04-17-2005, 12:58 PM | #1 (permalink) | ||||||||||||
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What Do You KNOW About The Status of Post War Iraq or of the War on Terror?
Please read this post before you reply.
I have presented the current story concerning the news report that the Bush administration has decided to stop publishing the yearly report on terrorism, and the reports surrounding the release and revision of last year's report. I have presented references from reliable sources that report that the Bush administration assessments and reporting on key matters, the status of the direction of global terrorism, the progress in training of Iraqi security forces, the status/progress of Iraqi electrical energy production, (after $1 billion has been spent to increase it.) and the Bush restatements of the mission in Iraq. What is it that Bush administration supporters or apologists, "know" that enables them to defend or support the Bush admin. with such certainty ? What am I missing ? Am I "over researching", instead of accepting Bush admin. PR at face value? Are all the conflicting reports, the ones that indicate that the war on terrorism is being lost, that there are no reliable figures concerning the progress of Iraqi security force training, and that Iraq produced less megawatts of power recently, than it did the week after the invasion, two years ago, to be ignored ? Bottomline.....is there a point when you will become concerned that your support of Bush and his admin.'s policies will undermine your own credibility ? What has this administration been correct about ? Quote:
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04-17-2005, 02:09 PM | #2 (permalink) | |
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Do a google for "petrodollar vs petroeuro".
It's surpising to note that in 2000 Saddam insisted that all oil from Iraq be paid for with Euros. Hostilities soon escalated. In 2003, Iran announced an intention to build an Iranian Oil 'bourse' that would compete with the IPE in London and the NYMEX oil exchanges and its primary trade currency would be the Euro. Soon after that, Pres. Bush announced plans to take action, citing that they were building nuclear weapons. Iran does,however, have a nuclear power network. Quote:
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04-17-2005, 02:25 PM | #3 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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04-17-2005, 03:23 PM | #4 (permalink) | ||
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questions that I asked in the thread starter. Here is a more recent report concerning Iraqi electrical energy production: Quote:
Iraq, or in the "war on terror", compared to it's statements of aims and accomplishments, and..... how do you know? How do you know what to tell your elected representatives as to voting for further appropriations that will finance Bush administration goals in Iraq and in the "war on terror? |
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04-17-2005, 05:11 PM | #5 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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What have the Bush admin accomplished in Iraq? Are you serious?
1) Fastest advance of an army in the history of history during wartime. 2) Bringing democracy back to Iraq 3) Ending state-funded massacres of Shi'ia and Kurds I'll give you the fact that the rebuilding is going exceptionally slow, and it needs to be put on a higher priority. I just ask you, how do you expect to protect EVERY bridge, EVERY portion of EVERY powerline. EVERY water main. Hell we have problems holding that down here in the US and there's no insurgency with the intent of holding it down. I'm not behind the admin fully on this, they need to hire more native Iraqi's to repair these, to bring back the employment and get them to feel more of a pride for their country. But to take every chance to stab at them, while ignoring the good they've done is blind partisanship. |
04-17-2005, 06:47 PM | #6 (permalink) | |
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1.) I cannot determine what information releases from the Bush administration concerning the invasion of Iraq, the "war on terror", the rebuilding of Iraq, (and for that matter..... the status of the SSI trust fund, the job performances of "Freedom Medal" winners George Tenet and Paul Bremer, the numbers of "foreign fighters" in Iraq, determinations of pollutant hazards, efficacy and safety of new drugs, hazards in the food suppy, i.e. MCD, what actually happened on 9/11 and who was responsible, the soundness of the currency, the impact on the treasury of proposed and enacted tax cuts, and other issues too numerous to detail here, are or are not reliable. 2.) Judging by my observations of the last four years, starting with the almost immediate post 2001 innaugaral executive order that restricted the scheduled releases of past president's files, and arriving at the article that I posted above thar describes Rice's order to cease publication of the yearly terrorism report, it appears that the Bush admin. does not want me to be able to make my own determinations, and that it is actively impeding my efforts to do so. If my reaction to this curious and disturbing departure from past administrations can be brushed aside by you, as "blind partisanship", then I have to conclude that you are accepting and blissful in your Bush admin. orchestrated ingnorance as far as the issues and performance of our government. I am not. |
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04-17-2005, 09:33 PM | #7 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Indiana
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Yes the war on iraq and terror is a complete disaster. We are creating more terrorists by the day. I think they lie so much they believe themselves. I like how Powell says the report was flawed. It seems like every report that comes out that isn't pro war, or that the wars are improving is "flawed."
It seems like these wars are really going no where. We are just fed 'we are fighting for freedom, don't ask questions' it starts to get old. And to think we are gearing up for Iran over the same thing as Iraq |
04-17-2005, 10:36 PM | #8 (permalink) | |||||
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This is a peculiar, disconnected time in history. Things will go along like this until they don't. The absurdities in national/world politics that no one seems to want to focus on now, are not confined to this end of the English speaking world, either. This season of misinformation and incompetence seems to be a deliberate and collaborative effort of equally inept British and American government extremists and their propagandists: Quote:
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04-17-2005, 11:22 PM | #9 (permalink) |
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i applaud your research, and your work of posting. you ask excellent questions. and your observations about 'erring on the side of life' and the "n word" are right on the money.
Sadly, I doubt anyone on the 'right' will respond in any real way. The facts are clear - the trend is obvious. And yet many refuse to see either. Peculiar, indeed. |
04-18-2005, 12:46 AM | #10 (permalink) |
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Personally?
I think the US and UK administrations have their own agenda and in some ways I can understand them covering up or spinning intel to mask real reasons for action. The only time it's justified is to prevent mass hysteria and panic. But the result is a lack of faith in the government and a lack of trust on their behalf of the public willing to back them on tough issues if they told the truth. I constantly feel like I'm being told not to ask questions by a well-intentioned parent who doesn't realise I can understand the situation enough to make my own mind up. |
04-18-2005, 07:43 AM | #11 (permalink) |
Born Against
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Since host's quotes are a bit lengthy, let me summarize them briefly:
--The State Department has published, annually, a definitive document called "Patterns of Global Terrorism" since 1986. The general public can see all these publications as PDF files here: http://www.mipt.org/Patterns-of-Global-Terrorism.asp These publications have always been the definitive source on terrorism acts and statistics. --There are two versions of the report: one is classified and is required by law to be submitted to Congress by April 30 each year. The other is unclassified and made available to the public. There is no law requiring the unclassified version to be published. --A former CIA analyst by the name of Larry Johnson found out somehow that the unclassified issue for 2004 was blocked from publication. He also got a copy of it and found that it reported 655 terrorist attacks last year, the most ever reported for one year over the entire history of these reports. That number was corroborated by several other current intelligence agents who have seen the report. --Larry Johnson found that the main reason for the jump in the numbers was a different method of counting used in 2004. That means that you can't really compare the 2004 numbers to those of the past. And most of the attacks (at least 300) occurred in India in the Kashmir region. The sharp increase was not caused by Islamic extremists; in fact if anything the number of attacks by Islamic extremists might have been lower in 2004. You can read more in Larry Johnson's excellent Counterterrorism Blog here: http://counterterror.typepad.com/the.../14/index.html --The Bush administration has admitted that the unclassified version of the report has been eliminated and will no longer be published in the future. Condoleeza Rice's office ordered that the publication be killed. --The classified version is still mandated by law, and will be submitted this year on schedule to Congress. --A different unclassified version will be released to the public under a different name. This new unclassified version will contain no statistics on the number of terrorist attacks. I think it is rather obvious that politics was the reason the annual report was blocked from public view. It would be a major embarrassment to the administration because it implies that terrorism has skyrocketed under Bush's watch. But those are the best numbers we have. They should be published. The fact that a new and better method of counting is used is irrelevant. It would be very easily to published the results from the old method and the new method side by side for comparison. Theoretically, Congress could write another bill that requires the annual statistics to be published for the general populace. But as long as Bush is president, that will never happen. |
04-18-2005, 10:59 AM | #12 (permalink) | ||
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Thanks for the summary, raveneye
Bottom line here: No one will ever convice me that the Iraqis are somehow worse off now than when they had a muderous psychopath as a leader. It may not be disneyworld over there, but at least we've changed some of it for the better. However, I will concede, they did lie about why we went over there. We had a million and one good reasons to go over there and take out Saddam, but instead Bush chose to make one up. Quote:
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04-18-2005, 11:18 AM | #13 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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What I know is that our actions have led to terrorist activities rising, not falling. Our 'war on terror' is failing day by day. The more invaded Middle Eastern countries = more people resorting to terrorism. Our wrong begets their wrong. It's a vicious cycle that will only end when one side finally realizes that they need to brake the chain. One thing you have to realize is that America doesn't lose if we stop killing Middle Easterners. The terrorists don't win if we leave Iraq or the Middle East. |
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04-18-2005, 12:02 PM | #14 (permalink) |
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Also, Saddam maybe wrong, but he's been telling his people that the US is the enemy for decades.
20 year olds have grown up, possibly under the threat of the secret police if they didn't agree with Saddam, but regardless of what Saddam did, to them he spoke the truth about the Americans and the English. Even now he's gone, the seeds of what he's sown have a very fertile field to grow in. |
04-18-2005, 12:21 PM | #15 (permalink) | ||
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<h2>How Do You Know?</h2> This administration seems to have a policy of not wanting you to know. Check what they say and compare it to what you can find out on your own. The Bush administration has distorted the record at nearly every opportunity. Simplistic sloganeering about who is good and who is bad is a poor substitute for the work that it takes to fully shape a reliable outlook regarding post Nixon national policy and politics. The dead and the wounded pile up, and American influence and treasure bleed out because of an appalling lack of curiousity and cognition on the part of many voters in America. We'll soon see if voters in the U.K. also suffer from the Saddan=bad, Bush & Blair=good, myopia. Quote:
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04-18-2005, 12:34 PM | #16 (permalink) | |
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Folks, if Saddam was a "murderous psychopath", who "gassed his own people", and thus the U.S. was justified in an unprovoked invasion of Iraq that has resulted in the overthrow of his government by the force of the U.S. military, and the deaths of at minimum, 17,000 Iraqi civilians, and in the physical destruction of much of Iraq, what say you of the Reagan and Bush I administrations, who not only supplied Saddam with the chemical and biological weapons stocks and the technical knowhow to make and to use them, but turned a blind eye to Saddam's "gassing his own people", and continued to provide him with military support, intelligence info, and diplomatic relations. By your own "rules", are Rumsfeld, Bush I, and former members of the Reagan admin. not enablers and conspirators with the "murderous psychopath", Saddam? |
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04-18-2005, 12:57 PM | #17 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Well the thing about the material support was the US supplied Saddam at the extreme low of the spectrum, links have been posted here from the Stockholm Institute for Peace (I think thats the name) that puts the American contribution at 1% of all weapons supplied behind the Germans, French, and Russians. Wow isn't that a conincidence three of the biggest wars detractors were Saddams biggest weapons suppliers, they also had the most to gain by keeping him in power.
But yeah it is pretty lame that we were behind such a goon, but that was the politics of the time, I suppose we weren't to inclined to care what he did so long as he was putting the hurt on the Iranians.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
04-18-2005, 01:48 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Mattoon, Il
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To back Mojo's claim that we sent very few weapons to Saddam, this link shows that we sent a grand total of 100 helicopters, only 30 of which being light gunships, the others civilian models taken over for Air Force use. Compared to the hundreds of tanks, fighter jets, missiles, armored vehicles, etc. provided by Russia, France, and China, our contribution (of only 1% of the arms) seems quite insignificant.
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Pantera, Shadows Fall, Fear Factory, Opeth, Porcupine Tree, Dimmu Borgir, Watch Them Die, Motorhead, Beyond the Embrace, Himsa, Black Label Society, Machine Head, In Flames, Soilwork, Dark Tranquility, Children of Bodom, Norther, Nightrage, At the Gates, God Forbid, Killswitch Engage, Lamb of God, All That Remains, Anthrax, Mudvayne, Arch Enemy, and Old Man's Child \m/ |
04-18-2005, 02:24 PM | #19 (permalink) |
Born Against
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That SIPRI report of course covers only conventional arms.
The US in addition was the fourth largest supplier to Iraq of sensitive computer and intelligence technology (in purely monetary terms, amounting to $750 million since 1985). In purely technical terms, the U.S. could be seen as first, since no other country had the sophisticated technology that the U.S. gave Iraq. This sophisticated technology was used for a wide variety of purposes in running Saddam's military (e.g. upgrading the Soviet SCUD missiles, and to intercept and deceptively alter images picked up by U.S. spy satellites before the first Gulf War). There may have been transfers of a lot of other military material in secret from the U.S. William Eagleton at least left a paper trail indicating that he advocated setting up a large scale military shipment system from the U.S. to Iraq through third parties such as Egypt, so that the transfers could be hidden. This was in 1983, under Reagan. Yes, other countries did provide nearly all the conventional arms. But all those conventional arms were commanded and operated with the help of U.S. computer and intelligence technology. |
04-18-2005, 04:05 PM | #20 (permalink) | |
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Location: Fort Worth, TX
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04-18-2005, 04:24 PM | #21 (permalink) | |
Born Against
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But in any case, regardless of whom they could have gotten it from, they did get it from the U.S. According to Senate testimony later, the Reagan administration was secretly providing a wide range of technical military assistance to the Iraqis. The Reagan administration was doing this because apparently no other nation was willing and capable. |
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04-18-2005, 04:52 PM | #23 (permalink) | |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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This is one reason why many people around the world are sick of the U.S. We so often do what is in our short-term political interest, with so little thought as to the long-term consequences, that nobody believes us when we want to do good. Can you blame Iraqis or Afghanis, who we have both aided and helped kill for decades, for viewing us skeptically?
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"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
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04-18-2005, 04:57 PM | #25 (permalink) | |
Born Against
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04-18-2005, 05:39 PM | #26 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Indiana
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If a murderous psycopath is defined as someone who kills innocent civilians, has rape rooms, and tortures people, then Saddam is a psycopath. Then you look at what's happened there since we've invaded, thousands of civilians killed, prisoners sodomized and humiliated, and the torture is back. It's bad when Saddam does it, and ok when we do it. I don't understand the logic there. Last edited by samcol; 04-18-2005 at 07:17 PM.. Reason: accepted jolt :) |
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04-18-2005, 06:54 PM | #27 (permalink) | |
Upright
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I believe that even though Saddam did not have WMD's he was trying to make us think he did. He was probably financing terrorists and paying the famlies of suicide bombers. Would you rather defend the US on American soil or on Iraqi soil? But the main point of this point host, is to ask you one question: <h2>How Do You Know?</h2> Don't quote me newspaper articles, my dad (a lawyer) won't even comment to the press anymore because 90% of the time they distort his words to support the article they've already planned to write, or they just don't understand enough about what he is saying to use it correctly. All you have is an impression that our presence in Iraq is making terrorists and found a few journalists who share it. I believe that Iraqis, just like everyone else I know, simply want to live a shrapnel free life and see the benefits of democracy. The New York Times, CBS News, Houston Chronicle - all of these are only symptoms of a major disease in the news media. If you've been there you KNOW, If you know people there you KNOW, otherwise you are simply giving an opinion. That's what most of world politics is about - opinions. Last edited by The Jolt; 04-18-2005 at 07:06 PM.. |
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04-18-2005, 08:37 PM | #29 (permalink) | ||
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Defend America, from what ? You are skeptical about news reporting, but in your skepticism, you make a strong case that it is of vital importance for the Bush administration to release, timely, frank, and reliable reports concerning the rebuilding of Iraq and the status of the war on terror. I know that this is not happening, because journalists' reports of Iraqi electrical production do not collide with reports that our government releases, because it has ceased to release such reports, now that the news is unfavorable. Journalists and the non-partisan GAO agree that Bush admin. info releases concerning the progress in training Iraqi security forces are incomplete and misleading. Now the report to the public on terrorists incidents of the previour year will not be published on the order of Secty of State Rice, because the information that it reports is inconsistant with Bush admin. claims of progress in the "war on terror". I do not have to rely on news reports vs. Bush admin. reports or withholding of reports to make accurate assessments of important events. For example, Hans Blix, Scott Ritter, David Kay, and Charles Duelfer all refuted the assertion that you and the Bush admin. made that "Saddam did not have WMD's he was trying to make us think he did". These weapons inspector's reports, since Dec., 2002, three months before Iraq was invaded, up until Scott Mcllellan's Jan. 12, 2005 press briefing, quoted above, allow me to know well that you still buy into inaccurate opinions very similar to the ones touted by Bush spokespersons and sympathetic media personalities. Saddam complied with the UN in the Dec. 2002 release of 12,000 pages of info concerning the status of Iraqi WMD programs, which turned out, after the US spent several hundred million dollars in a futile attempt to refute them, turned out to be an accurate Iraqi account, yet you just wrote that "he was trying to make us think he did". I know that Saddam was attempting to comply with the UN, Bush promised to seek a UN resoution before invading Iraq, and then ordered the invasion without seeking the resolution that he pledged to seek. The Jolt, please provide examples of Saddam "financing terrorsts". "Probably" is not good enough to justify aggressive war, especially when you offer no durable evidence that the US was directly threatened. Bush did not choose to respond to Saddam in a manner that was anywhere near proportional to acts that threatened US security. Every example cited by Powell in his infamous UN briefing in Mar, 2003, have since been exposed as unreliable. French journalists perceived and reported this when it happened (see my earlier post), you still do not seem to accept it, now. The Jolt, my avatar is a tribute to SCOTUS Justice Robert Jackson, the chief US prosecutor of war crimes at Nuremberg. Here is what he had to say about waging a war of aggression. No journalist need sway my thinking that the US executive branch is now populated by several as yet unindicted war criminals, Justice Jackson persuaded me of that as this run up to war unfolded: Quote:
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04-19-2005, 02:29 AM | #30 (permalink) |
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Face it folks, anything the US does in the middle east is for the US's own benefit and for cheaper oil.
It is your lifeblood. People either have to start giving up cheap oil and what it represents in their wealth and daily lives, or they have to buck up and quit worrying about how their government goes about getting it for them. Policy changes according to who is in power and what the current situation is. I don't think the majority were unhappy with the idea of the US helping Saddam fight the fundamentalist Islamic nation of Iran at the time. I guess the events over there should be accompanied with the side note of "It seemed a good idea at the time" when relegated to the history books. It's hard to set a standard to the world to represent a working democracy when you're also hip deep in other nations' problems. |
04-19-2005, 05:14 AM | #31 (permalink) | ||||
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arm sales to Iran during the same Reagan years when the US was also arming Saddam, have been appointed to important positions in the current Bush admin. Again, the "Saddam was bad, but Iran was our mutual enemy" excuse for selling him the means and the knowhow to deploy chemical and biological weapons, does not convincingly fly, in the face of the evidence that the Reagan admin. was actively engaged in selling weapons to Iran at the very same time. This time around, the Bush admin. is not restrained by an office of special prosecutor statute:<a href="http://www.infoplease.com/spot/indepcounsel1.html">http://www.infoplease.com/spot/indepcounsel1.html</a> Is it any wonder that the Bush admin. implemented the following policy, early in 2001, and then expanded it after 9/11? Quote:
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04-19-2005, 05:18 AM | #32 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Indiana
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04-19-2005, 05:40 AM | #33 (permalink) | ||
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No response, so far, to the question of when it would be appropriate to infer that previous US executive administrations were complicit conspirators who turned a blind eye to Saddam's military deployment of chemical and biological weapons, continuing to offer material support, technical and military support, and maintained full diplomatic relations with his regime even after knowing that he "gassed his own people"?
(I guess the "N word" and the Ann Coulter threads are just too compelling today. Ole host just won't stop blathering about hypocrisy and the waging of illegal war of aggression..........) Quote:
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What do you know about the administration and it's policies that you support? |
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04-19-2005, 08:03 AM | #34 (permalink) |
Illusionary
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Tecoyah watches the silence.........quite amused by the missing replys.
I doubt very much you will get many .....as there seems little this administration has done that stands out as worthy of support. And contrary to what some may think, This does not in any way please me.
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Holding onto anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one who gets burned. - Buddha |
04-19-2005, 08:51 AM | #35 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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Does that seem like a good move by the administration? Does it build trust with the American people? Why would they do that? One plausible reason is that they think it illustrates that we are losing the war on terror, and it would cost them politically. And perhaps the war has been about politics, power, and managing thier own agenda - and NOT about making us safer. Can you think of another reason? |
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04-19-2005, 09:08 AM | #36 (permalink) | |
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This is kind of old, but seems to be a less inquisitive version of this thread topic:
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04-19-2005, 09:41 AM | #37 (permalink) | |
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A grab of the huge Iraqi oil fields might not mean cheaper oil now, but if the trend is followed and the petrodollar gets competition, life as you know it will end as it will simply be too expensive to maintain the current standard of living in the US. That land grab and the future concessions wrung from it provides a little more security for the petro dollar, even with a sloghtly raised price for gas. It just means that the price won't go mental all at once. |
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04-19-2005, 11:19 AM | #39 (permalink) | |
Upright
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I agree Manx, we don't know Jack. Unless you live over there, or know someone who does, all you have is the media's preception of what is going on.
As far as the thing about War Criminals: War Criminals are what the winners call the losers. Bush is not a war criminal (he won), Saddam is a war criminal(he lost). Quote:
As far as "probably" not being good enough to declare war, you're right. But I wasn't the one who declared war, was I? (Hint:I am not a member of congress) |
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04-19-2005, 08:42 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: Buffalo, New York
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On another note, does anyone know - since we supplied Hussein with stockpiles of both chemical and biological weapons - if the information he supplied to the UN on these programs accounted for the amounts we gave/sold to him? I'm curious about that one. |
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iraq, post, status, terror, war |
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