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#61
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Is Al Gore running for something?
What support does this person mean? This anonymous poster must hail from the inner city, juding from this paragraph: What ever they can do to win pack power that Bush won illigentamately from AlGore, the sooner they can raise taxes and spend your money on them selves and their base. I read an artical that claimed AlGore's support comes mainly from inner city high school drop outs. Suppose that's why when Al Gore went head to head with GWB in the last election he got the most votes? According to the "artical" there must have been an "illigentamate" vote count in "AlGore's" favor. Either the greatest number of people in America are inner-city high school dropouts, or the poster should consider going "pack" to the source of this drivel with some serious questions. |
#62
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It was even simpler than that. I just applied a chain of simple logic
based on the definitions previously provided. If "neo" is new, then if someone is a "neo"conservative, that implies that they were previously something else. The most common "other" ideology would be a liberal. Therefore, a "new" conservative would most likely be an "old" liberal. Binary thinking at its finest. Only two possibilities to consider. |
#63
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Gould 0738 wrote:
Is Al Gore running for something? What support does this person mean? This anonymous poster must hail from the inner city, juding from this paragraph: What ever they can do to win pack power that Bush won illigentamately from AlGore, the sooner they can raise taxes and spend your money on them selves and their base. I read an artical that claimed AlGore's support comes mainly from inner city high school drop outs. Suppose that's why when Al Gore went head to head with GWB in the last election he got the most votes? According to the "artical" there must have been an "illigentamate" vote count in "AlGore's" favor. Either the greatest number of people in America are inner-city high school dropouts, or the poster should consider going "pack" to the source of this drivel with some serious questions. I really wonder sometimes what the future of this country will be, with so many simple-minded, semi-literate right-wingers running loose. |
#64
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#65
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Dave Hall wrote:
On 23 Jun 2004 15:22:13 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote: It was even simpler than that. I just applied a chain of simple logic based on the definitions previously provided. If "neo" is new, then if someone is a "neo"conservative, that implies that they were previously something else. The most common "other" ideology would be a liberal. Therefore, a "new" conservative would most likely be an "old" liberal. Binary thinking at its finest. Only two possibilities to consider. Sometimes that's all there is. Are you familiar with Occam's razor? Dave I am. Old William called for a minimum number of points *necessary*. For issues as complex as a worldwide Islamist insurgency, black or white ain't enough. |
#66
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#67
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Binary thinking at its finest. Only two possibilities to consider.
Are you sure you want to describe this process as "thinking?" Dave Hall wrote: Sometimes that's all there is. Are you familiar with Occam's razor? Yep. Very good Dave. Either you're with us, or you're against us... intensely paranoid psychosis, logically justified. DSK |
#68
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On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 08:08:13 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: Dave Hall wrote: it's just that they stand firm in their resolve. They make the hard decisions rather than engaging in endless debates from infinite angles. Even when their assumptions are wrong and events prove their thinking is leading to one disaster after another. No one has yet to prove that those decisions were wrong (your biased and ill-informed opinions do not count), or that these decisions have been a "disaster". We've lost more lives in one campaign in WWII than we have in the whole Iraq war to date. Yet by the logic of some of you guys on the left, we probably should have abandoned our effort in WWII as well. No one (At least no one with an ounce of realism) claimed going into this war on terrorism, that it would be easy. Our enemy is hard to identify, and hides behind the protection of many contributors. Should this mean that we should do nothing? Or should we try to "reason" with people who have openly stated that their goal is to drive western culture from their lands, and ultimately from the face of the earth? What bargaining chip could we hold for them? What concessions could we offer? What other course of action would be preferable to the one which our leader has selected? Did you even think that we might need to establish a base of operation so that we can carry on the next phase of this campaign? There are a lot of smoking guns in Saudi Arabia, and in Iran. If we were to seriously pursue this, we would jeopardize our oil imports as well as present a logistical problem. Having Iraq for both substitute oil and as a point of deployment makes strategic and tactical sense. What you call "Bush's stupidity" may very well be a cleverly organized and well thought out effort. 20 years from now, and we'll look back a bit differently than we are now. Rigid personality disorder, eh? No, it's called doing what's right, even if it makes some people uncomfortable in the short term. If we don't fight the battle now, our children will have to, and the odds will be less in our favor. Dave |
#69
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Dave Hall wrote:
On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 08:08:13 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: Dave Hall wrote: it's just that they stand firm in their resolve. They make the hard decisions rather than engaging in endless debates from infinite angles. Even when their assumptions are wrong and events prove their thinking is leading to one disaster after another. No one has yet to prove that those decisions were wrong (your biased and ill-informed opinions do not count), or that these decisions have been a "disaster". Bush's "war against terrorism" is a fraud and a disaster, no matter how you and the other binaries try to spin it. What you call "Bush's stupidity" may very well be a cleverly organized and well thought out effort. 20 years from now, and we'll look back a bit differently than we are now. Are you competing for the "Today's Laugh" prize? Rigid personality disorder, eh? No, it's called doing what's right, even if it makes some people uncomfortable in the short term. There's nothing right about Bush policies, except, of course, that they are mostly extremely right...wing. |
#70
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