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Originally posted by worldwatcher
who will more than likely use Sharia Law as a basis for their new country's laws???
Originally posted by worldwatcher
oil talk and dependency????
What happened to the discussion that Iraq has democratically voted to be an Islamic state run by religious leaders who will more than likely use Sharia Law as a basis for their new country's laws???
get back on topic and stop with the name calling (remember this thread was started by a mod, I will see the no's no's) now play nice boys.
Originally posted by Harlequin
you do know that women had more rights under sadam hussein than under sharia law don`t you?
Originally posted by Souljah Without oil all Warplanes of the USAF stand still on their runways. Without oil carrier battle groups have no more meaning. Without oil combat vehicles of the USArmy stand still.
You got much more to loose then any other Country - for you have the Majority of Armed Forces OVERSEAS - in combat zones.
Originally posted by worldwatcher
oil talk and dependency????
What happened to the discussion that Iraq has democratically voted to be an Islamic state run by religious leaders who will more than likely use Sharia Law as a basis for their new country's laws???
get back on topic and stop with the name calling (remember this thread was started by a mod, I will see the no's no's) now play nice boys.
Originally posted by Souljah
Without Essential Oil Reserves your American Ecnomoy, based on Crude Oil, will Collapse like a Tower of Cards. So fragile it is, that the USA can not afford, that Crude Oil would be sold in PetroEuroes, therefore making the PetroDollar drop.
As the trends became available regarding the Iraqi elections of last Thursday, what has emerged is that contrary to all pre-poll projections, the Shi'ite religious coalition, the United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), not only held together, but also can be expected to dominate the new 275-member National Assembly for the next four years.
More importantly, the "secular" candidates who were believed to enjoy links with the US security agencies would seem to have been routed. Former premier Iyad Allawi's prospects of leading the new government seem virtually nil. And Ahmad Chalabi's Iraqi National Accord suffered a shattering defeat.
The prognosis that Sunnis would flock to Allawi or that Shi'ite constituents were disillusioned with the "fundamentalist" UIA and would be drawn to Allawi's secular platform has also proved to be highly faulty.
Originally posted by Benevolent Heretic
The way I see it, what we've done in Iraq is similar to giving a bandaid to a person who has been seriously wounded in an accident
Originally posted by Harlequin
you do know that women had more rights under sadam hussein than under sharia law don`t you?
Originally posted by Ambient Sound
Well, what can you feel for a people who choose slavery over freedom, except pity?
I don't see that we have any right to prevent this. We put them in a position where they actually had a choice for once. This was a noble endeavor in my opinion. If they have chosen chains and servitude to a religion that seems intent upon forcing the rest of the world to destroy it, then their fate is out of our hands, and we should not trouble ourselves to worry over them anymore. They had the choice.
The day Sharia law is adopted in Iraq is the day we should withdraw everything from there including all financial and diplomatic aid. We have no right to force them to choose our way, but neither do we need to reward a stupid decision. We should not withdraw to enact revenge or to punish, but for the simple reason that societies ruled by religion are incapable of coexisting with secular societies based on the rational assumption of basic equal rights and individual liberty.
It's quite simple. Religious States cannot be trusted. Who knows what their God will tell them to do tomorrow?
Originally posted by worldwatcher
Originally posted by Harlequin
you do know that women had more rights under sadam hussein than under sharia law don`t you?
I'm not sure enough about that to agree with you, I think it's might be about the same when it comes to women's rights in the country
: Originally posted by kozmo
I say bring the troops back home now and allow Iraq the pleasure of wallowing in their radical new government. The taliban has demonstrated how successful a religious government can be, right Afghanistan?