A day to day acount of the whacky and wonderful world of Muggaz - i tend to be having too much fun these days, and often cannot remember moments due to debauchery - its time the internet repayed my loyalty by recording my antics.
Published on January 15, 2004 By Muggaz In Politics
I have grown up in Australia, lived here all my life... and I love my country to pieces. Nationalism and Patriotism are definitely two attitudes that i have no problems understanding whatsoever.

Arguing on the internet is rather stupid. The only time someone wins is when the other concedes or is humiliated and does not reply. The simple fact of the matter is that peoples ideals differ greatly, and there really isn't much one can do to change their own ideals if that is all they have known all of their life - the ideals one posseses should be formulated by your own programming, because if you dont program your own mind, the world will do it for you.

What i think is right and wrong, evidently differs from what other people may think is right or wrong - in the scope of things, it doesn't really matter, because at the moment, i am but a small pawn in this great chess game, and my part is yet to be played out i think...

I believe its just part of my personality to not be a passive onlooker. When people express their views, and if i do not agree with them, i tend to see red and react straight away, and i dont really think about why this person came to this belief - i.e. recently there have been many an argument in realtion to 9/11 and US foreign policy. I have been guilty of not thinking about your ideals, and why you have those ideals, and only concentrating on mine.

Just so people can see where i am coming from, i have tried to pen some of these ideals out in relation to historical events. These subjects are definitely open for debate... and i have only tried to guess your ideals (by your, i mean Right Wing...) so, i apologise profusely if i am wrong, i am just trying to write it as i see it.

My ideals - 9/11 was a terrible event, the loss of human life was tragic, however I beleive the US did not have the right to bomb Afghanistan after 9/11 - take more human life... and create a severe chain reaction and create more Osama's for our children to deal with (only they wont be financed by the CIA)

Your ideals - 9/11 was catastophic. 3000 American civilian lives is a lot more than we have killed (!) but someone in Afghanistan had a hand in 9/11, so we have to show them a lesson.

My ideals - Isreal should make more of a concerted effort to live and co-operate with the Palestinians, they were there first and the land was just taken from them because it was convenient, whilst the suicide bombers are wrong in attacking civilians, it is their only form of recognition against an Isreali army that posseses millions of $$$ in military hardware obtained at bargain basement prices

Your ideals - The Jews were there 40,000 years ago and that is their homeland, they have been persecuted for years, and we should do everything in our power to appease them. Palestine should be happy we haven't removed them completely.

My ideals - If a South American country chooses to initiate a communist form of government, it should be up to them and good luck to them - if it is bad, as history shows, the people will rise up and they will prevail.

Your ideals - Communism is evil and we should finance fascist dictators and killing squads to take out communists and their sympathisers

My Ideals - Saddam Hussein is a despicable dictator, but if the Iraqi people hate him enough, they should be able to incite their own revolution - the people will rise up and they will prevail.

Your ideals - Saddam Hussein is a despicable dictator who was useful to us in the past, but now we need some oil and a base in the middle east, so lets instill fear amongst the western world and tell them all he has weapons of mass destruction, then we can justify going to war with them

My ideals - The Vietnamase people had the right to choosing their own form of government

Your ideals - We dont like communism, and they maybe attacked us on the coast, 500,000 US soldiers lives is a small price to pay to end the domino effect... and we sure showed them (!)

My ideals - Cuba can ally with whomever they want, and have any defense they want

Your ideals - There cannot be a Nuclear missile base so close to us, as this would give someone else the aggressive stance, if a war were to start, we want to start it in the best possible position, we want to remain the antagonisers.

None of these ideals can possibly be right or wrong to either of us, because the simple fact of the matter is that what i beleive is right or wrong is often so far polarised to your beliefs, that we will continue to move around in circles and circles - until one is humilated or concedes defeat... which isn't going to happen, because no one is going to concede if they truely believe they are right.

I am rather upset that that i allready have a reputation on this site as a Hate monger. I find it disenchanting that people are so quick to assume that i hate people. I do not hate any one, in fact, i have a lot in common with you people (i LOVE lord of the rings!!) but because my ideals differ from yours, and that i am pointing out i find your attitudes disagreeable, you assume that i hate. Not once have is said that i hate American people. I am not a fanatic. I disagree with your conservative and in my opinion Uni-latteral perspective on the world... It is just my way to make my opinion known. I am no passive onlooker... but i definitely have a long way to go before i can articulate my opinions, and why i find others disagreeable.

Consider yourselves my brain food.

Comments (Page 1)
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on Jan 16, 2004
Opinions are great aren't they. Anyone can say anything about anything and hide behind the cover of "it's my opinion", but truelly have no real facts or basis for their opinion. Everyone should create their own ideals but people should base it off some sort of fact or events. The sad part is Muggaz there are many people who have the exact same way of thinking as you do. That way of thinking, that is impulsive opinions, have not helped the world yet. So lets look at it logically. The world is looking at the United and opposing the war but why are they opposing the war? Easy, it is no longer in their interests to ally with the United States. Alliances after World War 2 is what made the world what it is today. Today these countries have not helped before the war, during, or after the war. France tried to rally the world to stop the U.S. from ousting Saddam. Russia was sending night-vison goggles to Saddam. None are helping with the rebuilding. Some Americans are bitter about this, others just can explain it. Democrats think it's our fault. They blame Bush which is easy. They lack vision and theirs is an etymological problem. There is no real communication. These countries are not allies. It is just optimistic thinking to count Russia or France as allies, naivete that counts Russia as a new one. It doesn't suprise me. All countries have different interests. For half a centure sentiments against communism papered those differences, but communism is all but gone. As such nations no longer have permanent allies but permanent interests. Alliance with the U.S. is no longer an interest. These countries are content to leave the U.S. out there twisting in the wind. Most countries don't want us destroyed, they aren't crazy, but they are not hurt to see us distracted, diminished and occasionally defeated. When the existential and powerful enemy was nazism or communism, the world stood behind its American defender. But Muslim extremism is different. Its hatred is wider, but the main focus is against the U.S.A.. Its calling card is Ground Zero (WTC). and last time I checked that wasn't in Australia. These countries "allies" know that eventually they might be threatened but for now they are happy to see the U.S. fight the new enemy alone. We were attacked the U.S. will carry the fight regardless, we must. For many countries , the war on terrorism offers a free ride and a strategic bonus, which is American diminishment. France has declared before the the U.S. dominance is intolerable, many other countries believe this but don't have (pardon my French ) balls to say it. The facts are the facts we continue to fight on many fronts and its consuming us. We spend blood and money in faraway places like Baghdad while some countries like China build up their military and economic power strengthning themselves to be the superpower of the future. Europe is conforming into a continental giant and the rest of the world goes about their business while making inferences on the Americans. The neutral countries may rant poetically about Americans and their sins, but they really don't hate us truelly that is. The problem isn't that they care but its simply calculations. They do what they believe is smart for their interests. Different countries have different interests and thats the way the world turns there is no use for the U.S. to cry about it. We will go on alone if we must. It is the ideals that drive this country to do what it is that they do. Look at the Japanese after decimating them we rebuilt them into one of the strongest countries on the planet with a democratic way of doing things. The same goes for Germany. The Germans would not be what they are today if it wasn't for the Americans but alas interests are what matter not actual loyalty. How can you teach what is the right way to a people that would not understand the right way. Poverty and no education leads the people in the last few remaining communist countries into oppresion. In lamens terms the people do not know that life can be better because they are restricted from learning of a better way of living so they live out their lives blindly believing it is the right way. When given two choices you choose one or the other what if you didn't know about the other choice or thought it possible. There are two sides two everything and you are trying to understand that which is alot better than most people who only see one side of the story. I am just letting you know how the world and why the world is in reacting the way it is.
on Jan 16, 2004
Muggaz what makes you think these are ideals? Believing in a right or left or center is an ideal. Communism, Capitolism, and Socialism are all ideals.

My ideals - 9/11 was a terrible event, the loss of human life was tragic, however I beleive the US did not have the right to bomb Afghanistan after 9/11 - take more human life... and create a severe chain reaction and create more Osama's for our children to deal with (only they wont be financed by the CIA)
Your ideals - 9/11 was catastophic. 3000 American civilian lives is a lot more than we have killed (!) but someone in Afghanistan had a hand in 9/11, so we have to show them a lesson.



9/11 was not the only terrible event, there have been many many more terrorist attacks both before and after that were claimed by muslim extremists. Bali, the Phillipines, Morroco, Russia, Israel, Kashmir, etc..

Osama was not financed by the CIA. I adressed this on Brad's thread.

Poverty and oppression create terrorists.

My ideals - Isreal should make more of a concerted effort to live and co-operate with the Palestinians, they were there first and the land was just taken from them because it was convenient, whilst the suicide bombers are wrong in attacking civilians, it is their only form of recognition against an Isreali army that posseses millions of $$$ in military hardware obtained at bargain basement prices
Your ideals - The Jews were there 40,000 years ago and that is their homeland, they have been persecuted for years, and we should do everything in our power to appease them. Palestine should be happy we haven't removed them completely.


The initial plan of the German Nazis was to take all of the Jews in Germany and then Europe and just kick them off the continent. Unfortunately, even though Palistine agreed to give European Jews a home, the Germans felt it was too much time and trouble to relocate them so they started killing them instead.

The suicide bombings started as a means to force the Jews out of Palistine. Not Israel, just Jews that were living in Palistine. The Israelites were on that land way way back when, were persecuted yes, but that isn't why Israel at least has one country at its back. The concern is that if someone is not watching out for the Jews, we will witness another holocaust.

I don't think anyone wants to see Palistine kicked out of their country? The problem that is apparently keeping a peace process from being successful has to do with the settlements, and the suicide bombings. Israel has no right to claim Jewish settlements on Palistinian land should belong to Israel just because those settlements have Jews in them. If a Jew wants to live in Israel he or she will live in Israel, if a Jew wants to live in Palistine they should be able to live there, without hinderance from a muslim terrorist group that thinks muslims and Jews should not live together.

Arafat should not have sacrificed his people just to save his ass from getting blown up by the very muslim extremists that he was not only once a part of, but also continued to use to further his own agenda, and continued to fund with moneys that were intended to provide aid to the Palistineans.

The aid that Israel receives (at least from the US) is part of a much older agreement that brought an end to the war with Israel and Egypt. Egypt and Israel to this day receive the exact same amount of military and financial aid to insure the countries are on an equal footing. The reason that agreement was able to bring peace to both countries is because Egypt wasn't using muslim terrorist cells.

Jerusalem is a holy city, for both Muslims and Jews, it is also a holy city for Christians. So, what is wrong with Jerusalem being shared by both countries? Yet it was Palistine that refused that compromise during the Clinton Peace Accord.

How many Jews and Muslims alike have been killed by suicide bombings in the last two years? Why can't they just put their explosives away long enough to let the Palistineans and the Israelis negotiate their own peace accord, and then leave their countries alone?

My ideals - If a South American country chooses to initiate a communist form of government, it should be up to them and good luck to them - if it is bad, as history shows, the people will rise up and they will prevail.
Your ideals - Communism is evil and we should finance fascist dictators and killing squads to take out communists and their sympathisers


If you are talking about Chile (which I am convinced you are) you are wrong. The US didn't finance Pinochet and his killing squads. But I will provide more on this a little later because it requires a lot more space.

My Ideals - Saddam Hussein is a despicable dictator, but if the Iraqi people hate him enough, they should be able to incite their own revolution - the people will rise up and they will prevail.

Your ideals - Saddam Hussein is a despicable dictator who was useful to us in the past, but now we need some oil and a base in the middle east, so lets instill fear amongst the western world and tell them all he has weapons of mass destruction, then we can justify going to war with them


I think this might actually require another post as well, because you make an accusation but I can prove you are very very wrong. Hundreds of thousands of Iraq's people were tortured and killed for tyring to rise up against Sadam. They had been trying for quite some time. Sadam's arsenal of WMDs has never been fully known, because everytime the UN inspectors got even remotely close to a site, Iraqis were moving the contents at that site out the back door. It was being seen on camera. He had already shown his willingness to use his chemical weaponry on Iran, Iraqis (including the Kurds), and on Allied forces during the first and second gulf war. And while it is still suspected there are still more WMDs that have yet to be found, the most recent find was in a small arsenal of missles that had blister agent in them.

Oil is the weakest arguement anyone can pose, because it is reflects someone that has jumped to a conclusion rather than actually been following what has been going on in Iraq. But as I said I will put my PROOF that you are way way off base on a separate post.


My ideals - The Vietnamase people had the right to choosing their own form of government

Your ideals - We dont like communism, and they maybe attacked us on the coast, 500,000 US soldiers lives is a small price to pay to end the domino effect... and we sure showed them (!)


This is beyond rediculous. The war in Vietnam started because the Soviet Union was trying to put a Soviet dictator in power in Vietnam and Cambodia. The people of Vietnam didn't get the right to choose their own form of government, because the US lost that war. I have a letter from a while back from a Vietnamese immigrant who recently moved to the US. Its called the "HO Story", and I think it sums it up a lot better than I ever could. But my suggestion to you is to read up on the history of this region before you make an assumption about it.

The Ho Story

By Nick Schou

Why I Hate Ho Chi Minh
Thirty years after his death, nobody remains more loathed on the streets of Orange County's Little Saigon than Ho Chi Minh, the frail-looking Vietnamese nationalist who led his country through three wars of independence-against Japan, France, and ultimately the United States. When Westminster businessman Truong Van Tran tried to hang a photograph of Ho Chi Minh on the wall of his electronics store, hundreds of Vietnamese, many of whom fled their homeland for Little Saigon, showed up to protest.

"Let him die," they chanted. "Let the communist die!"

Tran responded by claiming he wasn't a communist but had read books about Ho's life and grew to respect him. "He cared about his people," Tran told the Los Angeles Times on Feb. 12. "He took care of his people."

To most of Tran's Vietnamese-American neighbors, however, Ho symbolizes the authoritarian government that descended upon South Vietnam in April 1975, sparking one of the largest mass exoduses in modern history. Among the earliest refugees to flee the conflict were urban Catholics who had worked under France's colonial administration and the subsequent South Vietnamese government.

In later years, refugees fleeing Vietnam included both former inmates of communist "re-education" camps and people who were fleeing the economic hardships wrought by the war and America's subsequent trade embargo. What all-or at least most-of these people have in common is an undying hatred for Ho, who they believe was directly responsible for starting the nightmare that led to the deaths of countless of their relatives and loved ones. As the banners that still wave outside Tran's store declare, Ho was nothing more than a "mass murderer."

But the same could be said of any of the political leaders who participated in the Vietnam War. If Ho was a murderer of many brave South Vietnamese people, so were former South Vietnamese Presidents Ngo Dinh Diem and Nguyen Cao Ky-along with former U.S. Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon. In a certain sense, all of these leaders were responsible for the deaths of more than a million Vietnamese during what amounted to two decades of unbelievably brutal conflict.

"Ho Chi Minh was the head of a government that was engaged in a continuing struggle to prevail," said Stephen Vlastos, a professor of East Asian history at the University of Iowa who taught courses on the Vietnam War at UC Irvine in the mid-1980s. "So were the various governments in South Vietnam. Both governments used violence against their enemies as part of their political strategy of survival. We tend to simplify history in terms of the personalities of various leaders. That doesn't make sense except as a tool of propaganda," he insisted.

Nonetheless, of all the personalities involved in the Vietnam War, it's difficult to imagine one more enigmatic and misunderstood than Ho. Just as the mere mention of his name still brings forth long-simmering hatred in such places as Little Saigon, Ho was despised in America even before the onset of the Vietnam War. As early as 1948, Time magazine dismissed him as "goat-bearded," a "Mongoloid Trotsky" and a "tubercular agitator who learned his trade in Moscow."

But as David Halberstam surmised in his 1971 biography of Ho, "It was that very contempt-which every peasant in Vietnam felt from every Westerner-that would make him so effective. This was Ho's great strength, the fact that he was a Vietnamese Everyman, and it was why he shunned monuments and marshal's uniforms and general's stars, for he had dealt with powerful Westerners his whole life, had surely been offered countless bribes by them, but he had chosen not to be like them, not to dress like them or live like them."

Vlastos agrees with that assessment. "There were many things about [Ho] that were broadly appealing to many Vietnamese quite apart from his politics," he says. "Unlike other communist leaders, he was extremely modest. He never developed a personality cult. He was the only major communist leader who was never interested in publishing a 'collected works' or presenting himself as an authority on all areas of knowledge. He was always focused on the immediate political objective of achieving a unified Vietnam free from foreign influence."

The quest for that objective, which Ho both personified and pursued throughout his adult life, began in 1865, when the French captured Saigon. They spent the next 25 years pacifying the countryside. The invading French surged inland, occupying modern-day Cambodia and Laos, and established the colony of French Indochina, which divided what we now know as Vietnam into three separate administrative areas-Tonkin, Annam and Cochin China-running respectively from north to south. French rule was harsh on the Vietnamese, especially on the rural peasants. Like colonial subjects elsewhere in Asia and Africa, they were pressed into gangs of forced laborers, and political dissidents were jailed or executed with hardly a blink by French officials who viewed them as subhuman "coolies."

Into this environment of racism and political and economic repression, in approximately 1890, Nguyen Tat Tanh was born, who later took the name Nguyen Ai Quoc (Nguyen "the Patriot") and ultimately Ho Chi Minh, which means "One who enlightens." Ho's father, Nguyen Sinh Huy, a well-educated Vietnamese from Tonkin, was a fierce nationalist. Amid escalating French repression, Ho's sister was sentenced to life in prison, prompting Ho to flee his country. By the 1920s, he had traveled through much of Europe and the United States, paying his way by washing dishes and waiting tables. The dishwasher was also a diplomat, unsuccessfully lobbying European leaders at the Treaty of Versailles to lend support for the nascent cause of Vietnamese independence from France.

With that failure, Ho took his crusade to Moscow, where the October 1917 revolution was still fresh in the air and where for the first time, Ho's pleas for support found open ears. Thanks in no small part to his friendly reception in the Soviet Union, Ho remained throughout his life committed to socialist economic and political doctrine.

But if Ho was a communist, he was also first and foremost a nationalist-a duality that Western policymakers could never accept and therefore refused to understand. "The whole question of whether Ho was a communist or a nationalist is a false dichotomy," explained Vlastos. "That was the essence of the confusion within America's intervention. We were unwilling to see that a communist movement in Vietnam could be anything other than an extension of international communism.

"There was never any doubt that Ho was a communist," Vlastos added. "But prior to 1954 there was always some confusion as to the character of the movement he was leading-whether it was going to be a communist-led coalition or a single-party communist state."

This question grew increasingly important during World War II, when the French deserted Vietnam, leaving it open to invasion and occupation by the Japanese. Ho spent the war in the mountainous jungles of the north with his Vietminh guerrillas, who were given weapons and training by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency's predecessor, the Office of Strategic Services. Following the Japanese surrender in 1945, Ho officially declared Vietnam's newfound independence in a Hanoi celebration that received an aerial salute by friendly U.S. warplanes. While the "Star-Spangled Banner" blared tinnily over loudspeakers, Ho read from the text of his declaration of independence, the language of which was identical to the founding document of his wartime ally.

These details would soon be forgotten. Later that year, the U.S. moved to lend diplomatic and military support to France's desire to re-colonize Vietnam. The reasons were largely Eurocentric: France's postwar government was a mess; the economy had yet to be propped up with U.S. aid; and the strongest French political organization was the communist party. Fearing that domestic turmoil would lead to a communist takeover of France-and Greece, Italy and Germany-President Harry Truman ordered U.S. warships to ferry French troops back to Vietnam; Ho and his guerrillas went back to their bases in the mountains and jungles outside Hanoi.

By 1954, the French effort to maintain their colony had all but collapsed. The U.S. considered aiding its ally, which had become bogged down at a remote outpost near the Laotian border known as Dienbienphu, by dropping a nuclear device on Vietnamese soil. Ultimately, the U.S. opted against this tactic. Within weeks, Ho's army overran the French base at Dienbienphu, and "French Indochina" entered the ashbin of history.

Victory was short-lived. U.S. diplomats -with the consent of the Soviet Union and particularly China-pressured Ho and his victorious Vietminh into accepting a division of Vietnam along a narrow strip of land known as the 17th Parallel; the country would now be two separate nations, North and South Vietnam. Facing the prospect of yet another war, Ho accepted the division, and thus was born in 1955 the Republic of South Vietnam.

Neither Ho nor Ngo Dinh Diem, a French-speaking Catholic who became South Vietnam's first president, had any illusions that the two countries would remain geographically divided for long. Both aspired to become the first leader of a united Vietnam. Each launched incursions into the other's territory in hopes of resolving the issue by force. In 1964, a year after Diem and his brother-in-law were murdered during one of South Vietnam's countless coup d'etats, one such skirmish in the waters off North Vietnam (later revealed to be a U.S. hoax) led to the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, America's decision to send U.S. troops into the conflict. America's military intervention lasted a decade, by which time well more than 1 million Vietnamese had perished. Most of them were unwilling participants conscripted by both sides and noncombatants slaughtered in the crossfire.

Some features of U.S. military strategy between 1965 and 1973 were mindboggling. One was the use of B-52 bombers to "carpet-bomb" both rural South Vietnam and industrial targets in the north. Another was the declaration of so-called "free-fire zones," areas believed to be communist strongholds and where anyone caught moving in the open was presumed an enemy and gunned down. Napalm, white phosphorous bombs and the infamous defoliant Agent Orange were dispensed throughout the war with horrifying results-the latter still producing birth defects among rural Vietnamese children.

Because of its reliance on technology, the U.S. was responsible for the lion's share of the carnage dished out in Vietnam. Nonetheless, it's a documented fact that many Vietnamese landlords perished or were forced into exile in 1950-54, the early years of Ho's socialist revolution, and many former French collaborators and other opponents were imprisoned or killed.

"Ho certainly made the Vietnamese landlord class enemies of the people," says Vlastos, "but he wasn't giving orders for people to go out and kill them. Most of the violence was carried out at a local level and was the result of long-standing social antagonisms."

Later in the war, however, Ho's forces in the south, the National Liberation Front (NLF), or Viet Cong, carried out a sustained campaign of public executions of corrupt or noncompliant local authorities in the South Vietnamese countryside. Most notably, during the 1968 Tet offensive, North Vietnamese and NLF units massacred several thousand "class traitors" in Hue, the historic capital of the Annamese dynasty.

In 1969, the U.S. military and CIA responded to the Tet offensive by launching Operation Phoenix, a campaign of terrorism, torture and execution that left tens of thousands of Vietnamese dead. Targets of Operation Phoenix included suspected NLF agents and their supporters in South Vietnam-along with anyone unlucky enough to end up on the wrong list.

By that time, Ho had reached the twilight of his life. He died in April 1969, a full six years before the realization of his lifetime goal of a united, socialist Vietnam free of Western control.

For as long as the U.S. was involved in Vietnam, Ho was depicted as little more than a tool of Moscow and Beijing. The myth of China-Vietnam axis is belied by history: China had occupied Vietnam for a millennium before the arrival of the French; just four years after North Vietnam's 1975 victory, China invaded Vietnam again. Armored columns of the Red Army rolled through the same rugged mountain passes where Ho's Vietminh guerrillas had evaded French and Japanese troops decades earlier. After a few weeks of grueling combat, Vietnam routed the invaders, ending the last attempt by an outside power to threaten Vietnam's independence.

There's added irony in the claim that Ho was a front man for foreign governments in Moscow and Beijing. While it's true that Ho's forces received military assistance from the Soviet Union and Eastern bloc countries; Soviet rail shipments to North Vietnam were routinely picked clean by quick-fingered Chinese military officials.

Furthermore, although North Vietnam clearly depended on military support from the Soviet Union for its survival, South Vietnam relied upon the physical presence of hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops-along with the use of more bombs than were dropped by all sides during World War II-for its national security.

"South Vietnam was always dependent on the West, particularly the U.S.," says Vlastos. "It was always a client state in that sense. The leaders of the government from Diem on down the line always aspired to independence. But they were never able to achieve it. The rapidity of the collapse of South Vietnam once America pulled out of the war caught everyone by surprise, including the North Vietnamese."

Indeed, when North Vietnam launched its final offensive against the south in 1974, Ho Chi Minh's lifelong colleague and friend General Vo Nguyen Giap planned for a two-year campaign. Instead, the fighting lasted a mere six months. The swiftness of South Vietnam's demise was perhaps best illustrated by the famous image of the last U.S. helicopter hovering over the abandoned American embassy just moments before a North Vietnamese tank burst through the building's front gate.

For some people-especially those who now call Little Saigon home-the fighting still hasn't ended. Sometimes the evidence is less obvious than the recent appearance of hundreds of anti-Ho protesters in Little Saigon. A copy of the Halberstam biography Ho, which was obtained from the UC Irvine library and cited in this story, bore the following pithy epitaph on its title page: "Fuck you, Ho!"

My ideals - Cuba can ally with whomever they want, and have any defense they want
Your ideals - There cannot be a Nuclear missile base so close to us, as this would give someone else the aggressive stance, if a war were to start, we want to start it in the best possible position, we want to remain the antagonisers.


Cuba can not have war heads 90 miles off the coast of Florida. Cuba may belong to Castro now, but if you go to Little Havana in Florida and ask the well over a million Cubans now living there who Cuba belongs to, they will tell you it belongs to them. But unless you had to risk your life and the lives of your children to swim or sail in your makeshift boat the 90 miles it takes to get to the US then I guess you wouldn't understand why the US has the stance on Cuba that it does.



on Jan 17, 2004
I think your post and the substantial reply by damouse70 illustrates well the difference of ideals. It all has to do with the'paradigm' of the individual which is shaped by the totality of the life experience. Our individuality is a gift from our God. I speak of my peole in terms only I feel and believe, and make it clear in my writings and words. I am ME not YOU, so have only the right to speak as my spirit leads me. I qualify my response as a Lahkota and Yakama Aboriginal as being MY view, not my People's. They do the same for me, as we understand each is on his own path and experiences Spirit as Spirit chooses not as he chooses.

This same ancient pre-historic understanding of the nature of things allows us to equally respect the deer and pray over him and thank him for giving us his power of life for us, rather than count the points and 'score' him in his time of Holy transition. By maintaining our deepest and most valuable identity and sense of self, we are surviving in the NWO. We know who we are and what is important to us as a People, and hold these values sacred. Long after this Empire collapses under the rebellion of those it seeks to manipulate, we will still be here and still have love and respect for all Peoples who come to our land for sanctuary from their prison-life in the NWO.

Indeed a study of the age of Colonialism in America up to 1800 shows that among the most severe problems the British Lords had was the number of slaves - termed 'indentured servants' if European in origin for some reason - of their system escaping to take up with Natives due to our most ancient and stable form of Government which respected their individual rights. When put to their comparison, these people were observed as having a Government over 500 years old and still stable in some areas such as the North East as the Hau-de-no-sau-nee had. There were no prisons or police, debts or sins to forgive. A good day was getting up communing with family, clan, and nature, eating (I dare say catch a buzz) and crashing next to the fire. It still exists, and I heard the recent Chief say he wouldn't be a Chief if he couldn't sit on anyones porch and drink a soda or beer as he talked with them. I hope you keep such wisdom in mind when considering our Cousins in Aboriginal Australia.

Have no regard for the one or two-sentence displays of mindless followers. Remember to trust your truth and know it has its own power, not needing you to feel popular be validated. Galileo, Jesus, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the manly-men who built a Nation of the climes of Australia from nothing were all outcast and unpopular with the powers that were (note I said WERE).

I am a strong advocate to the feminists that they neglect their own to not acknowledge the intense and consice philosophy of Ayn Rand in the 20th Century - the creator of 'Objectivism' - as maybe the only GREAT philosopher that age produced. I had the privilege of watching her at the Felt Forum in Chicago shortly before her passing while guesting the Phil Donohue Show. At the end of the hour she had some 17,000 women and "L' word people screaming for her to shut up! as she sat in the middle on the platform and laughed, a clear Majority of one. Today, I still speak of her truths, and cannot recall the name of anyone else present in that room except Phil. Take heart my friend, not all Americans dis-agree with you. If we do, so what? It will all come out in the rinse and the truth is not mocked.

Blog On.
on Jan 17, 2004

People are entitled to their own opinions, even when those opinions are put in the form of an "ideal".

They are not, however, entitled to their own facts.

Muggaz, I think you should make sure to save these posts you make and then in several years go back and read them. The main problem I have with your posts is that you have a superficial understanding of events. Most of your "ideals" are charactertures and over simplification of the issues.

The Vietnam one is particularly appalling in its lack of knowlege of the facts.  The Bin Laden being supplied by the CIA is another such statement (the US helped Afghanistan against an aggressive invasion from the Soviet Union, are you actually arguing that this was somehow bad? That certain "bad people" like Osama Bin Laden may have benefited indirectly from this doesn't make it our fault anymore than we can blame the government for criminals in the United States because they attended public schools at one time).  Nearly every "ideal" you have listed is like that though.

What I find amazing is that anyone from Australia would have such double-standards (how those Tasmanians doing? Oh yea, they're all dead due to an Australian progrom in the late 1800s).

Your second problem is less severe than the issue of simply not knowing the subject matter you post about.  Your second problem is that you essentially just complain about what others do without offering an alternative.  For example, you state that the US did not have the (ahem) "right" to bomb Afghanistan.  So what would you have prposed the US do to take care of Al Queda which was based in Afghanistan and protected by the government of Afghanistan (Taliban)? Remember, the US tried to negotiate with the Taliban to turn over Osama Bin Laden and his cronies and they refused. So what would your next move have been?

If someone wants to come on and argue that the moon is made of green cheese they have that right. But that doesn't make the person who says it is not made of green cheese merely someone of a differing opinon or "ideal".

on Jan 18, 2004
I knew this would come up...

The Vietnam one is particularly appalling in its lack of knowlege of the facts. The Bin Laden being supplied by the CIA is another such statement (the US helped Afghanistan against an aggressive invasion from the Soviet Union, are you actually arguing that this was somehow bad?

My argument has and will be all along that the US should stay out of other peoples business... I am certainly saying it was not right of the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan either...

Please also tell me how my Vietnam comment is appalling? i think it comes down to what i know, and what you want to believe - Your nationalism and patriotism is blinding the truth. Please correct me if over 500,000 US soldiers weren't wounded or injured? Please correct me if i am wrong that one of the reasons for going into Vietnam was the well documented domino effect prevention? Please correct me if i am wrong that war was declared on the basis that it could have 'possibly' been NVA that attacked an American destroyer on the coast? Please correct me if i am wrong that Vietnam is still a communist country today?

What i find amazing is that you have put words into my mouth... have i once applauded my government for what they did in Tasmania, or even mentioned it??? that sounds like a come back from an 8 year old child trying to get a reaction... Of course i disagree with what happened in Tasmania... and if you really care, i can go through a whole list of negatives to do with our government at the moment, but this isn't about the Australian government - its about the US.

You are most definitley correct in saying that the US are the most 'benevolent' of the world leaders in all of History, and i do not argue that point.. but they dont really have any great company as far as world superpowers go...

"Remember, the US tried to negotiate with the Taliban to turn over Osama Bin Laden and his cronies and they refused. So what would your next move have been?"

Ok then Brad... where has bombing Afghanistan got you in your search for Osama bin Laden??? I am almost positive that if you didn't bomb Afghanistan on this particular occasion, there definitely would have been some helpful intelligence... maybe thats naive of me to resort to other measures other than brute force... what kind of negotiation is that anyway? 'hand over bin laden, or we bomb you!'

You have definitley made it clear that i should perhaps just observe from the sidelines for the time being... You have your views, and while i dont agree with some of them, i still respect you as a person... well, a little person because of that Tasmanian comment... but a person none the less. All i ask is that instead of making a blatant attempt to shoot mine or any left wing argument down with excuses, please recognise that we aren't blithering idiots just because of our political stance, and we, like you - have come to our beliefs for a reason.

on Jan 18, 2004

Please also tell me how my Vietnam comment is appalling? i think it comes down to what i know, and what you want to believe - Your nationalism and patriotism is blinding the truth. Please correct me if over 500,000 US soldiers weren't wounded or injured? Please correct me if i am wrong that one of the reasons for going into Vietnam was the well documented domino effect prevention? Please correct me if i am wrong that war was declared on the basis that it could have 'possibly' been NVA that attacked an American destroyer on the coast? Please correct me if i am wrong that Vietnam is still a communist country today?

It's appalling because you have no idea what you're talking about. Where do we even start? How about the fact that the Vietnam people didn't want to "choose" a communist country anymore than Cuba wanted a communist government. The United States was defending South Vietnam. Not trying to conquer North Vietnam.

Secondly, about 50,000 -- not half a million, Americans died.

Do you even know (or care) how the end came for South Vietnam? Did the people of South Vietnam choose communism? No. After the United States left, North Vietnam conquered the south with ruthless military force killing somewhere between 300,000 to 1.5 million South Vietnese in the process and leading to one of the largest mass exoduses in human history as people tried to escape south vietnam for their lives.

Not that people like you care. Your hatred of America just blinds you to the real world results of American failure. The US pulled out of South Vietnam meant we stopped defending South Vietnam. And North Vietnam then violated its agreements and brutally conquered its neighbor to "unite" the country. 

It's people like you who would argue that the US had no business in liberating Europe. Maybe continental Europe wanted to be controlled by the Nazi's.  Please explain the difference between Nazi Germany conquering say Poland and North Vietnam conquering the south.

that's why your comments are appalling. Not only do you have no idea how many Americans were killed in it but you have only the faintest idea what the whole thing was about.  If the US wanted to conquer North Vietnam it could have done so quickly. It didn't. It just wanted North Vietnam to quit attacking the South.

The Domino theory you allude to was nothing sinister. It was based on history - once Hitler took Austria it then took Czech and then conquered Poland and then the low countries and then France and so on. The domino theory believed that history would repeat itself here. If North Vietnam with their Soviet backing were allowed to conquer the south they would then go on and take over other countries in the region and murder millions in the process.

Which, incidentally, is exactly what happened. Not that you left-wingers seem to care. You only focus on hoping america fails.  So after North Vietnam conquered the south and killed tousands if not millions of people there in the process, neighbor Cambodia went Communist too and murder 1.7 MILLION Cambodians.

So you tell me, which would have been a better outcome? South Vietnam keeping its freedom and Cambodia deciding for themselves what they wnat to do or what actually happened with the millions dead.

And you wonder why I think you should stand on the side-lines and educate yourself first?

on Jan 19, 2004
Admited - factual error...only (!) 50,000 Americans died... still too many as far as i am concerned. Still.. over 500,000 were wounded... thats why i got my numbers mixed up... sorry!

'After the United States left, North Vietnam conquered the south with ruthless military force killing somewhere between 300,000 to 1.5 million South Vietnese in the process and leading to one of the largest mass exoduses in human history as people tried to escape south vietnam for their lives'

Dude... i know this... It just happens that i work right in the middle of the most predominent Vietnamese community in Melbourne...

Sorry Mr Booky Boy... but i have spoken to these people who did leave... and yes, they left because their country was in a rather bad way and they were being slaughtered... sorry for using a hypothetical, but if i was NVA, i would be rather mad at the South for bringing in Americans who killed non-discriminately because of the chance any male was in the NVA... which is what the southern (!) vietnamese people have TOLD me... i suppose it is conveniently left out of most of the literature you entertain. Before you attempt to label that as a justification.. it isn't...

'Not that you left-wingers seem to care. You only focus on hoping america fails'

You have a great problem. I dunno, I am going to use the blinded by patriotism argument again, and say that it is us left wingers who care a damn site more than you or your conservatives. We want the killing to stop. We want a good future for our children. Right wingers are eliminating any chance of a secure future for our children... in spite of their professions that they are creating a secure world without terrorists. I am sorry, but i find that idea laughable.

'It's people like you who would argue that the US had no business in liberating Europe. Maybe continental Europe wanted to be controlled by the Nazi's. Please explain the difference between Nazi Germany conquering say Poland and North Vietnam conquering the south'

Want to know the dif. between Nazis and NVA? the NVA had no desire for world domination.. they just wanted to unite a country that was seperated by imperial powers. That may be a little over simplified, but it really is as black and white as that. Now please try and tell me that the south weren't interested in unifying. The NVA also weren't interested in 'ethnic cleansing' what a handy fact you decided to ommit.

If anything, i argue that the ever righteous should have liberated Europe a lot sooner... but it wasn't until their own interests were under threat that they considered re-opening the eastern front.

The domino theory was nothing but a 'theory' yes... it probably would have happened... but i dont beleive it is a cause to go to war. you do. thats where we are different.

'If North Vietnam with their Soviet backing were allowed to conquer the south they would then go on and take over other countries in the region and murder millions in the process'

That is a well founded generalisation/assumption - but an assumption none the less. By the same token, i would assume that a lot of Asian nations would have been angry at the Russians, and they would have found themselves having problems in Asia that would have caused problems sustaining their forces in M.E and eastern Europe... man that is a stupid assumption if ever i saw one... lesson here... dont assume.

You can choose to reply, or just leave it alone... as i have said, from now on i am happy to observe, i will continue to rebutt any direct arguments though.

For an uneducated fool... i am rather happy with myself right now.
on Jan 19, 2004

Sorry Mr Booky Boy... but i have spoken to these people who did leave... and yes, they left because their country was in a rather bad way and they were being slaughtered... sorry for using a hypothetical, but if i was NVA, i would be rather mad at the South for bringing in Americans who killed non-discriminately because of the chance any male was in the NVA... which is what the southern (!) vietnamese people have TOLD me... i suppose it is conveniently left out of most of the literature you entertain. Before you attempt to label that as a justification.. it isn't...

. I see, so you take it as fact that the US just slaughtered all males in Vietnam (which is amazing since the South Vietnamese army was pretty big and full of males) to justify the undeniable fact that the north came down and slaughtered millions of people which caused survivors to flee to where you could talk to them.

If you could just get over your narrow mindedness you would see what is in front of you: Those people had to flee their homeland because the United States left Vietnam.  The rest of your statements are just sophistry.

Want to know the dif. between Nazis and NVA? the NVA had no desire for world domination.. they just wanted to unite a country that was seperated by imperial powers. That may be a little over simplified, but it really is as black and white as that. Now please try and tell me that the south weren't interested in unifying. The NVA also weren't interested in 'ethnic cleansing' what a handy fact you decided to ommit.

Spoken like the perfect indoctrinated drone. So please explain what happened to Cambodia then. You do know about Cambodia right? An Laos?

Do you even know what the goal of Marxist/Leninism was? The spread of communism through violence.  These weren't peace protesters here, these were people who conquered another sovereign state.

But let me fill you in a bit about World War II since you apparently aren't very familiar with it.  Germany's argument was the same as yours: They just wanted to reunite Germany as it was supposed to be. So first they took over Austria because it was a Germanic state. Then they demanded part of Czech because there were Germans there. Then they wanted the Polish cooridor returned and that was their excuse for invading Poland.

In other words, the difference between Nazi Germany and Communist North Vietnam were remarkably similar. And once they conquered the south, they then set their designs on their neighbors.

Communism isn't just another form of government. I've never understood why you leftists recognize Nazism as being horrible and evil while giving communism a free pass.  Communism exterminated more innocent people, by far, than Nazism.  But yea, maybe the US should have just minded its own business in Europe too. Heck, maybe the US should have kept its nose out of Asia back in 1940 and let Australia deal with the Japanese on their own. 

After all, the Japanese wanted to create the greater east asia co-prosperity sphere. Isn't that nice? And we evil Americans stopped them.

The wanting to "unite" has been used as an excuse for centuries for conquest.

You have a great problem. I dunno, I am going to use the blinded by patriotism argument again, and say that it is us left wingers who care a damn site more than you or your conservatives. We want the killing to stop. We want a good future for our children. Right wingers are eliminating any chance of a secure future for our children... in spite of their professions that they are creating a secure world without terrorists. I am sorry, but i find that idea laughable.

You want the killing to stop? Since when? You only seem interested in stopping US action. Action that generally results in saving millions of lives over the long run. During the gold war, people like you protested everything the US did even while Communism was exterminating millions of its own citizens in extermination camps. People like you thought Ronald Reagan was a monster even as his policies helped end communism and free millions of people.

It has been people with belief such as mine that have actually put a stop to killing by dealing with the world in a rational manner.  Because people like you convinced the US government to abandon Vietnam, millions of Vietnamese died in the aftermath. Millions of people in Cambodia were then exterminated as well. Where were the protests then? Where were the protests to stop Pol Pot? People like you carry signs calling our President "Hitler" while real-live evil fascists actually do horrible things.  Oh no, the US might put an end to Saddam's reign of terror and 10,000 civilians may die in the process so the US has to be "stopped" but you'll turn a blind eye to someone like Saddam who has murdered hundreds of thousands of his own people, often in cruel and gruesome ways.

'If North Vietnam with their Soviet backing were allowed to conquer the south they would then go on and take over other countries in the region and murder millions in the process'

That is a well founded generalisation/assumption - but an assumption none the less. By the same token, i would assume that a lot of Asian nations would have been angry at the Russians, and they would have found themselves having problems in Asia that would have caused problems sustaining their forces in M.E and eastern Europe... man that is a stupid assumption if ever i saw one... lesson here... dont assume.

Good god, are you really this dense? The domino theory was proven correcty by what actually happened. Hello? US leaves South Vietnam and millions are murdered by North Vietnam. Communists take over in Cambodia and millions more die. Which part of this "generalization" do you not get? It isn't a theory, it actually happened.  What's next? Holocaust denial?

It's all part of the same pathology. For some reason, leftists know exactly how many died in the holocaust (12 million btw) but have no clue how many millions died due to Communish (1.7 million in Cambodia alone). And because they're so blinded by their anti-US position, they can't recognize that it wasn't really the US who lost in Vietnam. It was the people of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and elsewhere who lost -- their lives, their homes, their families.  Though somehow I'm sure you'll find some twisted way to make even that our fault. BTW, China murdered millions of its own people during the same time. Was that our fault too? Seriously, given that we live in an age where people like you blame the weather on the United States it's hard to tell where you draw the line on assigning blame.

For an uneducated fool... i am rather happy with myself right now.

Well, that's what they say, ignorance is bliss.

on Jan 19, 2004
I just read a few points of your reply.. you are really quite bias as you are an American, and you will never understand, as i am bias because i am not American, and evidently... i will never understand... however...

'Do you even know what the goal of Marxist/Leninism was? The spread of communism through violence'

Classic example of your finger pointing. It was the spread of communism through revolution... yes, Violence certainly did occur, but by no means is it the definition.

Just because i am a lefty you assume i am ok with Communism and extreme methods of governance... i know all about the Slavs Stalin killed, and about the 1.7mill in Cambodia... it doesn't make it right... but once again, they are not who is 'policing' the world today, and they are not involving themselves issues that make me fear for the future of the next generation...

Dont think for one second we dont appreciate the US help we received in WWII. THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU.

I think if you spoke to Ho and Hitler separately, their ideas would be very different... Ho had no intention of governing Cambodia or Laos... he just wanted the communism ideal to spread. I am actually laughing right now that you can even fathom comparing the NVA to Nazi Germany... I know that the reason to Unite has bee cited as the cause for many a war... the NVAs was definitely justified though... it all comes down to what YOU beleive... obviously, you beleive Germany were justified? or the NVA weren't.

'Oh no, the US might put an end to Saddam's reign of terror and 10,000 civilians may die in the process so the US has to be "stopped" but you'll turn a blind eye to someone like Saddam who has murdered hundreds of thousands of his own people, often in cruel and gruesome ways'

Why didn't they do it earlier? did the gruesome torture and killing only just start or something?

because it didn't serve their best interests...

Look, i can see i am touching on a nervy subject for you or something, because normally someone wouldn't even bother replying to someone this 'dense'

Just get over my views or something... because you still haven't proved me wrong... you have just insinuated a hell of a lot and brought up assumptions and hypotheticals.

name calling wont get you anywhere.

just build a bridge.. and get back to whatever it is you do.

on Jan 19, 2004

Classic example of your finger pointing. It was the spread of communism through revolution... yes, Violence certainly did occur, but by no means is it the definition.

Huh? Do you know of a single case where communism was chosen by the people? Just one case in history will suffice.  In every case, communism was the result of a violent overthrow or foreign invasion. When the people are given a choice, as they finally got in the early 90s, they chose democracy.

'Oh no, the US might put an end to Saddam's reign of terror and 10,000 civilians may die in the process so the US has to be "stopped" but you'll turn a blind eye to someone like Saddam who has murdered hundreds of thousands of his own people, often in cruel and gruesome ways'

Why didn't they do it earlier? did the gruesome torture and killing only just start or something?

Is this what counts as a rebuttal in your world? So now the US is bad for not doing it earlier? Classic case of damned if you do, damned if you don't.

I think if you spoke to Ho and Hitler separately, their ideas would be very different... Ho had no intention of governing Cambodia or Laos... he just wanted the communism ideal to spread. I am actually laughing right now that you can even fathom comparing the NVA to Nazi Germany... I know that the reason to Unite has bee cited as the cause for many a war... the NVAs was definitely justified though... it all comes down to what YOU beleive... obviously, you beleive Germany were justified? or the NVA weren't.

I didn't compare Ho to Hitler. I compared the situations in general together.  But yes, you touch on an important difference in our world views - peole like you obsess over intentions. People like me worry about results. It doesn't matter if Ho wouldn't have approved of the extermiantion of millions of people violently (btw, Ho was actually quite ruthless), the bottom line is that the US leaving the area resulted millions of deaths.

Now, people like you would be the ones having demanded the US leave Vietnam in the first place while people like me would have argued that we need to ensure the safety of the people there because it's the right thing to do. But hey, how would people like me know that millions would be murdered if the north won? Because that's what always happens when the communists take over.  Stalin murdered millions of people in his "purges". Same thing happened in China. Cuba has the most prisoners per capita in the western hemisphere. So how did we know that millions would die in south-east Asia if the US withdrew its protection? Because people like us know history while protesters like you don't.

Just get over my views or something... because you still haven't proved me wrong... you have just insinuated a hell of a lot and brought up assumptions and hypotheticals.

Oh I'm pretty comfortable that any sane person reading this exchange will conclude that you're out to lunch on these issues. If anything, perhaps next time you want to spread your opinions on historical topics you will actually try...you know...reading about history or something.

name calling wont get you anywhere.

This from the guy who called me an "8 year old" and "little person" just a few responses earlier. .

just build a bridge.. and get back to whatever it is you do.

Trust me, this doesn't take much time away from making millions of dollars annually. It's more of a sport.

on Jan 20, 2004
where does the title of this thread come into play?

I saw a little idealism and mostly blibberyt blobber. Ideals in themselves are simple. Life and reality is complex. these two clash. by talking about his ideals and refuting them with facts is useless. Ideals are met with different ideals. So I shall state my ideals and why I disagree with Muggaz:

My ideals - 9/11 was a terrible event, the loss of human life was tragic, however I beleive the US did not have the right to bomb Afghanistan after 9/11 - take more human life... and create a severe chain reaction and create more Osama's for our children to deal with (only they wont be financed by the CIA)



I agree with it being tragic. I agree with the reaction of the united states. as being that you don't live here you would never have seen the difference in people that 9/11 made. If the US didn't do something and do it fast not only would it be giving a weak face to inspire other terrorist attacks it also would kill the national moral. If our national moral went down most likely, the economy would slump, riots, and other civil disturbances would rise. Thus maybe the fall of the US. If the US fell would would take its place?

My ideals - Isreal should make more of a concerted effort to live and co-operate with the Palestinians, they were there first and the land was just taken from them because it was convenient, whilst the suicide bombers are wrong in attacking civilians, it is their only form of recognition against an Isreali army that posseses millions of $$$ in military hardware obtained at bargain basement prices


cutting through the history we get to Israel is a country right now. Israel has the means to defend itself. Does that make the problems in the middle east their fault. No. They defend themselves against attackers. Israel does not mean to kill civilians while the suicide bombers do. Trying to justify the suicide bombers actions by saying it is their only form of recognition is wrong. Justification needs more reason then that. Especially since it wasn't their only way. If the middle east palestinians formed an alliance and started acting as one body instead numerous terrorist cells much more positive results would come from that region.

My ideals - If a South American country chooses to initiate a communist form of government, it should be up to them and good luck to them - if it is bad, as history shows, the people will rise up and they will prevail.


This statement is incorrect. people cannot always rise up and prevail. Have you ever seen the movie 1984. once the government has a mighty grip on its citizens they have no resonable means to rise up against it. This is when another party has to come into play. History has proven that national-communism in order for it to function must have an iron grip over its citizens. The ideals of Communism are sound the means and application are entirely faulty.

My Ideals - Saddam Hussein is a despicable dictator, but if the Iraqi people hate him enough, they should be able to incite their own revolution - the people will rise up and they will prevail.


see the above comment. Your people can rise theory is off.

My ideals - The Vietnamase people had the right to choosing their own form of government


did you choose your form of government? what would it be? would you trust your peers to choose?

Lets stick with the tried and true republic.


My ideals - Cuba can ally with whomever they want, and have any defense they want


You live in australia right. say there is a small Island nation in say the approxiamate location as tazmania. Lets say it has a dictator so the people don't have a choice about what the government does. Would you like that small poor country to have nuclear weapons? Wouldn't a better purpose for the money be towards the people. The embargo against Cuba hurts its inhabitants, but not so nearly as much as Castro. Castro is rich. His people are poor. He has mislead them. He has mishandled them. Why would the United States allow such a man to have nuclear weapons. Right now if cuba gets them they are directly in his hands.



I wish I made millions annually.......

on Jan 20, 2004
Why dont you ever defend arguments instead of making me write back over and over again...

You said communism was violence by definition i said it was revolution... yes - the whole idea of a revolution is change. In all of these circumstances, change wasn't so welcome by those in power, thus the people and the representatives were forced to use violence. Muggas 1 Rich Internet dude 0

'Is this what counts as a rebuttal in your world? So now the US is bad for not doing it earlier? Classic case of damned if you do, damned if you don't.'

Yes, that sure as pie is a rebuttal in my world... you were using Saddams ruthlessness and torture as your reasons for his overthrow... if those were the reasons, why didn't they go sooner? Muggas 2 - Rich Internet dude 0

'I didn't compare Ho to Hitler. I compared the situations in general together. But yes, you touch on an important difference in our world views - peole like you obsess over intentions. People like me worry about results. It doesn't matter if Ho wouldn't have approved of the extermiantion of millions of people violently (btw, Ho was actually quite ruthless), the bottom line is that the US leaving the area resulted millions of deaths.
Now, people like you would be the ones having demanded the US leave Vietnam in the first place while people like me would have argued that we need to ensure the safety of the people there because it's the right thing to do. But hey, how would people like me know that millions would be murdered if the north won? Because that's what always happens when the communists take over. Stalin murdered millions of people in his "purges". Same thing happened in China. Cuba has the most prisoners per capita in the western hemisphere. So how did we know that millions would die in south-east Asia if the US withdrew its protection? Because people like us know history while protesters like you don't.'

It does matter that Ho wouldn't have approved the extermination of millions violently - because you were comparing NVA directly to the Nazis. And you continue with the insinuations... people like you blah blah blah. Muggas 3 - Rich Internet dude 0

'Oh I'm pretty comfortable that any sane person reading this exchange will conclude that you're out to lunch on these issues'

See... the name calling again... its not just me though, its a whole bunch of readers? Any leftie will concur with me... i think you will find in general, my ideas are along the same path... so in essence, you are calling anyone from the left insane! because while they may not agree with me, I sure dont think they agree with you, but you get a point for trying. Muggas 4 - Rich Internet dude 1

'This from the guy who called me an "8 year old" and "little person" just a few responses earlier'

Name calling didn't get me anywhere... no, but i never called you an 8 year old, or a little child, i merely said your retorts reminded me of such youngsters and i respect you as one... not that you ARE one... n00b Muggas 5 - Rich Internet dude 1

'Trust me, this doesn't take much time away from making millions of dollars annually. It's more of a sport'

Well, keep at that sport tiger... doing a great job. End score - Muggas 5 - Rich Internet dude 1

Peace Out.


on Jan 20, 2004
I find it amusing that in the "my ideals / your ideals" section, you find a way to display your ideals in the most favorable way while portraying others ideals in a very negative way. Then in the next breath, you say none of these ideals can be right or wrong. Very interesting.

VES
on Jan 20, 2004
Another irony....

Arguing on the internet is rather stupid.


Do you believe this? And if so, why are you arguing on the internet?

VES
on Jan 20, 2004
Muggaz, you said somewhere back there in your comments or article that you often "see red" and just write what your opinion is. I see that over and over in these comments. It seems as though you get so defensive you don't take a true look at what you or anyone else is saying. I think debating on the internet is a great way to learn if you open your mind. I think we are all guilty of making quick opinions but if you try to see others points of view, you can learn a lot.
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