Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Originally posted by: shadow9d9
Very simple. We should have done an 1000x better job catching the terrorists in tora bora.. after securing Afghanistan(and not letting violence get out of hand by ignoring it like we are doing now). Then we should beef up our borders, increase our inspections at our ports, and prepare a comprehensive plan to deal with future emergencies(even including something like Katrina, which is pretty similar of a disaster).
Let me hop in my Delorean and order the military to do a better job at Tora Bora. :roll:
That is it. The "terrorists" term is mainly a bogeyman.. there will ALWAYS be terrorists... after 1993, there were no attacks until 2001... and that was without doing anything like attacking Afghanistan and trapping and killing the Taliban/Al Qaeda. We aren't surrounded by terrorists in this country...we simply keep interfering with the middle east and try to control oil for our benefit.
Since oil is the only production of the Middle East that we need and it is their main means of income, if we simply followed Brazil and use alternative fuel, we will slowly bankrupt the ME byu refusing their oil and acting as a role model for the world including Russia and China in using alternative fuel. Since we no longer would have any personal interest in the Middle East, the terrorists would focus their efforts to other countries interfering with the ME(since we won't be).
That is the ticket right there, all we need to do is get the entire world to convert to alternative energy sources and stop using oil. Should be easy right?
BTW: Brazil only uses 1.9 million barrels of oil a day. The entire world uses about 82 million barrels a day. The US uses 10 times as much as Brazil, 5 million barrels a day is used just in our cars and trucks.
There. Is that so complicated? Attacking everything in site makes no sense. Iraq makes no sense. We are no closer to eliminating dependency on foreign oil. Bush said we are dependant on oil yet has done NOT ONE SINGLE DAMN THING to change that since that speach!
Let's look at the "four underlying factors" fueling "the spread of the jihadist movement:"
"(1) Entrenched grievances, such as corruption, injustice, and fear of Western domination, leading to anger, humiliation, and a sense of powerlessness;
(2) the Iraq 'jihad;'
(3) the slow pace of real and sustained economic, social, and political reforms in many Muslim majority nations; and
(4) pervasive anti-U.S. sentiment among most Muslims -- all of which jihadists exploit."
hmmm Don't see anything about oil in there...