Brilliantly, sadly observed

Mark Kohut mark.kohut at gmail.com
Thu Nov 26 05:32:21 CST 2015


I do not want to argue for the bush administration's Iraq war. That was awful and evil. 

Then we changed course. 

I need to learn the Geneva conventions re the bombing of transnational " states".

When an Unjust State, ISIS, takes over " Sovereign states" who is 'responsible' for the citizens? You have no belief in the way the West tries to kill only ISIS. 75% of set up air strikes are said No to, says an Army general. 

ISIS is not responding in kind. ISIS has Al--Qeada DNA, who did not respond in kind. ISIS is capturing and killing in an avowed war against the West ( as well as those they hate where they are) 

I think that if we have a " just war" on the ground, then we have a larger than ground troops 
War. 

Sent from my iPad

> On Nov 25, 2015, at 11:36 PM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
> 
> I never said Al Qaeda or BinLaden were responding in kind. I said Isis was. But I think it is you who fails to understand moral equivalence. You seem to think that The US can murder hundreds of thousands in a nation that neither attacked nor threatened them  and expect to be safe themselves. What about the wealthy 'freedom fighters' of recent US history and their idiotic reasons for starting wars. What about the mass killing in Gaza?  What about our support for Mubarak, the Shah, the Saudis. What about the estimated million children who starved due to our blockade of Iraq. What about our torture? Why isn’t the same kind of outrage over Paris directed at the US killing of Doctors and patients in the MSF hospital? Isn’t it that we don’t want to look at our own crimes and stupidity and violence, or to question the nasty behavior of the US military?
> 
> Fuck america’s ignorant and murderous self-righteousness.  And the same for the French leader who started bombing in Libya and the ISIS territories. He risked his civilian citizens when he rained bombs on cities which have more non-combatant civilians than Isis fighters. What he did was just as bad as what they did. 
>  The only way to fight a group like this without collective punishment is on the ground, following the Geneva accord to avoid civilian casualties, and followed by the kind of economic aid given to Japan and Germany. That is very costly, but the bombing is pure terrorism and  begets more of the same. Both Bush and Obama had the stated strategy , on which billions was spent, of training the Iraqi army to handle internal threats. Before that it was massive bombing and a large ground war. None of these strategies has brought the stated goals. Neither will this new bombing campaign.
> 
> 
>> On Nov 25, 2015, at 9:14 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> " They" claimed?---not any I believed ...and ISIS out of Al---Qaeda would NOT have happened if we had not bombed? ( not that I believe we should have bombed Iraq, but I say nothing would have stopped ISIS from happening. And the most major difficulty is stopping/destroying a transnational group such as Al--Qaeda formed by a wealthy 'freedom fighter' who fought the Russians whose ideology held Westernism---your life and mine---as an evil in itself....and who " responded in kind" to our having military bases in Saudi Arabia, an ally, by knocking down the World Trade Center and killing 3000. “
> 
> He claimed also to be responding to Israel’s treatment of Palestinians. Many westerners, avid for war, describe Islam in the same way,”an evil in itself". All militaristic cultures fill themselves with the same lies in order to control land, gain power and enrich themselves at others expense. 
>> IN kind" shows you don't get " moral equivalence" in any way. 
>> 
>> Sent from my iPad
>> 
>>> On Nov 25, 2015, at 8:23 PM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I think you are dreaming when it comes to Obama and global warming. Under enormous political pressure he finally canned the tar sands pipeline, but has dramatically increased fracking and continued gulf oil operations despite the spill and also opened the arctic. He talks one way and acts another in virtually every issue.
>>> 
>>> The problem with bombing is it is wildly indiscriminate and kills many civilians.  US bombs in Syria have killed many more civilians than were killed in all Isis attacks on  westerners. We are also bombing and doing drone missile strikes in Yemen, Afghanistan, Africa etc. 
>>> If you want to make war you need to do all that is possible to avoid civilian deaths or you are just terrorists with uniforms and jets. Collective punishment is evil. 
>>> 
>>> The sad truth is that the US is still the major planetary terrorist of the last 2 decades and ISIS is simply responding  in kind. You seem to approve of the very tactics that led to these attacks. 
>>> 
>>> The Syrian rebels you speak of have absorbed into ISIS or decimated to virtual non-existence. 
>>> 
>>> You want to imagine that this utterly horrible policy of solving all conflicts with bombs will magically work this time? They claimed it had worked in Iraq right up until ISIS proved them to be liars and idiots. 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> that does not destabilize us.
>>>> On Nov 25, 2015, at 7:29 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> paris, beirut and the Russian plane show they are a global threat,
>>>> imho. I do not know what else
>>>> to do but soldiers on the ground means more deaths and no resolution
>>>> 
>>>> Obama has clearly spoken against Us Military dominance. I do not know
>>>> how self-governance will take hold,
>>>> unless the Syrian rebels take down Assad and make it happen.
>>>> 
>>>> The move off oil--and to other sources of energy---has been happening
>>>> and accelerated by Obama.
>>>> 
>>>>>> On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Nov 25, 2015, at 4:40 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Is ISIS an existential global threat, in your mind. And what is to be
>>>>>> done if it is?
>>>>> ISIS has clearly reached its limits as a regional force and millions are fleeing the area. They are refugees from ISIS, from drought, from bombs,  from the Syrian army and from the Iraqi army. So the fact that ISIS is ruling by terror and ideological solidarity over such an inhospitable and deadly region is hardly an existential threat.
>>>>> 
>>>>> What is to be done? Not bombs, not drones, not coalitions with the dictatorial monarchy that bred Isis and Al Qaeda. Not regime change with a new set of Generals and dickhead dictators. These have been tried again and again.  Our policies in  Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya and Iraq have failed miserably, and yet more of that is what is proposed by Obama and the Republicans. Part of the problem here is that some things can’t be fixed any more than people can be brought back from the dead.
>>>>> 
>>>>> If the nations of the earth truly want to disarm ISIS and bring justice to the region it would require ground troops with a high commitment to the Geneva conventions and a willingness to address the original injustices to regional Sunni Arabs.  Clearly the civil war between Shia and Sunni  Iraqis did not resolve the problems in Iraq  following the massive destruction of the war. Despite plenty of weapons, training and money the government of Iraq could not stop the seizure of control by the ISIS fighters.
>>>>> 
>>>>> US policy needs to change dramatically away from global military dominance toward creating a working model of a just middle class peaceable multi-ethnic, tolerant  republic/democracy/ parliamentary socialism/whatever we choose in a reasonably non-corrupt self governing process. We need to lead toward renewable energy and local full spectrum green economies. Either we move toward something like that or we continue on the path to globally destructive wars for dominance, resource extraction, and an ecological death spiral.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 10:57 AM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
>>>>>>> Calling people knuckle draggers may have some accuracy and offer some comic release, but are our problems really coming from the semi-literate? Is  the US Military and our campaigns of mass obliteration and drone warfare in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and now Isis controlled regions the product of semi-literacy or even the Republicans? The votes and financing came from both parties, many lawyers, many newspeople. My feeling is that Trump is just like Netanyahu, a shrewd public power broker who knows fear and war are the ultimate political drug, and voices openly the xenopobic hate mongering that produced the blowback.
>>>>>>> Many educated people are as addicted to denial and military violence and the racism of neglect as the more obviously ignorant followers of Trump and Cruz.. The Paris attacks have produced an ugly willingness to keep bombing regardless of how man regional civilians die, and that willingness goes across the political spectrum.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Nov 24, 2015, at 8:09 PM, David Kilroy <thesaintgodard at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> "It's clear now that the Paris attacks enormously energized the Trumpist movement. He's now speculating openly about invading Syria. Trump's proposals have gone from overt prejudice to things literally taken out of late Weimar history — closure of mosques and a national Muslim database. The rank-and-file have both fed off and stoked this behavior. When a lone protester started chanting "black lives matter" at a Trump rally, Trumpists jumped him (he was luckily not badly injured). Trump later said, "Maybe he should have been roughed up." Hours later he lied about witnessing Muslim crowds celebrating 9/11, and retweeted nonsense racist garbage from a literal neo-Nazi."
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> http://theweek.com/articles/590497/donald-trumps-alarming-skid-toward-outright-fascism
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> After decades of being allowed to stockpile arms with increasingly little federal interference, a general escalation in the violent rhetoric of the right, and shrill sponsorship from the NRA, semiliterate knuckle-draggers are only too eager to start a race / "religious" war in the U.S., and the candidates, allowed to start their noisome campaigns two years in advance of an actual election, are only egging them on.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> I live in a state where black churches were burned, in a city with clear color lines.  I'm not afraid of black people.  I'm afraid of shitheads teething for glory.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 7:37 PM, David Kilroy <thesaintgodard at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> Apologies for harping on this point.  Know that I do.  But it frankly terrifies me.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 7:17 PM, David Kilroy <thesaintgodard at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> (shades of Lot 49, too: recall the swastika armbands)
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 7:16 PM, David Kilroy <thesaintgodard at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> The tech sector's too "What, me worry?" about the problem.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Anonymity in comments threads, Craigslist, 4chan, Reddit et al permit open promulgation of hate speech.  Most sites, when confronted about the problem, cite free speech as a concern when the fact is they don't want to face the added hassle of verifying accounts and making people responsible for their words.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> There's a massive network of these shitheads armed for a race riot and no-one seems to want to stop them.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 5:05 PM, Steven Koteff <steviekoteff at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> Thanks a lot for this, Mark. Reading it now, and I agree with you. Very smart and sadder for it.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 24, 2015 at 2:45 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> Charlie Pierce on the Powder Keg that is the United States of America
>>>>>>>> right now http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a39987/america-race-powderkeg/
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -
>>>>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> http://davidkilroy.tumblr.com/
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> http://davidkilroy.tumblr.com/
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> http://davidkilroy.tumblr.com/
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> http://davidkilroy.tumblr.com/
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> -
>>>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>>>>> -
>>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list
>>>>> 
>>>>> -
>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>> 
>>> -
>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
>> -
>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list
> 
> -
> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
-
Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l



More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list