When did I ever say this was solely about justice? Just like with C. Lee, you infer meaning from my words instead of just listening to what I'm saying.
Don't compare this conversation to mine with C. Lee's. Let me get this straight: I never said
you were talking about justice, but since we're talking about this, it turns out
I happened to bring it in the first place and you commented to a reply on that subject.
Furthermore, I never suggested
you were talking about justice, I just happened to be interested in the subject of
just responses to terrorism, not just the termination of its leaders.
You were the one moving the goalposts and making this a conversation about some sense of pragmatism.
But I believe future consequences have to be added up when considering supposed 'pragmatic' solutions. If convenience is all that matter, allow me to be graphic to make a point: why not nuke the ******* and be done with it? Yes, some additional lives will be lost, but none of them Americans, and some of them could be potential recruits for extremists, so we would just be proactive! So why not nuke them? None of those countries can really retaliate and we can always justify it and say they were posing extreme danger to our national security and, hence, the world's security.
And before you try to say I'm being ridiculous, take that ridiculous example, play it down and extract some considerations to our actual predicament. We, through previous agreement with tyrannical governments, are bombing suspects of secret investigations without proper disclosure of facts or even undisclosed trial. No, I don't conform with the notion that we are being kept safe. That's the same thing they said when they went after the WMDs.
Yes, I know it
probably was easier to bomb the site, but if we had permission for that, how come putting men in the ground was so unattainable? Pakistan is a thousand times more volatile and plagued with radical islamists than Yemen, and we got in and killed the Big Guy. What was the difference? Besides, the intelligence community has stated Anwar al-Awlaki was leading several on-going plots against the US. Hence, he was a most valuable source of information, information maybe privy to the CIA. Wasn't he more valuable alive?
Total trust in the government is the last thing any sane citizen wants. So no, I don't approve with this line of action. And Obama seems to be getting too comfy on it.
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Where's the line? Ask Israel. They've been taking out Hezbollah and Hamas for years. And when Gaddafi's regime was still in charge of Libya, we took out the country's military and installations with our drones. And we continue to take out the remnants of the Taliban, the former government of Afghanistan. Not really sure where you're going with this question. If you're trying to give me an example of a "slippery slope" you're not doing a very good job. Covert and overt actions against rogue governments are nothing new.
Of course they are not new. They don't stop. I don't have to convince you on their never-ending nature. Ask Israel where targeting Hamas and Hezbollah has gotten them.