular belief, it ain't the poor that go out on Jihad, it's some rich bastard that gets them stoked up and sends them out to die for Allah, while providing them with food, shelter and spending cash.  Bin-Laden wasn't some beggar, he had mounds of cash.  Same with Saddam sending checks to the families of homicide bombers.  And Iran sponsoring Hezbullah and a couple of other Jihadi type groups.  Cut off the cash, cut off the threat.
3)  Idle hands are the devils workshop, so lots of suddenly unemployed Arabian Utes, and the "Arab Spring" really goes viral in places like Saudi Arabia.
4)  Oh, and we can tell them to GFThemselves, food is now 2x or 5x the price of a barrel of oil.  Get Canada and Argentina in on it, and form OFEC.  (Organization of Food Exporting Countries.)  Enjoy eating your oil.


That's one of the better ideas propounded here Scout26 .... now, if we could get Herr Obama to listen to it...... ;/


"OFEC" ....that's pretty good too.
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: RevDisk on February 04, 2014, 01:42:45 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcAEjvT-Ri8

NSA is now releasing Public Service Announcements.    =D
Title: Re: Snowden is nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
Post by: TommyGunn on February 04, 2014, 01:48:16 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcAEjvT-Ri8

NSA is now releasing Public Service Announcements.    =D

Oooooops 
"An error occured. Please try again later."

Maybe the NSA wasn't so keen on these PSAs after all ....  [tinfoil]