Archive for March, 2009

How does the Iraq war and the War on Terrorism affect your vote?

Static asked:


The Iraq war and War on Terrorism is becoming harder and harder to understand. Which canadidate do you think can solve both problems? Give me reasons and proof!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Richard
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How to Avoid a War?

Harun Yahya asked:


The preparations for the United States’ planned military operation against Iraq are moving full-speed ahead. It seems that unless something happens to reduce the tension between the United States and Iraq, there will be war in the Middle East. Inevitably, that war will cost the lives of tens of thousands of people and will lead to the deaths of innocent civilians. Many soldiers from the U.S. and Iraqi armies will be killed, and their families will suffer terribly. Unless war is prevented, great harm will be wreaked on the economies of the countries in the region, of which Turkey is a part, and particularly that of Iraq. Poverty and all the difficulties that stem from it will increase.

There is no doubt that the prevention of this approaching disaster, the avoidance of war and the finding of a peaceful solution, is the hope and desire of every person of good conscience. In fact, many individuals and civil society organizations all over the world are today saying “No to war” and encouraging their own governments to take initiatives to prevent such a clash. A wide community and many opinion formers within the United States maintain that the problem needs to be resolved by peaceful means.

Yet all these demands for peace need to be backed up by a concrete solution. Let us first briefly examine the present situation with a view to finding such a solution.

1. It is clear that following the September 11 terrorist attacks, the United States entered a state of alarm, declared war on terrorism and those administrations it perceived as being connected to it, and is totally determined on the issue.

2. After the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, the main target in this war was set out as Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq. Even if there is room for debate whether Saddam Hussein really has built nuclear or chemical weapons, that regime is now firmly on the U.S. administration’s black list, and it does not appear possible that this can change.

3. Unless there is a radical change in the present situation, the United States will strike at Iraq. The decision has long since been taken.

What is noteworthy here is the fact that the United States has gone on the offensive not against Iraq but against Saddam Hussein’s regime in that country. As President Bush and other officials have repeatedly stressed, Saddam’s administration has to come to an end. For that reason, the most realistic formula to preventing war is for Saddam’s administration to end before the war starts. The only way for that to happen is for Saddam Hussein to step down before the onset of war.

Saddam Hussein Must Step Down From Power

In order for this formula to come about, the United States and the international community have to put forward a plan that is acceptable to Saddam Hussein. There is one point in particular that must not be ignored: that is the fact that Saddam Hussein has a wife and children, a family. In all probability he is not at all happy with the situation facing his country and people. Yet he may be unable to arrive at a healthy decision on account of concerns for his own and his family’s safety. For that reason, if that safety is guaranteed, then it is clear that Saddam Hussein will have no wish to see a terrible slaughter that will cost tens of thousands of Arab lives. In that light, the following elements must be included in the plan that needs to be put to Saddam Hussein:

1. Saddam Hussein must be allowed to leave Iraq and settle in a friendly Arab country, in security and with certain assets. It must be guaranteed that he will be able to spend the rest of his life in comfort in that Arab country

2. Following Saddam Hussein’s abdication, a technocratic government consisting of moderate and independent figures must be set up in Iraq. That government must react positively to the international community’s demands for disarmament, and must seek a solution to the urgent problems facing the country. The embargo and sanctions against Iraq must be lifted, and with assistance from the international community a regeneration programme must quickly be initiated. The suffering of the Iraqi people, who have lived in terrible misery and poverty ever since the 1980s, must be brought to an end as a matter of urgency.

3. The necessary legal and institutional changes must be brought in to allow Iraq to become a democratic state of law. A constitutional order that respects the rights of all ethnic and religious groups living in the country, and that allows them to live together under one roof in peace in security must be established. Later still, free elections must be held, and Iraq must take its place in the world as a respected member of the community of nations.

If Saddam Hussein takes the common sense approach and prevents war by stepping down, then he will have done the people of Iraq one of the greatest services possible, and will go down in history as a hero. We need to be aware that according to Islam, the greatest heroism lies in winning the “Great Jihad” (Jihad al-Nafs), in other words in conquering one’s own desires. Power is a desire that is hard for many people to forsake. A leader who foregoes power for the sake of the safety and happiness of his people thus wins that “Great Jihad” and behaves in the most honorable manner possible.

For this reason:

We Call on Saddam Hussein:

If you step down from power and leave Iraq, you will have prevented a war that would cost the lives of thousands, tens of thousands of Iraqis. Babies and defenseless women and old people who would otherwise have died under the bombs will be saved. Your cities will not be razed and your country will not be ruined. You will prevent the people of Iraq from suffering a terrible disaster for the sake of a war that cannot possibly be won.

Please make that sacrifice… Then the world will regard you not as a leader who led his people to death and suffering, but as one who gave up everything for their sake.

Even more importantly, there is no doubt that such behavior will please God. In the Qur’an, God reveals that saving just one person from death is as much a good deed as saving all of mankind:

…If someone kills another person-unless it is in retaliation for someone else or for causing corruption in the earth-it is as if he had murdered all mankind. And if anyone gives life to another person, it is as if he had given life to all mankind… (Qur’an, 5:32)

If you allow the war to be prevented, you will have saved not one life but thousands.

We must not forget that the outbreak of war on earth is displeasing to God. We are told in the Qur’an that war is a great evil, that it represents corruption, and that God does not love corruption. (Qur’an, 5:64) In another verse, God calls all people to peace:

O You who believe! Enter absolutely into peace (Islam). Do not follow in the footsteps of Satan. He is an outright enemy to you. (Qur’an, 2:208)

In short, supporting peace and bringing it about is a great duty of all Muslims.

We Call on the U.S. Administration

The divine principles that should guide the Iraqi administration must do the same for the U.S. administration.

President Bush is a religious man. He has frequently and sincerely stated his belief in God and the Bible, the Christians’ holy book. For that reason, we believe that he, and all religious people in the administration, will carefully consider those passages from the Bible that command peace amongst men.

For instance, the Gospel according to St. Matthew says, “Blessed are the peacemakers.” (Matthew, 5: 9)

The following quotations command all Christians to love their enemies, pray for their improvement, to be forgiving and not to seek revenge:

Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. (Matthew, 5: 44)

If possible, so far as it depends upon you, live peaceably with all. Beloved, never avenge yourselves… If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him drink. (Romans, 12: 18-20)

There are also passages in the Old Testament, the guide for both Christians and Jews, that command peace amongst men. One such passage reads, “by the fear of the LORD a man avoids evil. 7 When a man’s ways please the LORD, he makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.” (Proverbs, 16: 6-7) In other words, he who follows God’s path forgives his enemies.

President Bush is sincerely devoted to the moral values of the Holy Book. His words in his address to the nation on September 11, 2002, “Our deepest national conviction is that every life is precious, because every life is the gift of a Creator who intended us to live in liberty and equality.” are a clear statement of this. The entire world hopes that he will bring his common sense and conscience to bear on the subject of the Iraq in the most effective manner.

If there is war between Iraq and the United States, many innocent people will die. Innocent Iraqi children, women and old people will die under the bombs, or be crippled and suffer, and a whole nation will drown in pain. The Iraqi Army will suffer terrible casualties, and those dead soldiers will leave orphans and widows behind them. The American Army will also suffer casualties, leaving weeping families in their wake, and American servicemen will be condemned to all sorts of sorrows, thousands of miles from home, in a land they do not know.

How and why should anyone choose disaster when there is a peaceful way?

No to a War of Pride

The element that needs to be observed if peace is to be established is the positive, rather than negative use of psychological factors. If, for example, America uses language that provokes Saddam Hussein and causes Iraqi disarmament to become a matter of pride for Saddam Hussein, the problem will continue to escalate. Many wars of pride have broken out in the past. There must not be another.

On the other hand, it is a terrible mistake for certain circles to use the kind of language that will provoke president Bush and the U.S. administration and thus prepare the groundwork for a question of pride. Neither President Bush, nor the current administration nor the American state have any need to engage in a show of power or determination. The calming down of emotions heightened by the mutual use of provocative statements and the adoption of a rational approach by both sides are of great importance to a solution.

The Baghdad regime, on the other hand, must understand and respect the United States’ sensitivities. America was subjected to the world’s worst ever terrorist attack on September 11, 2001, in which thousands of innocent Americans lost their lives. America is perfectly justified in finding the perpetrators of this attack, bringing them to justice, and preventing any repetition of similar terrorist incidents. For that reason, no government must take any action that provokes alarm in the United States, but must wholeheartedly help eliminate existing concerns. If the United States is concerned that Iraq might support various terrorist actions in the near future or pose a threat to the United States and its allies in the region by producing chemical and nuclear weapons, then Iraq needs to do all in its power to do away with those concerns. Iraq will not be diminished by proving it is not involved in a threatening activity. Quite the opposite. It will earn the appreciation and confidence of the international community and its neighbors.

What Will Happen if War Cannot Be Prevented?

If war cannot be prevented by means of the formula we have put forward here or by some other means, then the ensuing developments will be most unfortunate:

1) Deaths: If a wide-ranging operation begins as planned, this will inevitably lead to a great many deaths. Iraqi troops, Iraqi civilians and American troops will die, and others will be crippled.

2) The Destruction of Iraq: It appears inescapable that a land and air operation against Baghdad will result in serious physical damage to the city and other settlements of strategic importance. The Iraqi economy is already in collapse, and a strike against the capital and important facilities will wreak the kind of damage it will take decades to put right.

3) The Danger of Civil War: If the Baghdad regime is overthrown, a struggle for power will begin between the different religious and ethnic minorities in the country, and that might lead, in turn, to a bloody civil war. The repetition in Iraq of the civil war in Lebanon during the 1970s and ’80s, which caused so much bloodshed, is a disaster that looks likely to be repeated.

4) The Fragmentation of Iraq: Another likely development after the war is the fragmentation of Iraq in a framework of ethnic and religious minorities. Such a fragmentation would lead to fighting between those minorities and also give rise to exceedingly powerless, poor and uncontrolled tiny states, which would inevitably fall into anarchy and chaos. Furthermore, these tiny states that would probably emerge could also have the effect of destabilizing Iraq’s neighbors. This is what gives rise to Turkey’s justified concern in the face of the danger represented by a Kurdish state in Northern Iraq. Not just Turkey, but other neighboring and Gulf states, such as Iran, Syria and Jordan would also be harmed by the confusion in Iraq.

5) Economic Difficulties in the Region: It is estimated that in the 11 years since the 1991 Gulf War, Turkey has suffered an economic loss of more than $100 billion. A new war would put an end to commercial life in the region and deal a deadly blow to tourism, and there would be recession and losses in all other sectors of the economy.

6) Increased Danger of a “Clash of Civilizations.” A potential war between Iraq and the United States would represent an opportunity for those who wish to encourage a bloody conflict between the Western and Islamic civilizations. Protests against the war will come from all over the Islamic world, and that will serve the purposes of the scenario aimed at bringing the United States against the Islamic world. A peaceful solution in the face of this problem will lead the way to the world peace and security necessary for the “Peace of Civilizations.”

Our hope is the prevention of a war in Iraq, a solution to the problem without bloodshed, and the Middle East becoming a region where peace and friendship prevail over conflict.

Under the pen name of Harun Yahya, Adnan Oktar has written some 250 works. His books contain a total of 46,000 pages and 31,500 illustrations. Of these books, 7,000 pages and 6,000 illustrations deal with the collapse of the Theory of Evolution. You can read, free of charge, all the books Adnan Oktar has written under the pen name Harun Yahya on these websites www.harunyahya.com



Constance
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Is Bush’s Iraq war going to lead to the biggest religious civil war since the Protestant Reformation?

Anti-Socialist asked:


If when US troops leave Iraq the civil war that is currently going on between Iraqi Sunnis & Iraqi Shiites will most likely spill over into the entire Mideast & maybe the entire Muslim world which would make it the largest religious civil war since the 100 year world war between European Catholics & Protestants.

If you think gas prices are high now or that the chaos & carnage in the Iraq war is bad if there is a major Mideast regional regilious civil war between Sunnis & Shiites (thanks to Bush’s invasion of Iraq) the world economy will come to a screening halt & you all will be riding your bikes to work, that is if you still have a job, which you probably won’t.

Bush just keeps giving the gifts that keep on giving.

Jeffrey

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Ways to Support our Troops, Soldiers & Their Army Wives in the Iraq & Afghanistan War

Robert Walsh asked:


Robert Walsh Kids Clothing wants to announce the creation of their newest page on their website, entitled “Support Our Troops, Soldiers & Army Wives In Iraq & Afghanistan War”. Since September the collapse of Wall Street and the Housing Foreclosures countrywide has dominated the NEWS.  Americans from coast to coast are focusing on their economic concerns of keeping their jobs, saving their homes from foreclosure, and protecting their saving and investments from being a complete loss.

Due to this refocusing we seemed to have forgotten our troops in Iraq, and the Afghanistan war against terrorism.  With all the doom and gloom at home we want to remind our fellow citizens that there are thousands of American soldiers in Iraq.  Afghanistan and the war in Afghanistan is the front line in our war against terrorism.  Our service men and women still need our support.  And with the Holiday Season upon us it is more important than ever that we give them a touch of home on the battle fronts abroad as we have done in all of our previous wars over the last fifty plus years.

This page, http://www.robertwalshkidsclothing.com/23.html, suggests ways to support our troops and their army wives here at home.  With every donation Americans can share the “Holiday Spirit” by sending an e-mail Christmas to one of over 200,000 troops stationed overseas away from their families in order to safeguard our freedoms here at home.  A simple donation may provide soldiers a call home to their army wives and children with a prepaid phone card.  This certainly is a top holiday gift, because it brings SO MUCH JOY to everyone, including the giver and the recipients and their families.

These precious simple gifts that are PRICELESS are made available through the generosity of ordinary Americans who want to recognize American soldiers worldwide who once again sacrifice their lives and the lives of their army families during this Holiday Season. 

Through your kindness and generosity we can give back to our troops a gift that is PRICELESS.  A holiday card that tells a member of our Armed Forces we haven’t forgotten, and we are grateful for your service CAN MEAN SO MUCH to that soldier stationed high in the cold and remote mountains of Afghanistan. To write soldiers or have an e-mail card sent in your name is a real morale booster for that G.I. Joe.

Or to adopt a soldier with a donation for that prepaid phone card not only supports the soldiers in Iraq, but also their army wives here stateside who receive that surprise precious long distance phone call that unites the army family for the HOLIDAY….how precious is that!!! 

We want to encourage Americans, despite their own economic hardships, to realize that even a small donation of $20.00 is less than one penny for the every service men and women abroad.  It would take approximately $2,000.00 to raise it to a penny per soldier stationed overseas.

So please join our effort to remember our troops this Holiday Season with an affordable donation that will bring PRICELESS HOLIDAY JOY to a soldier and his/her family.  You can’t buy much with a penny these days.  But by helping to raise a penny per soldier abroad with YOUR DONATION and Donations like yours is the BEST GIFT YOU CAN GIVE to our soldiers this HOLIDAY SEASON!  Please help Support our Troops.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL OUR SERVICE MEN AND WOMEN & THEIR FAMILIES THIS HOLIDAY SEASON!!!



Henry
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What do you think of the idea of a tax surcharge to pay for the Iraq war?

Time to Shrug, Atlas asked:


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071002/ap_on_go_co/us_iraq_tax

Although I am typically against raising taxes for any purpose, I am also against passing on deficits to future generations.

Do you think that raising taxes now is the answer, even considering the risk of pushing the country into a recession?

Or do you support keeping taxes low, and attempting to solve the deficit and national debt problems through economic growth and spending restraint from this point forward?

I can tell you that I would be much more likely to support the tax surcharge if I thought it would end with the Iraq War. However, anybody with any sense knows that politicians would then just find something else to spend the money on.

Thoughts?
Samantha Stickers: Actually, Democrats brought this plan to the floor.

Try to keep up.

Peggy

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Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD - War Trauma)

Carolyn Clayton asked:


It has been estimated that 30% of Vietnam war veterans, 10% Gulf war veterans, 6% to 11% Afghanistan war veterans and 12% to 20% of veterans of the Iraq war have suffered from Post Traumatic Stress disorder. This is an anxiety disorder that can develop after exposure to one or more terrifying events.

The history of PTSD date back to the early 1800’s where military doctors began diagnosing soldiers with “exhaustion” following the stress of battle. This “exhaustion” was characterized by mental shutdown due to individual or group trauma. Around this time there was a syndrome in England called ‘railway spine’ or ‘railway hysteria which bares a resemblance to what we call PTSD today. This was found by people who had been in the catastrophic railway accidents of that time.

In World War I and II the term ’shell shock’ and combat fatigue’ were terms to describe veterans who exhibited stress and anxiety after being in combat. The official designation of “Post Traumatic Stress Disorder” did not come about until 1980 when the Third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) was published.

This anxiety disorder occurs when you are afraid and your body activates the fight or flight response. This reaction to fight releases adrenaline, which is responsible for increasing your blood pressure and heart rate as well as increasing glucose to muscles (to allow you to run away quickly in the face of immediate danger). However when this danger has gone your body begins to go through a process that shuts down the stress response and this process involves the release of another hormone known as cortisol. If your body doesn’t generate enough cortisol to shut down the stress reaction you may continue to feel the effects of adrenaline. Trauma victims who develop post-traumatic stress disorder often have higher levels of other stimulating hormones (catecholamines) under normal conditions in which the threat of trauma is not present. These same hormones kick in when they are reminded of their trauma.

Military Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is a very serious disorder with symptoms such as self harm, anger, violence and drug addiction as well as depression. All of these are common symptoms of Military Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and sadly affects thousands of soldiers every year who have serviced in the armed forces. Treating Military Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is done through psychotherapy and basic counselling but can take a lot of time and patience.

Sadly a number of people who are experiencing and suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, also known as ‘war trauma’, is said to hugely increase in the next few years due to the number of soldiers who are fighting in areas such as Helmand and Basra. There are concerns that the Iraq war is producing more cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder than any other conflict in decades, one of the main reasons for this is that the violence has been so widespread and exposure to it so constant over long periods of time. The suicide bombers, roadside mines and the constant threat of attack within the Iraq war poses a unique challenge to the mental health of the soldiers who are serving in it.

If you are one of those suffering and are thinking of claiming compensation for you suffering then you should do so right away. It is your civil and legal right to claim compensation for injuries psychological and mental. No-one should suffer in silence.



Phyllis
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Has anyone noticed that the media and the public seem to be forgetting about the Iraq war?

madcat asked:


We continue to monthly get many troops killed in Iraq, and the war seems to be marching on as usual. I have noticed that it does not seem to get the coverage, and the public does not seem to be as concerned as they were. I’ve seen more coverage on Britney Spears this week, than the war. Are we getting used to it, just accepting it as never ending, or just don’t care anymore? Just wondering.

Keith
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What do you think of Iraq war funding especially the money spent to rebuild Iraq?

Roohlou asked:


What do you think of Iraq war funding especially the money spent to rebuild Iraq? What should we do about it? please give me a detailed answer.

Carmen
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How many Americans (not to mention others) have died in the Iraq war each year?

KA asked:


McCain believes Iraq war can be won by 2013. So that is 5 more years.What is the expected death toll? You figure it out.

Christopher
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How come the Iraq War hasn’t brought the American people $20/barrel oil like was initially promised?

trer asked:


I remember Bill O’Reilly and the other conservatives saying that the Iraq War would mean cheap oil for us and it would stimulate the economy. It’s 2008 and oil is $140/barrel. Why?

Lloyd
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