Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
SOBER ASSESSMENT OF OUR CURRENT POLITICAL SITUATION
#1
This is a long read but for those of you that believe in our country, it is worth it.

If this author is really who he claims to be, this quite a sobering way
to put our current crisis in this country!!

AN INCREDIBLY SOBER ASSESSMENT OF OUR CURRENT POLITICAL SITUATION
Please, take the time to read this !!

Another assessment of where the US stands in relation to the Middle East
problems, this one is from the guy who had his finger on the nuclear
trigger for three years as head of our defense and response complex
buried under Cheyenne Mountain at Colorado Springs. He was the only
person who could initiate a nuclear attack after advising the sitting
president of a missile launch by our enemies and our need to respond. No
political or civilian type in the US had more knowledge about day to day
military actions around the world. Everyone should find quiet time to
read this. As far as I am concerned, it is exactly the direction we
should go and the consequences of not doing so are well thought out.

John R. (Jack) Farrington Major General, USAF (Retired) Middle East
Imperative
BY: JIM CASH, Brig. Gen., USAF, Ret.

I wrote recently about the war in Iraq and the larger war against
radical Islam, eliciting a number of responses. Let me try and put this
conflict in proper perspective.
Understand, the current battle we are engaged in is much bigger
than just Iraq. What happens in the next year will affect this country
and how our kids and grandkids live throughout their lifetime, and
beyond. Radical Islam has been attacking the West since the seventh
century. They have been defeated in the past and decimated to the point
of taking hundreds of years to recover. But they can never be totally
defeated. Their birth rates are so far beyond civilized world rates that
in time they recover and attempt to dominate again.
There are eight terror-sponsoring countries that make up the grand
threat to the West. Two , Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, just need firm
pressure from the West to make major reforms. They need to decide who
they are really going to support and commit to that support. That answer
is simple. They both will support who they think will hang in there
until the end, and win. We are not sending very good signals in that
direction right now, thanks to the Democrats.
The other six, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, North Korea and
Libya will require regime change or a major policy shift. Now, let's
look more closely. Afghanistan and Iraq have both had regime changes,
but are being fueled by outsiders from Syria and Iran. We have scared
Gaddafi's pants off, and he has given up his quest for nuclear weapons,
so I don't think Libya is now a threat.
North Korea (the non-Islamic threat) can be handled diplomatically
by buying them off. They are starving. That leaves Syria and Iran. Syria
is like a frightened puppy. Without the support of Iran they will join
the stronger side. So where does that leave us? Sooner, or later, we are
going to be forced to confront Iran, and it better be before they gain
nuclear capability.
In 1989 I served as a Command Director inside the Cheyenne Mountain
complex located in Colorado Springs, Colorado for almost three years. My
job there was to observe (through classified means) every missile shot
anywhere in the world and assess if it was a threat to the US or Canada.
If any shot was threatening to either nation I had only minutes to
advise the President, as he had only minutes to respond. I watched Iran
and Iraq shoot missiles at each other every day, and all day long, for
months. They killed hundreds of thousand of their people. Know why? They
were fighting for control of the Middle East and that enormous oil
supply.
At that time, they were preoccupied with their internal problems
and could care less about toppling the west. Oil prices were fairly
stable and we could not see an immediate threat. Well, the worst part of
what we have done as a nation in Iraq is to do away with the military
capability of one of those nations. Now, Iran has a clear field to
dominate the Middle East, since Iraq is no longer a threat to them. They
have turned their attention to the only other threat to their dominance,
they are convinced they will win, because the U.S. is so divided, and
the Democrats (who now control Congress and may control the Presidency
in
2008) have openly said we are pulling out.
Do you have any idea what will happen if the entire Middle East
turns their support to Iran, which they will obviously do if we pull
out? It is not the price of oil we will have to worry about. Oil WILL
NOT BE AVAILABLE to this country at any price. I personally would vote
for any presidential candidate who did what JFK did with the space
program---declare a goal to bring this country to total energy
independence in a decade.
Yes, it is about oil. The economy in this country will totally die
if that Middle East supply is cut off right now. It will not be a
recession. It will be a depression that will make 1929 look like the
"good-old-days". The bottom line here is simple. If Iran is forced to
fall in line, the fighting in Iraq will end over night, and the
nightmare will be over. One way or another, Iran must be forced to join
modern times and the global community. It may mean a real war---if so,
now is the time, before we face a nuclear Iran with the capacity to
destroy Israel and begin a new ice age. I urge you to read the book "END
GAME" by two of our best Middle East experts, true American patriots and
retired military generals, Paul Vallely and Tom McInerney. They are our
finest, and totally honest in their assessment of why victory in the
Middle East is so important, and how it can be won. Proceeds for the
book go directly to memorial fund for our fallen soldiers who served the
country during the war on terror. You can find that book by going to the
internet through Stand-up America at [url "http://www.ospreyradio.us/"]www.ospreyradio.us[/url]
<[url "http://www.ospreyradio.us/"]http://www.ospreyradio.us/[/url]> or [url "http://www.rightalk.com/"]www.rightalk.com[/url]
<[url "http://www.rightalk.com/"]http://www.rightalk.com/[/url]>
On the other hand, we have several very Angry retired generals
today, who evidently have not achieved their lofty goals, and insist on
ranting and raving about the war. They are wrong, and doing the country
great harm by giving a certain political party reason to use them as
experts to back their anti-war claims.
You may be one of those who believe nothing could ever be terrible
enough to support our going to war. If that is the case I should stop
here, as that level of thinking approaches mental disability in this day
and age. It is right up there with alien abductions and high altitude
seeding through government aircraft contrails. I helped produce those
contrails for almost 30 years, and I can assure you we were not seeding
the atmosphere. The human race is a war-like population, and if a
country is not willing to protect itself, it deserves the consequences.
Nuff-said!!!
Now, my last comments will get to the nerve. They will be on
politics. I am not a Republican and, George Bush has made enough
mistakes as President to insure my feelings about that for the rest of
my life. However, the Democratic Party has moved so far left, they have
made me support those farther to the right. I am a conservative who
totally supports the Constitution of this country. The only difference
between the United States and the South American, third world, dictator
infested and ever-changing South American governments, is our US
Constitution.
This Republic (note I did not say Democracy) is the longest
standing the world has ever known, but it is vulnerable. It would take
so little to change it through economic upheaval. There was a time when
politicians could disagree, but still work together. We are past that
time, and that is the initial step toward the downfall of our form of
government. I think that many view Bush-hating as payback time. The
Republicans hated the Clinton's and now the Democrats hate Bush. So,
both parties are putting their hate toward willingness to do anything
for political dominance to include lying and always taking the opposite
stand just for the sake of being opposed. JUST HOW GOOD IS THAT FOR OUR
COUNTRY?
In my lifetime, after serving in uniform for President's Kennedy,
Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, and Bush I have a pretty good feel
for which party supported our military, and what military life was like
under each of their terms. And, let me assure you that times were best
under the Republicans. Service under Jimmy Carter was devastating for
all branches of the military. And Ronald Regan was truly a salvation.
You can choose to listen to enriched newscasters, and foolish people
like John Murtha (he is no war hero), Nancy Pelosi, John Kerry, Michael
Moore, Jane Fonda, Harry Reid, Russ Feingold, Hillary Clinton, Ted
Kennedy, and on-and-on to include the true fools in Hollywood if you
like. If you do, your conclusions will be totally wrong.
The reason that I write, appear on radio talk shows, and do
everything I can to denounce those people is simple. THEY ARE PUTTING
THEIR THIRST FOR POLITICAL POWER AND QUEST FOR VICTORY IN 2008 ABOVE
WHAT IS BEST FOR THIS COUNTRY. I cannot abide that. Pelosi clearly
defied the Logan Act by going to Syria, which should have lead to
imprisonment of three years and a heavy fine. Jane Fonda did more to
prolong the Vietnam war longer than any other human being (as
acknowledged by Ho Chi Minh in his writing before he died). She truly
should have been indicted for treason, along with her radical husband,
Tom Hayden, and forced to pay the consequences.
This country has started to soften by not enforcing its laws, which
is another indication of a Republic about to fall. All Democrats, along
with the Hollywood elite, are sending us headlong into a total defeat in
the Middle East, which will finally give Iran total dominance in the
region. A lack of oil in the near future will be the final straw that
dooms this Republic. However, if we refuse to let this happen and really
get serious about an energy self-sufficiency program, this can be
avoided.
I am afraid, however, that we are going in the opposite direction. If we
elect Hillary Clinton and a Democrat controlled congress, and they carry
through with allowing Iran to take control of the Middle East, continue
to refuse development of nuclear energy, refuse to allow drilling for
new oil, and continue to do nothing but oppose everything Bush, it will
be over in terms of what we view as the good life in the USA.
Now, do I think that all who do not support the war are
un-American
-- of course not. They just do not understand the importance of total
victory in that region. Another failure of George Bush is his inability
to explain to the American people why we are there, and why we MUST win.
By the way, it is not a war. The war was won four years ago. It is
martial law that is under attack by Iranian and Syrian outside
influences, and there is a difference.
So, what do I believe? What is the bottom line? I will simply say
that the Democratic Party has fielded the foulest, power hungry,
anti-country, self absorbed group of individuals that I have observed in
my lifetime. Our educational system is partially to blame for allowing
the mass of America to be taken in by this group. George Bush has done
the best he can with the disabilities that he possesses. A President
must communicate with the people. And I would tell you that Desert Storm
spoiled the people. Bush Senior's 100-hour war convinced the people that
technology has progressed to the point that wars could be fought with no
casualties and won in very short periods of time. I remember feeling at
the time, that this was a tragedy for the US military. To win wars, you
must put boots on the ground. When you put boots on the ground, soldiers
are going to die. A President must make the war decision wisely, and
insure that the cause is right before using his last political option.
However, CONTROLLING IRAN AND DEMOCRATIZING THE MIDDLE EAST IS THE ONLY
CHOICE IF WE ARE HELL-BENT ON DEPENDING ON THEM FOR OUR FUTURE ENERGY
NEEDS.

Jimmy L. Cash, Brig. Gen., USAF, Ret.
Lakeside, Montana 59922
[signature]
Reply
#2
utter and complete claptrap, from a war mongering neo-con idiot


just another nut



sm

GO DEMOCRATS IN 2008 - BRING THE CLINTONS AND PROSPERITY BACK TO AMERICA
[signature]
Reply
#3
The Only nut around here Sm Is YOU!
[signature]
Reply
#4
I decided to do some checking to find out if this letter was real. I copy and pasted the generals name and rank into a search engine. I came up with a web site called military.com. There was a discussion going on about this letter so I started reading. Everything sounded good so I read on, a reply came from Apieceofmymind2, if I was a betting man I would say this guy was you Southernman[angelic]. Was it?
[url "http://forums.military.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/409192893/m/6960020151001"]http://forums.military.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/409192893/m/6960020151001[/url]
[signature]
Reply
#5
dont insult me, that crap is all bs

jpg 1

go barack Ohh!

jpg 2


panguitch, 11-10-07 - hedgesd, powermaker, b&^%a & me - great day!

sm
[signature]
Reply
#6
I feel sory for any nation who is depentant on any other country for its primary resorces... so the third world war of power has begun..[pirate]

what happened to our developing an alternitive power sorces for transportation? using fossel fuels for industustry is ok, but when you fill the planet with fossel fuel consuming macheins you are asking for desaster...

creating a global economy while still using fossel fuels is adding fuel to the fire...

Bush is not alone with his disabilites, it would seem that the entire congress and senat suffers with his same delusions of what it takes to make a global economy work, It dosnt work if even one percent of a nations population is suffering for basic needs, food, water, shelter, education and pulling in other countries in to a global economy when it cant take care of it self is a desaster waiting to happen and a culture devistated due to comertial oppertunist....

It only took 300 years to defete the non industrialized north american indian who only had sticks and rocks to fight with...

so unless we deture from the use of fosel fuels to suport a global economy the three thousand year third world war of power will be our legesy...
[signature]
Reply
#7
Very good assessment of the current global situation with our dependence on oil. We have to start some where, so my question would be to you Dave, what fuel source are you using to power your vehicle? I haven't made the move yet but I've been looking into CNG as an alternate fuel to using oil, it's cost is 70 cents per gallon, with 0 emissions. I also heard today that a car has been made in France that runs on compressed air. It gets 70 miles on a charge with air only with gas it gets up to 600 miles per gallon.
[signature]
Reply
#8
I lean more towards the fuel cell. Lets save our Ngas and oil for heat. Here in Ct I believe we have a couple of companys developeing the cells. We'er so close that it needs a good push from the private secter to make it happen. How about some big tax credits for all that can make it happen??
[signature]
Reply
#9
tax breaks were given, "to the oil companies"

I agree that tax encentives directed twards the development of alternate fuels for general transprotation by state and federal governments would be all that was needed along with the removel of tax encentives to the rest of the develoment of oil guzeling vehicals is all that would be needed to make it happen...

unfortunatly, oil had a political strangle hold on out governments and automotive industry world wide... Oil has a guarnteed proffet pact with our government along with natural gass and electricity...

think of all the oil spills that can be eleminated by swithcing form crude to soibean deasle fuel to supply freight industry.

Sadly enough as I type this, I am seeing a hummer add on the tv for hummers 133.oo per month financing...
[signature]
Reply
#10
due to my employment and financial status I have resorted to using less, by far less than I have ever used. my consumption has dropped down to 15 gallons of gas per month on avarage. that is down from 30+ gallons per week that I used when I was working.

even my boat has used under 12 gallons of gas this year, using wind and electric for most of my fishing.

the last I heard, michigan has only two hydrogen stations. near interstate bus stations for refueling. you could not switch to a hydrogen car if you had the money and wanted to.

what most people dont realize is that going to alternitive fuels will not eliminate the need for oil for transportation, lubricants 'motor oill and axil oil' hydrolic break and transmition oils' and grease all of which are products of oil is needed to make vehicals opperate...

unless something is done soon, I will be walking before too much longer...
[signature]
Reply
#11
We will always need oil in some capacity for the useful thing in life. But if we can just get to the point of useing only the oil we produce for ourselves. But then we'ed have to convince the big boys to just sell it in country and not overseas.[crazy] If only they could see the future isn't oil anymore.[Tongue]
[signature]
Reply
#12
the Sad part is, we are buying our own oil, but what most people dont know is our government has allowed oil companies to put the oil on the world market and buy it back from them selves at out ragous prices and passing the gouging on to consumers...

Our government gave oil companies garenteed proffit margens if they did not put our oil on the world market, but some where along the line the government has changed the rules of the game and allowed them to put it on the world market with guarenteed proffit margens...

when there is an oil spill and the oil companies have to clean it up, the get paid to clean it up... no losses, there for no insentives to do the job right in the first place....[unsure]
[signature]
Reply
#13
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]My word Dave the Oil companies are not in some type of consperacy to screw America. Oil is a world traded comodity just like Gold, Orange Juice, Corn etc. The price of oil historicaly is on an up and down cycle, and we just happen to be in the up time. It wasn't all that long ago and oil was around $20 a barrell and your Detroit Auto companies started pumping out the un-ecinomical SUV's that dramatically contributed to our demand meeting our supply.[/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3][/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]Speculation, and a supply that is equal to demand is why we have high oil prices. The ultimate answer is to get away from any type of comodity fuel source like oil, or corn for biofuels. Biofuels are good but as demand goes up they will be acceptable to the same speculation that oil is today, just ask the ranchers and farmers that have seen thier livestock feed prices skyrocket over the last few years since biofuels technology has increased. [/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3][/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]Fuel Cells now that is the answer, but we are many years before that type of technology is widely and cheaply available to the average consumer. I heard today that Chevy was going to try and market a fuel cell car for around $80,000 by 2010. Thats good but I can buy a $40,000 car and buy $5 a gallon gas for and still be money ahead for the lifetime of the cars.[/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3][/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]If people want cheaper gas in the short term like I do, it is relativly simple, STOP USING SO MUCH. But that is not the American way and we have become so extremely dependent on foreign oil it is rediculous. So the next thing would be to drill, refine, and use our own oil from our own lands. But the Democrats will not allow drilling on our major reserves we have in the US such as in Alaska, and Clinton put the kobosh on one of our nations best reserves in Utah by creating the Escalante Nation Park right before he left office. Drilling our own oil and becoming independent of foreign oil is the only way to see cheap gas at least in the short term.[/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3][/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]If you think we have high oil prices now just wait and see what happens if Hilary is elected, but at least my taxes will be raised, my guns rights abolished, and the poor will live better than the working class and have free health care.[/size][/#808000][/font][Tongue]
[signature]
Reply
#14
[font "Verdana,Arial,Helvetica"][black][size 1][/size][/black][/font]
From what I have read there is more than enough Ngas to go around and in the middle East it is a by product, to get rid of it they give it away. In Utah you can find Ngas in many locations, not a problem getting a fill up here. There are already cars and trucks on the market that run on Ngas. A think when fuel cells are fully developed and on the market, with easy access to getting fill ups, it will be an a good deal but until that day Ngas is here now, lets use what we have. I agree there should be some big tax credits to get the fuel cell going, I hope it happens soon. WH2
[signature]
Reply
#15
Sounds good to me. Here the only cars and trucks with Ngas are state or government. Bio does help, but we are seeing the down side of that as stated. It would be a hoot to see an outboard with a fuel cell.
[signature]
Reply
#16
I can not argue the stupidity of the american auto industry, you would think they would have learned their lesson from back in the 70's and 80's when those gas guzzlers were abandoned on the hiway because they couldnt get gas enough to get them off the road... especialy when auto industry employees them selves seeked out gas economical vehicals like the renault and la-cars and datsons.

It is hard to beleive how impetuous the industry is in beleiving that catering to the 1% of the population was going to make them competitive in a world trade that actuly only exist in this country when it comes to forgen cars...

the oil industry like every one else hates change and refuses to let go of its monoply as far as a perpultion fuel goes. and the owners of our auto industry have stock in the oil industry and see the change over as a means of cutting open their own pocket books... "Dollars makes sence if ya think about it"

we are talking another industrial revolution when it comes to changing over to new tec. auto shops and dealerships having to retool and re-educate to meet the needs. machanics will have to become qulaified electritians in order to service a car. and if ya ask me, that is just what the doctor ordered to turn our economy around...

of corse people in my edge of the woods aint as shiny an apple on the rack as they pretend to be, living 50+ away from where they work, burning enough gas per vehical in one week that I could take an up north drive for a hunting and fishing trip three times the same week. the guys driving the suv's hummer's 4x4's burning three times the fuel needed to cart them selves back and forth to work... to top it all off, they just built another 5,000 square foot house on my block driving my taxes up as it drives my property values down...

I like the electric cars, but untill the solar cell tec is improved electric cars will be a dream of the future..

of corse I havent got a clue as to what to do about the lawnmowers, some of the lawns around here would need a 10,000 foot extention cord or better, it wouldnt hurt my fealings any to see a few more blades of grass and a few more shrubs around the hood...
[signature]
Reply
#17
michigan is full of natural gas, with all the dump sites we have and what do they do with it? when they cap off the dumps they put up burning stokes and burn it, getting nothing for the burn. pure waist!

it could be bottled and sold, small electrical generators could be run, heating boilers run... waist waist waist....
[signature]
Reply
#18
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]One thing to remember is that our refining capacity has not increased in the last 20 years while are demand has increased dramaticaly.[/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3][/size][/#808000][/font]
[font "Tempus Sans ITC"][#808000][size 3]No matter what 10 barrels at $100 makes the same as 100 barrels at $10 dollars. I make this point because any major oil company will always produce as much as possible no matter what the price of oil is. If our countries reserves were open up and made only available to us the oil companies would make just as much if they were able to produce the amount that we now import from OPEC.[/size][/#808000][/font]
[signature]
Reply
#19
tuche!

that is one method of keeping the demand up and the supply low...

michigan is going to build a new refinery in down town detroit.

the state of michigan also has oil for demand as well, we already have them tapped in to, our state is keeping the pumps out of opperation for the most part... they are owned by the state department of natural resorces... the state cant use the money from the wells to float their own over spending so the keep the pumps at a minimum...

there is a new well going down right in the city of lavonia, the city will be reaping the benifits...

both well and refinery will be in full production in 2010. The well and refinery will be 30 miles apart. It will take the drivers longer to do the safty checks and start the truck that it will take to drive the oil to the refinery...

one key note about the new refinery, it is going to be bio fuel...
[signature]
Reply
#20
You are so right, what a waste[mad]. At one of our local dumps they have been laying pipe into the landfill as they fill it up and a few years ago they started selling the methane to the Air force base that is right next door. I don't know if all of the newer landfills do this but it is a great idea and something that all states should be required to do in newer dumps.
[signature]
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)