Winstonm, on Sep 5 2007, 06:49 PM, said:
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That he did it for the wrong reasons doesn't make it the wrong decision.
There is fallacy of logic here that I am having trouble pinpointing.
Hmmmm...good example.
OK, I found the fallacy there.
You're discussing the PERSON. I've already said that I won't defend Bush.
I'm discussing the EVENT.
A similar example. Some idiot cuts me off in traffic. I force him off the road, and shoot him dead. You know, a typical American response.
Later, it turns out that his car was full of explosives and he was on his way to blow up a preschool that wouldn't give him an extra pudding cup 20 years ago.
The PERSON: Should I be lauded, or rewarded, for my actions? Of cours not.
The ACTION: Was the result favorable to society and the world in general? I'd say definitely.
So I'm separating the two. I'm not a Republican, or a Conservative. You don't have to convince me that Bush is an idiot.
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Reason - or call it motivation - is critical because it determines objectives.
The announced goal in Iraq was to rid Saddam Hussein of weapons of mass destruction so he wouldn't give them to terrorists - how can we forget the "mushroom cloud" threat Bush painted for us.
Doesn't matter. Once you've decided on a course of action as big as a war, you give the reason that will give you unanimous support. That was the point of the Stamp Act, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, the Maine, the Lusitania, even Pearl Harbor I suspect.
Suppose Bush had gone before Congress and said "Madeleine Albright was asked about half a million kids dying in Iraq due to the Sanctions, and she said 'we think the price is worth it'. If we pull out completely, millions of Kurds and Shiites who helped us and worked with us and trusted us will be killed. Well I say it's not worth it, and I say letting those people die would be a violation of all we hold dear. So I'm going to invade Iraq next week".
Americans, being Americans wouldn't have been very enthusiastic. Why should we sacrifice a couple of thousands of American good old boys to save millions of our erstwhile allies over there? Why do it now, instead of later (which is basically the reason why we didn't do it in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001...)? Tepid support, fewer people volunteering, it would have made the mess far worse than it is now. If you're going to fight a war, you don't do it halfway. And sometimes, that means you lie to get the support of the populace. Sometimes, hell. I can't think of a modern war that hasn't used some pretence or another to get the populace riled up.
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If there were other valid reasons to be in Iraq, there were other avenues than a U.S. led invasion to attain those goals.
Well, by all means, tell me what those avenues were. The reasons I gave two paragraphs up are the reasons I would have gone, plus one more: we were under time pressure. Saudi Arabia wanted us out, and soon. Funding Al Qaeda so they could attack us was only the start.