In a way, anyone who has voted liberal in oz, for GWB in the US, or Blair in the UK, is responsible for the war in Iraq. And all three were voted in again after the war had "ended". Thereby, those people voting for them again gave their moral support to the war, and support of the blood for oil policy. Now admitted by Coward.i know a lot of people who justify to themselves that they are not directly responsible for Iraq... and hence absolved of any guilt. but in the end, we all want our lifestyle, our cheap goods, etc, etc and oil is a vital part of all this, be it in plastics, or cheap imports, or indeed mobility.
In a way, anyone who has voted liberal in oz, for GWB in the US, or Blair in the UK, is responsible for the war in Iraq. And all three were voted in again after the war had "ended". Thereby, those people voting for them again gave their moral support to the war, and support of the blood for oil policy. Now admitted by Coward.
.....
Chops.
its just overconsumption. the system needs people to keep spending credit to buy crappy goods with built in obsolesence dates and shrouded in masses of packaging. armed with huge marketing budgets, glitzy packaging and hype, advertisers dangle these trinkets in front of the sheeple who happily hammer away at their credit cards, thus perpetuating the (eventually unsustainable) cycle.
watching thousands of people camp out in excited anticipation to buy an iphone, or barge down the doors knocking people over at grace brothers on boxing day in some psychotic consumerist frenzy, it just makes me want to punch people.
... .....
hi dukey1. I'm really not sure they (Labour) actually would have, or could have - cause our reliance on the US as an ally to ward off potential local threats - even distant future ones - is too great.
2. Equally - so many folk simply MUST have the latest greatest gadgets/cars/whatever as soon as it appears and the old one is instantly valueless. .....Only the newest will do. I was shocked by Japanese consumerism when I first came here.
The Age said:US to declare Iran guards terrorists
Helene Cooper, Washington
August 16, 2007
THE Bush Administration is moving towards declaring that Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps is a foreign terrorist organisation.
If imposed, the declaration would signal a more confrontational turn in the Administration's approach to Iran and would be the first time that the US has added the armed forces of any sovereign government to its list of terrorist organisations.
Is this setting the grounds to justify directly attacking Iran's military?
Yep, I'm not supporting it, just commentating...Thats insane,
US 'poised to strike Iran'
Geoff Elliott, Washington correspondent | August 25, 2007
BOB Baer, the former Middle East CIA operative whose first book about his life inspired the oil-and-espionage thriller Syriana, is working on a new book on Iran, but says he was told by senior intelligence officials that he had better get it published in the next couple of months because things could be about to change.
Baer, in an interview with The Weekend Australian, says his contacts in the administration suggest a strategic airstrike on Iran is a real possibility in the months ahead.
"What I'm getting is a sense that their sentiment is they are going to hit the Iranians and not just because of Israel, but due to the fact that Iran is the predominant power in the Gulf and it is hostile and its power is creeping into the Gulf at every level," Baer says.
He says his contacts have told him of his book: "You better hurry up because the thesis is going to change. I told them submission is in January but they said, 'You're probably going to be too late'."
Not sure if I agree with your premise here TB. People buy V8s for a reason beyond practicalities, IMO. The same reasons that people buy convertables and 4WDs that never go off the road. Oil 'cheap'?by the way i dont think the US or UK or australia went to Iraq to secure cheap oil, oil is still cheap, why is GM still making 5 litre V8 commodores?
"Syria has already received more than 1.5 million refugees and there could be no end in sight to what the Americans unleashed there. We simply can't cope anymore," a Syrian official told Reuters.
France accuses Iran of seeking nukes
Henry Samuel, Paris
September 23, 2007
FRENCH President Nicolas Sarkozy has accused Iran of seeking a nuclear bomb and urged "stronger sanctions" against Tehran.
It was the latest sign that Mr Sarkozy is positioning France as America's key European ally in tackling Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
He said France did not want a war but flatly declared in a television interview that "Iran is trying to obtain an atomic bomb.
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