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Government is not the solution it is the problem.
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It is the difference between trying to take control or simply just setting rules. Whenver the government tries to "regulate the market" they end up wasting tax dollars and not providing a better product at a better price. Quote:
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The Dems have hit on a strategy
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We are coming up to an election. Couldn't he keep his mouth shut until after the election? Can't these naysayers just shut up for a couple of weeks to see if we can pull of a good election and then start their belly aching? They can't wait until after the election because they want us to fail. They are more concerned about Bush looking bad than they are about the future of the United States or Iraq. |
Immoral invasion?
How can anyone possibly say it was immoral for the US to invade Iraq and remove this guy?
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsar...IAL.xml&rpc=22 Not in the U.S's strategic interest - maybe. But immoral. No way. The invasion was definitely the moral thing to do. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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But, more importantly, taking this position avoids any real discussion of the war in depth and detail, and the repeated attempts by the administration to ridicule and slur their opponents into silence has had a very unfortunate effect on the quality of the debate, which is about as poor a debate as I can imagine for a serious issue. From what I can see the only people who have truly sought to raise the level of debate on the national political stage have been Murtha and McCain. Win and Lose are loaded words; we will not have either an outright and total win (that is, all the Iraqis will not be gathering together to sing "Kumbayah" and "America the Beautiful" anytime soon), and we will not have an outright and total loss. For me, a decade or so of peace and relatively stability in the Middle East would constitute a win - and that is what I would like to see the discussion focus on in Congress, rather than these cheap charges of disloyalty and bumper-sticker patriotism. I do not think we will have a sensible discussion, in part because many of Bush's ardent supporters are Hawks eager to light a fuse in Iran or Syria, and he has played to this gallery, but if he were smart, he would be saying that stability is victory, and make the argument for the Middle East being less volatile today than it was four years ago. I will confess that I would give more credit to the Israelis and Palestinians for the increased stability, rather than to our invasion of Iraq, but I would like to at least hear a rational, dispasionate argument that Iraq has had this effect. |
No sense of responsiblity.........
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And no one wants that. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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They have nothing else to fall back on. The whole party right now rests on "Bush sux in Iraq." If Iraqis vote big-time in this next set of elections, and start forming workable coalitions and cleaning out the terrorists themselves, and we start bringing people home, there's a huge hole on the left - there's no party position remaining at all. So, I guess we have passed that point where people can't be treasonous because they're fighting for their vision of America, and entered into "they want us to fail simply so that they can win votes." On the plus side, I can now foresee Dean costing the D's a whole 'nuther election cycle all by himself. Truly a giant among men. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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You're participating on a board of educated professionals who, though often indulging in exercises of creative writing and experimental hackery, occasionally break through the noise to try and have substantive conversations. Except for Hank, all of us have jobs. We consume what information we can, when we can, and try to make sense of it. This is a particular challenge with Iraq, because unless (say) one happens to work inside the E-Ring and sifts through thousands of reports a day, NO ONE really knows jack shit about Iraq. It's too big of a country, and there's too much different stuff going on to get your arms around it very well. It's all anecdotal information cobbled together from media sources, friends who are in the field, etc. So when I read posters who admit to not knowing the answer, and worrying that things are not going well, that strikes me as an honest, and not irrational, response. Your response, apparently, is to be offended by that. I read you telling us that we're just not looking very hard, dammit, because the evidence (which is outside the MSM) tells you that we ARE winning. Oh, and by the way, there ARE traitors. Strikes me that it's not too much for the unwashed, incurious, liberal Bush-hating masses to ask "okay, where?" Otherwise, you've just declared the conversation to be over. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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I don't see how This Thing is Even up for debate
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2. Dean is a flat out four star imbecile. Along with others, like Coulter, his nonsense doesn't deserve to be debated anywhere, even here. He's a shock jock politico. He throws firebombs out there to rally a virulent, deluded, small core of obsolete left wingers who no longer have a voice. Howard Dean is a joke and should be treated as such. 3. That Dean is an idiot doesn't make his statement entirely wrong ("Even a blind pig stumbles upon an acorn...," etc...). Rummy is McNamara II. We need more masssive force to slam home a quick voctory. To do that, we need a massive infusion of bodies on the ground to overwhelm the insurgents. Simply put, to win this thing, we need a massive bucket of blood, and the only way to get that is to double troop strength. I applaud Rummy for trying to fight a new type of war. There is nothing wrong with trying to win a war with minimum bodies on the ground. But you can't do it when the enemy hides among the innocents. You can't bomb entire cities to smithereens. The collateral damge is too high. So you need more soldiers. Will a Dem do what's right and necessary and send more bodies there? Or will he kowtow to public sentiment and do the popular thing and pull out? My guess is the latter. 4. If we declare victory and run away leaving the country a shambles, we'll create a rift with the Arab world that can never be repaired. Cutting and running because a few thousand more will die is sacrificing tens of thousands in our nation and elsewhere over the coming decades. I don't think we should have gone into Iraq, but now we're there, and there is no option but to complete the misssion, no matter how many casualties it takes. Its pathetic we're faced with such a shitty situation, but thats the hand, and there is no other way to play it. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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As I said, a debate between Murtha and McCain would strike me as informative, interesting, and likely to be very productive. I cannot think of anyone else in the administration, in Congress, or on the national stage who is engaging in a productive debate. And if it is sad that Dean is doing this bumper-sticker debate thing, it is far sadder that Bush and Cheney, in their esteemed positions, are doing the same. Doesn't anyone see that the childish yelling backing and forth demeans the Presidency far more than the August Office of Chief Hack occupied by Dean? |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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There's a ton of info on Iraq out there, all over. I can find a pile of it in minutes, from people who are there, both on the ground and running things. I can find more from people going over to have a look and then coming back to tell us. It's easy to find. So, I combine those two concepts - that this community should be most gifted at tracking down and analyzing all of this info, and that the info is out there, and I'm left with one overriding impression: the responses on this board that say "gee, where is all this info" are, at best, disingenuous. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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The Dems have hit on a strategy
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And, Murtha as the voice of reason? Murtha can't decide what he wants to say, even in the space of one interview. He likes Bush, Bush has a good plan, and Bush needs a plan? C'mon, find another. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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We accomplish the stated goals of: removing Saddam, initiating the process of establishing a constitutional democracy, (and it appears going forward that that process is . . . well, . . . progressing well, meaning, the country votes and elects and legislates and enforces as an expression of popular will instead of concentrated power), Iraq is no longer a destabilizing influence on the rest of the ME (and is, in fact, a stabilizing influence), Iraq is left as a willing friend and ally and business partner of the USA, and we bring home our military in stages as these things happen. To me, that's a win. |
The Dems have hit on a strategy
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Yeah, this'll be a fun debate. |
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