RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (Full Version)

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rulemylife -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/16/2009 12:05:36 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FatDomDaddy

Well... interesting...

Bu this question would be raised...

What were the Bush people doing that kept it from happening after 9/11 and what changes did the Obama folks do that allowed it?

I am NOT saying that will be a fair question, it may or it may not be but it would be asked and asked loudly.


Of course the question would be raised.

By Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Cheney, Gingrich and the rest of the happy crew who didn't seem to think of
the same question of what the Bush administration did, or failed to do, that allowed 9/11 to happen.




rulemylife -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/16/2009 12:31:22 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth


The distinction should be clear; conspiracy theories aside for a minute, unlike the first experience on 9/11, "We didn't know this could happen here!" will not be an acceptable excuse.


No kidding?

Will that be anything like the World Trade Center getting bombed a few years before Bush took office?

quote:

Three times the amount of the Bush bail out, the Obama bail out isn't producing............


Huh?  What?

Please correct me if I'm wrong but Bush's TARP and Obama's stimulus were nearly equivalent in the amounts.









rulemylife -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/16/2009 12:42:34 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

Panda isn't a Jacksonian.

I think there would be some domestic repercussions, but I think you've got the final result exactly correct.

From The Jacksonian Tradition
by Walter Russell Mead

Once wars begin, a significant element of American public opinion supports waging them at the highest possible level of intensity. The devastating tactics of the wars against the Indians, General Sherman’s campaign of 1864-65, and the unprecedented aerial bombardments of World War II were all broadly popular in the United States. During both the Korean and Vietnam Wars, presidents came under intense pressure, not only from military leaders but also from public opinion, to hit the enemy with all available force in all available places. Throughout the Cold War the path of least resistance in American politics was generally the more hawkish stance. Politicians who advocated negotiated compromises with the Soviet enemy were labeled appeasers and paid a heavy political price. The Korean and Vietnam Wars lost public support in part because of political decisions not to risk the consequences of all-out war, not necessarily stopping short of the use of nuclear weapons. The most costly decision George Bush took in the Gulf War was not to send ground forces into Iraq, but to stop short of the occupation of Baghdad and the capture and trial of Saddam Hussein.


Firm


And this has been borne out by our stunning success in the second go-around?




Mercnbeth -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/16/2009 7:22:33 AM)

quote:

Huh? What?

Please correct me if I'm wrong but Bush's TARP and Obama's stimulus were nearly equivalent in the amounts


No problem...
President Bush, acknowledging the risk of recession, embraced about $145 billion worth of tax relief Friday to give the economy a �shot in the arm. �

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, abbreviated ARRA (Pub.L. 111-5), is an economic stimulus package enacted by the 111th United States Congress in February 2009. The Act of Congress was based largely on proposals made by President Barack Obama and was intended to provide a stimulus to the U.S. economy in the wake of the economic downturn. The measures are nominally worth $787 billion.

Appreciating that you didn't challenge the effectiveness, but actually its closer to four times.




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/16/2009 4:42:14 PM)

FR:

Queens terror raids part of FBI probe into Denver-based cell plotting attack on 9/11 scale
Updated Tuesday, September 15th 2009, 12:47 PM

A suspected Al Qaeda cell - the first uncovered in the U.S. since 9/11 - drew round-the-clock FBI surveillance Tuesday as authorities said they thwarted its plans for a major terror attack.

Scores of FBI agents inundated Denver as they closed the noose on the five-man cabal with ties to World Trade Center mastermind Osama Bin Laden's terrorist group, sources told the Daily News.

One of the suspects visited New York last week toting bomb-making plans after a trip to Pakistan - home to most of Al Qaeda's leadership, sources said.

The massive federal response was "an indication of just how serious a threat they see this as," said Frances Townsend, former counterterrorism adviser to ex-President George W. Bush.

Multiple sources told The News the FBI believes it has uncovered an Al Qaeda cell for the first time since 9/11, prompting the huge response.

"The FBI is seriously spooked about these guys," a former senior counterterrorism official told The News. "This is not some ... FBI informant-driven case. This is the real thing."




It's just a matter of time.

Firm




Grofast -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 3:36:34 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

quote:

ORIGINAL: Grofast

Isreal has been fighting this kind of war fo almost 60 years maybe we ought to take advice in how to do it from them.


....er.......60 years? And they still haven't won? Why would you want to take advice from a country that fails to win such a conflict?
Surely a more sensible approach would be to look for examples of wars against terrorists that have actually been brought to a conclusion.
hmmmm has there been a second attack agenst Isreal like what happened at munic olympics nope. i am a believer that if the evidance is there that a certain person is responcable for an act of terroism agenst american citizens thier life and the lives of thier families are forefit assination of the planners of horriable acts of violence agest us as well as direct family should be added to the list of responces. the dead have no rights to violate




stella41b -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 9:31:14 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

.....now, as it is pretty much an accepted fact that US citizens funded both sets of terrorists in Ulster, then i called you on what appears to be hypocrisy.  What right does the US have to hold other sovereign countries to account for the actions of its citizenry if the US refuses to hold its own citizens to the same standard?
You may argue a version of 'might makes right', but that would just prove my point that a far too large proportion of US citizens fail to see that wisdom is as important as force.

Yeah, but history is made by the ones with the force, even if they don't have "wisdom".

Firm


Not quite true there Firm, but nice try. There's such a thing known as diplomacy. and whichever way you look at it history shows that nobody does it quite like the Brits.




tazzygirl -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 9:43:38 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth

quote:

Huh? What?

Please correct me if I'm wrong but Bush's TARP and Obama's stimulus were nearly equivalent in the amounts


No problem...
President Bush, acknowledging the risk of recession, embraced about $145 billion worth of tax relief Friday to give the economy a �shot in the arm. �

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, abbreviated ARRA (Pub.L. 111-5), is an economic stimulus package enacted by the 111th United States Congress in February 2009. The Act of Congress was based largely on proposals made by President Barack Obama and was intended to provide a stimulus to the U.S. economy in the wake of the economic downturn. The measures are nominally worth $787 billion.

Appreciating that you didn't challenge the effectiveness, but actually its closer to four times.



The amended version of H.R. 1424 was sent to the House for consideration, and on October 3, the House voted 263-171 to enact the bill into law.[6][11][12] President Bush signed the bill into law within hours of its congressional enactment, creating a $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program to purchase failing bank assets.[13]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailout_of_U.S._financial_system_(2008)

Sorta seems like they are the same... and doesnt that say Bush signed it into law?

Then, according to msnbc, Bush asked for another 145 Billion for tax relief.




DedicatedDom40 -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:29:19 AM)

The stimulus was crafted by institutional democrats who just knew they would take power long before Obama ever won the nomination, let alone won the general election.  And it was a bad, pork-laden stimulus.  And just like the previous stimulus efforts, it relied upon trickling borrowed money down through corporate hierarchies to (hopefully) create *some* jobs at the bottom.

What made the Obama clunker program so much more effective was the money bypassed all the corporate hands on Wall St. and went straight to the end consumer on Main St.  The money didn’t funnel through dozens of corporate hands with each level 'taking their cut' (for doing nothing) before it landed on Main St and benefited the new car purchaser and created jobs. The only thing corporations gained off the deal was their usual per-car profit enhanced by higher sales volumes. 





Politesub53 -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:35:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Grofast

hmmmm has there been a second attack agenst Isreal like what happened at munic olympics nope. i am a believer that if the evidance is there that a certain person is responcable for an act of terroism agenst american citizens thier life and the lives of thier families are forefit assination of the planners of horriable acts of violence agest us as well as direct family should be added to the list of responces. the dead have no rights to violate



There have been several terrorist attacks in Israel where more people were killed than at Munich. It is stupid to claim otherwise.

Edited to fix quotes.




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:36:51 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth


The distinction should be clear; conspiracy theories aside for a minute, unlike the first experience on 9/11, "We didn't know this could happen here!" will not be an acceptable excuse.


No kidding?

Will that be anything like the World Trade Center getting bombed a few years before Bush took office?

quote:

Three times the amount of the Bush bail out, the Obama bail out isn't producing............


Huh?  What?

Please correct me if I'm wrong but Bush's TARP and Obama's stimulus were nearly equivalent in the amounts.


Merc corrected you about the size of the "stimulus" packages.

As for your first comment ... I guess if Clinton had treated it as something other than a "law enforcement problem", maybe the US would have an extra 3 or 4 thousand citizens alive right about now ...

Firm




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:39:03 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

Panda isn't a Jacksonian.

I think there would be some domestic repercussions, but I think you've got the final result exactly correct.

From The Jacksonian Tradition
by Walter Russell Mead

Once wars begin, a significant element of American public opinion supports waging them at the highest possible level of intensity. The devastating tactics of the wars against the Indians, General Sherman’s campaign of 1864-65, and the unprecedented aerial bombardments of World War II were all broadly popular in the United States. During both the Korean and Vietnam Wars, presidents came under intense pressure, not only from military leaders but also from public opinion, to hit the enemy with all available force in all available places. Throughout the Cold War the path of least resistance in American politics was generally the more hawkish stance. Politicians who advocated negotiated compromises with the Soviet enemy were labeled appeasers and paid a heavy political price. The Korean and Vietnam Wars lost public support in part because of political decisions not to risk the consequences of all-out war, not necessarily stopping short of the use of nuclear weapons. The most costly decision George Bush took in the Gulf War was not to send ground forces into Iraq, but to stop short of the occupation of Baghdad and the capture and trial of Saddam Hussein.


Firm



And this has been borne out by our stunning success in the second go-around?


I don't guess you actually read the article.

Firm




tazzygirl -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:40:33 AM)

Tarp was 700 Billion... i fail to see how the numbers dont add up.

If Bush wasnt happy about this TARP plan, then why did he sign it?




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:41:20 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: stella41b


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

.....now, as it is pretty much an accepted fact that US citizens funded both sets of terrorists in Ulster, then i called you on what appears to be hypocrisy.  What right does the US have to hold other sovereign countries to account for the actions of its citizenry if the US refuses to hold its own citizens to the same standard?
You may argue a version of 'might makes right', but that would just prove my point that a far too large proportion of US citizens fail to see that wisdom is as important as force.

Yeah, but history is made by the ones with the force, even if they don't have "wisdom".

Firm


Not quite true there Firm, but nice try. There's such a thing known as diplomacy. and whichever way you look at it history shows that nobody does it quite like the Brits.

Not sure what you mean exactly, Stella.

Diplomacy only works when a nation is willing and able to back up their position with force.

Seems, from my reading of history, that the Brits were rarely shy about using force.

Firm




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:43:32 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl

Tarp was 700 Billion... i fail to see how the numbers dont add up.

If Bush wasnt happy about this TARP plan, then why did he sign it?

Bush "stimulus": $145 billion

Obama "stimulus" $787 billion

Neither I nor Merc have said we approved of even the Bush "stimulus". But throwing good money after bad is never a good idea.

Firm




mnottertail -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:46:25 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: stella41b


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

.....now, as it is pretty much an accepted fact that US citizens funded both sets of terrorists in Ulster, then i called you on what appears to be hypocrisy.  What right does the US have to hold other sovereign countries to account for the actions of its citizenry if the US refuses to hold its own citizens to the same standard?
You may argue a version of 'might makes right', but that would just prove my point that a far too large proportion of US citizens fail to see that wisdom is as important as force.

Yeah, but history is made by the ones with the force, even if they don't have "wisdom".

Firm


Not quite true there Firm, but nice try. There's such a thing known as diplomacy. and whichever way you look at it history shows that nobody does it quite like the Brits.

Not sure what you mean exactly, Stella.

Diplomacy only works when a nation is willing and able to back up their position with force.

Seems, from my reading of history, that the Brits were rarely shy about using force.

Firm


Talleyrand and France spring to mind almost immediately, as does King Hussein in Jordan, and Anwar Sadat in Egypt.

Ron




FirmhandKY -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 10:55:36 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail

Talleyrand and France spring to mind almost immediately, as does King Hussein in Jordan, and Anwar Sadat in Egypt.


You'll have to be more specific about Talleyrand and King Hussein.

As for Sadat, I'll assume you mean how he made peace with Israel? Yeah, he did that. He also proved that he was willing and able to use force on them. Remember the 73 war?

Firm




mnottertail -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 11:02:49 AM)

FirmHandKY,

willing perhaps, but unable. that is the same sort of notion that was roundly soused by people who knew Saddam had no WMD, and we were not about to be shocked and awed.......the 12 years prior had given us the compendium of his military might, and did not affect anything.

So, in terms of diplomacy backed with force, they actually have to have force to back with, in order to have a negotiating position from strength.

Neither here nor there, I got no real dogs in this fight.

Ron




pyroaquatic -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 11:08:06 AM)

Very interesting topic LoreSpinner....

I remember nine eleven very clearly. I woke up late for school. I got to school... and then....

the school was shut down for that day. We watched it over and over again.

It was shocking. The entire day was a moment of silence. The earth seemed to have stood still.

I remember looking into the eyes of adults and seeing huge bags. People were losing sleep over it.

Despite the fact the event is over we are still affected by it. Two planes and two buildings. Physically the people of new york are reporting health conditions like asthma, ptsd, and the like. The attack had a profound effect on our psyche. I still believe we are being attacked. 9/11 is not over yet.

We are spending money like mad to catch people that-for lack of a better term-blend well within the environment of their upbringing.

For a while we were quite unified and we did something. Perhaps it was in haste, perhaps not.

It is unfortunate that it takes a major tragedy to get the american people rallied.

-----

Well, I like to roleplay...

so using my imagination how would we be attacked again.

The first time it was explosive, outright, and fast. With tactical precision.

I would imagine the next time would be very low and slow. We would not know we had been attacked until way after it was over.

What would be the method? Well, our socioeconomical base is already shot... so it would not take much to push that over into a pit. Gang violence takes care of other things as well as organized crime. Robbery, murder, rape, drugs. Well, I think America is tearing itself from the inside out. I work hard to have no money.

I don't think you have to go over the pond to find terrorists. We have them right here in america. If there is going to be a change in America it must be completely radical.

But not violent.

Give no reason for others to be hating upon us.

And to have complete obsessive focus on one or two things....

Like Education and Alternative Energies.

If I was president I would not be worrying about anything else but those two things. Bring the quality of education up and suddenly there would be more skilled workers and doctors and nurses.... and the like.

Wean ourselves off of dependency with localized sources of energy and suddenly....

well,

we don't need anyone else.

America is like a codependant child it seems.

----

Call me a crackpot, crazy conspiracy theorist or whatever. I don't care.... well... I do but I have meatballs to make. :D
I have not read the other replies but I will, I swear.




tazzygirl -> RE: 9/11...What if it happens again (9/18/2009 11:14:58 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl

Tarp was 700 Billion... i fail to see how the numbers dont add up.

If Bush wasnt happy about this TARP plan, then why did he sign it?

Bush "stimulus": $145 billion

Obama "stimulus" $787 billion

Neither I nor Merc have said we approved of even the Bush "stimulus". But throwing good money after bad is never a good idea.

Firm


So this is inaccurate?

quote:

The amended version of H.R. 1424 was sent to the House for consideration, and on October 3, the House voted 263-171 to enact the bill into law.[6][11][12] President Bush signed the bill into law within hours of its congressional enactment, creating a $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program to purchase failing bank assets.[13]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailout_of_U.S._financial_system_(2008)

And how many stimulus bills did Bush introduce .. and have passed...during his term?




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