Stephen Eisel wrote:Jim DeVito wrote:Got a fresh batch brewing right now. What are you doing tonight.
Ohhhh Yeahh! (clicky)
I see your clicky and raise you one......... well clicky

Moderator: Jim O'Bryan
Stephen Eisel wrote:Jim DeVito wrote:Got a fresh batch brewing right now. What are you doing tonight.
Ohhhh Yeahh! (clicky)
Stephen Eisel wrote:7 men were indicted for the bombing of the WTC in 1993. Abdul Rahman Yasin (the main bomb maker)was released by our government and went back to Iraq. The handling of this incident by our government only encouraged terrorist world wide. Do you understand how a terrorist cell operates? It is obvious that the Clinton admin did not.The six men who actively and directly conspired and committed the 1993 bombing were all tried and are serving life sentences with no chance of parole.
If you ignore history, the bombing of the USS Cole, the bombing of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, the bombing of the US embassy in Beirut, the bomb that was exploded outiside the U.S. air force installation in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, then you are correct.The constant refrain of "we haven't been attacked since 9/11" is a weak argument that supposes that there is only one means to the end, and that the ends justify the means.
I did not notice the terrorist in Iraq helping the people of Iraq. I did not see the terrorist building schools, power plants, hospitals, Mosque, water treatment plants, and ensuring that the Iraqi people could vote in free elections.So you think the ends DO justify the means? Is that what you're saying? If so, how are we morally any different than them?
Stephen Eisel wrote:I did not notice the terrorist in Iraq helping the people of Iraq. I did not see the terrorist building schools, power plants, hospitals, Mosque, water treatment plants, and ensuring that the Iraqi people could vote in free elections.So you think the ends DO justify the means? Is that what you're saying? If so, how are we morally any different than them?
The question was are we morally different from the terrorist. My answer was yes.Jim DeVito wrote:Stephen Eisel wrote:I did not notice the terrorist in Iraq helping the people of Iraq. I did not see the terrorist building schools, power plants, hospitals, Mosque, water treatment plants, and ensuring that the Iraqi people could vote in free elections.So you think the ends DO justify the means? Is that what you're saying? If so, how are we morally any different than them?
Haven't we already established there were no terrorists in Iraq until we got there. Yeah Yeah I know saddam was no princes, but at least you could say he made sure he was the only terrorist in town.
Yes, if you have been completely brainwashed by the drive by media and ignore history then yes there were no terrorist in Iraq until the US invaded Iraq ...Haven't we already established there were no terrorists in Iraq until we got there
Bringing the US down to a terrorist level is the job of the left wing media in this country. Reacting to a threat with the proper force to protect innocent lives does not make us like the terrorist. Our goal is to spread freedom not terror.Jim DeVito wrote:And in that respect you have to wonder what the end game of the evil doers is. Is to to bring the mighty US down to there level. With no regard for justice or life or the rule of law. In some respects over the last eight they have won.
Time and time again we have lost our moral footing in the name of fighting the immoral out there.
My brother was killed in the World Trade Center on 9/11. I have been waiting for justice ever since. Last month, I went to Guantanamo Bay to try to find it.
What I witnessed was shocking. I saw a place where prisoners toy with the authorities, read the newspaper and get one hour breaks for prayer. I saw a place where detainees are treated far better than many ordinary American criminal defendants - and, as far as I'm concerned, far better than they deserve.
I looked straight into the eyes of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the man who masterminded the attacks that killed my brother and almost 3,000 other Americans. I was there when President Obama was inaugurated - and, soon thereafter, when he called a four-month halt to the criminal trials that were just getting underway.
I left with a deep fear that some day the men we now hold in custody will be free to inspire others who hate - if not to continue to kill innocent people themselves.
My presence at Guantanamo was rare. My brothers were chosen by lottery to be among the small number of family members able to observe the proceedings there; with their one remaining slot, they invited me. In retrospect, it turns out we may have been among the very last civilians to set eyes on the detention camp as we know it today.
Stephen Eisel wrote:I did not notice the terrorist in Iraq helping the people of Iraq. I did not see the terrorist building schools, power plants, hospitals, Mosque, water treatment plants, and ensuring that the Iraqi people could vote in free elections.So you think the ends DO justify the means? Is that what you're saying? If so, how are we morally any different than them?
Bringing the US down to a terrorist level is the job of the left wing media in this country.
Reacting to a threat with the proper force to protect innocent lives does not make us like the terrorist. Our goal is to spread freedom not terror.
It depends. If you are talking about the Guantanamo detainees, who are foreign enemy combatants captured on foreign soil and being held at a U.S. naval base abroad, then my answer is no for due process. If you are talking about a US citizen who has no ties to a terrorist group (and committed a terrorist act) then my answer is yes for due process.So you think the ends DO justify the means? Is that what you're saying? If so, how are we morally any different than them?[/quote] Just for the record, I am not a mind reader. You asked how are we morally different from the terrorist and I gave you a very clear answer. The first question you asked, so do you think the ends do justify the means is also very unclear. Are you talking about Guantanamo? waterboarding? versus the acts of the terrorist?
at what point do you drop the due process of law for criminal suspects and call them 'enemy combatants'?
Jim DeVito wrote:I think he was referring to things like gitmo and renditions and water-boarding and torture and the like when asking that question.