More war thoughts.
I'm still not fond of Bush; I think he went about this the wrong way. But as I've said before, I also think this may be (I'm not so confident as to say is) a war that needed to be fought. It's how he got to it that I don't approve of.
My dad sent me a link to an entry about the war, which is notably pro-war. And I think it may be the first such to at once quantify my ambivalence, and speak to it. The comparisons are interesting.
I still don't know what I think; I'm thinking. Besides making me think, I thought it was a fascinating piece in its own right (it's gone through the Civil War and science fiction by the end of it). So, here's
My dad sent me a link to an entry about the war, which is notably pro-war. And I think it may be the first such to at once quantify my ambivalence, and speak to it. The comparisons are interesting.
I still don't know what I think; I'm thinking. Besides making me think, I thought it was a fascinating piece in its own right (it's gone through the Civil War and science fiction by the end of it). So, here's
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<lj-cut text="Ambivalent, but not anti-war, thoughts in here.">I'm still not fond of Bush; I think he went about this the wrong way. But as I've said before, I also think this may be (I'm not so confident as to say <i>is</i>) a war that needed to be fought. It's how he got to it that I don't approve of.
My dad sent me a link to an entry about the war, which is notably pro-war. And I think it may be the first such to at once quantify my ambivalence, and speak to it. The comparisons are interesting.
I still don't know what I think; I'm thinking. Besides making me think, I thought it was a fascinating piece in its own right (it's gone through the Civil War and science fiction by the end of it). So, here's <a href="http://www.ejectejecteject.com/archives/000039.html".a link for anyone who is curious</a>.
My dad sent me a link to an entry about the war, which is notably pro-war. And I think it may be the first such to at once quantify my ambivalence, and speak to it. The comparisons are interesting.
I still don't know what I think; I'm thinking. Besides making me think, I thought it was a fascinating piece in its own right (it's gone through the Civil War and science fiction by the end of it). So, here's <a href="http://www.ejectejecteject.com/archives/000039.html".a link for anyone who is curious</a>.
no subject
The evidence that Hussein actually has a functional program for the manufacture of weapons of mass destruction is far more shaky than he seems to assume. And US intelligence sources (which the president seems bent on ignoring) claim that the invasion of Iraq is more likely to destabilize the region than to pacify it. And he discusses the administration taking a long hard look at the region after 9/11, and decided to go in and clean it up -- but there's strong evidence that they were planning on doing it long before 9/11.
Anyway, it's a complex issue, from whatever perspective you're looking at it. No simple answers. And this is certainly the most thoughtful piece in favor of the war that I've seen, and it was well worth reading, and I can see how it's an attitude intelligent people could take. But... well, I'm sticking to my opinion.
no subject
But the sheer thought level of this one was nice to see. Normally, the pro-war folks seem to just rant about being patriotic....