yes i always did think these sites were being patrolled by "government" types. it is obvious, these people will tell you that night is day and if you listen to long ennough you might think so too. if you tell a lie for long enough it becomes truth. ask them if they will go to war and they don't like it. there is one person whose proud to kill innocent people he's the guy with the picture sat on the self propelled gun, at least he is honest enough to show that he is ignorant and willing to die for it in an illegal conflict. these days i have little patience for people who depise logic.
I find it hard to believe that Israel only flew in Syrian airspace, the attack was in northeast Syria. The middle-east is a osculating fan,always has been.
I would call your suppositions on peoples ideology (your "If you say this you must mean that") and your belittling of others who disagree with you as "trolling". But that is just my opinion. Also your classic response of "be coherent" is an evasive maneuver that allows you to dodge answering or giving a reasonable response to a post. I understand why you support the NPT, you do not wish to see more nuclear WMDs in the possession of questionable governments. I merely pointed out the flaws in the treaty, and why, in todays world, it is unreasonable to expect all the worlds leaders to adhere to a policy that keeps them under the foot of the worlds superpowers. That is why I suggested that all countries, including the US, work out a treaty of true nuclear disarmament. No one "needs" nuclear WMDs. "when the war is over, then there will be in all countries a pursuit of secret war preparations with technological means which will lead inevitably to preventative wars and to destruction even more terrible than the present destruction of life." Albert Einstein, December 1944
Didnt he propose his famous equation"E=mc2" to Roosevelt, suggesting the power of the atom could be used to make a weapon.
Although the atom bomb clearly demonstrated the principle of E=mc2, Einstein was a pacifist. But he did support the US building of the "bomb" in response to the threat that Hitler was very close to getting the "bomb" himself. And with Germany's superiority in rocket technology, Einstein knew the it would be devastating to Europe and the world if Hitler got it first. His fears proved unfounded when Germany was defeated before it could develop the "bomb". And much to his dismay, the "bomb" was used to destroy two cities in Japan. Einstein later wrote, "I have always condemned the use of the atomic bomb against Japan." Five months before his death, Einstein had this to say about his role in the creation of the atomic bomb: "I made one great mistake in my life... when I signed the letter to President Roosevelt recommending that atom bombs be made; but there was some justification - the danger that the Germans would make them."
Hey look, three months later.... oh Iran and Syria are still independent countries and Israel's borders remain unchanged. Go figure.
oh i've been around actually i have revised this post i forgot the people i'm dealing with here aren't so good on any level what use is it talking to them about history or rational thought i have seen very little on that score. on that note lets say i've been around and leave it at that
I do not see the relevance of your question. Other than the fact that you probably believe that since you have visited Syria, that would somehow make us think that your understanding of Syrian or Middle East politics is any greater than if you had never crossed the US border. I am not yet impressed.