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  4. Irwin N. Graulich: The Gaza Strip-Tease

Irwin N. Graulich: The Gaza Strip-Tease

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  • L Lost User

    Didn't realise that giving bad references is still possible in the good old US of A - in UK if you are unable to give a good reference you should not give any reference at all as it is contrary to law to give a bad job reference. Suppose a shelf stacking/stocking job is same at Walmart as elsewhere, unless he was doing an even more menial task. :doh:

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Rob Graham
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    It is permissible to inquire if the previous employer would re-hire the applicant. No reason is required or expected for saying you would not rehire, and it is the penultimate bad reference.

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    • O Oakman

      Stan Shannon wrote:

      Europeans did take away precisely the wrong lessons from WWII.

      I suppose from your little jerkwater town in Indiana it's easy to start imagining that Europe is a single monolithic organization. It's too bad you have so little idea of what the real world is like.

      Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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      S Offline
      Stan Shannon
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      Oakman wrote:

      I suppose from your little jerkwater town in Indiana it's easy to start imagining that Europe is a single monolithic organization. It's too bad you have so little idea of what the real world is like.

      For any practical purpose, it is a single monolithic organization. If there is a significant group that disagrees with the status guo, they must live in Xanadu with all those hoards of moderate muslims we are always being told about. And, btw, I thought I might point out the logical inconsistency of complaining about me stereotyping Eurpeans as you happily stereotype jerkwater towns.

      Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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      • L Lost User

        Stan Shannon wrote:

        Europeans did take away precisely the wrong lessons from WWII.

        Would you care to expand on exactly what Europeans have not done or learnt properly since WWII, and by whose yardstick are you measuring it?

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        S Offline
        Stan Shannon
        wrote on last edited by
        #17

        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

        Would you care to expand on exactly what Europeans have not done or learnt properly since WWII, and by whose yardstick are you measuring it?

        The lesson that Europeans took away from WWII was that government did not have enough power. Clearly the only thing that could stop another holocaust was the concentration of even more power into the hands of really, really nice people who could go about convincing Europeans that they were all a bunch of scum bags who needed to be ashamed of every last aspect of their civilization, traditions and culture (except for the ones approved of by the state, of course).

        Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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        • S Stan Shannon

          Richard A. Abbott wrote:

          Would you care to expand on exactly what Europeans have not done or learnt properly since WWII, and by whose yardstick are you measuring it?

          The lesson that Europeans took away from WWII was that government did not have enough power. Clearly the only thing that could stop another holocaust was the concentration of even more power into the hands of really, really nice people who could go about convincing Europeans that they were all a bunch of scum bags who needed to be ashamed of every last aspect of their civilization, traditions and culture (except for the ones approved of by the state, of course).

          Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          Stan Shannon wrote:

          government did not have enough power.

          Three questions for you Stan. 1. What power do you think that American Governments have that Governments from Britain, France, Germany, Spain ... do not? 2. Is this the yardstick to measure that, or have you some other test that equates as a yardstick? 3. What should European Governments individually or collectively do to rectify such shortcomings?

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          • S Stan Shannon

            Oakman wrote:

            I suppose from your little jerkwater town in Indiana it's easy to start imagining that Europe is a single monolithic organization. It's too bad you have so little idea of what the real world is like.

            For any practical purpose, it is a single monolithic organization. If there is a significant group that disagrees with the status guo, they must live in Xanadu with all those hoards of moderate muslims we are always being told about. And, btw, I thought I might point out the logical inconsistency of complaining about me stereotyping Eurpeans as you happily stereotype jerkwater towns.

            Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

            O Offline
            O Offline
            Oakman
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            Stan Shannon wrote:

            For any practical purpose, it is a single monolithic organization.

            Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same.

            Stan Shannon wrote:

            happily stereotype jerkwater towns.

            The only town I talked about was yours. The small town I live in is filled with enlightened souls. Don't get me wrong. I even think there are intellectuals in Indiana. Unfortunately the last time I went through the state, both of them were on vacation.

            Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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            • I Ilion

              MichNews.com (Conservative news & commentary) Irwin N. Graulich: The Gaza Strip-Tease[^]

              ... And much of the world continues to repeat the same mistakes of history. In fact, Europe learned absolutely nothing from WWII. Instead of learning that decent, moral nations must "fight evil," the Europeans learned that "fighting is evil." ...

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              This is not a serious analysis of the Palestinian problem, he is merely preaching to the converted.

              Ilíon quoted:

              In fact, Europe learned absolutely nothing from WWII. Instead of learning that decent, moral nations must "fight evil," the Europeans learned that "fighting is evil."

              Europe (both sides) learned what it was like to be on the receiving end of a war of attrition. Had the USA experienced that lesson, they, too, might have decided that "fighting is evil".

              Country Population Military Deaths Civilian Deaths
              Perpetrators
              France 41,700,000 217,600 267,000
              Germany 69,623,000 5,533,000 1,540,000
              Italy 44,394,000 301,400 145,100
              Japan 71,380,000 2,120,000 580,000
              UK 47,760,000 382,700 67,100

              Dragged in
              USA 131,028,000 416,800 1,700
              USSR 168,500,000 10,700,000 11,400,000

              (Apologies to all the unmentioned countries that were also dragged in on either side.)

              Source: World War 2 Casualties[^] Not to mention the destruction of each nation's infrastructure and economy. Does USA's lack of activity re Germany, Japan and the USSR during the 1930s indicate that the USA was not then a "decent, moral, nation" - or were they not seen as being "evil"? Possibly why we were anxious to avoid WW2: World War 1 Casualties[^]

              Bob Emmett

              O 1 Reply Last reply
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              • L Lost User

                Stan Shannon wrote:

                government did not have enough power.

                Three questions for you Stan. 1. What power do you think that American Governments have that Governments from Britain, France, Germany, Spain ... do not? 2. Is this the yardstick to measure that, or have you some other test that equates as a yardstick? 3. What should European Governments individually or collectively do to rectify such shortcomings?

                S Offline
                S Offline
                Stan Shannon
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                . What power do you think that American Governments have that Governments from Britain, France, Germany, Spain ... do not?

                Well none, subsequent to our take over and occupation by european political tyranny. However, before that, the US governmetn had virtually no power to affect society or culture at all. That was all managed at the state and local levels of our society.

                Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                Is this the yardstick to measure that, or have you some other test that equates as a yardstick?

                I have no idea what any of that means.

                Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                What should European Governments individually or collectively do to rectify such shortcomings?

                Immdediately abandon all forms of collectivist government and reform your governments around Jeffersonian and free market, principles. In short, accept the fact that you have been wrong all along, the American model has always been superior. Once you have done that, maybe our occupiers will see the errors of their way and voluntarily release us from our bondage.

                Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                • O Oakman

                  Stan Shannon wrote:

                  For any practical purpose, it is a single monolithic organization.

                  Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same.

                  Stan Shannon wrote:

                  happily stereotype jerkwater towns.

                  The only town I talked about was yours. The small town I live in is filled with enlightened souls. Don't get me wrong. I even think there are intellectuals in Indiana. Unfortunately the last time I went through the state, both of them were on vacation.

                  Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Stan Shannon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  Oakman wrote:

                  Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same.

                  Pretty much.

                  Oakman wrote:

                  The small town I live in is filled with enlightened souls.

                  So is mine. We just happen to believe that enligtenment does not necessarily mean universal agreement.

                  Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                  • S Stan Shannon

                    Oakman wrote:

                    Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same.

                    Pretty much.

                    Oakman wrote:

                    The small town I live in is filled with enlightened souls.

                    So is mine. We just happen to believe that enligtenment does not necessarily mean universal agreement.

                    Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

                    7 Offline
                    7 Offline
                    73Zeppelin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    Stan Shannon wrote:

                    Oakman wrote: Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same. Pretty much.

                    Yeah - "pretty much" not the same at all... You should get out more.

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                    • O Oakman

                      Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                      what Europeans have not done or learnt properly since WWII

                      They didn't learn that Stan is right and everyone else is a Marxist.

                      Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                      whose yardstick are you measuring it?

                      Stan's, of course.

                      Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                      T Offline
                      Tim Craig
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      Oakman wrote:

                      Stan's, of course.

                      That's not a yardstick. That's not even the short end of a broken ruler.

                      "Republicans are the party that says government doesn't work and then they get elected and prove it." -- P.J. O'Rourke

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                      • S Stan Shannon

                        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                        . What power do you think that American Governments have that Governments from Britain, France, Germany, Spain ... do not?

                        Well none, subsequent to our take over and occupation by european political tyranny. However, before that, the US governmetn had virtually no power to affect society or culture at all. That was all managed at the state and local levels of our society.

                        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                        Is this the yardstick to measure that, or have you some other test that equates as a yardstick?

                        I have no idea what any of that means.

                        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                        What should European Governments individually or collectively do to rectify such shortcomings?

                        Immdediately abandon all forms of collectivist government and reform your governments around Jeffersonian and free market, principles. In short, accept the fact that you have been wrong all along, the American model has always been superior. Once you have done that, maybe our occupiers will see the errors of their way and voluntarily release us from our bondage.

                        Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

                        O Offline
                        O Offline
                        Oakman
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        Stan Shannon wrote:

                        Immdediately abandon all forms of collectivist government and reform your governments around Jeffersonian and free market, principles. In short, accept the fact that you have been wrong all along, the American model has always been superior. Once you have done that, maybe our occupiers will see the errors of their way and voluntarily release us from our bondage.

                        Thank you for making my day. I suppose it's cruel to laugh at insanity, but I can't help it.

                        Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • 7 73Zeppelin

                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                          Oakman wrote: Yep, Greece and Switzerland, Finland and Bosnia - all the same. Pretty much.

                          Yeah - "pretty much" not the same at all... You should get out more.

                          O Offline
                          O Offline
                          Oakman
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #26

                          73Zeppelin wrote:

                          You should get out more.

                          He's far too terrified of the world to ever experience it.

                          Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                          7 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • L Lost User

                            This is not a serious analysis of the Palestinian problem, he is merely preaching to the converted.

                            Ilíon quoted:

                            In fact, Europe learned absolutely nothing from WWII. Instead of learning that decent, moral nations must "fight evil," the Europeans learned that "fighting is evil."

                            Europe (both sides) learned what it was like to be on the receiving end of a war of attrition. Had the USA experienced that lesson, they, too, might have decided that "fighting is evil".

                            Country Population Military Deaths Civilian Deaths
                            Perpetrators
                            France 41,700,000 217,600 267,000
                            Germany 69,623,000 5,533,000 1,540,000
                            Italy 44,394,000 301,400 145,100
                            Japan 71,380,000 2,120,000 580,000
                            UK 47,760,000 382,700 67,100

                            Dragged in
                            USA 131,028,000 416,800 1,700
                            USSR 168,500,000 10,700,000 11,400,000

                            (Apologies to all the unmentioned countries that were also dragged in on either side.)

                            Source: World War 2 Casualties[^] Not to mention the destruction of each nation's infrastructure and economy. Does USA's lack of activity re Germany, Japan and the USSR during the 1930s indicate that the USA was not then a "decent, moral, nation" - or were they not seen as being "evil"? Possibly why we were anxious to avoid WW2: World War 1 Casualties[^]

                            Bob Emmett

                            O Offline
                            O Offline
                            Oakman
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #27

                            You should count casualties, not just deaths which are always skewed by the quality of medical care available. However, you seem not to grasp that when a soldier dies, a civilian family is affected. To imply that because the U.S. incurred almost exclusively military deaths, its civilian population remained untouched suggests a need for more thought. Most of Americans who died had been farmers, shopkeepers, mechanics, and teachers only months before. Those soldiers who survived still knew what it was like to see their best friends die in front of them and they did not forget when two years later they returned to their civilian careers. Nor do I mean to suggest that this was any less true for the Brits, Germans, or Russians.

                            Bob Emmett wrote:

                            Europe (both sides) learned what it was like to be on the receiving end of a war of attrition

                            In WWII, only the Russians fought a war of attrition and that only at the battle of Stalingrad. Both Blitzkrieg and its later adaptation by Patton with the Red Ball Express, and, to some extent, Montgomery, are the antithesis of a war of attrition.

                            Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                            L 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • S Stan Shannon

                              Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                              . What power do you think that American Governments have that Governments from Britain, France, Germany, Spain ... do not?

                              Well none, subsequent to our take over and occupation by european political tyranny. However, before that, the US governmetn had virtually no power to affect society or culture at all. That was all managed at the state and local levels of our society.

                              Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                              Is this the yardstick to measure that, or have you some other test that equates as a yardstick?

                              I have no idea what any of that means.

                              Richard A. Abbott wrote:

                              What should European Governments individually or collectively do to rectify such shortcomings?

                              Immdediately abandon all forms of collectivist government and reform your governments around Jeffersonian and free market, principles. In short, accept the fact that you have been wrong all along, the American model has always been superior. Once you have done that, maybe our occupiers will see the errors of their way and voluntarily release us from our bondage.

                              Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

                              L Offline
                              L Offline
                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #28

                              Not wishing to be rude, but you have not stated anything at all. Why? Well... You said, "Europeans did take away precisely the wrong lessons from WWII." then "The lesson that Europeans took away from WWII was that government did not have enough power" and now you say ...

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              Well none, subsequent to our take over and occupation by european political tyranny. However, before that, the US governmetn had virtually no power to affect society or culture at all. That was all managed at the state and local levels of our society.

                              then

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              I have no idea what any of that means.

                              Frankly Stan, I have not got a clue what your original criticism was as you answer clearly "Well none", so I assume you haven't got much of a clue neither.

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                              • O Oakman

                                73Zeppelin wrote:

                                You should get out more.

                                He's far too terrified of the world to ever experience it.

                                Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                                7 Offline
                                7 Offline
                                73Zeppelin
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #29

                                Yes, that is quite evident to me.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • O Oakman

                                  You should count casualties, not just deaths which are always skewed by the quality of medical care available. However, you seem not to grasp that when a soldier dies, a civilian family is affected. To imply that because the U.S. incurred almost exclusively military deaths, its civilian population remained untouched suggests a need for more thought. Most of Americans who died had been farmers, shopkeepers, mechanics, and teachers only months before. Those soldiers who survived still knew what it was like to see their best friends die in front of them and they did not forget when two years later they returned to their civilian careers. Nor do I mean to suggest that this was any less true for the Brits, Germans, or Russians.

                                  Bob Emmett wrote:

                                  Europe (both sides) learned what it was like to be on the receiving end of a war of attrition

                                  In WWII, only the Russians fought a war of attrition and that only at the battle of Stalingrad. Both Blitzkrieg and its later adaptation by Patton with the Red Ball Express, and, to some extent, Montgomery, are the antithesis of a war of attrition.

                                  Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #30

                                  Oakman wrote:

                                  You should count casualties,

                                  Too many columns. :)

                                  Oakman wrote:

                                  However, you seem not to grasp that when a soldier dies, a civilian family is affected.

                                  Why would I not grasp the "bleedin' obvious"? The family is affected whether the departed is blown apart in uniform or in bed.

                                  Oakman wrote:

                                  to see their best friends die in front of them

                                  As did my father, 19 years old, as part of the BEF in 1940, on the beaches at Dunkirk. Then with the 8th Army in North Africa and Italy.

                                  Oakman wrote:

                                  Russians fought a war of attrition

                                  Perhaps there are degrees of attrition, military and civilian. To me, bombing cities to wear down the population is attrition.

                                  Bob Emmett

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