Jimmy Carter Administration Revisted

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heyheybooboo

Diamond Member
Jun 29, 2007
6,278
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^^^^^ Average peanut farmer?? Hee hee hee hee ...

Graduated in the top ten percent of the Naval Academy with a degree in Physics, graduate work in nuclear physics, qualified as a submarine captain under Admiral Rickover, governor of Georgia, champion of civil rights, habitat for humanity - knows how to swing a hammer (Dubya swings one like a girl-no offense ladies :) ), known to lust in his heart (you have to have been an adult in 1976 to understand that one) outstanding one term president who guided this country through one of its most darkest periods ... etc... etc ...

Yup. Just your average peanut farmer.

 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
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There is no doubt that Carter is a very decent human being, as decent as anyone to hold the office.

But history shows that a lot of his idealistic policy and beliefs did not work in the ugly world that we live in.

Carter pushed the Shah of Iran to release political prisoners and loosen up it on political protestors. This led to the Islamic revolution which caused Iran to go from a regime with little human rights to a regime with no human rights.

The problem with Carter is that he was too much of an idealist. As his deal with North Korea proved this. After returning from NK Cater said the following :? But I said this when I got back from North Korea, and people said that I was naive or gullible and so forth. I don't think I was. In my opinion, this was one of those perfect agreements where both sides won and got what they wanted and there were no-nobody blinked, nobody had to yield.? That was June 22 1994.

We now know that NK was getting centrifuges from Pakistan as early as 1998 or 1999.
Carter really was naïve and gullible.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
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BTW here is a 1999 brief for congress that says:
There is significant evidence that undeclared nulcear weapons development activitiy continues, including efforts to acquire uranium enrichment technologies and recent nuclear related high explosive tests.

So much for blaming this on Bush huh?
 

Farang

Lifer
Jul 7, 2003
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ProfJohn, still waiting on you to refute Zinn's point. You seem more interested in blasting rapid-fire bullshit than in engaging in any kind of real discussion.

And has anyone told you you're a total joke, trying to suggest you're a professor with both your username and diploma avatar? Let me guess the thought process. . . 'The random bursts of drivel I spew from my mouth are not enough to make credible arguments.. if people think I'm an educated man and not some blathering idiot this shall surely be more convincing!'
 

Pabster

Lifer
Apr 15, 2001
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Perhaps most interesting is Carter continues to open his mouth where he shouldn't, causing deeper scrutiny of his own record. Which, let's face it, is nothing to brag about.

Every President does a a few good things, and lots of bad things. The problem is that people tend to remember the latter category.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,161
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Originally posted by: Farang
ProfJohn, still waiting on you to refute Zinn's point. You seem more interested in blasting rapid-fire bullshit than in engaging in any kind of real discussion.

And has anyone told you you're a total joke, trying to suggest you're a professor with both your username and diploma avatar? Let me guess the thought process. . . 'The random bursts of drivel I spew from my mouth are not enough to make credible arguments.. if people think I'm an educated man and not some blathering idiot this shall surely be more convincing!'
What point am I suppose to refute?
This one?
?The terrorism of the suicide bomber and the terrorism of aerial bombardment are indeed morally equivalent?

I don?t think it needs to be refuted. Anyone with a half a brain who isn?t a member of the anti-war brigade will understand it as an idiotic statement.

Aerial bombardment is done to degrade the enemy?s ability to fight and thus end wars.
Suicide bombing is done to kill civilians and has no legitimate military purpose. Name for me one war that was ended via suicide bombings?

As for your personal attack: seems kind of ironic that a guy with 'graduate' icon would attack someone for having a diploma icon. I have never claimed that my profession or name or icon imparts me with some kind of super genius powers, in fact I have gone out of the war many times to claim that it does not. In the end my name and icon are nothing more than a name and an icon, they have no higher meaning. Instead of reading into what you think I am trying to say why not just read what I actually say and stick to that?
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Originally posted by: Farang
ProfJohn, still waiting on you to refute Zinn's point. You seem more interested in blasting rapid-fire bullshit than in engaging in any kind of real discussion.

And has anyone told you you're a total joke, trying to suggest you're a professor with both your username and diploma avatar? Let me guess the thought process. . . 'The random bursts of drivel I spew from my mouth are not enough to make credible arguments.. if people think I'm an educated man and not some blathering idiot this shall surely be more convincing!'
What point am I suppose to refute?
This one?
?The terrorism of the suicide bomber and the terrorism of aerial bombardment are indeed morally equivalent?

I don?t think it needs to be refuted. Anyone with a half a brain who isn?t a member of the anti-war brigade will understand it as an idiotic statement.

Aerial bombardment is done to degrade the enemy?s ability to fight and thus end wars.

So is suicide bombing. It's one of the few and most effective tactics when faced with an overwhelmingly powerful enemy.

Suicide bombing is done to kill civilians and has no legitimate military purpose.

It has a very legitimate 'military purpose' from the view of the bombers' side - it's one of the few ways to fight an overwhelmingly powerful opponent that has any effect.

The purpose is to weaken 'the enemy', which includes a large civilian population who is paying for the oppression and typically allowing it to go on, maybe not paying attention.

Just ask yourself why the US has often supported terrorism in the past - in places such as North Vietnam in the early 60's (the Gulf of Tonkin was involving supposed attacks on US ships escorting US_trained South Vietnamese terrorists into North Vietnam), or Castro's Cuba in the same time frame, or Reagan's sponsoring non-state terrorists like the Contra Army in Nicaragaua (which successfully pressured the population to vote out Noriega) or state terrorism (e.g., El Salvador). Why did the founders of Israel use terrorism?

Ask yourself how oppression would be challenged without terrorism, by the Palestinians (maybe they could get another UN vote), or by Chechens against Putin.

Of course it's easy to condemn the killing of civilians - but can you show me many examples of terrorism where the terrorists don't feel they're responding to the wrongful killings of their own civilians? You completely miss the point attributed to Zinn above, that ignoring the civilian casualties and bombing anyway is the *same disregard* for innocent life that a desperate group killing civilians as the only tactic they have to oppose an oppressor, are similar morally.

It seems to me that you are simply myopic on the issue - since you are not afraid of any oppressor, of being bombed by an overwhelming military force, you don't care about that point of view; since you are more worried about the suicide bomber, that could affect you, you do condemn that. Dropping Napalm and Agent Orange on civilians? Appropriate military activity. Killing some of a population who is electing politicians who order that bombing against your family? That's wrong.

I rarely see you question the morality of the underlying policies, PJ - you seem a sucker for any government claim that invading a nation is right, at least when it's our government.

IMO, you have a SERIOUS deficiency in your own morality and sense of justice because you are so blinded by the authority of your nation, resulting in the aforementioned myopia.

When you hear tells of an oppressed people fighting the powers that be, you seem to first check your partisan filter (are the oppressors our 'friends'), and if they are, then you have a blind spot for their wrongs. Where are your posts against the Central American thugs who we sponsored in the 1980's, for example? I have never seen a word of concern. You cherry pick your use of of objecting to wrongs for all the wrong reasons - not to pick the worse wrongs, but to try to score debate points against whatever enemy you're condemning.

Name for me one war that was ended via suicide bombings?

The Israeli/US invasion of Lebanon in 1982.

Oh, sorry, you meant more than one. Algeria's occupation by France in the 1960's (you should watch the classic movie).

But you don't need to prove that to show that the tactic makes strategic sense for groups facing very large enemies. Often it doesn't work; but we're talking about the sort of acts used by the most outmatched opponents that are desperate, so of course they're going to lose. Did the Japanese tactic of Kamikazes not make any military sense, just because it didn't allow them to win the war? No, it made a lot of sense - and even the ethical issues with it might be debatable when the pilots were facing virtually certain slaughter already.
 

m1ldslide1

Platinum Member
Feb 20, 2006
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn

Carter pushed the Shah of Iran to release political prisoners and loosen up it on political protestors. This led to the Islamic revolution which caused Iran to go from a regime with little human rights to a regime with no human rights.

I'm afriad that you're flat wrong on this, and I'm wondering who could've told you this nonsense?

Please read my posts above. The Shah of Iran was a US puppet, and his regime was very unpopular. The Islamic revolution was a popular revolt against exactly this. The people of Iran stormed the US embassy because we exported the Shah back to the States after he lost power. This whole "they did it because we wanted them to go easier on prisoners and because they hate freedom" garbage is just poison.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,161
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Originally posted by: m1ldslide1
Originally posted by: ProfJohn

Carter pushed the Shah of Iran to release political prisoners and loosen up it on political protestors. This led to the Islamic revolution which caused Iran to go from a regime with little human rights to a regime with no human rights.
I'm afriad that you're flat wrong on this, and I'm wondering who could've told you this nonsense?

Please read my posts above. The Shah of Iran was a US puppet, and his regime was very unpopular. The Islamic revolution was a popular revolt against exactly this. The people of Iran stormed the US embassy because we exported the Shah back to the States after he lost power. This whole "they did it because we wanted them to go easier on prisoners and because they hate freedom" garbage is just poison.
Wikipedia:
In 1977 a new American President, Jimmy Carter, was inaugurated. In hopes of making post-Vietnam American power and foreign policy more benevolent, he created a special Office of Human Rights which sent the Shah a "polite reminder" of the importance of political rights and freedom. The Shah responded by granting amnesty to 357 political prisoners in February, and allowing Red Cross to visit prisons, beginning what is said to be 'a trend of liberalization by the Shah'. Through the late spring, summer and autumn liberal opposition formed organizations and issued open letters denouncing the regime.[83] Later that year a dissent group (the Writers' Association) gathered without the customary police break-up and arrests, starting a new era of political action by the Shah's opponents.
Jimmy Carter pushed the Shah to liberalize in the name of human rights. Once that was done the opposition groups were able to operate out in the open for the first time. This started the road towards the revolution.

My point was that Jimmy Carter wanted better human rights in Iran, but in the end we ended up with worse human rights due to the Islamic revolution. Sure the Shah was not a popular guy and all that, but as the saying goes ?Better the Devil you know than the Devil you don't?
 

Lemon law

Lifer
Nov 6, 2005
20,984
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We can see where non Prof John is so down on Jimmy Carter with---Jimmy Carter pushed the Shah to liberalize in the name of human rights. Once that was done the opposition groups were able to operate out in the open for the first time. This started the road towards the revolution.

My point was that Jimmy Carter wanted better human rights in Iran, but in the end we ended up with worse human rights due to the Islamic revolution. Sure the Shah was not a popular guy and all that, but as the saying goes ?Better the Devil you know than the Devil you don't?
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Now compare the Carter doctrine with the new GWB bring democracy to the mid-east record. I call you out on this PJ and raise you one Nobel peace prize even though GWB claimed to want better human rights in Iraq.

Let me count your myths.

1. You contend that somehow Carter undermined the Shah. And if he had not done so, the Shah would still be sitting on the Peacock throne.

2. The Shah was doomed anyway and a revolution was coming. Even the CIA missed it entirely. Ultimately that revolution dumped on the USA, not for the sin of supporting the Shah and his secret police, but for the sin of Carter granting the Shah refuge and medical treatment in the USA. And the US embassy was taken and hostages were held for over a year. True, the USA was somewhat humiliated. But instead of over reacting, Carter was mature enough not to start a big war, and in the end no one got killed. The joker in the deck were the total backdoor negotiations by Reagan and his team, the same team that later sold weapons to Iran.

3. Now contrast that with cowboy GWB. Who started a war in which more than 4000 US personnel have been killed and only GOD know how many hundreds of thousand of Iraqis. Now the USA is totally humiliated and firmly occupies the moral low ground Carter refused to take. And GWB has caused a longer national nightmare.

Somehow non Prof John, you always choose to vilify the wrong person and invariably try to make hero's out of idiots. What the hell is wrong with you and you should be deeply ashamed of yourself.
 

woodie1

Diamond Member
Mar 7, 2000
5,947
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The only thing Jimmy (milktoast) Carter has done worthwhile is his work with Habitat for Humanity.
I did not like him when in office but thought he might have some purpose after being expelled from the White House.
Instead Jimmy is unsuccessfully concealing his rage at the country that rejected him and his presidency.

Didn't the Church Committee that gutted the CIA happen under his administration?

Jimmy (milktoast) Carter: the man who paved the way for Iran's ayatollahs, Venezuela's Chavez and North Korea's nuclear program.

 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
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Originally posted by: woodie1
The only thing Jimmy (milktoast) Carter has done worthwhile is his work with Habitat for Humanity.
I did not like him when in office but thought he might have some purpose after being expelled from the White House.
Instead Jimmy is unsuccessfully concealing his rage at the country that rejected him and his presidency.

Didn't the Church Committee that gutted the CIA happen under his administration?

Jimmy (milktoast) Carter: the man who paved the way for Iran's ayatollahs, Venezuela's Chavez and North Korea's nuclear program.

Man, you are such a reminder of the level of ignorance and poison among too many in our nation. The John Birchers and McCarthyites have nothing on you.

Once again, there's little room for me to post the bad about Carter responding to such crap, so - Carter did a lot of good, he was right to push human rights, the ony rage showing is your irrational rage at a president who did good you're ignorant about while you cheer his disastrous successor. The Church commission happened under Ford, and it was needed to curtail huge abuses - they were a wonderful thing of the type that makes the country great. Carter had not a thing to do with Chavez becoming president - which was a good things.

You call him milktoast out of shameless ignorance you want to flaunt. You're the sort of evil, ignorant citizen that's a far bigger threat to the US than any terrorist.