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New that is the way it should be, parents brainwashing first
I have to do it all the time with my guys cause of the crap they feed em in school. Now there is lots of stuff I disagree with mikey on but not the right to bring up your kids your way.
thanx,
bill
Mike Doogan
"Then there's figure skating and ice dancing and snowboarding. The winners are all chosen by judges. That's not sports. That's politics. And curling? If curling is a sport, pork rinds are a health food."
New Hey, I'm not defending the public school system.
But if kids don't learn to think for themselves at home, they certainly won't learn it at school, or from MTV, or from their equally blinkered peers...

Bottom line, they won't learn it. Most kids go one of two ways: either they slavishly adhere to what their parents drummed into them, or they rebel and slavishly adhere to the exact opposite. No thinking involved either way, and no conception of other alternatives. And about as much chance of hitting on the truth as of a stuck clock telling the right time.

And there's not much chance of finding the truth if you haven't got the facts. Mmoffit's kid is appallingly ill-informed, and I think I know whose fault it is. (But then the public school system has dropped the ball as well.) The noncombatants in Afghanistan aren't being bombed to oblivion. They're grateful to be rid of the Taliban, and the collatoral damage has been very minimal indeed. But that's something the kid won't be hearing about.

It's not that hard to raise a kid. Unless you try to do it right. Then it gets complicated. The first tricky thing is getting the kid to survive to adult age. The second tricky thing is getting him to fully function as an adult once he's there. Not many parents succeed at both these things. Not all even try.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New So, the WTC death tally was less than "very minimal"?
[link|http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1740000/1740538.stm|http://news.bbc.co..../1740538.stm]

The number of Afghan civilians killed by US bombs has surpassed the death toll of the 11 September attacks, according to a study by an American academic.
Nearly 3,800 Afghans died between 7 October and 7 December, University of New Hampshire Professor Marc Herold said in a research report.

Professor Herold has been gathering data on civilian casualties since 7 October by culling information from news agencies, major newspapers and first hand accounts.

His report, which places the death toll at 3,767, lists the number of casualties, location, type of weapon and source of information.

"In fact the figure I came up with is a very, very conservative estimate," Professor Herold said in a radio interview.
-----

More Afghan civilians killed by us than Americans killed by Saudi Arabians on 9/11. If the number of Afghan civilians was "very minimal", then why all the fuss about the WTC dead?

My kid is ill-informed? That is particularly funny coming from you!

bcnu,
Mikem
Expand Edited by mmoffitt Feb. 15, 2002, 09:46:14 AM EST
Expand Edited by mmoffitt Feb. 15, 2002, 09:47:05 AM EST
New If the total for Afghanistan is as accurate as
original estimates of WTC death toll, it's bound to shrink the same way.

When you use the word "minimal", you probably mean "smallest possible". Clearly, it was possible to kill fewer people in WTC by striking an hour earlier. Did we do everything possible to avoid civilian casualties? No, but we did a whole lot more than anybody else have ever done.
New Again, WTF?
Did we do everything possible to avoid civilian casualties? No, but we did a whole lot more than anybody else have ever done.
And you base this statement upon........................?

Again, my suggestion was to cordon off their country and put a bounty on ObL.

Instead, we've killed more of their innocents than they killed of our innocents AND we still don't have ObL.

Yay us!
New Well said.
New Based on...
reports of our outraged pilots who vere forbidden to strike when they had 75% probablity of hitting bin Laden or Omar - too many civilians around. Based on the crowds of Afghans gathering around every bomb crater - people who are afraid for their lives don't behave that way. Based on the fact that we reported every fuck up so far, and Pentagon apologized for most (we being Western press in general, not just suck-ups at CNN).

As for cordonning the country - that is utter bullshit. Did not work in Checnia - why should it work in Afghanistan? Who'll be doing the cordonning? Where, in tribal lands of Pakistan? In Usbekistan? That startegy could have worked in Palestine (oh how I wish they'd do it! But the settlements have to go first.), but not in Afghanistan.
New Something doesn't add up.
reports of our outraged pilots who vere forbidden to strike when they had 75% probablity of hitting bin Laden or Omar - too many civilians around.
But we've killed civilians in this "war".

It seems that we've killed a lot of civilians.

And I don't recall ever hearing that we knew WHERE ObL was.

Sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo......................

I'm having trouble believing that we would NOT toast a cave or building or town if we were 75% sure that ObL was there.

Based on the crowds of Afghans gathering around every bomb crater - people who are afraid for their lives don't behave that way.
After the bombs stop, they gather to see the wreckage. After the bombs stop, they aren't in fear.

As for cordonning the country - that is utter bullshit.
Whatever.

Did not work in Checnia - why should it work in Afghanistan?
Remind me again, who was the bounty on in Checnia?

Who'll be doing the cordonning?
That would the our military.

Where, in tribal lands of Pakistan? In Usbekistan?
Along every border of Afghanistan. No one crosses the border. We have the technology. The reason we didn't do it like this is because it wouldn't give the immediate "results" that bombing them did.

On the other hand, it would have resulted in fewer deaths, near zero innocent deaths and it would have given us ObL.

New No, it adds up.
Check your facts and your logic. On all of your, um, points, objections, whatever they were meant to be.

You do have a tendency to speak in snippy little non sequiturs. But at least you're more grammatical than Ashton.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New War's target...
was Taleban. ObL would be a nice side effect, but the prime directive was to remove Afghanistan as his base. So we bombed Taleban's army, which was hiding behind civilians rather effectively. But not effectively enough. Between Northern Aliance and US, we managed to topple a governement. If less than 4000 dead (according to some huy's estimates) is too much to pay for a change of governement - what kind of standard do you have in mind? Soviets did a lot worse. Could you tell me who did better? And, before you tell me that we should not have tried - different discussion, sir. That was

As to people gathering around craters - I come from Sanct Petersburg, the city that survived real bombardment in WW2. People do not gather around destroyed building unless they know it was a chance hit, not likely to be repeated.

The story about denied permission to bomb was all over the place, including here. Can't find a link, though.


WRT "cordonning" - this will end just like our discussion on "communism". Only somebody who knows nothing of that part of the world can suggest such tactics. I've been to a semetery where some Russian officers from last attempt were buried. Not pretty. And the number of civilians killed was in millions. No, stationing an occupation ("cordonnig", my ass) army in that part of the world will never accomplish anything.

New Hmmmm, I must have been tuned to the wrong war.
The "War on Terrorism" that >I< recall started with us demanding that the Taliban turn over ObL.

But they wanted to see our "proof".

So we invaded their country to get him ourselves.

The ORIGINAL target was ObL and his network.

At least, that's the war >I< remember.
New "Original" being the key word.
When they refused to surrender ObL, they became a target. targets.push(Taleban), you see?
New And that makes sense to you?
Terrorists fly planes into the WTC and Pentagon.

We say ObL is behind it.

We focus on ObL.

We find an obstacle to our "getting" ObL.

The new focus becomes the obstacle.

ObL becomes "a nice side effect".

Allow me to quote from your earlier post:
War's target... was Taleban.

ObL would be a nice side effect,.....
I'm sure you can understand my confusion as to what the "objective" of the "war" is. Particularly when, as you say, it changes depending upon whom we think is opposing us.
....but the prime directive was to remove Afghanistan as his base.

New Taleban was not just an "obstacle".
They actively cooperated with ObL. They used his expertise (e.g., in killing the head of Northern Aliance). And he had resources of Afghanistan at his disposal. Those resources are small compared to US. But it really, really helps to have a country (no matter how poor or unrecognized) where every "policemen" is your friend. So, the first step toward neutralization of ObL became obvious. Remove the only governement that openly supports him. That's what we've done.It was a necessary first step. And for the duration of that step, ObL became a side target. Now that we think we are done (whether we really are is a different question), we can restore bin Laden's status of primary goal. Except that now we have no clue how to get him - not even first step. Well, time will tell.
New Well, that was going to be my point.
Except that now we have no clue how to get him - not even first step.
It's called "focus", Grasshopper.

So, we have the evil mastermind still out there.

He still has his international network of terrorist cells.

Not to mention the "Axis of Evil".

Sorry, I just have images of all the James Bond movies where Jimmy goes chasing after the retreating goons so he can arrest every one of them while the guy with the world destroying weapon saunters over to his waiting jet and leaves the island.
New Maybe we'll be lucky
Rumor was that binLaden was in the throes of (what was it, kidney or liver?) disease.

Of course there are LOTS of rumors about everything.

Dangit, I've got hiccups again.
Where each demon is slain, more hate is raised, yet hate unchecked also multiplies. - L. E. Modesitt, from his Recluse series
New What IS your point, Grasshopper?
That the U.S. should have left bin Laden his base of operations because it couldn't nail him without killing civilians? Or is your point that we didn't get him because we "weren't focused"?

What was your grand scheme to get the guy, presuming you do indeed want to get him? And if you never really wanted to go to Afghanistan to take away his base of operations, what number of Americans are you willing to sacrifice in the next terrorist incident? How many Afghanis are you willing to sacriface to the Pashtun -led Taliban? Why don't you explain to us how many Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras, etc. you are willing to have tortured and killed by the Taliban and Al Qaeda because there might be civilian casualities if the U.S. tried to stop it?
Gerard Allwein
New You've missed the moral high ground.
What was your grand scheme to get the guy, presuming you do indeed want to get him?
I think I've been over that enough times.

And if you never really wanted to go to Afghanistan to take away his base of operations, what number of Americans are you willing to sacrifice in the next terrorist incident?
Well, you see, >MY< goal was to STOP the terrorist attacks by not creating NEW terrorists.

And that requires that >WE< do not kill innocent civilians.

How many Afghanis are you willing to sacriface to the Pashtun -led Taliban?
As many as it takes for THEM to decide to change. Remember, >WE< were supporting the Taliban before. Which gets back to my points about us not fucking with their politics. Sometimes, you do have to let them sort themselves out.

Why don't you explain to us how many Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras, etc. you are willing to have tortured and killed by the Taliban and Al Qaeda because there might be civilian casualities if the U.S. tried to stop it?
Again, as many of them as they are willing to accept. This isn't about us. This is about them.

The only reason we were involved is that we want the oil.

Which is also the reason that we switched from targeting ObL to replacing the government in Afghanistan.

And don't try telling me that we're there to help the Afghan people. Where were we last year? Do you think they didn't stone women last year?

Or the year before?

Or the year before that?

We aren't there to "save" any Afghans (or Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras, etc).

We knew about how they were treating their people years ago. We did nothing.

Don't try to claim moral high ground now. You just look stupid.
New Re: You've missed the moral high ground.
The only reason we were involved is that we want the oil.

So, Afghanistan is a major oil producer?

And don't try telling me that we're there to help the Afghan people. Where were we last year? Do you think they didn't stone women last year?

Totally beside the point, fact remains we removed a pimple on the ass of the world.

We knew about how they were treating their people years ago. We did nothing.

Yes, the U.S. was busy listening to moral authorities like you. Hopefully the U.S. has gotten over it.
Gerard Allwein
New *sigh*
www.google.com
+bush +oil +afghanistan +pipeline

Totally beside the point, fact remains we removed a pimple on the ass of the world.
Bzzzzzt! Wrong answer. Yes, we did something to help some people. But >WHY< we did it is the issue. Remember, we were >SUPPORTING< the Taliban before. And we didn't give a FUCK about the Afghan people before the attacks.

We're in it for the oil.

That is the >WHOLE< point.

Yes, the U.S. was busy listening to moral authorities like you. Hopefully the U.S. has gotten over it.
Really? So we've reduced our dependance upon their oil?

Ohhhh, I don't think we have.

Was that the best insult you could come up with? Maybe I should give you more time?

I really love the way you ill-educated fascists try to elude responsibility.

Remember what I've posted before.
Step#1: Reduce our oil imports from that region by 1/20'th each year for 20 years.

Once we've done that, you and your fascist buddies can make all the claims you want.
New I could almost replace you with a script.
Input:
"The sky is blue with white fluffy things in it."

Output:

"And you base this statement upon....?

Instead, the sky is tartan plaid with pink polka dots. And we still haven't got bin Laden.

Yay sky!"

Input:
"The Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776."

Output:

"And you base this statement upon....?

Instead the Declaration of Independence was fabricated in 1952 to justify American imperialism in North Dakota. And we still haven't got bin Laden.

Yay Declaration of Independence!"
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New And I could replace you with a jar of mayonaise.
The ORIGINAL statement was:
Did we do everything possible to avoid civilian casualties? No, but we did a whole lot more than anybody else have ever done.
Now, if >YOU< have anything to support that claim, please provide it.

If not, at least some people like mayonaise.
New save it till yer 21
Mike Doogan
"Then there's figure skating and ice dancing and snowboarding. The winners are all chosen by judges. That's not sports. That's politics. And curling? If curling is a sport, pork rinds are a health food."
New Marc Herold's numbers are wrong
He got the numbers by adding up the numbers listed in the newspapers, including Taliban press releases, multiple reports of the same event, and so on. The 3800 dead figure is just plain wrong.

The Associated Press reports that the number of casualties was between 500 and 600, which are one-eighth to one-sixth of Herold's numbers. Even Human Rights Watch thinks that the actual number of casualties was probably between 1000 and 1300, about a quarter or a third of the Herold's number. Given that HRW in turn has an institutional bias to inflate the numbers, I'd say their numbers represent a solid upper bound on the number of civilian casualties in the Afghan War.

I'm dubious that the casualty totals have much to do with whether or not one supports or opposes the Afghan War, but we might as well use the correct numbers while descending into flames. :)
New What are Taliban numbers?
A professor culls news reports and other odd bits of information and calls it "research"? He's academically dishonest at the least.

How about some statistics on how many people the Taliban have killed after gaining power? If we had yearly statistics on that, we could project how many they were likely to kill in the future. I'll bet their henchmen, Al Qaeda, didn't keep records.
Gerard Allwein
New I suspect
that during the active bombardment, we disrupted more executions than we killed civilians.

From the reports that came out when the Taliban was a matter of sovereignty and only civil rights freaks and feminists thought they were a problem, I have little doubt that at the end of 2002, more Afghans will be alive than would have been without the war.

----
"You don't have to be right - just use bolded upper case" - annon.
New One more thing. Now, I'm mad.
>> But if kids don't learn to think for themselves at home, ...
WTF are you talking about? You think I suggested that she not say the pledge? If you can read with the comprehensive ability of a 2 year-old (I know, that may be a stretch for you) you will see that I did NOT enter the fray. I could have raised Holy Hell with the teacher, but I didn't. My daughter CONCLUDED FOR HERSELF that she didn't want to say the pledge.

I stayed on the periphery - BY DESIGN. She DID make up her own mind AND THAT IS WHAT I AM PROUD OF!

Update: last Friday her schoolmates noticed that she wasn't saying the pledge. They asked her why, she reiterated her (NOTE MARLOWE: HER)
position. They knocked her down on the playground and kicked her, in full view of a teacher who did nothing to stop it. Now, I am going to the principal, and perhaps the Superintendent, about that on Monday. Or, maybe I shouldn't? I don't want to "brainwash" her.

Follow-up PRIDE: I asked her what she would do on Monday. She said, "I am not going to say the pledge. They can't beat me into something I don't believe in."

My daughter is better informed and a much better American than you or I will ever be.

Try that,
Mikem
New do teach her to defend herself
a can of juice in one pocket and a sock in the other works wonders.
thanx,
bill
Mike Doogan
"Then there's figure skating and ice dancing and snowboarding. The winners are all chosen by judges. That's not sports. That's politics. And curling? If curling is a sport, pork rinds are a health food."
New As should anyone be..
I accept at face value your daughter's report - they knocked her down on the playground and kicked her, in full view of a teacher who did nothing to stop it.

My personal view of such an event is - that this single act (of omission) on Any teacher's part, should be grounds for dismissal, once proven. It is an act which gives credence to the mob, to the bullying of those who disagree.. to the mindset of Lord of the Flies ignorant children who are acting from rote and without any comprehension. THIS is what that 'teacher' taught these empty young minds, that day.

I hope you will be able to force (school-wide? depending upon the nature of your local PTA) a detailed confrontation of what exactly was Wrong, and why it must not recur. Were it my child and were the school milieu such that they would Not face these issues - I'd look for a cub reporter and any similar means of getting this story into the public consciousness.

You may not like some of what crawls out from the woodwork, but you will at least know more about your 'community' - and you will have faced an issue particularly germane to current events. The entire small 'play' is indeed a Parable, deserving of frequent reenactment. Lest we forget.. WTF it is, we think is worth defending about our 'community', state, nation (?) Or not worth defending.


Good luck,

Ashton
New She's a better person than they are.
Congratulations.

And that teacher should never "teach" again.
New well mike is in CA where a teacher would lose the job if
she separated them "during" the incident, teachers in many places go in actual fear of their students and the school district. Whatever the case, it needs to be pushed to the school board.
thanx,
bill
Mike Doogan
"Then there's figure skating and ice dancing and snowboarding. The winners are all chosen by judges. That's not sports. That's politics. And curling? If curling is a sport, pork rinds are a health food."
New You and your daughter have my sincere admiration
Your daughter for her ability to take a stand against odds. You for raising her and giving her that ability.

My hat is off to you sir. And tell your daughter I'm proud of her (tho I doubt it will make a difference to her).
With this much manure around, there must be a pony somewhere.
New Well, now you've framed me up nicely.
If I challenge you, I look like a big heartless meany.

If I don't challenge you, your nonsense gains credibility by association with, um, conviction and courage and stuff.

Hell with it. I can't win without a level playing field, and you're not gonna allow me a level playing field. So I'll just go out fighting. Here are my points:

1) The vicious stupidity of other kids does not in any way make your daughter, or you, in the right regarding the original question. Truth just doesn't work that way. There was a time when young Nazi sympathisers got beat up on the playgrounds of America.

2) Conviction is not the same as bloody-mindedness. The difference is: one is well thought out, and the other isn't. But I don't expect you to appreciate such a fine distinction.

There. Now I look like a big heartless meany. Now you can beat me up.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New My heart goes out this this child
[link|http://images.icnetwork.co.uk/upl/0006275E-E72C-1BA8-805C80C328EC02DC.girl|She didn't live long enough to get beat up on the playground.]

Juliana McCourt wasn't courageous, or pigheaded, or even brainwashed. She was simply incinerated.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New Your mind must be an interesting place to inhabit.
So, a victim of a terrorist attack (religious fundamentalism) provides what support for your defense of fascist-like behaviour in the US?

Or are you claiming that Juliana McCourt didn't want to be coerced into saying TPoA either?

Or are you claiming that Juliana McCourt liked saying TPoA?

Or are you claiming that if everyone said TPoA that Juliana McCourt would still be alive?

Allow me my view on the situation.
Certain people are taught a certain belief and are willing to harm others who don't believe as they do.

Now, whether those certain people are terrorists or school-mates..........

But that's okay in your mind 'cause our cause is right and just and meet.
New Just trying to put things in perspective.
Knowing how much it drives people like you up the wall to see things put in perspective.

Moffitt's kid is not a hero. And neither are the terrorists. And neither are you.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html]
Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
New Really?
Moffitt's kid is not a hero.
A child willing to get beaten at school while a teacher looks on is not a hero?

Maybe. Depending upon how you define "hero".

She's certainly a lot braver than most of the people I've met.

Knowing how much it drives people like you up the wall to see things put in perspective.
And what perspective is that?

A child was killed by someone who couldn't stand opposing thought.

A child was beaten by someone who couldn't stand opposing thought.

"Perspective"?

The child who was beaten was beaten by US CITIZENS!

Oh, is the "perspective" you're aiming for the fact that we can treat people with different viewpoints just as badly as the terrorists did?

Or is it that you don't HAVE a point?

You start waving pictures of dead children as some kind of holy symbol against the forces of evil (liberals) hoping that they will flee in terror?

Doesn't look like that happened, does it?

So, again, I'm asking you what your point was with your post of a dead girl's picture.

Don't give me generalities like "perspective". Give me specifics.

And Mike's daughter has more guts and character than you've displayed so far.

She's willing to get beaten for her beliefs and you can't even articulate your's in a web forum.

She's being beaten. The worst you'd get is embarrased.

No wonder you don't think she's a hero.
New Nahh.. you built the box, and keep reinforcing the walls
You're "for the mob" - when the mob has ideas you deem to be ~same Revealed Truth as You have. Of course when the mob has different views: why then.. ignore ignorant mob behavior. How very convenient and.. flexible of you.

(You don't even get.. that this isn't even about! the PoA.. per se). One Ernst Cantorowicz at UC, in the early '50s pointed out, in a nicely reasoned tract* which went around - and months later, caused the UC Regents to rescind Their 'Loyalty Oath':

* entitled, The Fundamental Issue, it pointed out that the entire oath hysteria was about - wait for it - YAN attack on tenure!. Yup a Regent - cast in same bullet-mold as you - was convinced that Profs were no different from janitors: hire & fire 'em at will, them uppity intellekshuls. (That's another thread. One idiocy at a time.)

[link|http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/uchistory/archives_exhibits/loyaltyoath/docs_images.html|Loyalty Oath history]

C. pointed out that *any* coerced oath (sign this or starve / become unemployable / get beat up by class etc.) is invalid on the face of it. It's even inane on the practical side: why those awful, unPrincipled Commyunist Wackos\ufffd will sign Anything! in order to subvert, undermine, sabotage our US Bastion of Personal Freedom\ufffd. Oh the involute irony of it all...



Carry on with further box reinforcements - eventually you'll nail shut the oxygen vent too,


Ashton

PS - is this simple enough English for ya? I can make it reel simple, as fits your preference - by numbering the sequence from 'oath' ---> 'oaf'. Woof.

[link|http://www.dansdata.com/psycho.htm|How to spot a psychopath (or even just a trail)]
New Marlowe, just change yer username to Ginger
Mike Doogan
"Then there's figure skating and ice dancing and snowboarding. The winners are all chosen by judges. That's not sports. That's politics. And curling? If curling is a sport, pork rinds are a health food."
New Good News. And Thank You All...
for the kind thoughts, encouragement, etc.

I met with the my daughter's teacher, the teacher who allegedly stood by and the principal. The teacher who didn't do anything said she didn't see it, that there were many children she was charged with watching and she apologized saying she certainly would have intervened. She seemed honest and genuinely upset that this happened. I wasn't there, it's entirely possible that it was over before she glanced my daughter's way.

My daughter's teacher was upset with the two students leading the antagonism (my daughter told me later that he took them aside as they headed out for recess and must have admonished them because they both apologized to my daughter). Then the teacher did something I really liked. He changed his history lesson for the day and they studied the evolution of the PoA, including Ike's adding of "Under God" AND the court cases involved (WV Board of Education vs. Barnette - or Barrette, I can't remember, in 1942). Then a classroom discussion was held where the students listed possible reasons for and against making the pledge!

The kids didn't kick her, I understand now. But they did knock her down and stomp her hand with their feet (she has bruises to show for it).

At any rate, I'm pleased with the way the teacher handled the situation. And interestingly, once the discussion turned to "why wouldn't some one want to say the pledge?" my daughter said, "Well, I think we're overdoing this a little. I mean, if we keep this up, I think we're heading in a bad way." Because of her statements and several others raised by other children, several other students have decided not to say the pledge. No, marlowe, I'm not really happy about that except indirectly. I am VERY happy that a classroom of 11 year-olds is actually thinking about what their country is doing and that they are FREE to decide for themselves whether or not it is appropriate.

Thanks again guys and sorry if I went overboard on the ranting,
Mikem
New Congrats!
And I like the teacher doing the lesson on the origins of TPoA.
New Relieved to hear..
Actually, "not having seen the foray" is the explanation I'd have hoped for - I find it still difficult to imagine any teacher in 2002: actually condoning that stimulus/response. (Or any teacher who has not read Golding's Lord of the Flies, for that matter)

Finally - it's a positive result when your daughter didn't have to next confront an Us/Them dichotomy for the rest of her term - because nobody wanted to discuss the Issue. Perhaps this little contretemps and its result, of better discussion - shall reinforce your daughter's (already advanced) sense of the appropriateness of speaking up (or 'not-speaking' that which you don't accept, in present case).


Cheers,

Ashton

Hey! maybe her class can invite Marlowe to give the counter-case! - for unconditional Jingoism every time. I'd bet they'd see right through the sophistry and go for the jugular. Wouldn't it be fun to see that POV dismantled by a bunch of 11-year olds?
New Ashton, stop it!
Don't tease 'em, they bite.
With this much manure around, there must be a pony somewhere.
New Re: Us/Them dichotomy avoided - good thing indeed.
     Something's (blowing) up in Kandhar - (marlowe) - (50)
         From the mouths of babes. - (mmoffitt) - (3)
             what does she do during the prayer? (duck) -NT - (boxley) - (1)
                 Don't... - (Simon_Jester)
             Tall oaks from little acorns - (Ashton)
         Why quote only the worst part? - (Arkadiy) - (45)
             `Coz I'm a sensationalist at heart. - (marlowe) - (44)
                 that is the way it should be, parents brainwashing first - (boxley) - (43)
                     Hey, I'm not defending the public school system. - (marlowe) - (42)
                         So, the WTC death tally was less than "very minimal"? - (mmoffitt) - (23)
                             If the total for Afghanistan is as accurate as - (Arkadiy) - (19)
                                 Again, WTF? - (Brandioch) - (18)
                                     Well said. -NT - (mmoffitt)
                                     Based on... - (Arkadiy) - (13)
                                         Something doesn't add up. - (Brandioch) - (12)
                                             No, it adds up. - (marlowe)
                                             War's target... - (Arkadiy) - (10)
                                                 Hmmmm, I must have been tuned to the wrong war. - (Brandioch) - (9)
                                                     "Original" being the key word. - (Arkadiy) - (8)
                                                         And that makes sense to you? - (Brandioch) - (7)
                                                             Taleban was not just an "obstacle". - (Arkadiy) - (6)
                                                                 Well, that was going to be my point. - (Brandioch) - (5)
                                                                     Maybe we'll be lucky - (wharris2)
                                                                     What IS your point, Grasshopper? - (gtall) - (3)
                                                                         You've missed the moral high ground. - (Brandioch) - (2)
                                                                             Re: You've missed the moral high ground. - (gtall) - (1)
                                                                                 *sigh* - (Brandioch)
                                     I could almost replace you with a script. - (marlowe) - (2)
                                         And I could replace you with a jar of mayonaise. - (Brandioch) - (1)
                                             save it till yer 21 -NT - (boxley)
                             Marc Herold's numbers are wrong - (neelk) - (2)
                                 What are Taliban numbers? - (gtall) - (1)
                                     I suspect - (mhuber)
                         One more thing. Now, I'm mad. - (mmoffitt) - (17)
                             do teach her to defend herself - (boxley)
                             As should anyone be.. - (Ashton)
                             She's a better person than they are. - (Brandioch) - (1)
                                 well mike is in CA where a teacher would lose the job if - (boxley)
                             You and your daughter have my sincere admiration - (Silverlock)
                             Well, now you've framed me up nicely. - (marlowe) - (6)
                                 My heart goes out this this child - (marlowe) - (3)
                                     Your mind must be an interesting place to inhabit. - (Brandioch) - (2)
                                         Just trying to put things in perspective. - (marlowe) - (1)
                                             Really? - (Brandioch)
                                 Nahh.. you built the box, and keep reinforcing the walls - (Ashton)
                                 Marlowe, just change yer username to Ginger -NT - (boxley)
                             Good News. And Thank You All... - (mmoffitt) - (4)
                                 Congrats! - (Brandioch)
                                 Relieved to hear.. - (Ashton) - (2)
                                     Ashton, stop it! - (Silverlock)
                                     Re: Us/Them dichotomy avoided - good thing indeed. -NT - (mmoffitt)

If for no other reason that historical (hysterical?) context.
342 ms