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Hallelujah Adonai Yeshua!
- Apr 6, 2002
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Today at 11:45 AM Brimshack said this in Post #20
As for opposing the troops themselves, it might pay to remember that none of them is currently in a position to say 'No'. They must fight if they are ordered to do so, hence it won't do any good to try an introduce doubt into their minds. On the other hand, the notion that failure to support the war amounts to a betrayal of the troops is effectively a blank check to leaders who may misuse them in a variety of ways.
I agree with this. In this case the question was whether you could pray for their safety and till not support them. To this I say that if you are praying for them, you are supporting them.
(Is that so abstract? I could swear it has happened before.) If your disagreement is with policy-makers, then your arguments should be directed at the actions of policy-makers, not the troops themselves. Those who protest should protest with dignity; they should refrain from hyperbole; they should refrain from wreckless descriptions of actions taken by the troops (as distinguished from stating concerns over any credible reports of human rights violations - should they occur), and they should certainly refrain from actually giving MATERIAL aid and comfort to the enemy (e.g. Jane Fonda).
Or volunteering themselves as human shields to someone who cares nothing for the human shields' safety.
Many in the right would not be satisfied with such terms, but to suggest that we should refrain from disagreement over the most important event in current world history is to render the democratic process hollow at best, and potentially to destroy it outright. There is real danger that the public pressure to support this war combined with actual measures being taken to Congress (Patriot II) could compromise a number of American freedoms.
What actions are you referring to?
The protests are not in themselves symbolic gestures of hatred toward the US or it's policy, however, when the protests and disagreements take on another form (i.e recent ELF actions) the outcome defeats the cause and becomes a stain to the movement's already shaky repoir with the government.
I think it is a beautiful thing to see people freely protesting the governments actions, and I also think that it is a beautiful thing to see people supporting the troops. But when the event is polarized to the point of becoming pro-US and anti-US both sides lose.
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