Author

Topic: Let’s Keep ISIS in Perspective (Read 715 times)

legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
March 03, 2015, 09:49:31 PM
#2
You don't have to be an American soldier only once. After your enlistment time is up, resign. If you resign honorably, they'll take you back if you decide to go back.

On the other hand, you might decide to warn the kids who think that they are supporting their country by enlisting.

Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 1001
March 03, 2015, 09:06:16 PM
#1
Quote
Last week, John Kerry seemed to be auditioning for the role of Dr. Pangloss.

Despite jihadi violence across the Middle East and ISIS terror in Iraq and Syria, Kerry told Congress, we live in “a period of less daily threat to Americans and to people in the world than normally — less deaths, less violent deaths today than through the last century.”

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper appeared to undercut Kerry the next day when he testified, “When the final accounting is done, 2014 will have been the most lethal year for global terrorism in the 45 years [since] such data has been complied.”

From January through September 2014, said Clapper, there were 13,000 terrorist attacks that killed 31,000 people. Afghanistan and Pakistan accounted for half of these attacks. And the Islamic State ranks first among terrorist organizations.

Yet, is Kerry wrong?

Despite our outrage over the barbarity of ISIS — beheadings of journalists and aid workers by “Jihadi John,” and of Christians on a beach — this century does not remotely rival in evil the bloodiest century of them all, the 20th.

From 1914-1918, nine million men died in the Great War. A comparable number of civilians perished.

More...http://www.lewrockwell.com/2015/03/patrick-j-buchanan/isis-is-a-bad-bunch/

You'd think older generations would be calling bs on the neocons' propaganda that these are the most violent times for people of the world in history.
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