--- Gautam Mukunda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- Deborah Harrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > Overstatement.  A coalition was forged before, so
> > it can be again.  Will it be easy?  No. But that's
> > not a reason not to try.

> No, it really wasn't an overstatement.  Do you have
> _any_ evidence that a coalition can be forged again.
<sniplet> 
> We have tried continually to form a coalition. 

No, some in the Administration have acted and spoken
as if non-Americans don't matter and never will. 
Belittling and insulting people is not the way to form
a coalition.  The efforts to forge 1441 were laudable.

> We got a unanimous
> resolution of the Security Council _which is being
> ignored_.  Given that fact - that the opponents of
> the
> war were willing to vote for a resolution and then
> turn around and completely ignore its explicit
terms-
> what, other than wishful thinking, makes you think
> that this can happen?

1) Resolution 1441 was - with great effort - passed. 
Why is it "wishful thinking" to try to get another
passed and implemented?
2) Blair, Powell and others don't seem to think
they're wasting their time in pushing for a coalition.

<I snipped a lot of - to borrow your prior use -
snarky comments, which I will address in another
post.>
 
> > Bluntly, because I find the "holier than thou"
> > attitude WRT the-US-vs.-the-world foolish,
> > condescending, and most of all **counterproductive
> > to the stated goals** of the government.  It's one
> > thing
> > to claim to be better (which we are), another
> > _entirely_ to state that one has both God's ear
> and His mission --which happens also to be the claim
> of certain Muslim extremists.  If this is presented
> > as a "holy war," it *will not* stay 
> > confined to Iraq. 
> 
> Can you please give me a quote where anyone in the
> government "state[d] that [we] ha[ve] both God's ear
> and His mission?"  Or presented this as a "'holy
> war'"?  Even _one_?  

The "stated goals" to which I referred were the
disarmament of Iraq and the destruction of its WoMD.
I did not *quote* the "God's mission" because that is
how I further described Bush's attitude WRT the rest
of the world - not Iraq specificly; illustrative
statements include:

http://jerusalem.indymedia.org/news/2003/03/108547.php
{a March '03 article, looks like a reprint of a
Newsweek article}

>>At Opryland in Nashville�the old �Buckle of the
Bible Belt��Bush told religious broadcasters that �the
terrorists hate the fact that ... we can worship
Almighty God the way we see fit,� and that the United
States was called to bring God�s gift of liberty to
�every human being in the world.� In his view, the
chances of success were better than good. (After all,
at the National Prayer Breakfast a few days before,
he�d declared that �behind all of life and all history
there is a dedication and purpose, set by the hand of
a just and faithful God.� If that�s so, America
couldn�t fail.) 

>>"The liberty we prize is not America's gift to the
world, it is God's gift to humanity." 
Context: This statement is not found in Scripture, but
harks back to the writings of French political
philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville. It raised a red
flag for supporters of separation of church and state.


{I include the following not as a quote, but to show
that I am far from alone in hearing that Bush is 'on a
mission.')
>>But the president is facing a mighty force of
religious leaders on the other side. They include the
pope (Bush will meet with a papal envoy this week,
NEWSWEEK has learned), the Council of Bishops, the
National Council of Churches, many Jewish groups and
most Muslim leaders. �People appreciate his devotion
to faith, but, in the context of war, there is a fine
line, and he is starting to make people nervous,� says
Steve Waldman, the editor and CEO of Beliefnet, a
popular and authoritative Web site on religion and
society. �They appreciate his moral clarity and
decisiveness. But they wonder if he is ignoring
nuances in what sounds like a messianic mission.� 

While this site is obviously anti-Bush, it has further
quotes from the President on religion.
http://www.dubyaspeak.com/theologian.shtml
>>We welcome all religions in America, all religions.
We honor diversity in this country. We respect
people's deep convictions. ...Since America's
founding, prayer has reassured us that the hand of God
is guiding the affairs of this nation. We have never
asserted a special claim on His favor, yet we've
always believed in God's presence in our lives. This
has always been true. 
-- Same speech, two different sentiments, National
Hispanic Prayer Breakfast, Washington, D.C., May 16,
2002
 
How one can claim that "the hand of God is guiding the
affairs of this nation" yet deny "a special claim on
His favor" is not comprehensible.

After 9/11 (article from Oct '01):
http://www.msnbc.com/news/632784.asp?cp1=1 
>>Unblinkingly resolute before a cheering Congress,
George Bush defiantly vowed in God�s name to lead an
anxious nation and the civilized world in a decisive
campaign against the forces of terror. The fight would
focus initially, he said, on Islamic extremist Osama
bin Laden and his Qaeda network in the mountains of
Afghanistan...

>>Besides allies, Bush said, America would need�and
receive�assistance from Above. �Freedom and fear,
justice and cruelty, have always been at war,� he
said, �and we know that God is not neutral between
them.�

>>There would be no freelancing of the kind that had
led him to describe the task at hand as a �crusade��a
word with an unfortunately specific historical and
theological meaning that had outraged Muslims when he
used it. 

>From the same article, showing that extremist Muslims
(in this case, the Taliban) _do_ think of opposing the
US as a "holy war:"
>>As the president spoke, American warplanes, ships
and troops were speeding bin Laden�s way�and the
dictatorial clerics who rule the country prepared for
what they later called a �showdown of might� in an
Islamic �holy war.� 

Please note that I am not mocking Bush's faith - I
believe that he fervently believes what he says, and
that he is very sincere in his faith and _what it
demands that he do_.  That is scary to me (who also
believes in a Divine Presence, but doesn't claim to
know what It wants).

Debbi
who now has to run off to Brighton for a
horse-training session, and didn't get nearly as far
as I'd hoped in plowing through the BrinL flood  :)


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