The US army originally wasn't supposed to exist, and then was only supposed to be used defensively following a declaration of war.
That needs a link.
The US army originally wasn't supposed to exist, and then was only supposed to be used defensively following a declaration of war.
That needs a link.
I recommend The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 if any of you wish to read about the origin of Al-Qaeda and other Al-* groups.
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I recommend The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 if any of you wish to read about the origin of Al-Qaeda and other Al-* groups.
Many of them have roots in the Mujhaadeen in Afghanistan, which was organized, funded and trained by the CIA. The interesting thing is that the warning signs were there for a while, but most people didn't really see it until 9/11.
No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!
I recommend The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 if any of you wish to read about the origin of Al-Qaeda and other Al-* groups.
Many of them have roots in the Mujhaadeen in Afghanistan, which was organized, funded and trained by the CIA. The interesting thing is that the warning signs were there for a while, but most people didn't really see it until 9/11.
And these warning signs are still there, and continue to be there.
http://nypost.com/2015/09/18/team-obama-has-spent-500m-to-train-four-or-five-syrian-rebels/
The US government continues to pick and choose a group of 'moderates', 'rebels', or 'anti-whatever' to be their puppets in opposing local forces, and yet these same people would become the next terrorist group. Which one of these 4 trained Syrians will become the next terrorist?
It's like a lifecycle of terrorism. Western governments continue to inject money and weapons into 'troubling' countries, and these troubling countries produce more terrorists, which then encourages the government to put more money into it.
If you believe in the illuminati and all that crap, maybe it's all been planned out so we react in fear and submit to the New World Order :D.
If Marvel has taught me right, with $500 million, I am expecting these 4-5 people to be radioactively-infused mutants with super powers.
But my point is they still didn't go out and indiscriminately target civilians and there was no reason for the average citizen in the UK to be scared of being blown up.The official figures for the IRA attacks include ~650 civilian deaths. So I beg to differ, especially for anyone who happened to live in Northern Ireland at the time.
I wouldn't call somebody who lived in Northern Ireland during the troubles "an average citizen". The IRA did not deliberatly target civilians in the same way that the USA doesn't. That does not mean that there is no such thing as collateral damage.
I wouldn't call somebody who lived in Northern Ireland during the troubles "an average citizen".
Again, there are 1.7 million civilians who would disagree with you on this point (that's roughly 3% of the total UK population).
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That's why the founders gave the right to bear arms - as standing armies in peacetime were bad, so millitia were required in case an army ever needed to be raised (and so that a tyrant with an army could be fought).The US army originally wasn't supposed to exist, and then was only supposed to be used defensively following a declaration of war.
That needs a link.
. 22 Racing Series .
That is not an accurate history lesson.Their reaction was to stomp down extremely hard on the groups responsible but also moving where those groups ultimately wanted towards where those groups wanted the society to move: towards an extremely conservative and narrow form of Islam which we now know to be the problem (we are worried about Salafism but the Saudi Wahhabism is an even stricter form of that).
And unfortunately they have tons of money to export that. Granted, most of that is our money we paid for oil so in a way, it's our fault as well but this is nonetheless one important piece of the puzzle. Unless the Saudi interpretational sovereignty on Islam can be broken I don't see much hope for things getting better down the road.
I restore Nintendo 64 video-game OST’s into HD! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCtX_wedtZ5BoyQBXEhnVZw/playlists?view=1&sort=lad&flow=grid
...stuff...
When one asks for a link, you should just supply the link. Because though you may be correct, no one will know unless you substantiate your claim. Until actual evidence/facts are presented, it's just speculative interpretation.
With that said, LINK :)
I wouldn't call somebody who lived in Northern Ireland during the troubles "an average citizen".Again, there are 1.7 million civilians who would disagree with you on this point (that's roughly 3% of the total UK population).
Why would they disagree with me?
Just because it is 3% of the population doesn't mean that they not were living in exceptional circumstances.
People in Northern Ireland during the troubles were living in a country that was at war and was patrolled by armed police. Communities were split on religious boundaries and there was regular violence and riots.
Meanwhile the rest of us in the UK got up went to work, took our kids to the park went to the pub, watched the footie and were blissfully unaware the people within our own country were living in such terrible conditions.