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  1. #1
    Council Member SteveMetz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ken White View Post
    I wonder how this thread would have run had Steve not titled it "The Israeli option on Strategy" and had not even mentioned Israel?

    I generally agree with his prescription but would instead have called it the TR strategy, walk softly and carry a big stick.

    Let's dump the 'Israeli'
    Lesson learned

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    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Unhappy I never ceased to be amazed by how many people

    cue in on one, to them, hot button word and then allow that to skew or even derail their comprehension of the actual point of a written piece.

    Sigh. As they say, the internet is not a perfect medium...

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    Ken brought up a point I've been chewing on since I read it, about how the negativity seems focused in the North.

    I live and work in New Jersey; my extended family is almost all in Boston or the near suburbs of Boston; my GF lives out in Chicagoland. Contrary to what Tequila says, I don't watch Fox News, haven't in years and years.

    And the feeling I get among those I talk to is one of...Not Carteresque malaise. Worse. One of "The world seriously hates us now, but there is nothing remotely practical that will change that fact." Add to that a fair helping of "We. Are. Totally. Screwed." Economically, in foreign affairs, and just generally.

    It cuts across party/generational/social lines, too. Hawk, dove, Republican, Democrat, old, young...It's a constant. This broad sense of, if not "We're doomed", then one of "We'll never recover."

    But it doesn't seem to have penetrated the South; it's a Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest thing (and I can't say much about farther west than that).

    I can't figure out -why-, but it feels like what Ken says has something to it - not because of the weather, but for some reason I can't grasp.

    What's the difference? What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac, while the South (and maybe the West) doesn't have the same gloomy feelings about the world?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Penta View Post
    Ken brought up a point I've been chewing on since I read it, about how the negativity seems focused in the North.[]

    I can't figure out -why-, but it feels like what Ken says has something to it - not because of the weather, but for some reason I can't grasp.

    What's the difference? What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac, while the South (and maybe the West) doesn't have the same gloomy feelings about the world?
    Warmth, sunshine, and happy hunting grounds (up here, they ain't so happy anymore). That, and not quite as much of the population is crammed into tense, dreary, big cities, like most people in North-East US and Canada are.

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    Council Member SteveMetz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Penta View Post
    What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac..
    If you're like us, you're also in need of a big, honkin bag of rock salt about now.



    (From Pictures-I-Like.com)

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    Moderator Steve Blair's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Penta View Post
    Ken brought up a point I've been chewing on since I read it, about how the negativity seems focused in the North.

    I live and work in New Jersey; my extended family is almost all in Boston or the near suburbs of Boston; my GF lives out in Chicagoland. Contrary to what Tequila says, I don't watch Fox News, haven't in years and years.

    And the feeling I get among those I talk to is one of...Not Carteresque malaise. Worse. One of "The world seriously hates us now, but there is nothing remotely practical that will change that fact." Add to that a fair helping of "We. Are. Totally. Screwed." Economically, in foreign affairs, and just generally.

    It cuts across party/generational/social lines, too. Hawk, dove, Republican, Democrat, old, young...It's a constant. This broad sense of, if not "We're doomed", then one of "We'll never recover."

    But it doesn't seem to have penetrated the South; it's a Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest thing (and I can't say much about farther west than that).

    I can't figure out -why-, but it feels like what Ken says has something to it - not because of the weather, but for some reason I can't grasp.

    What's the difference? What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac, while the South (and maybe the West) doesn't have the same gloomy feelings about the world?
    Take a look at the original settlers of both sections and you'll get an idea.

    By the way, once you get clear of the midwest folks don't tend to be as gloom and doom. Until you hit the West Coast, of course.
    "On the plains and mountains of the American West, the United States Army had once learned everything there was to learn about hit-and-run tactics and guerrilla warfare."
    T.R. Fehrenbach This Kind of War

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    This thread has moved on apace.
    I have an admission to make. I opened the thread just after steve started it, got distracted and then read the initial post without looking at the title, I then wrote my post. Net result I missed the Israel bit in the title and, despite being post #6, had only seen the opening post.
    My second confession is that my previous anti-American rant comes from a place of love. I have always been a fan particularly of the founding fathers and the constitution and the idea of America they embody. I think this leads me to feel more let down by the direction of more recent trends: being let down by a friend being worse than betrayal by a stranger.

    On a more Utopian note what do you think would be the effect of the US reducing its military expenditure to a point where its forces were only equal to Western Europe (as a block with similar GDP and population), any savings to be diverted into an enormous hearts and minds operation. What could you do with that kind of budget?
    Reduce subsidies to US producers of cotton and rice which would kick start agriculture in some of the world’s poorest countries and shame Europe and Japan into following.
    A foreign aid budget that would make friends for the US all over the world.
    The US provides Israel with a subsidy of about $500/cap/year that kind of money extended to the Palestinians’ along with real pressure on Israel to give up enough land to make a viable state would do more to reduce the risk of Islamic terrorism than any size of military.
    Is a stockade always the best way of protecting your population? Might making friends with them ‘injuns not be a better bet in the long run?

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    Default Ron, I did not mean to

    imply that all IO is PSYOP. Rather, what I thought Gian was talking about was PSYOP. As Tom says, PSYOP is A component of IO. My comment then was directed at that part tof the equation. And, I would reiterate that you can't keep on selling snake oil if it doesn't work. If it does work, then it is much easier and legitimate to sell and we call it aspirin.

    Cheers

    JohnT

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    Quote Originally Posted by John T. Fishel View Post
    imply that all IO is PSYOP. Rather, what I thought Gian was talking about was PSYOP. As Tom says, PSYOP is A component of IO. My comment then was directed at that part tof the equation. And, I would reiterate that you can't keep on selling snake oil if it doesn't work. If it does work, then it is much easier and legitimate to sell and we call it aspirin.

    Cheers

    JohnT
    I probably came off a little strong, but as I'm sure you can tell this has been a "hot-button" fo me for a while. It's not so much that it's not understood but that as Tom pointed out it's in the Joint Manual and I'm afraid for a lot of folks thats where it stays and the context in which it's taken.
    Honestly I think this last post by walrus did more to point out why and how important it is for us to have our heads around it.

    It's not that we may not disagree with what others from around the world say or that they are necessarily right, but in the end their perceptions are our reality when it comes to interacting with them. I think Ken brought this out in mentioning how often we ended up in fights do to lack of others truly
    knowing what we're about(generalization)

    We must focus on a greater understanding of the globe and it's peoples in order for either Full scale warfare, COIN, or inbetween to be effective.

    Yes a soldiers job is a soldiers job, but work smarter not harder training never hurts.

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    Steve, you wrote:

    I'm moving toward the conclusion that our problem is NOT that people don't understand us (and hence the problem is NOT poor strategic communications or information operations). Most people do have a reasonably good understanding of us. They just increasingly don't want what we want and plain don't like what we stand for.
    This is where I run the risk of being booted off this board under the "America Hater" label.

    It's the Bush Administration and the directions he and his supporters are taking America that the rest of the world doesn't like, and I absolutely agree with the rest of the world.

    America's reputation stinks, period, it stinks with your friends as well as your real enemies, but because you happen to have the worlds biggest economy, we hold our nose and still deal with you.

    I will not catalogue the various sins and practices that have led to this, it would take too long, suffice to say that we have reached the point where a Brigadier General, legal advisor to Guantanamo, refuses to answer a hypothetical question from the Senate Judiciary Committee, about whether Iranians waterboarding a downed American airman would be torture.

    http://thinkprogress.org/2007/12/11/...boarding-iran/

    Now this situation is recoverable, lower your blood pressure and please don't switch off yet.

    1. First understand why your friends are deserting you. It has a lot to do with your non-observance of the golden rule. And the "my way or the highway" attitude. People in the rest of the world have other ways of organising and doing things that are just as good, if not better, than yours. Get some humility and follow the golden rule.

    2. Understand that you cannot be the world's policeman, the world won't tolerate it, nor the robber baron economic attitude that goes with it. You will simply drive people into the arms of the next rising power, the Chinese, or the Indians or the Russians. Furthermore, as has been pointed out by others, empire is expensive. You think Iraq and Afghanistan is bad? Consider the entire world rebelling against you. If you start doing as you would be done by (Step #1) you can instead build alliances and enhance security that way.

    3. That gets your friends back onside, now lets talk about the real enemies.In confronting your real enemies the first thing you have to do is understand whats bugging them. In the Middle East, they don't just "hate our freedoms". There has been a battle between western civilisation and the ancient religious power structures of Islam for the hearts and minds of muslims going on for at least four generations, and until George W. Bush came along, the West was winning - and it doesn't take an anthropologist to say it.

    Stop doing things that alienate Muslims. Start doing the same things we did during the cold war - and here I am going back to the Fifties. These things include a massive campaign to prove to the world that we really are the good guys and start walking the talk, just like we did with the Communists. These were massive efforts (Not just IO and Psyops) to educate, demonstrate and convince wavering populations the world over that the American/ European model of free market capitalism and secular democracy was much better at creating human happiness than Communism.

    Ask yourself this; If Muslims "hate our freedoms" why the heck do you think that many of them will do almost anything (legal and illegal) to migrate to Europe or North America, or Australia? They don't want to live under an oppressive theocracy, but of course if you invade, kill, bomb, jail and and torture people they will rally to their religion and stand up for their country like people anywhere would.

    Then of course there is Putin's Russia, but how do we confront his rigged elections when the last but one American Presidential Election was a mess?

    How do we confront Dictators around the world over human rights when America has trashed its own record in this area?

    I could go on. America has done some hateful things and until you recognise it, give the Government a kick in the backside and tell it to start living up to the reputation America HAD as a beacon of hope then nothing will change, and you will keep wondering why.
    Last edited by walrus; 12-13-2007 at 11:28 PM.

  11. #11
    Council Member Ken White's Avatar
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    Default Well, yeah...

    Quote Originally Posted by walrus View Post
    . . .
    America's reputation stinks, period, it stinks with your friends as well as your real enemies, but because you happen to have the worlds biggest economy, we hold our nose and still deal with you.
    Been true of many for many years. The fact that we're unduly arrogant, a bit insensitive and a trifle xenophobic doesn't help.
    . . .
    Now this situation is recoverable, lower your blood pressure and please don't switch off yet.

    1. First understand why your friends are deserting you. It has a lot to do with your non-observance of the golden rule. And the "my way or the highway" attitude. People in the rest of the world have other ways of organising and doing things that are just as good, if not better, than yours. Get some humility and follow the golden rule.
    True, the first four years of this Administration were a cluster of diplomatic blunders of some magnitude. In fairness, they've done much better the past three. The damage will heal but it will take time. Not as bad as it was during Viet Nam.

    2. Understand that you cannot be the world's policeman, the world won't tolerate it, nor the robber baron economic attitude that goes with it. You will simply drive people into the arms of the next rising power, the Chinese, or the Indians or the Russians. Furthermore, as has been pointed out by others, empire is expensive. You think Iraq and Afghanistan is bad? Consider the entire world rebelling against you. If you start doing as you would be done by (Step #1) you can instead build alliances and enhance security that way.
    We'd really rather not be the world's policeman. Honest. Read Bush's early speeches; we disavowed the job and Rumsfeld backed him up. Then they got caught in the crossfire; all the earlier placatory efforts with ME were for naught, it appeared.

    Unfortunately, the UN seems to be marginal at the job and other then the Poms and you Strynes, no one else seems to want to help much. That's been true since WW II and it's a long standing problem; everyone is just more aware of it now because we communicate better.

    3. That gets your friends back onside, now lets talk about the real enemies.In confronting your real enemies the first thing you have to do is understand whats bugging them. In the Middle East, they don't just "hate our freedoms". There has been a battle between western civilisation and the ancient religious power structures of Islam for the hearts and minds of muslims going on for at least four generations, and until George W. Bush came along, the West was winning - and it doesn't take an anthropologist to say it.
    True -- but George is apparently an impatient guy and decided to take a calculated risk and see if he could accelerate a probable four to six generation movement into a two generation movement. Many do not agree with that. It may or may not work. Probably will but some will never forgive him for doing it -- even those that benefit if it does work. Old world's funny that way...

    Stop doing things that alienate Muslims. Start doing the same things we did during the cold war - and here I am going back to the Fifties. These things include a massive campaign to prove to the world that we really are the good guys and start walking the talk, just like we did with the Communists. These were massive efforts (Not just IO and Psyops) to educate, demonstrate and convince wavering populations the world over that the American/ European model of free market capitalism and secular democracy was much better at creating human happiness than Communism.
    Different time and different antagonists. Fractures in Society and excessive ideological divides in most western nations make the world a different place. Hard to orchestrate a bunch of hostile cats -- that means we have difficulty getting our act together to do what you suggest. the other side has their own cat herding problem as well. Neither they nor we are as monolithic as was the case in the 50s.

    Ask yourself this; If Muslims "hate our freedoms" why the heck do you think that many of them will do almost anything (legal and illegal) to migrate to Europe or North America, or Australia? They don't want to live under an oppressive theocracy, but of course if you invade, kill, bomb, jail and and torture people they will rally to their religion and stand up for their country like people anywhere would.
    The average Muslim is not the problem, it's those who pervert the religion. However, the degree of solidarity between members of the religion males disavowal of those with ill intentions difficult. There's more -- but you know all that...

    Then of course there is Putin's Russia, but how do we confront his rigged elections when the last but one American Presidential Election was a mess?
    Same way the Commonwealth confronts Mugabe's? Or Fiji's...

    How do we confront Dictators around the world over human rights when America has trashed its own record in this area?
    In the eyes of some; haven't noticed any real problems in that regard to US Citizens other than the occasional odd wad. There's that xenophobia again. There also is that fragmentation and divided electorate I mentioned.

    I could go on. America has done some hateful things and until you recognise it, give the Government a kick in the backside and tell it to start living up to the reputation America HAD as a beacon of hope then nothing will change, and you will keep wondering why.
    We've been doing hateful things for over 220 years in the eyes of a great many; no news there.

    It'll change, everything goes in cycles. Ours last either four or eight years. Current one ends mid-January 2008. Not much will change but some people will be happier, some less happy.

    Most of us don't wonder why at all, by the way...

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    Thank you for your well thought out and measured response to my post Ken. I apologise if I've offended anyone and my post is a bit over the top.

    But from where I sit, the problem and the solution appear obvious and I get hot under the collar thinking about the years and lives we've wasted barking up the wrong tree.

    We built a perfectly good strategy to confront and contain Communism while we whittled away at its economic and social credentials for thirty years until that tree fell down.

    We need to dust off those old strategies and do exactly the same to radical Islam in my opinion, starting with building good relations with those countries that want to be our friends.

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Penta View Post
    Ken brought up a point I've been chewing on since I read it, about how the negativity seems focused in the North.

    I live and work in New Jersey; my extended family is almost all in Boston or the near suburbs of Boston; my GF lives out in Chicagoland. Contrary to what Tequila says, I don't watch Fox News, haven't in years and years.

    And the feeling I get among those I talk to is one of...Not Carteresque malaise. Worse. One of "The world seriously hates us now, but there is nothing remotely practical that will change that fact." Add to that a fair helping of "We. Are. Totally. Screwed." Economically, in foreign affairs, and just generally.

    It cuts across party/generational/social lines, too. Hawk, dove, Republican, Democrat, old, young...It's a constant. This broad sense of, if not "We're doomed", then one of "We'll never recover."

    But it doesn't seem to have penetrated the South; it's a Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest thing (and I can't say much about farther west than that).

    I can't figure out -why-, but it feels like what Ken says has something to it - not because of the weather, but for some reason I can't grasp.

    What's the difference? What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac, while the South (and maybe the West) doesn't have the same gloomy feelings about the world?
    Hi Penta, for the answer to your question just listen to Bocephus explain it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I4s0n...eature=related

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    Council Member Ron Humphrey's Avatar
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    Smile Honestly I've spent most of my life in the midwest

    Quote Originally Posted by Penta View Post
    Ken brought up a point I've been chewing on since I read it, about how the negativity seems focused in the North.

    I live and work in New Jersey; my extended family is almost all in Boston or the near suburbs of Boston; my GF lives out in Chicagoland. Contrary to what Tequila says, I don't watch Fox News, haven't in years and years.

    And the feeling I get among those I talk to is one of...Not Carteresque malaise. Worse. One of "The world seriously hates us now, but there is nothing remotely practical that will change that fact." Add to that a fair helping of "We. Are. Totally. Screwed." Economically, in foreign affairs, and just generally.

    It cuts across party/generational/social lines, too. Hawk, dove, Republican, Democrat, old, young...It's a constant. This broad sense of, if not "We're doomed", then one of "We'll never recover."

    But it doesn't seem to have penetrated the South; it's a Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest thing (and I can't say much about farther west than that).

    I can't figure out -why-, but it feels like what Ken says has something to it - not because of the weather, but for some reason I can't grasp.

    What's the difference? What has the Northern part of the country seemingly in need of mass prescriptions of Prozac, while the South (and maybe the West) doesn't have the same gloomy feelings about the world?
    and throughout that time I've seen very little really bring the spirits down.

    We had floods, ice, economic stress, but we just keep on smiling. I actually think it has more to do with the fact that most southerners and midwest don't really pay too much attention to what is said by who, when, and how. We just tend to take one day at a time and pretty much expect life to suck sometimes so we're never really surprised when it does.

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