Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, strong national defense American Jew and I'm petrified for our country's safety given the political climate and lack of leadership in the White House.
If you are an Obama supporter, if you are apolitical (hard to reach these people since I'm posting on the politics board, I get it), if you are a strict Liberitarian against involvement abroad, are you scared for our future as a free country? Do you worry about groups like ISIS, Al Quaeda, Hamas, having influence over your life and liberties in the US? It is already happening in Europe.
Honestly I'm not looking for a debate. I'm just having a hard time seeing how things can get better for us under this administration.
Hamas has shown zero interest, evidentially and historically, in doing anything outside of Palestine.
Whatever fobias you are entertaining, Hamas in the U.S. shouldn't be one of them. Why not be afraid of the IRA and the Basque movement, too?
If you are going to use the word, learn to spell it -- PHOBIA.
In Spanish, it's fobia. Hardly a reason to ignore the content of the post.
jsteele wrote:Those of you worried about IS terrorism should read this article:
http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/isis-and-al-qaeda-similarities-and-differences
The author compares IS to al-Qaida. One thing that stands out is that high-profile terrorist attacks abroad are much less likely to be conducted by IS given its priorities.
Anonymous wrote:
This is the US, not Spain, not Mexico. Learn English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am worried that we are not taking terrorism seriously anymore considering everything that happened on 9/11 and the "clues" we missed cause we fell asleep at the wheel.
I blame the entire political environment and both parties. Everyone is trying to score cool points and not learn from lessons of the past. I fear that if we have another terrorist attack in this country, we'll look back at benghazi and how instead of focusing on any security lapse's or lessons learned, we spent out time playing gotcha trying to blame people in the administration. We will look back at how ISIS/IS increased its strength and influence because we as a country did nothing to slow them down. In the end the finger pointing will be 100 times worse with folks blaming obama, republicans, or some made up creation in their mind.
In the end, am I scared to death? No. Just worried and angry that our politicians are playing too many games and its going to end up biting us in the ass. I just hope it doesnt.
Maybe we should look at WHY people attack us. "They hate our freeeeedom" is a feel-good cop-out, not much different than saying the bullies at your school pick on you because they are jealous of your intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:I am worried that we are not taking terrorism seriously anymore considering everything that happened on 9/11 and the "clues" we missed cause we fell asleep at the wheel.
I blame the entire political environment and both parties. Everyone is trying to score cool points and not learn from lessons of the past. I fear that if we have another terrorist attack in this country, we'll look back at benghazi and how instead of focusing on any security lapse's or lessons learned, we spent out time playing gotcha trying to blame people in the administration. We will look back at how ISIS/IS increased its strength and influence because we as a country did nothing to slow them down. In the end the finger pointing will be 100 times worse with folks blaming obama, republicans, or some made up creation in their mind.
In the end, am I scared to death? No. Just worried and angry that our politicians are playing too many games and its going to end up biting us in the ass. I just hope it doesnt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, strong national defense American Jew and I'm petrified for our country's safety given the political climate and lack of leadership in the White House.
If you are an Obama supporter, if you are apolitical (hard to reach these people since I'm posting on the politics board, I get it), if you are a strict Liberitarian against involvement abroad, are you scared for our future as a free country? Do you worry about groups like ISIS, Al Quaeda, Hamas, having influence over your life and liberties in the US? It is already happening in Europe.
Honestly I'm not looking for a debate. I'm just having a hard time seeing how things can get better for us under this administration.
Hamas has shown zero interest, evidentially and historically, in doing anything outside of Palestine.
Whatever fobias you are entertaining, Hamas in the U.S. shouldn't be one of them. Why not be afraid of the IRA and the Basque movement, too?
If you are going to use the word, learn to spell it -- PHOBIA.
In Spanish, it's fobia. Hardly a reason to ignore the content of the post.
This is the US, not Spain, not Mexico. Learn English.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not really concerned about terrorist acts from the 70s...I'm more concerned about acts of terrorism that could happen now. And I'm not worried about the crazy white kid in the movie theater---I'm worried about a coordinated act of terrorism by an extremist Muslim group (or the crazy American who has joined their jihad).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, strong national defense American Jew and I'm petrified for our country's safety given the political climate and lack of leadership in the White House.
If you are an Obama supporter, if you are apolitical (hard to reach these people since I'm posting on the politics board, I get it), if you are a strict Liberitarian against involvement abroad, are you scared for our future as a free country? Do you worry about groups like ISIS, Al Quaeda, Hamas, having influence over your life and liberties in the US? It is already happening in Europe.
Honestly I'm not looking for a debate. I'm just having a hard time seeing how things can get better for us under this administration.
Hamas has shown zero interest, evidentially and historically, in doing anything outside of Palestine.
Whatever fobias you are entertaining, Hamas in the U.S. shouldn't be one of them. Why not be afraid of the IRA and the Basque movement, too?
If you are going to use the word, learn to spell it -- PHOBIA.
In Spanish, it's fobia. Hardly a reason to ignore the content of the post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, strong national defense American Jew and I'm petrified for our country's safety given the political climate and lack of leadership in the White House.
If you are an Obama supporter, if you are apolitical (hard to reach these people since I'm posting on the politics board, I get it), if you are a strict Liberitarian against involvement abroad, are you scared for our future as a free country? Do you worry about groups like ISIS, Al Quaeda, Hamas, having influence over your life and liberties in the US? It is already happening in Europe.
Honestly I'm not looking for a debate. I'm just having a hard time seeing how things can get better for us under this administration.
Hamas has shown zero interest, evidentially and historically, in doing anything outside of Palestine.
Whatever fobias you are entertaining, Hamas in the U.S. shouldn't be one of them. Why not be afraid of the IRA and the Basque movement, too?
If you are going to use the word, learn to spell it -- PHOBIA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a fiscally conservative, socially liberal, strong national defense American Jew and I'm petrified for our country's safety given the political climate and lack of leadership in the White House.
If you are an Obama supporter, if you are apolitical (hard to reach these people since I'm posting on the politics board, I get it), if you are a strict Liberitarian against involvement abroad, are you scared for our future as a free country? Do you worry about groups like ISIS, Al Quaeda, Hamas, having influence over your life and liberties in the US? It is already happening in Europe.
Honestly I'm not looking for a debate. I'm just having a hard time seeing how things can get better for us under this administration.
Hamas has shown zero interest, evidentially and historically, in doing anything outside of Palestine.
Whatever fobias you are entertaining, Hamas in the U.S. shouldn't be one of them. Why not be afraid of the IRA and the Basque movement, too?
Anonymous wrote: Like I said, I know for sure that one of the guys I called in was detained (and not released).
Anonymous wrote:http://news.yahoo.com/obama-on-isil---we-don-t-have-a-strategy-yet-214309757.html
I'm SCARED. Very scared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The person who said that was Roosevelt. And he took on the Nazis. Any irony for you?
No irony. Roosevelt said that in 1933, about the Depression, not the Nazis. He said "So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself—nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance"
What you are engaged in is unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes.
Lastly, Roosevelt didn't preemptively bomb Germany because they took the Rhineland in 1936. He didn't attack when they took the Sudetenland in 1938. In 1939, when they invaded Poland, the US declared neutrality. Roosevelt didn't declare war when Germany took France, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, or Estonia. When London was being bombed, and Greece and Yugoslavia fell, he signed the Lend Lease Act, still not going to war. No, it was only in December of 1941, when we were actually attacked, that Roosevelt declared war.
And you think that Syria is a threat to our existence.
Roosevelt had courage. He did not throw us carelessly into war. He tried to avoid it and he bought us five years to deal with our own economic problems back home.