Rwanda, Take II
Jul. 26th, 2004 03:45 pmAnd, as before, our government does nothing. I wouldn't be so angry, I think, were it not that this President has made such a screaming point about America being the world's police, and loudly proclaimed that we stood for peace and justice all over the globe.
Well, where's the peace and justice now, Mr. Bush?
http://www.itv.com/news/846086.html
Sudan emergency aid appeal under way
11.44PM, Wed Jul 21 2004
A new appeal for emergency aid has been launched as the humanitarian crisis in Sudan continues to escalate.
A million people have been forced to leave their homes in the Darfur region of Sudan because of civil war.
They are living in desert camps over the border in neighbouring Chad and are desperately in need of food and clean water.
The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC), representing the UK's leading international aid agencies, is aiming to raise desperately needed cash.
Government-backed militia known as the Janjaweed are accused of carrying out the mass rape of women and young girls. Around 30,000 people are believed to have been murdered.
Amnesty International has said that testimonies from refugees show that the attacks are occurring on a massive scale.
To make a donation visit the DEC website at www.dec.org.uk, telephone 0870 60 60 900 or send a cheque/postal order made payable to: DEC Sudan Emergency, PO BOX 999, London EC3.
"Women and girls are being killed, raped and gang-raped, raped in public, abducted, tortured and forced into sexual slavery," Amnesty said.
A DEC spokeswoman said: "The scale of people's suffering in Sudan is immense and is getting worse. People have lost family members, been driven from their homes and lost everything they own.
The DEC charities appealing for help are British Red Cross, CAFOD, CARE International UK, Christian Aid, Concern, Help the Aged, Merlin, Oxfam, Save the Children, Tearfund and World Vision.
Yesterday, a human rights organisation accused the Sudanese government of arming and supporting the militia.
Human Rights Watch's director Kenneth Roth said: "We can no longer trust Khartoum to police itself when Khartoum is part of a large problem. It's like the fox guarding the chicken coop."
"We in no sense contest Sudanese government efforts to suppress that rebellion.
"The way the Sudanese government had chosen to try to suppress the rebellion is by attacking any member of the two ethnic groups that have given rise to the scorched earth policy."
Well, where's the peace and justice now, Mr. Bush?
http://www.itv.com/news/846086.html
Sudan emergency aid appeal under way
11.44PM, Wed Jul 21 2004
A new appeal for emergency aid has been launched as the humanitarian crisis in Sudan continues to escalate.
A million people have been forced to leave their homes in the Darfur region of Sudan because of civil war.
They are living in desert camps over the border in neighbouring Chad and are desperately in need of food and clean water.
The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC), representing the UK's leading international aid agencies, is aiming to raise desperately needed cash.
Government-backed militia known as the Janjaweed are accused of carrying out the mass rape of women and young girls. Around 30,000 people are believed to have been murdered.
Amnesty International has said that testimonies from refugees show that the attacks are occurring on a massive scale.
To make a donation visit the DEC website at www.dec.org.uk, telephone 0870 60 60 900 or send a cheque/postal order made payable to: DEC Sudan Emergency, PO BOX 999, London EC3.
"Women and girls are being killed, raped and gang-raped, raped in public, abducted, tortured and forced into sexual slavery," Amnesty said.
A DEC spokeswoman said: "The scale of people's suffering in Sudan is immense and is getting worse. People have lost family members, been driven from their homes and lost everything they own.
The DEC charities appealing for help are British Red Cross, CAFOD, CARE International UK, Christian Aid, Concern, Help the Aged, Merlin, Oxfam, Save the Children, Tearfund and World Vision.
Yesterday, a human rights organisation accused the Sudanese government of arming and supporting the militia.
Human Rights Watch's director Kenneth Roth said: "We can no longer trust Khartoum to police itself when Khartoum is part of a large problem. It's like the fox guarding the chicken coop."
"We in no sense contest Sudanese government efforts to suppress that rebellion.
"The way the Sudanese government had chosen to try to suppress the rebellion is by attacking any member of the two ethnic groups that have given rise to the scorched earth policy."
no subject
Date: 2004-07-26 01:54 pm (UTC)Sorry, just paraphrasing bush's reasons for not wanting to deal with anything but Iraq...
no subject
Date: 2004-07-26 03:11 pm (UTC)If only Bush had that much style.
Two Words
Date: 2004-07-26 06:04 pm (UTC)[matt]
Date: 2004-07-27 07:08 am (UTC)She's probably pretty attractive too, or the other countries of the world would have learned by now. It may be that America is in her late thirties nowadays and has to learn how to be a manipulative bitch in a different age of life, if indeed she were a person to complete this analogy. There are many who are getting tired of her act and would love to see her down with the mascara running down her face.
I'm not saying that I'm proud of this by any stretch...it's just my viewpoint on what America is.....so basically my answer to your last question is that the geopolitical behavior of this country is well documented and isn't doing anything different now....it doesn't do favors or requests for free. Any time the US helps somebody in the name of good there's usually a pricetag involved behind the scenes.
Bush is nothing but the latest (one of the more offensive) puppet in a regime that is more machine than human.
Ever wonder what our biological cells would say about what we do? I bet my cells might think that I'm a tyrant dictator, the way I've been eating lately.
-Matt <----one extremely jaded voter
Re: [matt]
Date: 2004-07-27 07:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 08:05 am (UTC)Carter put it pretty well last night-- in 34 months, we've watched the amazing good will and solidarity of the entire world towards us be completely squandered. We're led by a President who believes America should stand alone, but we live in a world where all countries must work together.
Gah.
[matt]
Date: 2004-07-27 08:27 am (UTC)Some presidents can do a little out of the box thinking, but look where that got Clinton. A president needs the machine to survive. That's why some can get away with murder (current puppet) and some can't get away with diddling a bimbo. They just need to be a good actor and role player. That's why Reagan's name is so entrenched in the history books. He was an excellent puppet. Bush Jr. is terrible at it.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 01:03 pm (UTC)The common thread though is that the UN seems incapable of doing anything in either case, except taking bribe money.
Q
Re: [matt]
Date: 2004-07-27 02:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 06:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 06:32 pm (UTC)Really, spread the blame around a little. The UN SHOULD be capable of acting without Bush telling it to. Only, they really haven't shown any sign of it.
∞
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 06:40 pm (UTC)EVERYONE should be doing something about Sudan. But for Bush to utterly ignore the situation is hypocritical, to say the least.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 09:24 pm (UTC)If you WANT him to intervene in Sudan, then why are you complaining that he intervened in Iraq? Conversely, if you DIDN'T want him to go into Iraq, why are you unhappy that he's not going into Sudan?
∞
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 09:32 pm (UTC)The decision to go into Iraq was "pre-emptive war." There was no pressing need to invade and take over at that instant, though Bush tried to convince the world that there was. Now, there's an immediate, pressing, horrific need to help Sudan, and he does nothing. Says nothing. I didn't like the push for war in Iraq because there was no urgent need. Now that there is one elsewhere, it further shows up his hypocrisy that he looks the other way.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 09:51 pm (UTC)By the way, has Kerry articulated a position on Sudan? The closest I've been able to discern is that he's on the sitting back and waiting for the world community side of the equation.
I'm just looking for a consistant principle here.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 10:04 pm (UTC)When there is an urgent, pressing need to go into a country to offer humanitarian aid, go. When there isn't, don't. I don't support "pre-emptive war." And I despise hypocrisy in a President. Is that simple enough?
Do you just come here to bait me? You KNOW we don't agree politically. And coming here and saying, "There's no pleasing some people" isn't going to win me to your argument.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 10:33 pm (UTC)"The dictator who is assembling the world's most dangerous weapons has already used them on whole villages -- leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind, or disfigured. Iraqi refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtained -- by torturing children while their parents are made to watch. International human rights groups have catalogued other methods used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape. If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning."
The humanitarian disaster that was Iraq under Saddam was one of the four reasons given in the State of the Union speech for going. Hundreds of thousands of people were killed. If humanitarian reasons are justification for going anywhere, then it was justified. In my opinion, opening the doors of a prison with hundreds of children under five in it justifies a lot.
You didn't give a consistant principle, you gave a threshold with a gray area, what decides "Immediate" enough? You faulted Bush for not waiting for the UN in one situation, and faulted him for waiting in another. Then you demand that he be consistant, but to be consistant on the position that you faulted him for before. "We're led by a President who believes America should stand alone, but we live in a world where all countries must work together." I assume you don't LIKE it when America acts alone. You should be happy, you're getting your wish now.
If you want Bush to be the world's policeman NOW, then stop complaining about him having been it THEN. If you want that, then you have to accept all that comes with it.
I didn't "come here to bait you." I still have you on my friends list, so I saw the post. I thought it would be a one shot thing, giving you a poke in the contradiction. That you don't see how you're being inconsistant is troubling.
By the way, I'm not opposed to intervention in Sudan, but I'd like to see the rest of the world step up for once, since they too bitch about the US taking the lead.
ÿ
no subject
Date: 2004-07-27 10:48 pm (UTC)What's happening in Sudan has built to a crisis NOW. And again, because there doesn't seem to be some pressing political gain, Bush isn't saying anything about it. He isn't even bringing it up, though soon, as the situation worsens-- which it inevitably will-- he'll have to.
I do think Bush should have gone in with the support of the UN in Iraq, and I never said he shouldn't go in with the UN's support now. You want to bring up a lack of consistency? Explain why, when humanitarian aid was so important in Iraq, it matters nothing now in Sudan?
And you can take your condescending tone and shove it, Rich.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-28 01:50 am (UTC)Soooo, he should have kept ignoring it then? Afganistan was over, and we waited months and months trying to do it the diplomatic way.
He decided it'd become an issue when he needed a diversion to cover the fact that he couldn't find Osama Bin Laden.
Osama is, more than likely, in the northern reaches of Pakistan. We can't go there, it would mean violating the sovreignty of our fragile ally, and the result would be a takeover by the Islamic fundamentalists, making Pakistan a terrorist nation with nuclear weapons. So the best we can do is keep him cornered, and deal with the rest of al Qaeda.
In the meantime, Afganistan is going to have free and open elections in October.
There was no connection between Al Qaeda and Iraq... He said there was a link. There wasn't.
Not according to the 9/11 commission. There may not have been one between Iraq and the 9/11 attack, but there was definitely a connection between the two.
I do think Bush should have gone in with the support of the UN in Iraq,
Except, that wasn't going to happen, not while France, Germany and Russia were getting fat kickbacks from the Oil for Food program. That 18th resolution was just about to have enough votes to go through before Chirac announced it was going to be vetoed, no matter what, rendering it moot.
Explain why, when humanitarian aid was so important in Iraq, it matters nothing now in Sudan?
Because everyone complained about Iraq, so now you're getting what you wanted. Also, all our resources are committed right now. Why doesn't the rest of the world take up some of the slack?
I'm sorry if I'm coming off as condescending, but dammit, I expect smarter analysis of these things from you, not just the regurgitated party line that ignores the facts. Since when did you give a damn about Sudan, or any other African nation, until it became a tool to attack Bush?
You're better than this.
Re: [matt]
Date: 2004-07-28 05:54 am (UTC)Just make sure you bring your own meds. And I'd probably have to learn how to drink their vodka or it's an insult to them otherwise. As long as they fed me plenty of kielbasy or blintzes with the vodka I should be fine.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-28 06:48 am (UTC)I've stated my opinions, and I'm not going to figure out a different way to say them so they get through to you. I'm not going to change your opinion-- I just happen to disagree with just about everything you've said.
And you have the right to be condescending because you're disappointed in me? Well. That's not condescending, is it? You take your facts and believe your arguments, I take mine and believe mine. I happen to think I'm right, and at this point, I really don't give a damn. I see just about everything this administration has done as having self-serving ulterior motives, and just about everything they've said as weak, defensive justification. I would have been fine debating this in a mutually respectful manner, but once you started in with the "Aren't you happy now?" and "There's just no pleasing you!" bullshit, it was pretty much game over. And no, it's not just this argument. This is just the final straw. I stopped discussing politics with you years ago, and this is why.
If you can't stop yourself from arguing every time you see a liberal, stop reading my journal.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-28 10:09 am (UTC)As I said, I happen to AGREE WITH YOU that something should be done. But I also think that the rest of the world ought to take up some of the burden, rather than leaving it just to the United States.
I don't think this is opportunistic Bush bashing on your part, just the reverse, that your hatred is so intense that ANYTHING would be interpreted in negative terms.
But you know, I don't even discuss politics in my own journal (at least not very much) and I usually just skip over it when I see it in yours. But I noticed you un-friended me and stopped reading mine quite some time ago. Perhaps I should do the same.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-28 03:47 pm (UTC)http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/africa/07/27/sudan.main/
"Sudan 'will fight foreign troops'
KHARTOUM, Sudan -- Sudan will retaliate against international troops if they are sent to intervene in the troubled Darfur region, Khartoum's foreign minister has said."
no subject
Date: 2004-07-30 01:05 pm (UTC)So, your earlier criticism about Bush not even asking the UN to do something is incorrect. He has asked, but the UN isn't really willing.