DUBAI (Reuters) - Kuwait’s defense minister said it has received a letter from the Commander in Chief of a U.S. military camp in Kuwait “declaring imminent withdrawal of all U.S. military forces in three days,” state news agency KUNA said on Wednesday.
“Receiving such [a] letter from Camp Arifjan was unexpected and we are communicating with U.S. Department of Defense for more details and information,” KUNA reported the minister as saying.
TEHRAN, Iran — Kuwait says its state-run KUNA news agency’s Twitter account was hacked and posted false story on US troops withdrawing from the nation.Kuwait made the announcement Wednesday after the fake alert went out on its account, drawing widespread attention.
When it comes to Christians, it's because of the Bible.Why do some Christians and Muslims hate Jews? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So when Pilate saw that he was gaining nothing, but rather that a riot was beginning, he took water and washed his hands before the crowd, saying, “I am innocent of this man’s blood;[a] see to it yourselves.” 25 And all the people answered, “His blood be on us and on our children!”
Congratulations! You got yourself the First Trump war.It’s happening. — NOS4A2
Well, we have the promise from Trump to attack 52 targets, and luckily a flip-flop from him on the cultural targets, so I guess Persepolis will be intact (if ruins can be intact) after this war. It's a tit for tat, which others than the neocons, Israel and the Saudis aren't so excited about:Now that Iran has casually shot missiles at American bases in Iraq, and with Iraq already demanding that these bases be gone, I wonder what the next improvised response is supposed to be? The assassination of another Soleimani? — alcontali
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif tweeted that Iran was finished fighting and was not actively pursuing any kind of escalation to the conflict.
"Iran took & concluded proportionate measures in self-defense under Article 51 of UN Charter targeting base from which cowardly armed attack against our citizens & senior officials were launched," Zarif tweeted. "We do not seek escalation or war, but will defend ourselves against any aggression."
“It’s hard to remember now, but as recently as last week, most people didn’t consider Iran an imminent threat,” Mr. Carlson said at the start of his Monday show, going on to mock Mr. Trump’s secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, for saying intelligence agencies had identified an undefined Iranian threat.
“Seems like about 20 minutes ago, we were denouncing these people as the ‘deep state’ and pledging never to trust them again without verification,” Mr. Carlson told viewers, eyebrow arched. “Now, for some reason, we do trust them — implicitly and completely.”
Yes. It already was in a deep political turmoil and now likely will be a renewed battlefield with such confusion that nobody can figure it out. Which I guess is the objective. After all, the ISIS thing was just to be over, so what everybody needs is a new reason for fighting.Iraq is now militia-land, just like Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, and Somalia. — alcontali
This is the fear everybody has about Trump. Nobody believes that Trump would even consider preparing some coherent plan or form an alliance. What he basically is now doing is waiting for the countermove from Iran. In my view for Iran the best response would be to spend time and work on those nukes as much as they can and try to get Iraq really to go with it's Parliaments decision of sending the US troops home. If Trump really responds with sanctions on Iraq, it's a win for Iran.Risky to make bluffs that have your own guys contradicting you, especially when those guys are the ones you'll need to rely on for military action. — Baden
You're not alone with this. I'm really starting to question if the country has anymore an effective foreign policy. Other commentators have made similar remarks especially about the State Department. It is simply a mess.the US is looking more dazed and confused than tough at the moment. — Baden
It is the most astonishing thing about US foreign policy: that the sole Superpower goes is so much influenced and controlled by a small country, which is the closest ally by only defends it's own interests. It's simply crazy if you ask me. But when you have AIPAC and especially the Evangelicals with their insane beliefs, that's what you have. It's just about getting the votes and a twisted Overton window on what can be even said about the Mid-East policy in general.Obama seemed to have been better at juggling with Israel's pressure on the USA "to do something" about Iran. Israel is very selfish and will drag the USA without hesitation into adventures that are not in its best interest. — alcontali
I think he's milking the "outrage" factor with this. He wants to be seen as this "no-nonse" tough guy and for him it works if democrats and lefties get "outraged" by his rhetoric. That's the method. Everything is just about the next elections.Stupid of Trump to threaten terrorist attacks on cultural sites. Even the Pentagon told him to fuck off. If he's trying to unite the world, including his own armed forces against him, he's succeeding. — Baden
I agree with this totally. This is the stupidity of Trump as the Obama agreement was indeed a better option. But the bad thing was that it was done by Obama, so for Trump it had to be bad. This is the crazyness of Trump. When it comes to Iran, he's been a hawk right from the start. It's a thing many Trump supporters haven't noticed in their daydreams about Donald.The only way to avoid war now, is for Iran to urgently acquire a nuclear arsenal along with the ballistic missiles to strike anywhere on the globe. Hence, for Iran, it is a race against time now. By the way, Iran should obviously have done that a long time ago already. — alcontali
I think this is unlikely.Another possible solution for Iran is to place itself under the Russian nuclear umbrella. If anybody strikes at Iran, the Russian Federation will immediately and without hesitation strike back. I think that this is to some extent already the case anyway. — alcontali
International tribunals give bad vibes to Trump supporters.wouldn't they have to hold an international tribunal and declare him a war criminal? — ernestm
I don't think that's likely.If the US goes to war, it might become a bit tricky, again he will face both ways, deceiving the public, while sending British troops anyway. — Punshhh
You noticed it too? Not something that is on the first page, but ought to be. Trump is already contemplating sanctions against Iraq if they go through with this.And now OUR OWN PUPPET GOVERNMENT wants us out of Iraq, which they really have to do to keep peace with their neighbor! — ernestm
The Fukuyaman moment of "End of History" was a different kind of hubris, but still hubris just like 'Manifest Destiny' with similar ideas of inescapable outcomes and inherent virtue. It's there perhaps with the hubristic idea of globalization and economic growth as a cure for everthing, which especially was (and is) rampant in the EU. The EU simply assumed that "all you need is economic growth, and that comes through integration, intergration and more integration and also through globalization". Well, globalization isn't only blessing and integration is difficult and isn't a cure for all. That the EU is a bag of independent nations with their own cultures didn't matter to the internationalist elites either: Let's just assume everything can be answered by bureaucrats in Brussells. Let's create EU unity with a flag and stealing from Beethoven "Ode to Joy" to be the "anthem" of the EU. Not so. People relate to their nation states, not the EU.But when your bureaucrats and globalists told us they created the end of history, they gave us the clash of civilizations instead. Trump is left to clean up their mess and he’s doing a damn good job of it. — NOS4A2
Careful what you wish for.That’s the way it should be, in my opinion. The US needs to step away from the world stage, and especially leave that pile of dust to its inhabitants. We no longer require their oil, their workers, their ancient tribalisms. — NOS4A2
The US has been the biggest economy for a long time. The only thing is that it isn't as dominant as it was in the 1950's, when Europe was still rebuilding and China was destroying itself with Communism. I'm not forgetting my own point. US foreign policy has morphed to unilateral bullying without any kind of long term thinking behind it. It doesn't care a shit about it's own allies or bother creating alliances. Now with the Trump yesmen alongside Trump, it's just one disaster lead by tweets. I have no clue what they are doing...and likely the Trump administration hasn't either. It's just reactions to things that happen.But other than that you’re putting words in my mouth and forgetting your own point, about how some time ago the US was really a leader in the World. — NOS4A2
This is actually a myth.That’s right, and now the other members have to pay their fair share, because thankless Europeans have been benefitting from American defense and money for the past 70 years and have hardly anything to show for it. — NOS4A2
Leaders ought to think how they can get their team to work for the common objective. A leader isn't someone who unilaterally decides to do something and bullies others that if they don't oblige, they will be working with the enemy. That simply isn't leadership.Yes, a leader would rethink these alliances, especially if they prove to be a waste of time, resources and money. — NOS4A2
WSJIraqi Parliament votes to expel U.S. troops from the country, after airstrike that killed top Iranian military leader
I think that finally many of them start to be tired of being called hypocrites (by supporting Trump and saying that they are also for Christian values/virtues). I think another reason is that the shadow of Hillary is fading away. You simply cannot now start defending Trump by saying how worse Hillary would have been. 2016 is ancient history.Funnily enough, I read recently that Trump was losing support among Evangelicals and the religious in general and was concerned to shore that up. Maybe he cussed too much or something. Anyway, I like the angle. Something adroitly fucked up about it. — Baden
Wrong.The US is more a leader now than it ever was. Number one economy, number one energy producer, number one military force on the globe. — NOS4A2
And this shows how illogical and incoherent this is. Isn't that 'defence of the West' that you are supposed to be so tired of? And why would there even have to be a Leader country? Still, other countries would be just fine if the US would show leadership. But no. You won't do that.The US has effectively defended the West while Europe had to rebuild itself from its disastrous century of wars. It’s pretty clear the US is still the world leader, if not by choice, then at least because no one else has stepped up to the plate. — NOS4A2
Not perfectly though. I can't plot a positive economic or strategic outcome to this for the US ruling classes that beats sticking with the Iran deal and encouraging progressive forces in the country. Maybe I lack a sufficiently Machiavellian imagination or something. Anyone here see a war being good for the US? — Baden
I've come to the conclusion the US foreign policy doesn't exist anymore.Why do we have a fortress embassy in Iraq in the first place? We should have left years ago. We never should have gone in. I'm in total despair about what passes for US foreign policy. — fishfry
Actually Trump also bombed his own allies. But I guess it works great. See how well it worked with Pakistan, your former ally.Putin has such a grip on Trump that Trump keeps bombing Putin’s allies. — NOS4A2
Lol. The one's in a tough spot are the Americans. Already Americans are fleeing Iraq. We'll see if they can still hang on to Iraq, or if we see them being kicked out. Might happen, might not, let's see later today.Nature has a way of ending beefs. The strongest wins.
It puts the Ayatollah in a tough sport. Fight back and be demolished. Or do nothing and lose your credibility. — NOS4A2
Iraq’s Speaker of Parliament Mohammed al-Halbousi condemned on Friday a U.S. air strike in Baghdad that killed Iran’s most powerful general and a top Iraqi Shi’ite militia commander as a breach of sovereignty.
“Yesterday’s targeting of a military commander in Iraq’s armed forces near Baghdad international airport is a flagrant breach of sovereignty and violation of international agreements,” he said in a statement.
“Iraq must avoid becoming a battlefield or a side in any regional or international conflict,” he added. Halbousi, who as speaker is Iraq’s top Sunni Arab politician, called on the government to take all steps needed to stop such attacks.
Iraq’s parliament will hold an extraordinary session on Sunday to discuss the U.S. air strike in Baghdad which killed Iran’s Quds Force leader Qassem Soleimani and Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, it said on Friday.
Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi called on lawmakers to hold an emergency session and address the attack, which he called a violation of sovereignty.
“One sure result of the U.S. strike is that the era of U.S.-Iraq cooperation is over,” Richard N. Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former American diplomat, wrote on Twitter. “The U.S. diplomatic & mil presence will end b/c Iraq asks us to depart or our presence is just a target or both. The result will be greater Iranian influence, terrorism and Iraqi infighting.”
I'm not sure if you have missed it, but this is a total disaster.Am I missing anything? — Baden
Yeah, Jeffjo, how isn't it what you said? (Hint: see first line in the quote above)Look, we've got your point, Jeffjo. — ssu
No, I really don't think you do. Or at least, you have shown no evidence of it.
The point of the evolution you misinterpret is to determine if the set T is internally consistent. — JeffJo
No. It's the inconsistency between two or more axioms in the axiomatic system, which make the system inconsistent. — ssu
And how is that not what I said? — JeffJo — JeffJo
Great! So you admit that what you said was a philosophical statement.It is a statement about philosophy, not a statement in math. — JeffJo
Infinity is quite useful in mathematics. Doesn't everything in math exist in our minds?Infinity is just an abstract concept that exists in our minds. — Devans99
Yes, what does it indeed mean? What is the thing that transcendental numbers bring to this? It's a great question.He looked at the infinity of the natural numbers and noted it follows a particular pattern. He called that pattern aleph-zero, claimed it was a number and that it was possible to do arithmetic with it. He then proceeded to examine the infinity of reals, noted that they cannot be put into one-to-one correspondence with the naturals hence had a different fundamental pattern. — Devans99
I fully agree. The whole notion of talk at the 'national level' is difficult. After all, the whole idea of nationhood is invented, yet however 'artificial' people say it is, it is quite real. And a functioning idea of a nation joins together quite different views on just what that nation is about.I said above that the shift to discussing morals at the nation level is problematic since these are not groups with a single set of morals. — Coben
At least I'm not saying that. The vast majority of people will make sacrifices that cannot be said to be done in self-interest, and there you can observe just how complex humans interacting in societies are to compared to anything else.I think it is a mistake to view morals as, really, just self-interest. That's where I came into the argument. This is now being taken as me advocating for moral crusades. — Coben
Not actually.Even if a war with the US would likely be one sided and devastating. — Coben
The existence of national sovereignty or the existence of the state is usually that "higher value". After all, extremely seldom does the enemy literally think of genocidal extermination of the people and to make an "artificial desert" of the area. (Even if that has happened in history, unfortunately)Of course. I just don't think we can rule out countries and certainly not groups choosing to put themselves at risk for a higher value. Higher according to them. — Coben
And the most evil things people can do is when opposing 'evil'. Evil in itself implies that one cannot understand it, one cannot reason it. Otherwise one oneself would be evil too. Fighting evil means that you have a firm view that you are right and that your opponent is wrong. Not wrong in the way that his objective as bad, but that they are wrong also in moral terms. This goes to the heart to the issue how you face "an enemy": is your opponent a person fighting on the other side, following his or her flag and people, is your opponent just an advocate of an ideology you don't believe in or is he or she truly evil.I do think however that groups are willling to fight what they consider evil, even if given the option not to. — Coben
Lol. Well, they took it back so I guess that the cadre was very small. And as Fishfry commented earlier, this experiment wasn't just limited to my country (Finland), but the US too. I'd suspect that we copied the 'new trends' during those progressive times from the US. From the viewpoint of teaching small children math, starting with counting sheep is the way to go. It is the natural way, I'd argue.Did this set theory experiment simply not work at all, or did it produce some small cadre of math geniuses? — boethius
I think this is a bigger philosophical problem for mathematics. Basically mathematics has evolved from the necessity of counting, calculating and computation. Hence 'applied math' came first. Abstract mathematical thought has emerged only later. This makes us start mathematics from the natural numbers.In teaching maths, I think it is important to make a clear distinction between pure (abstract) maths and applied (to the real world) maths. It is the conflation of the two that causes problems.
Of course children first learn maths with the conflated maths; counting sheep etc. But perhaps around the time they enter secondary school ( around age 13) the distinction needs to be emphasised. — A Seagull
Countries can explain and justify made decisions by a moral stand, but that justification hardly is the reason why they would do something that puts them into peril. With something that isn't as dangerous, isn't very risky, one can indeed put what is morally right on a pedestal on go with that because of domestic politics.I think we can say Britain took a moral stand which its leaders knew was taking a direct and immediate risk regarding their countries sovreignty. — Coben
No. It's the inconsistency between two or more axioms in the axiomatic system, which make the system inconsistent. Your assumptions what others think are incorrect here.The point of the evolution you misinterpret is to determine if the set T is internally consistent. — JeffJo
Hmm. And in just what category would you put your idea presented here btw? :wink:What was said, is that Math accepts no absolute truths. — JeffJo
I've always said that Trump in his ineptness of leadership, inability to govern or make his own administration to work makes everything so evident, clear and so obvious. Every truthful book and article paint the same Picture of this guy.More details on same. — Wayfarer
What is clear is that it all came down to the president and what he wanted; no one else appears to have supported his position. Although the pretext for the hold was that some sort of policy review was taking place, the emails make no mention of that actually happening. Instead, officials were anxiously waiting for the president to be convinced that the hold was a bad idea. And while the situation continued throughout the summer, senior defense officials were searching for legal guidance, worried they would be blamed should the hold be lifted too late to actually spend all of the money, which would violate the law.
The problem is that no math course has enough time to really take the time. Usually it's just "here's the proof, there, I showed it to you, now use this algorithm".My beef is that the real numbers are introduced too early in education. Infinite processes and essentially 100% of numbers being infinitely complex are, though perhaps can be dealt with abstract rules, too difficult to conceptually grasp for most high school students. — boethius
I agree.Not only do the foundations shift, but mathematics rolls along like a giant intellectual snowball, gathering layer after layer of new concepts and theory, a plethora of results that can be bewildering even to an expert in a specific area. I was in a classical area, complex analysis, for years, and still dabble in elementary research, but these days I can hardly understand the titles of papers in that subject. — jgill
The problem is transportation. You can have electric cars, but aviation represents a problem.Beware, however: Abandoning fossil fuels will NOT be easy. There is no substitute for oil, in terms of molecules that are energy-rich and the basis of a vast amount of chemistry that composes the feedstock of many types of production. The world economy is organized dependence on fossil fuels. — Bitter Crank
There are two very basic falsehoods and obvious myths that persist in US politics and with a large section of American voters.That sentiment is one consequence of the problems I'm speaking about. When neither candidate from either party is willing to tackle the underlying corruption, and all that that entails - head on - and all effected/affected Americans see the quality of life erode right before their eyes as a result... You get apathetic voters. — creativesoul
So why vote for either party? A What legislation you specifically have in mind?Both parties have enacted legislation that caused and is still causing demonstrable financial harm to American citizens. — creativesoul
He has a history of other quite dubious things, but who cares about the "character issue" anymore? We have had plenty of his 'character' as President. I'd concentrate on his presidency.Trump's claims about supporting American workers are bullshit, pure and unadulterated. He has a history of breaching contracts and using undocumented workers in lieu of American workers. — creativesoul
If you have record low unemployment, then salaries ought to rise. Yet then again it's a sign that the business cycle is reaching it's peak.But democrats have embraced identity politics in more recent years, to the detriment of the worker in my opinion. — NOS4A2
Playing it too much for the 'woke' crowd indeed can alienate the traditional blue-collar workers.But democrats have embraced identity politics in more recent years, to the detriment of the worker in my opinion. — NOS4A2
