Hereby declaring that im giving away 100k or more. To Who? Thats simple.
I will give the money to the first person who is able to impress me with an armor/weapon set.
Sounds easy right? Well im probably the most picky person in GW when it comes to armors, so its the simplest yet most difficult task for those who wish to compete.
There is no restrictions, the contest starts now, the prize(s) will be updated when i see fit depending on participation. More activity means higher prizes so the more people contribute the higher the stakes. The contest ends when someone wins, and someone wins when im impressed with their contribution. There is no restrictions on the amount of entries a person can make and there is no time limit. There is no restrictions on armor or weapons and its a race so whoever impresses me first gets all the money, there wont be any second prizes.
A contribution is submitted by posting a picture here in this thread, any type of picture will do aslong as i am able to see the entire character. More angles to show emphasis on some parts can be a plus, so is a description of the thoguhts that you put behind the set.
The current Prize is: 100k
Is it crazy? Yes. Will I be easy to impress? No.
Good Luck to everyone|||So, this is the OTF. You're giving away 100k? Dollars, euros, what? Seems like a lot for some GW armor.|||Wow!
I best run out and buy myself some clothing from Cantha...
...how do I get there from the real world?
-Art|||Spent the entire night capturing this, thank god we won 10-7. This is the first time i'm joining such a competition. Wish me luck... included a mini story to this. Enjoy
Character profile
Her story begins when she left the Jade sea to the temple of balthazar to train to become a great luxon. Her training has made her strong, versatile in many weapons and now she wears a suit of made of the finest gold. Her weapons are made of gold and the hint of red on her armor shows her luxon allegiance. She was a hunter of sorts during her days back home and often carries a spear and shield. Her other favoured weapons include the bow and a set of daggers. As she returns to the jade sea, she is now more than prepared to take on even hordes of Kurzicks. Her red cape is stained red with the blood of her enemies and the Kurzick infiltrators now surrender in fear at the coming of the warrior of gold.
Chloe's training: Running uphill
looking into the distance, i miss home....
training to be an assassin
A last goodbye to the training grounds
The Jade Sea... Home...
Fighting against the kurzicks
No one steals our Jade
I am the strongest - RAWRRRRRR
A good nap after victory
|||Apologies for posting this in the wrong subforum, it was pretty late when i made it. If a mod sees this please move it to whereever it seems apropriate.|||I'll move it over to GW1 General Discussion, since there is no longer a lounge.|||Psycho-Clown Necro
|||So ... you're rewarding people who have spent boatloads of in game currency ... with more in game currency ...
Sounds like a republican CEO of a major corporation. |||wow 100k would be nice, but since I cant put pics up here guess I will have to pass |||Quote:
So ... you're rewarding people who have spent boatloads of in game currency ... with more in game currency ...
Sounds like a republican CEO of a major corporation.
Because impressive means expensive, right?
Minecraft Guild Wars 2
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Tastes like chicken
yummy stuff, enjoy!|||I just ate a chicken pot pie about 5 minutes before clicking this.|||did it taste like chicken?|||Good thing I stay as far away as I can from those kinda retarded products.
I prefer if I can know what I eat more than the fact that it's supposedly meat from a particular type of animal.
Hell, if I was rich instead of a poor student, I'd never buy minced meat, I'd buy proper lumps and chop it up myself. It's stupid enough that we have these things and that there's such a huge market for them in the first place, let's not give them more incentive to keep pushing.
I know that here, the industry for chicken says consumers want processed meat. That means they call it marinated and pump saline solution into it(up to like 20%) and the act like they're doing people a favour.|||Meh. Real men eat everything, especially if it's got dirt and weird stuff in it. I'll not stop eating my Nathan's dogs for a mere pap alert.|||I like pig bone marrow cooked the old-fashioned way thanks.
That pink goop looks like taffy. I'd love to hand that out for Halloween.|||Kind of cool, the process to get these very last pieces of meat off the bones must be complicated. It's good that they invented this, so that you need fewer chickens to feed more people.
Also imagine what that cardboard box must look like afterwards |||I ate a shawarma yesterday that tasted like cardboard. I wish it tasted like chicken.|||Quote:
Also imagine what that cardboard box must look like afterwards
We don't have to imagine. That's what McDonald's chicken nuggets are made from.|||The first time I can recall noticing MSC in an ingredient list was on a can of vienna sausages. The only reason I was eating them was because I'd had my wisdom teeth out. (and there was precious little I could eat) It was during the Winter '08 Olympics, so... do the math.
Disgusting as it is, I still crave a can of that stuff once in a while. Maybe every few years, and then I'm reminded why it's so seldom.
I prefer if I can know what I eat more than the fact that it's supposedly meat from a particular type of animal.
Hell, if I was rich instead of a poor student, I'd never buy minced meat, I'd buy proper lumps and chop it up myself. It's stupid enough that we have these things and that there's such a huge market for them in the first place, let's not give them more incentive to keep pushing.
I know that here, the industry for chicken says consumers want processed meat. That means they call it marinated and pump saline solution into it(up to like 20%) and the act like they're doing people a favour.|||Meh. Real men eat everything, especially if it's got dirt and weird stuff in it. I'll not stop eating my Nathan's dogs for a mere pap alert.|||I like pig bone marrow cooked the old-fashioned way thanks.
That pink goop looks like taffy. I'd love to hand that out for Halloween.|||Kind of cool, the process to get these very last pieces of meat off the bones must be complicated. It's good that they invented this, so that you need fewer chickens to feed more people.
Also imagine what that cardboard box must look like afterwards |||I ate a shawarma yesterday that tasted like cardboard. I wish it tasted like chicken.|||Quote:
Also imagine what that cardboard box must look like afterwards
We don't have to imagine. That's what McDonald's chicken nuggets are made from.|||The first time I can recall noticing MSC in an ingredient list was on a can of vienna sausages. The only reason I was eating them was because I'd had my wisdom teeth out. (and there was precious little I could eat) It was during the Winter '08 Olympics, so... do the math.
Disgusting as it is, I still crave a can of that stuff once in a while. Maybe every few years, and then I'm reminded why it's so seldom.
Jamie Oliver got an Emmy
and puts it to good use!
|||He still seems like the chill guy he was back when "The Naked Chef" started out. Nice gesture towards him, he was quite an inspirational source for me back in the day.|||Jamie is awesome. I like his style of "cheap, simple stuff that tastes good", that is, to me, a display of true cooking skill and talent. Too many "posh" chefs with TV shows use overly complex recipes or waste extremely expensive groceries hoping you'd never get a chance to find out how lost they are in the kitchen.|||Sorry MV, I may becaome a little offensive here.
I f***ing hate Jamie Oliver. As a working class Yorkshireman I hate this middle class effigy, lecturing to people who are on the breadline that they should feed their children "Soupe de poisson" instead of fishfingers!
This idiot blames everything on a bad diet to poor people. Never does he look towards the food industry; who waters down chicken breasts, brands sheeps balls/gibblets etc.. as "good" meat. No!, he continues to live in this world, where as long as you can exploit book deals and get TV deals it does not matter what sh*t you feed people.
This pr*ck is not Heston Blumenthal or Ferran Adria, just a cheap wannabe "X-Factor" whore who milks idiots. He is the Simon Cowell of the food industry!
Additionally - he is worse than Hugh Grant and Kiera Knightly as the stereotyplcal English pompous twat.|||One I will have to agree on, he really is a bloody stereotypical british guy in appearance, accent etc. etc.
But really, some guy who found out he was good at something isn't deserving of milking that talent for his own good? That's certainly new to me.
I'd be interested in hearing what about his person pissed you off so much. Did you participate in the school food programme as an ignorant parent or something similar? Because either way it almost sounds that harsh.|||We are all entitled to our own opinion. For me, Jamie Oliver is inspiring. He helped in educating everyone about healthy eating and showed that one person can make a difference. You deserve that Emmy and keep up the amazing work, Jamie.
|||He still seems like the chill guy he was back when "The Naked Chef" started out. Nice gesture towards him, he was quite an inspirational source for me back in the day.|||Jamie is awesome. I like his style of "cheap, simple stuff that tastes good", that is, to me, a display of true cooking skill and talent. Too many "posh" chefs with TV shows use overly complex recipes or waste extremely expensive groceries hoping you'd never get a chance to find out how lost they are in the kitchen.|||Sorry MV, I may becaome a little offensive here.
I f***ing hate Jamie Oliver. As a working class Yorkshireman I hate this middle class effigy, lecturing to people who are on the breadline that they should feed their children "Soupe de poisson" instead of fishfingers!
This idiot blames everything on a bad diet to poor people. Never does he look towards the food industry; who waters down chicken breasts, brands sheeps balls/gibblets etc.. as "good" meat. No!, he continues to live in this world, where as long as you can exploit book deals and get TV deals it does not matter what sh*t you feed people.
This pr*ck is not Heston Blumenthal or Ferran Adria, just a cheap wannabe "X-Factor" whore who milks idiots. He is the Simon Cowell of the food industry!
Additionally - he is worse than Hugh Grant and Kiera Knightly as the stereotyplcal English pompous twat.|||One I will have to agree on, he really is a bloody stereotypical british guy in appearance, accent etc. etc.
But really, some guy who found out he was good at something isn't deserving of milking that talent for his own good? That's certainly new to me.
I'd be interested in hearing what about his person pissed you off so much. Did you participate in the school food programme as an ignorant parent or something similar? Because either way it almost sounds that harsh.|||We are all entitled to our own opinion. For me, Jamie Oliver is inspiring. He helped in educating everyone about healthy eating and showed that one person can make a difference. You deserve that Emmy and keep up the amazing work, Jamie.
Emily the Strange Movie!
I will admit I am giddy right now.
Emily The Strange Movie IMDB
More News
Not only is there an 'Emily the Strange' movie being made into a movie, but they got Chloe Moretz to play her. The young actress has shown good acting (imo) in the last few movies she has made (and from the trailers, 'Let Me In' is going to rock too, Oct. 1).
Emily The Strange
Didn't put this in the horror thread because I would have bumped my own thread.|||I absolutely love Emily The Strange! I wonder why this thread doesn't have any comment. Emily may be different but she's not weird, in my opinion. I guess it depends on your view of life and people in general.
Emily The Strange Movie IMDB
More News
Not only is there an 'Emily the Strange' movie being made into a movie, but they got Chloe Moretz to play her. The young actress has shown good acting (imo) in the last few movies she has made (and from the trailers, 'Let Me In' is going to rock too, Oct. 1).
Emily The Strange
Didn't put this in the horror thread because I would have bumped my own thread.|||I absolutely love Emily The Strange! I wonder why this thread doesn't have any comment. Emily may be different but she's not weird, in my opinion. I guess it depends on your view of life and people in general.
Obama Nation: Absorption and Vietnam
Quote:
President Obama urgently looked for a way out of the war in Afghanistan last year, repeatedly pressing his top military advisers for an exit plan that they never gave him, according to secret meeting notes and documents cited in a new book by journalist Bob Woodward.
Frustrated with his military commanders for consistently offering only options that required significantly more troops, Obama finally crafted his own strategy, dictating a classified six-page "terms sheet" that sought to limit U.S. involvement, Woodward reports in "Obama's Wars," to be released on Monday.
**************
Woodward's book portrays Obama and the White House as barraged by warnings about the threat of terrorist attacks on U.S. soil and confronted with the difficulty in preventing them. During an interview with Woodward in July, the president said, "We can absorb a terrorist attack. We'll do everything we can to prevent it, but even a 9/11, even the biggest attack ever . . . we absorbed it and we are stronger."
**************
An older war - the Vietnam conflict - does figure prominently in the minds of Obama and his advisers. When Vice President Biden rushed to the White House on a Sunday morning to make one last appeal for a narrowly defined mission, he warned Obama that a major escalation would mean "we're locked into Vietnam."
So, Obamatons, what say you? Is Woodward suddenly full of carp now that he's talking about your beloved?
Or do you believe there's nothing wrong with a President who barely had regular employment designing a critical military campaign exclusively for political purposes?
Or more pointedly, does any of this reportage even matter to you?|||You have upset me so much.|||Quote:
You have upset me so much.
It's a tough job, but someone's got to do it. |||I do not really care for the word use-age of, "We can absorb a terrorist attack." I am sure he doesn't want terrorist attacks to happen, but that (to me) gives off an impression of being less preventive towards such.
...
As far as the President's involvement and ideas over the war so far in meeting with the military:
First, Obama is no military man (and as such (imo) does not know or have enough experience in handling the American military). If an objective is given to the military, they know (through their means) how to go at it/ or what needs to be done military-wise.
The problem imo is not with Obama nor the US military. If I were to point out the root of the problem it would be with the previous US leaders decisions and goals (I mainly blame Rumsfeld here). I do agree that the military should pull out; out of a war that should not have lasted this long (or have been initiated to begin with). The problem was the conditions of the war in the first place, giving the military an objective that was one to be endlessly sought for.
If there is a victory in this war at all, it is only a temporary one, in getting rid of the baddies the military has taken out so far. It will never be a permanent victory as in establishing democracy in Iraq/areas about.
The only way to achieve even somewhat of a permanent (yet constantly fought for) victory would be to absorb Iraq as a distant US state (which is out of the question, and crazy). There is no way what has been set up so far in Iraq is going to stay up, without US military assistance. Once the military pulls out, things are going to go back to some version of what they were before; eventually.
It would take forever to get Iraq to the self-sufficient point where even Israel is at currently with all the opposition wanting to do them in (imo).|||Er...CMEPTb, the OP's quote refers to the conflict in Afghanistan, not Iraq. Although the argumentation is still valid either way. By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
Personally, I don't see why the U.S. shouldn't back out. So it looks like a failure, and perhaps it is, is that bad? Maybe the U.S. could get some other nations to stop relying on them so much by making them realize we're not the unstoppable, perfect, rich nation of freedom. And it wouldn't hurt for the government's ego to take a blow (not just Obama, everyone that comprises the upper levels), which I honestly wouldn't be surprised to hear some European users agree on.
Besides that I'm fairly certain part of the economic downturn was a result of leaning a bit too much on the U.S. in some ways.|||Quote:
Er...CMEPTb, the OP's quote refers to the conflict in Afghanistan, not Iraq.
Oops.
Quote:
By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
Its a war on "Terror, Terror, Terror..."; no, I agree. More of a national bounty pursuit on terrorists.
|||Quote:
I am sure he doesn't want terrorist attacks to happen, but that (to me) gives off an impression of being less preventive towards such.
There are conservative cynics who think he'd be fine with it, as with the Executive "never let a good crisis go to waste" motto. I don't really agree; I think it's sufficient for socialists to have the <threat> and to have a crisis <approaching> a wartime footing. If it's actual warfare, not only does that mean there's real fighting but it tends to bring the sort of moronic stuff into focus. People tend to lose their alarmist mentality about [strikeout]Global Warming[/strikeout] [strikeout]Climate Change[/strikeout] Global Weather Disruption when there's a raving goon screaming "Allahu Akbar" and waving an AK around.
Quote:
First, Obama is no military man (and as such (imo) does not know or have enough experience in handling the American military). If an objective is given to the military, they know (through their means) how to go at it/ or what needs to be done military-wise.
His actions indicate that he doesn't care. It's along the same sort of line that <caused> Vietnam, where the politicians become so enamored of their own ego that they believe they are smarter than the professionals. (See below to Leon about "Vietnam was a good thing")
Quote:
It would take forever to get Iraq to the self-sufficient point where even Israel is at currently with all the opposition wanting to do them in (imo).
Hate to tell you this (particularly after your foot->mouth), but Iraq's working despite Iranian sabotage. Part of this is because Iraq had one of the most sophisticated populations in the region, despite Saddam's oppression. I kind of suspect it's also because the Sunni nations have a lot vested in keeping Iran penned in...
Quote:
By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
No - it's a conscious political decision, in part because you can readily see the Left's suicidally stupid response in continually trying to define Low-Intensity Conflict as "Police Action". This allows them to make the false extrapolation that it's really just a law enforcement issue, resulting in the reading of Miranda rights to combatants, collection of evidence that meets American courtroom standards, extensive ambulance-chaser employment, and other mind-wiltingly destructive concepts involved in extending the peacetime rights of a nation's citizens to an international battlefield.
Quote:
So it looks like a failure, and perhaps it is, is that bad?
Well, if you don't mind the fate of women and children returning to abject misery, Osama Bin Laden returning to fame/credibility, and the Talibs being able to return to domination of the drug trade, then perhaps not. As an American, or even if one was a Westerner who doesn't approve of European Islamicization, I'd say it's really bad.
Quote:
And it wouldn't hurt for the government's ego to take a blow (not just Obama, everyone that comprises the upper levels), which I honestly wouldn't be surprised to hear some European users agree on.
That's from the "Vietnam was a good thing" school. The problem is that we have to take the bad with the good, and when looking at the 1960's in a historical context, it was a disaster.
The reason Obama decided to come up with his own blue-sky plan was that he believed all of the Generals were warmongers, in that they weren't giving him any plans that would immediately start withdrawing troops. That's not only because he had run against Bush with the despicable "Good War/Bad War" falsehood (Iraq = bad, Afghanistan = good). It's because having hung his hat on the falsehood, he asked for a plan that would be successful while drawing down immediately - in other words, HE DEMANDED THE IMPOSSIBLE from his military, and then didn't like the result.
That's pretty much why we've been losing troops at levels similar to that of the bad periods in Afghanistan (while the media busily runs Cat-in-Tree stories), and why the Executive had to try to produce a miracle with Petraeus like a rabbit out of a hat, despite having trashed the General previously. Petraeus, God bless him, isn't a filthy Marxist and is concerned about the National welfare - he will give his life for a despicable cadre that wanted him destroyed. However, one can easily recognize that giving your life for people who have the opposite interests leads to disaster.
Quote:
Besides that I'm fairly certain part of the economic downturn was a result of leaning a bit too much on the U.S. in some ways.
Oh, sure. And we're not going to recover from it soon, either.|||Quote:
No - it's a conscious political decision, in part because you can readily see the Left's suicidally stupid response in continually trying to define Low-Intensity Conflict as "Police Action". This allows them to make the false extrapolation that it's really just a law enforcement issue, resulting in the reading of Miranda rights to combatants, collection of evidence that meets American courtroom standards, extensive ambulance-chaser employment, and other mind-wiltingly destructive concepts involved in extending the peacetime rights of a nation's citizens to an international battlefield.
If I'm understanding properly, then, you're saying that it's being called a war to avoid the extension of peacetime rights to those being fought against in the international battlefield, correct? While I don't disagree that this would be a bit (well, actually, probably quite) inefficient, I find it to be equally inefficient to paint those that you could possibly negotiate with as being terrorists, and while I'm not familiar with any good examples regarding the situation being discussed, it seems very likely to have happened on several occasions.
Technically, the entire no negotiation policy seems rather poor in general to me. It leads to more polarization of the combatants' mindsets to the point of dehumanizing one another, which, while one side already may be doing, we should attempt not to. It results in all manner of crimes and abuses that needn't happen.
Quote:
Well, if you don't mind the fate of women and children returning to abject misery, Osama Bin Laden returning to fame/credibility, and the Talibs being able to return to domination of the drug trade, then perhaps not. As an American, or even if one was a Westerner who doesn't approve of European Islamicization, I'd say it's really bad.
If it isn't Osama Bin Laden and members of the Taliban, it'd be some other manufactured hero and corporate CEOs in peacetime. In my opinion, first-world countries are simply in tolerable misery, but misery nonetheless. The difference lies in the extremity of the misery, of course, and either way, say we stabilize them, wouldn't you say the chances of sending them a load of money every so often (each year?) would be high? It's really a lose-lose situation, you leave without stabilization, the ones you were fighting off return to power, you stabilize it, you have to send a large check to maintain that stabilization (or so they say anyway).|||I am still too upset to speak of this.|||Quote:
If I'm understanding properly, then, you're saying that it's being called a war to avoid the extension of peacetime rights to those being fought against in the international battlefield, correct?
More or less. It's not some sort of malevolent plot, but a recognition that war is inherently a suspension of civil society's behavior. The concept of the Law of War is oxymoronic, because in reality the victor punishes the loser in any way they see fit, and the fallacious construct of a League of Nations only exists as long as the member parties continue to claim agreement. That's why you see rampant corruption, double standards, and scandals from U.N. member countries on a constant basis.
Quote:
I find it to be equally inefficient to paint those that you could possibly negotiate with as being terrorists
It's war, and it's ugly. The example you're searching for is the Iran-Contra scandal under Reagan.
Quote:
It leads to more polarization of the combatants' mindsets to the point of dehumanizing one another, which, while one side already may be doing, we should attempt not to.
Not really; war always involves demonization of the opposition because otherwise only true barbarians would go to war. Teaching a civilized person to kill someone out-of-hand isn't an easy task, which is why Islamists and other barbaric groups use child soldiers.
Quote:
If it isn't Osama Bin Laden and members of the Taliban, it'd be some other manufactured hero and corporate CEOs in peacetime.
Speaking of demonization, consider the Left's claims about the Right. The converse really doesn't hold, but I'll paraphrase where I read it well-stated recently:
Quote:
In my opinion, first-world countries are simply in tolerable misery, but misery nonetheless.
That's a depressing viewpoint, but if you go with the whole "life is pain" stance then you make sense. Afghanistan is and always has been a shytehole, and the only times when this was somewhat ameliorated was when the British occupation wasn't being contested through the reign of the Afghan King (prior to his being dethroned).
Quote:
I am still too upset to speak of this.
But not too upset to type, apparently?
President Obama urgently looked for a way out of the war in Afghanistan last year, repeatedly pressing his top military advisers for an exit plan that they never gave him, according to secret meeting notes and documents cited in a new book by journalist Bob Woodward.
Frustrated with his military commanders for consistently offering only options that required significantly more troops, Obama finally crafted his own strategy, dictating a classified six-page "terms sheet" that sought to limit U.S. involvement, Woodward reports in "Obama's Wars," to be released on Monday.
**************
Woodward's book portrays Obama and the White House as barraged by warnings about the threat of terrorist attacks on U.S. soil and confronted with the difficulty in preventing them. During an interview with Woodward in July, the president said, "We can absorb a terrorist attack. We'll do everything we can to prevent it, but even a 9/11, even the biggest attack ever . . . we absorbed it and we are stronger."
**************
An older war - the Vietnam conflict - does figure prominently in the minds of Obama and his advisers. When Vice President Biden rushed to the White House on a Sunday morning to make one last appeal for a narrowly defined mission, he warned Obama that a major escalation would mean "we're locked into Vietnam."
So, Obamatons, what say you? Is Woodward suddenly full of carp now that he's talking about your beloved?
Or do you believe there's nothing wrong with a President who barely had regular employment designing a critical military campaign exclusively for political purposes?
Or more pointedly, does any of this reportage even matter to you?|||You have upset me so much.|||Quote:
You have upset me so much.
It's a tough job, but someone's got to do it. |||I do not really care for the word use-age of, "We can absorb a terrorist attack." I am sure he doesn't want terrorist attacks to happen, but that (to me) gives off an impression of being less preventive towards such.
...
As far as the President's involvement and ideas over the war so far in meeting with the military:
First, Obama is no military man (and as such (imo) does not know or have enough experience in handling the American military). If an objective is given to the military, they know (through their means) how to go at it/ or what needs to be done military-wise.
The problem imo is not with Obama nor the US military. If I were to point out the root of the problem it would be with the previous US leaders decisions and goals (I mainly blame Rumsfeld here). I do agree that the military should pull out; out of a war that should not have lasted this long (or have been initiated to begin with). The problem was the conditions of the war in the first place, giving the military an objective that was one to be endlessly sought for.
If there is a victory in this war at all, it is only a temporary one, in getting rid of the baddies the military has taken out so far. It will never be a permanent victory as in establishing democracy in Iraq/areas about.
The only way to achieve even somewhat of a permanent (yet constantly fought for) victory would be to absorb Iraq as a distant US state (which is out of the question, and crazy). There is no way what has been set up so far in Iraq is going to stay up, without US military assistance. Once the military pulls out, things are going to go back to some version of what they were before; eventually.
It would take forever to get Iraq to the self-sufficient point where even Israel is at currently with all the opposition wanting to do them in (imo).|||Er...CMEPTb, the OP's quote refers to the conflict in Afghanistan, not Iraq. Although the argumentation is still valid either way. By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
Personally, I don't see why the U.S. shouldn't back out. So it looks like a failure, and perhaps it is, is that bad? Maybe the U.S. could get some other nations to stop relying on them so much by making them realize we're not the unstoppable, perfect, rich nation of freedom. And it wouldn't hurt for the government's ego to take a blow (not just Obama, everyone that comprises the upper levels), which I honestly wouldn't be surprised to hear some European users agree on.
Besides that I'm fairly certain part of the economic downturn was a result of leaning a bit too much on the U.S. in some ways.|||Quote:
Er...CMEPTb, the OP's quote refers to the conflict in Afghanistan, not Iraq.
Oops.
Quote:
By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
Its a war on "Terror, Terror, Terror..."; no, I agree. More of a national bounty pursuit on terrorists.
|||Quote:
I am sure he doesn't want terrorist attacks to happen, but that (to me) gives off an impression of being less preventive towards such.
There are conservative cynics who think he'd be fine with it, as with the Executive "never let a good crisis go to waste" motto. I don't really agree; I think it's sufficient for socialists to have the <threat> and to have a crisis <approaching> a wartime footing. If it's actual warfare, not only does that mean there's real fighting but it tends to bring the sort of moronic stuff into focus. People tend to lose their alarmist mentality about [strikeout]Global Warming[/strikeout] [strikeout]Climate Change[/strikeout] Global Weather Disruption when there's a raving goon screaming "Allahu Akbar" and waving an AK around.
Quote:
First, Obama is no military man (and as such (imo) does not know or have enough experience in handling the American military). If an objective is given to the military, they know (through their means) how to go at it/ or what needs to be done military-wise.
His actions indicate that he doesn't care. It's along the same sort of line that <caused> Vietnam, where the politicians become so enamored of their own ego that they believe they are smarter than the professionals. (See below to Leon about "Vietnam was a good thing")
Quote:
It would take forever to get Iraq to the self-sufficient point where even Israel is at currently with all the opposition wanting to do them in (imo).
Hate to tell you this (particularly after your foot->mouth), but Iraq's working despite Iranian sabotage. Part of this is because Iraq had one of the most sophisticated populations in the region, despite Saddam's oppression. I kind of suspect it's also because the Sunni nations have a lot vested in keeping Iran penned in...
Quote:
By the way, does anyone else think it silly to call either engagement a "war"? The activity fits the definition, but there is no definitive threat we're facing, it's a mix of insurgents (Shiite or Sunni), Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and so forth, with the first group probably being partially funded by either of the two latter mentioned groups.
No - it's a conscious political decision, in part because you can readily see the Left's suicidally stupid response in continually trying to define Low-Intensity Conflict as "Police Action". This allows them to make the false extrapolation that it's really just a law enforcement issue, resulting in the reading of Miranda rights to combatants, collection of evidence that meets American courtroom standards, extensive ambulance-chaser employment, and other mind-wiltingly destructive concepts involved in extending the peacetime rights of a nation's citizens to an international battlefield.
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So it looks like a failure, and perhaps it is, is that bad?
Well, if you don't mind the fate of women and children returning to abject misery, Osama Bin Laden returning to fame/credibility, and the Talibs being able to return to domination of the drug trade, then perhaps not. As an American, or even if one was a Westerner who doesn't approve of European Islamicization, I'd say it's really bad.
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And it wouldn't hurt for the government's ego to take a blow (not just Obama, everyone that comprises the upper levels), which I honestly wouldn't be surprised to hear some European users agree on.
That's from the "Vietnam was a good thing" school. The problem is that we have to take the bad with the good, and when looking at the 1960's in a historical context, it was a disaster.
The reason Obama decided to come up with his own blue-sky plan was that he believed all of the Generals were warmongers, in that they weren't giving him any plans that would immediately start withdrawing troops. That's not only because he had run against Bush with the despicable "Good War/Bad War" falsehood (Iraq = bad, Afghanistan = good). It's because having hung his hat on the falsehood, he asked for a plan that would be successful while drawing down immediately - in other words, HE DEMANDED THE IMPOSSIBLE from his military, and then didn't like the result.
That's pretty much why we've been losing troops at levels similar to that of the bad periods in Afghanistan (while the media busily runs Cat-in-Tree stories), and why the Executive had to try to produce a miracle with Petraeus like a rabbit out of a hat, despite having trashed the General previously. Petraeus, God bless him, isn't a filthy Marxist and is concerned about the National welfare - he will give his life for a despicable cadre that wanted him destroyed. However, one can easily recognize that giving your life for people who have the opposite interests leads to disaster.
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Besides that I'm fairly certain part of the economic downturn was a result of leaning a bit too much on the U.S. in some ways.
Oh, sure. And we're not going to recover from it soon, either.|||Quote:
No - it's a conscious political decision, in part because you can readily see the Left's suicidally stupid response in continually trying to define Low-Intensity Conflict as "Police Action". This allows them to make the false extrapolation that it's really just a law enforcement issue, resulting in the reading of Miranda rights to combatants, collection of evidence that meets American courtroom standards, extensive ambulance-chaser employment, and other mind-wiltingly destructive concepts involved in extending the peacetime rights of a nation's citizens to an international battlefield.
If I'm understanding properly, then, you're saying that it's being called a war to avoid the extension of peacetime rights to those being fought against in the international battlefield, correct? While I don't disagree that this would be a bit (well, actually, probably quite) inefficient, I find it to be equally inefficient to paint those that you could possibly negotiate with as being terrorists, and while I'm not familiar with any good examples regarding the situation being discussed, it seems very likely to have happened on several occasions.
Technically, the entire no negotiation policy seems rather poor in general to me. It leads to more polarization of the combatants' mindsets to the point of dehumanizing one another, which, while one side already may be doing, we should attempt not to. It results in all manner of crimes and abuses that needn't happen.
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Well, if you don't mind the fate of women and children returning to abject misery, Osama Bin Laden returning to fame/credibility, and the Talibs being able to return to domination of the drug trade, then perhaps not. As an American, or even if one was a Westerner who doesn't approve of European Islamicization, I'd say it's really bad.
If it isn't Osama Bin Laden and members of the Taliban, it'd be some other manufactured hero and corporate CEOs in peacetime. In my opinion, first-world countries are simply in tolerable misery, but misery nonetheless. The difference lies in the extremity of the misery, of course, and either way, say we stabilize them, wouldn't you say the chances of sending them a load of money every so often (each year?) would be high? It's really a lose-lose situation, you leave without stabilization, the ones you were fighting off return to power, you stabilize it, you have to send a large check to maintain that stabilization (or so they say anyway).|||I am still too upset to speak of this.|||Quote:
If I'm understanding properly, then, you're saying that it's being called a war to avoid the extension of peacetime rights to those being fought against in the international battlefield, correct?
More or less. It's not some sort of malevolent plot, but a recognition that war is inherently a suspension of civil society's behavior. The concept of the Law of War is oxymoronic, because in reality the victor punishes the loser in any way they see fit, and the fallacious construct of a League of Nations only exists as long as the member parties continue to claim agreement. That's why you see rampant corruption, double standards, and scandals from U.N. member countries on a constant basis.
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I find it to be equally inefficient to paint those that you could possibly negotiate with as being terrorists
It's war, and it's ugly. The example you're searching for is the Iran-Contra scandal under Reagan.
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It leads to more polarization of the combatants' mindsets to the point of dehumanizing one another, which, while one side already may be doing, we should attempt not to.
Not really; war always involves demonization of the opposition because otherwise only true barbarians would go to war. Teaching a civilized person to kill someone out-of-hand isn't an easy task, which is why Islamists and other barbaric groups use child soldiers.
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If it isn't Osama Bin Laden and members of the Taliban, it'd be some other manufactured hero and corporate CEOs in peacetime.
Speaking of demonization, consider the Left's claims about the Right. The converse really doesn't hold, but I'll paraphrase where I read it well-stated recently:
- The Left believes that they are inherently good because their motivations are better than those who don't agree with them.
- The Left believes that they are inherently smarter because it is nonsensical for people who aren't evil not to agree with them.
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In my opinion, first-world countries are simply in tolerable misery, but misery nonetheless.
That's a depressing viewpoint, but if you go with the whole "life is pain" stance then you make sense. Afghanistan is and always has been a shytehole, and the only times when this was somewhat ameliorated was when the British occupation wasn't being contested through the reign of the Afghan King (prior to his being dethroned).
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I am still too upset to speak of this.
But not too upset to type, apparently?
League Of Legends!
Haha it's a pretty fun game!
https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?...c50d3778216539
You guys should give it a try, it's a nice alternative to Guild Wars, although both are fun games. (:
https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?...c50d3778216539
You guys should give it a try, it's a nice alternative to Guild Wars, although both are fun games. (:
KINECT - And the uncomfortable interview
http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/bt/...nect-interview
That poor man. He seems so uncomfortable answering any questions, especially with the terrible performances in some of the many booths around him. This video also shows the dreadful Harry Potter game which I saw at Games Com, and it's not looking any much better. It's like what happens when you take the rich Harry Potter franchise, and then strip it of anything that makes it Harry Potter, and make it into a rail shooter with unplayable controls.|||God...the KINECT...
I liked it better when it was called the PlayStation EyeToy and EyeToy games. And at least they knew it was a gimmick only good for gimmick games.
You can say what you want about the Playstation Move (lol Wii ripoff etc..), but at least theirs WORKS and is used to complement the existing controller. That, and their glowing ball thing could actualy be used outside of gaming applications. One of my classmates is doing a thesis on that (e.g. scrolling sideways to "zap" between stations, scrolling up/down to control volume), though I somewhat fail to see the advantage over a regular remote control where you point and push a button to go to any station you want...|||http://www.yaybuttons.com/
That poor man. He seems so uncomfortable answering any questions, especially with the terrible performances in some of the many booths around him. This video also shows the dreadful Harry Potter game which I saw at Games Com, and it's not looking any much better. It's like what happens when you take the rich Harry Potter franchise, and then strip it of anything that makes it Harry Potter, and make it into a rail shooter with unplayable controls.|||God...the KINECT...
I liked it better when it was called the PlayStation EyeToy and EyeToy games. And at least they knew it was a gimmick only good for gimmick games.
You can say what you want about the Playstation Move (lol Wii ripoff etc..), but at least theirs WORKS and is used to complement the existing controller. That, and their glowing ball thing could actualy be used outside of gaming applications. One of my classmates is doing a thesis on that (e.g. scrolling sideways to "zap" between stations, scrolling up/down to control volume), though I somewhat fail to see the advantage over a regular remote control where you point and push a button to go to any station you want...|||http://www.yaybuttons.com/
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