Where do all these Anti-American pukes come from?

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AUK Registrar wrote:
> In <MYDfe.4084$Fn1.1325@trnddc03>, Mike P <res1yj7x@verizon.net> wrote:
>
>
>>Chris Hayes wrote:
>>
>>>Mike P wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Bear wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>"Mike P" wrote in
>>>>>: If you don't like being shown the fool you are don't cross post
>>>
>>>to this
>>>
>>>
>>>>>: group.
>>>>>
>>>>>I don't see where he was shown to be the fool!
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Not being able to support anything he has said, and when called on it
>>>
>>>
>>>>falls back to statements like sockpuppet or Troll. This way he
>>>
>>>doesn't
>>>
>>>
>>>>have to prove anything other than his lack of knowledge of the
>>>
>>>subject.
>>>
>>>
>>>> Then like a five year old he keeps coming back making wild claims
>>>>looking more foolish every time.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>You're a mission troller. And a liar. Get over yourself, little man.
>>>
>>
>>Lets see you prove your statement this time. If you can that is. As far
>>as little I'm a six foot tall Native Person,
>
>
> Hm. You look taller than that. Then again, I'm only 5' 10" and the sage
> smoke was in my eyes ...
>

After you all left the Pow Wow I got a bag of it to smoke/smudge the
house. Also had some good smoked Deer from the Trader behind us.

Mike
 
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In rec.games.frp.dnd Bear <bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote:
> "John" wrote
> :I think the supporters of this war are creating "straw men" now and
> : knocking them down. They're portraying an anti-war movement that
> : mostly doesn't exist -and why?
>
> Please clarify. Are you talking about people who support the war or people
> who support the troops?

I thought that was pretty clear from his message.


mcv.
 
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"mcv" wrote
: Bear <bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote:
: > "John" wrote
: > :I think the supporters of this war are creating "straw men" now and
: > : knocking them down. They're portraying an anti-war movement that
: > : mostly doesn't exist -and why?
: >
: > Please clarify. Are you talking about people who support the war or
people
: > who support the troops?
:
: I thought that was pretty clear from his message.

I didn't.

--
Bear
a/a #1422

And I know it’s my own damn fault.
 
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Concerned Citizen wrote:
> I keep seeing all these losers out here who don't support the troops
> and Bush like they should. Why do they come from? Why do these
> leeches insult the troops when they're out their fighting for their
> freedoms and protecting them from terrorists? Bush is trying to
> rebuild Iraq after liberating it and is giving them freedom and
> democracy for the first time they've ever seen. The terrorists
killing
> troops are fading fast as the Iraqi people are celebrating their
> freedom. They're basically target practice for the troops.
> Afghanistan was also liberated and is now a free democracy. The US
is
> winning the War on Terror. All because Bush had the guts to ignore
all
> you "anti-war" types.
>
> The US is the freeist country in the world. The US government gives
> and protects freedom for the rest of the world who are too cowardly
to
> protect themselves. They're parasites. They're all jealous of
> American freedom and democracy and that's why they hate us. I only
> wish Bush could run in '08 to keep the White House away from the
> DemocRATS who'd give the US over to the UN and their activist judges,
> who are of course supported by the liberal media.

You make a big noise about freedom and democracy, while at the same
time promoting stifling free speech and perverting the democratic
process. With a slap at the Judiciary and our free press, for
fascism's sake. Nice job!

jwk
 
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Douglas Berry wrote:
> On 9 May 2005 12:27:15 -0700, "Chris Hayes" <hayes12@fadmail.com>
> drained his beer, leaned back in the alt.atheism beanbag and
drunkenly
> proclaimed the following
>
> >Actually, TR wasn't in the White House in 1918. Wilson was. And
> >there's one thing Bush does have in common with Teddy Roosevelt: a
lust
> >for war. TR was a bona fide warmonger. Twain met him twice and
called
> >him nuts.
>
> Roosevelt also started the National Parks system, ensuring that
> millions of acres of natural wonders would be preserved.

Ummm, you know that was because he liked to hunt, don'tcha? (Not that
*I object.)

Teddy was a weakling as a child and spent much of his adult life trying
to prove that he was a "real man".

jwk
 
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Bear - to clarify, the leftists and anti-war people I know are being
very careful not to criticize the troops.
We know that many of them signed up for a very different kind of
military career than the one they're facing in Iraq, thanks to George
Bush's decision to plunge into the war over there, for the most part on
the basis of bad intelligence or deliberate lies.

Although I'm a lefty myself, a democratic socialist and former
pacifist, I also know that there are military critics of this war, such
as retired Marine Corps commandant Gen. Joseph Hoar, and conservative
GOP critics of the war, such as Clyde Prestowitz and Pat Buchanan, who
clearly care for the troops, and don't oppose US wars in general, But
they do believe that plunging into this particular conflict was a
deadly and destructive mistake.

When promoters of this war, which I think is mostly about support for
the oil companies and support for Sharon's government in Israel, call
opponents of the war "anti-American pukes," I think it's clear that
they're creating a straw man to knock down.

If they're at all literate and intelligent, the super war hawks on Iraq
have to know that at least part of the opposition to Bush's policies
there is coming from within the US military and diplomatic
establishment.

I think yelling about "Anti-American pukes" is therefore a deliberate
distraction, a ploy designed to squash legitimate dissent.

I'm not denying that there are some anti-Americans within the antiwar
movement; I used to participate somewhat nervously in antiwar rallies
they held in the 1960s over Vietnam.

But as the anti-imperialist American historian William Appleman
Williams has written, there's also a proud tradition in this country of
opposing "empire" on patriotic grounds, as destructive of the political
institutions and the political traditions that have made the American
Republic as great as it is.

I'm not a fan of Pat Buchanan at all, but I think he's within an old
and honorable tradition when he writes that Americans face a choice
between "republic" and "empire." And I think the advocates of "empire"
are now trying to paint the defenders of the republic as anti-American,
which is a lie.
 
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John wrote:
> Bear - to clarify, the leftists and anti-war people I know are being
> very careful not to criticize the troops.
> We know that many of them signed up for a very different kind of
> military career than the one they're facing in Iraq, thanks to George
> Bush's decision to plunge into the war over there, for the most part
on
> the basis of bad intelligence or deliberate lies.
>
> Although I'm a lefty myself, a democratic socialist and former
> pacifist, I also know that there are military critics of this war,
such
> as retired Marine Corps commandant Gen. Joseph Hoar, and conservative
> GOP critics of the war, such as Clyde Prestowitz and Pat Buchanan,
who
> clearly care for the troops, and don't oppose US wars in general,
But
> they do believe that plunging into this particular conflict was a
> deadly and destructive mistake.
>

I'd recomend Prestowitz's _Rogue_Nation_ even though I might disagree
with his other stuff. He lays out quite the convincing case that the
US is more of a rogue state than any other nation (due to American
exceptionalism) and people outside (and many inside) see the US
government as the most aggressive one on the planet. If you haven't,
you might want to check out Chalmers Johnson's _Sorrows of Empire_ and
his earlier _Blowback_, which details how US foreign policy is pretty
much now determined by the military and how a permanent war economy has
taken over in the US. You might also find Howard Zinn's classic _A
People's History of the United States_ enlightening because it shows
the dark underbelly of American history that is ommited from the lore
books (i.e. textbooks) kids read in public schools and sold as
"history." While Chomsky ain't perfect (I don't like the cult of
personality which has sprung up around him), he's right about a good
many things and his books are fairly good IMO.

> When promoters of this war, which I think is mostly about support for
> the oil companies and support for Sharon's government in Israel, call
> opponents of the war "anti-American pukes," I think it's clear that
> they're creating a straw man to knock down.
>
> If they're at all literate and intelligent, the super war hawks on
Iraq
> have to know that at least part of the opposition to Bush's policies
> there is coming from within the US military and diplomatic
> establishment.
>
> I think yelling about "Anti-American pukes" is therefore a deliberate
> distraction, a ploy designed to squash legitimate dissent.
>

Or rather, the call to war and mobilize as a mass goes to the very core
of what is not intelligent (it's more a pull at the heart with
"patriotism" being seen as a virtue than anything rational). People
say that stating the masses are stupid is "elitist." It's not so much
elitist as a statement of fact, for the larger the mass, the more
stupid the message one must give in order to get many different
individuals to go along:

"In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and
epochs, it is the rule." -Friedrich Nietzsche

As individuals, those who make up "the masses" may be intelligent.
When they act as a group pretending that a concept like "nation" is
anything other than absract, they're bound to get leaders who either
play them for fools or are stupid in and of themselves.

> I'm not denying that there are some anti-Americans within the antiwar
> movement; I used to participate somewhat nervously in antiwar rallies
> they held in the 1960s over Vietnam.
>
> But as the anti-imperialist American historian William Appleman
> Williams has written, there's also a proud tradition in this country
of
> opposing "empire" on patriotic grounds, as destructive of the
political
> institutions and the political traditions that have made the American
> Republic as great as it is.
>
> I'm not a fan of Pat Buchanan at all, but I think he's within an old
> and honorable tradition when he writes that Americans face a choice
> between "republic" and "empire." And I think the advocates of
"empire"
> are now trying to paint the defenders of the republic as
anti-American,
> which is a lie.
 
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Howard Berkowitz wrote:
> In article <6-Wdnc9p5oCHghzfRVn-qg@comcast.com>, Rock-Viper
> <rockvipe@comcastNOSPAM.net> wrote:
>
> > PLONK
>
> It would be interesting to know if you are plonking an individual or
the
> subject. If the subject, of course, you will never see this.

Who would know? He doesn't quote anything, which had me puzzled as to
what he's plonking as well.
 
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Bear writes about Vietnam: "It probably wouldn't have lasted that long
if the the country hadn't been so
divided."

Reply: The French journalist Felix Greene, in a book published when US
involvement in Southeast Asia was just beginning, noted that at one
point in their history, the Vietnamese fought a THREE -CENTURY GUERILLA
WAR to be free of Chinese occupation.

And eventually, after 300 years of resistance, the Vietnamese won the
conflict, against a gigantic and powerful neighbor that was much nearer
than the US.

Obviously no one today can tell "what might have been" 30 years ago if
things had worked differently, because they didn't work differently.

So Bear could be right that if it hadn't been for the antiwar
protesters in the streets of America, Lyndon Johnson would have somehow
succeeded in his great Asian adventure and Vietnam would be capitalist
today.

But it doesn't seem bloody likely. The implication of Felix Greene's
history is that US troops still would be fighting and dying around
Saigon today, because the VN nationalists and communists were
incredibly tough, stubborn, militarily aggressive people, with an
amazing capacity for killing and dying, who were fighting on their own
soil for what they thought of as their national independence.

The chances that they would accept a bunch of Westerners from 10,000
miles away lecturing them about how to run their own government seem
pretty slim to a lot of people. But Bear, you're entitled to your
opinion.


:
 
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PLONK
 
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In article <6-Wdnc9p5oCHghzfRVn-qg@comcast.com>, Rock-Viper
<rockvipe@comcastNOSPAM.net> wrote:

> PLONK

It would be interesting to know if you are plonking an individual or the
subject. If the subject, of course, you will never see this.
 
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Asmodeus wrote:
> "Bear" <bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote in
> news😀4CdnT7n49vbJeLfRVn-tg@comcast.com:
>
> > That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting, risking
> > our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived there
> > sheltered life back here in the states.
>
> It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.
>

So how do you explain the fact that many Vietnam vets protested the war
after coming home? There were others who saw criticism of the
government as bad because it "undermined the moral of the troops":

"Ein Land, Ein Volk, Ein Führer!"
 
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In <0sZfe.17523$dw1.4138@trnddc02>, Mike P <res1yj7x@verizon.net> wrote:

>AUK Registrar wrote:
>> In <MYDfe.4084$Fn1.1325@trnddc03>, Mike P <res1yj7x@verizon.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>>Mike P wrote:

>>>Lets see you prove your statement this time. If you can that is. As far
>>>as little I'm a six foot tall Native Person,
>>
>>
>> Hm. You look taller than that. Then again, I'm only 5' 10" and the sage
>> smoke was in my eyes ...
>>
>
>After you all left the Pow Wow I got a bag of it to smoke/smudge the
>house. Also had some good smoked Deer from the Trader behind us.

Rats! Missed that. Maybe this year if they have it again in November...
 
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Bear wrote:
> "Chris Hayes" wrote
> Asmodeus wrote:
> > "Bear" wrote
> >
> > > That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting, risking
> > > our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived there
> > > sheltered life back here in the states.
> >
> > It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.
> >
>
> : So how do you explain the fact that many Vietnam vets protested the
war
> : after coming home?
>
> Stupidity!
>

Stupidity for being outraged about the mass murder of Vietnamese who
had nothing to do with the "international communist conspiracy"?

> : There were others who saw criticism of the
> : government as bad because it "undermined the moral of the troops"
>
> It undermined the moral of the American troops and boosted the moral
of the
> enemy.
>

Given how the war had no concrete objectives and didn't make sense, how
is that a bad thing?
 
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Howard Berkowitz wrote:
> In article <1a-dnYM0cIEO9xzfRVn-vw@comcast.com>, "Bear"
> <bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote:
>
> > "John" wrote
> > : Bear, it probably did seem to you that the protesters were living
a
> > : sheltered life back in the US while you were taking all the risks
in
> > : the SE Asian jungles. I can't blame you for being angry.
> > :
> > : But do you think your Vietnamese enemies would have given up and
let
> > : the US win that conflict, the way it was going in the 1960s?
> >
> > One cannot really know, but I do know that the protesters boosted
the
> > moral
> > of the enemy because everytime ther were big headlines of
confrontations
> > back home we would pay for it.
>
> To what extent have you studied the politics of the various
Vietnamese
> factions? Remember that many considered the war simply a
continuation
> of anticolonial activity from WWII -- the Viet Minh was anti-Japanese

> before it fought the French, and Viet Minh were prominent both in the

> north and south.
>

In fact, the Viet Minh was pretty much the only political game in town
which had mass appeal. As a condition of the French's pull-out of
Vietnam (after the US payed about 80% of costs of France's colonial
war), the country was split in two (Viet Minh in the North, Pro-Western
government in the South) with elections to be held a few years later to
reunify the country. Knowing the Viet Minh would overwhelmingly win,
the government of south Vietnam refused to allow elections and the US
got pulled in more and more as "south" Vietnam's government was hated
more and more by those forced to live under it.

> Remember that under the French, there was no unified Viet Nam, or
> south/north. French Indo-China was made up of three regions that did

> not match the line of partition.
>
> >
> > : Do you really think that the North Vietnamese and the VC would
have
> > : surrendered, ever?
> >
> > They weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to
live
> > peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ
>
> With all due respect, first, while the VC was attrited even more than

> the NVA, the VC were not northerners and did not want to live there.

> There was considerable resistance to an unresponsive southern
> government, and the US was not reforming that regime. Even if the US
> killed every NVA trooper, without radical changes in the RVN
government,
> a new resistance would have arisen.
>
> In other words, the fundamental problem was Vietnamese politics, not
> major combat operations and not US politics. The US military, under
> micromanagement, was being asked to solve a nonmilitary problem.
>

Correct. The NLF in the south was the only party who was actually
giving reforms to peasants and bettering their lot. As the Pentagon
Papers put it: "South Vietnam was a creation of the United States."
IOW, the whole idea of a "south" Vietnam was pretty much a fiction held
in American minds. Vietnamese didn't see it that way.

> The North was quite willing to lose millions of men. Given the effect
of
> the long-withheld intense bombing operation, LINEBACKER II, there are

> fair arguments that a very hard bombing campaign, the 94-target list
> originally defined by the Joint Chiefs, taken at the very start,
might
> have had a much greater effect. The slow escalation and "signalling"

> grand strategy of the Johnson Administration, coupled with a basic
> military strategy of attrition against a force willing to take
losses,
> hurt far more than domestic protests.
>

That's the thing the USG was shocked about. No matter how many people
they killed, the "communists" never suffered a hit in morale. They saw
the only vehicle of change to be Ho and his group. With "free fire
zones", attacks on the ecology to induce mass starvation, and ariel
bombardment at a level never seen before, the Vietnamese never lost
their morale. Why? Because they had more to lose than the US did.

The Vietnam war was pure bullshit, from the lies at the Gulf of Tonkin
to the idea of containment as per "domino theory" (the US learned the
lesson that it's easier to destroy governments than create them which
is why after Vietnam they went to a "rollback" strategy in Afghanistan
which bled the Soviets, as the Soviets spent far more trying to
solidify their rule than the money spent supporting the guerrillas
among the Mujahedeen).

> >
> ]
> > : To some of the military men who've testified on this subject
before the
> > : US Senate, this war for Iraqi "democracy" looks like a fool's
errand.
> > : And it's not honest to accuse war critics like these of being
> > : "anti-American pukes." It's just not. They may be too
pessimistic;
> > : they may be wrong. But they've spoken out against this war
because
> > : they think it's not in the US national interest. That's
patriotism, in
> > : my book.
> >
> > I didn't accuse anybody of being a puke and I challenge you to
provide
> > evidence that I did.. And they are welcome to their opinion as long
as
> > they
> > understand that others have a right to differ with their opinion.
All I
> > am
> > saying is don't divide our country again and give the enemy
ammunition
> > that
> > will boost their moral and make it more difficult on our troops.
>
> I can get along with this, if it also goes along with responsible
> actions on the part of the National Command Authority. The
> Weinberger-Powell doctrine on getting involved in wars reflected many
of
> the lessons of Viet Nam. The national civilian leadership got the US
> involved in a situation that was not winnable by military means
alone,
> with the double whammy that the civilian leadership would not let
> military professionals pick the most effective means of operations.

It seems that Bush, just like Johnson, doesn't seem to realize that you
can't win a war through pure violence alone unless you literally crush
entire nations (like Japan and Nazi Germany). Even then, there was
still resistance (it was easier to get the Japanese to stand down
because the Emperor told them to and his word was taken as sacred writ,
but fanatical Nazis still fought for a few years after WWII). It took
the Marshall Plan (and reconstruction in Japan), the UN, and Bretton
Woods (i.e. IMF) to pretty much stabilize systems after WWII.
 
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"Chris Hayes" wrote
Asmodeus wrote:
> "Bear" wrote
>
> > That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting, risking
> > our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived there
> > sheltered life back here in the states.
>
> It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.
>

: So how do you explain the fact that many Vietnam vets protested the war
: after coming home?

Stupidity!

: There were others who saw criticism of the
: government as bad because it "undermined the moral of the troops"

It undermined the moral of the American troops and boosted the moral of the
enemy.

--
Bear
a/a #1422

And I know it’s my own damn fault.
 
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"John" wrote
: Bear writes about Vietnam: "It probably wouldn't have lasted that long
: if the the country hadn't been so
: divided."
:
: Reply: The French journalist Felix Greene, in a book published when US
: involvement in Southeast Asia was just beginning, noted that at one
: point in their history, the Vietnamese fought a THREE -CENTURY GUERILLA
: WAR to be free of Chinese occupation.
:
: And eventually, after 300 years of resistance, the Vietnamese won the
: conflict, against a gigantic and powerful neighbor that was much nearer
: than the US.
:
: Obviously no one today can tell "what might have been" 30 years ago if
: things had worked differently, because they didn't work differently.
:
: So Bear could be right that if it hadn't been for the antiwar
: protesters in the streets of America, Lyndon Johnson would have somehow
: succeeded in his great Asian adventure and Vietnam would be capitalist
: today.
:
: But it doesn't seem bloody likely. The implication of Felix Greene's
: history is that US troops still would be fighting and dying around
: Saigon today, because the VN nationalists and communists were
: incredibly tough, stubborn, militarily aggressive people, with an
: amazing capacity for killing and dying, who were fighting on their own
: soil for what they thought of as their national independence.
:
: The chances that they would accept a bunch of Westerners from 10,000
: miles away lecturing them about how to run their own government seem
: pretty slim to a lot of people. But Bear, you're entitled to your
: opinion.

As are you and the book you referred to.

--
Bear
a/a #1422

And I know it’s my own damn fault.
 
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Bear wrote:
> "Chris Hayes" wrote
> : Bear wrote:
> : > "Chris Hayes" wrote
> : > Asmodeus wrote:
> : > > "Bear" wrote
> : > >
> : > > > That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting,
risking
> : > > > our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived
there
> : > > > sheltered life back here in the states.
> : > >
> : > > It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.
> : > >
> : >
> : > : So how do you explain the fact that many Vietnam vets protested
the
> : war
> : > : after coming home?
> : >
> : > Stupidity!
> : >
> :
> : Stupidity for being outraged about the mass murder of Vietnamese
who
> : had nothing to do with the "international communist conspiracy"?
>
> Did I sasy that liar?
>

So where was the stupidity from?

> : > : There were others who saw criticism of the
> : > : government as bad because it "undermined the moral of the
troops"
> : >
> : > It undermined the moral of the American troops and boosted the
moral
> : of the
> : > enemy.
> : >
> :
> : Given how the war had no concrete objectives and didn't make sense,
how
> : is that a bad thing?
>
> You wouldn't know if I told you.
>

IOW, you can't answer. I've come to expect such from you.
 
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Bear wrote:
> "Howard Berkowitz" wrote
> : "Bear" wrote:
> :
> : > "John" wrote
> : > : Bear, it probably did seem to you that the protesters were
living a
> : > : sheltered life back in the US while you were taking all the
risks in
> : > : the SE Asian jungles. I can't blame you for being angry.
> : > :
> : > : But do you think your Vietnamese enemies would have given up
and let
> : > : the US win that conflict, the way it was going in the 1960s?
> : >
> : > One cannot really know, but I do know that the protesters boosted
the
> : > moral
> : > of the enemy because everytime ther were big headlines of
confrontations
> : > back home we would pay for it.
> :
> : To what extent have you studied the politics of the various
Vietnamese
> : factions? Remember that many considered the war simply a
continuation
> : of anticolonial activity from WWII -- the Viet Minh was
anti-Japanese
> : before it fought the French, and Viet Minh were prominent both in
the
> : north and south.
> :
> : Remember that under the French, there was no unified Viet Nam, or
> : south/north. French Indo-China was made up of three regions that
did
> : not match the line of partition.
>
> What does this have to do with what you are supposedly replying to?
>

Everything.

> : > : Do you really think that the North Vietnamese and the VC would
have
> : > : surrendered, ever?
> : >
> : > They weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to
live
> : > peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ
> :
> : With all due respect, first, while the VC was attrited even more
than
> : the NVA, the VC were not northerners and did not want to live
there.
> : There was considerable resistance to an unresponsive southern
> : government, and the US was not reforming that regime. Even if the
US
> : killed every NVA trooper, without radical changes in the RVN
government,
> : a new resistance would have arisen.
> :
> : In other words, the fundamental problem was Vietnamese politics,
not
> : major combat operations and not US politics. The US military,
under
> : micromanagement, was being asked to solve a nonmilitary problem.
> :
> : The North was quite willing to lose millions of men. Given the
effect of
> : the long-withheld intense bombing operation, LINEBACKER II, there
are
> : fair arguments that a very hard bombing campaign, the 94-target
list
> : originally defined by the Joint Chiefs, taken at the very start,
might
> : have had a much greater effect. The slow escalation and
"signalling"
> : grand strategy of the Johnson Administration, coupled with a basic
> : military strategy of attrition against a force willing to take
losses,
> : hurt far more than domestic protests.
>
> Again, they weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked
to live
> peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ
>

Hey kid: you aren't in Howard's league. His turds are more educated on
the subject of military history than you are. And I say this as a
person who disagrees with Howard on some issues, but has a degree of
respect for him.

> : > : To some of the military men who've testified on this subject
before
> the
> : > : US Senate, this war for Iraqi "democracy" looks like a fool's
errand.
> : > : And it's not honest to accuse war critics like these of being
> : > : "anti-American pukes." It's just not. They may be too
pessimistic;
> : > : they may be wrong. But they've spoken out against this war
because
> : > : they think it's not in the US national interest. That's
patriotism,
> in
> : > : my book.
> : >
> : > I didn't accuse anybody of being a puke and I challenge you to
provide
> : > evidence that I did.. And they are welcome to their opinion as
long as
> : > they
> : > understand that others have a right to differ with their opinion.
All I
> : > am
> : > saying is don't divide our country again and give the enemy
ammunition
> : > that
> : > will boost their moral and make it more difficult on our troops.
> :
> : I can get along with this, if it also goes along with responsible
> : actions on the part of the National Command Authority. The
> : Weinberger-Powell doctrine on getting involved in wars reflected
many of
> : the lessons of Viet Nam. The national civilian leadership got the
US
> : involved in a situation that was not winnable by military means
alone,
> : with the double whammy that the civilian leadership would not let
> : military professionals pick the most effective means of operations.
>
> That's all I care about. Protesters shouldn't be a spectacle that the
enemy
> can use for propaganda and a boost to their moral. People can change
things
> by writing to their representatives, voting them out of office, etc.
>

Wouldn't work without mass protest. It was because of mass protest
that the politicians changed tunes because it was impossible to ignore
public opinion that large. The Vietnam War was mostly a criminal
affair, with the highest echolons of the USG being people who should
have been brought up on war crimes trials.
 
Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd,us.military.army,talk.politics.misc,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism (More info?)

"Bear" <bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote in
news😀4CdnT7n49vbJeLfRVn-tg@comcast.com:

> That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting, risking
> our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived there
> sheltered life back here in the states.

It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.


--
"What we need is a success strategy, not an exit strategy."
--Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice
 
Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd,us.military.army,talk.politics.misc,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism (More info?)

In article <1a-dnYM0cIEO9xzfRVn-vw@comcast.com>, "Bear"
<bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote:

> "John" wrote
> : Bear, it probably did seem to you that the protesters were living a
> : sheltered life back in the US while you were taking all the risks in
> : the SE Asian jungles. I can't blame you for being angry.
> :
> : But do you think your Vietnamese enemies would have given up and let
> : the US win that conflict, the way it was going in the 1960s?
>
> One cannot really know, but I do know that the protesters boosted the
> moral
> of the enemy because everytime ther were big headlines of confrontations
> back home we would pay for it.

To what extent have you studied the politics of the various Vietnamese
factions? Remember that many considered the war simply a continuation
of anticolonial activity from WWII -- the Viet Minh was anti-Japanese
before it fought the French, and Viet Minh were prominent both in the
north and south.

Remember that under the French, there was no unified Viet Nam, or
south/north. French Indo-China was made up of three regions that did
not match the line of partition.

>
> : Do you really think that the North Vietnamese and the VC would have
> : surrendered, ever?
>
> They weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to live
> peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ

With all due respect, first, while the VC was attrited even more than
the NVA, the VC were not northerners and did not want to live there.
There was considerable resistance to an unresponsive southern
government, and the US was not reforming that regime. Even if the US
killed every NVA trooper, without radical changes in the RVN government,
a new resistance would have arisen.

In other words, the fundamental problem was Vietnamese politics, not
major combat operations and not US politics. The US military, under
micromanagement, was being asked to solve a nonmilitary problem.

The North was quite willing to lose millions of men. Given the effect of
the long-withheld intense bombing operation, LINEBACKER II, there are
fair arguments that a very hard bombing campaign, the 94-target list
originally defined by the Joint Chiefs, taken at the very start, might
have had a much greater effect. The slow escalation and "signalling"
grand strategy of the Johnson Administration, coupled with a basic
military strategy of attrition against a force willing to take losses,
hurt far more than domestic protests.

>
]
> : To some of the military men who've testified on this subject before the
> : US Senate, this war for Iraqi "democracy" looks like a fool's errand.
> : And it's not honest to accuse war critics like these of being
> : "anti-American pukes." It's just not. They may be too pessimistic;
> : they may be wrong. But they've spoken out against this war because
> : they think it's not in the US national interest. That's patriotism, in
> : my book.
>
> I didn't accuse anybody of being a puke and I challenge you to provide
> evidence that I did.. And they are welcome to their opinion as long as
> they
> understand that others have a right to differ with their opinion. All I
> am
> saying is don't divide our country again and give the enemy ammunition
> that
> will boost their moral and make it more difficult on our troops.

I can get along with this, if it also goes along with responsible
actions on the part of the National Command Authority. The
Weinberger-Powell doctrine on getting involved in wars reflected many of
the lessons of Viet Nam. The national civilian leadership got the US
involved in a situation that was not winnable by military means alone,
with the double whammy that the civilian leadership would not let
military professionals pick the most effective means of operations.
 
Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd,us.military.army,talk.politics.misc,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism (More info?)

"Chris Hayes" wrote
: Bear wrote:
: > "Chris Hayes" wrote
: > Asmodeus wrote:
: > > "Bear" wrote
: > >
: > > > That's what it seemed like us that were there fighting, risking
: > > > our lives, living like animals while the protestor lived there
: > > > sheltered life back here in the states.
: > >
: > > It seemed like it because that's exactly what it was.
: > >
: >
: > : So how do you explain the fact that many Vietnam vets protested the
: war
: > : after coming home?
: >
: > Stupidity!
: >
:
: Stupidity for being outraged about the mass murder of Vietnamese who
: had nothing to do with the "international communist conspiracy"?

Did I sasy that liar?

: > : There were others who saw criticism of the
: > : government as bad because it "undermined the moral of the troops"
: >
: > It undermined the moral of the American troops and boosted the moral
: of the
: > enemy.
: >
:
: Given how the war had no concrete objectives and didn't make sense, how
: is that a bad thing?

You wouldn't know if I told you.

--
Bear
a/a #1422

And I know it’s my own damn fault.
 
Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd,us.military.army,talk.politics.misc,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism (More info?)

"Howard Berkowitz" wrote
: "Bear" wrote:
:
: > "John" wrote
: > : Bear, it probably did seem to you that the protesters were living a
: > : sheltered life back in the US while you were taking all the risks in
: > : the SE Asian jungles. I can't blame you for being angry.
: > :
: > : But do you think your Vietnamese enemies would have given up and let
: > : the US win that conflict, the way it was going in the 1960s?
: >
: > One cannot really know, but I do know that the protesters boosted the
: > moral
: > of the enemy because everytime ther were big headlines of confrontations
: > back home we would pay for it.
:
: To what extent have you studied the politics of the various Vietnamese
: factions? Remember that many considered the war simply a continuation
: of anticolonial activity from WWII -- the Viet Minh was anti-Japanese
: before it fought the French, and Viet Minh were prominent both in the
: north and south.
:
: Remember that under the French, there was no unified Viet Nam, or
: south/north. French Indo-China was made up of three regions that did
: not match the line of partition.

What does this have to do with what you are supposedly replying to?

: > : Do you really think that the North Vietnamese and the VC would have
: > : surrendered, ever?
: >
: > They weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to live
: > peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ
:
: With all due respect, first, while the VC was attrited even more than
: the NVA, the VC were not northerners and did not want to live there.
: There was considerable resistance to an unresponsive southern
: government, and the US was not reforming that regime. Even if the US
: killed every NVA trooper, without radical changes in the RVN government,
: a new resistance would have arisen.
:
: In other words, the fundamental problem was Vietnamese politics, not
: major combat operations and not US politics. The US military, under
: micromanagement, was being asked to solve a nonmilitary problem.
:
: The North was quite willing to lose millions of men. Given the effect of
: the long-withheld intense bombing operation, LINEBACKER II, there are
: fair arguments that a very hard bombing campaign, the 94-target list
: originally defined by the Joint Chiefs, taken at the very start, might
: have had a much greater effect. The slow escalation and "signalling"
: grand strategy of the Johnson Administration, coupled with a basic
: military strategy of attrition against a force willing to take losses,
: hurt far more than domestic protests.

Again, they weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to live
peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ

: > : To some of the military men who've testified on this subject before
the
: > : US Senate, this war for Iraqi "democracy" looks like a fool's errand.
: > : And it's not honest to accuse war critics like these of being
: > : "anti-American pukes." It's just not. They may be too pessimistic;
: > : they may be wrong. But they've spoken out against this war because
: > : they think it's not in the US national interest. That's patriotism,
in
: > : my book.
: >
: > I didn't accuse anybody of being a puke and I challenge you to provide
: > evidence that I did.. And they are welcome to their opinion as long as
: > they
: > understand that others have a right to differ with their opinion. All I
: > am
: > saying is don't divide our country again and give the enemy ammunition
: > that
: > will boost their moral and make it more difficult on our troops.
:
: I can get along with this, if it also goes along with responsible
: actions on the part of the National Command Authority. The
: Weinberger-Powell doctrine on getting involved in wars reflected many of
: the lessons of Viet Nam. The national civilian leadership got the US
: involved in a situation that was not winnable by military means alone,
: with the double whammy that the civilian leadership would not let
: military professionals pick the most effective means of operations.

That's all I care about. Protesters shouldn't be a spectacle that the enemy
can use for propaganda and a boost to their moral. People can change things
by writing to their representatives, voting them out of office, etc.

--
Bear
a/a #1422

And I know it’s my own damn fault.
 
Archived from groups: rec.games.frp.dnd,us.military.army,talk.politics.misc,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism (More info?)

In article <C5ydnZAfKMuPDRzfRVn-3g@comcast.com>, "Bear"
<bigbear1wh@native.web.net> wrote:

> "Howard Berkowitz" wrote
> : "Bear" wrote:
> :
> : > "John" wrote
> : > : Bear, it probably did seem to you that the protesters were living a
> : > : sheltered life back in the US while you were taking all the risks
> : > : in
> : > : the SE Asian jungles. I can't blame you for being angry.
> : > :
> : > : But do you think your Vietnamese enemies would have given up and
> : > : let
> : > : the US win that conflict, the way it was going in the 1960s?
> : >
> : > One cannot really know, but I do know that the protesters boosted the
> : > moral
> : > of the enemy because everytime ther were big headlines of
> : > confrontations
> : > back home we would pay for it.
> :
> : To what extent have you studied the politics of the various Vietnamese
> : factions? Remember that many considered the war simply a continuation
> : of anticolonial activity from WWII -- the Viet Minh was anti-Japanese
> : before it fought the French, and Viet Minh were prominent both in the
> : north and south.
> :
> : Remember that under the French, there was no unified Viet Nam, or
> : south/north. French Indo-China was made up of three regions that did
> : not match the line of partition.
>
> What does this have to do with what you are supposedly replying to?

You spoke below of the North Vietnamese, _and_ the VC "being asked to
live peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ." They had no desire to
stay north of the DMZ. Going back to about 1954, it was rather clear
that the Lao Dong party, as well as southern sympathizers, had
unification as a basic objective.

>
> : > : Do you really think that the North Vietnamese and the VC would have
> : > : surrendered, ever?
> : >
> : > They weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to live
> : > peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ
> :
> : With all due respect, first, while the VC was attrited even more than
> : the NVA, the VC were not northerners and did not want to live there.
> : There was considerable resistance to an unresponsive southern
> : government, and the US was not reforming that regime. Even if the US
> : killed every NVA trooper, without radical changes in the RVN
> : government,
> : a new resistance would have arisen.
> :
> : In other words, the fundamental problem was Vietnamese politics, not
> : major combat operations and not US politics. The US military, under
> : micromanagement, was being asked to solve a nonmilitary problem.
> :
> : The North was quite willing to lose millions of men. Given the effect
> : of
> : the long-withheld intense bombing operation, LINEBACKER II, there are
> : fair arguments that a very hard bombing campaign, the 94-target list
> : originally defined by the Joint Chiefs, taken at the very start, might
> : have had a much greater effect. The slow escalation and "signalling"
> : grand strategy of the Johnson Administration, coupled with a basic
> : military strategy of attrition against a force willing to take losses,
> : hurt far more than domestic protests.
>
> Again, they weren't being asked to surrender. They were being asked to
> live
> peacefully and to stay north of the DMZ

Again, their policy was to unify North and South, and they considered
living peacefully and staying north of the DMZ to be against their
policy. I don't have to support it to recognize their commitment to
that objective.

There were missed opportunities. The JCS list (it's also known as the 93
target list, because while it's numbered 1 to 94, they skipped a
number), hit hard and soon, might have had a real effect. LINEBACKER II
did.

Also, the Son Tay raid fell into an odd category, much as did the
Doolittle raid on Tokyo. Neither did much damage, although it's
generally recognized the Son Tay raiders would have rescued the POWs if
they hadn't been moved.

Both, however, caused massive national security action. The Japanese
were shocked and embarrassed, moved needed air defense units back to the
Home Islands, and wound up "overreaching" trying to extend their
perimeter at Midway.

The North Vietnamese government, besides consolidating the prisoners for
security and indirectly improving their morale, was scared to death of
special operations force raids. They assigned significant numbers of
ground troops to guard hydroelectric and other power stations, their
limited manufacturing, etc. In a police state, even small enemy raids
have a tremendous psychological effect.

Of course, the 94 target list had on it targets that were never hit
(possibly in LINEBACKER II), such as the Party and Defense Ministry
headquarters. The North Vietnamese never had a spokesman on the order
of Baghdad Bob. Admittedly, the only replacement for Bob would probably
have to be Marxist -- a follower of Groucho, not Karl. 🙂

>
> : >
> : > I didn't accuse anybody of being a puke and I challenge you to
> : > provide
> : > evidence that I did..

I don't think you did, although it probably would have helped to change
the thread title.

> And they are welcome to their opinion as long
> : > as
> : > they
> : > understand that others have a right to differ with their opinion. All
> : > I
> : > am
> : > saying is don't divide our country again and give the enemy
> : > ammunition
> : > that
> : > will boost their moral and make it more difficult on our troops.
> :
> : I can get along with this, if it also goes along with responsible
> : actions on the part of the National Command Authority. The
> : Weinberger-Powell doctrine on getting involved in wars reflected many
> : of
> : the lessons of Viet Nam. The national civilian leadership got the US
> : involved in a situation that was not winnable by military means alone,
> : with the double whammy that the civilian leadership would not let
> : military professionals pick the most effective means of operations.
>
> That's all I care about. Protesters shouldn't be a spectacle that the
> enemy
> can use for propaganda and a boost to their morale. People can change
> things
> by writing to their representatives, voting them out of office, etc.

Absolute agreement. For the record, I've lived in the DC area nearly 40
years. I've seen lots of demonstrations, and I've also seen lots of
systematic lobbying/letterwriting/electoral politics. The latter is FAR
more effective than mass demonstrations.

I will say there were a few demonstrations, some before my time, that
did have an effect. They tended to be peaceful, unifying, and positive,
such as the civil rights march featuring King's "I have a dream" speech.

In fairness, demonstrations tend to have an effect in unifying those
that participate in them. The demonstrators feel better about
themselves. Personally, if I have a problem with government policy, I'm
less concerned with personal feelings than changing the policy.