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#52 Nov 16 2009 at 2:44 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Locked,

Quote:
Long story short, Obama wants more strategy instead of just a blank-check for amounts of soldiers. He asked for more information before sending more soldiers over; specifically, information on how viable the Karzai government we're holding up in Afghanistan is. The options are currently being amended.


Translation:

He hasn't done anything about Afghanistan.

That's all you had to say. Implying that he's being "more thoughtful" is absurd and merely a copeout. Of course it gives good little goose stepping liberals the impression that he's really mulling over the situation, like his military commanders havn't been for the last year, but that's beside the point.

What is Obama's plan? He's only had how long to come up with one?



Edited, Nov 16th 2009 3:45pm by publiusvarus


No, fuckwad, I meant what I said, as I was quoting the article. And I didn't say thoughtful, so again, fail at trying to put words in my mouth. So you have inside information that he has not in fact been going to these military information sessions? I can only assume that from your comments, as you fail to cite anything and throw out allegations.
#53 Nov 16 2009 at 2:48 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Of course it gives good little goose stepping liberals the impression that he's really mulling over the situation, like his military commanders havn't been for the last year, but that's beside the point.

By accounts, his decision on which of the four plans to go with was complicated by the US ambassador to Afghanistan (retired US Lt. General Eikenberry) informing Obama that the political situation was so untenable that adding more troops now would just be spinning the wheels. But, if you did more than complain and insist that Obama was doing "nothing", you'd already know that.

Edited, Nov 16th 2009 3:02pm by Jophiel
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#54REDACTED, Posted: Nov 16 2009 at 2:51 PM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Locked,
#55REDACTED, Posted: Nov 16 2009 at 2:52 PM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) Jophed,
#56 Nov 16 2009 at 2:54 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Obama's put it off one year why not another?

Put what off? You did know that Obama has already significantly increased troop levels in Afghanistan, right? You know... in this past year?

Heheh... look at me asking if you knew something Smiley: laugh
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#57 Nov 16 2009 at 2:55 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Locked,

I can't cite anything


I agreed with Varus!
#58 Nov 16 2009 at 2:57 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Quote:
retired US general Eikenberry


How about the assessments of the generals who aren't retired? I guess those don't count in your book.

Good point. He's probably been fishin' and golfin' for the last twenty years. Oh, wait!...
lolWiki wrote:
Eikenberry served two tours of duty in the war in Afghanistan. His first tour in Afghanistan was from September 2002- September 2003. During this time he filled two positions; his primary duty was as the United States Security Coordinator for Afghanistan and the second position was the Chief of the Office of Military Cooperation-Afghanistan (OMC-A). As the Security Coordinator he worked closely with UNSG Special Representative Lakhdar Brahimi to forge a unified international effort to build a cohesive security sector. This Security Sector Reform (SSR) project included building the Afghan National Army (U.S.), reforming the Afghan Police (Germany), Counter-Narcotics (U.K.), Judicial reform (Italy), and Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration of the militias (Japan and U.N.). In his role as Chief of the OMC-A he was the chief architect of the strategy that built and fielded the first Afghan Army Corps. During his second tour he was Commander of the Combined Forces Command for 18 months, leaving in 2007 to become the Deputy Chairman of the NATO Military Committee.
[...]
Following his confirmation as ambassador, he retired from the U.S. military with the rank of Lieutenant General on April 28, 2009.

Yeah, and now he's actively in Afghanistan monitoring the political situation, having been specifically chosen to give a military view on the government there.

But he's "retired" so... you know...

Ah, you. Smiley: laugh

Edited, Nov 16th 2009 3:01pm by Jophiel
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#59 Nov 16 2009 at 2:58 PM Rating: Excellent
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I know i'm going to regret this but....

Hey Varus..


What do you think the US should be doing in Afghanistan (assuming for a moment that the US has got a good reason to be in Afghanistan in the first place)?

Really. I'm interested in what you think the US is supposed to be doing there.
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#60 Nov 16 2009 at 3:14 PM Rating: Excellent
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publiusvarus wrote:
Locked,

I can't cite anything because Obama's team hasn't put anything forward to agree or disagree with.

yet you disagree with such intensity.

You aren't sure -what- you disagree with, only that you disagree.
#61 Nov 16 2009 at 3:23 PM Rating: Excellent
It takes an intellectual to recognize another.

No wonder the pubbies don't like Obama. They suspect he's smarter than they are, and they can't put their finger on why.
#62 Nov 16 2009 at 3:30 PM Rating: Excellent
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Despite your political preference, you have to agree that Obama bowing again is better than Obama bowling again. That's just something he should never do.

#63 Nov 16 2009 at 3:34 PM Rating: Excellent
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trickybeck wrote:
Despite your political preference, you have to agree that Obama bowing again is better than Obama bowling again. That's just something he should never do.

From what I hear, he can compete against retards.
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#64 Nov 16 2009 at 3:49 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
trickybeck wrote:
Despite your political preference, you have to agree that Obama bowing again is better than Obama bowling again. That's just something he should never do.

From what I hear, he can compete against retards.


What a wonderfully equal-opportunity president we have.
#65 Nov 16 2009 at 3:50 PM Rating: Default
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There's bowing, and there's "bowing". When two heads of state are meeting (or any two people of equal status), a minor bow (more of a head nod) is appropriate and acceptable. It shows respect, but not subservience. Even had Obama done a more formal bow (as Nixon is doing in the picture earlier), it would have been viewed more as an attempt to comply with a cultural norm and an extreme measure to show respect to the other party. In Nixon's case, the meeting was historically monumental so he put out the full decorum. Obama's visit was casual and with an ally, and he certainly didn't do a formal bow, so bowing so low does not make sense.


I don't think he intends the bows he keeps tossing out as subservience, but IMO it shows somewhat of a cultural gap between Obama's perceptions and most of the US (and most of the Western world for that matter). In our society, there is no royalty, nor classes. No one is of a "higher station" than anyone else. We're all supposed to be equals, so bowing just isn't something we do culturally. To see the president of the US bow is unsettling to a whole lot of US citizens, and no amount of Obama's supporters insisting that it doesn't mean anything changes the fact that it does mean something to them.


Obama is representing all of us when he meets with those heads of state, so yeah, it's a bit bothersome to see him essentially throw out a hard held US view on status in ways that don't make sense diplomatically. It makes some wonder if he holds the same views towards equality and class as the rest of us. And that makes some wonder if he's really representing "US", or something else. It's a dumb thing to do politically. It gains him nothing on the foreign front at all, except presumably the snickers of his peers, and costs him quite a bit domestically. I can't imagine that his handlers haven't told him not to do this, especially after the stink raised the last time, which makes me assume it's some kind of habit or thing he thinks he should do no matter how inappropriate it might be. It's just strange to most of us to think that we've got a president who seems in the habit of bowing to other people for no apparent reason. While I know that it's easy to mis-characterize the whole "strong president" thing as arrogance and whatnot, the reality is that a head of state has to be a little bit arrogant. He can't press the needs of his own nation if he's always looking for a way to make the other guy happy. What can be labeled as arrogance, is also a sign of strength. And without that, your nation will be stepped on by everyone else...
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#66 Nov 16 2009 at 3:56 PM Rating: Excellent
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Quote:
In our society, there is no royalty, nor classes.


You've never met anyone named Getty, I take it.
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#67 Nov 16 2009 at 3:57 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:

I don't think he intends the bows he keeps tossing out as subservience, but IMO it shows somewhat of a cultural gap between Obama's perceptions and most of the US (and most of the Western world for that matter). In our society, there is no royalty, nor classes. No one is of a "higher station" than anyone else. We're all supposed to be equals, so bowing just isn't something we do culturally. To see the president of the US bow is unsettling to a whole lot of US citizens, and no amount of Obama's supporters insisting that it doesn't mean anything changes the fact that it does mean something to them.


You know, I kind of agree with this paragraph. It does show the gap of cultural understanding between the president and many (I wouldn't say most) in the US. Bowing, according to you, makes us unsettled because we're not used to it. Many Americans do not have the cultural knowledge of the custom, and think it shows excessive subservience when it is really just a show of respect. Obama (and many other Americans) on the other hand, realize this, and it doesn't unsettle us at all. We know it's just a "When in Rome..." kind of idea.

I think your point is different than mine, but the seemingly obvious conclusion is that many Americans are clueless when it comes to foreign customs and will find anything to complain about. I agree. Good for Obama for not catering to clueless Americans who are "unsettled" by something as insignificant as a bow. And shame on those same Americans for not taking the time to learn foreign customs and instead trying to deride and ridicule something that is different than what they know.
#68 Nov 16 2009 at 3:58 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
There's bowing, and there's "bowing". When two heads of state are meeting (or any two people of equal status), a minor bow (more of a head nod) is appropriate and acceptable. It shows respect, but not subservience. Even had Obama done a more formal bow (as Nixon is doing in the picture earlier), it would have been viewed more as an attempt to comply with a cultural norm and an extreme measure to show respect to the other party. In Nixon's case, the meeting was historically monumental so he put out the full decorum. Obama's visit was casual and with an ally, and he certainly didn't do a formal bow, so bowing so low does not make sense.


I don't think he intends the bows he keeps tossing out as subservience, but IMO it shows somewhat of a cultural gap between Obama's perceptions and most of the US (and most of the Western world for that matter). In our society, there is no royalty, nor classes. No one is of a "higher station" than anyone else. We're all supposed to be equals, so bowing just isn't something we do culturally. To see the president of the US bow is unsettling to a whole lot of US citizens, and no amount of Obama's supporters insisting that it doesn't mean anything changes the fact that it does mean something to them.


Obama is representing all of us when he meets with those heads of state, so yeah, it's a bit bothersome to see him essentially throw out a hard held US view on status in ways that don't make sense diplomatically. It makes some wonder if he holds the same views towards equality and class as the rest of us. And that makes some wonder if he's really representing "US", or something else. It's a dumb thing to do politically. It gains him nothing on the foreign front at all, except presumably the snickers of his peers, and costs him quite a bit domestically. I can't imagine that his handlers haven't told him not to do this, especially after the stink raised the last time, which makes me assume it's some kind of habit or thing he thinks he should do no matter how inappropriate it might be. It's just strange to most of us to think that we've got a president who seems in the habit of bowing to other people for no apparent reason. While I know that it's easy to mis-characterize the whole "strong president" thing as arrogance and whatnot, the reality is that a head of state has to be a little bit arrogant. He can't press the needs of his own nation if he's always looking for a way to make the other guy happy. What can be labeled as arrogance, is also a sign of strength. And without that, your nation will be stepped on by everyone else...
Dude, in Japan, you bow to the ******* pizza guy.
#69 Nov 16 2009 at 4:00 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
To see the president of the US bow is unsettling to a whole lot of US citizens, and no amount of Obama's supporters insisting that it doesn't mean anything changes the fact that it does mean something to them.

Meh, so did flag pins. I can only spend so much energy worrying about other people's asinine reasons for wringing their hands.
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#70 Nov 16 2009 at 4:02 PM Rating: Good
Edited by bsphil
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gbaji wrote:
In our society, there is no royalty, nor classes.
The real death of the middle class: it never existed.
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I'm not getting my news from anywhere Joph.
#71 Nov 16 2009 at 4:21 PM Rating: Good
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Quote:
Obama is representing all of us when he meets with those heads of state, so yeah, it's a bit bothersome to see him essentially throw out a hard held US view on status in ways that don't make sense diplomatically



So you want the person who represents you to look like an arrogant prick instead of a polite and well educated gentleman?

#72 Nov 16 2009 at 4:35 PM Rating: Good
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feelz wrote:
Quote:
Obama is representing all of us when he meets with those heads of state, so yeah, it's a bit bothersome to see him essentially throw out a hard held US view on status in ways that don't make sense diplomatically



So you want the person who represents you to look like an arrogant prick instead of a polite and well educated gentleman?
Of course they would, because it would reaffirm their position that Obama is an arrogant, elitist prick. Either way, he loses.
#73 Nov 16 2009 at 4:38 PM Rating: Excellent
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Quote:
It gains him nothing on the foreign front at all
Why do you continue to insist to know what foreign countries think when you get round housed by every one of us every time? You have no idea how much the Emperor of Japan did or didn't appreciate the token gesture. Seeing as how bowing is a sign of respect and common greeting amongst the Japanese, odds are in favour that it was taken well, as opposed to snickered at. That's just common sense.
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#74 Nov 16 2009 at 4:49 PM Rating: Good
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I'm trying to decide whether this whole imagined fiasco is out of desperation to attack Obama or a severe lack of understanding of what ethnocentrism is.
#75 Nov 16 2009 at 5:01 PM Rating: Excellent
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Allegory wrote:
I'm trying to decide whether this whole imagined fiasco is out of desperation to attack Obama or a severe lack of understanding of what ethnocentrism is.


Why limit yourself? Call it both.

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#76REDACTED, Posted: Nov 16 2009 at 5:42 PM, Rating: Sub-Default, (Expand Post) sweetums,
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