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View Full Version : report: Turkey attacks Kurdish bases: 120 die


Bilge_Rat
06-21-10, 09:52 AM
Turkey's military said Friday it killed as many as 120 Kurdish rebels in an air raid on rebel hideouts in northern Iraq last month and a daylong incursion by elite commandos into Iraq this week.




Hundreds of elite commandos crossed into Iraq for a daylong operation to hunt down a group of rebels who were escaping after an attack near the border town of Uludere. Kir said the commandos, who returned to their bases on the same day, killed five rebels but later intelligence reports suggested the rebel casualties, also in a co-ordinated air strike, were about 20.



according to other news report, it was more of a slaughter than a military operation, since there were apparently no casualties on the turkish side.

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2010/06/18/turkey-kurdish-rebels.html

anyone have any news on this?

strange that it is getting so little coverage in the news media.

SteamWake
06-21-10, 10:04 AM
Thats some scary stuff right there. I'll see what I can dig up.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100621/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_kurds

http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/Turkey-Troops-Kurdish-Rebels-Clash-Near-Iraq-Border-96716079.html

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/06/21/report-turkish-military-hunts-kurdish-rebels-iraqi-border-new-offensive/

Strangley enough CNN had nothing but Vandersloot or whatever his name is was all over.

OneToughHerring
06-21-10, 10:06 AM
Well Turkey is a Nato country, Nato countries have a tendency to do a lot of indiscriminate killing. Just look at the wars in Iraq & Afghanistan + Israel's killing of Palestinians.

MH
06-21-10, 10:08 AM
Nice try....

Weiss Pinguin
06-21-10, 10:24 AM
Well Turkey is a Nato country, Nato countries have a tendency to do a lot of indiscriminate killing. Just look at the wars in Iraq & Afghanistan + Israel's killing of Palestinians.
http://www.croatia.org/crown/content_images/2008/fishing_trawler.jpg

Already breaking out the fishing nets? http://i544.photobucket.com/albums/hh323/quantumpenguin/SubSim/fishing.gif

Bilge_Rat
06-21-10, 10:35 AM
Al Jazeera reports 130 killed, although the news is buried in a paragraph at the end of an article denouncing the "Kurd rebels":

On Friday, the Turkish military announced that at least 130 members of the PKK had been killed inside Turkey and in air raids on its hideouts in Iraq since violence flared in March.



http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2010/06/201062034424526682.html

of course, that is not surprising, Al Jazeera is well known for minimising reports about human rights abuse by any muslim country.

Skybird
06-21-10, 10:36 AM
Turkey's treacherous role in the Gaza incident superceded the reporting on the Turkish offensive in the Kurdish area. The operation got some mentioning in the german news, but no major coverage. 10 Turks wounded, 12 Kurds killed, they wrote, and quotes of much nationalistic propaganda and martial threats spilled out by Erdoghan.

In these days that is no headline anymore. The Kurds do not raise any interest anywhere, and to Erdoghans split-tongued poisenous tirades most people already got used by now, somehow.

turkey wants to become a regional dominant power, and sees itself taking claim of the Osman heritage. their new martial posture against the Kurds and their ongoing denial of the Armenian genocide are just two of the more obvious symptoms for that. turkey is clearly turning away from the West, Washington and Europe. If they were a EU member, they nevertheless would do so - but abusing their influence via the EU to do evben more dmage to the West. currently they are busy with reducing and finally neutralising the last bastion of kemalistic influence - the constitutional court, and the military. chances are that these last bastion will fall to the relgious, too. And then it should become obvious for even the most stupid idiot in Europe or Washington that we escaped a worst case scanerio when blocking Turkey from the EU.

We must make them leave NATO as well. they are no longer that reliable ally that - admitted! - they have been for several decades during the cold war. The new Turkey formed by the AKP is no ally, but an opponent at least. and I can imagine future mid-term scenarios when western forces will clash with Turkish forces in the ME - indirectly as well as directly and head on. As I see it, Turkey's role becomes more and more a parallel to that of Pakistan.

I wish their military would start a coup and destroy the AKP, establishing a regime by the generals again. No ideal solution for a Western nation - but Turkey is no Wetsern nation, and in the oprient, dictatorships work quite well. At least they keep the religious in check - something that democracies are not strong enough to acchieve there.

OneToughHerring
06-21-10, 10:51 AM
Al Jazeera reports 130 killed, although the news is buried in a paragraph at the end of an article denouncing the "Kurd rebels":



http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2010/06/201062034424526682.html

of course, that is not surprising, Al Jazeera is well known for minimising reports about human rights abuse by any muslim country.

Oh I didn't know Israel is in favour of the Kurds and the PKK. New information for me.

Bilge_Rat
06-21-10, 10:58 AM
Oh I didn't know Israel is in favour of the Kurds and the PKK. New information for me.

this has nothing to do with Israel. I have no interest in your crap. This is fair warning, from now on, I will report every incidence where you try to bait me. If you have nothing intelligent to add, stay out of the way.

AngusJS
06-21-10, 11:12 AM
Well Turkey is a Nato country, Nato countries have a tendency to do a lot of indiscriminate killing. Just look at the wars in Iraq & Afghanistan + Israel's killing of Palestinians.:confused:

Israel is not a NATO member.

OneToughHerring
06-21-10, 11:17 AM
:confused:

Israel is not a NATO member.

Oh yea, if you're a Nato member you have to pay the US. Israel gets money from the US.

Weiss Pinguin
06-21-10, 11:26 AM
Oh yea, if you're a Nato member you have to pay the US. Israel gets money from the US.
And that makes Israel a member of NATO how?...

AngusJS
06-21-10, 12:34 PM
Oh yea, if you're a Nato member you have to pay the US. Israel gets money from the US.The cost of NATO is shared among all member states, the US included. Member states don't pay the US.

http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/142718.pdf

page 8

OneToughHerring
06-21-10, 12:41 PM
Wouldn't make any sense for a country like Finland to pay for a Nato-conflict half way around the world, let alone send troops there. Oh wait, that's already happening with Partnership for Peace.

Why are Nato countries forced to buy weapons from the US?

Bilge_Rat
06-21-10, 12:54 PM
Next to nothing on this, most news media just quote the Turkish Army report that the 120-130 killed were "rebels", even though other articles and photos show that children were killed.

If this had been done by the U.S. in Afghanistan, you can be sure the Arab news media would be all over it.

I read "No true Glory" about the battle of Fallujah recently. During the first battle in early 04, the only reporters in town were from Al Jazeera and other arab news media who were friendly with the insurgents. They were reporting that U.S. Marines were deliberately killing civilians, which later turned out to be a total fabrication. The western news organizations who had no reporters on the ground simply reported what the arab news was reporting. The ensuing public outcry caused the Bush administration to stop the offensive.

When the offensive was restarted in nov. 04, the insurgents had recived hundred of foreign fighters as reinforcements and had heavily fortified the city. 95 U.S. servicemen died during the second offensive.

Dowly
06-21-10, 01:10 PM
http://www.rabbitteam.com/portfolio/kot_pop.gif

Jimbuna
06-21-10, 01:11 PM
this has nothing to do with Israel. I have no interest in your crap. This is fair warning, from now on, I will report every incidence where you try to bait me. If you have nothing intelligent to add, stay out of the way.

:confused:

Israel is not a NATO member.

And that makes Israel a member of NATO how?...

Simply ignore him....freeze him out...most people do.

He thrives on your answers...they spur him on.

http://img396.imageshack.us/img396/6942/popcorncowtx0.gif

XabbaRus
06-21-10, 01:14 PM
OK jimbuna knocked it on the head.

Don't feed the troll, do not post in his threads or answer any posts he makes. That simple. I do not have time to keep jumping on it every time someone reports a post by OTH because he has ticked someone off.

Weiss Pinguin
06-21-10, 03:14 PM
http://www.rabbitteam.com/portfolio/kot_pop.gif
Looks like it's time to bring out...

http://i366.photobucket.com/albums/oo109/lindsaylohann/Gifs/30s8rac.gif

Onkel Neal
06-21-10, 03:42 PM
Oh yea, if you're a Nato member you have to pay the US. Israel gets money from the US.



is there a reason why OTH is allowed to bait other members for no good reason. I am getting really fed up with this.


Ahem, there is an IGNORE function here, please use it.

OneToughHerring
06-21-10, 03:49 PM
Looks like it's time to bring out...

http://i366.photobucket.com/albums/oo109/lindsaylohann/Gifs/30s8rac.gif

Now if you were Scarlet Johansson I would forgive you. But you're not.

Sailor Steve
06-21-10, 03:50 PM
http://www.rabbitteam.com/portfolio/kot_pop.gif
That's a new one. I love it!

Sailor Steve
06-21-10, 03:54 PM
Ahem, there is an IGNORE function here, please use it.
1. I've always been willing to give OTH some slack, because I like some of his posts. And...

2. I've never, ever used the ignore button. But...

This attempt to turn a thread about Turkey and the Kurds into yet another bashing of the United States and Israel not only has nothing whatsoever to do with the topic, and seems to have no reason other than to annoy people. Since that is the very definition of trolling, I guess there's a first time for everything.

Goodbye, OTH.

Skybird
06-21-10, 04:08 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSXxB_FxLbQ

;)

antikristuseke
06-21-10, 06:39 PM
Wouldn't make any sense for a country like Finland to pay for a Nato-conflict half way around the world, let alone send troops there. Oh wait, that's already happening with Partnership for Peace.

Why are Nato countries forced to buy weapons from the US?

We are?
The **** are you on about now?

Weiss Pinguin
06-21-10, 06:46 PM
We are?
The **** are you on about now?
http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/1170/ackbars.jpg

antikristuseke
06-21-10, 06:56 PM
I know its a trap, I am bored.

TLAM Strike
06-21-10, 07:01 PM
Why are Nato countries forced to buy weapons from the US? So they will function correctly with US control systems. For example the Canadian Halifax class frigates use the US designed Mk-46 torpedo, Harpoon and Evolved Sea Sparrow missile so they are totally comparable with the US Navy's Aegis system. Aegis not only controls the weapons of an Aegis Cruiser/Destroyer it also can control the weapons of other ships in the group. So a US destroyer can take control of a Canadian frigate's weapons and guide them using its superior number of fire control radars, or the US destroyer could guide its weapons using the FCR of a Canadian frigate to boost its range. Also they use the same weapons to have a common inventory to draw from, the US stockpiles stores of arms in most Allied countries- so its nice if the local military can use the same munitions and spare parts as US forces. :know:

krashkart
06-21-10, 11:28 PM
^^ Standardization is a Good Thing. :up:

AngusJS
06-22-10, 12:43 AM
http://img535.imageshack.us/img535/5946/defence5.jpg

The Eurofighter Typhoon, made completely in Europe and capable of using US or European munitions. It's being sold to several NATO countries.

OneToughHerring
06-22-10, 01:51 AM
So they will function correctly with US control systems. For example the Canadian Halifax class frigates use the US designed Mk-46 torpedo, Harpoon and Evolved Sea Sparrow missile so they are totally comparable with the US Navy's Aegis system. Aegis not only controls the weapons of an Aegis Cruiser/Destroyer it also can control the weapons of other ships in the group. So a US destroyer can take control of a Canadian frigate's weapons and guide them using its superior number of fire control radars, or the US destroyer could guide its weapons using the FCR of a Canadian frigate to boost its range. Also they use the same weapons to have a common inventory to draw from, the US stockpiles stores of arms in most Allied countries- so its nice if the local military can use the same munitions and spare parts as US forces. :know:

Thank you TLAM Strike for that very knowledgeable and civilized answer. :salute:

Finland has the F-18's and the various repair-, training- and other systems that came with them. They were bought during the height of the 1990's recession and the purchase of the plane was done with a system of mutual trades, don't know the right English term for it. Anyway, the whole thing has been a bit of a debacle and there has been accidents etc. with the Hornets.

NeonSamurai
06-22-10, 08:12 AM
Does anyone else find the response levels to this sort of stuff disturbing? Massacre a bunch of Kurdish people, hardly anyone gives a damn. Yet if the US or Israel kills anyone.. Freak out over it (oh the humanity).

Talk about a double standard.

Tribesman
06-22-10, 08:32 AM
Does anyone else find the response levels to this sort of stuff disturbing?
I am just waiting for someone to start off with a carte blanche approach to Turkey because Turkey can do no wrong and if they could possibly be found to be doing wrong then its all acceptable really and anyone criticising Turkey for their policies and actions must just hate Turks

Yet if the US or Israel kills anyone..
Yep, if the US or Israel does it people are queing up to defend it while accusing anyone who has different views of somehow supporting terrorism.

Bilge_Rat
06-22-10, 09:17 AM
Does anyone else find the response levels to this sort of stuff disturbing? Massacre a bunch of Kurdish people, hardly anyone gives a damn. Yet if the US or Israel kills anyone.. Freak out over it (oh the humanity).

Talk about a double standard.

I agree there is evident media bias at work here. If the US had bombed a few villages over the border in Pakistan, sent in special forces and killed 120-130, including women and children, the media, especially the arab media would be all over this.

NeonSamurai
06-22-10, 10:25 AM
I am just waiting for someone to start off with a carte blanche approach to Turkey because Turkey can do no wrong and if they could possibly be found to be doing wrong then its all acceptable really and anyone criticising Turkey for their policies and actions must just hate Turks

Most people don't give Israel carte blanche. Usually just the opposite and expect things of Israel that no other country would tolerate. The US doesn't get carte blanche either (but I would say they get a lot more leeway in their actions, due to their position in the world).

Yep, if the US or Israel does it people are queing up to defend it while accusing anyone who has different views of somehow supporting terrorism.And you got a whole whack of people on the other side queuing up to scream how evil and horrible country x or y is. With both sides being total hypocrites and trying to twist things to a political stance.

In this case none of the above is going on. Nobody gives a <censored> about the Kurds. They are just another group that everyone in the region hates and has been killing them for ages.

If there is one thing I hate above all else it is hypocrisy.

Tribesman
06-22-10, 10:55 AM
Most people don't give Israel carte blanche
I never said most people did I, but there is normally no shortage of individuals who do.

And you got a whole whack of people on the other side queuing up to scream how evil and horrible country x or y is.
Indeed, then you get those who condemn the specifics from both sides and attack the justifications given.

In this case none of the above is going on.
Perhaps a view of yesterdays inside story program would be a good start as it gives a turkish view a kurdish view and a view from Britain, though of course Bilge rat won't realise that as he is rather blinkered with his dislike for that particular media outlet who apparently don't report such things.

TLAM Strike
06-22-10, 11:18 AM
http://img535.imageshack.us/img535/5946/defence5.jpg

The Eurofighter Typhoon, made completely in Europe and capable of using US or European munitions. It's being sold to several NATO countries.

Its also being sold to Saudi Arabia as well IIRC. Saudi uses a mix of US and European (mostly French and British) weapon systems.

Interestingly the sale to SA had to be approved by the US Government since the Eurofighter contains significant amounts of US technology.

Thank you TLAM Strike for that very knowledgeable and civilized answer. :salute: No problem. For a great example of NATO standardization with US Equipment read up on TADIL Systems (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactical_Digital_Information_Link). There are a bunch of different ones, Link 1, Link 4, Link 11, Link 22. They allow all forces hooked up to see each other and any targets the other units detect.

Finland has the F-18's and the various repair-, training- and other systems that came with them. They were bought during the height of the 1990's recession and the purchase of the plane was done with a system of mutual trades, don't know the right English term for it. Anyway, the whole thing has been a bit of a debacle and there has been accidents etc. with the Hornets. Well the F/A-18 Hornet hasn't been accident free in US service either.

goldorak
06-22-10, 11:49 AM
Turkey's treacherous role in the Gaza incident superceded the reporting on the Turkish offensive in the Kurdish area. The operation got some mentioning in the german news, but no major coverage. 10 Turks wounded, 12 Kurds killed, they wrote, and quotes of much nationalistic propaganda and martial threats spilled out by Erdoghan.

In these days that is no headline anymore. The Kurds do not raise any interest anywhere, and to Erdoghans split-tongued poisenous tirades most people already got used by now, somehow.

turkey wants to become a regional dominant power, and sees itself taking claim of the Osman heritage. their new martial posture against the Kurds and their ongoing denial of the Armenian genocide are just two of the more obvious symptoms for that. turkey is clearly turning away from the West, Washington and Europe. If they were a EU member, they nevertheless would do so - but abusing their influence via the EU to do evben more dmage to the West. currently they are busy with reducing and finally neutralising the last bastion of kemalistic influence - the constitutional court, and the military. chances are that these last bastion will fall to the relgious, too. And then it should become obvious for even the most stupid idiot in Europe or Washington that we escaped a worst case scanerio when blocking Turkey from the EU.

We must make them leave NATO as well. they are no longer that reliable ally that - admitted! - they have been for several decades during the cold war. The new Turkey formed by the AKP is no ally, but an opponent at least. and I can imagine future mid-term scenarios when western forces will clash with Turkish forces in the ME - indirectly as well as directly and head on. As I see it, Turkey's role becomes more and more a parallel to that of Pakistan.

I wish their military would start a coup and destroy the AKP, establishing a regime by the generals again. No ideal solution for a Western nation - but Turkey is no Wetsern nation, and in the oprient, dictatorships work quite well. At least they keep the religious in check - something that democracies are not strong enough to acchieve there.

All true Skybird except that you are forgetting one thing.
Europeans never really wanted Turkey in the union.
It was always the US pressing for this.
With all the problems we have, US ingerence in the european affairs is the last thing we need.
I say it again, for the all the stupid politicians we have, the greatest danger to a unified political and military europe has always been NATO. NATO is the beach head of the US in europe.
It has full filled its role during the cold war but now its just a leftover that does more damage than good.
We need a centralised european military force, without the americans. And NATO is an enourmous obstacle to achieving that goal.

Bilge_Rat
06-22-10, 12:41 PM
In a semi-related story which also surprisingly gets little play, Iran has shelled, bombed and invaded Iraqi territory for the past month:


ALI RASH, Iraq — This remote village high in the rugged mountains along the border with Iran has been deserted, its people having fled Iranian air and artillery bombardments with everything they could carry and whatever livestock that could be coaxed down the steep mountain trails.

Now the hundreds of Kurds who left Ali Rash and other mountain villages are living in sweltering refugee camp tents. They are at the center of questions about whether Iraq is willing or able to defend its borders with Iran — which has repeatedly breached the frontier in recent months.

The attacks on Ali Rash and at least a dozen other Kurdish villages have continued for more than a month and have included a foray by Iranian tanks one mile into Iraqi territory. But they have elicited only a tepid protest from Iraq’s government, including the release of a statement pleading with neighboring countries to honor its borders.



http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/17/world/middleeast/17border.html

of course, Iran is not attacking Iraq, but Kurdistan which may explain the tepid response from Baghdad, but it is again hard to understand why this type of story does not get a bigger play in the news media or why it has not been raised in the U.N.

not surprisingly, I could not find one word about this story on Al Jazeera's english website. :rotfl2:

Skybird
06-22-10, 03:48 PM
All true Skybird except that you are forgetting one thing.
Europeans never really wanted Turkey in the union.
It was always the US pressing for this.
With all the problems we have, US ingerence in the european affairs is the last thing we need.
I say it again, for the all the stupid politicians we have, the greatest danger to a unified political and military europe has always been NATO. NATO is the beach head of the US in europe.
It has full filled its role during the cold war but now its just a leftover that does more damage than good.
We need a centralised european military force, without the americans. And NATO is an enourmous obstacle to achieving that goal.I haven't forgotten US demands over Turkey at all - in the past I took too much flak that the Us ran a strategy of weakening the EU from within (as a potential rival on nthe world stage) by bringing turkey into the EU, and hoping to strengthen american influence on Turkey at the same time. But when turkey denied passage of US troops heading for Iraq, this should have rang some bells in Washington. maybe it did - but he consequences in thinking were to become even more determined to mistake wishes with reality: since 2003 it seems the Us demanded even louder that those stubborn Europeans should let Turkey in.

No chance, Sammy, never. Not even if Mexico would join the union, for Mexico is culturally quite close to the West, while Turkey is not.

Tribesman
06-22-10, 04:02 PM
a semi-related story which also surprisingly gets little play, Iran has shelled, bombed and invaded Iraqi territory for the past month:

Iran has been doing that for the past decade and more

but it is again hard to understand why this type of story does not get a bigger play in the news media
Because its not really news.

of course, Iran is not attacking Iraq, but Kurdistan
which doesn't really exist

or why it has not been raised in the U.N.

Who is going to raise it, the only people supporting those seperatists are those who have to pretend they are not supporting those seperatists and the people who have national and soveriegnty issues over these incidents and so might raise them have their own problems with the seperatists so they won't raise them.

not surprisingly, I could not find one word about this story on Al Jazeera's english website.
Yep the only recent PJAK article is about the executions in Iran

Schroeder
06-22-10, 04:48 PM
No chance, Sammy, never. Not even if Mexico would join the union, for Mexico is culturally quite close to the West, while Turkey is not.
I'm not so sure about that.:dead:
Let some governments be changed (and ours is pretty likely to not make it to the end of it's regular term) and Turkey will be invited again with a red carped and many apologies from our side.

The truth is just too inconvenient to admit it.

UnderseaLcpl
06-22-10, 05:22 PM
Does anyone else find the response levels to this sort of stuff disturbing? Massacre a bunch of Kurdish people, hardly anyone gives a damn. Yet if the US or Israel kills anyone.. Freak out over it (oh the humanity).

Talk about a double standard.

No kidding. One of my personal pet peeves when people bash the war in Iraq or put Germany on the stool of eternal guilt for the holocaust, while they cheerfully ignore all the holocausts since then and before then. Armenians, Russians, Russian Jews, Kurds, Shiites, half of Africa, Cambodia, China, Tibet, Vietnam, etc.... etc... nobody gives a rat's ass about them. I guess genocide is only an atrocity when there's a popular movie about it. Speaking of which, the Turks have been killing the Kurds for how long now? This is suddenly news? Must be a slow day.

I will refrain from using curse words to describe the hypocritical, self-centered, self-righteous......people that consider the invasion of Iraq to be unjust while they fall to their knees and beg forgiveness from the rest of the world for US intervention.

I do not count myself among their number. Politically, I'm more than happy to see other parts of the world tear themselves to pieces. More for US! Personally, I will and have put my own ass on the line to stop such atrocities, and I'd do it again, if they'd let me. Too bad the PMC's got nerfed, or I'd be sending in applications left and right to do my part. I guess I'll have to hold my breath for the omniscient states of the world to do something effective. Anyone got a cryo-stasis chamber I can borrow for forever?

I can literally feel my vocabulary degenerating into a veritable cornucopia of expletives as I write this, so I'll sign off with this: If you have a problem with killing for whatever reason, get your sorry ass on the line and do something about it!


I'll post something reasonable after I've calmed down.

Jimbuna
06-22-10, 05:35 PM
+10 James

Calling Mr. ITG....I think not :DL:nope:

OneToughHerring
06-22-10, 06:36 PM
Does anyone else find the response levels to this sort of stuff disturbing? Massacre a bunch of Kurdish people, hardly anyone gives a damn. Yet if the US or Israel kills anyone.. Freak out over it (oh the humanity).

Talk about a double standard.

Absolutely. Unfortunately even I can't make the US media look favourably upon the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party).

http://pontosandaristera.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/kurdistan_workers_party.gif

Long live the PKK! :)

krashkart
06-22-10, 07:38 PM
No kidding. One of my personal pet peeves when people bash the war in Iraq or put Germany on the stool of eternal guilt for the holocaust, while they cheerfully ignore all the holocausts since then and before then. Armenians, Russians, Russian Jews, Kurds, Shiites, half of Africa, Cambodia, China, Tibet, Vietnam, etc.... etc... nobody gives a rat's ass about them. I guess genocide is only an atrocity when there's a popular movie about it. Speaking of which, the Turks have been killing the Kurds for how long now? This is suddenly news? Must be a slow day.

I will refrain from using curse words to describe the hypocritical, self-centered, self-righteous......people that consider the invasion of Iraq to be unjust while they fall to their knees and beg forgiveness from the rest of the world for US intervention.

I do not count myself among their number. Politically, I'm more than happy to see other parts of the world tear themselves to pieces. More for US! Personally, I will and have put my own ass on the line to stop such atrocities, and I'd do it again, if they'd let me. Too bad the PMC's got nerfed, or I'd be sending in applications left and right to do my part. I guess I'll have to hold my breath for the omniscient states of the world to do something effective. Anyone got a cryo-stasis chamber I can borrow for forever?

I can literally feel my vocabulary degenerating into a veritable cornucopia of expletives as I write this, so I'll sign off with this: If you have a problem with killing for whatever reason, get your sorry ass on the line and do something about it!


I'll post something reasonable after I've calmed down.

I can relate to that, and I won't get into why. But, yeah. :)


Off the cuff... I may be horribly inaccurate in saying this, *but it took several Hollywood movies and an indie documentary or three to raise awareness of atrocities in Africa. That and a lot of books and other efforts that I'm not aware of. It didn't really change the odds of African villagers losing dignity, lives and/or various portions of their bodies to warrior machetes and young Kalash, but elsewhere at least some people began to research where their diamonds were coming from. All it has done is force the bad guys to switch up their fundraising efforts. *bonk*

Anyway, I don't mean to derail the thread. Tribal warfare in Africa was my main focus when I still dug into these kinds of issues.


* Pretty sure I missed something; but I'm not too picky that way.

August
06-22-10, 07:47 PM
.. nobody gives a rat's ass about them

The reason is I think because the perpetrators generally don't give a rat's ass about the accusation, indeed they might even be proud of it Do you think people like OTH would be badmouthing our country at every opportunity if our consistent response was only an unconcerned shrug of the shoulders?

UnderseaLcpl
06-22-10, 08:08 PM
The reason is I think because the perpetrators generally don't give a rat's ass about the accusation, indeed they might even be proud of it Do you think people like OTH would be badmouthing our country at every opportunity if our consistent response was only an unconcerned shrug of the shoulders?
Yeah, actually, I think they might:DL I think people like that reason that because the US has more, everyone else is getting less...or something. If it wasn't this it'd be something else, or possibly the same thing. I couldn't say, I don't understand their rationale.

OneToughHerring
06-23-10, 04:19 AM
Absolutely. Unfortunately even I can't make the US media look favourably upon the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party).

http://pontosandaristera.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/kurdistan_workers_party.gif

Long live the PKK! :)

Also, Abdullah Öcalan is still being held in a Turkish prison, there has been international pressure put on the Turkish to release him.

krashkart
06-23-10, 04:30 AM
Yeah, actually, I think they might:DL I think people like that reason that because the US has more, everyone else is getting less...or something. If it wasn't this it'd be something else, or possibly the same thing. I couldn't say, I don't understand their rationale.

The ever-widening gap between rich and poor. I remember having conversations some years ago with a guy from India. He really did not like the fact that the US eats up such a disproportionate amount of resources for its population, while at the same time he was caring for people in his country who were suffering from tuberculosis and too poor to afford proper medical treatment. This was also during one of the skirmishes with Pakistan, so he had probably some other things to be upset about, too. Anyway, I can see their point of view as much as I can (for being so far removed from their reality), and it's frustrating. How can one sit down to an enjoyable lunch with someone who resents our country for reasons that are so obvious to us? :rotfl2: