Everyone:
... but, IMO, we — as in the United States — can't afford this kind of hindsight. I mean, c'mon, we invaded and conquered another nation because of its alleged stockpiles of WMD, its alleged links to al-Qaida, et al., and because of the depravity of its leader.
Well, one out of three ain't bad. Except we can't afford one out of three in cases like this, either.
I'm sort of angry right now, especially with Colin Powell. He was the one I respected the most, and I took his words the most seriously, especially when he appeared before the United Nations. Now, despite all the latest revelations, he toes the line like a good soldier. I just don't know. Honor, duty and loyalty are good things (and always will be), but this is bordering on blind loyalty, and that frankly unnerves me.
Now ... now I don't know who's trustworthy anymore when it comes to national leaders. If Powell is fallible, then what does that make Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice? Accomplices and/or instigators to war fever? Am I guilty for taking Powell's statements at almost face value, based on his previous experience as, IMO, an outstanding military strategist and political role? Out of all of them, he was the one I respected the most ... and now ... well, I'm just displeased and growing more so with every day.
Iraq isn't secure. It won't be for some time to come. How many more of our men and women will die? We're at roughly 538 now. No, it's not even close to Vietnam, but don't tell that to the families and friends of the dead and wounded. And all the billions we're pouring into Iraqi Freedom ... I'd rather have pumped a few billion into maintaining the U.N. sanctions/inspections until closure was achieved rather than blowing $80 billion and climbing on the military offensive and subsequent occupation of Iraq.
**sigh** I'm just rambling here. I never believed the alleged links Iraq had to the Sept. 11, 2001, perpetrators, and I continue to believe that we did the world a favor by booting out Saddam once and for all. Yet it does nothing to alleviate the nagging feeling that maybe, just maybe, there was another way of going about this.
This isn't carte blanche for those who despise the United States to pile drive into this thread, nor is it permission for folks to come out and blindly defend everything we've done or say that, since 9-11, there's no wrong. As I see it, there never was any easy answer to the Iraq problem ... but that's the way life is, it seems.
If things were easy, 20/20 hindsight wouldn't be necessary. And sometimes, just sometimes, I wish I could just put myself in some group and never have to think too much about whether or not I'm right, wrong, or somewhere in-between. But then I think, no, you really don't want that. Life is all about having to make decisions, having to think, and what's the point of free will, of intelligence, if you're going to sign it off to someone else?
Just a ramblin' man ...
Gatekeeper
... but, IMO, we — as in the United States — can't afford this kind of hindsight. I mean, c'mon, we invaded and conquered another nation because of its alleged stockpiles of WMD, its alleged links to al-Qaida, et al., and because of the depravity of its leader.
Well, one out of three ain't bad. Except we can't afford one out of three in cases like this, either.
I'm sort of angry right now, especially with Colin Powell. He was the one I respected the most, and I took his words the most seriously, especially when he appeared before the United Nations. Now, despite all the latest revelations, he toes the line like a good soldier. I just don't know. Honor, duty and loyalty are good things (and always will be), but this is bordering on blind loyalty, and that frankly unnerves me.
Now ... now I don't know who's trustworthy anymore when it comes to national leaders. If Powell is fallible, then what does that make Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice? Accomplices and/or instigators to war fever? Am I guilty for taking Powell's statements at almost face value, based on his previous experience as, IMO, an outstanding military strategist and political role? Out of all of them, he was the one I respected the most ... and now ... well, I'm just displeased and growing more so with every day.
Iraq isn't secure. It won't be for some time to come. How many more of our men and women will die? We're at roughly 538 now. No, it's not even close to Vietnam, but don't tell that to the families and friends of the dead and wounded. And all the billions we're pouring into Iraqi Freedom ... I'd rather have pumped a few billion into maintaining the U.N. sanctions/inspections until closure was achieved rather than blowing $80 billion and climbing on the military offensive and subsequent occupation of Iraq.
**sigh** I'm just rambling here. I never believed the alleged links Iraq had to the Sept. 11, 2001, perpetrators, and I continue to believe that we did the world a favor by booting out Saddam once and for all. Yet it does nothing to alleviate the nagging feeling that maybe, just maybe, there was another way of going about this.
This isn't carte blanche for those who despise the United States to pile drive into this thread, nor is it permission for folks to come out and blindly defend everything we've done or say that, since 9-11, there's no wrong. As I see it, there never was any easy answer to the Iraq problem ... but that's the way life is, it seems.
If things were easy, 20/20 hindsight wouldn't be necessary. And sometimes, just sometimes, I wish I could just put myself in some group and never have to think too much about whether or not I'm right, wrong, or somewhere in-between. But then I think, no, you really don't want that. Life is all about having to make decisions, having to think, and what's the point of free will, of intelligence, if you're going to sign it off to someone else?
Just a ramblin' man ...
Gatekeeper
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