Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#121
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "WillStG" wrote in message ... On Feb 1, 10:06 am, 5016 wrote: I don't know if you've noticed, but there's a little bit of a budgetary problem in the US right now. Cruising around the world toppling dictators at will is not something that we've got the money for any more. That approach has been tried and has demonstrably failed. We're now in the worst recession in most people's memory and we don't have trillions of dollars to change regimes that you don't like. It's over. What has the American budget got to do with what I said? I said nothing about what America can do or should do. I expressed a personal sense of moral outrage and you and some others made up the rest. If you cannot say in your heart that if you could just end all Dictatorships and Tyranny in the world you would, then I think there is something wrong with you as a human being. If you, Will Miho, cannot say in your heart that if you could just end the killing of innocent people all throughout the world you would be willing to put aside that obsession of yours with a handful of dictators and tyrants, then there's definitely something wrong with you as a human being. The problem in this world is not lack of budget, it's lack of compassion. So why do you keep invading and destroying countries, killing and maiming people that are so much poorer than you? Predrag |
#122
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 2, 5:28 pm, "Predrag Trpkov"
wrote: "WillStG" wrote in message ... On Feb 1, 10:06 am, 5016 wrote: I don't know if you've noticed, but there's a little bit of a budgetary problem in the US right now. Cruising around the world toppling dictators at will is not something that we've got the money for any more. That approach has been tried and has demonstrably failed. We're now in the worst recession in most people's memory and we don't have trillions of dollars to change regimes that you don't like. It's over. What has the American budget got to do with what I said? I said nothing about what America can do or should do. I expressed a personal sense of moral outrage and you and some others made up the rest. If you cannot say in your heart that if you could just end all Dictatorships and Tyranny in the world you would, then I think there is something wrong with you as a human being. The problem in this world is not lack of budget, it's lack of compassion. Now you, of all people, are talking about compassion. Does this mean that you no longer support indiscriminate killing of civilians just because their homes happen to be on top of wherever in the world you decide that the oil is yours? Predrag I have never supported the killing of anyone for their oil, or anyone elses. Or for their wind, rain, earth or sunshine eitheir. But I guess you still support dictators, as long as they talk trash about against America. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#123
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 2, 6:27 pm, "Predrag Trpkov"
wrote: "Frank Stearns" wrote in message acquisition... WillStG writes: -snips- Or if we must, let it be your maiden aunt's kind of fiction. It's the enormous human potential of decent people like her that makes it difficult to wish your empire's decline were faster. Predrag American empire has born the blame - and the burden - for much of the World's problems for some time now. But feel free to step up at any time, and pay for the UN, Aids relief in Africa, and so on. ...and so much, much more. It took that USA empire two attempts with Europe to get them to finally end (mostly) their 2000+ year history of killing each other. Unless you are a Native American, your ancestors shared that history of killing each other for most of the 2000 years. By the time they crossed the ocean they were quite adept at applying organized violence. It is therefore not very likely that you're a Native American. Having been disgusted after the first go-around, in the 1920s and 30s the USA did nothing. Soon thereafter the world *really* had a mess on its hands that once again the bad ole bully USA had to step in and fix. How noble. I wonder what is it that happened that made you change your mind. It's perhaps this history that's lost on many, and the fact that our "staying out" pre-WWII wound up contributing to the loss of 50+ million lives. (Oh, and other 30 million lives snuffed out by the "we do it for the people" communists of the former Soviet Union.) That almost matches your score with the Native Americans. Let's hope that legendary Russian - American rivalry will never end. If there is a fault here, it's that the "evil" USA empire should have "interferred" a lot sooner on more than one occasion. (Then we had a mini-repeat of history when 1/3 of the Cambodian population was killed in the 1970s, but the USA had, in part, bowed to pressures not to get involved in Cambodia.) Those and similar lessons have not been completely forgotten over the past 10-20 years, at least by some in the USA. Oh yes, the Vietnam lesson has been forgotten rather quickly. Well, nothing to do, it had to be repeated. Predrag It takes a lot of brass for a guy from the Balkans to lecture Americans on having a history of violence. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#124
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 2, 5:45 pm, "Predrag Trpkov"
wrote: "WillStG" wrote in message ... On Feb 2, 2:30 pm, Paul P wrote: WillStG wrote: If you cannot say in your heart that if you could just end all Dictatorships and Tyranny in the world you would, then I think there is something wrong with you as a human being. You can't end dictatorships and tyranny by taking them out with military force as has been demontrated time and time again. Well you can if you completely annihilate the country, but I imagine that you have enough compassion towards innocents to not want that. Peoples and countries have to work out their own destinies. It is not for you to judge their way of life nor to impose your way on them. A lot of countries today would be so much better off if the big guys, like the United States, left them alone. Life in Iraq under US occupation has been just as bloody as when Saddam was in power and Iraqis are no further along towards working out their own destiny. Freedom and democracy didn't come about in the west by having it imposed on us by some outside force. They were built from within and this is why they last. It must be the same for other peoples. A lot of Americans have a very hard time with this. Paul P Paul, political answers to questions of the heart come off as excuses. Of course we can't remove every Dictator in the World, practically speaking. But where is your heart? It it was up to me, every evil ******* Dictator in this world would be gone. Apparently, you need to do a political accessment, cost analysis and then check with a Ways and Means committee before you allow yourself to ask your heart the question. The world needs to be spared from hearts like yours. Predrag So your answer to the question about ending Dictatorships in the Sudan and elsewhere is, you'd rather get rid of me. How typical of you, Predrag. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#125
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Predrag Trpkov wrote:
Mikhail Gorbachev made a deal with Bush senior's administration and agreed to dismantle the Soviet empire under certain conditions, one of them being of paramount importance to them: NATO was not to expand to Russia's backyard. Russia started to fall apart rapidly under Boris Jelcin and Clinton's administration disregarded the agreement. Russians could only stand by and watch in frustration, humiliation and anger as NATO crept onto their borders. Much of what has been going on in Russia, Ukraine and the whole region is a direct backlash of NATO's expansion. Russians will not allow it any further, no matter the cost. I think you overestimate NATO... first of all, NATO isn't what it used to be before the cold war. Yes, it's an organization that includes some alliances, but these days it has become little more than a military standards association in many ways. It's not a threat, and I can't see Gorbachev considering it one. I think a lot of the issues with the breakdown of the Soviet empire have to do with disillusionment about planned economies being replaced with a sudden belief that somehow free markets were going to solve all of Russia's problems... and human nature being what it is, they just exchange things for another set of different problems. Not to mention that too many people confuse the independant notions of democracy and free markets. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#126
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Predrag Trpkov" wrote
"Sigurd Stenersen" wrote in message "Predrag Trpkov" wrote 1 million killed 1-2 million widows Hmmm Oh, if it's the math that doesn't seem right to you, the number of widows being larger than the number of killed people, I guess it reflects the fact that muslims are allowed to have more than one wife. Hmmm Even cultures that allow bigamy and worse will, on the average, have a male to female birth rate ratio of approximately 1:1. Hence, if there are a lot of guys that have two or more wifes, there must be an even bigger number of guys that don't have a wife. So you are saying that the one million guys allegedly killed were mostly guys with more than one wife, and at the same time the bachelors were left alone. That sounds rather amazing. Something doesn't add up here. So - Hmmm Sigurd |
#127
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 03 Feb 2009 20:58:21 +0100, Sigurd Stenersen wrote:
snip So you are saying that the one million guys allegedly killed were mostly guys with more than one wife, and at the same time the bachelors were left alone. That sounds rather amazing. Civilian and insurgent deaths are counted separately. Therefore a 'war widow' can exist without a corresponding partner in the total *excess* mortality. That's how I understand it anyway. I believe there are no official American figures, because they stopped counting civilian deaths when the results became too depressing. Something doesn't add up here. So - Hmmm Sigurd |
#128
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Sigurd Stenersen" wrote in message ... "Predrag Trpkov" wrote "Sigurd Stenersen" wrote in message "Predrag Trpkov" wrote 1 million killed 1-2 million widows Hmmm Oh, if it's the math that doesn't seem right to you, the number of widows being larger than the number of killed people, I guess it reflects the fact that muslims are allowed to have more than one wife. Hmmm Even cultures that allow bigamy and worse will, on the average, have a male to female birth rate ratio of approximately 1:1. Hence, if there are a lot of guys that have two or more wifes, there must be an even bigger number of guys that don't have a wife. So you are saying that the one million guys allegedly killed were mostly guys with more than one wife, and at the same time the bachelors were left alone. That sounds rather amazing. Something doesn't add up here. So - Hmmm I'm not saying anything, I just quoted the source. Seemed trustworthy to me. Why is bigamy a bad thing? Anyway, while the male to female birth rate ratio in Iraq may have been the same as elsewhere, I doubt that the ratio of male to female adults has been anywhere close to 1:1 for many years now. Predrag |
#129
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Predrag Trpkov wrote: Mikhail Gorbachev made a deal with Bush senior's administration and agreed to dismantle the Soviet empire under certain conditions, one of them being of paramount importance to them: NATO was not to expand to Russia's backyard. Russia started to fall apart rapidly under Boris Jelcin and Clinton's administration disregarded the agreement. Russians could only stand by and watch in frustration, humiliation and anger as NATO crept onto their borders. Much of what has been going on in Russia, Ukraine and the whole region is a direct backlash of NATO's expansion. Russians will not allow it any further, no matter the cost. I think you overestimate NATO... first of all, NATO isn't what it used to be before the cold war. Yes, it's an organization that includes some alliances, but these days it has become little more than a military standards association in many ways. It's not a threat, and I can't see Gorbachev considering it one. I wish I did, but 10 years ago I was watching NATO aircrafts flying over my head loaded with missiles, destroying a nearby sovereign country, both military and civilian infrastructure, killing civilians all over the place. No matter what you and I think about Milosevic, it was a war of aggression, the supreme international crime according to the Nuremberg Tribunal. I'm not a fool to believe that it couldn't have been my home, had your military planners decided that building a huge military base on my island, instead of not-so-distant Kosovo, would better serve your national interests. That's the main and the most worrysome change in the official NATO doctrine. Once strictly a defensive alliance, it is now prepared to conduct military operations anywhere in the world, wherever it may suit the national interests of its member states. Couple that with the concept of "defence against terrorism" and there's nothing that couldn't be flexed to fit such criteria if the political will is there. If nothing, recent history has shown political will to be susceptible to extreme manipulation. AFAIK, Gorbachev doesn't trust NATO and the Americans much anymore. Hardly surprising. Even if the expansion of NATO to Russia's neighbours could have been overlooked, it was the NATO aggresion on Serbia in 1999 that opened many eyes in Russia. Especially now that it's clear that mass graves of 100000 to 200000 civilians will never be found on Kosovo as opposed to the biggest foreign U.S. military base built from scratch since the Vietnam War. For some of us Iraq is not that far away. I think a lot of the issues with the breakdown of the Soviet empire have to do with disillusionment about planned economies being replaced with a sudden belief that somehow free markets were going to solve all of Russia's problems... and human nature being what it is, they just exchange things for another set of different problems. Not to mention that too many people confuse the independant notions of democracy and free markets. --scott True, I've seen a lot of it around here too. However, in Russia the political and economical issues are inseparable from the geostrategical ones. Putin's strong position is just as much a result of his restoring Russia's global power status (and the accompanying national pride) as is his rescuing the economy from the freefall of the Yeltsin years. The same goes for their reinventing themselves as the leading energy superpower. Unfortunately that kind of roller coaster ride is not a fertile ground for democracy. Installing missile shields along the borders of Russia won't help either. Predrag |
#130
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 3, 10:09 am, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
I think a lot of the issues with the breakdown of the Soviet empire have to do with disillusionment about planned economies being replaced with a sudden belief that somehow free markets were going to solve all of Russia's problems... and human nature being what it is, they just exchange things for another set of different problems. Not to mention that too many people confuse the independant notions of democracy and free markets. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Had the US helped rebuild Russia, treating winning the Cold War like we did winning WWII, the odds would have been a lot better that Russia would not have degenerated into the Kleptocracy it has become, run by ex KGB. We should have infused massive capital and Industrial and infrastructure projects into the region 20 years ago, done something similar to a "Marshall Plan" and empowered the population economically, helped develop a broader Russian Middle Class. Wiser post Cold War policy would have prevented these problems we see now, but all people wanted to do was spend their "Peace Dividend". Stupid and shortsighted, pennywise and poundfoolish. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#131
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 14:14:35 -0500, Ty Ford
wrote: On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 13:26:52 -0500, Kurt Riemann wrote (in article ): Every time you quote his entire original post you are in violation of his copytight and owe him an additional 10,000. Kurt Riemann Actually, that's entirely incorrect, Kurt. You, above all people should know better. Ty Ford --Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWaPRHMGhG I think we're even now. Kurt |
#133
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 21, 7:20*am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
The most egregious example of this that I'm aware of is the site in China that ripped off my entirewww.pcavtech.comweb site, lock, stock, and barrel. * Same pages, except some were badly translated into Chinese. I don't know if it is still around or not. And they're fully aware there's not squat you can do about it, when multibillion-dollar entertainment behemoths can't do much. China is the IP violation center of the universe. This is a country that exports fake pharmaceuticals that kill people and from what I gather their gov't makes only cursory efforts to do anything about it. |
#134
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 21 Feb 2009 19:36:03 -0800 (PST), muzician21
wrote: On Jan 21, 7:20*am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: The most egregious example of this that I'm aware of is the site in China that ripped off my entirewww.pcavtech.comweb site, lock, stock, and barrel. * Same pages, except some were badly translated into Chinese. I don't know if it is still around or not. And they're fully aware there's not squat you can do about it, when multibillion-dollar entertainment behemoths can't do much. China is the IP violation center of the universe. This is a country that exports fake pharmaceuticals that kill people and from what I gather their gov't makes only cursory efforts to do anything about it. And, if you're an American, your government *won't* do anything about it either. As hopeful as I and so many other Americans are about the new Kennedy administration, few will have any illusions of any change of business-as-usual WRT China as long as they keep buying our paper. When we Americans approach the tipping point where our debt to China is recognized as the threat to national security that it is (and has been, and sadly unaknowdgled , for years...) and that we're borrowing that money from China to give it to Saudi Arabia, maybe we'll wise up. Yeah, that'll happen. The American Century is over. The best that anyone not lucky enough to be in the high-momentum parts of the the world, as opposed to the high-entropy parts of the world, and who believes that the American model was WorthWhile, can do *this* century is to tuck your heads between your knees and kiss your sweet ass goodbye. (Only true if we let it, kids.) God Bless Us, Every One, Chris Hornbeck |
#135
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro,aus.hi-fi,rec.audio.tubes
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message He's not THAT GOOD! DANCE YOU ****ING MONKEY, DANCE! I'll deal with YOU when I've got more time. Graham Enjoy the wait.. Nothings going to happen, it never does, Little Graham's just blowing smoke out of his arse AGAIN. bassett |
#136
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Path:
border1.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!nx 01.iad01.newshosting.com!newshosting.com!209.197.1 2.219.MISMATCH!post01.iad!news.buzzardnews.com!not-for-mail User-Agent: Microsoft-Entourage/11.4.0.080122 Date: Fri, 15 May 2009 00:34:20 +1000 Sorry, Brian. Not good enough. Bob Morein (310) 237-6511 |
#137
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro,
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Brian,
I'm holding up a finger for you. Guess which one. 1. You're late on this one. 2. And you had the ****ing nerve to email me about your lost tapes at Sheffield? 4. You crossposted this all over the place, nice going, Mr. Clean. 3. Does your mother own a gun? Ty Ford On Thu, 14 May 2009 10:34:20 -0400, Soundhaspriority wrote (in article ): It's this kind of timewasting that has crippled the U.S economy. Hiring lawyers and litigating the re-use of a review? ********! You've attempted to strongarm someone for an action that's at best likely "fair use" of your review, and at worst an innocent mistake that benefits the writer. Any writer benefits when his work is read and respected. And the miscreant is an old man with a prestigious audio history far exceeding that of the mere product reviewer. Sounds mostly like professional jealousy at work. And publications like Mix actively encourage manufacturers to reprint their reviews, something that gives more credibility to the publication as well as encourage advertisers - the method by which ALL editorial is paid for. A classic case of "biting the hand that feeds you". If I was Mr. Lindberg I'd tell Tyreeford to go suck an egg. This is clearly "fair use" under international copyright law. Bob Morein (310) 237-6511 --Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWaPRHMGhGA |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
I got ripped off! | Car Audio | |||
I got ripped off | Car Audio | |||
Not getting ripped off. | Car Audio | |||
Do you think I got ripped off? | High End Audio |