Iran: American people are being lied to.

Posted by johnpe1 9 years, 1 month ago to Government
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this "framework" appears to be a ghost, appearing
different to every viewer. -- j

SOURCE URL: http://www.glennbeck.com/2015/04/03/glenn-reacts-to-obamas-iran-deal/


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  • Posted by DrZarkov99 9 years, 1 month ago
    The sad part of what's happening to our society is that not only are we being lied to, but even established law has become meaningless to those in power. It's the "Laws are for the little people" attitude of a self-established bureaucratic "nobility". One would think that some degree of common sense would start to kick in before the government triggers large scale civil disobedience (which would likely stumble into violent revolution), but we have allowed our elites to develop an arrogant sense of invincibility that is delusional. Sooner than many think, unfortunately, the center will not hold.
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    • Posted by $ allosaur 9 years, 1 month ago
      When you own the DOJ, the Demrat Animal Farm more than equal elite betters can do no wrong.
      Besides the never ending lies of His Majack-u-sty El Presidebte Opinocchio, what's email "convenient" for Benghazi Killary is a foremost current event example.
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    • Posted by mccwho 9 years, 1 month ago
      Yes they think themselves to be royality. The title is forbidden in the USA, but what's the difference. When they get to live just like it, and exclude themselves from the very same laws they force everyone else to live by. Sounds like that King George guy that caused a revolution.
      If it looks like duck, sounds like a duck, acts like a duck, craps on the groung, then it must be a darn duck. Ditto for politicians and royalty.
      Duck = royalty
      Ground = regular people
      Darn duck = politician
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  • Posted by wmiranda 9 years, 1 month ago
    Back during the Vietnam peace talks in Paris, a candidate or newly elected congressman went to Paris on his own during a break in the talks between the official U.S. delegation and the Viet Cong delegation, to talk on his own with the Viet Cong delegation. He later presented the Viet Cong's points to congress. He argued for what the Viet Cong delegation wanted in order to release the POWs without regard to the U.S. points That candidate or young congressman that undermined the official U.S. delegation was John Kerry supported by people like Jane Fonda and her type. Go figure, huh? History repeating? Let them get what they want and call it a victory negotiation, except this time it's not a few hundred American POW, but an entire country- Israel.
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  • Posted by coaldigger 9 years, 1 month ago
    Lied to? I have reached the point where I don't believe a thing I read or hear until I have examined the facts and come to a conclusion of my own. Wait a minute! Isn't that what we are supposed to do anyway? We just to be very careful where we get our facts.
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  • Posted by RonC 9 years, 1 month ago
    The more I see of Obama/Clinton foreign policy the more D'nesh D'Sousa's 1st movie (America 2016) comes to mind. He theorized that Obama believes the wealth of America, Britain, Spain, and France came chiefly from the mineral rights stolen from 3rd world countries, and perhaps slave trade during their colonial periods.

    To compensate for this, D'Sousa guessed Obama would take a course of action that would undue much of what the colonial period set in place. By upsetting the middle East and allowing them to re-establish new governments, borders, and contracts for natural resources; it will certainly erase the borders established by the Allies after two world wars. No one can deny the Middle East has been upset.

    I had often wondered what the outcome would be if we toppled a government, then they elected a fundamentalist Islamic government? Ridiculous? Not really, look what happened when Obama upset Egypt's regime and the Muslim Brotherhood won the election.

    In my opinion one of our great recurring mistakes is to treat these regions like they are the 51st and 52nd states. All of the nations of the Middle East are sovereign nations, including Israel. It is not our place to tell Iran they cannot have a nuke or to tell Israel they will not bomb them. Unless we plan to occupy those nations, we have no standing in their decisions.

    Where we are restrained is in oil production. I want to point out that we are only restrained by our own local politics. For decades we have imported middle eastern oil, at great cost to our citizens, because local supply has been disrupted by regulations and political wrangling.

    I think the best solution is to turn to our own resources and let the middle East sort itself out. Anything different will have our fingerprints on it and will become the basis for the next great conflict over there.

    Additionally, if we open free energy markets here and allow innovation to find solutions for many problems, the cost will go down. If the spot price of oil turns out to be below Iran's break even point for production then how long will they run a loss leader to raise revenue? It's not like the world will buy an extra box of 7.62 ammo at the register because they were lured into the oil store with a sale.
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    • Posted by $ jdg 9 years, 1 month ago
      In the Middle East, and in Africa too, the colonial regimes drew stupid borders that have nothing to do with the way the local people are organized, or want to be. If some of those borders are gettting redrawn, it is (1) inevitable and (2) potentially good, depending on who is doing it. (I suspect that most of the new boundaries in Africa, though, are new colonial ones, the new colonial powers being China (whose leaders want to own the oil) and the Muslim Brotherhood (which is trying to "Islamize" large parts of Africa by wiping out Christianity, animism, and other faiths in places like Darfur, South Sudan, and Nigeria, just as ISIS is trying to do in the Middle East.)

      As far as treating the region like it's the 51st and 52nd states -- here I disagree with you. I believe the biggest problem with our Middle East policy is that it isn't fixed or coherent, and as a result the lives and efforts of our troops in places like Iraq and Afghanistan are being allowed to completely go to waste.

      I believe that before the US goes to war with anybody, anywhere in the world, we should have a well defined mission, and should complete it before we get out. Thus if some country, I'll call it A, launches a war of aggression against the US, we should not simply fight them to a standstill and go home. That accomplishes nothing. Rather, we should decide on the day we declare war that we're either going to annex A permanently and make it a state -- or at the very least we're going to occupy A for 50+ years, so we can teach their next two or three generations why it's wrong to wage wars of aggression (or commit genocide). We did this in Germany and Japan and it worked.

      The only exception I can see is if we believe that the person or group who launched the war doesn't represent the beliefs of that country -- as when bin Laden orchestrated 9/11 and took refuge in Afghanistan, and then Pakistan. In that case, we send a task force in, capture or kill the bad guys, and go home. (Which is *not* the way it actually happened, because the way it actually happened includes the war in Afghanistan that is still going on. The moment we realized, or decided, that we're not going to annex Afghanistan permanently, nor occupy it and re-educate its population for 50+ years, we should have ordered everybody home from there immediately.)

      I call this the all-or-nothing war policy. Because anything in between is an inexcusable waste of American lives.

      Of course in today's Middle East I would certainly choose to do "nothing" against ISIS, rather than "all". Because we don't have any reason we need to be there.
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    • Posted by 9 years, 1 month ago
      Ron, I am amazed that Iran has not simply bought
      nuclear warheads for their missiles from Russia or
      N.Korea -- they could get them more simply than
      going through all of the problems of making them
      themselves! -- j

      p.s. if we are in a close alliance situation with Israel,
      who no doubt have nukes because of our graciousness,
      the prevention of Iran's nukes is in our interest. .not from
      51st State nor from 50+ year dominance, just from alliance.
      and further, Iran's "death to America" has worse teeth if
      their icbms are nuclear-tipped. . self-interest.

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      • Posted by sumitch 9 years ago
        If Iran gets a nuke (which is what I think Barry O wants) and uses it on Israel they can kiss their crazy ex Persian rear quarter cheeks goodbye. Israel whipped the whole area in the seven days war. They would blow Iran back to the days of the crusades should they be so stupid as to attack them.
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        • Posted by RonC 9 years ago
          first of all, "Stupid is as Stupid does", and I don't think any one can make a case for rational thinking regarding the Iranian theocracy.

          Second, throwing National Sovereignty aside for a "fixed or coherent" policy fits perfectly with the concept of One World Government or New World Order. The Iranians would argue that their view of a coherent foreign policy is much better for them than the US idea of coherent. I believe the policy will be set or approved by the UN, negating the need for US congress and ultimately constitutional government...all for the sake of a unified and coherent policy. I believe this will happen because our fearless leader has already floated many trial balloons to test the American people's willingness to surrender their sovereignty. a.) in going after Khadafy, Obama chose to confer with NATO, the UN, and other governments rather than his own congress. b.) during an oil shortage in his first term he acted on the advice of the International Energy Commission to release large quantities of oil from our strategic reserve. These decisions were not the business of foreign influences until our leader chose to allow this influence, or maybe preferred to respond to world influence. More recently, he writes in secret to the Ayatollahs to pave the way for his great "agreement" with Iran and openly leaks plans to seek approval from the UN, rather than seek advice and consent from the Senate.

          I already know I am a knuckle dragging Neanderthal when compared with "Mr. Nuance", John Cary. A student of the dynamics of free markets, human nature, and the freedom offered by the US Constitution could never understand something as complex as US foreign policy. I'll stipulate all of that. However, I am a US citizen before I am a world citizen. I read my Constitution often and marvel at the simple language guaranteeing my freedom from government and sovereignty, both personal and as a Nation. I don't see a benefit gained from losing it.

          It is true wars are fought differently these days. Wars once were fought to win, and to the victor went the spoils. Now wars are fought to feed the military/industrial complex, relieve local political pressures, topple unfriendly regimes, and most important, there can never be a clear winner; we must fight to a draw. That is a dreadful waste of blood and treasure, and nothing is really solved.

          My bottom line is we should run our railroad and let the rest of the world run theirs. If that results in a conflict between Israel and Iran, they will solve it. Our involvement only leads to the next crisis of resentment in the area. The more energy independent we become, the less relevant the middle east problems are in out life. Truly, if the whole region becomes nuclear that's fine, until they come our way. Then, if they really want to go nuclear, maybe we would be justified in giving them more nuclear energy in a day than they can comprehend. Just an armed society is a polite society, the Saudi's having a nuke may do more for Iran's behavior than anything we have to offer.
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  • Posted by richrobinson 9 years, 1 month ago
    We know we are being lied to. The question is how bad is this "deal". I'm wondering if this announcement is being made so that we stop paying attention. The thinking may be that if we believe a deal is reached and all they have to do is type it up and sign it that it's all over. I hope the main stream press continues to cover this story.
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