Actually, I just did some reading up on Col Ghadafi. Prior to 2003 he was a strong supporter of any kind of revolution type organizations. After reading about him I remember quite clearly about him in the 80's. I was in the Army when they bombed that disco and Reagan tried to kill him with an AF strike when they found leads to him tying him to that disco. We lost a number of troops there as I remember.
So he was always a bad guy. Well in 2003 he finally agreed to take responsibility for sponsoring the Lochurbie bombing and he paid a bunch of money to the victims families. So Bush took him off the axis of evil list. Right wing radio used the settlement as an example that we were scaring all the bad boys into towing the line.
I'm looking at the bigger picture with history as a guide. With the events of 9-11 as well as all the stuff we have been involved in to secure our future oil use. We were pre-destined to be in our current position. We are too dependent on oil to do anything else. I know that alternative energies are too costly and don't have the potential that a lot of people claim. We're pretty much stuck on the path we're on until alternatives can be built and put in to economic use. In other words when oil cost us so much that the alternatives would be cheaper to invest in. We're stuck. We will have to maintain a strong presence for at least another 25 years. I can't really blame it on the Republicans or big money anymore. Obviously big money is making a killing, but it's the price of our existence.
Being former military I do have a lot of respect for the guys over there. I know all the stuff they have to put up with just being under arms. I can't truly imagine what it's like to actually come under fire though. Believe me I spent a lot of time contemplating it while I was in though. The Cold War was pretty real for us. I'm glad they never decided to come over. There would have been close to a million dead between losses on both sides and civilian deaths. Of course that's probably why it never happened.
As for the policy changes. Every thing the military has done in the past 30 years has been designed to reduce casualties of Americans. When there are large casualties, people lose their taste for it. How many were lost on D day. Wasn't it around 60,000 or so? Could you imagine losing as many as were lost in the major battles during WWI and WWII? As long as they can keep the numbers down and the draft out of the picture. They will be able to keep it going.
They seem to have Iran pretty stable now. Of course they have their own security troops now. They're still on the edge though. Could you imagine living in a society where every time you send your kid to the corner market, it might be the last time you see them?
We take a lot for granted here.
So he was always a bad guy. Well in 2003 he finally agreed to take responsibility for sponsoring the Lochurbie bombing and he paid a bunch of money to the victims families. So Bush took him off the axis of evil list. Right wing radio used the settlement as an example that we were scaring all the bad boys into towing the line.
I'm looking at the bigger picture with history as a guide. With the events of 9-11 as well as all the stuff we have been involved in to secure our future oil use. We were pre-destined to be in our current position. We are too dependent on oil to do anything else. I know that alternative energies are too costly and don't have the potential that a lot of people claim. We're pretty much stuck on the path we're on until alternatives can be built and put in to economic use. In other words when oil cost us so much that the alternatives would be cheaper to invest in. We're stuck. We will have to maintain a strong presence for at least another 25 years. I can't really blame it on the Republicans or big money anymore. Obviously big money is making a killing, but it's the price of our existence.
Being former military I do have a lot of respect for the guys over there. I know all the stuff they have to put up with just being under arms. I can't truly imagine what it's like to actually come under fire though. Believe me I spent a lot of time contemplating it while I was in though. The Cold War was pretty real for us. I'm glad they never decided to come over. There would have been close to a million dead between losses on both sides and civilian deaths. Of course that's probably why it never happened.
As for the policy changes. Every thing the military has done in the past 30 years has been designed to reduce casualties of Americans. When there are large casualties, people lose their taste for it. How many were lost on D day. Wasn't it around 60,000 or so? Could you imagine losing as many as were lost in the major battles during WWI and WWII? As long as they can keep the numbers down and the draft out of the picture. They will be able to keep it going.
They seem to have Iran pretty stable now. Of course they have their own security troops now. They're still on the edge though. Could you imagine living in a society where every time you send your kid to the corner market, it might be the last time you see them?
We take a lot for granted here.