Thread: War and the United States
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April 15th 2010, 02:34 PM #16
Re: War and the United States
Ha! I got you beat. I voted against Bush the first time. I voted libertarian. The second time around I did vote for Bush because of the Libertarian stance on the war (that I now agree with).
I pretty much agree with all of that (except about the bad arguments from the Repubs on health care. Not that they didn't have some stinkers, but none that were bad enough to make me go the other way.)The Iraq War happened in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. America felt a new sense of vulnerability. The Patriot Act was actually a more reasonable response because the 9/11 attacks had nothing to do with WMDs or foreign state sponsorship of attacks. 9/11 was about Muslim terrorists coming up with a clever way to kill Americans with the tools already here in the States. The Patriot Act was intended to improve the effectiveness of US Intelligence in detecting and disrupting such attacks. (Obviously some of the details of the Patriot Act are of questionable effectiveness relative to loss of civil rights.)
But there was another result: the worry that hostile states could assist terrorist groups with technology. This despite the fact that such assistance was just proven unnecessary. Saddam Hussein was well known for both his anti-American rhetoric and his unwillingness to cooperate with international inspection teams. There was plausible (but not solid) intelligence that he may have been developing usable WMDs. He had also murdered a number of his own people. A real awful guy all around. Of no small significance, he wasn't well liked by religious Muslims, so attacking him would be much less risky than attacking Saudi Arabia (where the 9/11 hijackers came from).
From the average war-supporting citizen's point of view, Iraq was about the military kicking some butt in the name of protecting America from terrorists...even though the connection was very tenuous. Bush constantly talked about 9/11 and Iraq in the same sentences which strengthened the conceptual connection without actually saying Iraq was connected. From the administration's point of view, Iraq was about trying to gain political power in the region by setting up a friendly democracy.
Opposition was most noticeably focusing on bad-faith style arguments. The US just wanted Iraq's oil. Bush wanted to continue the fight on behalf of his father. Bush knowingly sold the war on false evidence. That kind of thing. These arguments pushed me in favor of the war because they were so bad. (Same as how terrible Republican arguments against the health care bill pushed me to support it.) The better arguments against the war recognized that Bush may have been acting in good faith and that encouraging democracy may in itself be a good thing, but questioned spending so much in money and lives to meddle in the affairs of another country. Neither the arguments for nation building nor for attacking countries antagonistic to the USA were being applied in a principled way.
That's why I say Iraq was more about being a relatively easy target with a regime no one would defend than a real threat to American lives. In fact, it probably cost more American lives to attack Iraq than it would have to continue with a diplomatic posture.
It is speculation or, as you put it "personal assessment", but I think it probably accurate.Where is human nature so weak as in the bookstore?- Henry Ward Beecher
"I agree fully with all Faramir has said" - Dee Dee Warren
“Duty…is the sublimest word in our language. Do your duty in all things…. You cannot do more; you should never wish to do less.” -- Robert E. Lee
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April 15th 2010, 03:14 PM #17
Re: War and the United States
I sincerely applaud the level-headedness you have on this, Sea. So many people (liberals, in particular) appeal to character assassination when they critique Bush policy. To me, the explanation you provided there in the second paragraph makes so much more sense than, "Bush lied." All the people working for him told him the same thing: Saddam's got weapons. Saddam hates America. Put two and two together, George. Whether you think the evidence was solid or not is not my point...it's just silly to claim he intentionally tried to deceive the American people.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
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April 15th 2010, 04:57 PM #18
Re: War and the United States
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April 15th 2010, 05:00 PM #19
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Male - ChristianRe: War and the United States
Amen!
Saddam had every opportunity to dialogue - it was not a "sudden attack". He perpetuated the myth (if you want to call it that) that he had WMD. He constantly manipulated and obfuscated the efforts of the International Community to prevent them from determining the intent of his "technology" research.
You can find, if you bother to look, numerous quotes from some of Bush's greatest critics who said, prior to the war, Iraq had WMD. They expressed it in absolute terms.Last edited by Cow Poke; April 15th 2010 at 05:20 PM.
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April 15th 2010, 05:13 PM #20
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Undisclosed - WiccanRe: War and the United States
Bush was not, and is not, intellectually inept.
Bush would have, in my opinion, been a stellar peacetime president. Before 9/11, he was doing a good job--not without mistakes, certainly, but I don't believe I've ever heard a constitutional requirement that the president be superhuman.
After 9/11, however, the picture changed. The Bush administration was in over its head, but in all reality, I do not think that any person or administration could possibly have faced the events of that day, and the resulting necessary political paradigm shifts, and handled them in a flawless manner. It is doubly foolish to expect that the changes necessitated would please all parties.
Bush did the best he could do--and while I disagree with many of the specific things that were done, in the end, that is all we can ask of our elected officials.Life sometimes needs to be grabbed by the throat and beaten with a lead pipe. ~ Sir Longpost, a good friend of mine.
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April 15th 2010, 05:55 PM #21
Re: War and the United States
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April 15th 2010, 05:59 PM #22
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April 15th 2010, 06:09 PM #23
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Undisclosed - Wiccan
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April 15th 2010, 06:11 PM #24
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April 15th 2010, 06:15 PM #25
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Undisclosed - WiccanRe: War and the United States
Never hurts? Absolutely, and I do thank you for it. But if I had to choose between the truth and the condemnation of every single person on the globe, three guesses which I would choose--and the first two don't count.
Veritas contra mundi.Life sometimes needs to be grabbed by the throat and beaten with a lead pipe. ~ Sir Longpost, a good friend of mine.
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April 15th 2010, 06:24 PM #26
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Male - Christian
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April 15th 2010, 06:25 PM #27
Re: War and the United States
"There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact." Mark Twain. 'Life on the Mississippi'
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April 15th 2010, 07:57 PM #28
Re: War and the United States
"... engage your brain before you engage your weapon." - Gen. James Mattis, USMC
I don't care how systematic your theology is until you show me how biblical it is.
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April 15th 2010, 08:06 PM #29
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Undisclosed - WiccanRe: War and the United States
Oy! Thinking of Gore (or Kerry) in office is absolutely terrifying. Gore may have done more-or-less as well as Bush before 9/11, but after? The mind boggles.
Don't get me wrong--again, I think Gore would have done his best. I'm just not certain his best would have been even as good as Bush.Life sometimes needs to be grabbed by the throat and beaten with a lead pipe. ~ Sir Longpost, a good friend of mine.
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April 15th 2010, 09:10 PM #30
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