Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Perplexed Politicians don't understand why majority of public does not want war with Syria.

The same out of touch politicians who can't be bothered to learn about the lack of debt suspension rights for consumers are shocked that the majority of the U.S. public does not want a war with Syria over the alleged Syrian government chemical bombing of their own populace.

I would suggest that the U.S government's inability to catch up with social media rules is the underlying reason. The U.S. still demands complete compliance and secrecy with all it's own secret actions, even if those actions are questionable or illegal, but wants sympathy and support when other governments do wrong.

The U.S. condemns Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden for leaking secrets of potential wrong doing but wants full support when another country does wrong against its own peoples.  

When does the U.S. begin to be more transparent?

When the day of more meaningful transparency occurs, than that is probably the day when more people would want the U.S. involved in Syria.

I personally would also like to see drones used to spy and collect data in potential hotspots, and that information shared with the public on an ongoing basis until it becomes rather obvious the present Syrian regime needs to be replaced.  

We have drones to bomb places but not to spot sarin gas being used? I would suggest our drone priorities are misplaced.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Besides commenting on the articles you can also leave a comment if you would like your occupy blog listed, it's free.

OCCUPY THE WORLD

About Me

My photo
I've created a Credit Card Product that can reverse the record setting 1.1 trillion dollars in consumer credit card debt at record high interest rates. Saving So Help Me Todd is my present passion, as is helping unfairly Banned by Linkedin Members get back on LinkedIn. Past passions have included winning a Los Angeles Emmy and also an Internship Scholarship from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences; Creating the "Legalize Los Angeles Home Based Business Video" that was viewed by City Council staff before LA City council voted 12-1 to pass legalizing Los Angeles Home Based Businesses in 1997; and having an incredibly low budgeted Opera Video win a Los Angeles Emmy that was featured in a successful campaign to approve a 75 million Education bill for the Santa Monica area.

My Blog List