Posted on 07/21/2004 4:52:37 AM PDT by Tafkatld
A few minutes ago I posted here about Linda Ronstadt. No swearing, no personal insults. Other posters here viciously attacked and insulted Ronstadt, their posts remain. My post got deleted within minutes. Are you guys really that scared? I believe in free speech and the exchange of opinions, obviously you don't. Mr Robinson, answer me: on what basis was my post deleted? I almost feel compelled to post on various other websites how I doubled up laughing about the cowardice on display here. Again, show me your courage please, cheers from the Leftist Dutchman!
"I am not that 'jesterguy', honest."
I think we have our confirmation.
and oh yes since I turned up here today for the first time today, I must admit that I am not that conversant that well yet with the ins and outs of this board. If I seem to be posting randomly therefore, I hereby offer apologies.
And what is it you people have with cats, I dare ask?
Cheers, tafkatld in Holland.
"Speech" is not entirely free anywhere. There are consequences to what you say. Libel or slander can get you fines or worse.
For example, what are these "false accusations" of which you speak? Various UN resoultions passed, using language suggestive of further action being taken in the face of Iraqi non-compliance, at the very least verify that international opinion was that WMD's existed in-country that had not been accounted for in part due to Iraqi deception and interference with inspections.
I'm not saying that a UN resolution or ten is justification alone for starting a war---Lord knows the UN passes many resoultions that aren't worth a damn that the US and others ignore---but the fact that multiple resolutions faulted the Iraqis for their non-compliance flies in the face of your "false accusations" claim.
Now, the Bush administration may be/is guilty of going to war under the guise of preemptive action. Increased radicalism among a rapidly growing Arab population that is alarmingly undereducated and underemployed has been a concern in the West for decades.
September 11 was, in combination with other attacks worldwide in recent years, cause to seriously consider whether the coddling of dictators in the Middle East and ignoring the "Death to America" rants emanating from Wahhabi-istic schools and mosques was acceptable.
Basically, I don't care if the rest of the world hates us right now because, I'm convinced, that ours is the correct course of action. To suggest that Iraq or other countries in the region can never be truly democratic is both historically ignorant (are Arabs any more "unteachable" than the Japanese? The Germans? The Russians?) and discriminatory.
"Democracy" doesn't necessarily mean "American-style democracy". You live in a free country very unlike my own, you know this to be true.
George Bush is spot on when he says, "Freedom is not America's gift to the world. It is God's gift to mankind."
If and when the day comes that this is not a core principle of US foreign policy, I'm moving to some desolate South Pacific island to live in peace 'cause this world won't be worth living in any longer.
You evade my critique. I know of emergency rooms. That is not the same as an all-bases-covering broad health insurance. And those helped as you describe it, in emergency cases that is, they still have to pay, right? Anyway, I don't think poor sufferers from cancer fit into your vision of US general health care; but if I am wrong correct me please.
LOLOL !
I don't know, of course, but I suspect that your ideology could be included among those criticized in the article below.
Hammer and Crescent (from the New Humanist, which is published out of London), http://www.newhumanist.org.uk/volume119issue1_more.php?id=498_0_25_0_C
by Amanda Day Jan 05, 04
A potential electoral force is emerging from the antiwar movement. But why is a supposedly progressive grouping making room for
religious conservatives, asks Amanda Day?
When millions marched against the war last year, the New York Times announced the birth of a new superpower: world opinion. In Britain in particular, the contrast between popular sentiment on the streets and the actions of a supposedly leftwing government led to speculation that Tony Blairs New Labour had found its match, not in the fusty Conservatives or upstart Liberal Democrats, but in voters disillusioned by mainstream parties and prepared to stand up and say so.
Though it failed in its objective, the alliances formed within the Stop The War Coalition still exist, and, if certain groups have their way, may become a force in this years European elections. A new grouping centred around the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), the Communist Party of Britain (CPB) and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), as well as representation from Islamic groups such as the Muslim Association of Britain (MAB), is hoping to mobilise new young voters at the ballot box.
Directing its election efforts at an amorphous mass, i.e. all those who didnt agree with Tony Blairs decision to go to war against Iraq, this unlikely communion of socialists and Islamists has already engendered charges of being homophobic, antiIslamic, antiSemitic, antiwomens rights and antidemocratic. And its barely twelve months old.
The most influential party in this group is the SWP, whose leading member John Rees has been a key figure in both the anti-war movement and the Socialist Alliance, an electoral coalition that has increasingly become a vehicle for the SWP.
One former Alliance press officer expressed her alarm at the SWPs hijacking of the Stop The War Coalition: Having run the Alliance into the ground, she says, the SWP is now threatening to do the same to the fragmented anti-war movement.
The SWPs history with the Alliance is not a pretty one. Many Alliance members quickly became disillusioned with the SWPs authoritarianism, exemplified in the purging of nonSWP members from executives and diminished communication between leadership and ordinary members. The SWPs links with the Muslim Association of Britain will also give cause for concern for many of those who marched against the war over the past twelve months, and who want to see political changes as a result. Very few are likely to be keen admirers of the SWPs extreme left agenda, or indeed of Islams inherent conservatism. While they may have marched alongside hardline Islamic groups over Iraq, their sympathies with them are unlikely to extend to calls for an Islamic Caliphate of Great Britain.
The SWP certainly fancies its chances at exploiting antiwar feeling. At an SA conference in May, it claimed that the occupation of Iraq has created the biggest potential audience for a new left alternative for generations. It then stated that in order to rise to the opportunities presented it needed a new and more determined approach.
Soon after, it elaborated: We cannot answer this crisis of representation on our own. The development of the Socialist Alliance is one stage in the development of an alternative. We would like to see a new or broaderbased initiative built out of current and unfolding political events...or at least a relaunch of the idea behind the SA. This included involving those in the Muslim community who have been radicalised...religious belief should not be a barrier to being part of such a project.
Its not the first time the SA has attempted to court religious communities in order to make electoral gains. Sue Blackwell, a former member from Birmingham, recalls: The first time the issue arose for me was in 2000, not in connection with an Islamic group but with the Council of Sikh Gurudwaras. The SWP seemed to have latched onto a particular Sikh chap when he got involved in local protests and meetings, and persuaded him to stand as a council candidate for the Socialist Alliance.
To my knowledge he had never been a member of a socialist party and had only recently got involved in politics. I had heard that he was being put forward by the Council of Sikh Gurudwaras. I took the opportunity to raise the issue in principle of how the SA should relate to religious organisations. I was told that my contribution was a racist one. When asked if I would raise the same question if a Catholic priest had been standing, I said: Yes, I would want to know his views on abortion because no way would I accept an antiabortion candidate as an SA candidate. For me this was a basic issue of principle; for the SWP, it was sectarian.
The partys blind tendency to regard any challenge to a member of an ethnic minority as racist or sectarian has continued ever since. The SWPs current postergirl, Birmingham Stop the War chair Salma Yaqoob, is consistently defended from any criticism by cries of Islamophobia. Yaqoob, a Muslim psychotherapist who, legend has it, became politically active after being spat at in the street in the aftermath of 9/11, has the full support from the SWP, keen to hitch their wagon to her mediafriendly, and perhaps more importantly, Muslimfriendly hijab wearing image. Yaqoob herself has admitted that she was elected Chair of Birmingham Stop the War Coalition at her second ever political meeting.
This perceived fasttracking of names to the top of the list has raised a few eyebrows among other leftist groups. Alliance members, particularly in Birmingham, have felt marginalized, especially since it emerged that an executive member of the SWP was in discussions with Birmingham Central Mosque. Former Alliance members claim that the SWP replaced proven socialists in Birmingham with its own apparatchiks, hastily recruited to the Socialist Alliance in order to pack out meetings. Those purged included firefighter Steve Godward, the respected Birmingham SA chair, and longtime campaigner Rumy Hasan, who says now: I think what happened was the SWP got very excited by the presence of Muslims at marches and meetings. The election of a councillor in Preston, with the backing of the local imam, also went to their head. What seems to be happening now is that they hide the atheism at the core of leftist politics in order to pursue a blatant getrichquick electoral scheme.
Across the country Muslim groups have been granted great concessions by a supposedly secular movement in return for electoral support. Some Stop the War meetings had gendersegregated seating, (reportedly for Asian women only) while Muslim holy men have been allowed to conduct prayers and invoke Allah on what are supposed to be secular platforms.
At the SWPs Marxism 2003 conference one former Alliance member claimed that womens rights and gay rights were described by the secretary of the Stop the War Coalition as a shibboleth which couldnt be allowed to get in way of unity with Muslim groups.
Other farleft parties long thought moribund have also seized the chance to commandeer peace movements. In September, Communist Party of Britain member Kate Hudson took the CND chairmanship by one vote. Ms Hudson is keen for a closer working relationship with Stop the War Coalition and Muslim Association of Britain. A further 12 of CNDs 15 new national executive positions share these views.
Meanwhile, another, more highprofile grouping has begun to set out its electoral stall.
Leading lights of the left, such as Guardian columnist George Monbiot, Salma Yaqoob, John Rees of the SWP, awkward squad union leader Bob Crow and MP George Galloway, recently exiled from the Labour party, are planning a movement to contest the European parliament elections next summer. Mr Galloway has said he suspects the conservative MAB will affiliate to the new group, provisionally named Unity. This unity, apparently, does not stretch to women and the gay community. Some SA members allege that this new electoral platform would be limited in its commitment to womens rights, with no mention of gay rights, in a bid to placate influential Muslim Groups such as the MAB.
For its part, the MAB was established in the UK 1997 to fill in the gap in the terms of Islamic dawah work where the call for a comprehensive Islam that encompasses all aspects of life is lacking. The MAB tries to implement this through wisdom and good preaching.
Not very progressive is probably the mildest way to describe the MAB. But then, the same can probably be said for political groups which throw their ideals overboard in order to capitalise on the mass antiwar movement.
Antiwar feeling in this country ran so high last February that two million people marched against the war in London. Since then, the only alternative those people have had to demonstrate their disquiet has been more marches and at some point the opportunity to vote for a catchall Unity candidate at European Parliament elections. Amorphous mass or not, it remains to be seen whether they will fall for the dubious charms of a left wing party that promises all to everyone. Theyve marched down this road before.
Additional reporting by JulieAnn Davies and Pádraig Reidy
Where was the US when Franklin Roosevelt was having tea with Joseph Stalin, a dictator who killed millions of his own people. International politics sometimes creates strange bedfellows. One day a country can be classified as our friend and the next day they're classified as our enemy.
I am not jester -
I cannot prove it. I am writing from a publicly accessible University computer, if that is of any help to you. Let mr Adminnie confirm this if you so much want to.
Cheers, T.
LOL!!
I bow before you...
Don't worry. Your welfare society will soon be crushing under its own weight, unless the Islamofascists takeover first.
There are guns in Dutchland, btw. I know of several Dutch posters on gun websites.
And Pim was mudered by a gun (though you probably approved of that one).
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1971423.stm
Oh, remember how parliament considering postponing the elections due to the murder of this one man? Damn Fascists, right!!??
Oh, and here's an analysis of how the crime rate is higher in the Netherregions than in the U.S.
http://qsi.cc/blog/archives/000144.html
Hell, I doubt you're even Dutch.
It isn't the governments job or the presidents, to make sure you have a job. It isn't the governments job to make sure you don't live in ghetto...
All of these are left to the person on whether healthcare, or a job or standard of living is important to them.
If I choose to pay for health care, $200 or so a month through the state health plan would cover my family...I would hardly say over a million people aren't covered because it's the governments fault.
It's because there are those that don't find it to be a priority and the numbers are boosted to push healthcare to be government run...
Welfare makes a lazy public, and welfare is for a lazy public...
Considering your posting style and wording have been exactly the same but on different subjects it makes me wonder naturally.
We've dealt with this kind of thing before, posters with multiple handles for reasons other than exchanging ideas and actual conversation.
Naturally, I'm suspicious.
Damn..He may be behind a firewall at a university....
Third time I've asked university boy, what percentage of your paycheck do you get to keep on payday?
No, you're not well-informed.
I am not jester.
Hate sure does make cute young things turn ugly, don't it? Such a shame.
Red
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