Jump to content

person of the decade


luke warm

Recommended Posts

Barry, why do you only nominate two US presidents? You might just as well take Russian president Putin or Germany's chancellor Merkel, they were very important and influential this decade.

 

Looking at Luke's link, I would have voted for the Google guys. I mean, the influence of a president is often overestimated, but Google surely is the company of the decade.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dubya is the person that definitely dominated the last decade.

 

10 years ago who would have thought that the USA would imprison people without a trial and without the status as prisoners of war. Who would have thought that there would be military actions in 2 foreign countries. Who would have thought that the alliance between the US and Nato (esp. Germany) could get a crack because of that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Barry, why do you only nominate two US presidents? You might just as well take Russian president Putin or Germany's chancellor Merkel, they were very important and influential this decade.

Maybe influential for you B)

 

Even in Romania there are plenty of people who have never heard of Angela Merkel and Putin and there are few people that have any idea what they stand for etc. Everybody everywhere knows about GWB and what he 'achieved' during his terms :) And Romania is an EU member, I can only imagine how many people in Afghanistan know about Putin or Merkel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 years ago who would have thought that the USA would imprison people without a trial and without the status as prisoners of war.

Me. But then I remember history. Lincoln did it. So did FDR. Although in both those cases the people imprisoned were US citizens.

Your memory is not consistent with facts if you compare Bush's actions to those of Lincoln. It is a common ruse some have used to equate the claim of Bush to being a "war president" to Lincoln's actions because Lincoln acted during a time of "war".

 

But that is not what happened.

 

Lincoln did not act under powers granted by war; Lincoln acted under the power to suppress rebellion.

 

So Lincoln is not such a good example; Better is FDR.

 

There is a strong comparison between the actions of FDR and Bush:

 

The courts found that the government had intentionally withheld these reports and other critical evidence, at trials all the way up to the Supreme Court, which would have proved that there was no military necessity for the exclusion and internment of Japanese Americans. In the words of Department of Justice officials writing during the war, the justifications were based on "willful historical inaccuracies and intentional falsehoods."
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 years ago who would have thought that the USA would imprison people without a trial and without the status as prisoners of war.

Me. But then I remember history. Lincoln did it.

It figures, what with Lincoln being a Republican and all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Where's the love you espouse for "rule of law," Winston? "Suppression of Rebellion" is a specious distinction - the Supreme Court ruled (and on more than one occasion, I believe) that Lincoln violated the Constitution and acted illegally.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Where's the love you espouse for "rule of law," Winston?  "Suppression of Rebellion" is a specious distinction - the Supreme Court ruled (and on more than one occasion, I believe) that Lincoln violated the Constitution and acted illegally.

In exactly which quote do you see me condoning the action of Lincoln? I merely stated that the legal basis claimed among the three actions was totally different, thereby excluding using one as precedent for another.

 

But you spar with gnats - here you are a real attorney while all I have are ignorant opinions.

 

"Suppression of Rebellion" is a specious distinction

 

Actually, on further review I find this hilarious coming from someone whose entire profession is based on making specious distinctions of just this sort. :rolleyes: :D :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heh.

 

btw with respect to the FDR excerpt, did you know that Italian-Americans and German-Americans were sent to internment camps, also?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heh.

 

btw with respect to the FDR excerpt, did you know that Italian-Americans and German-Americans were sent to internment camps, also?

As for me, I was not aware of that.

 

Regardless, I in no way can justify any comparison of the injustices and abuses of power used by both Lincoln and Roosevelt to those instigated and used by the administration of the Cheney-Bush.

 

You simply cannot place state-sponsored kidnapping and organized torture in the same category as illegal imprisoning for a limited duration of time - you cannot claim show trials using coerced evidence to be in the same category as real military tribunals.

 

Don't get me wrong - Obama is no better and is in many ways worse than Cheney-Bush for adopting the same DOJ stance on military tribunals.

 

What we have become is not the nation of Lincoln or FDR: our justice for those held at Gitmo and elsewhere around the world has much more in common with Stalin's show trials than any presidential precedent.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Barry, why do you only nominate two US presidents? You might just as well take Russian president Putin or Germany's chancellor Merkel, they were very important and influential this decade.

Lol Gerben, you know why, because they haven't been important in america, and that's the only thing that matters.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heh.

 

btw with respect to the FDR excerpt, did you know that Italian-Americans and German-Americans were sent to internment camps, also?

This would amaze me if it means in any widespread way. I was aorund at the time and I grew up in Minnesota. Plenty of folks with German backgrounds there, and I never heard of it.

 

My direct experience is not quite a counter-example but still..

My father came here for Croatia and took out citizenship in something like 1937. As a child, I understood he came from Austria. Croatia was part of Austria-Hu ngary in 1910 when he arrived. Well Croatia is neither Austria nor Germany but there was absolutely no trouble He considered volunteering after Pearl, but my mother pointed out that he was forty-one, I was two, and maybe he should stay home. He went to work in a munitions factory at Rosemont, Minnesota. No questions asked.

 

 

I don't know which of my young friends were German and which weren't. I didn't think that way, and despite the best efforts of some to turn us all into hyphenated Americans, I still don't. But in Minnesota in the 40s, I don't believe it would have been possible for there to be a round-up of German-Americans that would have escaped my notice.

 

One other piece of evidence: I was chatting with a friend about childhood days. He is of German background and when, as a child, he heard of a great German victory on the radio he cheered. His mother explained the facts to mhim. He said nothing about any trouble, but he did learn not to cheer for the Germans.

 

One thing I learned just a few years ago: In Minnesota there were prisoner of war camps for Germans, and many of the prisoners were used as farm laborers. This was common in many places. I read some novel, set in Canada, about this practice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heh.

 

btw with respect to the FDR excerpt, did you know that Italian-Americans and German-Americans were sent to internment camps, also?

This would amaze me if it means in any widespread way. I was aorund at the time and I grew up in Minnesota. Plenty of folks with German backgrounds there, and I never heard of it.

 

My direct experience is not quite a counter-example but still..

My father came here for Croatia and took out citizenship in something like 1937. As a child, I understood he came from Austria. Croatia was part of Austria-Hu ngary in 1910 when he arrived. Well Croatia is neither Austria nor Germany but there was absolutely no trouble He considered volunteering after Pearl, but my mother pointed out that he was forty-one, I was two, and maybe he should stay home. He went to work in a munitions factory at Rosemont, Minnesota. No questions asked.

 

 

I don't know which of my young friends were German and which weren't. I didn't think that way, and despite the best efforts of some to turn us all into hyphenated Americans, I still don't. But in Minnesota in the 40s, I don't believe it would have been possible for there to be a round-up of German-Americans that would have escaped my notice.

 

One other piece of evidence: I was chatting with a friend about childhood days. He is of German background and when, as a child, he heard of a great German victory on the radio he cheered. His mother explained the facts to mhim. He said nothing about any trouble, but he did learn not to cheer for the Germans.

 

One thing I learned just a few years ago: In Minnesota there were prisoner of war camps for Germans, and many of the prisoners were used as farm laborers. This was common in many places. I read some novel, set in Canada, about this practice.

A little over 10,000 I believe (German-Americans that is, not counting the Italian-Americans in that figure).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...