I fail to see how referencing a political situation from the 1930s, when
a) The world was very different, and
b) The threat was an entire nation just across the sea who we (UK) had only just been to war with,
is in any way relevant to al-Qaeda. I thought it was a convention when arguing sensibly not to use Reductio Ad Hitlerum logic.
I can use other examples mind...
The point was that one can not always remain passive, ideally we would all like to live in a world where the values/ philosphy/ etc you profess hold true, but realistically it won't happen, not until we have a common goal which unites us, even 'religous rivals'.
However the only thing that could possibly unite us is the threat of extermination from an alien species, I mean with all our modern values, we can't even agree on a basic plan for global warming. <_<
As for the later posts about human rights, well what a murky topic
I say that those who admit to murders, or previously stated the intent to murder and were later a strong suspect of one, should only cost taxpayers the amount to give them an injection. Some people say if the U.S. didn't spend billions on war, sick people in the U.S. could be saved, why don't the same people advocate better allocating resources to sickness than use it housing and detaining self-admitted murderers? :huh:
You 'end' one life (not that sitting in jail for 40+ years is one) early, in order to prolong the life of another
In the powers that be I trust
