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Before the war...

Before we went into Iraq, were you for the war?

  • Yes

    Votes: 6 35.3%
  • No

    Votes: 11 64.7%
  • Not Sure

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    17

conserv.pat15

Banned
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Jan 17, 2006
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Very Conservative
Before we went into Iraq, were you for the war? This question is mainly for the liberals.
 
Absolutely not. At the time, it was one of the stupidest things any president has ever done. And it remains one of the stupidest things any president has ever done.
 
Absolutely not. At the time, it was one of the stupidest things any president has ever done. And it remains one of the stupidest things any president has ever done.

Why was it stupid? Also, are you saying it was stupid and unjustified... Or just stupid?
 
Why was it stupid? Also, are you saying it was stupid and unjustified... Or just stupid?

Well, "unjustified" is fairly subjective because it depends entirely on what one's definition of a "just war" is. In my opinion, it was not justified, because Iraq did not pose a serious threat to the United States or any of our allies. And while brutal, Iraq didn't qualify as an urgent humanitarian crisis the way that, say, Darfur does.

But it was most definitely stupid. You don't commit over 100,000 troops to an Arab state with a long history of tribalism and expect them to suddenly become a functional democracy. You don't eliminate the only counterbalance to Iranian hegemony in the region. You don't focus all of your efforts onto a marginally important country, while ignoring REAL developing threats like Iran. And you don't turn a steady supply of oil into a free-for-all unless you absolutely have to.

Then the way it was implemented was horrible. After the invasion, we should've kept the Baath army intact and turned the keys to Iraq over to Ahmed Chalabi and Iyad Allawi to rule the country however they saw fit.
 
Even at fourteen Iraq seemed like an excuse for our inability to find OBL. Keeping WMD's out of the hands of terrorists did seem like a goal worth achieving though.
 
I was young and impressionable four years ago... I thought, yay, lets go get Osama and his little friend Saddam too- I just knew what the newspaper told me. Ah, lost innocence...:roll:
 

While I think this war was definately justified, I also believe it was a smart move in the greater context of the War on Terror.
 
Absolutely not. I have always been against this war because even IF you believed that WMD existed and THAT was the rationale for going to war, I always felt that we should have continued to work with the UN sanctions and try to find a diplomatic solution. There was no URGENCY that justified a departure from the War Powers Act that allowed George Bush to act in the manner in which he did.

There was ample evidence before we ever went to war that Cheney and Rumsfield were using 9/11 as an excuse to forward an agenda that they had been trying to pursue for decades prior to 911.
 
While I think this war was definately justified, I also believe it was a smart move in the greater context of the War on Terror.

How was the war a smart move in the greater context of the war on terror. Rumsfields war has made us weaker in that regard. Additionally, we took our eye off the real targets in the war on terror in order to pursue Rumsfield and Cheney's Iraq agenda which had nothing to do with the terrorist attacks that our nation had recently taken. How do you equate this as a smart move in the war on terror. Objectively....it seems like a rather stupid move in that direction.
 
This is the most cowardly war ever fought in history!

We are a nation based on the rule of law. A nation that is supposed to come from the moral high ground. There is nothing moral about scapegoating a country that results in a half million of their citizens dying as a result of unprovoked armed aggression.
 
Before we went into Iraq, were you for the war? This question is mainly for the liberals.

I'm not all that liberal (except on personal rights, where I'm 100% liberal), but just wanted to say I was against the war since before it started. The contrived justifications and intelligence seemed obvious to me at the time. Anyway, we had already defeated Iraq in 1991, and had it under our control. There was no need to re-invade. It was a mistake and a misguided shameful deadly farce.
 
funny how liberals have such selective memories
as if WMDs were the only reason Bush gave to go to war with Iraq :roll:
 
whoa whoa whoa
liberals will go nuts when they read someone try to imply, god forbid come straight out and say, a schools faculty is overweighted by Liberals
that is just a neocon lie and right wing hysteria :doh
 
funny how liberals have such selective memories
as if WMDs were the only reason Bush gave to go to war with Iraq :roll:

That was the only reason he constantly pushed. He might've occasionally mentioned other reasons the way he might've mentioned that Saddam was a doodoo-head, but for the most part, the other justifications came AFTER the war started and the American people realized the WMD claims were bogus.
 
whoa whoa whoa
liberals will go nuts when they read someone try to imply, god forbid come straight out and say, a schools faculty is overweighted by Liberals
that is just a neocon lie and right wing hysteria :doh

Most universities probably ARE staffed heavily with liberals. What of it? Why is that necessarily a bad thing? What makes you think that their political views have much influence on their students? Even if they do, again, why is this necessarily a bad thing? Have you considered the possible REASONS the faculty leans in one political direction more than the other?
 
because they live in the theoretical
and in a perfect world, I would adopt alot more liberal ideals
but i dont because i find them in conflict with how the real world is
 
No, I was not for the war.

I wanted us to commit to fighting terrorism, instead.
 
Hell no. During the lead up, I looked around at what people were saying, the MSM were all pushing, talk radio people (in my market) were pushing, a sh!t ton of people were pushing, and I thought "What is the rush? We got Iraq on lock, what are they gonna do?" I've paid attention enough to realize that the "smoking gun" wasn't really gonna "come in the form of a mushroom cloud." So, I questioned some more and found more evidence against what everyone was saying. I saw Scott Ritter give a speech, and read about computer simulations of the war, in which a retired general played the part of the Iraqis and won every time.

To top it all off, I was walking to class one evening and one of the local AM stations had a PA set up in the quad for a war rally. This broad was on the mic and yelled: "We gotta go to Iraq and defend our freedoms." It was then that I truly realized how stupid my fellow citizens can be. It was really f@ckin' sad that these people had no clue and were all skeetin' to send their sons and daughters to the desert over sh!t they didn't even know the truth about. :-( :hm
 

I agree. I saw it as kind of a mass hysteria at the time. How could it have been so easy to pursue an unnecessary elective war with a country that couldn't fly a biplane unless we approved it? And the situation just gets worse because each time we get new information about the reasoning for the war, we find out the original intelligence was either wrong or deliberately fabricated.
 

There's no such thing as a cowardly war bud. If using so called "cowardly" tactics helps more of our soldiers return home alive, I'm all for it.
 
Initially, I was for it. I say that with shame now. I argued vehemently for the war on several debate forums. What happened on 9/11 was more than just "news coverage" to me, it was very personal. And that emotional response was used successfully by the current adminstration to garner my support for the war. I thought we were going there for the right reasons. I believed we were... I *wanted* to believe we were. I wanted justice... vengence... and trusted that the government was telling the truth to the American people (and the world).

I was wrong. I couldn't have been more wrong. I allowed my emotions to be used against my own logic. I didn't research enough initially, I didn't pay enough attention. It was only later that I became decidedly against the war. After I found out that my government lied to me... that they intentionally used my emotions (and the emotions of millions) for support for the war. They counted on us not thinking it through... they counted on us wanting justice at any cost. They counted on our emotions ruling our decisions. And, they made a good bet. They were right.. I will give them that.

Now, I detest the Bush Administration for what they did, and for manipulating me and so many others. And I'm ashamed for allowing myself to be manipulated.
 

Who lied and what was the lie?
 
Before we went into Iraq, were you for the war? This question is mainly for the liberals.


I was with Howard Zinn on this one:

http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0819-01.htm



Duke
 
Who lied and what was the lie?



Bush admits no WMDs found, defends Iraq invasion

....Strike one?

-----------------
 
Who lied and what was the lie?


"[The CIA possesses] solid reporting of senior-level contacts between Iraq and al-Qaeda going back a decade." -- CIA Director George Tenet in a written statement released Oct. 7, 2002 and echoed in that evening's speech by President Bush.

"We've learned that Iraq has trained al-Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases ... Alliance with terrorists could allow the Iraqi regime to attack America without leaving any fingerprints." -- President Bush, Oct. 7.


These were the kickers for me. I was led to believe that Iraq/Saddam had something to do with what happened on 9/11.




"We have seen intelligence over many months that they have chemical and biological weapons, and that they have dispersed them and that they're weaponized and that, in one case at least, the command and control arrangements have been established." -- President Bush, Feb. 8, 2003, in a national radio address.

"Our conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between 100 and 500 tons of chemical weapons agent. That is enough to fill 16,000 battlefield rockets." -- Secretary of State Colin Powell, Feb. 5 2003, in remarks to the UN Security Council.

"We know where [Iraq's WMD] are. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south, and north somewhat." -- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, March 30, 2003, in statements to the press.

"Yes, we found a biological laboratory in Iraq which the UN prohibited." -- President Bush in remarks in Poland, published internationally June 1, 2003.

"The evidence indicates that Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program ... Iraq has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes and other equipment needed for gas centrifuges, which are used to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons." -- President Bush, Oct. 7, 2002, in Cincinnati.
 
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