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View Full Version : After Iraq, then what for the "Insurgents"?



101A
12-04-2006, 08:52 AM
After they have broken the back of the United State's will in Iraq, what will be the next move for the people who are doing so much to get us out of there (talking about the insurgents there, not the anti-war folks here)?

I'm betting, encouraged by their resounding victory, they pick up there camps and move 'em on over to Afghanistan an kick our asses over there.

We'll be out of Afghanistan before the next president's midterm election, and a radical wing of Islam will be back in control. The terrorists have the formula, and they will use it again. There will be plenty of poeple in this country who will agree that we need to leave, and the media will soon join in that chorus.

Ultimately, I believe that the towers will have fallen, the Pentagon will have been attacked, and the net result will be Shia control in Iraq, and something similar in Afghanistan. Iran will have nukes, and control over both of those, plus Syria and Jordan.

boutons_
12-04-2006, 09:38 AM
"will be Shia control in Iraq"

... which 100% the fault of, the impeachable crime of, dubya/dickhead for starting an unnecessary, phony Iraq war. Having Saddam in place now would be vastly superior to the Repug Iraq catastrophe and its consequences.

I agree with all your consequences. An unbroken arc of radical Muslim states from Iraq to Afghanistan, with ends of the arc, Jordan/Lebanon and Pakistan, at risk to go theocratic/radical inevitably. Then Israel goes, if not sooner.

Financed by $8B - $10B /month of oil $$ into Iran/Iraq.

To blame this situation
1) on the anti-Iraq-war crowd or
2) on the press or
3) on ANYBODY

... but dubya and dickhead is total, lying bullshit.

I'm not worried about Iran nukes. Iran can't deliver them to USA, and they're too indsicriminate when used on someplace like Israel which is full of sacred Muslim sites.

Millions of cheap Kalashnikovs, RPGs, mortars, convential rockets, cell phone bombs paid for by US oil $$$ will suffice to take out Israel, and take down not-yet-radical govts in north Africa: Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco.

So the "solution" for the Repugs is to stay in Iraq, keep losing, keep being irrelevant, keep being unable to control the violence, while losing several 1000 more US military.

If the Shia can manage to cleanse the Sunnis, and the US is still there, the Shia will then turn their full force on the US military.

Iraq is not state, will never be a state friendly to USA, ie, the Repugs simply can't win in Iraq. The same is true of Afghanistan.

The Repugs have strategically fucked up so fucking catastrophically in Iraq that most people can't even start to imagine the consequences.

You're doing a heckuva job, dubya.

George Gervin's Afro
12-04-2006, 09:39 AM
After they have broken the back of the United State's will in Iraq, what will be the next move for the people who are doing so much to get us out of there (talking about the insurgents there, not the anti-war folks here)?

I'm betting, encouraged by their resounding victory, they pick up there camps and move 'em on over to Afghanistan an kick our asses over there.

We'll be out of Afghanistan before the next president's midterm election, and a radical wing of Islam will be back in control. The terrorists have the formula, and they will use it again. There will be plenty of poeple in this country who will agree that we need to leave, and the media will soon join in that chorus.

Ultimately, I believe that the towers will have fallen, the Pentagon will have been attacked, and the net result will be Shia control in Iraq, and something similar in Afghanistan. Iran will have nukes, and control over both of those, plus Syria and Jordan.


America has proven they will fight when the fight is worth it. Was Vietnam a resounding success? Worth it? The country decided that 58,000 dead was enough and we have reached that point in Iraq. The majority of this country sees the Iraq war as one that did not have to be fought and that wasting anymore lives there proves nothing. No one is complaining about the war in Afghansitan but I see that you need to 'make that up' in order to prove your point. The consistant complaint about Afghanistan is not why went there but why we left with the job unfinished. We took resources from fighting the Taliban to fighting some liberation experiment that did not work. Why do you blame America for the problems brought on to us by Bush?

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 10:20 AM
boutons will be howling like a banshee for some action from our
government to curb the violence and terrorist attacks in our
cities.

You think I'm joking. The terrorist know exactly what people like
boutons and his ilk have done for them and that they have no
backbone. The will attack and attack and we will be fighting on
our soil. Then boutons and his bunch will cry like little babies that no one is protecting them. And will wonder why the terrorist want
to attack us. We are their friends.

George Gervin's Afro
12-04-2006, 10:29 AM
boutons will be howling like a banshee for some action from our
government to curb the violence and terrorist attacks in our
cities.

You think I'm joking. The terrorist know exactly what people like
boutons and his ilk have done for them and that they have no
backbone. The will attack and attack and we will be fighting on
our soil. Then boutons and his bunch will cry like little babies that no one is protecting them. And will wonder why the terrorist want
to attack us. We are their friends.


what in the fuk are you talking about ray? Apparently your definition of backbone is "supporting" an unecessary war and ignoring that young lives are being sacrificed for nothing more than saving face. We will fight and sacrifice.. but we won't sacrifice just to fight..

101A
12-04-2006, 10:35 AM
America has proven they will fight when the fight is worth it. Was Vietnam a resounding success? Worth it? The country decided that 58,000 dead was enough and we have reached that point in Iraq. The majority of this country sees the Iraq war as one that did not have to be fought and that wasting anymore lives there proves nothing. No one is complaining about the war in Afghansitan but I see that you need to 'make that up' in order to prove your point. The consistant complaint about Afghanistan is not why went there but why we left with the job unfinished. We took resources from fighting the Taliban to fighting some liberation experiment that did not work. Why do you blame America for the problems brought on to us by Bush?

No one is complaining about Afghanistan now, but they will be, I'm betting.

The people who stirred the pot in Iraq are, for the most part, not Iraqis. They will leave when the job is finished, and they WILL go to Afghansitan. They will pick off our soldiers a few at a time, the death toll will rise. At the same time they will begin civilian blood-baths, side against side, until, eventually, America will get tired of it, write it off, and remove our troops. I believe it is inevitable.

We started something in Iraq, and now that it has gone horribly wrong, we don't have the decency to stick it out. If we will leave the Iraqi's high and dry after messing up there country, why wouldn't we do the same for Afghanistan?

Can't you hear the pundits, the anti-war types? I sure can: How about: "We've been in Afghanistan 18 months LONGER than Iraq, and yet the violence is increasing, not decreasing." or how about, "Soon, the Afghanstan war will have been fought for longer than WWI and WWII COMBINED!" and also, conveniently, it probably won't be the Taliban, so we might hear things like, "It was the Talliban that were responsible for 9/11 - and they're gone, why are we STILL fighting this war"?

If you don't think the US can change its mind real quickly, remember that GW won in '04 on very much a "stay the course" platform in Iraq. That was only TWO years ago.

101A
12-04-2006, 10:38 AM
what in the fuk are you talking about ray? Apparently your definition of backbone is "supporting" an unecessary war and ignoring that young lives are being sacrificed for nothing more than saving face. We will fight and sacrifice.. but we won't sacrifice just to fight..


We started the 'unnecessary" war. Can't put that genie back in a bottle. Is it right to leave now? Isn't that worse?

boutons_
12-04-2006, 10:49 AM
"The people who stirred the pot in Iraq are, for the most part, not Iraqis."

so you believed dubya last week when he lied that al-Quaida was the cause of dubya's Iraq catastrophe?

US military estimates that only 2% or 3% of troublemakers in Iraq are al Quaida or foreign. As native Sunnis and Shia join into the the fray, that %age will probably go down. Even if al Quaida never showed up in Iraq (they weren't there under Saddam, another Repug lie), the Sunni/Shia civil war was very probably inevitable once Saddam/Baathists were removed.

"don't have the decency to stick it out."

It was "indecent" for the Repugs to start the war, where are the Repugs going to find decency now?

"stick it out" == "stay the course" ? yep, very vague, nice policy.

"GW won in '04 on very much a "stay the course" platform in Iraq".

bullshit. dubya won ONLY because of Rove's tactic of "war president" worked. Just because the war was going on and not yet obviously a total fucking disasater, just enough of the US was hoodwinked into not changing horses in war time. Congrats, Rove, dubya re-elected with smallest margin ever for an incumbent pres winner. It only cost 3000+ US mlitary lives and a couple $T.

Do you think you have some kind insight that the eventual, sooner or later, outcome in Afghanistan will be different from Iraq's? Like Iraq, but now 5 years later, the "govt" in Afgahnistan is extremely weak, controls not much more than Kabul, democracy is extremely weak, public security is at very best shaky even in Kabul, the institututions and infrastructure are extremely weak. All will collapse and revert to the Taliban as soon as the NATO/US leaves. sooner or later. yawn. That has been evident for a couple years.

George Gervin's Afro
12-04-2006, 10:57 AM
We started the 'unnecessary" war. Can't put that genie back in a bottle. Is it right to leave now? Isn't that worse?


So there is the question. Do we continue to sacrifice our blood and money in a conflict that cannot be won militarily? When is enough? From what we know now it depends on the Iraqis themselves to see if they want it bad enough. How many dead GIs would it take for you to decide when to get out? Since we know now that AL Qaeda comprises roughly 2% of the insurgency the notion that' we fight them over their so we don't have to fight them here' is not very accurate. the other 98% are still planning to kill us.. and yet we are bogged down in a no win situation.

101A
12-04-2006, 11:02 AM
Do you think you have some kind insight that the eventual, sooner or later, outcome in Afghanistan will be different from Iraq's? Like Iraq, but now 5 years later, the "govt" in Afgahnistan is extremely weak, controls not much more than Kabul, democracy is extremely weak, public security is at very best shaky even in Kabul, the institututions and infrastructure are extremely weak. All will collapse and revert to the Taliban as soon as the NATO/US leaves. sooner or later. yawn. That has been evident for a couple years.

See, Afro, Boutons just made my point.

101A
12-04-2006, 11:05 AM
So there is the question. Do we continue to sacrifice our blood and money in a conflict that cannot be won militarily? When is enough? From what we know now it depends on the Iraqis themselves to see if they want it bad enough. How many dead GIs would it take for you to decide when to get out? Since we know now that AL Qaeda comprises roughly 2% of the insurgency the notion that' we fight them over their so we don't have to fight them here' is not very accurate. the other 98% are still planning to kill us.. and yet we are bogged down in a no win situation.


I don't know how to "win" in Iraq...all I know is we started it, and don't have the stones to finish it. It's what the insurgents have KNOWN all along; that to beat the US, you simply have to turn public opinion against a given endeavor. They have, apparently, won. It is shamefull.

clambake
12-04-2006, 11:10 AM
How do you right a wrong that is an impossible situation. With more dead GIs?

boutons_
12-04-2006, 11:10 AM
typical good news from Aghanistan:

December 4, 2006

Panel Faults U.S.-Trained Afghan Police

By JAMES GLANZ and DAVID ROHDE

Five years after the fall of the Taliban, a joint report by the Pentagon and the State Department has found that the American-trained police force in Afghanistan is largely incapable of carrying out routine law enforcement work, and that managers of the $1.1 billion training program cannot say how many officers are actually on duty or where thousands of trucks and other equipment issued to police units have gone.

( note: this is not an opinion piece)

In fact, most police units had less than 50 percent of their authorized equipment on hand as of June, says the report, which was issued two weeks ago but is only now circulating among members of relevant Congressional committees.

In its most significant finding, the report said that no effective field training program had been established in Afghanistan, at least in part because of a slow, ineffectual start and understaffing.

Police training experts who have studied or had first-hand experience with the American effort in Afghanistan said they agreed with the report’s findings, and some said they had warned for years that field training was the backbone of a strong program. But they said additional problems needed to be investigated, including the quality of private contractors and the cost and effectiveness of relying on them to train the police officers. In particular, the experts questioned why the report focused on United States government managers and only glancingly analyzed the performance of the principal contractor in Afghanistan, DynCorp International of Virginia.

( hmm, I bet DynCorp is huge Repug campaign contributor )

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/04/world/asia/04police.html?ei=5094&en=dde08ec5ddaac97d&hp=&ex=1165294800&partner=homepage&pagewanted=print

101A
12-04-2006, 11:11 AM
"stick it out" == "stay the course" ?

Didn't say "stay the course". I said "don't quit".

Also, it is not a Republican war, it is an American war.

Just the way it is.

clambake
12-04-2006, 11:16 AM
It may be an American war, but half of us feel betrayed. How do you win Iraq when you can't even heal at home?

101A
12-04-2006, 11:19 AM
How do you right a wrong that is an impossible situation. With more dead GIs?


First, you start by not calling it "impossible".

Then, you make it clear we're not going to quit, no matter what; no matter how much we lose, no matter how many insurgent there are, no matter how many car bombs, IED's, Suicide bombers, etc...WE"RE NOT LEAVING!

Then, what, exactly, can the insurgents do? Can they beat us militarily? Can they capture and hold ground? Can they drive us out? Can they kill more of us than we kill of them?

No, no, no AND NO.

What would be the point of a continued insurgency, if the goal of that insurgency is to get us to leave?

Eventually THEY would be the ones admitting it was an impossible task.

Unfortunately they KNOW that our policies are fickle, and they KNOW how to manipulate those. Haven't y'all seen the captured documents that say as much? This war is going as per a plan; their plan.

101A
12-04-2006, 11:22 AM
It may be an American war, but half of us feel betrayed. How do you win Iraq when you can't even heal at home?

We all feel betrayed by all kinds of things the government does!

But WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT!!!

We elect the people who make the decisions that set the course for the country, domestically and abroad. When we change our collective minds, we elect different people, which changes the direction the country is heading in.

The insurgents know this. The Iraqis are learning it, in spades.

clambake
12-04-2006, 11:26 AM
It is what it is. How does this benefit Iraqis? Actions on the ground will not change. What we have given them is the constant fear of ending up dead.

101A
12-04-2006, 11:31 AM
It is what it is. How does this benefit Iraqis? Actions on the ground will not change. What we have given them is the constant fear of ending up dead.

No, it certainly sucks to be an Iraqi right about now; but at least we are there sticking it out with them. The majority ARE NOT killing each other, and I'm sure want this all calmed down.

Staying or leaving AT THIS MOMENT probably makes little difference to them, but in the near future, when the Shia take over and begin government sponsored retaliation and genocide on the Sunni, it will matter a great deal. After that, depending on how "radical" the new government is, public stonings, ala Iran and Afghanistan, may, or may not, be the rule of the day (at least Saddam didn't have a particulary religious bent to his craziness).

Any of that we can prevent, I believe, would be a good thing - SINCE WE STARTED IT!!!

boutons_
12-04-2006, 11:37 AM
"WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT!!!"

The Iraq war was Repug/neo-con pet project, prior to 2000.

How many people were involved in cooking up the Repug/neo-con war?
a couple 100 max? vs 300M Americans.

600K MORE Americans voted against dubya than for him. How is dubya's radical programs and Iraq war "American".

Iraq was NOT, and is not, an American project.

Starting Iraq war, and losing Iraq, is EXCLUSIVELY a Repug responsibility.

Smearing Repug shit on America won't stick.

The Repugs, alone, have disgraced America.

Niceties like "stick it out" or "decency" have long ago been overwhelmed by how to minimize the immeidate damage to US military and the Iraqis.

The long-term damage, well, it's humongously worse, even unimaginable.

clambake
12-04-2006, 11:41 AM
If we were really sticking it out, there wouldn't be another 100 dead Iraqis laying on the sidewalk this morning in Bahgdad. 95% of our patrols consist of getting from one point to another as quickly as possible. We're not holding anything but the green zone, which is primarily for our own protection. How does this benefit Iraq?

101A
12-04-2006, 11:45 AM
"WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT!!!"

The Iraq war was Repug/neo-con pet project, prior to 2000.

How many people were involved in cooking up the Repug/neo-con war?
a couple 100 max? vs 300M Americans.

600K MORE Americans voted against dubya than for him. How is dubya radical program and Iraq war "American".

Iraq was NOT, and is not, an American project.

Starting Iraq war, and losing Iraq, is EXCLUSIVELY a Repug responsibility.

Smearing Repug shit on America won't stick.

The Repugs, alone, have disgraced America.

Niceties like "stick it out" or "decency" have long ago been overwhelmed by how to minimize the immeidate damage to US military and the Iraqis.

The long-term damage, well, it's humongously worse, even unimaginable.


Go walk the streets of Sadr city with that message, B. See if it keeps your head attached to your shoulders.

Also, how does leaving lessen the immediate damage to the Iraqis? I'm sure their deaths won't be on our evening news anymore; I mean, what's the point - mission accomplished? But they will still die, probably in even greater numbers.

101A
12-04-2006, 11:52 AM
If we were really sticking it out, there wouldn't be another 100 dead Iraqis laying on the sidewalk this morning in Bahgdad. 95% of our patrols consist of getting from one point to another as quickly as possible. We're not holding anything but the green zone, which is primarily for our own protection. How does this benefit Iraq?


Did I ever say I was proud of the job we're doing now?

Obviously, the decision has been made that Iraqi lives are MUCH less valuable than GI lives.

Again, shameful, if that is what's happening.

However, I don't fully believe you characterization of what's going on. Xray posted a letter from a soldier in Iraq last week that is very much at odds with what you have written regarding what our troops are doing in Iraq right now.

clambake
12-04-2006, 12:03 PM
I don't doubt that soldiers believe in their cause. I wouldn't try to contradict that. I would hate to be "just spinning my wheels". Most Iraqis are having their mind made up for them.

boutons_
12-04-2006, 12:19 PM
"how does leaving lessen the immediate damage to the Iraqis?"

Sooner or later, the Iraqis will complete their civil war, with whatever Iraqi deaths that causes, and Iraq will be stabilized again, but much more powerful and dangerous to USA/world than the Iraq of Saddam since 1991.

The US military, and the still-born, compromised Iraqi govt and its military/police forces, are now powerless to stop it, to which the daily carnage testifies.

I blame the US troops for nothing. They are just employees, pawns, doing their impossible jobs, It's their cynical, evil fucktard-in-chief who is fully, exclusively blameful.

I read where the work of US withdrawal would take at least a year.

btw, the Repug political mucky-mucks figure they will have no chance of winning in 2008 with the US still in Iraq. ie, they will push for withdrawal, not because it's the right thing to do for the US or for the Iraqis, but only because they want more of chance of making domestic partisan gains or winning in 2008.

101A
12-04-2006, 12:25 PM
btw, the Repug political mucky-mucks figure they will have no chance of winning in 2008 with the US still in Iraq. ie, they will push for withdrawal, not because it's the right thing to do for the US or for the Iraqis, but only because they want more of chance of making domestic partisan gains or winning in 2008.

Sounds about right - again, very sad that your life in Iraq is more affected by American politics than ours in this country.

BTW, since we are talking why things happen regarding the war; I no longer give GWB much credit for us not being hit here in the homeland by another attack since 9/11. It would be bad PR for the bad guys to commit terrorist attacks over here; it would strengthen our resolve OVER THERE. As soon as they've won over there, however, I think we'll get somthing big; start the cycle over again. Sons of bitches are patient.

boutons_
12-04-2006, 01:08 PM
"I think we'll get somthing big"

I think not. The fucking FBI/CIA/NSA/FAA were awakened by 9/11 (not, as they should have been, by the WH in the summer of 2001).

They all had great interest in supporting the Exec raping US privacy because they could make the excuse "we couldn't protect America in summer 2001 because we were hog-tied by the law", when in fact they had ALL the tools they needed to stop 9/11, but they are all a bunch constipated, turf-defending, chair-warming, pension-accruing, job-secured bureaucratic keystone cops made to look silly and girly-man by OBL and 19 hijackers with a few $100K.

I think US domestic security against foreign attacks is much better now. Of course, it would have been much more solid if dubya had not wasted $500B in Iraq.

OBL himself has admitted that striking in the USA is extremely difficult. The one chance he got, it was a biggie, and it accomplished his goal of drawing the US into Muslim lands where it would be vulnerable and much more easily attacked. OBL has beat dubya like a drum. Iraq was dubya's gift to OBL and the terrorists.

Not only do the terrorists get to kill US people in Iraq, Iraq then also falls into Muslim hands.

OBL must be praising Allah 10 times/day for dubya's mind-boggling fuckups.

.

johnsmith
12-04-2006, 02:37 PM
Totally unrelated to the subject:

You think Bin Laden is still alive? I don't.

ChumpDumper
12-04-2006, 02:51 PM
The people who stirred the pot in Iraq are, for the most part, not Iraqis.Nah, it's way more complicated than that.

As far as Afghanistan goes, the main problem is the Taliban and their radical allies are free to operate from the lawless areas of Pakistan -- not unlike the Viet Cong in Cambodia. No one has ever been able to control this land effectively and it's too much to expect Mushaharaf to go in and regulate; don't forget the Taliban was pretty much a creation of the Pakistani armed forces and intel service.

01Snake
12-04-2006, 03:29 PM
Totally unrelated to the subject:

You think Bin Laden is still alive? I don't.

Yep. I'd say he is dead as well.

boutons_
12-04-2006, 03:50 PM
"it's too much to expect Mushaharaf to go in and regulate"

he did a deal a couple months ago with the tribal leaders that effectively allowed the tribal areas to secede from Pakistan.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 04:33 PM
I think all of you are full of junk food and will soon expel
it in the normal manner. You have already written off
Iraq. Who will you write off next?

Guess we should just surrender and let them come on
over here and tell us how to live our life. Right?

clambake
12-04-2006, 04:39 PM
I get it Ray. You want everybody to just assimilate to Bush's way of thinking, and extinguish contemporary thought, because Bush is our savior.

George Gervin's Afro
12-04-2006, 04:44 PM
I get it Ray. You want everybody to just assimilate to Bush's way of thinking, and extinguish contemporary thought, because Bush is our savior.


Hey maybe Ray is right..Bush has been dead on so far in regards to Iraq.. from WMDS to the insurgency being in their final throes.. I mean we just need to to trust Bush..

johnsmith
12-04-2006, 04:45 PM
I used to think it was impossible for a person to be strictly liberal or strictly conservative. I mean, no one could possibly agree with everything one side says and disagree with everything another side says.

Then I came to Spurstalk.com and was introduced to Ray and Boutons.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 04:48 PM
I get it Ray. You want everybody to just assimilate to Bush's way of thinking, and extinguish contemporary thought, because Bush is our savior.

No clam, I just want us to keep doing what we
have been doing for all my life. Protect our way
of life. But that is rapidly evaporating because we
have so many people like you that have no concept of
of what is going on in the world. The United
States has done more for the people of this
world than any other country in the history of
mankind. We have liberated and established
democracies in many countries and never,
never kept territories we have conquered.

And contrary to your way of thinking, the people
who put this country on a path to greatness was
people who did assimilate and become one
nation. For all our faults, we had one great
benefit, we worked as one. Which isn't the
case now. As shown by people like you.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 04:48 PM
I used to think it was impossible for a person to be strictly liberal or strictly conservative. I mean, no one could possibly agree with everything one side says and disagree with everything another side says.

Then I came to Spurstalk.com and was introduced to Ray and Boutons.


Then you haven't read much history.

johnsmith
12-04-2006, 04:50 PM
Then you haven't read much history.


Oh dear lord. :rolleyes

Ok, let me rephrase that, in todays day and age I didn't think it was possible.


I have two bachelors by the way, one being in History and the other in Civil Engineering.

Although I'm much younger then you, I promise I've read plenty about history.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 04:52 PM
Then you didn't pay heed to what was read.

Debate was the the basis for the founding of this
country. But with one thing in mind. The country.

johnsmith
12-04-2006, 04:58 PM
Then you didn't pay heed to what was read.

Debate was the the basis for the founding of this
country. But with one thing in mind. The country.


Ray, don't get me wrong here, I don't think there is anything wrong with your point of view because that's what it is, your point of view. In fact, as anyone on here can attest, I lean much further right then I do left. I just didn't think there were people as far right as yourself and as far left as Boutons. You guys are polar opposites, Boutons is "Bizzaro Ray".

It wasn't a shot at you, just an observation.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 05:07 PM
JS, I take no offense. And I am thick skinned. This
forum, thanks to Kori and LJ, exist to express our views.
And I do. And I hope you do. That is what this country
is all about. I try to keep my language clean and hope
I make sense. Which I know sometimes I don't. But
we all do that on occasion. But I am passionate about
my beliefs. First, I am a Texan and then .....just joking.

clambake
12-04-2006, 07:02 PM
We all love this country Ray. But your confused about what that means. Country and Bush are not the same. You should fear Bush for the sake of your country.

xrayzebra
12-04-2006, 07:37 PM
^^What makes you think that I think Bush and Country
are the same. I do not agree with Bush on some
things. Like the illegals. Immigrations I have no
problem with. Just get in line. Dammit.

exstatic
12-04-2006, 07:49 PM
We started the 'unnecessary" war. Can't put that genie back in a bottle. Is it right to leave now? Isn't that worse?
Nope. There's an expression that hints at this, but doesn't quite cover it: Not throwing good money after bad.

There's just not going to be a good outcome. We can stay and watch it spiral out of control with us in the middle, or we can GTFO and let them kill each other, instead of each other and occasionally our kids.

101A
12-05-2006, 09:36 AM
Nope. There's an expression that hints at this, but doesn't quite cover it: Not throwing good money after bad.

There's just not going to be a good outcome. We can stay and watch it spiral out of control with us in the middle, or we can GTFO and let them kill each other, instead of each other and occasionally our kids.


In other words, "THEY reep what WE sow."

How very convenient for us.

101A
12-05-2006, 09:41 AM
Not throwing good money after bad.


:lol

...from a liberal.

Irony.

You must mean, "Not throwing good money after bad in certain wars I don't agree with," because heaven knows the left in this country is all for doing just that when it comes to any number of ineffective government sponsored social programs.

boutons_
12-05-2006, 11:35 AM
"Not throwing good money after bad."

should be: not throwing bad money after bad.

There's nothing good about the human/security/strategic catastrophe the Repugs have created in Iraq.

boutons_
12-05-2006, 11:57 AM
"ineffective government-sponsored ... programs."

... such as DHS/FEMA, Iraq, Afghanistan ?

velik_m
12-05-2006, 01:23 PM
I think Egypt will be the next on the list after Iraq and Afghanistan.

boutons_
12-05-2006, 01:29 PM
All of N. Africa is vulnerable to radical Muslim takeover, including long-time US ally Morocco. All of the regimes are corrupt and undemocratic (America is corrupt and democratic), and people on the bottom see overthrow as a chance for something better. But only Algeria and Libya have the oil/gas $$$ to subsidize the poor, as Iran does.