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#11
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From: jdupre5762@
Let's continue the comparison. Roosevelt also threw Japanese residents into detention camps by the tens of thousands. Imagine if Bush 43 tried to do that with Muslims. Chris Mark |
#12
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Chris Mark wrote:
From: jdupre5762@ Let's continue the comparison. Roosevelt also threw Japanese residents into detention camps by the tens of thousands. Imagine if Bush 43 tried to do that with Muslims. Roosevelt was wrong in his day, and our Congress not too long ago acknowledged precisely that. If 43 gets reelected, we may not have to do very much imagining. We presently have an undisclosed number of Muslims in detention who have not yet been charged with any crimes against the state, nor have they been allowed access to legal counsel and they've been subjected to a lot of other things made possible by the Patriot's Act. The numbers may burgeon in time. I don't know where we're going with this comparison. Throwing people into concentration camps because you fear something they might possibly do some day in the future without a shred of evidence is no more conscionable (sp?) today than it was when Roosevelt did it in 1942. George Z. |
#13
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Let's continue the comparison.
Roosevelt also threw Japanese residents into detention camps by the tens of thousands. Imagine if Bush 43 tried to do that with Muslims. Roosevelt was wrong in his day, and our Congress not too long ago acknowledged precisely that. If 43 gets reelected, we may not have to do very much imagining. We presently have an undisclosed number of Muslims in detention who have not yet been charged with any crimes against the state, nor have they been allowed access to legal counsel and they've been subjected to a lot of other things made possible by the Patriot's Act. The numbers may burgeon in time. I don't know where we're going with this comparison. Throwing people into concentration camps because you fear something they might possibly do some day in the future without a shred of evidence is no more conscionable (sp?) today than it was when Roosevelt did it in 1942. George Z. President Roosevelt's incarerating American citizens of Japanese ancestry without due process was very bad. There's no doubt about. But no one had dreamed the Japanese could attack PH. It seemed prudent to take all precautions on the West Coast. To condemn FDR now is to make a generational judgment on him, however. I will say I might be more forgiving of Bush 43 playing fast and loose with executive power -- if-he-had-anything to-show-for-it. I had not posted much in this NG around the time of the invasion, but I did support it. MUCH to my surprise the Bush administration had only the vaguest notion of how post-war Iraq would look. They then made every operational and strategic mistake they possibly could. I've posted them before. These include: Not involving the UN in the war. Basically, as events have shown, without UN involvement (i.e. more troops), we can't subdue the country. Misreading (unless he just lied) the intelligence on Iraqi complicity/duplicity in Al Quaida's attacks on the US. Ditto on weapons of mass destruction supposedly held by Saddam. Dismissing the Iraqi army. We could have paid them $200,000,000 for three months (vice 5,000,000,000,000 a month that we are spending now) and not had hundreds of thousands of military trained men hanging around unemployed. Dismissing Ba'ath party officials. It's now suggested that at least some Ba'athists be brought back. Ignoring the estimate of the Army Chief of Staff in Feb, 2003. Gen. Shinseki said "several hundred thousand" US troops would be needed. The Bushies just ignored that -- it didn't fit the plan. Focusing on Iraq when Al Quaida is in Afghanistan. Afghan countryside is now run by the warlords. Again, look at where FDR was after three years, and look where Bush is. I was watching "Meet the Press" today. Lehrman, the former Reagan era SecNav was saying, "we still don't have this, that and the other thing." And Tim Russert said: "After three years?" All Lehrman could do was hem and haw. That's what I am saying -- after three years? Let's take a moment to think about another war time president, Abraham Lincoln. When Lincoln took office, seven states were in active rebellion. The US army was only 17,000 strong. The armory at Pensacola (for instance) was manned by an ordance sergeant and his wife. Most of the army was in the west. That was March 1861. Lincoln made a ton of mstakes. He fired generals probably too quickly. He consistenly over estimated Union sentiment in the south, he meddled in operations (until Grant took over). Of course Lincoln did a lot of good things too. Three years later, Union armies totaling over a million men were poised to crush the rebellion, which they shortly did. How close are we to crushing Al Qaeda? It was reported a couple of nights ago that Al Qaeda training camps are operating RIGHT NOW in the afghan/Pakistani border area. And did anyone see the report that Taliban fighters had occupied a provincial capital in Afghanistan this last week? They've since been ejected, but I guess someone will now make a parallel to that occupation and the Battle of the Bulge. Bush and his sorry crew need to go --not because he ducked his military obligations, --not because he stole enough votes in Florida to steal the election (aided and abetted by the Supreme Court), but because he is a blithering idiot with blithering idiot staffers who have fouled up the war on terror. Walt |
#14
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![]() "JDupre5762" wrote in message ... Let's compare and contrast here, shall we? FDR allowed the Germans and Japanese to murder and torture American POWs at will from 1941 to 1945 and the American Press never called him on it. No proof of that for the Germans at all: they complied strictly with the Geneva Convention. Over 95% of American POWs of the Germans survived the war. John Dupre' They did? Not towards the Soviets or occupied territories nor towards the 12 million murdered in the camps. Want to keep it just to POWS? Ever heard of The Great Escape? 50 escapees were murdered in groups of 2 or 3 AFTER being captured. Ok, let's keep discussing POWS. Ever heard of the "Commando Order" issued by Hitler? How many allied air crews were murdered before becoming POWs? I'm talking here about murders by military people not civilians as in Hamburg where British aircrewen who parachuted into the city were bound and thrown alive into the burning buildings. On the other hand FDR didn't "allow" Axis atrocities. He just couldn't stop them. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#15
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From: "Eunometic"
British Commandos themseves did not take prisoners and were found with orders not to do so as this presumably might imperil their mission. This was the basis of Hitlers commando Order. OK, we have another revisionist here. I snipped the rest of his garbage. The British commandos were found with orders on their persons? That is an out and out lie. This fool even blames the Brits for Hitler's Commando Order. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#16
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#17
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B2431 wrote:
Germans and Italian residents were also detained. Ellis Island even became a detention camp. German-American and Italian-American citizens of the United States were not interned en masse; Japanese-American citizens were. Not just alien residents, mind you, but American citizens, some going back several generations, were locked up in camps without the slightest hint of due process. They were even forbidden to move out of the prohibited areas voluntarily; only internment was acceptable. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
#18
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#19
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From: "George Z. Bush"
Roosevelt also threw Japanese residents into detention camps by the tens of thousands. Imagine if Bush 43 tried to do that with Muslims. Roosevelt was wrong in his day, and our Congress not too long ago acknowledged precisely that. Interesting that Earl Warren was a strong proponent of interning the Japanese while J.Edgar Hoover opposed it. I don't know where we're going with this comparison. Probably nowhere. The situation in WW2 is not comparable to the situation today. And some of the things Roosevelt did couldn't even be contemplated today. For example, he pushed Attorney General Francis Biddle to try his more outspoken congressional critics for sedition, in particular Martin Dies, Burton Wheeler and Hamilton Fish. Under pressure from FDR William Powell Maloney was named "Special Assistant" with broad investigative powers to unearth links between Roosevelt's war policy critics and German propaganda and intelligence networks. During the investigation Maloney leaked hints that he was about to indict Rep. Fish and Clare Hoffman, though he never did. He also targeted Father Coughlin, the "radio priest," but shied away from issuing an indictment. He did, however, indict 28 "extremest" antiwar types from various walks of life. Eventually 30 people were tried but with no convictions. Today that would be like Bush pushing Ashcroft to have Michael Moore, Noam Chomsky, the Dixie Chicks, et al, tried for sedition, with threats of charging Ted Kennedy with treason. Not even conceivable, so much have times changed. Throwing people into concentration camps because you fear something they might possibly do some day in the future without a shred of evidence is no more conscionable (sp?) today than it was when Roosevelt did it in 1942. The old saying is that after every war there is less freedom to protect. But the US generally has learned from the extreme actions taken during previous national emergencies and behaves with more restraint each time. Bush can't do what Roosevelt did, Roosevelt couldn't do what Wilson did and Wilson couldn't do what Lincoln did. And again, this war isn't like WW2, where we had clear nation-state enemies and harnessed the full power of the economy to crushing them without mercy and with total disregard for "collateral damage." Today's war, whether we are for it, against it, or sitting on the fence, we have to admit is a pretty low-intensity affair, not even close to the intensity of Vietnam, let alone World War II. The closest comparisons I can come up with--and they aren't all that close--are the post-civil war Indian campaigns, the Philippines Insurrection and various Carribean/Central American adventures, with the Philippines business being the closest. Difficult, costly, not a lot of casualties but militarily challenging and with general success, even some amazing accomplishments, but not unambiguously leading somewhere, while divisive among citizens, with many wondering not only what the point of it all was, but actively opposed to an effort that seemed to be against the basic principles of the country: We should not be going around invading other countries to impose democracy on them. And the cynics said it was really about making money not democracy. The equivalent of Haliburton then was, I suppose, Del Monte or Dole. Same song, different lyrics. Chris Mark |
#20
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In article ,
Cub Driver wrote: On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 07:58:16 GMT, "Eunometic" wrote: No proof of that for the Germans at all: they complied strictly with the Geneva Convention. Over 95% of American POWs of the Germans survived the war. That didn't help the ones sent to Auschwitz. Not to mention Russian POWs. |
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