January 6th, 2006

Lies and the lying liars who hear them

It’s said all the time on the left, and even by many liberals: Bush lied. Bush lied through his teeth, especially about WMDs in Saddam’s Iraq.

I don’t even have to provide the links; we all know what a recurrent refrain it is. Thread after thread, on this blog and others–even when Bush and WMDs aren’t really the issue at hand–have been taken up with the argument.

But this post isn’t about the issue of WMDs and lying. That’s been hashed over time and again, to no avail, so often that I’m convinced it’s an argument that goes beyond logic and beyond facts. I’m more interested in what’s behind the argument; what drives it.

So, why “Bush lied?” Wouldn’t it be enough to say that Bush was mistaken, misinformed, stupid, duped, misled, lazy, deluded–oh, any number of other criticisms of Bush that could so much more easily be argued than lied?

After all, “Bush lied” is fairly easy to refute. The usual counterargument goes like this: almost everyone on earth, including most of the intelligence operatives in the US and Europe, believed that Saddam had WMDs. In fact, there’s a theory that perhaps even Saddam himself was fooled into thinking he actually had WMDs.

But no matter; Bush lied.

I’ve become convinced that the key to this assertion is a relatively new and fundamental misunderstanding of the meaning of the term “lied,” an error that has its genesis in the growth of narcissism (please see Dr. Sanity’s fine series on the affliction).

In truth, the hallmark of a lie is that its locus is in the speaker. To be lying, the speaker must be aware of the falsehood of the utterances. So whether or not something is a lie has nothing to do with the listener, and everything to do with the teller.

But many listeners in our day and age have lost sight–not just of truth vs. relative truth, or objective vs. subjective truth–but of any truth-falsehood distinction outside of their own perceptions. So the new definition of a lie has become: something that fooled me. Something that I heard and thought was true, and then discovered wasn’t true. It made me angry to be jerked around like that. So it’s a lie.

Such a listener lacks awareness of any need to ascertain the state of mind of the speaker in order to define an utterance as a lie–it is simply irrelevant; it does not compute in the equation. In fact, the so-called liar is actually often either mistaken, misinformed by others, in denial, or deluded. But that doesn’t matter to a listener who hears everything only in terms of him/herself and how something makes him/her feel.

Thus, a lie is born.

149 Responses to “Lies and the lying liars who hear them”

  1. Tertium Quid Says:

    Great post! Great blog. I’ve written quite a bit on my own blog about how the Democrats and the left are caught in a 1972 time-warp and cannot escape.

  2. Active Observer Says:

    To the anonymous poster who wrote:

    > Your opponent didn’t beat you, he cheated.
    > He doesn’t have another opinion, he lied.

    It’s true that many people feel this way, and often based on a knee-jerk reaction instead of the facts. However, sometimes people do cheat and sometimes they do lie. If you disregard anyone who accuses anyone of cheating or lying, you’re having a knee-jerk reaction yourself.

    For myself and many other on the Left, “Bush” is shorthand for “the Bush Administration”. He’s ultimately responsible, but we know he’s mostly the mouthpiece for the people making the policy. If he repeats a lie formulated by someone in his administration, it works out to the same thing. Let’s just get rid of “plausible deniability”, which is a loophole allowing politicians to tell lies and claim that they didn’t know better. Here’s a classic example:

    “A few months ago I told the American people I did not trade arms (TO IRAN) for hostages. My heart and my best intentions still tell me that’s true, but the facts and the evidence tell me it is not.”
    - Ronald Reagan

    I’m suprised that I haven’t seen mention in this thread of the letter signed by Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld and others connected to the Bush administration that urged Clinton to invade Iraq in 1998. The Administration wanted this invasion long before 9-11, and they were very selective and misleading about the evidence they used to justify it. Even Colin Powell (”this is bullsh*t!”) thought the administration was making false (or at best unsubstantiated) claims about Iraq in order to justify the invasion.

    We don’t have to call it a lie if that term offends, but the war on Iraq was launched on false pretexts.

    From the Downing Street Memos:

    The Foreign Secretary said he would discuss this with Colin Powell this week. It seemed clear that Bush had made up his mind to take military action, even if the timing was not yet decided. But the case was thin. Saddam was not threatening his neighbours, and his WMD capability was less than that of Libya, North Korea or Iran. We should work up a plan for an ultimatum to Saddam to allow back in the UN weapons inspectors. This would also help with the legal justification for the use of force.

  3. douglas Says:

    “Motor1560:
    If they came into your church and began to proselytize for another sect they would be ejected. Same thing here.

    - Yeah, that sounds like what Jesus would do, too. Eject them.”
    TKaMB.

    Jesus kicked the money changers out of the temple. with violence. It seems, yes, Jesus just might kick someone out. Slow down- in your haste to try to make someone else look the fool, you trip yourself. Seek wisdom and truth, not just victory.

  4. Anonymous Says:

    It’ is the natural recourse of a mind in the hold of a conspiracy theory ‘mindset’.

    Your opponent didn’t beat you, he cheated.

    He doesn’t have another opinion, he lied.

    He isn’t just wrong, rather he is evil.

    It goes on and on…

  5. Anonymous Says:

    Beep, beep! Cut and run.

    Sigh.

    Michael Adams is a well-regarded pollster. You can follow the link I posted earlier and learn a bit about the differences between Americans and Canadians.

  6. Ymarsakar Says:

    People who use pieces of Franks that they agree with and then ignore everything else, yes, they are liars who both lie as well as hear.

    You don’t think the rich are corrupting bureacrats? Jeez, you are naive. You ever hear of Dan Rather and his false, but true motiff?

    No Democrat has ever needed proof, it is too middle class.

  7. Steve J. Says:

    YMAR: Steve has a problem, and it is the simple fact that he believes in his own propaganda. Contrary to popular and systemic belief, Republicans don’t believe everything the military tells them. So quoting a general responsible for the infamous “Pincer” no shit attack, is not the magic wand here.

    So, Tommy Franks is also a liar?

  8. Steve J. Says:

    YMAR: It’s quite obvious Hans was on the take to the UN rich blokes, and was paid to find nothing.

    Do you have any proof of that smear?
    .
    .
    .
    .
    Didn’t think so.

  9. aqualung Says:

    And how about the most recent Bush lie that all domestic wiretaps are obtained only with a court order! How, pray tell, Ms. Neo-neocon, is that not a LIE?

  10. Motor 1560 Says:

    Beep, beep! Cut and run.

  11. Anonymous Says:

    “If all politicians were like Pierre Trudeau, there would be world peace.”
    - John Lennon

    Truepeers, I have absolutely zero desire to debate a prairie tory sympathetic to the Bush administration.

    I posted to answer a pointed question about Canadians’ “obsession” with George W. Bush, and now I’m gone.

    Peace

  12. truepeers Says:

    People who think they can always avoid fights are a great danger to themselves and humanity. And the desire for such avoidance has a lot to do with why you started this little debate in the first place. Bush’s claim is that he is doing some necessary evil to minimize the quantum of violence and evil in this world. He does not pretend we can ever escape evil completely. He is not a utopian. But your type don’t accept him for what he is and make constructive criticisms about what lesser evils we must commit, or not. You criticize him from utopian premises. You never do more than ask why can’t we just love one another and/or die? Even Auden came to reject the lie that is his famous line. Maybe Trudeau did something like that too after the world of serious people laughed at his peace campaign and let Reagan do the job.

  13. Anonymous Says:

    You’re just looking for a fight, Truepeers.

  14. truepeers Says:

    I’m not long going to debate someone who goes by the moniker “anonymous”; there are too many about and one cannot know to which combo of voices one is responding. BUt then, the anonymous I think I’m addressing may not believe in the idea of a coherent authorship that might exist beyond the jumble of quotes some are prone to spit out.

    What to think of someone who appears to be enamored of Pierre Trudeau ditties and calls Paul Martin (or did he mean Johnny Cretin?) prophetic? To be serious for a moment, it suggests a lack of intellectual development, a tendency to gnosticism, both of which he is all too right to suggest are common in Canada. But popularity is hardly a reason to defend such “intellectual” tendencies. No, for that, you need more substantial argument, not that you can readily find them in liberalism which by all appearances is on its death bed (kind of odd that someone who likes his Trudeau-the-liberator quotes would not see himself as being now lost in worship of a past).

    Anyway, anonymous, you have yet to respond substantively to any of my somewhat more substantive points. For example, if you want to defend a book, defend it with arguments. The appeal to authority (especially in a country whose authorities often lack intellectual punch) is a well-known fallacy. Or why not begin with my contention that when you argue in a public forum, you never simply “speak for yourself”, whatever the popularity of such locutions among the more resentful, “shut him up” thinkers. To speak in public is always to make a claim on the sacred centre to which we are all attached. Humans can only speak “in their own names” today, because they first came to speak the name of god. But this might not be apparent to those who don’t seem to give a damn that the Trudeau, academic, and CBC think with which they are enamored is slowly ripping their country apart. Get out of Ontario, Buddy.

  15. Ymarsakar Says:

    Steve has a problem, and it is the simple fact that he believes in his own propaganda. Contrary to popular and systemic belief, Republicans don’t believe everything the military tells them. So quoting a general responsible for the infamous “Pincer” no shit attack, is not the magic wand here. Just because the Democrats say such things, doesn’t mean they should fall prey to their own lies. Nor should anyone else, David Duke, George Galloway, or any other ally of the Left.

    “Yes, I, too, believed there were weapons. I began to be skeptical when we went to sites that were given to us by U.S. intelligence and we found nothing. They said this is the best intelligence we have, and I said, if this is the best, what is the rest?”

    It’s quite obvious Hans was on the take to the UN rich blokes, and was paid to find nothing. Anything else is obviously a belief in a corrupt system.

    He began to be skeptical when he started getting wired amounts from Saddam and kickbacks from Kofi.

  16. Ymarsakar Says:

    The only people concerned about WMDs are the Lefties. And there is a good reason for that. If WMDs existed, it would be a Republican issue of national defense, but if WMDs did not exist then the Left could lie to their heart’s content, safe in the knowledge that in the field of sophistry and semantics they rule supreme. I am humbled to be in the grace of such masters of double think, for their prowess overwhelms all mortal attempts at imitation.

    Still, they would die just as easily choking on anthrax as the rest of us, easier perhaps, and that is their weakness.

    Most of the people try to argue about why not finding WMDs was justified, I don’t quite see why they waste their time. Saddam knew perfectly well that it is not the presence or non-presence of WMDs that mattered, it was the fear and the knowledge that he would use them on the people that mattered. Because regardless of how people hate Bush or Saddam, they can still be killed and silenced.

    And that is the only real matter of importance concerning WMDs. If they do not exist, then they cannot be used to kill the liars, and if they cannot be used, then everything is a game. So that is why Republicans wanted to find WMDs and Democrats did not. It played to each other’s strengths. The Republican’s strength is that of reality, of the cold hard iron and the unbroken diamond will. The Democrats, of course, have their strength in erosion, dread psychology, and mysterious religion.

    Can’t fight religion, so don’t try it. If you reform it, you get burned as a witch or as insensitive. Fighting fanatics is problematic, but the up shot is that fanatics don’t change their strategy, regardless of how their tactics change.

    The Democrats will never change their strategy, but they will change their tactics. And that is why the WMD issue is irrelevant. It is a tactical problem, the greater strategic overview overrides tactics of such a shade valorous.

  17. aqualung Says:

    Of course, listening to a lie and not believing it to be a lie also involves the phenomenon of hearing things only in relationship to oneself. If I beleive George Bush never lies, i will refuse to hear any of them. But we know Bush has lied many times; about WMDs (no evidence to the contrary has been given here), saying that we had “found the WMDs” when they were really only weather balloon installations, about firing anyone involved in the Plame leak, about denying that he ever said Osama Bin Laden was no longer a concern to him. These are documented facts, documented for posterity. Attempts by people here to deny this are trying to rewrite history. But if the thesis above is correct, maybe the neocons never even hear the lies because the belief that Bush never lies is already established in their brains. Another George warned us about this in the novel 1984. Double speak and Bush speak are the same; we must fight the right-wing spin that lies are only told by the left, and nothing that this cabal of neo-cons currently running (ruining also applies) this country ever does is wrong.

  18. Anonymous Says:

    The issue is maturity, and the problem is that the Baby Boomer Left (again) is ruining things for everyone else.

    John Kerry, Cindy Sheehan, Barbara Pelosi, were all radiclibs in the 1960’s, when they likely enjoyed the ever-flowing sex, drugs and rock’n'roll while they marched against The War and chanted slogans about LBJ “killing” kids each day. Heady times, no responsibilities, lots of fun.

    In our parents’ day, people bought red sports cars, got trophy spouses and took trips to Europe when the specter of mortality began to rear its ugly head in one’s fifth decade. Now the lefties of the Brat Generation acts up (again), stamp their collective foot and demand the right to push everyone else around (again).

    John Kerry and Cindy Sheehan will deny that millions died when the United States abandoned Indochina, and will deny that any harm will come if the United States abandons the Middle East, even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

    Lefties lie, and people die.

  19. Anonymous Says:

    Truepeers,

    Please do the country a favour and speak for yourself.

    Alright, no contemporary Canadian politician would ever pepper their public addresses with so many references to God.

    You wrote:

    “… that’s not to say that … we can’t support Bush’s foreign policy, and many Canadians think we should have done more along these lines.”

    Many? Do you mean more than three?

    You might wish to read Paul Martin’s address to the House concerning Canada’s decision not to enter the Iraq war. It’s prophetic.

    “Your notion of a growing cultural divide may be a figment of a facile pollster’s imagination.”

    Michael Adams’ book won the Donner Prize, which is Canada’s highest honour for a book in the public policy literary field.

    “The Past is to be respected and acknowledged, but not to be worshiped. It is our future in which we will find our greatness.”
    — Pierre Trudeau

  20. Ymarsakar Says:

    Two Addendums. A lot of spam posts here result from leap-jump thinking, with no coherent systemic whole. Things get left out quite often that way, producing unnecessary clog in the works.

    The other, is simply that one of Neo’s most succinct posts has the longest thread by far. I detect a pattern in that.

    Most of the newcomers seem to come here from links or something. I wonder which ones they are, it seems it creates a maelstrom of activity with Sanity links.

  21. Ymarsakar Says:

    To Neo, to Tequila, to Darrel, to Motor. In that order

    I don’t even have to provide the links; we all know what a recurrent refrain it is.

    True, and I don’t think even the Nazis could have been as sick of it as we are now. The Big English propaganda technique is still going strong with the socialists and Marxists I see.

    I’m more interested in what’s behind the argument; what drives it.

    As Sun Tzu wisely advised. Pierce the enemy’s weaknesses with your strength, do not go up against the enemy’s strength at all, but avoid it if at all possible.

    Propaganda, unity of voice, and righteous fury with concentration are obviously the Democrat’s forte.

    After all, “Bush lied” is fairly easy to refute.

    It is not quite as easy to refute given the unity matrix of the accusers. It isn’t dieing of steam precisely because it isn’t a top down propaganda project, but as you noted, a grass roots one. And those are hard to stamp out, grassfires that is.

    In fact, there’s a theory that perhaps even Saddam himself was fooled into thinking he actually had WMDs.

    If you watch Saddam speak on his first day, and watch the others sitting around you, you will notice a curious effect. Which is, that Saddam doesn’t look worried, he looks like he is having the best time of his life interspersed with borring testimonies by dead people. The others sitting around him look like they are scared shitless whenever Saddam goes on one of his monologues. They got stress lines around their eyes, they got their hands in front of their faces, their body posture is really wilted, and so on.

    Saddam is quite a tough guy at deception. So good he can fool himself. No wonder the Democrats like him as an ally, just their kind of operator.

    Such a listener lacks awareness of any need to ascertain the state of mind of the speaker in order to define an utterance as a lie–it is simply irrelevant

    Such an opponent, if faced in mortal combat, would be incapable of determining my thoughts, plans, or motivations. Such an opponent would be wasting my time in a fight. Which is the whole point, the Democrats are wasting America’s time cause they ain’t got a clue, ain’t wanna get a clue, and can’t get one. No use as a loyal opposition at all.

    All reality is constructed and those who are more powerful (the usual white male oppressors) force their version of reality onto the poor oppressed people of the world.

    I bet Jefferson or any of the other Founding Fathers never did realize the full ramifications of a common justice system, perpetual peace and prosperity, along with ultimate stability of leadership and political continuation. It leads to a sort of entropic effect onto which reality as it is constructed can be held up by the simple fiat of the peace, stability, and prosperity of this country. Terrorism tends to put a log jam into things however. Unfortunately, it tends to be that this kind of disease weakens the organism just enough for an attack to topple it unto death. Europe is in their death throes for cert, we bounced back somehow.

    Because however one might construct or deconstruct reality, a bullet in the head is a bullet in the head, and a nuclear weapon is still a nuclear weapon that I can deploy and use.

    The inspectors were by no means convinced and wanted more time.

    The inspectors were on the take, as usual. They should have been given an execution, not more time. But Bush in his benficence simply invaded after six months of pandering to corrupt idiots and bureacratic nonsense. Bush may be decisive, but he should have told Blair to push off.

    Bush and Tommy Franks also used the fearmongering mushroom cloud image, and in 2002, Dick Cheney said Saddam was a “mortal threat” intent on “nuclear blackmail.”

    That’s actually right, Bush made a big mistake in using the fearmongering too soon. He should have waited until there was a real nuclear mushroom cloud, and then he could have invaded like 10 countries at once. Many of the military feared that the people would give too much power to the government after the 9/11 panic, and they would have been right, if 300,000 or 30 million died instead of 3,000. Bush should have waited. He jumped the shark too soon.

    Pat Buchanan can’t intimidate a mouse, let alone Saddam.

    Cheney wasn’t even elected.

    Millions of people around the globe think Americans are stormtroopers in disguise that rape, beat, and murder little children as we see fit. Makes sense that they would believe Saddam was harmless too.

    Tony Blair was the one that said going to the UN was necessary, and Bush believed him. Anything from Tony Blair is almost useless, anyone trusting his 24 hour stuff gets what is coming to him. Americans do the fighting and the dieing. The British contribute worthwhile forces, but going to the UN didn’t make up for that. And that is why Blair’s judgement is bad. And why anyone that trusts Blair’s judgement needs to recheck his premises.

    Kuwaitt supported the invasion cause they knew nobody but the US would protect their skinny selves. Good actions don’t need everyone agreeing, that’d be rather fascist. They are with us because we can do things for them, things that nobody else can. They pay us for protection and we provide it. An equitable deal, a deal that they cannot refuse in fact.

    It does make sense that someone would not feel bitter if he told himself never to believe in anything Bush said. Can’t have psychological defense mechanisms activate without an injury.

    Most of the world were quite taken in by such things, because most of the world wanted Saddam to have nukes because they believed the US would get hit and then they can get on with the New Year’s party in Europe, Arabia, and etc. Then when Bush said he couldn’t find anything, he spoiled everyone’s joy and revealed the self-deception of the world at large and their stupidity.

    I mean the man speaks the truth all the time.

    He absolutely does, and that is why he isn’t honest. Such a trait makes him very ineffective in war time.

    March on, peasants! Cheer! Cheer for your King! Meanwhile, the top 1% of the wealthy aristrocracy own more wealth than bottom NINETY-PERCENT.

    That’s what the Democrats bought by George Soros says and the Unions that make 100,000 dollars a year that striked before Christmas in New Yorks says. Sure, they’re fighting the good fight against the rich all right. Only the rich are backing them as cannon fodder.

    If everyone just kept repeating, the UN is corrupt, Bush is too honest, honest people do not mix with corrupt people, and Bush needs to stamp harder on idiots and domestic enemies then everything will be all right and congruent.

    The same impulse that drives Neo into not erasing or editing comments is the reason why Bush is in the situation he is in. Bush was not elected because he was a war hero or some ruthless fracker like FDR. He’s a gentle man, with a kind disposition, that needed to learn after 9/11 on how to order people to be killed. He’s still learning too, unfortunately. We need Roger the Terrible, we really really do.

    The fact that we haven’t found them as Darrel mentions, is cause Bush was crackjack stupid enough to be taken in by slick Tony man’s con job about going to the UN. When Tony Blair told Chirac that you need to act inside an organization such as the US, instead of outside of it cause it is too powerful to assault from the outside, old man Tony got it right on the dot. Chirac did not do nearly as much damage to US interests as when Tony got old trustworthy George to sign on the UN corrupto wagon.

    All Bush had to do was to tell everybody that Saddam was being made an example of, because he wouldn’t return a missing American POW, or provide any cooperation for the search. That is what is known as a “pretext” and it works a lot better than “trusting the UN” to find anything but virgin children.

    Man, that’s scary stuff.

    What Motor said is meat for the pounding, and is quite invigorating and good for the fighting morale. It’s what makes the boys get up and shoot. Tequla thinks it is scary. To people who can’t protect civil liberties, sure it is scary. Being helpless is always scary.

    A wingnut majority? Me thinks you should restudy American history. The WWII generation is coming back, and coming back stronger than the slick Baby Boomers.

    He’s written the most radical and offensive posts I’ve seen on this blog.

    I take offense to that.

    One thing I realized, arguments take up more space than I ever could write in one sitting.

  22. truepeers Says:

    Steve J, a snarky dismissal does not an argument make, though it may be all you’re capable of. Anyway “speak for yourself” is such a shallow concept. What is public life about if not a shared human scene we must inevitably contest?

    Consider this, it is perfectly possible, though unlikely, to imagine a future in which everyone is a professed atheist. In this world, will the concept of God fade away, a useless anachronism. I maintain it will not; we atheists will still have to regularly deny our belief in God. Why is this? it is because the idea of God is inherent or original to human language and we cannot escape it. The first word is the name of God. This is an argument I can well defend at length with the most rigorous arguments from Generative Anthropology the leading school of thought on such matters. But I’m not sure you are up to it.

  23. Steve J. Says:

    the fact that we all rely on some concept of a sacred Being and of an existence that transcends our individual lives

    Speak for yourself.

  24. truepeers Says:

    Anonymous Canadian at 10.47:

    It used to be quite common for Canadian politicians to refer to God; we even do it in our national anthem. There’s nothing strange about that; it is not possible for any humans, even atheists, to make meaning of the world without the concept of God; and recognizing this anthropological fact, the fact that we all rely on some concept of a sacred Being and of an existence that transcends our individual lives, a fact not explained well by any philosopher, should only give one respect for those who seek humility in relation to some idea of a subsistent Being that guarantees the meaningfulness of the words we share.

    COme to think of it, it wasn’t until Trudeau, that God talk became unpopular in Canadian politics, and perhaps this coincidence is somehow related to why Trudeau was such an arrogant and incompetent leader - even though he was a devout Catholic - a leader who achieved little besides a massive national debt, a Charter of Rights, a perennially-pissed off Quebec, and a facile mythology about Canada that has more resonance in your kneck of the woods than in mine. I’m reminded of Brian Mulroney who groaned to his confessor, Peter Newman, about the man - Trudeau - who had a child out of wedlock, at the age of 73, and all these people (the elites who dominate the media and education system) think there’s nothing wrong with it. But such are the people who think they know and represent Canadian values. Kind of makes me admire the Bushes of the world.

    BUt yes, we don’t have a Republican tradition as strong as America’s or even England’s. We have to come to terms with this and be what we are. But that’s not to say that being confident in our own semi-national/semi-imperial identity we can’t support Bush’s foreign policy, and many Canadians think we should have done more along these lines. Your notion of a growing cultural divide may be a figment of a facile pollster’s imagination. The two countries have been divided from the start, and there has often been a narcissism in small differences, but there is also much we share in common from our common ancestry and we don’t always have to come across as the sore losers of a civil war now 230 years old.

  25. Richard Aubrey Says:

    Neo. You combine a kind heart with too much shrinkthink.

    The folks claiming Bush lied aren’t suffering from narcissim and the other maladies you point out they have. Even though they are afflicted as you describe.

    They know Bush didn’t lie. They think it helps their cause to claim he did. In other words, they lie and they know they lie.

  26. Anonymous Says:

    Why are Canadians so obsessed with getting rid of Bush? I’ve always found that strange.

    Obsessed? You’re thinking about this the wrong way. To quote Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau,

    Living next to you is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered is the beast, if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt.
    - Addressing the Press Club in Washington, D.C. (25 March 1969)

    It’s hard not to pay attention to American politics.

    Despite the common assumption that citizens of our two countries have a lot in common, there’s actually a growing cultural divide. We don’t have a sizeable demographic group with that peculiar hierarchy of values that make up the cliché Republican. So where a lot of Americans no doubt feel perfectly in tune with Bush, he comes across as sorta skewed and wrong up here. For example, no Canadian politician would ever pepper their public addresses with so many references to God.

  27. Steve J. Says:

    (ahem) Kofi Annan’s

  28. Steve J. Says:

    (as compared to the Clinton administration, which didn’t approach the UN)

    Clinton did work with the U.N. and supported Kofi Anna’s last ditch effort to convince Saddam to allow the inspectors full access.

  29. Steve J. Says:

    What Blix said in 2004 is not relevant. What he said in his official capacity before the invasion is. I trust you can understand the distinction.

    Blix is relating his statements to the U.S. before the invasion, in his official capacity.

  30. Steve J. Says:

    for the Vietnamese people (whom the USA army is killing, like Kerry’s Genghis Khan Winter Soldier testimony).”

    TOMMY FRANKS (continuing directly): -the things that Senator Kerry said are undeniable about activities in Vietnam. I think that things didn’t go right in, in Vietnam.

    SOURCE:
    HANNITY(8/3/04)

  31. Tom Grey Says:

    Also, let’s not forget the BIG LIE — “in Vietnam, the USA was the oppressor”.
    “The US Leaving Vietnam will end the war, and be BETTER for the Vietnamese people (whom the USA army is killing, like Kerry’s Genghis Khan Winter Soldier testimony).”

    I don’t remember how much you note the idea that the “US being there is worse for the people” — in Vietnam (wrong) and now in Iraq (wrong).

  32. Tom Grey Says:

    Neo, Yes! — the narcissist self-absorbtion of the PC Left. Like my little children; like spoiled children, often only children.

    Now I wonder how many Leftists have no brothers or sisters.

  33. Paul Snively Says:

    Brief logic lesson:

    You cannot prove the negation of an existential quantifier in first-order logic given the open-world assumption. The reason is simple: it only takes one counterexample, probably taken from the portion of the open world not considered in the clause at hand, to refute the proof.

    Now, Iraq is big, but it’s not an open world. In principle, you could prove that there are no WMDs in Iraq at any given point in time. In practice, however, all you can do is talk in probabilities until everyone’s satisfied that the probabilities are sufficiently low as not to matter. The only way this works is with a great deal of effort on the part of the government in question. We know what this looks like, primarily thanks to the voluntary disarmament and documenteation efforts of the South African government. The problem with Iraq in the time leading up to the war was that it looked like exactly the opposite: obfuscation, challenge, and rejection right up until the day of the invasion. With Iraq’s history of gassing its own people, invading its neighbors, and daily firings on planes patrolling the no-fly zones from Desert Storm, the prudent thing to do was to believe that Iraq had something to hide. And this is only considering the WMDs, while American policy from the Clinton administration to the Bush administration has held some half a dozen other factors to be critical to supporting the policy of regime change. Unfortunately, precisely because the Bush administration believed (correctly, as the criticism reinforces) that the international community would only be impressed by the WMD argument, that was the argument that they presented to the UN (as compared to the Clinton administration, which didn’t approach the UN). So now we have the damned if you do, damned if you don’t problem: Bush loses because there aren’t stockpiles of WMDs in Iraq, and the fact that he went to the UN at all doesn’t count. But if he hadn’t gone to the UN, the screams about unilateralism and the “rush to war” that took 11 months would be even louder.

    As a Libertarian, I really wish that I didn’t have to defend the Bush administration on this, as there’s plenty to criticize the administration about. But until a credible opposition party arises and initiates a serious debate on the facts and merits, defend the current administration on these issues I must.

  34. Huan Says:

    @flenser

    now now, if they cannot understand what a lie is, how could you expect them to understand the flow of time? that what is known in 2004 is different from what is known in 2002.
    i think you expect too much.

  35. flenser Says:

    Steve J

    What Blix said in 2004 is not relevant. What he said in his official capacity before the invasion is. I trust you can understand the distinction.

  36. Nahanni Says:

    Chuck 12:42 AM, January 07, 2006 said…
    “I don’t like pretentious aristocrats, myself. There they stand, holding a perfumed silken hankerchief over their nose, while they lecture us poor sods on what we should believe, and then they tell us that we are too gullible, fearful, and stupid to understand anyway.”

    That is one of the best descriptions I have read for the LLL’s of Hollywood/New York/San Francisco/Seattle/Boston “academics” and the MSM attitude toward us members of the “great unwashed” out here in “Jesusland”.

    It was also the attitude of the French Aristocracy before they all lost their heads.

  37. Good Ole Charlie Says:

    neo:

    It might be interesting that all who sign in with a psuedonym - including me - either give a reason why the pseudonym or plainly identify themselves and give their location: State, Country, Whatever.

    OK, I lead off. I use a psuedonym because I teach in a public school system that frowns on blogs. I still talk in spite of the fear the Admin has of the School Board and The Voters.

    I live in the Reading, Pennsylvania area. I am registered to vote as Independent.

    Now how about everyone else.

  38. Steve J. Says:

    JOKES ON US - WMD TALK WAS A “CHARADE”
    (Via Atrios)

    RogerLSimon lets the rest of us know what was really going on with all the WMD talk by the Administration:

    As the for the run-up to the war, in looking back I think it was a big game of charades that everybody understood. Despite what was said, the obvious US motivation was geo-political. We wanted the despot Saddam out of the Middle East and replaced by a democracy. The French and the Russians - never particularly interested in democracy in the first place - desperately wanted to keep their cash cow in office. Everybody knew this, so the dreaded WMDs had to be emphasized in front of the UN.

    Of course the real mistake was this emphasis on WMDs instead of a more honest declaration of the what the war was really about - democracy.

    Simon admits that the emphasis on WMD was less than honest and lets us know that everybody understood this, courtesy of SimonPolling.

    His commenters are not bothered by the blatant dishonesty:

    Calvin agrees with Simon:

    This is a succinct description of my feeling as well.

    Neo-Neocon adds:

    As far as the buildup to the Iraq are goes, I’m with Roger–it was common knowledge, at least in the blogosphere, that the extreme emphasis on WMDs was for the world international community–the UN (although fat lot of good that did). There were always multiple reasons for the war, chief among them changing geopolitical realities in the region. But that would have been a hard sell, to say the least.

  39. Anonymous Says:

    I just stumbled upon this web site as I was installing Google desktop. I guess it is a default in the setup.
    It does my heart good to see that the right is going to defend this lunacy up until the very end. The fact that the wheels are falling off of this rickety Republican Party and you cannot see it is incredible to me.
    The Republicans have done a great job in getting the power that they wanted, and have proven beyond a doubt that they have not a clue on how to govern a country, only how to call their opponents names, and claim how corrupt that they are.
    The fact is it is easy to claim that your opponent is incompetent, but very difficult to show that you are not.

  40. Steve J. Says:

    You should read what Hans Blix said in his own words.

    “Yes, I, too, believed there were weapons. I began to be skeptical when we went to sites that were given to us by U.S. intelligence and we found nothing. They said this is the best intelligence we have, and I said, if this is the best, what is the rest?”

    HANS BLIX, NYT, 3/30/04

  41. Steve J. Says:

    If somehow Sadaam had disposed of his weapons before Bush started talking invasion, then I have yet to encounter evidence of his doing so.

    The evidence is right here:

    http://www.cia.gov/cia/reports/iraq_wmd_2004/Comp_Report_Key_Findings.pdf

  42. Steve J. Says:

    The only real reason lays in another fundamental weakness of the liberal cause. That weakness is one of personal responsibility.

    Why did Pres. Fredo award George Tenet the Medal of Freedom?

  43. Steve J. Says:

    The facts of the matter relating to WMD therefore don’t matter

    “We know for a fact there are weapons there.” - Ari Fleischer, Jan. 9, 2003

  44. Justin Olbrantz (Quantam) Says:

    Well holy crap. Admittedly I’m only about 70% through the thread, but I just couldn’t resist commenting, anymore. Frankly, I find this entire debate jaw-dropping. Never before have I seen the anti-war crowd so totally defeated in logic that, point by point, dozens of arguments are silently conceded, and new, totally different ones presented in the hope of saving face. And not just any war critics, but the intellectuals. Come on, people, you’re shaming liberals everywhere!

  45. truepeers Says:

    BTW, my point is not that religious guarantees of honesty don’t often fail, but simply that the secular left have yet to devise an alternative vision of how we might put our faith in people.

  46. truepeers Says:

    I haven’t read all the comments here, but one point I think is missing is that one of the reasons much of the lib left goes crazy over the “bush lied, people died” theme, is that the idea of the President lying inevitably draws one into consideration of the basis by which we have ever protected ourselves against lying. And this has to do with what society makes sacred, or transcendent, a process whose importance most of the secular left would deny.

    To lie about the sacred signs and positions that bond the community, or to be a worldly representative of the sacred, like the President, and to be a liar, is something society cannot long tolerate. Traditionally, it has been religion, its social authority and teachings, that has been the guarantor of this obligation.

    While a conservative can decry Clinton’s lying as a sign of the decline of sacred and moral values, and still take such values seriously, a liberal secularist who may have the thought that Bush is lying, cannot so easily decry the decline of sacred values. How often do you hear Bush being criticized from the left as a bad Christian? Sometimes it happens - there are still libleft Christians out there - but it it not mainstream liberal sentiment today.

    It is because the left cannot criticize Bush by holding up religion, and because they cannot hold up religion as our surety against the moral hazard of lying, that they are driven to tizzies. They can offer no guarantee in general for moral behaviour, once they themselves have turned against the sacred. What they see in the allegedly fallen president is a sign of their own nihilism. Unable to come to terms with this, they just go crazy instead.

  47. Yr. Fthfl. Svnt. Says:

    Kalvan said…
    “Interesting. Presumably a corollary would be that if the person hears an actual lie, but it is something (s)he chooses to believe, then it was not a lie.”

    Moonbat logic. The lie remains a lie, supported by prejudice, delusion, or whatever other personal flaw motivates that person to believe the lie. It’s quite a common phenomenon on the left.

  48. P-BS-Watcher Says:

    “One reason for the ubiquity and ferocity of the accusation, is what if he’s NOT a liar?”

    Exactly. The notion of a listener-centered definition of lying helps explain a lot of the illogical rhetoric. But in practice it is a defense mechanism for a deeper seated problem. If Bush is not evil incarnate, if he is right, or even if he is a misguided bumbler, the whole leftist world view collapses. That can’t be allowed to happen. Bush if Hitler. See What If You Are Wrong?

  49. Buddy Larsen Says:

    Yeh–TM, that is a good ‘un. I first heard it wrt the Carter administration.

  50. Buddy Larsen Says:

    One reason for the ubiquity and ferocity of the accusation, is what if he’s NOT a liar?

    It’s would be (in fact, “is”), for a lot of folks, a pretty devastating implication.

  51. Henry Bowman Says:

    This is odd…to “lie” is to “speak or act or deceive…”. This is a very straightforward definition. The problem occurs when trying to determine that a person thought when they spoke.

  52. tequilamockingbird Says:

    I was just e-mailed this joke. I hope people on both sides of the divide might find some humor in it — I know I did!

    Little David was in his 5th grade class when the teacher asked the
    children what their fathers did for a living. All the typical answers
    came up-Fireman, policeman, salesman, etc.

    David was being uncharacteristically quiet and so the teacher asked him
    about his father. “My father’s an exotic dancer in a gay cabaret and
    takes off all his clothes in front of other men. Sometimes, if the
    offer’s really good, he’ll go out to the alley with some guy and have
    sex with him for money.”

    The teacher, shaken by this statement, hurriedly set the other children
    to work on some coloring, and took Little David aside to ask him, “Is
    that really true about your father?” “No,” said David, “he works for the
    Bush administration, but I was too embarrassed to say that in front of
    the other kids.”

  53. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Tatterdemalian: Sorry, I don’t have any answers for you, but thank you for that excellent link to Jim Lehrer’s interview of Hans Blix. Very, very instructive reading. Everyone participating in this thread, I think, could benefit from reading it.

    Brad, I think the last paragraph of the interview, in particular, will strike a chord with you, in relation to what I believe was your last post:

    “JIM LEHRER: Whatever else, do you feel vindicated by events?

    HANS BLIX: Well, I think the matter is too serious for any sort of feelings of vindication. Yes, I think it proved that inspections… international inspections, if independent or individual countries, and which is run professionally, came to conclusions which were closer to reality than intelligence agencies which were linked to political governments that had preconceived ideas.

    And I think that’s a lesson for the future because the world will need inspections in the future in Iran, in Libya and in North Korea. And in my view, the best would be to have these inspectors coming in, demanding the cooperation of the countries and also have the leverage of the political and military support. I have no doubt that we would not have been admitted into Iraq if it had not been for the U.S. military buildup in the summer of 2002, so both are needed. But in both cases, I think critical thinking is essential.”

  54. Anonymous Says:

    This refrain is so common that it too is dishonest. Yes, at one point in history, everyone thought Saddam had WMDs. But after the inspections process started up again, all sorts of credible evidence started cropping up that the basis for this certainty was faulty, and that Saddam really wasn’t sure to have WMDs after all. Bush and the right ignored and refused to seriously confront this evidence, and in fact actively and deceptively told the public only one side of the story.

    Sorry, but that’s lying. Trying to weasel out of it by simply lying about the sequence of events (Clinton thought Saddam had WMD, so Bush can’t have lied if Clinton was honest) is no less slimy.

    And as Lincoln said: claiming to know something for sure when you in fact know that there are serious doubts and that the basis for your claims to knowledge are empty IS lying. There’s no way around that.

  55. Tatterdemalian Says:

    I wonder if anyone could suggest a way we could verify whether or not Saddam had WMDs without invading. Hans Blix, long after the invasion, said there was no way he could be sure all the WMDs were gone, and specifically blamed Saddam’s continuing interference for the UN inspectors’ inability to perform their job.

    Anyone know how we could properly inspect Iraq, without Saddam interfering and without deposing him? Anyone? Bueller?

  56. Rose Nunez Says:

    Nice, long, (mostly) civil discussion. How refreshing!

    Re the incendiary Scott Ritter: In December, The Weekly Standard recapped the accusations that Ritter was in the pay of, if not Saddam himself, Saddamites. Key graf:

    Al-Khafaji first came to public notice after revelations that he gave former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter $400,000 to produce a film that criticized the United States for its role in the inspection process. Al-Khafaji, who is listed as a “senior executive producer” of the film, arranged meetings for Ritter with high-level officials in Saddam’s government, a feat New York Times magazine writer Barry Bearak found “impressive.” Ritter had previously been an outspoken critic of Saddam Hussein, and issued dire warnings about the status of the Iraqi dictator’s weapons of mass destruction. His sudden flip–he is now a leading apologist for Saddam’s regime–and revelations about Ritter’s 2001 arrest for soliciting sex with minors have fueled speculation about the nature of his relationship with al-Khafaji.

    Al-Khafaji has long claimed that he cares only about the Iraqi people, an assertion too preposterous even for Ritter, who told THE WEEKLY STANDARD in 2001 that his patron was “openly sympathetic with the regime in Baghdad.”

    Link here:
    http://weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/002/605fgcob.asp

  57. terrye Says:

    So I take it the Bush bashers want to put Saddam back in power?

    Maybe he will name a mass grave after one of them.

    Saddam could have done the same thing a decade ago that Qaddafi did a couple of years ago and there would not have been an invasion. There would have been no Food for Oil scam either.

    The ability of people like tequila and verb etc to just cut and paste this long winded crap on comment thread after comment thread is mind numbing.

    I don’t even bother with their lies anymore. I just yawn and keep on scrolling. I stop reading when it become so repetitive.

    Gee, did I say lies?

    Hans Blix actually said there had to be a “presumption” that Saddam had weapons because he was supposed to account for them and did not. That is why the UN had not turned him loose years before.

    Bush did not say Saddam was involved in 9/11 but Saddam was associated with at least one of the people who attacked the WTC back in 1993. But this claim was not made by Bush, it was made by the Clinton administration.

    Saddam tried to kill a president.

    Saddam ignored the cease fire agreement.

    What will the loony left do when Bush leaves office? Who will they blame for everything?

    This is like a sickness with these people.

    Imagine Bush becomes president and defends Saddam. He says Clinton lied about the Weapons, he says the Zionists run the UN, he says we should abandon the nofly zones and let Saddam get back to killing his own people enmasse.

    Would they have preferred this outcome? How do they think the world would have responded?

    My guess they would have said no blood for oil. They would have said Bush had made a deal with the devil for the oil and was allowing a mass murderer with weapons of mass destruction flaunt the law and slaughter his own people. They would have reminded us that the Iraqi Liberation Act was national policy.

    The truth is whatever they say it is. That is the whole point.

  58. Charlie Says:

    Most excellent postage!

    Complementary theory: “Bush lied” was chosen because it rhymes with “people died” and because it’s short and fits on a bumper sticker. The jingoism of the left.

  59. The Bunnies Says:

    Verb ignored many of my ponts (the military being broken, homeland security being so inept that we’ve had a massive wave of no attacks, etc.) but he did respond to some. I’ll respond to what I find to be his most feeble, and his most effective response.

    He said “Multilateral coalition?” as if to imply that there was none whatsoever. I named three of the counties that comprised of this supposedly nonexistent coalition and suggested that he therefore implied that these countries don’t exist. I admit that he did not explicitly state that France exists but Australia does not, but France’s opinions seem to matter, whereas Australia’s can be dismissed with a question mark. He then suggested that I was not capable of arguing in good faith without refuting his own initial dismissal of Poland with mere punctuation.

    “Clinton didn’t invade, but I agree with the basic truth…Clinton was a liar. Everyone knows that.”

    Thank you, verb. You can admit this, but many of your allies can not. Were I excusing Bush’s lying via Clinton, I would in fact be engaging in the logical fallacy you cited. However, that was not my point.

    Many of those who hate Bush think Clinton was wonderful. They accuse Bush of lying and cite it as evidence that he is an awful president, but Clinton said many of the same things. The typical response to this evidence of their hypochrisy is to simply ignore it.

    Clinton and Bush disagreed in their assessment of the urgency of Sadaam’s WMD programs as well as their prescription as to how best to handle them. However, no evidence exists to suggest that they either differed in their assessment of the existence of said programs, or in what they relayed to the American people in their explanations as to why they responded how they did.

    No “lies” of Clinton would excuse any “lies” of Bush. Nevertheless, either both lied on the issue of Sadaam having WMD’s, or both did not. Verb concedes that Clinton may also have lied, most others simply ignore this point (like verb himself did on my point of Iraq’s attempts to acquire goats or cowpeas from Niger).

    Clinton chose to bomb based on a seemingly mistaken assessment; Bush chose to invade. Regardless, both used the very same assessments of Sadaam’s programs to come to their respective conclusions. I commend verb for at least addressing this issue, demonstrating that he is capable of at least criticizing Clinton for that which he would love to crucify Bush.

    I’ve seen little evidence elsewhere to indicate that his is the prevailing view among anti-war opponents.

  60. Grand Stand Says:

    I don’t think convincing the American people that Bush lied on WMDs is the goal. Although repeating the lie often enough is having some influence.

    The goal is to make the “Bush Lied” meme stick to counter balance the “Clinton Lied” reality.

    It isn’t about any one issue. It’s about painting the Republicans as “see, they lie TOO, so we get to take lying off the table.”

    If they’re all liars then we can talk about something else and we can’t criticize them for it.

    They’re still smarting for being caught out with the Blue Dress.

  61. Anonymous Says:

    God bless the USA.

  62. flenser Says:

    verb

    Three neutral observers all tasked with investigating and reporting on the state of Saddam’s WMD arsenal, all reported that Saddam had nothing. Before the war.

    As I pointed out, Blix actually said the opposite of what you are claiming. You are either mistaken, or lying.

  63. The Bunnies Says:

    Hi Tequila–if only everyone could keep their disagreements as civil…

    “The bit about Clinton and Albright being mistaken, misinformed, etc.: Perhaps you haven’t read the entire thread, but that’s a quote from neo-neocon’s original post, intended humorously; I wasn’t trying to make a serious argument.”

    Well, then what is your take on it? Are both liars, or were both misled?

    “The “Beware of the Dog”: True, Saddam did not comply with a number of UN resolutions, and failure to do so is grounds for suspicion.
    That’s as far as I’m willing to go: grounds for suspicion, not grounds for invasion. On the inspection issue, by late fall of 2002, when it was patently obvious war was on the way — although the Administration denied the decision had been made — the 1998 position had become moot. The inspectors had resumed their work, getting much better cooperation. In the last weeks before the war, cooperation was total, and the inspectors were coming up dry.”

    1998 was not mute, because it demonstrated that the Iraqi regime could not be trusted. Maybe the inspectors were not exactly thrown out, but they were not cooperated with, and per the terms of the cease fire, that alone justified retaliation. Sadaam remained in power after 91 only because we allowed him to stay because he agreed to certain things. He stopped agreeing–we withdrew our permission.

    “By the way, I’d cite Scott Ritter here, but his name draws an enormous amount of flak. Can you or anyone provide proof, not rumour, that he’s an Iraqui stooge?”

    I had proof on my old computer before it crashed–I echo your sentiment. (If someone can debunk the Scott Ritter stuff, that’s also welcome)

    “I hate to trot out knee-jerk responses, but the use of chemical weapons against Iran and much of their use against his own people occurred with the tacit blessing of the U.S., when Iraq was an ally against the perceived greater enemy, Iran.”

    To me, this doubled our responsibility to get rid of him. If American power led to the creation of such abuses, then American power has no excuse to allow it to continue (ditto the Taliban).

    “The UN is a bit of a thorny issue. I’d be willing to go along with the UN on pretty well every issue to do with Iraq — the no-fly areas being one exception — but pro-war people very frequently trot out UN decisions that they find helpful to promote their agenda while generally despising the UN for their namby-pamby attitude. A dilemma, no?”

    A common pro-war argument is that the UN talks tough but fears actually doing anything. They say things like “serious consequences” but then complain if anyone wants a consequence more serisous than a finger wag. Words have meanings, and if the UN thought Sadaam should have been left alone, they should have said so, but it’s become a meaningless organization. However, it’s a meaningless organization that occasionally says something relevant before contradicting itself. It’s important to point out the contradictions.

    The other side isn’t exactly consistent in regards to the UN, either. I remember during Gulf War I hearing repeatedly that the UN is nothing more than an echo chamber for US interests. During Kosovo, we didn’t need UN approval to wage war. But along comes Bush, UN approval is all of a sudden equal to “legitimate.” If I suspect that Bush actually obtained direct (instead of only implicit) UN approval for this war that we would simply go back to “the UN is only a rubber-stamp for America” and “we bribed Cameroon to vote with us” and UN approval would be dismissed. Please provide evidence to the contrary.

  64. Huan Says:

    Also,

    International law was not broken. Iraq submitted to the terms of the ceasefire as set forth by the US in 1991. As part of the terms, Iraq was to fully comply with inspection. It did not. The last UN resolution before the cancellation was unanimous that Iraq had not complied.

    It does not matter whether you did not feel Iraq was a threat. It really even does not matter whether no one else, person or nation, felt Iraq was a threat. That one person with reasonable ground and analysis felt Iraq was a threat does not mean that person lied.

  65. flenser Says:

    verb

    Why are Canadians so obsessed with getting rid of Bush? I’ve always found that strange.

  66. Huan Says:

    @verb and tequilamockingbird

    The analogy was very apt.
    1. As a person, you did not know whether the mugger had the gun or not.
    As the Bush administration, he did not know whether Iraq had wmd or not
    2. As a person, it did appear by the point in the pocket that the mugger had a gun
    As the Bush administration, it did appear by failure to comply with the inspection that Iraq did have wmd
    3. As a person facing a mugger, one would certainly felt threatened
    As the Bush administration after 911, Iraq certainly appear menacing
    no “lie”
    4. Was Iraq threatening?
    From recent actions yes. Iraq invaded as the aggressor both Iran and Kuwait. And lobbed missiles at Israel. Iraq also brutally oppressed its own Kurds and Shia subpopulation.
    Thus if a mugger who looks like a mugger, whose police records you have seen, comes up to you with what appears to be a gun in his pocket to mug you, would you feel threatened?

    The fact that under international pressure at the time still did not comply fully only heightened the sense of threat.
    That Iraq did not, while under international pressure threaten to invade another country at the time is meaningless and does not mean it was not threat. Or was there a lie to perceive Iraq as a threat.

    May be Neo should have a follow up post to clarify what a “threat” is?
    That it is a subjective response
    That it is temporally directed
    That not knowing the absolute truth of the nature of the threat
    That fearing a harmful outcome
    All constitute what a “threat” is.

  67. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Huan: As verb said, “Saddam wasn’t invading anyopne, wasn’t threatening anyone.”

    His neighbors opposed him after his invasion of Kuwait, to the extent that many of them sent troops in the true coalition gathered by GHWB. This time around, they’re opposing the invasion.

  68. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Well said, Brad. It’s received wisdom that the U.S. has never before been so polarized.

    Wouldn’t you agree, though, that there has been some constructive dialogue on this thread? I don’t think reasoned discussion is impossible.

  69. verb Says:

    lets re-examine what imminent threat may mean subjectively,
    if a man comes up to you with a gun in his pocket to rob you. Would you feel that was an imminent threat?
    how do you at the time know that it was not just his index finger in his pocket pointing at you?
    worth testing it if your wife or kids could be shot in the process?

    Not analogous. Saddam wasn’t invading anyopne, wasn’t threatening anyone.

    We even stepped up bombing in 2002 to goad him into a response. He didn’t bite.

    We thought for sure the inspectors would find something, they didn’t.

    There were the real reasons, and then there were the selling points. While everyone may have believed it was plausible for Saddam to have some chem or bio weapons (certainly not nukes)…that was just the selling point. We didn’t invade to defend anyone from a toothless tiger with a bad attitude. It wasn’t defense, it was offense.

    Simply put, it was aggression. Illegal as hell, even Richard Perle admitted as much.

  70. Brad Says:

    Well, this thread proves one thing: there is no middle ground where Bush is concerned! Given the fact that the US had similar splits over Clinton, Reagan, Carter, and Nixon, one wonders what the future holds. I know we have had such polar politics going all the way back to Adams vs. Jefferson, but that was before the abominations of the 20th century and the real possibility of nukes being used by those that don’t worry about MAD, or against them. That, along with the economic divide -the absurd compassion for the rich on one side vs. the blind belief that we can get marx right the next time- will definately require some clear thinking in the future to deal with.

  71. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Huan: “If a man comes up to you with a gun in his pocket to rob you. Would you feel that was an imminent threat?”

    I don’t agree with your analogy. Saddam didn’t have a gun; in fact, he looked as if he might be thinking about buying a gun someday. Would you feel that was an imminent threat?

  72. tequilamockingbird Says:

    The Bunnies: Sorry to take so long getting back to you. I’ve been sidetracked, as you may have noticed.

    The bit about Clinton and Albright being mistaken, misinformed, etc.: Perhaps you haven’t read the entire thread, but that’s a quote from neo-neocon’s original post, intended humorously; I wasn’t trying to make a serious argument.

    The “Beware of the Dog”: True, Saddam did not comply with a number of UN resolutions, and failure to do so is grounds for suspicion.
    That’s as far as I’m willing to go: grounds for suspicion, not grounds for invasion.

    On the inspection issue, by late fall of 2002, when it was patently obvious war was on the way — although the Administration denied the decision had been made — the 1998 position had become moot. The inspectors had resumed their work, getting much better cooperation. In the last weeks before the war, cooperation was total, and the inspectors were coming up dry.

    By the way, I’d cite Scott Ritter here, but his name draws an enormous amount of flak. Can you or anyone provide proof, not rumour, that he’s an Iraqui stooge? I’ve always considered him one of the heroes in this sordid affair.

    “He threw out the inspectors after not allowing them in palaces, etc.” It may be nitpicking, but Saddam didn’t throw them out, although I’ve seen that repeated ad nauseam. They were withdrawn, ostensibly because they were being hindered from complete freedom of movement.

    You said, ‘Not “any country whose government is duplicitous,” but perhaps those that have also previously used WMD’s against both foreign soldiers and domestic civilians, have shot at American and British planes countless times, defied numerous counts of the cease fire, and jerked around UN inspectors repeatedly might qualify.’

    I hate to trot out knee-jerk responses, but the use of chemical weapons against Iran and much of their use against his own people occurred with the tacit blessing of the U.S., when Iraq was an ally against the perceived greater enemy, Iran.

    They shot at U.S. and British planes that were illegally, according to the UN, violating Iraq’s soverign airspace with their imposition of no-fly zones in the north and south. (I believe the no-fly zones to have been a good thing, by the way, and they probably prevented large-scale attacks on the Kurds in the north and the Shiites in the south.)

    The UN is a bit of a thorny issue. I’d be willing to go along with the UN on pretty well every issue to do with Iraq — the no-fly areas being one exception — but pro-war people very frequently trot out UN decisions that they find helpful to promote their agenda while generally despising the UN for their namby-pamby attitude. A dilemma, no?

  73. verb Says:

    what we did know was that
    a) Iraq has yet accounted for all its wmd as per the ceasefire
    b) Iraq was the only nation at the time shooting at our planes enforcing the no-fly zones per the same ceasefire

    Inspectors found nothing of substance. Iraq wasn’t a threat to us…even his neighbors didn’t think he was a threat to them. If they did, they’d have joined the colaition, or supported the invasion financially.

    WMD was not a reason…it was a rationalization. This war was not about a threat, and never was. That’s just the selling point for the rubes to buy into it.

    But did I say “prevaricate”? Sorry…I meant “lie”. Didn’t mean to make use of synonyms appear like mincing words. I meant “lie”.

    PS: What do you call someone who speaks three languages? Trilingual.

    What do you call someone who speaks two languages? Bilingual.

    What do you call someone who speaks one language? American! ;-)

  74. Huan Says:

    tequilamockingbird,

    1. my comment regarding the use of “including” was not meant to demonstrate a gramatical error, as your comment regarding my typo of “mislead” was. It was to show that actions against Iraq was not because of a suggested link to 911, but that because Iraq was a terrorist state, supporting terrorisms like that of 911 (but not necessaaarily 911 itself).

    2. it does not matter if another was abusive. you did not need to be.

    verb,

    while you may not agree with Iraq being an “imminenet threat”, that does not mean there was any prevarification. again, re-read the part of Neo’s post regarding what constitute a “lie.”

    what we did know was that
    a) Iraq has yet accounted for all its wmd as per the ceasefire
    b) Iraq was the only nation at the time shooting at our planes enforcing the no-fly zones per the same ceasefire

    lets re-examine what imminent threat may mean subjectively,
    if a man comes up to you with a gun in his pocket to rob you. Would you feel that was an imminent threat?
    how do you at the time know that it was not just his index finger in his pocket pointing at you?
    worth testing it if your wife or kids could be shot in the process?

    even with english as my 3rd language, your usage of prevarification (was it an attempt to sidestep Neo’s and common usage definition of what a “lie” is?) is … how shall i say it … “funny”. but not ha ha funny.

  75. verb Says:

    Why not let’s debate the real reasons for Iraq…instead of their BS cover story.

    One set of talking points debating the other…all of it BS. A grand distraction to keep America looking at the sleight of hand while the power brokers get rich.

    Really? What’s America’s strategic goal, what are the reasons? Access to cheap, plentiful oil. Permanent bases in a central part of the region. Surrounding Iran. Guilt over letting the Iraqi Shia get crushed in 91. And some cowboy proving that America is capable of fighting a less than immaculate war — where every casualty we take is perverse proof that America can take a punch.

    That’s why we’re there. But, it’s mostly about the oil, and hobbling our global competition. It’s about money. Let’s don’t be naive.

    I’d have a lot more respect for Bush if he went on TV and said…”look, there is massively growing demand for oil in developing industrial nations like China and India. We have forever passed the peak of oil production, and a growing demand will be jockeying for increasingly limited supply in the decades to come.

    Our American way of life — our economic might, our lifestyles, our strategic preeminence, depend on access to cheap, plentiful energy sources. Always have.

    Someday you’ll thank me for those 14 permanent bases and putting a friendly gov’t in there by hook or by crook. Not just for the oil, either (but it’s nice to have.) If Iran gets out of line, we won’t need permission from the Afghan warlords or the Ba’athists to launch an invasion from their turf. And if things go sideways in Saudi, we’ve got it covered there too.

    As a bonus, remember when my dad screwed the Shia in 1991, told them to rise up against Saddam, and then abandoned them? We put them in power, finally. Leave Kurdistan alone, ya hear?

    Oh, and Osama? Remember when you said that America couldn’t take a punch…that we’d bug out at the first sign of casualties? We had a long track record of that, it’s true. But so far — we’ve lost more kids in Iraq than every military engagement going back to Vietnam, combined. That’s right. Haiti, Grenada, Panama, Bosnia, Kosovo, Somalia, the first Gulf War, Afghanistan — add em all up and realize we’ve lost double that in Iraq…and we still ain’t going nowhere. Don’t mess with Texas, f*cker. Yippeekayay!

    And as a message to the next wouldbe Saddam, or Noriega, or Osama — once you’re on America’s payroll, you’re there for life. Don’t think you can just walk away. Islam Karimov, ya listening?

    That’s the noble cause. Oil, strategic placement, hobbling China, resolving Cheney’s guilt over 91, and oil. And f*cking Saddam, on principle.

    Great job, American troops. Thanks, God Bless, goodnight.”

    That would at least be honest. He wouldn’t even have to mention the patronage his buddies got as a result.

  76. Motor 1560 Says:

    And, the beat goes on. I’m not the radical here, ‘Bird. To the delusional person the sane are crazy, “Because, its all so clear here in my mind.”

    I make a reference that goes over his head. Does he go to Google to learn more? No, he says, “What kind of a leap is that? What in hell are you talking about?” Does he take some time to Google the blogs I mentioned? Impossible.

    Translation: I can’t get bogged down here. I have points to make.

    Notice how he begins to fixate on me personally? I become a “radical” making “offensive” “fanatical” comments? He even admits to his unease. If he had a therapist he would be encouraged for this insight and asked more questions encouraging further insight into his condition.

    He knows something’s wrong. There is a “Disturbance in the Force”. This is the “Don’t look at the man behind the curtain.” argument. It’s all those right wing neocons fault. “Bush is behind it, I tell you! Why don’t you listen. Listen to me. Listen to me!”

    Mass delusion? Does not compute. “Just listen to me! I’m tequilamockingbird.” This is a person in the grip of the transmittable disease meme of BDS. A full blown case. Just imagine having to clean his spittle flecked monitor and keyboard? Fair puts me off my feed it does.

    Orderly, take Mr. ‘Bird back to the ward and bring in the next case for review.

  77. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Bravo, verb.

  78. verb Says:

    I’ll give you another example of prevarication, one that directly relates to this thing you said:

    This refers to authorization to attack ALL terrorist states, some of which might have had a part in 9/11.

    Remember when the admin was going around claiming they’d never said “imminent threat” (pdf link) to justify pre-emptive war? I do.

    What prevarication! Bush’s National Security Strategy repeatedly justifies pre-emptive war on rogue nations in general — and Iraq specifically — on the basis of “imminent threat”.

    They also use terms like: “looming threat”, “new threat”, “contemporary threat”, “immediacy of today’s threats”, “imminent danger of attack”, and “sufficient threat”.

    At the time of the Gulf War, we acquired irrefutable proof that Iraq’s designs were not limited to the chemical weapons it had used against Iran and its own people, but also extended to the acquisition of nuclear weapons and biological agents. […] Other rogue regimes seek nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons as well. These states’ pursuit of, and global trade in, such weapons has become a looming threat to all nations.

    For centuries, international law recognized that nations need not suffer an attack before they can lawfully take action to defend themselves against forces that present an imminent danger of attack. Legal scholars and international jurists often conditioned the legitimacy of preemption on the existence of an imminent threat—most often a visible mobilization of armies, navies, and air forces preparing to attack.

    We must adapt the concept of imminent threat to the capabilities and objectives of today’s adversaries. Rogue states and terrorists do not seek to attack us using conventional means. They know such attacks would fail. Instead, they rely on acts of terror and, potentially, the use of weapons of mass destruction—weapons that can be easily concealed, delivered covertly, and used without warning. […]

    The United States has long maintained the option of preemptive actions to counter a sufficient threat to our national security. The greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction— and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty remains as to the time and place of the enemy’s attack. To forestall or prevent such hostile acts by our adversaries, the United States will, if necessary, act preemptively.

    Denying they used the words “imminent threat” to describe Iraq is absolutely absurd. It was the very basis of their justification for pre-emptive war.

    Claiming they never said it…that’s a lie on par with anything Clinton lied about. Again…plain talk. Plain meaning of words. A real man admits it. Liars and people of low character like Clinton and Bush try to weasel out of what they said and did. And so do their supporters.

  79. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Grackle: Yeah, you’re right. This is a second instance when I reacted to Motor 1560’s ravings in an inappropriate way.

    It’s hard to maintain a balanced perspective when you’re dealing with a fanatical radical. Sorry.

  80. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Lunacy: Clinton lied to attempt to conceal an adulterous affair. Bush — and I’ll avoid the use of the word “lied” — cherrypicked and exaggerated information supporting the avowed aim of his neo-con advisers to invade Iraq and overthrow Saddam, presenting that information as indisputably true, while ignoring and suppressing information to the contrary, and led the nation into an aggressive and unnecessary war. Do you think the two are of the same order of magnitude?

    Of course you don’t. No reasonable person would. Rather, you don’t accept my premise about Bush’s — the Administration’s — actions. Can we agree on that?

  81. verb Says:

    Not the amounts unaccounted for after the first Gulf War? Not his previous use of WMD? Not his throwing out inspectors? (yes, kicking out those searching WMD is evidence that you might have them, even if it happened in 1997)

    What did Blix and el Baradei report? Why did Bush ask them to leave, they clearly weren’t done with inspections.

    Again…if we’re talking about what did Saddam have at the time of invasion…the wild claims of WMD weren’t supported by current inspections. They. didn’t. find. anything. Sheesh.

    The relevant portion here is “take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist orgnizations INCLUDING (emphasis mine) persons who…September 11, 2001.” It doesn’t say “only” those who planned 9/11. This refers to authorization to attack ALL terrorist states, some of which might have had a part in 9/11. Take a logic course. Is that the best proof you’ve got that the adminsitration hammered it into the heads of the world that Sadaam planned 9/11?

    You’re parsing words like a Clintonista. BTW, Clinton didn’t invade and occupy Iraq. While you’re on the subject of logical fallacies, check out “tu quoque.”

    Again…what is the plain meaning of words? “Including” doesn’t “include” Saddam. He wasn’t “included” in the 9/11 attacks. If the President meant “including, but not limited to”, then that’s what the resolution should have specified. It didn’t. Of course it’s easier to take an overly generous interpretation, but I could cite 50 other examples of where they conflated Iraq with 9/11 (or “the terrorists who attacked us”) and it’s a pattern of deceit.

    If Bush lied, so did Clinton. Please, will somebody on the left address this? Everyone skirts around this every time.

    Clinton didn’t invade, but I agree with the basic truth…Clinton was a liar. Everyone knows that. The difference is, I’m not parsing words like the meaning of “including” to a generous interpretation. “Is” means “is, and “including” means “including”. (And left and right has nothing to do with it.)

    Apparently Poland, Britain, Australia, etc. don’t even exist. (all nations that opposed the invasion, however, are part of the “international community”)

    For crying out loud…are you capable of discussing things in good faith? You’re arguing against every “leftie” you’ve ever debated here…which doesn’t include me.

    Remember the debates, when Cheney castigated Edwards over a compariosn between the 1991 coalition and the current one: “You made the comment that the Gulf War coalition in ‘91 was far stronger than this. No. We had 34 countries then; we’ve got 30 today. We’ve got troops beside us.”

    Highly misleading. The 1991 coalition had 660,000 troops (and nearly all of Iraq’s neightbors — Saudi, UAE, even Syria, it was a larger, more local, more Muslim supported coalition) for “merely” ejecting Saddam from Kuwait.

    Let’s be perfectly honest here…if we had 660,000 troops to bear on the current situation for peacekeeping duties, we wouldn’t be having this debate in 2006, in a ll likelihood. We’d both be celebrating successful elections.

    You seem to want to argue Michael Moore, and something Murtha said, and whatnot…but I’m a realist. This ain’t polemic.

    Bush hade claims which he couldn’t substantiate…regardless of what Saddam did or didn’t do.

    The coalition isn’t as strong (not even 1/4 as strong) as the 1991 coalition.

    They invaded on their own timetable, and still they were unprepared. That’s unforgivable.

    Bush is still lying now! What is the state of Iraqi security forces? Anyone can tell you that the Iraqi security forces are largely compromised in places, and enacting vendettas, and even if they were fully field ready, they’d still need American support, air support, logistsics, etc. But to listen to Bush you’d think they’re “standing up so we can stand down.” Great, rosy assessment completely unsupported by reality.

  82. Grackle Says:

    tequilamockingbird said…

    “Non-embedded journalists in Iraq are probably well aware they’re risking being murdered by right-thinking American troops like you, as others have been.”

    Stupid assertions such as the above only serve to undercut your other arguments. Aren’t you at all concerned about your credibility to the reader?

  83. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Huan: “to suggest someone may need psychiatric care for their belief is egregious, especially if you have not demonstrated the professional capacity to make that diagnoses.”

    You’re right about ad hominem arguments, of course. I made one comment that I’ll admit was rude and dismissive. I refer you to Motor 1560’s post where he repeatedly characterizes huge numbers of people as crazy. His reason, in a nutshell? They think differently than he does.

    He’s written the most radical and offensive posts I’ve seen on this blog.

  84. Lunacy Says:

    Back to the topic:

    I see it as Projection.

    Those who selectively accuse Bush of lying while ingoring the same info out of the mouth of Clinton or whomever are themselves the liars,

    projecting thier sin onto Bush and his supporters.

    They know the difference between deceipt and error.
    They knew it when Clinton deceived and covered for him. They rationalized that the deceipt didn’t matter because it was a “private matter.” That he lied was not important because what he lied about was not important to them. It didn’t support any agenda they had. In fact, denying the importance of Clinton’s deception WAS supportive of thier agenda.

    But now, it behooves them to project deceipt onto Bush because that DOES support their agenda.

    It isn’t naivity. It isn’t misunderstanding.

    On the contrary, it is quite logical by leftist standards.

    Quantity has a quality all it’s own. If you repeat the lie enough it begins to sound true. Or true in essence…

    like “fake but accurate”.

    Lunacy

  85. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Huan: verb was only quoting from the “Text of a Letter from the President to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President Pro Tempore of the Senate.” If the use of the word “including” is a grammatical error, it’s one that was made by the President. Hmm — if it is indeed an error, do you suppose he would admit it?

    tequilamockingbird

  86. Motor 1560 Says:

    What do we know? We know that the positions taken by people like ‘Bird and his ilk are the expression of delusional thinking. Neo, Dr. Sanity; sigmund,carl and alfred; and Shrinkwrapped have been kind enough to use their professional analytic skills to delineate the nature of the delusions and have given us the causal matrices that have caused these delusions.

    We know that, extended to their full illogical reach, these delusions put each of us, our families and our country at risk.

    The delusions have also deprived us of a “loyal opposition” party so crucial to the operation of our democracy. The almost total capture of the Democratic Party and its subsequent marginalization is not a healthy development. But, it may hasten the rise of a new centrist party. Only time will tell.

    Like so many mentally ill people those infected by the delusional meme have fairly common behavioral problems and thought processes.

    One pattern is to try to argue “opponents”, that is people who are not infected, into agreeing with them, sharing their illness. When this doesn’t work they will, commonly, act out. With regard to blogs with comments this may take the form of talking so much that no one else can speak, or smearing feces on the walls.

    My response is to not enable their behavior. I do not engage them in debate; all of us who have dealt with the delusional know this to be futile nor do I try to find “common ground”. Never try to teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and annoys the pig.

    Make no mistake. These are not just crazy people. They are dangerous crazy people because just like dippy Aunt Jo, we don’t know when they are going to go out to the kitchen and come back into the living room with a carving knife or let her psychotic boyfriend in the back door. By that time she is not the sweet, babbling nut at the dinner table.

    Some of us may even excuse her behavior by saying, “Oh she didn’t really mean it.” or “You just have to know how to handle her.” Some people will even deny the whole concept of mental illness. “Well, she has her rights, you know. Besides, mental illness is just somebodies opinion. I don’t think it really exists at all.”

    You read about it all the time. “Sweet Old Aunt Slays Five In Their Beds. More at ten”

    What we are dealing with is a whole cohort of people who have bought into a mass delusion; not the first time this has happened.

    If Henny Penny had simply told Chicken Little, ” Stop talking nonsense Little! You got hit on the head with a acorn. Get over it. Or, you will go to your room and miss supper.” If old CL doesn’t shut his beak, he stands a real chance of getting sent to his room and having his door nailed shut.

    Folks, we have to stop giving dangerous, crazy people the oxygen of a “benefit of a doubt”. When we enable them, they in turn enable others who are overtly and publicly murderous.

  87. Huan Says:

    tequilamockingbird,

    btw, ad hominems, whether direct or insinuated, do not advance your argument.
    rather it weakens your own character.

    to suggest someone may need psychiatric care for their belief is egregious, especially if you have not demonstrated the professional capacity to make that diagnoses.

  88. Huan Says:

    tequilamockingbird said…
    SEC. RUMSFELD: Not at all. If you think — let me take that, both pieces — the area in the south and the west and the north that coalition forces control is substantial. It happens not to be the area where weapons of mass destruction were dispersed. We know where they are. They’re in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat.”

    You’ve got a point. I relied on a source that said that Rumsfeld stated flatly: “We know where they are.” He did say that. He added that they were somewhere east, west, south and north of Baghdad. Thanks for the helpful, clear and unambiguous statement, Mr. Secretary.
    Lovely of you to demonstrate in person Neo’s point. Did Rumsfeld lied when he made this statement? Did he indeed know there were no WMD and declare he knew they were there?

    Then consider this from Patrick Chester regarding what else Rumsfeld said:
    “I would also add, we saw from the air that there were dozens of trucks that went into that facility after the existence of it became public in the press and they moved things out. They dispersed them and took them away. So there may be nothing left. I don’t know that. But it’s way too soon to know. The exploitation is just starting.”

    btw, English is my 3rd language. Even so, I have to point out something verb posted regarding a Bush letter linking Iraq and 9/11:
    (2) acting pursuant to the Constitution and Public Law 107-243 is consistent with the United States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations, organizations, or persons who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.
    By using the word “including” he thus make the distinction that action will be taken against terrorists organizations, some, but not necessarily all or only those, who took actions on 9/11.

  89. tequilamockingbird Says:

    Motor 1560: Congratulations on actually saying something about your beliefs and where you stand rather than just saying I’m not entitled to take a position that doesn’t agree with yours. It’s a start.

    “Iraq is a done deal”? Hardly. It’s a work in progress. “Events of the last ten years are simply a continuation of something that has been laying around since 1683 …”? Hardly. They’re simply a continuation of something that has been laying around since the Creation, or whatever myth you happen to believe in concerning that event.

    “I don’t believe that this is a War Against Terrorism.” Neither do I! Common ground!

    “In twenty years we will either be a Spartan nation of spears or we will go under.”

    Man, that’s scary stuff. Good thing people like you are only a wingnut minority. Reminds me of an allusion to Travis Bickle earlier in this thread. You could benefit from psychiatric care. They’re doing amazing things these days.

    “On that basis you and I have no common ground at all. I may be wrong. You may have read the primary and secondary literature and may even be an exegete of the Qur’an and fluent in modern and classical Arabic. I doubt it. You sound like a Starbucks intellectual.”

    What kind of a leap is that? What in hell are you talking about?

    “And, yes I served and still serve; just not as strenuously these days; so I’m immune to the chickenhawk argument.”

    Huh? Who brought up any chickenhawk argument?

    “We’ll pull your sorry chestnuts out of the fire just like we’ve always done. Even effete chestnuts.” It’s your sorry chestnuts that are in the fire in Iraq, partner. If this was a War on Terror, which we agree it is not, we’d be in there with you, as we are in Afghanistan. (Afghanistan is not a pretty sight these days, and hasn’t been since the U.S. withdrew its Arabist experts and the cream of its special forces for the neo-con imperialist invasion of Iraq, but Afghanistan is a whole ‘nother story.)

    “Just don’t get downrange or somebody might mistake you for a target. Stay back with the women and children and keep your hand over your stacking swivel.” Good advice. Non-embedded journalists in Iraq are probably well aware they’re risking being murdered by right-thinking American troops like you, as others have been.

    “Just don’t make me have to listen to your emissions.” Change the channel, buddy. Nobody’s making you do anything.

    Oh, and if I can intrude on your message to verb, thanks for the “logical fallacies” link. I suggest you read it. If you don’t see how any of those apply to you, read it again.

    Also in your post to verb: Reverse Chickenhawk? Does that apply to the glorious military career of your illustrious Commander in Chief? Where does it leave Rumsfeld and five-deferment Cheney, along with hundreds of Congressmen, Senators, and unelected advisors who never served but are directing this unnecessary elective war of agression?

  90. flenser Says:

    verb

    You should read what Hans Blix said in his own words.

    Sample; “Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament which was demanded of it and which it needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world and to live in peace.”

  91. Anonymous Says:

    If you don’t agree w/ neo’s posts and think that you’re going to convert the folks here and barring that drive them off with contarian posts then you are a disrupter and a troll/shill.

    Don’t let the door hit you in the cheeks on your way out. And, write if you get work, hear?

  92. Anonymous 12:01 Says:

    Bunny:
    “When Clinton and Albright in the 90’s talked about the urgent need to get rid of Sadaam’s weapons of mass destruction, were they lying, too?”

    - I have no way of knowing whether they were lying or not, but I do know they didn’t use it as a reason to go to war. The politics of Washington is one thing and the politics of war is another. War is immensely more destructive than any other human endeavor (including the sum total of all terrorism as defined by the US). Anyone who starts a war, like George W. Bush, needs to be held to the absolute highest degree of scrutiny.

    Bush was misled? By whom? And why do they still work for him? If this was truly all just a colossal mistake, at least one person ought to have lost their job over it – if not for lying, then for being totally incompetent.

    Not only has this administration *started* a war, it has also undercut our liberty, and that also deserves the utmost scrutiny. Even the Abramoff scandal is penny-ante compared to the blood and guts on the killing floor and your government spying on…you. It doesn’t get any more serious.

    “Scepticism was not enough in dealing with someone who has gassed civlian populations, etc. We needed proof, the burden of proof was on Saddam, and he didn’t provide it.”

    - When you refer to the gassing, you’re referring to a time period when the US government (which included basically the same people who are there now) were supporting Saddam Hussein with money, weapons and intelligence. Back then spreading gas wasn’t as naughty as spreading the Iranian revolution into Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. That worked out well.

    You don’t seem to view the US Gov’t with even the least little bit of that same skepticism. Yet, it is a government that has injected “its own people” with diseases (Tuskegee Syphillis Experiments), utilized concentration camps, practices torture, spies on its citizens, and starts wars.

    Essentially, this discussion is about the Bush Administration’s marketing strategy for going to war. WMD. He wanted to start a war with a nation that did not attack or threaten to attack us…and he had to spend months and months trying to convince everyone to go to war. When he couldn’t, he just did it anyway.

    After all, it would have been rather difficult to go to war based on the truth. How’s this:

    “We declare war on the immeasurably inferior nation of Iraq in order to establish a stronger American military presence in the Middle East. We wish to pillage and control its natural resources in a manner that will extend American power and benefit our privileged elites and corporations.

    “More than 10,000 red-blooded American men and women may be sacrificed, maimed, or otherwise scarred for life. At least ten innocent Iraqi men, women, and children will likely be killed for every innocent life lost on 9/11, and many more innocents shall suffer. They may decide to fight back, and if they do we intend to stay and continue to fight whatever the cost (to you). Bring it on.

    We’re going to invite the media to ride along with us, embed them. And, we’ll do our damndest to hide the ugly realities of war from you in cooperation with the 5 mega-corporations who control the media. Instead of actually thinking, we encourage you to go about business as usual.

    “During this time of war, we intend to make an unprecedented move: we will lower taxes for the wealthiest 1% of our citizens, ensuring the working class foots even more of the bill. Further, we shall reduce the number of jobs on the homeland by hundreds of thousands. We thank the American peasants, err, middle class and poor, for increasing productivity (profits) and continuing to settle for less (lower wages and a higher cost of living). In closing, we’re going to create or raise premiums on Medicaid for the poor, and cut food stamps for the really poor while we’re at it. After all, there must be sacrifice.”

    Now, that wouldn’t have gone over too well. The only part they were able to tell us truthfully was t