Why is anyone supporting Obama?

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In summary, the conversation is discussing different opinions on the character, abilities, and political philosophies of a particular candidate (likely Barack Obama). Some believe that his supporters see potential in him due to his intelligence and character, while others are not convinced of his abilities or experience. The conversation also touches on the current state of politics and the upcoming election, with some expressing uncertainty about who they will vote for.
  • #106
OmCheeto said:
I still support Obama because he: Ordered the closing of the Gitmo detention facility...
Could you explain why you support him because of this? To me, this appears to be a pretty major policy and strategy blunder (except insofar as the main strategy behind it was getting elected - it's just that now he has to deal with the campaign promise). His position is wrong on several levels:

1. You can't just close the facility. There are people there and you have to do something with them. When he gave his one-liner soundbytes on the issue during the campaign, he never explained what would be done with them and so he got people to support him on the issue without ever thinking about it...which is what a good public speaker does. So what can really be done with them...?:

1a. Release them to their home countries. Well, no, you can't. Many of the countries where these guys game from don't want them back, so some simply can't be released back to their home countries. And others who have been released back to their home countries have rejoined the terrorist ranks they came from. So that doesn't work.

1b. Release them to the US. Um, no.

1c. Transfer them to a civilian jail in Chicago. Funny he didn't mention this option during the campaign, isn't it...? The only argument I've heard in favor of this is that it eliminates the symbol of Gitmo. So what? Is that really all this issue is about? A symbol? As if that really means the terrorists in Afghanistan are going to say 'oh, ok, 'Gitmo is closed - let's lay down our weapons and make peace.' C'mon. Naive platitude is all that is. Let's be honest: the only reason he is transferring them to Chicago is so he can claim he fulfilled his campaign promise. There is no real value to doing it (and, of course, it costs money). And it doesn't really solve the problem of what to do with them anyway, does it? It isn't a permanent solution. So...

1c1: Once they get to Chicago, 1a and 1b haven't gotten any more viable. What else can we do? How 'bout trying them in civilian court? Is that a can of worms we really want opened? For a foreign fighter in Afghanistan to be charged (with what?) in a civilian court under US civilian court rules? It just wouldn't work for most of them. And that's in addition to the fact that trying them in civilian court puts the lives of our soldiers in danger because they have to adjust their rules of engagement to treat enemy soldiers like civilian criminals in some cases.

...and more to the point: now that the public really knows how the issue works instead of just hearing the one-liner soundbyte that he's going to close the prison, public opinion has turned against him on it. The public is now starting to realize that they got suckered by a flashy smile and a "hope"ful speech.

...and the same goes for the laughable unemployment prediction and action. Remember 8%? He'd appreciate it if you would forget...
diminished the role of lobbyists in the White House
Has he? Immediately after making his declaration of that he started making exceptions to it. Without seeing some statistics, I'm not inclined to believe he's lived up to this. Also, the way you worded it, a 1% drop would be counted as a win - but considering how hard he campaigned on this point, I'd consider it a big loss since what he actually initially said was "lobbyists won't find a job in my White House". So while you may consider a small drop to be a good start, his promise was laughably silly when he made it and he never really attempted to keep it anyway. And you're giving him a win for that?
gave a great Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech
I actually laughed out loud when I saw this. While I completely agree that being a good speech maker is one of his principal accomplishments, it is still funny to see it actually listed as such.

Being a too good a speech maker is one of the things I've never liked about him.
 
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  • #107
Supercritical said:
I think this is relevant, and will probably be discussed elsewhere on this forum:source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/03/us-intelligence-iran-nuclear-weapons

The gruesome irony of this will not be lost on those in this forum, for now Obama is:

A. Dismissing intelligence that says Iraq (whoops, I mean Iran) suspended it's WMD program...
This article does not say that. It makes clear, that now, in the year 2010 intelligence has been received that changes the intelligence estimate of the year 2007:
"After reviewing new documents that have leaked out of Iran and debriefing defectors lured to the west, Mr Obama's advisers say they believe the work on weapons design is continuing on a smaller scale – the same assessment reached by Britain, France, Germany and Israel," the New York Times reported.
 
  • #108
Regarding Iran and its nuclear program, strong allegations have been made that Iran started working on a neutron initiator (a nuke's trigger according to what I've read) in 2007. Source The 2007 NIE that declared Iran's program "halted" was published in November 2007. Again, we don't need a repeat of Iraq: Iran is clearly far from a bomb, and it's irresponsible to state Tehran is hell-bent on acquiring any given the current open-source info. But the important point is that it is not "halted."

I suppose a case can be made that good, disciplined intelligence takes months or even years to crystallize, resulting in a natural lag-time. The matter remains, however, that the 2007 NIE demolished the remaining scraps of credibility the Bush administration had at the time, compromising Bush's mandate to confront Tehran. This means that precious time has been lost (2 years) and that the United States and its allies have been shown to lack continuity of purpose. We now know Iran has capitalized on the hesitation.

I think it also bears noting that NIE's on both sides of the issue (supporting and challenging the notion of active programs) have been discredited. Think about what that does to the reputation of the US intelligence community. Critics can now propose that the US can't figure it out one way or the other!
 
  • #109
russ_watters said:
OmCheeto said:
I still support Obama because he: Ordered the closing of the Gitmo detention facility

Could you explain why you support him because of this?

Sure. Gitmo represented to me a form of cowardice on the part of America. So afraid of retaliation were we, that we wouldn't even keep detainee's on our own soil for fear of attack. It was kind of a "not in my backyard" mentality.

Bringing the bad boys home sends a message:
America said:
We are not afraid.

Sorry to provide such a simple answer to what you appear to believe a very complex issue, but that's just the way I see things sometimes.
 
  • #110
OmCheeto said:
Sure. Gitmo represented to me a form of cowardice on the part of America. So afraid of retaliation were we, that we wouldn't even keep detainee's on our own soil for fear of attack. It was kind of a "not in my backyard" mentality.
Wow, I've honestly never heard that before - and in any case, that reason just plain isn't correct: they are in Guantanamo Bay primarily for legal reasons, not because of some fear (of what you think the fear is, I'm not clear)*. But it's related to the symbolism argument and to me it isn't really worth much (and more to the point, wouldn't have been the same campaign issue). Ie, if we had put them in a special prison in Leavenworth from the start, this wouldn't be an issue to you? I really suspect that to most people on that side it still would be an issue, just with a different name. Certainly, the detainees would still exist, so some issue still would.
Sorry to provide such a simple answer to what you appear to believe a very complex issue, but that's just the way I see things sometimes.
That's ok - you just see this issue very differently from how most people do, I think. His dropping approval rating on this issue reflects that.

* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guantanamo_Bay_detention_camp
After the Justice Department advised that the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp could be considered outside US legal jurisdiction, prisoners captured in Afghanistan were moved there beginning in early 2002.

FYI, here's a gallup poll on the subject, with discussion of the stark change in public opinion on it following the Congressional vote against Obama on the subject, which probably made the idea of the prisoners being transferred to the US 'more real' to people.
By a better than 2-to-1 margin, Americans are opposed to closing the Guantanamo Bay prison that houses terror suspects and moving some of those prisoners to the United States. Americans express even more widespread opposition to the idea of moving the prisoners to prisons in their own states if Guantanamo is closed.

...These results are based on a May 29-31 USA Today/Gallup poll. Early in his administration, President Obama announced that he would close the controversial prison within a year. However, his policy received a bit of a rebuke last month when the U.S. Senate rejected funding for the closure until the president outlines a plan for what to do with the terror suspects still being held there. Even some prominent Democratic senators rejected the idea of moving Guantanamo detainees to U.S. prisons.

...Polling by other firms has found greater support for closing Guantanamo, using different question wordings. Most of these differ from the Gallup question in that they associate the policy with President Obama and do not mention what would be done with the terror suspects who are currently housed at Guantanamo.

...The only other recent poll that addresses the handling of the prisoners is an April 22-26 CBS News/New York Times poll, which found 47% saying the U.S. should "continue to operate the prison" and 44% saying it should "close the prison and transfer the prisoners somewhere else."

That poll was conducted before the Senate vote. Much of the discussion after that vote concerned the possibility that some of the prisoners would be sent to U.S. prisons. Thus, it is possible the poll's results would differ if asked today because it may now be clearer to Americans that transferring prisoners "somewhere else" might include the United States.
http://www.gallup.com/poll/119393/Americans-Oppose-Closing-Gitmo-Moving-Prisoners.aspx

Yes, you are right that I feel strongly about this issue. The reason for that is two-fold. First, the wider issue of the war on terror is important to me and it doesn't appear to me that people are taking the issue seriously. Your opinion is an example of this. Second, and related, is what Gallup says about Obamamania: attach a position to Obama and people will support it without putting thought into it. Besides not taking the issue itself seriously, it is dangerous for people to support a President without thought. And that goes back to what you said before about his public speaking skills (and why that is a turn-off to me)...
 
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  • #111
russ_watters said:
1b. Release them to the US. Um, no.

Um. Why not? You try people and find them innocent or guilty. You release the innocent (unless ofcourse you don't believe in the American constitution).

If I did something wrong, and I now realize it was wrong, it's my - not anyone else's- responsiblity to make it right.
 
  • #112
russ_watters said:
Wow, I've honestly never heard that before - and in any case, that reason just plain isn't correct: they are in Guantanamo Bay primarily for legal reasons, not because of some fear (of what you think the fear is, I'm not clear)*. But it's related to the symbolism argument and to me it isn't really worth much (and more to the point, wouldn't have been the same campaign issue).

I'm sorry, but your post says it in black and white:

Americans express even more widespread opposition to the idea of moving the prisoners to prisons in their own states if Guantanamo is closed.

I understand the political point of view of the states not wanting the prisoners. If they don't put up a fight to keep them out, and the goon squads show up and blow up the Sears tower because the detainee's are in the Cook County jail, then it will be someones fault.

The Senates opposition to Obama's plan also, in my mind, makes the one year promise moot. But I've never been one to dwell on exactness in politics.

wiki on gitmo said:
On May 20, 2009, the United States Senate passed an amendment to the Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2009 (H.R. 2346) by a 90-6 vote to block funds needed for the transfer or release of prisoners held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

And you are correct about the legality of the choice of Gitmo.

wiki on gitmo said:
asserted that detainees were not entitled to any of the protections of the Geneva Conventions

But that just stinks of hypocrisy. Seems to me that this is, ironically, why we've had an embargo on Cuba for the last 50 some odd years.

Yup

wiki on the US embargo against Cuba said:
the embargo was codified into law in 1992 with the stated purpose of maintaining sanctions on the Castro regime so long as it continues to refuse to move toward "democratization and greater respect for human rights

Ah ha! Another reason I'm supporting Obama. He's does seem to get things done:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/presidential-memorandum-closure-dentention-facilities-guantanamo-bay-naval-base"
December 15, 2009

By the authority vested in me as President and as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Authorization for Use of Military Force (Public Law 107-40, 115 Stat. 224), and in order to facilitate the closure of detention facilities at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, I hereby direct that the following actions be taken as expeditiously as possible with respect to the facility known as the Thomson Correctional Center (TCC) in Thomson, Illinois:

etcetera, etcetera, etcetera

BARACK OBAMA​
 
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  • #113
russ_watters said:
1a. Release them to their home countries. Well, no, you can't. Many of the countries where these guys game from don't want them back, so some simply can't be released back to their home countries. And others who have been released back to their home countries have rejoined the terrorist ranks they came from. So that doesn't work.
About 14%, 1 in 7, according to an unreleased Pentagon report from last January. Is it justice to incarcerate the other 6? And since these detainees were released during the Bush administration it is hardly fair to use Bush's failures to paint Obama.

1b. Release them to the US. Um, no.

No argument here.

1c. Transfer them to a civilian jail in Chicago. Funny he didn't mention this option during the campaign, isn't it...? The only argument I've heard in favor of this is that it eliminates the symbol of Gitmo. So what? Is that really all this issue is about? A symbol? As if that really means the terrorists in Afghanistan are going to say 'oh, ok, 'Gitmo is closed - let's lay down our weapons and make peace.' C'mon. Naive platitude is all that is. Let's be honest: the only reason he is transferring them to Chicago is so he can claim he fulfilled his campaign promise. There is no real value to doing it (and, of course, it costs money). And it doesn't really solve the problem of what to do with them anyway, does it? It isn't a permanent solution. So...

It is more about showing the rest of the world that America is a nation ruled by law, not fear. Are we so afraid of a tactic that we will abandon are values?

1c1: Once they get to Chicago, 1a and 1b haven't gotten any more viable. What else can we do? How 'bout trying them in civilian court? Is that a can of worms we really want opened? For a foreign fighter in Afghanistan to be charged (with what?) in a civilian court under US civilian court rules? It just wouldn't work for most of them. And that's in addition to the fact that trying them in civilian court puts the lives of our soldiers in danger because they have to adjust their rules of engagement to treat enemy soldiers like civilian criminals in some cases.

This doesn't follow for me.

Can you offer an example where rules of engagement are rewritten because the guy shooting at you might be classified a civilian?

On the battlefield you have combatants and noncombatants. I don't see how prisoner classification after the battle should have any bearing on rules of engagement.

...and more to the point: now that the public really knows how the issue works instead of just hearing the one-liner soundbyte that he's going to close the prison, public opinion has turned against him on it. The public is now starting to realize that they got suckered by a flashy smile and a "hope"ful speech.
This is just speculation and opinion. And American policy is not set by the poll numbers... it is made by corporations.
...and the same goes for the laughable unemployment prediction and action. Remember 8%? He'd appreciate it if you would forget...

Most economists agreed that the stimulus was too small. Banks took the 700 billion from Bush and purchased the treasury bonds that were printed to get the 700 billion to begin with. So yes, I consider what Obama has done for the economy to be quite positive. He is not an economist, so I never took his prediction that seriously to begin with.
Has he? Immediately after making his declaration of that he started making exceptions to it. Without seeing some statistics, I'm not inclined to believe he's lived up to this. Also, the way you worded it, a 1% drop would be counted as a win - but considering how hard he campaigned on this point, I'd consider it a big loss since what he actually initially said was "lobbyists won't find a job in my White House". So while you may consider a small drop to be a good start, his promise was laughably silly when he made it and he never really attempted to keep it anyway. And you're giving him a win for that?

You still need to fill the jobs with qualified people. Obama has gone a long way toward closing the door between lobbyists and government. The rules are much stricter, although he has provided waivers for many. I would call it progress, not a win, but a good step in the right direction.

I actually laughed out loud when I saw this. While I completely agree that being a good speech maker is one of his principal accomplishments, it is still funny to see it actually listed as such.

Being a too good a speech maker is one of the things I've never liked about him.

I thought that it was his speech at the 2004 Democratic convention that led you to support Obama in the first place.
 
  • #114
OmCheeto said:
Ah ha! Another reason I'm supporting Obama. He's does seem to get things done:
On the first read this statement baffled me. You must have some familiarity with the fact that the day after Obama took office he promised http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-by-the-President-On-National-Security-5-21-09/" .
Obama speech said:
By any measure, the costs of keeping it open far exceed the complications involved in closing it. That's why I argued that it should be closed throughout my campaign, and that is why I ordered it closed within one year.
But after re-examination of Obama's statement contains its own explanation for the widespread lack of seriousness Russ mentioned is evident right there - the naivete expressed by Obama both in underestimating the need for Gitmo and in underestimating the complexity in the disposition of the existing prisoners. I posted at the time of this action that the Washington Post carried a story stating Obama "ended" the "war on terror' the same day by signing a piece of paper. With insane reporting like that it is understandable how people don't take the issue seriously.
 
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  • #115
Jumping in on the economic issues -
Skyhunter said:
...Most economists agreed that the stimulus was too small.
No, not most. Many economists didn't approve the original stimulus plan, at least not the spending aspects. Some hard core Keynesians want more stimulus now but they're not 'most' at this point.
Skyhunter said:
Banks
and GM/Chrysler and AIG and Freddie/Fannie
Skyhunter said:
took the 700 billion from Bush
and Obama/Geitner
 
  • #116
russ_watters said:
His position is wrong on several levels:

So you assert

1. You can't just close the facility. There are people there and you have to do something with them. When he gave his one-liner soundbytes on the issue during the campaign, he never explained what would be done with them and so he got people to support him on the issue without ever thinking about it...which is what a good public speaker does. So what can really be done with them...?:

1a. Release them to their home countries. Well, no, you can't. Many of the countries where these guys game from don't want them back, so some simply can't be released back to their home countries. And others who have been released back to their home countries have rejoined the terrorist ranks they came from. So that doesn't work.

actually you can do this, US policy and practice (as so amply demonstrated by the last administration) is not an issue of what other countries want or don't want. Drop them off with the authroities in the country of record, whether or not they want them.

"doesn't work?" what doesn't work? Who cares what they do when they are returned? obviously not the people who captured them and then held them in detention, or they would have operated under the principles of such a plan all along. If they had been concerned about them becoming, joining, or rejoining terrorist organizations after their release, they should have taken steps to make such an eventuality unlikely. If they didn't care, why should anyone else?

1b. Release them to the US. Um, no.

Why not? give them a temporary VISA and release them in the US. If they commit a crime, charge and arrest them, if they overstay their VISA, deport them.

1c. Transfer them to a civilian jail in Chicago.

Permanent detention without charges or trial, is no solution whether it is at the Guantanamo Naval base, or a former Chicago area prison.

1c1: Once they get to Chicago, 1a and 1b haven't gotten any more viable. What else can we do? How 'bout trying them in civilian court? Is that a can of worms we really want opened? For a foreign fighter in Afghanistan to be charged (with what?) in a civilian court under US civilian court rules? It just wouldn't work for most of them. And that's in addition to the fact that trying them in civilian court puts the lives of our soldiers in danger because they have to adjust their rules of engagement to treat enemy soldiers like civilian criminals in some cases.

should have been thought about before taking them prisoner and detaining them, regardless, yes, the best, and really only, non-hypocritical method of dealing with these people in accord with American traditions, values and law, is to charge them and try them in US courts, and if they are found not guilty of the crimes for which they are charged, then they must be released, if they are found guilty, they they face the appropriate sentence according to US system of justice.

After insisting upon using the US military to accomplish what should have been handled mostly by US Justice dept methods and agents, it is a little late to whine about the restrictions and dangers of making them perform tasks they are neither equipped nor trained to perform. Ultimately, however, if we are talking about actual battlefield engagements rather than the more ephemeral "global stage of battle in the War on Terror," military rules of engagement are not a problem or issue, so long as any prisoners taken, are appropriately processed once they have been removed from the battlefield situation.

...and more to the point: now that the public really knows how the issue works instead of just hearing the one-liner soundbyte that he's going to close the prison, public opinion has turned against him on it. The public is now starting to realize that they got suckered by a flashy smile and a "hope"ful speech.

Finding fault with the Obama administration, doesn not automatically lend credence or support for fringe right distortions of the issues.

Being a too good a speech maker is one of the things I've never liked about him.

Now that's a substantive and logical reason not to like someone.
 
  • #117
mheslep said:
This article does not say that. It makes clear, that now, in the year 2010 intelligence has been received that changes the intelligence estimate of the year 2007:

Unfortunately, this "new" evidence, sounds suspicously similar to the Bush "intelligence" from the same types of disreputable sources with an agenda to involve US sanctions and force against their domestic political rivals (ala Curveball, and all the rest). Personally, I think we take the steps we can to forestall and prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear weapon's state, but, in the long run we should start dealing with them as though such were already a fact. Dealing with Iran with a handful of crude nuclear weapons is certainly no more difficult than dealing with the Global Soviet empire with tens of thousands of state of the art nuclear weapons.
 
  • #118
Trakar said:
Why not? give them a temporary VISA and release them in the US. If they commit a crime, charge and arrest them, if they overstay their VISA, deport them.

You would want to just release terrorists into the civilian population of the U.S.?

Permanent detention without charges or trial, is no solution whether it is at the Guantanamo Naval base, or a former Chicago area prison.

Yes it is. It takes the terrorists off of the battlefield and thus keeps them from harming anyone. The United States is ready to end the War on Terror tomorrow if the terrorists want. They're the ones who keep trying to attack us.

should have been thought about before taking them prisoner and detaining them, regardless, yes, the best, and really only, non-hypocritical method of dealing with these people in accord with American traditions, values and law, is to charge them and try them in US courts, and if they are found not guilty of the crimes for which they are charged, then they must be released, if they are found guilty, they they face the appropriate sentence according to US system of justice.

Treating terrorism like a law enforcement issue is what got us to 9/11 in the first place. Non-state, illegal combatants are not to be treated as criminals. If civilian court trials are held, it can lead to the release of classified information on how they were captured (that is what happened with the WTC bombers) and also mean soldiers in the battlefield may have to treat certain terrorists as criminals.
 
  • #119
OmCheeto said:
But that just stinks of hypocrisy. Seems to me that this is, ironically, why we've had an embargo on Cuba for the last 50 some odd years.

No it does not. There is a HUGE difference between holding non-state, illegal enemy combatants who are not entitled to Geneva Convention rights or the U.S. Constitution in a place like Guantanomo Bay because they have decided to repeatedly attempt to commit acts of war against the nation, and a government literally just infringing on the rights and freedoms of its people in the name of power.
 
  • #120
Why support Obama? How could anyone be unhappy with Obama? The guy is amazing!

Officially banned the use of torture
Closing Gitmo
Reestablishing the credibility of the US around the globe [as did we by electing him!]
Helped to orchestrate a response to the in-process global economic meltdown
Recall that he was a superstar even among global leaders!. Amazing! Even they can see that Obama is a once-in-a-lifetime leader.
Reacted forcefully and quickly to intervene in the meltdown of the US economy.
Renewed long-term effort to ban all nuclear weapons
The Nuclear Doomsday Clock Still Ticks
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-doomsday-clock-still-ticks

Very likely to get 90% or more of what he wanted for health care reform. Presidents have been trying for seventy years. This alone is enough to mark his place in history as one of the greats.

Has shown steady resolve in his treatment of Afghanistan. Has used force where possible against terrorist camps in Pakistan, as he said that he would.

In spite of the fact that many economists argued that, in order to save them, Obama would have to nationalize the banks, he refused to do so; making it clear even to a lunatic that the claims that Obama is a "socialist" are lunatic. He had the perfect opportunity to seize power at the financial heart of the nation, but he didn't. Of course, even that isn't enough to change the minds of his detractors. Instead they cry about, essentially, how he saved the economy.

He angers the fringe on the right and the left because he is operating in the middle. He is smart, skilled, calm, and calculating. He is dedicated to the right side of the right issues and he stays focused. While he is human and will make mistakes, and he has, so far he is as close to being the ideal President as any I have seen in my lifetime. Thank God that great men appear in times of great crisis.
 
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  • #121
Ivan Seeking said:
Why support Obama? How could anyone be unhappy with Obama? The guy is amazing!

Officially banned the use of torture
Closing Gitmo
Reestablishing the credibility of the US around the globe [as did we by electing him!]
Helped to orchestrate a response to the in-process global economic meltdown
Recall that he was a superstar even among global leaders!. Amazing! Even they can see that Obama is a once-in-a-lifetime leader.
Reacted forcefully and quickly to intervene in the meltdown of the US economy.
Renewed long-term effort to ban all nuclear weapons

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-doomsday-clock-still-ticks

Very likely to get 90% or more of what he wanted for health care reform. Presidents have been trying for seventy years. This alone is enough to mark his place in history as one of the greats.

Has shown steady resolve in his treatment of Afghanistan. Has used force where possible against terrorist camps in Pakistan, as he said that he would.

In spite of the fact that many economists argued that, in order to save them, Obama would have to nationalize the banks, he refused to do so; making it clear even to a lunatic that the claims that Obama is a "socialist" are lunatic. He had the perfect opportunity to seize power at the financial heart of the nation, but he didn't. Of course, even that isn't enough to change the minds of his detractors.

He angers the fringe on the right and the left because he is operating in the middle. He is smart, skilled, calm, and calculating. He is dedicated to the right side of the right issues and he stays focused. While he is human and will make mistakes, and he has, so far he is as close to being the ideal President as any I have seen in my lifetime. Thank God that great men appear in times of great crisis.

I take a completely opposite view of him so far. I think a lot of these points are still muddy at best.
 
  • #122
mheslep said:
On the first read this statement baffled me. You must have some familiarity with the fact that the day after Obama took office he promised http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-by-the-President-On-National-Security-5-21-09/" .
But after re-examination of Obama's statement contains its own explanation for the widespread lack of seriousness Russ mentioned is evident right there - the naivete expressed by Obama both in underestimating the need for Gitmo and in underestimating the complexity in the disposition of the existing prisoners. I posted at the time of this action that the Washington Post carried a story stating Obama "ended" the "war on terror' the same day by signing a piece of paper. With insane reporting like that it is understandable how people don't take the issue seriously.

Don't worry, no one reads the newspapers anymore anyways. Haven't you heard? They are all going down the toilet. :)
 
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  • #123
Cyrus said:
I take a completely opposite view of him so far. I think a lot of these points are still muddy at best.

Maybe, but you're just a kid. :biggrin:

Isn't it past your bedtime?
 
  • #124
Ivan Seeking said:
Maybe, but you're just a kid. :biggrin:

Well, honestly. Closing down Gitmo was a stupid move because he had no idea where to move them, and no one in the United States wants them in their town (Because of irrational fear that it will invite attacks in their city - :rolleyes: oh brother). If he was smart, he would put all the GITMO crew in a state that never votes democratic.

As for credibility around the world...ehhh...no. He increased the popularity of the name brand USA, but realistically the Chinese are doing their own thing and giving him a hard time. He doesn't have the pull to keep them in check. When he visited Russia, no one cheered for him, it was only quiet silence in the crowd because they were suspicious of him.

For his healthcare reform, we will have to see what actually gets passed before making any claims. The point here is that everyone: republican and democrat: know that reform has to occur because the current system is not self-sustainable. The only question is how the reform will look like.
 
  • #125
Ivan Seeking said:
How could anyone be unhappy with Obama?

Because they want to.

A very dear old friend of mine, who must be in her 80's by now, sent me emails about once a month regarding Obama. They were all the typical slanderous types that people receive and just forward, nodding their heads, and going "Yah! Everyone should know the truth!". I put up with them until she sent me the one about the Cook County jail. Now this was probably a mistake on my part, as I've not received any emails from her since, but I responded to her, and all of her 15 friends that she'd cc'd, that her story was false.

So what's my point? Like I said, people want to be unhappy with him. They want to believe the lies. And I find most of the real arguments against Obama to be trivial, or worse yet, simple name calling.

But I think all the garbage emails about him prove one thing: If they have to resort to lies to make him look bad, then the kid must be doing a pretty good job.
 
  • #126
OmCheeto said:
Because they want to.

A very dear old friend of mine, who must be in her 80's by now, sent me emails about once a month regarding Obama. They were all the typical slanderous types that people receive and just forward, nodding their heads, and going "Yah! Everyone should know the truth!". I put up with them until she sent me the one about the Cook County jail. Now this was probably a mistake on my part, as I've not received any emails from her since, but I responded to her, and all of her 15 friends that she'd cc'd, that her story was false.

So what's my point? Like I said, people want to be unhappy with him. They want to believe the lies. And I find most of the real arguments against Obama to be trivial, or worse yet, simple name calling.

But I think all the garbage emails about him prove one thing: If they have to resort to lies to make him look bad, then the kid must be doing a pretty good job.



I remember watching this, it was probably off a link from PF. I sure hope that this represents a small fraction of Americans because it's kind of sickening. There may be legit reasons to dislike Obama and I'm certain that some people truly do not support Obama because ofwhat he's done so far. These types of people/tactics just make the position seem rediculous though, in my opinion.

I'll tell you all why I support Obama: He's very handsome and I would love to make love with him.
 
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  • #127
Ivan Seeking said:
Why support Obama? How could anyone be unhappy with Obama? The guy is amazing!

Officially banned the use of torture

This I think is nonsense. Believe you me, if the scenario ever occurs where they need to torture the guy to get information or NYC or DC are going up in a nuclear fireball possibly, they're going to torture him.

Closing Gitmo

Stupid move IMO.

Reestablishing the credibility of the US around the globe [as did we by electing him!]

You mean maybe popularity. The U.S. was plenty credible already. We are losing our financial credibility right now though, Moody's has said they may have to consider downgrading the value of our bonds.

Recall that he was a superstar even among global leaders!. Amazing! Even they can see that Obama is a once-in-a-lifetime leader.

You judge a leader based on whether they are a "superstar?"

Reacted forcefully and quickly to intervene in the meltdown of the US economy.

That was under George W. Bush. Barack Obama just enacted a stimulus, which no one knows if it has worked yet.

Renewed long-term effort to ban all nuclear weapons

This is a Left-wing pipedream that will never happen and is IMO silly to pursue right now. No one is engaging in a nuclear arms race now. If the Russians want to try this again, go ahead, we'll bankrupt them and send them back to where they were in 1990.

He needs to focus more on stopping Iran IMO with this.

Very likely to get 90% or more of what he wanted for health care reform. Presidents have been trying for seventy years. This alone is enough to mark his place in history as one of the greats.

Or one of the worsts. This healthcare "reform" bill has nothing to do with helping people, it has to do with the Democrats seizing a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to grab control over a sixth of the economy.

The bill is longer than War and Peace and no one knows exactly what is in it, except a variety of new commissions, regulatory agencies, and so forth.

You don't try to reform a sixth of the economy in one fell swoop. There are much cheaper and simpler ways to increase access to healthcare for people, but those are too free-market, and the Democrats do not want free-market. They need to pass this bill (which may be un-Constitutional in certain respects), so they can then hopefully pass a "public option" later on, which then makes the way for single-payer.

It always gets me how every Leftist (not saying you are a Leftist, I just mean in general) cheers for Barack Obama's attempt at health reform to expand coverage, but no one cheered for when George W. Bush enacted the (at the time) largest government intrusion into healthcare in decades with his $400 billion expansion of Medicare.

The Left like big-government, one would think they would have loved that.

And yes, the Republicans could have passed a lot of the health reforms they are saying should be done now when they had control of the Congress and the Executive, so yes they screwed the pooch on that one.

Has shown steady resolve in his treatment of Afghanistan. Has used force where possible against terrorist camps in Pakistan, as he said that he would.

On this, he is doing good I think.

In spite of the fact that many economists argued that, in order to save them, Obama would have to nationalize the banks, he refused to do so; making it clear even to a lunatic that the claims that Obama is a "socialist" are lunatic. He had the perfect opportunity to seize power at the financial heart of the nation, but he didn't. Of course, even that isn't enough to change the minds of his detractors. Instead they cry about, essentially, how he saved the economy.

He is a European-style social democrat, which is still very far to the Left, and very bad for this country IMO. We are not Europe nor should we want to be Europe.

He angers the fringe on the right and the left because he is operating in the middle.

Depends on how one defines "middle." To a socialist, they might say he is operating in the middle, as he is not Left enough for them. To a center-left person for whom center-left is the middle, he is a middle person. I'd say he is operating to the far center-left.

He is smart, skilled, calm, and calculating.

Yes.

He is dedicated to the right side of the right issues and he stays focused. While he is human and will make mistakes, and he has, so far he is as close to being the ideal President as any I have seen in my lifetime. Thank God that great men appear in times of great crisis.

He is dedicated to what he views are the right issues. But that doesn't make them right. We will have to see how he handles the finances of the country, and its security, long-term, before we make any full judgements I'd say.
 
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  • #128
russ_watters said:
1b. Release them to the US. Um, no.

Trakar said:
Why not? give them a temporary VISA and release them in the US. If they commit a crime, charge and arrest them, if they overstay their VISA, deport them.
Yes Traker is on to something here. I suggest the authorities release Gitmo folk directly into Traker's protective custody, actually have them travel only while in said company. Then if a former Gitmo resident commits a crime, after charging and arresting them, we will also be able to announce that the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Napolitano#.22The_system_worked.22_Controversy"[/I]
 
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  • #129
Nebula815 said:
Treating terrorism like a law enforcement issue is what got us to 9/11 in the first place. Non-state, illegal combatants are not to be treated as criminals. If civilian court trials are held, it can lead to the release of classified information on how they were captured (that is what happened with the WTC bombers) and also mean soldiers in the battlefield may have to treat certain terrorists as criminals.

An illegal combatant is a criminal.

According to the GC all persons who are captured in war are to be treated with due care as described in its provisions until such time as they have gone before a tribunal and been determined to be either a legal prisoner of war or otherwise. If they are determined to be criminals then they may be treated and tried as such under the laws of the detaining party.

Guantanamo Bay was being used as a means of keeping at arms length the legal problems of the Bush Admin not wishing to treat the prisoners as prescribed by law attempting to keep them perpetually in a supposed gray area between criminal and combatant. Obama closing the detention facility and bringing the prisoners here will hopefully force the US to properly dispose the matter. Some people find keeping these persons here and treating them with due care to be distasteful. Keeping them in a facility off US soil without any proper legal status is even more distasteful, only we citizens can easily not concern ourselves with it that way.



To the OP in general I would say that I like Obama. I do not think he is the greatest thing since sliced bread. I disagree with him on some issues which I believe any adult should realize is going to happen with anyone, we don't get to build our own president and live in our own perfect world without regard for the needs and wishes of the rest of our countrymen. I believe that Obama is doing a good job. He has not made any major mistakes of which I am aware. He is, in my opinion, doing at least as good a job as I could possibly conceive of McCain doing and with the added benefit that I actually agree with Obama much more than could I agree with McCain. It may be just a personal opinion but I perceive Obama as being much more intelligent and respectable an individual than McCain. I believe that he represents the US well.
 
  • #130
Nebula said:
It always gets me how every Leftist (not saying you are a Leftist, I just mean in general) cheers for Barack Obama's attempt at health reform to expand coverage, but no one cheered for when George W. Bush enacted the (at the time) largest government intrusion into healthcare in decades with his $400 billion expansion of Medicare.
Similarly I was rolling my eyes at the Liberals booing the Bush Admin's push for an amnesty bill knowing full well that it had nothing to do with anything but it being done by Bush. Now that Obama is doing it it is a great idea of course.
 
  • #131
TheStatutoryApe said:
An illegal combatant is a criminal.

According to the GC all persons who are captured in war are to be treated with due care as described in its provisions until such time as they have gone before a tribunal and been determined to be either a legal prisoner of war or otherwise. If they are determined to be criminals then they may be treated and tried as such under the laws of the detaining party.

The GC apply to uniformed soldiers fighting in a declared war though, not to illegal combatants who are not fighting in a declared war, and who even if they were, violated the rules of war, thus meaning the GC do not apply to them.

Some people find keeping these persons here and treating them with due care to be distasteful. Keeping them in a facility off US soil without any proper legal status is even more distasteful, only we citizens can easily not concern ourselves with it that way.

I wouldn't say so. They are illegal enemy combatants. No one forced them to take up arms against the United States. Gitmo's purpose is to keep them out of combat for the duration of the war.
 
  • #132
TheStatutoryApe said:
Similarly I was rolling my eyes at the Liberals booing the Bush Admin's push for an amnesty bill knowing full well that it had nothing to do with anything but it being done by Bush. Now that Obama is doing it it is a great idea of course.

Yup.
 
  • #133
Nebula815 said:
The GC apply to uniformed soldiers fighting in a declared war though, not to illegal combatants who are not fighting in a declared war, and who even if they were, violated the rules of war, thus meaning the GC do not apply to them.



I wouldn't say so. They are illegal enemy combatants. No one forced them to take up arms against the United States. Gitmo's purpose is to keep them out of combat for the duration of the war.
There are a few discussions regarding this already. They get rather long and involved. I'll only say that if you read the GC [Part I, Article 5] it seems(since I am no expert I will only use 'seems') to clearly indicate that all prisoners receive the prescribed treatment for POWs until their cases are properly disposed by a tribunal.
 
  • #134
On a side note, from what I know of Gitmo, it gives the prisoners basically POW treatment. The International Red Cross is there, they get three meals a day, medical care, prayer time, etc...
 
  • #136
Nebula815 said:
You would want to just release terrorists into the civilian population of the U.S.?

Sorry, I must have missed where the evidence against these people was put before and a jury of peers, argued and weighed, and found to compellingly have indicated their guilt in the crimes of which our government has accused them? As far as I know, they are suspects in a serious set of crimes, and I fear that the government may have so tainted the evidence and mishandled the prosecution of these suspects that clean and clear prosecutions on the original charged offenses may be impossible, and "time served" may in some cases prove inadequate recompense for some counter-claims of personal injuries and damages committed by criminal actions involved with US detention.

Yes it is. It takes the terrorists off of the battlefield and thus keeps them from harming anyone. The United States is ready to end the War on Terror tomorrow if the terrorists want. They're the ones who keep trying to attack us.

and you know these people to be terrorists because,...?

(hint - if they are found anywhere near a "battlefield" they aren't, by definition, "terrorists." Some of these might be "enemy combatants," or "resistance" fighters, or taxicab drivers and farmers in the wrong place at the wrong time, or someone who said something bad about someone who had the ear of a local police officer, or US informant. Ultimately, until all of the evidence is dispassionately evaluated and each case is carefully analysed we don't even know that all of the people labelled enemy combatants actually are such. Battlefield precautions dictate that one apply enthusiastic prejudice when it comes to any such classifications, better to be overly cautious than blown up or shot by someone you released yesterday because you weren't sure who they were or what their intentions were. Lock them up and treat them like a fanatic enemy for eight years and you have probably turned them into such even if they weren't such when you took custody of them. However, making someone hate you, does not justify your continued imprisonment of them.)


Treating terrorism like a law enforcement issue is what got us to 9/11 in the first place. Non-state, illegal combatants are not to be treated as criminals. If civilian court trials are held, it can lead to the release of classified information on how they were captured (that is what happened with the WTC bombers) and also mean soldiers in the battlefield may have to treat certain terrorists as criminals.

No, the failure to continue to treat terrorism as a top priority national and international legal and diplomatic issue is what led to 9/11. The pumping of hundreds of billions of dollars annually into the bank accounts of politically and ideologically radical royal families and not applying appropriate economic and diplomatic pressure toward reform among the nations ruled by such despots, is what got us to 9/11. Force begats force, mistreatment and hypocrisy only result in lowering the bar and admitting defeat. Repeating the same mistakes expecting different results is both insanity and suicidal. If you don't like what America stands for, you are free to leave, but I've sworn to defend the US Constitution and what it stands for against all enemies foriegn and domestic, and that is an oath I take seriously and have never been relieved from, and right now, you are starting to sound like an "enemy combatant" to me.
 
  • #137
Trakar said:
Sorry, I must have missed where the evidence against these people was put before and a jury of peers, argued and weighed, and found to compellingly have indicated their guilt in the crimes of which our government has accused them? As far as I know, they are suspects in a serious set of crimes, and I fear that the government may have so tainted the evidence and mishandled the prosecution of these suspects that clean and clear prosecutions on the original charged offenses may be impossible, and "time served" may in some cases prove inadequate recompense for some counter-claims of personal injuries and damages committed by criminal actions involved with US detention.

You are talking as if they common criminals. They aren't. And the government was extremely cautious in its handling of these terrorists at Gitmo, to the point of being hamstrung to a good degree.

and you know these people to be terrorists because,...?

They don't just throw random people into Gitmo.

Battlefield precautions dictate that one apply enthusiastic prejudice when it comes to any such classifications, better to be overly cautious than blown up or shot by someone you released yesterday because you weren't sure who they were or what their intentions were.

Which is hwy we have Gitmo.

Lock them up and treat them like a fanatic enemy for eight years and you have probably turned them into such even if they weren't such when you took custody of them. However, making someone hate you, does not justify your continued imprisonment of them.)

They are not treated like a fanatic enemy, they are simply kept off of the battlefield so they do not kill more Americans.

No, the failure to continue to treat terrorism as a top priority national and international legal and diplomatic issue is what led to 9/11. The pumping of hundreds of billions of dollars annually into the bank accounts of politically and ideologically radical royal families and not applying appropriate economic and diplomatic pressure toward reform among the nations ruled by such despots, is what got us to 9/11.

None of this would have worked against Afghanistan, which is what led to 9/11.

Force begats force, mistreatment and hypocrisy only result in lowering the bar and admitting defeat.

We do not mistreat captured terrorists.

Repeating the same mistakes expecting different results is both insanity and suicidal.

Yup.

If you don't like what America stands for, you are free to leave, but I've sworn to defend the US Constitution and what it stands for against all enemies foriegn and domestic, and that is an oath I take seriously and have never been relieved from, and right now, you are starting to sound like an "enemy combatant" to me.

Sounding a bit self-righteous here IMO. You are entitled to your opinion, but not everyone believes the U.S. Constitution applies to these terrorists.
 
  • #138
Nebula815 said:
No it does not. There is a HUGE difference between holding non-state, illegal enemy combatants who are not entitled to Geneva Convention rights or the U.S. Constitution in a place like Guantanomo Bay because they have decided to repeatedly attempt to commit acts of war against the nation, and a government literally just infringing on the rights and freedoms of its people in the name of power.

The Geneva convention applies to the signatory governments and their agencies (military aspects), it governs their responsibilities and binds their actions, much the same way our constitution outlines and binds the actions of our national government. The US Constitution covers how the US government and its agents may act with regards to citizens (domestic and foriegn), suspects in crimes (regardless of nationality or citizenship) and persons in general. The Constitution doesn't apply to people, it applies to our government. The Geneva conventions were established along greatly similar guidelines, they are agreements and guarantees among the signatory nations. It doesn't matter if the people affected are from signatory nations, what matters is the international accord that these nations will respond with, at the least, the minimal treatments and requirements all individuals which its military forces interact with; non-combatant civilian, combatants, neutral or involved third parties, and the distinctions between internaional and non-international conflict (especially with the three subsequent and applicable protocols).
 
  • #139
Cyrus said:
I take a completely opposite view of him so far. I think a lot of these points are still muddy at best.

Fully Agreed! "...muddy at best", and that is being generous, from my perspective.
 
  • #140
mheslep said:
Yes Traker is on to something here. I suggest the authorities release Gitmo folk directly into Traker's protective custody, actually have them travel only while in said company. Then if a former Gitmo resident commits a crime, after charging and arresting them, we will also be able to announce that the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Napolitano#.22The_system_worked.22_Controversy"[/I]

The only thing that would keep former Guantánamo detainees from boarding and blowing up a plane, is the same thing currently keeping everyone else from boarding and blowing up planes. If you worried about flying, keeping these people in Guantánamo doesn't seem to be stopping people from trying to blow up planes. If you are just nominating me to receive several hundred thousand a year and a government pension to serve as a former Gitmo detainee probation officer, we'd have to talk about the details but, I wouldn't rule out the opportunity out of hand.
 
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