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-   -   Barack Obama defends 'just war' using drones (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=204627)

Gerald 05-24-13 03:49 AM

Barack Obama defends 'just war' using drones
 
Drones effective scout.

Quote:

President Obama says it is a "hard fact" that drone strikes have killed civilians.President Barack Obama has defended the use of drones in a "just war" of self-defence against deadly militants and a campaign that had made America safer.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-22638533

Note: 24 May 2013 Last updated at 05:53 GMT

MH 05-24-13 04:54 AM

Damn....terminator drones.
Where is John Connor when you need him.

Catfish 05-24-13 07:15 AM

Seems drone kills have recently been put on the list of international war crimes.
So Obama's speech might be a reaction to this
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-leg...-crime/5334665
and that
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_16...drone-strikes/

"Oops well you know our drone attacks killed a lot of civilians, but we will be more cautious in the future."
:doh:

mookiemookie 05-24-13 08:03 AM

Rights going down the drain. :nope: And their justification for doing it is pretty much just the honor system. "Oh don't worry, we killed these guys. Trust us, they were bad guys. Of course we can't show you any of the evidence against them, because that would be a national security breach, but trust us, they were bad guys."

The United States government definitively says it can kill its citizens if it's too inconvenient to arrest them and try them. That's the bottom line. If you think your government, no matter who is in the White House, should have that power, then you really don't care about your rights.

AVGWarhawk 05-24-13 08:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mookiemookie (Post 2061721)
The United States government definitively says it can kill its citizens if it's too inconvenient to arrest them and try them. That's the bottom line. If you think your government, no matter who is in the White House, should have that power, then you really don't care about your rights.

The way I understood POTUS is US citizen on foreign soil actively engaging in activity to harm US citizens is fair game for a drone. The citizenship renounced. Nowhere did he say it is ok to use a drone against a US citizen here in the states. This is how I understood the 60 second portion of the speech I heard.

Ducimus 05-24-13 08:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mookiemookie (Post 2061721)
Rights going down the drain. :nope: And their justification for doing it is pretty much just the honor system. "Oh don't worry, we killed these guys. Trust us, they were bad guys. Of course we can't show you any of the evidence against them, because that would be a national security breach, but trust us, they were bad guys."

The United States government definitively says it can kill its citizens if it's too inconvenient to arrest them and try them. That's the bottom line. If you think your government, no matter who is in the White House, should have that power, then you really don't care about your rights.

I would have to concur.

edit:

Quote:

Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk (Post 2061725)
The way I understood POTUS is US citizen on foreign soil actively engaging in activity to harm US citizens is fair game for a drone. The citizenship renounced. Nowhere did he say it is ok to use a drone against a US citizen here in the states. This is how I understood the 60 second portion of the speech I heard.

I can understand an active shooting situation. I can also understand if said scumbag citizen happen to be in the wrong place at the right time. As in, "oops, I guess he shouldn't have been there then huh?" However if said person is ever captured, they still have due process.

Tribesman 05-24-13 08:33 AM

Quote:

Seems drone kills have recently been put on the list of international war crimes.
No. A local court has made a local ruling.


Quote:

he United States government definitively says it can kill its citizens if it's too inconvenient to arrest them and try them.
Doesn't that make it plain extra-judicial murder. Which is exactly what other governments get condemned for doing

mookiemookie 05-24-13 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk (Post 2061725)
The way I understood POTUS is US citizen on foreign soil actively engaging in activity to harm US citizens is fair game for a drone. The citizenship renounced.

That does not count as renouncing your citizenship. There is a formal process for doing so.

AVGWarhawk 05-24-13 08:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mookiemookie (Post 2061731)
That does not count as renouncing your citizenship. There is a formal process for doing so.

Ducimus:
Quote:

I can understand an active shooting situation. I can also understand if said scumbag citizen happen to be in the wrong place at the right time. As in, "oops, I guess he shouldn't have been there then huh?" However if said person is ever captured, they still have due process.
Agreed.

Mookie:

The formal process is handled without the target present. Such is life. Drone dispatched.

GoldenRivet 05-24-13 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mookiemookie (Post 2061721)
The United States government definitively says it can kill its citizens if it's too inconvenient to arrest them and try them. That's the bottom line. If you think your government, no matter who is in the White House, should have that power, then you really don't care about your rights.

^this

I was supportive of drone strikes when it was for recon purposes, or for taking out some truck full of terrorists... but when you consider that some or all of the occupants of the truck are born in Parma Ohio, raised in Newark, New Jersey and in their adult years became militant against the US government... well it makes no difference, protected by the constitution = protected by the constitution any way you slice it.

It is unprecedented - our own government is using remote drone warfare to murder US Citizens who have been deemed unworthy of due process of law.

If it can be proven that any president, past or present authorized drone strikes against US Citizens... they should be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

AVGWarhawk 05-24-13 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GoldenRivet (Post 2061746)
^this



It is unprecedented - our own government is using remote drone warfare to murder US Citizens who have been deemed unworthy of due process of law.

The due process is handled without the said individual involved in the proceedings that are held to determine if the individual is worthy. He just did not want to come in and talk about it. :shifty: Drone dispatched.

mookiemookie 05-24-13 09:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk (Post 2061733)
The formal process is handled without the target present. Such is life. Drone dispatched.

So if the President wanted you dead, all he'd have to do is say "AVG isn't a citizen anymore. Boom. Take him out."

There seems to be a fundamental flaw there...

Skybird 05-24-13 09:40 AM

Like it or not, drones are the future, and they become increasingly omnipresent - not only in warzone, but our public sphere in our home countries, too. Media, police, everybody - try to stop it. You will fail. Heck, even for private use, toy-drones are being sold. That is a door-opener - to make them being taken for normal, and raise acceptance by that. The F-35 is most likely the last manned combat fighter build by the US. And it is not just the sky. Drones for naval operations are being build, too. And drones for landwarfare.

Militarily, drones obviously are vulnerable to one main concern: the vulnerability of the control signal link. Iran claimed to have successfully interfered with the radio signals remote-controlling one US drone, and by that triggering the automatic emergency landing protocols of that drone that enabled Iran to get it in its hand and gain access to the video memory.

What that means, is a logical step that many of you will like even less: the shifting from remote-controlled to autonomous combat drones. I do not like it, you do not like it, most people will not like it, and legislation will be made to prevent or at least limit that. But autonomous drones are the logical next step. And it will become real.

And not in just 30 years or so.

There is another concern. Drones are made of components manufactured by a variety of nations. You cannot conclude by the built drone you captured who really has send it. With more and more nations, and the technically interested public enthusiasts, organised crime and the academic international community anyway having access to cheap and unsuspicious electronic components and the knowledge how to assemble a drone (a pipe bomb, a nuclear bomb etc) thanks to the internet, not only nations can soon send a combat drone into action without allowing to be identified and thus being held responsible for it: especially organised crime, terrorists wil be doing it also.

Mr. Redline alias Mr. Buticannot has by now collected an impressive record of empty speeches that arouse emotions and are rhetorically brilliant more or less, its just that his words tend to mean nothing but hot air. And even if there will be treaties and laws (and I strictly doubt the American and any state's interest in such laws since state governments are about control and power, not freedom): is anyone really naive enough to think that that will mean anything?

soopaman2 05-24-13 10:12 AM

You lost me Obama...

We have a thing called "due process"
The right to a fair trial.
The right to not be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.

How long until they hellfire missile a pot smoker? They get more time than Pedos in some places BTW.
I defended this toolbag for as long as I been a member here, I am still a somewhat lefty, but Obama is a spineless, self serving, weasel of a man, who uses his charisma to deflect his continuation of policies that he vilified to win the 2008 elections.

Even the far left wing rag, the huffington Post, is trashing him. Hard to piss off the food stamp publication... Real hard.

Between him and that (vile expletive deleted) Eric Holder, I am sick to my stomach.

Chris Christie 2016!
(I am not paid to keep saying that, though I should be)

We need a moderate. Not a DINO like Obama, or a "legacy holder" (aka American version of a monarachy) like Bush or any of his stupid hick relatives..

Obama....*sighs*:oops:

Stealhead 05-24-13 10:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by soopaman2 (Post 2061777)
How long until they hellfire missile a pot smoker? They get more time than Pedos in some places BTW.

A dealer or grower perhaps but a person just smoking pot in most states these days they will get a summons and pay a fine not much worse than a traffic violation.It depends on the state of course in a growing number a personal amount is not even a crime.

They waste their time fighting marijuana anyway it is the number one cash crop in the Appalachians down in Tennessee and Kentucky as well as several California counties.

They would send a Hellfire at Montecillo because Thomas Jefferson grew hemp which is now illegal even though hemp has no psychotropic properties.

What makes you think that Chris Christie would be any different than any other president these days? You underestimate the power that money has over politics even presidents they all do what they are told.


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