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THE Jimmy Carter Thread (merged)

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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby jdmartin » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 21:00:39

My god, there is some unbelievably ridiculous history revisionists on this post. Reagan's people agreed to provide the Iranians arms in their fight against Iraq as long as they held the hostages beyond the election. The Iranians had been negotiating with Carter's people, but two things - Carter really didn't want to provide weapons unless he had to, and Casey convinved the Ayatollah's people that Reagan was going to win the election, and the Iranians could get arms and spare parts for their weaponry, lots of which was American from the years of the Shah. The release of the hostages on Reagan's inauguration was done to embarass Carter. Carter had his faults, as all of us do, but to blame the Iranian situation squarely on him is akin to blaming high gas prices on George Bush.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') don't know what Reagan did at home in the US, but at least he saved our European asses from the Soviet Union, something for which I will be forever grateful.
edit: I get so pissed thinking of the Iranian Hostage Crisis and Carter that I have to post this excerpt. If you're not interested in it, don't read it.

Somehow, regardless of the location of "Uppsala, Sweden", I have to think this quote is an American abroad, incognito. For two reasons: the style of speaking in the posts sounds far too "American", and it seems nothing short of bizarre that a native of another country, thousands of miles away, would feel so connected to an event that involved some other country and a rescue attempt that they would get "so p*ssed". It would be like me being "pissed" about some Swedish fiasco in Finland. After reviewing some of their other posts, I have to conclude that Starvid is really a right-wing neoconservative American dressed in Swedish clothing. Of course, my apologies if I'm wrong. And I will agree that Europe does owe a great deal to the United States, more than once.

Back to the original post - Carter was right. He was one of the greatest men to ever hold the presidency, but was doomed by circumstance. There have been few men as honest and moral as Carter ever elected president, and certainly none since Truman. A lot of his ideas were simply ahead of his time. People weren't ready to accept that energy issues were coming to a head. As someone already mentioned, that was one thing that doomed him in the election. People wanted a "feel good" guy, and you can't deny that Reagan was a feel-good guy. Carter told everyone to conserve fuel and wear sweaters. Reagan told everyone to toss caution to the wind, morning in America has broken. Well, hell, after 15 years of turbulence (JFK, Vietnam, social movements, OPEC, Watergate, etc), people were ready to hear good, touchy-feely things. Reagan was happy and grandfatherly; Carter was dour and sour. No matter that many of Reagan's legacy movements continue to cause suffering today (the end of city revenue sharing, for example).
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby bruin » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 21:08:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', 'S')ure we could power down faster if Chairman Mao was running the US. I'm sure he could have run a new Cultural Revolution to get the job done. Those that don't follow suit will be relocated to labor camps. Russia was good at this too.
Personally, I'd rather wait until gas got too expensive to push back the demand.

What makes you think the end-state will be any different for the US? Getting to the end-state quicker is technically more efficient than wasting all that effort and time on TV shows and iPods

Because the Great Depression was different. The US responded with Roosevelt and the "New Deal." Russia responded with Stalin and the "Great Purge." China responded, although later, with Chairman Mao and his "Revolution"

I thought we were refering to comments by Jimmy Carter and the relevance to now, not the Great Depression which did not include an energy crises component.

The point made was this:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat makes you think the end-state will be any different for the US?

So we need to look at how our respective countries responded to a dramatic economic decline. PO is about a dramatic economic decline.
Jimmy Carter was on track with energy. When PO comes largely understood, there will be another Carter type voted in. Just like Roosevelt was.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 21:11:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', 'J')immy Carter was on track with energy. When PO comes largely understood, there will be another Carter type voted in. Just like Roosevelt was.

Or they will want another Reagan to make all the bad things go away.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby bruin » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 21:22:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', 'J')immy Carter was on track with energy. When PO comes largely understood, there will be another Carter type voted in. Just like Roosevelt was.

Or they will want another Reagan to make all the bad things go away.

Carter was about big government and regulations. Reagan was about small government and free markets.
Americans vote with their pocket books, when PO gets ugly, people won't be voting for a free market or another Reagan.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 21:26:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bruin', 'J')immy Carter was on track with energy. When PO comes largely understood, there will be another Carter type voted in. Just like Roosevelt was.

Or they will want another Reagan to make all the bad things go away.

Carter was about big government and regulations. Reagan was about small government and free markets.
Americans vote with their pocket books, when PO gets ugly, people won't be voting for a free market or another Reagan

So voting for socialism then.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby cornholio » Tue 04 Oct 2005, 22:21:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'O')r they will want another Reagan to make all the bad things go away.

Regan (and 20/28 years of neo-conservative leadership) should be seen as contributing to our pending problems rather than as a potential solution ... Reganomics (with it's neglect of debt and deficit spending and "trickle-down" theory) and shortsighted deregulation of industries (financial institutions, energy) brought us to where we are today ( Deficit, Enron...). These policies "worked" during a period of increasing abundant resources, but at a great expense that will have to be painfully delt with and hopefully undone in future years.
The sad thing is that a Reganesque platform ("It's morning in America" "Don't worry") will probably always win out over candidates with more practical and realistic platforms.
Verbal: The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist...
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby Starvid » Wed 05 Oct 2005, 10:25:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he Helsinki commitees didn't do sh*t. It was only a Soviet pr-trick But sure, some people were fooled by it.

That's not what the human rights and pro-democracy activists in ex-Soviet camp say, the people who eventually pulled down the regimes - only to have neoliberalism stuffed down their throats.
Protesters didn't pull down the Soviet Union. Or well, they did, but they were just the symptoms of the disease "planned economy" and military overspending. At the end the USSR spent about 25 % of it's GDP on the military.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'W')hat Reagan did was recognizing that the Soviet Union never wanted detente (at least not after Kruschtov), but world domination.

Pot calling kettle, at best. Or what do you thing the Reaganick PNACsters are trying to do? Why take side with either of the evil empires?

The PNAC-people want world domination, sure. But they never intended invading Sweden. The Soviet Union did. The US protected us. We could not afford our own nuclear armaments.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'W')hile Europe was all hippie peacenik he built up the US military and bled the Soviet Union with that silly Star Wars scheme. If the Soviets would have attacked us in the 70's we would have lost. In the 80's we would have won. All thanks to Reagan.
Idiotic waste, since Soviets were never gonna attack beyond Jalta borders.
That is just extraordinarily naive. Why did the USSR have the biggest standing army in the world, why did they make it bigger and bigger all the time, even during the perceived detente of the 70's (when all the greatest Soviet weapons were made, like the RPG, the BMP and the T-72)?
The USSR had a hybrid ideology, part russian expansionism and part communist historicism. They remind me very much of the present day neoconservatives (american expansionism + "democratic imperialism") or revolutionary France (french expansionism + revolutionary equality ideals).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'B')ut all of Europe is indebted to them and to the US.
Except maybe the people of Dresden. ;)
Don't count me in either.
I thought you were from Tennesee?
edit: Sorry, mixup with jdmartin.
Last edited by Starvid on Wed 05 Oct 2005, 10:27:02, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby Starvid » Wed 05 Oct 2005, 10:26:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', 'M')y god, there is some unbelievably ridiculous history revisionists on this post. Reagan's people agreed to provide the Iranians arms in their fight against Iraq as long as they held the hostages beyond the election. The Iranians had been negotiating with Carter's people, but two things - Carter really didn't want to provide weapons unless he had to, and Casey convinved the Ayatollah's people that Reagan was going to win the election, and the Iranians could get arms and spare parts for their weaponry, lots of which was American from the years of the Shah. The release of the hostages on Reagan's inauguration was done to embarass Carter. Carter had his faults, as all of us do, but to blame the Iranian situation squarely on him is akin to blaming high gas prices on George Bush.

The Iran-Contras affair was of course very stupid, but the worst thing was that insane rescue attempt. So embarrasing.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'I') don't know what Reagan did at home in the US, but at least he saved our European asses from the Soviet Union, something for which I will be forever grateful.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')omehow, regardless of the location of "Uppsala, Sweden", I have to think this quote is an American abroad, incognito. For two reasons: the style of speaking in the posts sounds far too "American", and it seems nothing short of bizarre that a native of another country, thousands of miles away, would feel so connected to an event that involved some other country and a rescue attempt that they would get "so p*ssed". It would be like me being "pissed" about some Swedish fiasco in Finland. After reviewing some of their other posts, I have to conclude that Starvid is really a right-wing neoconservative American dressed in Swedish clothing. Of course, my apologies if I'm wrong....And I will agree that Europe does owe a great deal to the United States, more than once.

:-D If there is anything on this planet I detest, it is those trotskyist neoconservatives. They combine the zeal of "doing the right thing" with total incompetence.
I can promise you I am Swedish. I am even a member of the Swedish Liberal Party (Folkpartiet), and I am an avid supporter of the welfare state and other pseudo socialist ideas. If I lived in America I would be perceived as wacko Berkeley leftist. Hehe, nowadays liberal even means leftist in the US. Oh the irony...
But thank you for the compliments on my english. I have only been to the US once (in San Francisco and LA during the 2000 election when I learnt the phrase "to close to call" ) :)
edit: Not trying to be an a**hole, but what did you find especially "American" in my other posts? Not trying to be uppity, just interested. :)

Well, back to the Carter issue. I got absolutely pissed because the US is the main representant of the West. When the US fucks up it makes us other westerners look stupid. And I detest incompetence, no matter what. For example, Hitler was an awful person, but he also was a total incompetent which makes him even worse.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', 'B')ack to the original post - Carter was right. He was one of the greatest men to ever hold the presidency, but was doomed by circumstance. There have been few men as honest and moral as Carter ever elected president, and certainly none since Truman. A lot of his ideas were simply ahead of his time. People weren't ready to accept that energy issues were coming to a head. As someone already mentioned, that was one thing that doomed him in the election. People wanted a "feel good" guy, and you can't deny that Reagan was a feel-good guy. Carter told everyone to conserve fuel and wear sweaters. Reagan told everyone to toss caution to the wind, morning in America has broken. Well, hell, after 15 years of turbulence (JFK, Vietnam, social movements, OPEC, Watergate, etc), people were ready to hear good, touchy-feely things. Reagan was happy and grandfatherly; Carter was dour and sour. No matter that many of Reagan's legacy movements continue to cause suffering today (the end of city revenue sharing, for example).

Well I agree with Carter on the energy issues (except about reprocessing of nuclear fuel). He knew we had to conserve and change to other energy sources. I hate him for losing Iran (for this most of all) and for the subsequent fuckup and for not protecting us Europeans more (we can't protect ourselves because we are pussies).
Maybe he did lot's of good things in the US, but I am no American (promise!) and I wouldn't know.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby MrBean » Wed 05 Oct 2005, 12:37:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'P')rotesters didn't pull down the Soviet Union. Or well, they did,

Nough said.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'b')ut they were just the symptoms of the disease "planned economy" and military overspending. At the end the USSR spent about 25 % of it's GDP on the military.

And about 50% of US Federal budget spending is military related. Neither Empire taken over by the military-industrial complex will be missed.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he PNAC-people want world domination, sure. But they never intended invading Sweden.

Neoliberal ideology is trying to invade the world, Sweden included. And aren't you part of their fifth column? ;)
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Soviet Union did. The US protected us. We could not afford our own nuclear armaments.

Again, Finland protected you, and there was no real threat to begin with (Stalinism gave up exporting socialist revolution long time ago, alas). There was only traditional nationalistic Russian empire left, content behind it's Jalta borders - ruled by their version of military-industrial complex, a paranoid bureaucracy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')hat is just extraordinarily naive. Why did the USSR have the biggest standing army in the world, why did they make it bigger and bigger all the time, even during the perceived detente of the 70's (when all the greatest Soviet weapons were made, like the RPG, the BMP and the T-72)?
The USSR had a hybrid ideology, part russian expansionism and part communist historicism. They remind me very much of the present day neoconservatives (american expansionism + "democratic imperialism") or revolutionary France (french expansionism + revolutionary equality ideals).
Paranoid nationalism and militarism, fearing that the capitalistic imperialists are going to invade them (like they did immediately after the Revolution), and seeing that capitalistic imperialists tried to - often succesfully - use military/black ops to suffocate autonomous socialistic revolutions (of course Stalinism did too, but that is different story).
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby Starvid » Wed 05 Oct 2005, 18:53:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'P')rotesters didn't pull down the Soviet Union. Or well, they did,

Nough said.

No. Reread my last quote and you might understand.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')ut they were just the symptoms of the disease "planned economy" and military overspending. At the end the USSR spent about 25 % of it's GDP on the military.

And about 50% of US Federal budget spending is military related. Neither Empire taken over by the military-industrial complex will be missed.

Yes, but the Federal buget is not (unlike in Sweden) 50 % of GDP. The US spends like 5-10 % of GDP on defence. While it is expensive to run an empire, it is not horrendously expensive. At least not for a market economy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he PNAC-people want world domination, sure. But they never intended invading Sweden
Neoliberal ideology is trying to invade the world, Sweden included. And aren't you part of their fifth column? ;)
Neoliberalism had it's heyday in the 80's. Nowadays the craziest ones ("Capitalism is something good in itself" a la Hayek) are gone. Today we use capitalism not because we believe it is a morally superior ideology, but because it is simply the best way to run an economy.
Or well, it is ideology in the US, but we have welfare states.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he Soviet Union did. The US protected us. We could not afford our own nuclear armaments.

Again, Finland protected you, and there was no real threat to begin with (Stalinism gave up exporting socialist revolution long time ago, alas). There was only traditional nationalistic Russian empire left, content behind it's Jalta borders - ruled by their version of military-industrial complex, a paranoid bureaucracy.
Finland protected us during the war but after the only worked like a potential shock absorber. All Swedish war plans assumed Finland would be over run. Finland knew they were in trouble so they got closer to the Soviets. "Finlandization" it was later called.
And anyways, Finland had no nukes, and resistance against a nuclear power (= has nukes and is ready to use them) when you don't have any nukes is futile. NATO, or rather the US, had nukes. We cowered under their nuclear umbrella.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')hat is just extraordinarily naive. Why did the USSR have the biggest standing army in the world, why did they make it bigger and bigger all the time, even during the perceived detente of the 70's (when all the greatest Soviet weapons were made, like the RPG, the BMP and the T-72)?
The USSR had a hybrid ideology, part russian expansionism and part communist historicism. They remind me very much of the present day neoconservatives (american expansionism + "democratic imperialism") or revolutionary France (french expansionism + revolutionary equality ideals).
Paranoid nationalism and militarism, fearing that the capitalistic imperialists are going to invade them (like they did immediately after the Revolution), and seeing that capitalistic imperialists tried to - often succesfully - use military/black ops to suffocate autonomous socialistic revolutions (of course Stalinism did too, but that is different story).
Sure the Russians were nationalist and paranoid. But that doesn't explain it. Their hordes were absolutely huge, much bigger than needed for defence. And they did invade several European and Asian countries (Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, the Baltic states et cetera).
And it was really part of their hybrid ideology. The whole world should be communist and ruled by Russia.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby jdmartin » Thu 06 Oct 2005, 00:16:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he Iran-Contras affair was of course very stupid, but the worst thing was that insane rescue attempt. So embarrasing.

Well, of course something had to be done, and that was one of those "all or nothing" risks. If they had come out with the hostages, it would have been another Cuban Missile Crisis PR bonanza (well, maybe that's a stretch but you know what I mean).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'I')f there is anything on this planet I detest, it is those trotskyist neoconservatives. They combine the zeal of "doing the right thing" with total incompetence.
I can promise you I am Swedish. I am even a member of the Swedish Liberal Party (Folkpartiet), and I am an avid supporter of the welfare state and other pseudo socialist ideas. If I lived in America I would be perceived as wacko Berkeley leftist. Hehe, nowadays liberal even means leftist in the US. Oh the irony...
But thank you for the compliments on my english. I have only been to the US once (in San Francisco and LA during the 2000 election when I learnt the phrase "to close to call" ) :)
edit: Not trying to be an a**hole, but what did you find especially "American" in my other posts? Not trying to be uppity, just interested. :)

Well, then my apologies. As for "American", starting a post "not trying to be an a**hole" is as American as it gets. I'd have to go back and re-read all your posts, but I'd say it was the overall "tone" of your demeanor. You've got an excellent mastery of conversational English, then...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell, back to the Carter issue. I got absolutely pissed because the US is the main representant of the West. When the US fucks up it makes us other westerners look stupid. And I detest incompetence, no matter what. For example, Hitler was an awful person, but he also was a total incompetent which makes him even worse.

I disagree. It only makes you look stupid if you've hitched your wagon to our mules. Otherwise reasonable discord can make you look smart. Whether we "win" or "lose" in Iraq, most reasonable people will agree that it's been a cluster, to date. Those I know that are non-American certainly don't look at Germany, for example, as being stupid, because they opposed the war in the first place (whatever their reasons). I think countries are too complex to simply be known by the company you keep. Otherwise, it might be hard to like us at all these days - Nicaraguan and El Salvador civil wars, support to Al-Qaeda precursors against the Soviets, support for Hussein as he was gassing the Iranians, etc. Even with these bruises, many people still look fondly upon us (though we have been squandering that good will lately).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell I agree with Carter on the energy issues (except about reprocessing of nuclear fuel). He knew we had to conserve and change to other energy sources. I hate him for losing Iran (for this most of all) and for the subsequent fuckup and for not protecting us Europeans more (we can't protect ourselves because we are pussies).
Maybe he did lot's of good things in the US, but I am no American (promise!) and I wouldn't know.

Carter didn't lose Iran, the times lost Iran. Still, today, 25 years later, Iran is a muslim theocracy, in contrast to the Shah's secular government. The only reasonable argument to be placed on Carter would be allowing the Shah into the US for treatment for cancer. Knowing Carter's moral makeup, the man couldn't refuse (though in hindsight it might have been better to stealthily provide care third-party, i.e. Mexico, Canada, etc). It's easy for people to have hindsight and say "should have done this, should have done that". Yeah, the whole thing sucked. But every hostage returned home alive. Shall we look back at Reagan and say "why didn't he get those 270 Marines out of Lebanon - he knew the place was a terrorist tinderbox waiting to go off"? Well, that would be unreasonable, because there was no prerequisite to look at, just as in the hostage situation. What really ended up happening was that Carter took a black eye because he wasn't a Harry Truman, "kick a** and take names" type of leader. So for that particular situation he wasn't well suited.

One other point - why should you hate Carter for not protecting Europeans? Hell, we bailed your a**es out of 2 world wars, rebuilt the entire continent with our money, and spent 40 years in a cold war hedging your bets against the Soviets. Why the hell couldn't Europeans put their dumb-ass nationalistic pride away, get together and stand firm against the Soviets on their own? The fact that it took 50 years after the end of WW2 to put together a meaningful European Union should say something about the nationalistic tendencies of those countries. If these countries would have gotten together on their own, they could have withstood the Soviets without us, because England and France had nuclear weapons of their own and could easily hit all the Soviet major cities. Personally, I resent the idea that the US should, or has to be, the world's policeman. If we weren't so damned involved in everyone else's crap, we'd have more resources to take care of our own house.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby Doly » Thu 06 Oct 2005, 07:28:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', 'P')ersonally, I resent the idea that the US should, or has to be, the world's policeman. If we weren't so damned involved in everyone else's crap, we'd have more resources to take care of our own house.

Agree 100%. I just hate it when there are American elections and I know for a fact that the rest of the world will have to live with the consequences without having had the slightest chance to have their say. Obviously, countries have to deal with stuff that happens in their neighbouring countries, but somehow the USA considers that the whole rest of the world is their neighbour. That's way too much.
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Re: Was Jimmy Carter right?

Unread postby Starvid » Thu 06 Oct 2005, 09:07:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'T')he Iran-Contras affair was of course very stupid, but the worst thing was that insane rescue attempt. So embarrasing.

Well, of course something had to be done, and that was one of those "all or nothing" risks. If they had come out with the hostages, it would have been another Cuban Missile Crisis PR bonanza (well, maybe that's a stretch but you know what I mean).

True, something had to be done, but that rescue was doomed from the beginning. Let me quote from my original rant.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Gary Brecher', ' ')Carter's braintrust started dreaming about rescue raids, like the Israelis had pulled off in Entebbe. That's how Charlie Beckwith's pitiful "Operation Eagle Claw" was born. Carter wanted a plan that would snatch the hostages from safe houses scattered in an enemy city of four million people.
Stupid. American Special Forces missions have less than a 50% success rate, and the odds on this one were much, much worse than that. The only way to get the hostages out was to hurt Iran enough to make them GIVE the hostages back, screaming "Take them! Take them!" and Carter had ruled that out.

His Secretary of State, Cyrus Vance, who looked like a Cub Scout leader, knew it wouldn't work. Even Beckwith, the mission Commander, knew it was hopeless. He calculated the risk of failure at 99.9%, but the poor bastard followed his CINC's orders and devised a plan.
It was maybe the worst plan in history. Eight RH-53D heavy-lift choppers-not the best ones we had either, but so-called "hangar queens" were used because their commanders weren't warned of the seriousness of the mission-would take off from the USS Nimitz and rendezvous with six C-130 transports at Desert One, a desert point near Iran's southern coast. After being refueled, the eight choppers would take Delta Force to Desert Two fifty miles outside Tehran, where they were supposed to hide for a full day before being infiltrated into Tehran in trucks.

So that's two big, loud landing strips inside Iran that we were supposed to manage without getting spotted. Plus a full day of trying to hide out.
If you've read Andy McNab's book Bravo Two Zero about what happened when his SAS team tried to hide out in rural Iraq during Gulf War I, you know how crazy that was. McNab's guys, the best soldiers in the world, were spotted by an old man herding goats before they even got unpacked.

If the Delta guys had somehow managed to go undiscovered and make it into Tehran in those trucks-another big "if"-and if they somehow found and rescued the hostage-an "if" the size of Shaquille O'Neal-the plan was that they'd take the hostages by truck to a downtown Tehran soccer stadium. Choppers would fly them from there to Manzariyeh air base 40 miles SE of Tehran, where C-141s would land, pick up the Delta operators and hostages and fly them home.
With some plans, you can find the flaw and say, "Aha! There's the problem!" But this plan was so hopeless, so complicated, with so many impossible stages open to so many obvious disasters, that you can't even isolate a single flaw. It was all flaws, and no logic.

There were other options. I wouldn't have gone as far as nuking them and invasion wasn't an option (before the Carter doctrine there were not many US troops in the gulf). But we could have jammed all Iran's communications. Then we would have seen if they really liked living in the Dark Ages like they claimed.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'I')f there is anything on this planet I detest, it is those trotskyist neoconservatives. They combine the zeal of "doing the right thing" with total incompetence.
I can promise you I am Swedish. I am even a member of the Swedish Liberal Party (Folkpartiet), and I am an avid supporter of the welfare state and other pseudo socialist ideas. If I lived in America I would be perceived as wacko Berkeley leftist. Hehe, nowadays liberal even means leftist in the US. Oh the irony...
But thank you for the compliments on my english. I have only been to the US once (in San Francisco and LA during the 2000 election when I learnt the phrase "to close to call" ) :)
edit: Not trying to be an asshole, but what did you find especially "American" in my other posts? Not trying to be uppity, just interested. :)

Well, then my apologies. As for "American", starting a post "not trying to be an a**hole" is as American as it gets. I'd have to go back and re-read all your posts, but I'd say it was the overall "tone" of your demeanor. You've got an excellent mastery of conversational English, then...
Thank you, thank you. :)
edit: To prove I really am Swedish I'll provide a link to a Swedish forum where I write: Forum
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'W')ell, back to the Carter issue. I got absolutely pissed because the US is the main representant of the West. When the US f**ks up it makes us other westerners look stupid. And I detest incompetence, no matter what. For example, Hitler was an awful person, but he also was a total incompetent which makes him even worse.
I disagree. It only makes you look stupid if you've hitched your wagon to our mules. Otherwise reasonable discord can make you look smart. Whether we "win" or "lose" in Iraq, most reasonable people will agree that it's been a cluster, to date. Those I know that are non-American certainly don't look at Germany, for example, as being stupid, because they opposed the war in the first place (whatever their reasons). I think countries are too complex to simply be known by the company you keep. Otherwise, it might be hard to like us at all these days - Nicaraguan and El Salvador civil wars, support to Al-Qaeda precursors against the Soviets, support for Hussein as he was gassing the Iranians, etc. Even with these bruises, many people still look fondly upon us (though we have been squandering that good will lately).
It is different today. In those days the West were much more of one entity since we had a common enemy. We had hitched our wagons to your mules. In one way we still do, for example >Europe has no Mid East policy, we leave oil protection completely to the US (thank you for footing the bill).
Also, for us westerners there is a big difference between, for example the US and Germany. For non-westerners the difference is about as big as the difference between Algeria and Morocco.
I think the Nicaragua an El Salvador wars were foolish. Very. But I am no expert on the.
Supporting the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan was a good thing. There was no way we could have guessed what would happen 25 years later. Bleeding the Soviets there was sound policy. Initiated by Carter even, IIRC.
I also think supporting Saddam was the right thing to do. Iran had to be contained. Of course that war had never needed to happen if we had stopped the revolution.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'W')ell I agree with Carter on the energy issues (except about reprocessing of nuclear fuel). He knew we had to conserve and change to other energy sources. I hate him for losing Iran (for this most of all) and for the subsequent fuckup and for not protecting us Europeans more (we can't protect ourselves because we are pussies).
Maybe he did lot's of good things in the US, but I am no American (promise!) and I wouldn't know.
Carter didn't lose Iran, the times lost Iran. Still, today, 25 years later, Iran is a muslim theocracy, in contrast to the Shah's secular government. The only reasonable argument to be placed on Carter would be allowing the Shah into the US for treatment for cancer. Knowing Carter's moral makeup, the man couldn't refuse (though in hindsight it might have been better to stealthily provide care third-party, i.e. Mexico, Canada, etc). It's easy for people to have hindsight and say "should have done this, should have done that". Yeah, the whole thing sucked. But every hostage returned home alive. Shall we look back at Reagan and say "why didn't he get those 270 Marines out of Lebanon - he knew the place was a terrorist tinderbox waiting to go off"? Well, that would be unreasonable, because there was no prerequisite to look at, just as in the hostage situation. What really ended up happening was that Carter took a black eye because he wasn't a Harry Truman, "kick a** and take names" type of leader. So for that particular situation he wasn't well suited.
Fisrt of all, I completely agree with Marine Barracks bombings. Reagan was to much of a coward to get vengeance after that. I can't blame him for having his Marines killed, that could happen to any President, but I can and do blame him for not exacting vengeance. He made the West look stupid, just as Clinton did after the bombing of USS what'shername in Yemen.

And on Iran. Of course it wasn't our fault the Shah fell. That was an internal Iranian dynamic. But we could have helped him a lot more. We could have helped him persecute the opposition, we (that is, you, we are to scared) could have intervened. The West intervened in the Russian Civil War and failed, but we could have won. Same thing in Iran. We could have done a lot more things. And when it came to Iran, taking risks would have been worth it. Iran was, is, and will be the most important country in the Middle East and one of the few Mid East countries which will work properly after oil exports end. The loss of Iran was the greatest geopolitical failure during the whole postwar era.
The Islamification was an absolute tragedy. The progressive dictatorship of the Shah was ended and the country fell back into the dark ages. If that hadn't happened, Iran would probably be a lot like Turkey today.
I might be a bit biased on this very question since I have many exile Iranian friends.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', 'O')ne other point - why should you hate Carter for not protecting Europeans? Hell, we bailed your asses out of 2 world wars, rebuilt the entire continent with our money, and spent 40 years in a cold war hedging your bets against the Soviets. Why the hell couldn't Europeans put their dumb-a** nationalistic pride away, get together and stand firm against the Soviets on their own? The fact that it took 50 years after the end of WW2 to put together a meaningful European Union should say something about the nationalistic tendencies of those countries. If these countries would have gotten together on their own, they could have withstood the Soviets without us, because England and France had nuclear weapons of their own and could easily hit all the Soviet major cities. Personally, I resent the idea that the US should, or has to be, the world's policeman. If we weren't so damned involved in everyone else's crap, we'd have more resources to take care of our own house.
Why couldn't the Europeans defend themselves? Because we had become peaceniks and we believed in the false detente. And we are cowards and we squabble. We needed the US and, really, the US needed us.
Look, I am a European federalist. I want nothing more than a united Europe which can take care of itself. But that is, alas, not to be.
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
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Jimmy Carter on Larry King Live

Unread postby SinisterBlueCat » Thu 02 Feb 2006, 17:23:10

Jimmy Carter was interviewed by Larry King last night. It was a wonderful interview, did anyone else see it?

You can read the transcript here...

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/ ... kl.02.html
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Re: Jimmy Carter's Televised Energy Speech. April 18, 1977

Unread postby MonteQuest » Fri 03 Mar 2006, 19:57:30

mp3 audio of Jimmy Carter's April, 18, 1977 speech: audio
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
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Unread postby rogerhb » Fri 03 Mar 2006, 20:09:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('earthman', 'J')immy Carter was ahead of his time

Alas, no, he said it exactly when it was needed. It is the voters who were blinded by a B-movie cretin that were behind.
The Hirsch report says 20years to prepare, 1979 would have been a good place to start.
Imagine if the US had actually led the world, and we then didn't have Thatcherism or Rogernomics.
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
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Unread postby MicroHydro » Fri 03 Mar 2006, 22:21:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('earthman', 'J')immy Carter was ahead of his time

Alas, no, he said it exactly when it was needed. It is the voters who were blinded by a B-movie cretin that were behind.

Yes, but the voters were manipluated by much more than a sunny old actor:
1) A corporate media empire already tilting right, which treated Moral Majority leader Jerry Falwell with respect and ridiculed Carter as being afraid of a rabbit.
2) Economic sabotage by Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, who decided to crush inflation by giving Carter a nasty recession as he was up for re-election. This created the Reagan democrats - laid off blue collar workers.
3) The continued captivity of the US hostages in Iran, treasonously negotiated by William Casey, 'Bud' McFarlane, and George H. W. Bush in October 1980 in Paris

For reasons that I still find apalling, TPTB chose to drive the world towards overshoot, collapse, dieoff, and a return to feudalism rather than attempt to create a sustainable free society. Bottom line, the dark ages were actually pretty bright for those with absolute power. It is good to be king. The elite think that they will continue to personally enjoy the benefits of technology in their enclaves after the collapse and dieoff - as long as they stay in power and surf the chaos by herding (and culling) the masses. Thus the huge interest in epidemic diseases, ID technology, psychopharmaceuticals, and propaganda. So far TPTB have done an excellent job. Few people, even people with advanced degrees, understand how the world is actually administered. In the future, even fewer will understand, as education has already deteriorated into warehousing and brainwashing.

PS: "Extreme liberals" Barbara Boxer and Hilary Clinton voted with the huge majority to renew/extend the Patriot Act Thursday. Heckuva Job Girls! I can't believe that anyone still thinks the D & R politicians represent different interests.
"The world is changed... I feel it in the water... I feel it in the earth... I smell it in the air... Much that once was, is lost..." - Galadriel
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Re: Jimmy Carter's Televised Energy Speech. April 18, 1977

Unread postby kochevnik » Fri 03 Mar 2006, 22:47:29

I met Carter at the White House twice, the first time about 2 months after this speech - I was selected as a leader for a youth group sponsored by rural energy cooperatives.

The thing I remember about Carter during that time is that a lot of people thought he was too smart and too logical to be a president. He was in the Navy and had a degree in engineering. I also think he was portrayed by many in the media as a bit of a weakling - and that soft southern drawl and Grandpa looks didn't help that impression. My memories include the general feeling that we had been pushed around by dark-skinned foreign outsiders (OPEC) and that the last thing we should do was retreat into a strategy of conservation and having to limit our lifestyles - we were Americans for god's sake. Conservation, in many people (idiots') minds was equivalent to surrender.

I don't think the presidents / leaders we choose are in any sense of the word 'leaders' - instead what they are, is a mirror image of who view ourselves as a nation - i.e. the President is acutally the ultimate FOLLOWER. Anyways, having grown up during this time period I don't see the American nation as being significantly better in any way than it is now.
In 1977 we had 200 million idiots in this country, in 2006 we just have a hundred million more of them.

For those that are keeping track of such things - there is an ENTIRE generation of Americans - the Silents, born during the time period from the mid 1920's to the early 1940's who never had a president of their own. We went right from presidents who had served in WWII to the Boomers. Fourth Turning strikes again.
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Re: Jimmy Carter's Televised Energy Speech. April 18, 1977

Unread postby rogerhb » Sat 04 Mar 2006, 02:41:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kochevnik', 'H')e was in the Navy and had a degree in engineering. I also think he was portrayed by many in the media as a bit of a weakling - and that soft southern drawl and Grandpa looks didn't help that impression.

In the UK around 1980 he was portrayed as a hick peanut farmer!
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
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Re: Jimmy Carter's Televised Energy Speech. April 18, 1977

Unread postby shakespear1 » Sat 04 Mar 2006, 15:46:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he thing I remember about Carter during that time is that a lot of people thought he was too smart and too logical to be a president.

Yessss, I remember this opinion being repeated about him and why he failed to be reelected. It seems so illogical that someone would think this about the highest officer of the land and yet that was something that was held against him.

Now we have someone that is at the extreme far end of the intellect spectrum and ..... And Nothing. No protest worth talking about.
I guess TV and Hollywood have done a fine job of creating a mind set of not questioning too deep or questioning the logic of a given situation 8)
Men argue, nature acts !
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