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CheesalaIsGood

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Everything posted by CheesalaIsGood

  1. CheesalaIsGood

    Paper with 100% record of endorsing Republicans

    How anyone can say either smoked the other in the third debate when SCHIEFFER was the mod and the whole debate was the political equivalent of Iowa/Penn St (maybe that's being a little harsh Texas/OU maybe) is beyond me. But apparently, it's somehow NOT fanboyism to say Kerry trounced Bush in ANY of the debates, GOTCHA. Not when it is exactly what happened. Nothing fanboy about it. Which IS fine considering everyone KNEW before hand that Bush was not the stronger speaker. So the results, while not surprising, are what they are. Besides, the debates, like the constant barrage of poll results only give you an idea of whats going on. So relax about it. It WOULD be fanboyism if anyone here actually DID act the way you say they act with the whole LOLBUSHSUX2004!!! bit you do. Christ, MUST you and Mike minimize everything?
  2. CheesalaIsGood

    Interesting article by Reaganite on

    I heard that Iraq thing kinda bummed some folks out. Hey, is Afganistan still there or did we blow it off the map? Anyone?
  3. CheesalaIsGood

    Whoops! Iraqi explosives disappear under our guard

    Well THAT fun to read. Thank you very very much Rob. Well done.
  4. CheesalaIsGood

    Interesting article by Reaganite on

    Bush, idiotically, tried to avoid causing anger by vetoing bills. He wanted to make peace with the Dems and suffered for it. Again, when asked for his biggest mistake, I wish he mentioned not vetoing a bill, as his spending has been absolutely horrible. However, as bad as Bush has been, Kerry will be worse and I don't have faith in the GOP holding out should, somehow, Kerry make his ludicrous spending popular. -=Mike Mike why are you talking like you work in the White House next to the guy? I mean come on. Quit putting words in Bush's mouth. Peace with the Dems? Nice idea. Hope you're right too. Got a link to him saying so?
  5. CheesalaIsGood

    US Army wants to Lift Ban on Women in Combat

    Well, he did decide to 'contribute'. Moreso than you have in this thread.
  6. CheesalaIsGood

    Paper with 100% record of endorsing Republicans

    Yet for some reason you continue to comment on it.
  7. CheesalaIsGood

    US Army wants to Lift Ban on Women in Combat

    So this topic is dead for another INXS bashfest? Yawn. Soldiers dying sucks of course. Still it seems the public is fairly attuned to accepting that. It does make one wonder (and I'm surprised no one has brought this up) is female solidiers coming home raped and/or pregnant via the enemy. THAT is what scares me. Women have this other "thing about them" that guys will never be able to understand. For minute try and imagine being a boyfriend or a husband or even just related to a girl who comes home in that kind of condition. For woman it just seems the stakes are so much higher as they have more to lose just by living through it. Which also makes the question of the worth of a mans life being less than a womans? Sigh. What I like and what I want are not always the same thing.
  8. CheesalaIsGood

    Interesting article by Reaganite on

    Yes, but you forget that this is the kind of race we have going here Mike. Where so many people feel that their choice for president is simply picking the least of two evils. I wonder how many people will vote impulsively while in the booth? Rhetorical of course.
  9. CheesalaIsGood

    Two arrested for throwing pies at Ann Coulter

    I'd do it. Happily. -=Mike ...I'd even call them hippies in your honor... I'd love to see you get up and chase somebody.
  10. CheesalaIsGood

    Biological Weapons are not WMDs

    Look at that bastard John Kerry taunting those retarded kids with his high karate kick. Come on Senator! Just cuz YOU can do it doesn't give you the right to show off!
  11. CheesalaIsGood

    Sell Me On...

    First you take some LSD, then you......
  12. CheesalaIsGood

    Eminem Releases Anti-Bush Song

    "Has the New York Times reported this yet?"
  13. CheesalaIsGood

    Cattle Decapitation......

    You should see the fucking album cover. http://www.cattledecapitation.com/index2.html look on the left. Its a a pile of face in feces coming out a cows ass. Mmm MM good.
  14. CheesalaIsGood

    I need a name for my new death metal band.

    Dorknail Or just stick 3 random words together like: Viking Placenta Truck Compact Tree Bag Sexy Space Manifold Fucking go nuts. Unfortunatly my band was called "Rotting Sex Lard" Feel free to steal it.
  15. CheesalaIsGood

    The War on Terror can't be won.

    http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/release.../11_hersh.shtml Investigative journalist Seymour Hersh spills the secrets of the Iraq quagmire and the war on terror By Bonnie Azab Powell, NewsCenter | 11 October 2004 Watch the Webcast: Seymour Hersh, 1 hour 22 minutes BERKELEY – The Iraq war is not winnable, a secret U.S. military unit has been "disappearing" people since December 2001, and America has no idea how irreparably its torture of Iraqis at Abu Ghraib prison has damaged its image in the Middle East. These were just a few of the grim pronouncements made by Pulitzer Prize–winning investigative reporter Seymour "Sy" Hersh to KQED host Michael Krasny before a Berkeley audience on Friday night (Oct. 8). The past two years will "go down as one of the classic sort of failures" in history, said the man who has been called the "greatest muckraker of all time" and (paradoxically) the "enfant terrible of journalism for more than 30 years." While Hersh blamed the White House and the Pentagon for the Iraq quagmire and America's besmirched world image, he was stymied by how it all happened. "How could eight or nine neoconservatives come and take charge of this government?" he asked. "They overran the bureaucracy, they overran the Congress, they overran the press, and they overran the military! So you say to yourself, How fragile is this democracy?" From My Lai to Abu Ghraib That fragility clearly unnerves him. Hersh summarizes his mission as "to hold the people in public office to the highest possible standard of decency and of honesty…to tolerate anything less, even in the name of national security, is wrong." He tries his best. More than any other U.S. journalist alive today, he embodies the statement that "a patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government," a belief defined by the conservationist Edward Abbey. Hersh was working the phone with sources up until the minute the presidential debate began, which he watched with a crowd in North Gate Hall. His country has not always thanked him for it — neocon Pentagon adviser Richard Perle has called Hersh "the closest thing we have to a terrorist," while his 1998 book on John F. Kennedy's administration, "The Dark Side of Camelot," cost him many friends on the left. But Hersh's reputation remains more bulletproof than most. The author of eight books, he first received worldwide recognition (and the Pulitzer) in 1969 for exposing the My Lai massacre and its cover-up during the Vietnam War. 1982's "The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House," painted Henry Kissinger as a war criminal and won Hersh the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Los Angeles Times book prize in biography. Most recently, as a staff writer for the New Yorker, Hersh has relentlessly ferreted out the behind-the-scenes deals, trickery, and blunders associated with the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Back in May 2003, he was the first American reporter to state unequivocally that we would not find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. (A mea culpa from a Slate journalist who doubted Hersh on WMDs also inadvertently confirms his prescient track record.) And in April of this year, he broke the story of how U.S. soldiers had digitally documented their torture and sexual humiliation of Iraqis at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The several articles he wrote for the New Yorker about Abu Ghraib have been updated and edited into his latest book, "Chain of Command: The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib." "Bush scares the hell out of me" Hersh came to Berkeley at the invitation of UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism and the California First Amendment Coalition. His appearance in the packed ballroom of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Student Union was the fitting end to a week of high-profile events in honor of the 40th anniversary of the Free Speech Movement. The Hersh event began only minutes after the second debate between President George W. Bush and John Kerry concluded. Krasny naturally asked Hersh — who had watched the debate at North Gate Hall stone-faced in the middle of a rowdy crowd — what he thought of the match. "It doesn't matter that Bush scares the hell out of me," Hersh answered. "What matters is that he scares the hell out of a lot of very important people in Washington who can't speak out, in the military, in the intelligence community. They know in ways that none of us know, the incredible gap between what is and what [bush] thinks." With that, he was off and running. One could safely say that for the next hour, Hersh proceeded to scare the hell out of most of the audience by detailing the gaps between what they knew and what he hears is actually going on in Iraq. While his writing is dense but digestible, in person Hersh speaks with the rambling urgency of a street-corner doomsayer, leaping from point to point and anecdote to anecdote and frequently failing to finish his clauses, let alone his sentences. His train of thought can be difficult to catch a ride on. This evening, it was a challenge for Krasny to slow him down long enough to get a word or question in edgewise. For example, here's a slice of raw Hersh on the current situation in Iraq: I've been doing an alternate history of the war, from inside, because people, right after 9/11, because people inside — and there are a lot of good people inside — are scared, as scared as anybody watching this tonight I think should be, because [bush], if he's re-elected, has only one thing to do, he's going to bomb the hell out of that place. He's been bombing the hell of that place — and here's what really irritates me again, about the press — since he set up this Potemkin Village government with Allawi on June 28 — the bombing, the daily bombing rates inside Iraq, have gone up exponentially. There's no public accounting of how many missions are flown, how much ordnance is dropped, we have no accounting and no demand to know. The only sense you get is we're basically in a full-scale air war against invisible people that we can't find, that we have no intelligence about, so we bomb what we can see. And yet — despite the more than 1,000 deaths of U.S. soldiers and the horrific number of Iraqi casualties — Bush continues to believe we are doing the right thing, according to Hersh. "He thinks he's wearing the white hat," he said, adding that is what makes this administration different from previous ones whose hypocrisy Hersh has exposed. Bush and the neocons "are not hypocrites." Enter the utopians "I think it's real simple to say [bush] is a liar. But that would also suggest there was a reality that he understood," explained Hersh. "I'm serious. It is funny in sort of a sick, black humor sort of way, but the real serious problem is, he believes what he's doing." In effect, Bush, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, and the other neocons are "idealists, you can call them utopians." As Hersh understands them, they really believe that the solution to global terrorism began with invading Baghdad and will end only with the transformation of the last unfriendly government in the Middle East into a democracy. "No amount of body bags is going to dissuade [bush]," said Hersh, despite the fact that Hersh's sources say the war in Iraq is "not winnable. It's over." As for Kerry's war plans, Hersh said he wished he could tell him to stop talking as if the senator's plan for Iraq could somehow still eke out a victory there. "This is a disaster that's been going on. It's a civil war, the insurgency. There is no 'win' anymore in this war," he argued. "As somebody said, 'We're playing chess, they're playing Go.'" Later, Hersh shared something he had yet to write about. Sources were suggesting that the many acts of domestic terrorism in Iraq that U.S. officials have been attributing to suspected Al Qaeda operative Abu Musab al-Zarqawi are in fact a smokescreen set up by the insurgents. "They decided to wage war against their own population," he said. "It's a huge step, with enormous consequences.…The insurgency has simply deflected what they're doing onto this man. And we fell for it." 'We operate on guilt, [Muslims] operate on shame…The idea of photographing an Arab man naked and having him simulate homosexual activity, and having an American GI woman in the photographs, is the end of society in their eyes.' -Seymour Hersh What is worse, he said impatiently, was that because U.S. forces had "privatized" so many of Iraq's institutions, it had decimated the job market in the country."This is why Bush can talk about 100,000 people wanting to go work in the police or in the army. It's because there's nothing else for them to do. They're willing to stand in line to get bombed because they want to take care of their family," he said. Hersh has been accused many times of sympathizing with "the enemy," and told that his publicizing of incidents like the My Lai massacre and the Abu Ghraib torture only fan the flames of anti-American sentiment around the world. He related that he's been asked if he feels guilty about the beheadings of two Americans who were wearing uniforms like those worn at Abu Ghraib. "As if the Iraqis needed me to tell them what's going on in that prison!" he responded. He also repeated a question often posed to him: "Was it immoral to go in … [T]he idea that Saddam was a torturer and a killer, doesn't that lend a patina of morality to going after him?" The answer to that one, he said unsmilingly, "is of course, Saddam tortured and killed his people. And now we're doing it." In addition to adding more details to the woeful chronology of the Abu Ghraib scandal, in which the military stopped the abuse only after Hersh's story brought it crashing down onto front pages around the world — four months after it was first reported to the Department of Defense — Hersh speculated on why those dehumanizing techniques had been used. He was sure that they were not, as some have claimed, the "stress outlet" or other spontaneous recreational ideas of young soldiers from West Virginia. Instead, he said, they were the outgrowth of a massive manhunt for information, any information, about first Al Qaida, the Taliban, and then the Iraqi insurgency: My government has a secret unit that since December of 2001 has been disappearing people just like the Brazilians and the Argentineans did. Rumsfeld decided after 9/11 that he could not wait. The president signed a secret document…There's a team of people, they fly in unmarked planes, they fly in Gulfstreams, they have their own choppers, they don't carry American passports, and they just grab people. And maybe in the beginning I can understand there was some rationale. Right after 9/11 we were frightened, we didn't know what to do … The original idea behind the sexually humiliating photos taken at Abu Ghraib, Hersh said he had heard, was to use them as blackmail so that the newly released prisoners — many of whom were ordinary Iraqi thieves or even civilian bystanders rounded up in dragnets — would act as informants. "We operate on guilt, [Muslims] operate on shame," Hersh explained. "The idea of photographing an Arab man naked and having him simulate homosexual activity, and having an American GI woman in the photographs, is the end of society in their eyes." And the fact that Americans had perpetrated such acts — and refused to take responsibility for it — ended America's role as any kind of moral leader in the eyes of not just the Middle East, but the world, Hersh railed. He talked about an Israeli, a longtime veteran of the troubles between his country and the Palestinians, who had emailed him to say, in essence, "We've been killing them for 40 or 50 years, and they've been killing us for 40 or 50 years, but we know that somewhere down the line we're going to have to live with those SOBs…If we had treated our Arabs the way you treated them in Abu Ghraib, the sexual stuff, the photographs, we couldn't live with them. You guys do not begin to understand what you've done, where you have put yourself in the Arab world." "They just shot them one by one" There was more — rumors of atrocities around Iraq that to Hersh brought back memories of My Lai. In the evening's most emotional moment, Hersh talked about a call he had gotten from a first lieutenant in charge of a unit stationed halfway between Baghdad and the Syrian border. His group was bivouacking outside of town in an agricultural area, and had hired 30 or so Iraqis to guard a local granary. A few weeks passed. They got to know the men they hired, and to like them. Then orders came down from Baghdad that the village would be "cleared." Another platoon from the soldier's company came and executed the Iraqi granary guards. All of them. "He said they just shot them one by one. And his people, and he, and the villagers of course, went nuts," Hersh said quietly. "He was hysterical, totally hysterical. He went to the company captain, who said, 'No, you don't understand, that's a kill. We got 36 insurgents. Don't you read those stories when the Americans say we had a combat maneuver and 15 insurgents were killed?' "It's shades of Vietnam again, folks: body counts," Hersh continued. "You know what I told him? I said, 'Fella, you blamed the captain, he knows that you think he committed murder, your troops know that their fellow soldiers committed murder. Shut up. Complete your tour. Just shut up! You're going to get a bullet in the back.' And that's where we are in this war." The story seemed to leave Hersh sincerely, deeply saddened. While his critics may call him a "muckraker" and unpatriotic, on Friday night it was obvious that Hersh takes the crumbling of America's image, very, very personally. "My parents were immigrants," Hersh said. "They came here because America meant something…the Statue of Liberty and all that stuff, because America always was this bastion of morality and integrity and a place for a fresh start. And it's right in front of us, not hidden, that they've taken this away from us." *on Friday night it was obvious that Hersh takes the crumbling of America's image, very, very personally.* I know exactly how he feels.
  16. CheesalaIsGood

    WWE in Puerto Rico?

    They don't like Carly in P.R anyways ....it's all about Rey Gonzalez! It would still have made more sense to have the brand with Colon in it have the PR PPV. Not when he is a heel. A NEW heel at that.
  17. CheesalaIsGood

    The "what did you vote for" thread...

    HHH v. Benoit - Benoit in the ME. Nuff said. Jericho v. Stevie Richards - Give Stevie a chance to shine! Orton v. Flair - Submission. Its the only way to give Orton the rub off Flair after all the trash talking between the two. To have Flair submit to him works. La Rez. v HBK and Edge - Put Team Happy Hair over to keep Edge away from the title scene just a little longer to build Edge more as a heel. Which evetually they'll have to answer that by dropping the title off of HHH to a face. Then you have a World Title opponent for Edge. Ok, I'm dreaming. Bischoff v Eugene - Wear a dress. I don't want to see any more hazing of Easy E to quench Vince's humilation tooth. So fuck the head shaving. Kane v. Snitsky - Steel Chair. No rubber pipes for me yo. Kill each other for real. I was disappointed that the Diva contest chicks didn't have an option to toss them in thumbtacks, so whatever to the rest of the card..
  18. CheesalaIsGood

    The War on Terror can't be won.

    Like it matters? Greatone pulls that kind of shit all the time (LOLOMG2004!!!!). Isn't he one of "YOUR guys"? The thread is hijacked... move on. He doesn't spell nearly as poorly as INXS. -=Mike ...BTW, your blog is horrible... "My" blog? The internet is a big place cupcake. Assume nothing. But at least you saw it. It must have been REAL hard for you to click that link. Greatone if you are so the best judge of all things content then YOU bring something to the table other than your poorly thought out kneejerk reactions. Then again, keep it up. I shouldn't expect more from you when all I'll see is less, streetwise.
  19. CheesalaIsGood

    Patrick Buchanan Essay

    I agree with the spinelss comment totally. Yep, yep, yep he hates jews. But I can't help but agree that some of his complaints about Bush have some merit. Bush and co. haven't exactly adhered to the type of republican platforms I have always known them to be. Smaller government, less spending, and being tough on immigration have always been banner conservative points of view. I think he was right to question and be critical in this regard in at LEAST as it pertains to conservatives staying true to what have traditionally believed. Hey, consider the source though. I feel the same way about John Kerry and before about Bill Clinton for pretty much the same reasons. Then again, if you look at Buchanan's 2000 campaign, he is in no position to criticize anybody for selling out their core beliefs. -=Mike Fair enough. I won't miss him when he is gone. Edit - It would certainly help republicans to be rid of him if only to help shed the evil hitlers stigma. Just dishing strategy is all.
  20. CheesalaIsGood

    The War on Terror can't be won.

    Like it matters? Greatone pulls that kind of shit all the time (LOLOMG2004!!!!). Isn't he one of "YOUR guys"? The thread is hijacked... move on.
  21. CheesalaIsGood

    Patrick Buchanan Essay

    I agree with the spinelss comment totally. Yep, yep, yep he hates jews. But I can't help but agree that some of his complaints about Bush have some merit. Bush and co. haven't exactly adhered to the type of republican platforms I have always known them to be. Smaller government, less spending, and being tough on immigration have always been banner conservative points of view. I think he was right to question and be critical in this regard in at LEAST as it pertains to conservatives staying true to what have traditionally believed. Hey, consider the source though. I feel the same way about John Kerry and before about Bill Clinton for pretty much the same reasons.
  22. CheesalaIsGood

    The War on Terror can't be won.

    Um, thanks for the ... support?
  23. CheesalaIsGood

    Florida Already Has Election Controversy

    Oh boy is THIS gonna get ugly. I can't wait.
  24. CheesalaIsGood

    Bush asks for more british troops

    And I've had that mentioned more than a few times, skippy. -=Mike Well, maybe i've just drawn a line. I just didn't think it was cool to use that sort of thing in CE.
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