It appears to me that you are doing yeoman's work in avoiding answering your own question, which I mirrored back at you with:
So, so far, your answer is, "We should not have spent a damned penny to liberate Iraq (beause Osama is still out there)."
Your second "answer" is...
You then go on to say...
("...protected America from the threat of Islamic terrorism"? But Osama's out there!!!)
[/sidestep]
Now it sounds like we're getting an answer. Since I've never actually looked up what it was costing us to keep Saddam "in his box" (as Madeline Albright used to say), but you evidently have, could you fill the rest of us in? How much did it cost us from the end of the first Gulf war in 1991 through March, 2003? What was the cost of keeping troops in Saudi Arabia to make sure Saddam didn't invade, and of flying continuous air sorties over the no-fly zone? And what was the future cost going to be, since we have to assume our armed forces would have to keep Saddam "in his box" as long as he lived, and probably longer if Uday and Qusay took over after his death?
You're starting to remind me of John Kerry during the late campaign. Whenever he was asked what he would do differently from Bush, his answer would start, "One thing I wouldn't do is..."
Please, don't do a John Kerry on me. Tell me how much you would pay for the liberation of Iraq. And since you seem to think the capture of Osama is of overriding importance, why don't you give us your number assuming Osama is dead, and your number assuming he's simply in hiding.
Note: In case you were wondering, no, I had not abandoned the field. My father died last week, so I had other more important matters to attend to.
At the height of his intellectual powers, he was possibly the most learned and intelligent man I ever knew; doubters should read the first thirty propositions of Baruch Spinoza's The Ethics and when they quicky start finding the intellectual waters too deep, reflect that my father not only read all of Spinoza's works, but understood them, probably as well as any university professor, and did so on his own, without teacher or tutor to guide him.
He was also the only person I've ever known who got the entire set of Will and Ariel Durant's The Story of Civilization and actually read the whole thing.
He also enjoyed reading Einstein and books explaining Einstein, tried to teach himself to play the piano, with somewhat less success than he had with Spinoza, spent years trying to brew the perfect cup of coffee (and everyone who knew him agreed he had succeeded), and could pick out the perfect melon and the perfect peach and the perfect pear at the fruit stand.
And when his adoptive country was attacked in December, 1941, he immediately enlisted, even though he was not yet a citizen. And for that, our family agreed, it is altogether fitting and proper that we honor his memory by enshrining his ashes at Arlington National Cemetery this spring, where he will never be forgotten, as long as there are people who love freedom and are grateful to those who fought to save it for others.
You "answered" by saying what we should not pay:Then correct my extreme position. Tell me how much you believe we should be willing to pay.
Which sounds to me like you're saying even if Bush had had one single flyer printed up saying, "Saddam is bad and should be overthrown" and had crumpled that single flyer up into a ball and thrown it into Iraq from the Kuwait border, that would have been too much money because Osama is still out thereToo much money.
A penny diverted from catching Osama was a penny too much
So, so far, your answer is, "We should not have spent a damned penny to liberate Iraq (beause Osama is still out there)."
Your second "answer" is...
...which is a diversion, not an answer, since I already told you I thought $500 billion was not too much (and I don't think we'll get remotely near that figure).You think that $200B is worth it. That's what we're at now, and counting. What's your top number?
You then go on to say...
...which seems at odds with your first answer, since your first answer said we shouldn't be spending a damned penny as long as Osama is still out there. So is it "not one penny" or is it "sixty billion dollars"?I think we've spent way too much. The previous gulf war cost us only about $60B. That was a wise investment.
[sidestep]Whatever we WERE paying was a good price for stability in the reigon. We could afford that level to keep the lid on while we protected America from the threat of Islamic terrorism.
("...protected America from the threat of Islamic terrorism"? But Osama's out there!!!)
[/sidestep]
Now it sounds like we're getting an answer. Since I've never actually looked up what it was costing us to keep Saddam "in his box" (as Madeline Albright used to say), but you evidently have, could you fill the rest of us in? How much did it cost us from the end of the first Gulf war in 1991 through March, 2003? What was the cost of keeping troops in Saudi Arabia to make sure Saddam didn't invade, and of flying continuous air sorties over the no-fly zone? And what was the future cost going to be, since we have to assume our armed forces would have to keep Saddam "in his box" as long as he lived, and probably longer if Uday and Qusay took over after his death?
You're starting to remind me of John Kerry during the late campaign. Whenever he was asked what he would do differently from Bush, his answer would start, "One thing I wouldn't do is..."
Please, don't do a John Kerry on me. Tell me how much you would pay for the liberation of Iraq. And since you seem to think the capture of Osama is of overriding importance, why don't you give us your number assuming Osama is dead, and your number assuming he's simply in hiding.
Note: In case you were wondering, no, I had not abandoned the field. My father died last week, so I had other more important matters to attend to.
At the height of his intellectual powers, he was possibly the most learned and intelligent man I ever knew; doubters should read the first thirty propositions of Baruch Spinoza's The Ethics and when they quicky start finding the intellectual waters too deep, reflect that my father not only read all of Spinoza's works, but understood them, probably as well as any university professor, and did so on his own, without teacher or tutor to guide him.
He was also the only person I've ever known who got the entire set of Will and Ariel Durant's The Story of Civilization and actually read the whole thing.
He also enjoyed reading Einstein and books explaining Einstein, tried to teach himself to play the piano, with somewhat less success than he had with Spinoza, spent years trying to brew the perfect cup of coffee (and everyone who knew him agreed he had succeeded), and could pick out the perfect melon and the perfect peach and the perfect pear at the fruit stand.
And when his adoptive country was attacked in December, 1941, he immediately enlisted, even though he was not yet a citizen. And for that, our family agreed, it is altogether fitting and proper that we honor his memory by enshrining his ashes at Arlington National Cemetery this spring, where he will never be forgotten, as long as there are people who love freedom and are grateful to those who fought to save it for others.