death penalty

Oh, I certainly agree that Sadam was violating the '92 armistice (I think it was '92) and that he was past due for a lesson. My point was that the reason given for invading was wmd's and not the deposition of a dictator with a long string of human rights violations. I don't think that I recall his human rights record brought up once in the wind up to the war, it may have been mentioned in passing, but was by no means the argument for engagement, nor was it reported about by the major news stations.

The point that I was trying to make was that this whole line of reasoning about deposing a brutal dictator, while true, is spin. The bushies realized that they weren't going to find wmd's (and that there was too much attention there to sneak in some) so they fell back on what was left. Suddenly no one mentioned wmd's any more and it was all about the human rights.

It was about as funny and frustrating as watching CNN try to be objective and not sensational. It was like watching CNN go from the "yay! war!" mentality, through "we're looking for and will find wmd's", to "what were you thinking?".

Much like CNN's about face, it seems like people are too willing to forget that the initial reason for the invasion was shown wrong, indeed that there seemed to be little convincing evidence along those lines to begin with. I agree that it wasn't Bush himself who made the call, he's a puppet anyway. However, I think that the administration was atrociously uncritical of the evidence brought before them. I suppose as a scientist I find it frustrating, I have to (with good reason and gladly) doubt every piece of information I receive. It must be analysed and tested for validity and to see whether it makes sense or is consistent with other data.

All the evidence that has come out leading up to and since the invasion has indcated that this administration was single-minded in their desire to invade. In time, the UN would have aided, it was just a matter of waiting. Why? Because the UN doesn't act quickly, on a single piece of evidence, or with the same agenda. Granted, the UN has had a dismal record in some places (cough--rwanda-cough), but it's still as good a platform for testing the validity of a cause. To defend your plan in front of hundreds of people, several of whom are skeptical or opposed to you to begin with forces you to present a strong and irrefutable case. The fact was that the 'immanant threat' was not shown. In time, however, the UN would have had to act to enforce its own ruling, lest others take advantage of them. But, of course, we'll never know.

In summary, no, I don't think that they lied about wmd's. I think that they misused shaky evidence and didn't check it for consistency. I suspect that they discarded evidence that suggested that there weren't wmd's (or an immanent threat), but kept positive evidence.
 
Sadaam's human rights atrocities were mentioned by major news stations, and not just 'in passing'... I'd like to post about a recent 'mass grave' of women and children with only minor details, but it's to horrendous....

The evidence is there, and it's not just "spin"..

By the way, I'm not arguing, but rather posting my side on this. I support out troops in this matter, and it's about time something was done until - and much worse, wait for immenent threat.
 
happychem said:
Much like CNN's about face, it seems like people are too willing to forget that the initial reason for the invasion was shown wrong, indeed that there seemed to be little convincing evidence along those lines to begin with. I agree that it wasn't Bush himself who made the call, he's a puppet anyway. However, I think that the administration was atrociously uncritical of the evidence brought before them. I suppose as a scientist I find it frustrating, I have to (with good reason and gladly) doubt every piece of information I receive. It must be analysed and tested for validity and to see whether it makes sense or is consistent with other data..

I agree that the reason we went in proved to be wrong, but with the intel they had and from the intel from other countries made it look like that way.

I believe the intel community is not as strong as once was. Under the Clinton Administration funding was drastically cut and trimmed back to meet that budget. Clinton even passed laws that put limits on how the intel community gets it information. They are now just trying to get it back to where it should be.

So to relate this to your field of expertise, wouldn't it be hard to test and analyze data if you had tough constraints put on you. For example, being way under funded, being told how you gather your data, etc....

happychem said:
...In time, the UN would have aided, it was just a matter of waiting. Why? Because the UN doesn't act quickly, on a single piece of evidence, or with the same agenda. Granted, the UN has had a dismal record in some places (cough--rwanda-cough), but it's still as good a platform for testing the validity of a cause. To defend your plan in front of hundreds of people, several of whom are skeptical or opposed to you to begin with forces you to present a strong and irrefutable case. The fact was that the 'immanant threat' was not shown. In time, however, the UN would have had to act to enforce its own ruling, lest others take advantage of them. But, of course, we'll never know.

There was so many resolutions that Iraq was thumbing it's nose at. When would the UN have acted? They didn't react over the 12 years leading to this war. The UN is more reactive than proactive.

The UN would have NEVER authorized this when countries like France and Russia had their own hidden agendas. The majority of the security council said yes, but these two decided to use their automatic veto power.

The main problem I have with the UN is this, I feel we shouldn't have to go ask for permission to protect our national security. We don't need a "World Litmus Test".
 
Tyler718 said:
So to relate this to your field of expertise, wouldn't it be hard to test and analyze data if you had tough constraints put on you. For example, being way under funded, being told how you gather your data, etc....

I certainly understand being underfunded! Anyone working in a research institute in Canada can tell you about that! After over 10 years of the Liberal government cutting funding to, well, everything, a lot of our institutions are becoming hard pressed to produce research of equal quality to that being produced States-side or in Europe. Most of our equiptment is antiquated by modern research standards. We can still produce equally good data as anyone else (for the time being) but it takes twice as long or worse. Part of the reason that my initial project collapsed was because in order for me to get data I had to a) go out to sea to gather it, which is affected by budget cuts to boats and the fact that our coast guard (who I would be travelling with) have been losing a boat a year to cuts and b) had to send my samples to Ireland for analysis because no one here has the proper equiptment.

I'm getting off topic, but the point is that even with budget cuts, we can't use that excuse for bad data, we just have to work twice as hard and if, with what we've got, we cannot conclusively say one thing or another from our data, we cannot report it. I understand that the fate of the world and/or national security doesn't hinge on marine concentrations and stable isotope ratios of methyl chloride, but the underlying principle is the same.

In their situation, they have to report what they have, for my part (and they may have, I didn't read the reports, of course) the report would have had to be loaded with "we really don't know" 's and "inconclusive data". You could say that "from what we've seen" or "from the little we have to go on" "it looks like there may be a threat, but the evidence is inconclusive" or something to that extent. It's acceptable to report partial or preliminary data and estimates based on them, so long as they are presented in that manner. The lead up speeches and reports to the public left little doubt that there was a clear and present danger.

As for the UN, you're right, they had certainly been snoozing for the past 12 years. Once of the best things to come of this is that the UN will have to smarten up. I think that there is a big problem with vetos and that this is not the first time the problem has arisen, it allows too few people to press their own agenda. Who knows what Russia or France's agenda was? I agreed with their veto on the basis of the evidence I had heard and seen on the news, such as it was. But when Chirac said that he would veto no matter what was just plain rediculous. As long as there are people who are more interested in squabbling, agendas and petty disputes, the security council and the UN will be doomed to be a cumbersome and slow moving body.

Again, I agree with you that a world litmus isn't necessary to protect your national security, I don't think that anyone could argue that. But there wasn't any evidence that Iraq was a threat to national security. Al Qaida was based in Afghanistan with support from the Taliban (who should have been ousted the moment they started after those 3000 year old Buddhist statues!), members and money were largely Saudi, Saddam was far too moderate to ever get along with any of the radicals like Bin Laddin. The threat did not appear to be there, nor were there any convincing arguments as to how these wmd's were to be used against the US. All the while N. Korea managed to build a better rocket.
 
happychem said:
In their situation, they have to report what they have, for my part (and they may have, I didn't read the reports, of course) the report would have had to be loaded with "we really don't know" 's and "inconclusive data". You could say that "from what we've seen" or "from the little we have to go on" "it looks like there may be a threat, but the evidence is inconclusive" or something to that extent. It's acceptable to report partial or preliminary data and estimates based on them, so long as they are presented in that manner. The lead up speeches and reports to the public left little doubt that there was a clear and present danger.

I definitely agree with this. What I'm trying to figure out is where the breakdown was. There was all this intel being thrown at a lot of this country's leaders and Britian's. They had both parties convinced here; Blair and Parliment convinced in Britian. That is a lot of people to convince. Was there political twist thrown in? I'm not sure.

happychem said:
But there wasn't any evidence that Iraq was a threat to national security. Al Qaida was based in Afghanistan with support from the Taliban (who should have been ousted the moment they started after those 3000 year old Buddhist statues!), members and money were largely Saudi, Saddam was far too moderate to ever get along with any of the radicals like Bin Laddin. The threat did not appear to be there, nor were there any convincing arguments as to how these wmd's were to be used against the US. All the while N. Korea managed to build a better rocket.

The threat I think was the capability of him giving / selling them to the terrorist networks. Money can make a lot of people to get along.

I agree that N. Korea is a threat along with Iran, India, Pakistan, unaccounted for missiles that belonged to Russia. I'm not niave enough to think that America can solve all this alone. We will need some world support, but not niave enough to wait on them to come aboard.
 
Tyler718 said:
Under the Clinton Administration funding was drastically cut and trimmed back to meet that budget. Clinton even passed laws that put limits on how the intel community gets it information. They are now just trying to get it back to where it should be.

Clinton was an idiot, even democrats can agree with that one. The point is that we shouldnt be making the same mistakes so soon after they happened.


Tyler718 said:
I agree that N. Korea is a threat along with Iran, India, Pakistan, unaccounted for missiles that belonged to Russia. I'm not niave enough to think that America can solve all this alone. We will need some world support, but not niave enough to wait on them to come aboard.


North Korea is a touchy issue...and i dont think we can do anything about it without world support. Why? China, thats why. A war with N. Korea isnt something we should let a Cowboy talk us into, its not something we can even come close to winning without support from other world powers. Taking on the worlds largest, and second largest standing armies together just isnt good news. We might have control of the sky and sea, but that can only get you so far. Our troops are great, but we're talking about sheer numbers that we just cant match by ourselves. Definitely something we want to watch out for, but definitely something where a "preemptive strike" isnt a good idea at all.
 
Actually, I think you'd be hard pressed to find strong democrats who did not respect Mr. Clintons works. He was highly intelligent, and skilled to be President material IMO. And why does everyone give Bush a hard time but not Clinton?

...Probably because Clinton didn't have nearly as many (if any) ulterior motives like Bush has. And also, Clinton might have lied to us about his personal life, and his little fling with the 23 year old intern was wrong... but as far as his presidency goes, he had our country booming, and world peace in general was a success. So perhaps that is why the public has thumbed their noses at everything Bush has done - because even though he might make the "right" decisions (which is still matter of opinion), nothing is to show if it. So what, he captured Saddam Hussein. Our world is still in shambles as far as I’m concerned. Next...?
 
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tomm10 said:
The death penalty is one of those topics that the public rarely discusses with facts.
as evident by this entire thread...
its unfortunate (IMO) to see uneducated/emotional arguments on this topic.

I read way to many posts that favored the dp based on emotion, without citing a single reference or fact...
 
I don't know if you self-qualified me as one of those cases (people), but to be clear - the facts are out there. The facts themselves do not support the death penalty, but I will confess I only know that because of the previous research I have done on the topic.
 
aquariumfishguy said:
...... So perhaps that is why the public has thumbed their noses at everything Bush has done ......
Our world is still in shambles as far as I’m concerned. Next...?
"World in a shambles"?

I was going to ask, what "public" are you referring to -- but, no don't answer that.


:D
 
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