Originally posted by DublinJimbo
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Danger Imminent - US Embassy shutdown
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amateur51
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scottycelt
Originally posted by DublinJimbo View PostI'm with the conspiracy theorists. It's too neat altogether to be told that the surveillance regime brought the threat to light. The scare will be used as another stick to beat Snowden with.
That these countries would go to the time, effort and expense involved in closing all these embassies just to produce another stick with which to beat an already trapped young Snowden would certainly be a quite risible state of affairs, that's for sure.
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With you on this one, scotty - and as for France, Spain, Portugal and Italy blocking their airspace to prevent Snowden, disguised as the Bolivian president, flying from Russia over their countries - even more risible.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIt appears there are quite a few countries involved in this conspiracy including the Germans and French, not officially great fans of the US/UK 'surveillance regime'. No doubt they much prefer their own secret surveillance regimes.
That these countries would go to the time, effort and expense involved in closing all these embassies just to produce another stick with which to beat an already trapped young Snowden would certainly be a quite risible state of affairs, that's for sure.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIt appears there are quite a few countries involved in this conspiracy including the Germans and French, not officially great fans of the US/UK 'surveillance regime'. No doubt they much prefer their own secret surveillance regimes.
That these countries would go to the time, effort and expense involved in closing all these embassies just to produce another stick with which to beat an already trapped young Snowden would certainly be a quite risible state of affairs, that's for sure.Last edited by ahinton; 07-08-13, 17:23.
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amateur51
"The US view of Yemen as an al-Qaida hotbed is a travesty of the truth
Yemen is a real place where people are demanding social justice and democracy. Their cause is only harmed by the US"
Interesting piece about Yemen & USA in today's Guardian by its former Middle East correspondent Brian Whitaker.
Brian Whitaker: Yemen is a real place where people are demanding social justice and democracy. Their cause is only harmed by the US
And some more about Al Qaida's 'local franchises'
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostNo I don't as I am, thankfully, free of paranoia.
being free of paranoia is one thing, being taken for a ride is another.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostWell if we choose to believe those in power without question, whoever they may be, then we will get what we deserve.
being free of paranoia is one thing, being taken for a ride is another.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostNot an issue of believing those in power without question....more a case of commonsense and being a bit sensible about things.
Thanks.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postif we choose to believe those in power without question, whoever they may be, then we will get what we deserve.
I think it's easier for the Irish to admire America than for the English, and though I've never been there, I somehow identify with the sentiments expressed in traditional Irish music. I was listening to this today, quite by chance, and if you have time to listen, you might detect a feeling of reliance on the friendship of America, metaphorically and literally.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View Postmore a case of commonsense
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed, but what's meant by "commonsense" is almost always coincident with the way "those in power" would like people to think, evolving as it does through a process by which ruling-class attitudes and interests are accepted by society at large (as Gramsci would have put it), which certainly seems to be illustrated in the way that some people accept such phenomena as the NSA's full-spectrum spying as some kind of "fact of life".
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KipperKid
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed, but what's meant by "commonsense" is almost always coincident with the way "those in power" would like people to think, evolving as it does through a process by which ruling-class attitudes and interests are accepted by society at large (as Gramsci would have put it)
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