Chef Jim Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 It takes more than one or two people to lead a nation to war. There are many, many people that would disagree with you included the author of the letter in question in this thread.
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 (edited) There are many, many people that would disagree with you included the author of the letter in question in this thread. There are many, many, idiots in the world too. There's a difference between believing and acting upon bad intelligence and fabricating it. W's administration had a lot of hawks who saw to it we went to war, regardless of cause. But they couldn't do it alone and knew it. So a story was shaped. Lots of people on both sides of the aisle went along with it, believing it to be in the best interest of the nation. There were also lots of people who went along with it believing it to be in their own personal best interest. Edited March 21, 2013 by We Come In Peace
erynthered Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 There are many, many, idiots in the world too. There's a difference between believing and acting upon bad intelligence and fabricating it. W's administration had a lot of hawks who saw to it we went to war, regardless of cause. But they couldn't do it alone and knew it. So a story was shaped. Lots of people on both sides of the aisle went along with it, believing it to be in the best interest of the nation. There were also lots of people who went along with it believing it to be in their own personal best interest. Did all the other Countries that had the same intel fabricate their intel too?
DC Tom Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 So, John Kerry and Hillary Clinton plus a host of other dems and world leaders were all in on the WMD subterfuge? And hundreds, if not thousands, of analysts working with the raw intel.
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 Did all the other Countries that had the same intel fabricate their intel too? It was follow the leader. And hundreds, if not thousands, of analysts working with the raw intel. Yes. With senior administration officials cherry picking the data that fit the narrative they were selling.
DC Tom Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 Yes. With senior administration officials cherry picking the data that fit the narrative they were selling. Funny. Not two posts up you made a clear distinction that the intel was fabricated rather than subject to confirmation bias. Now you're making the exact opposite statement. Kinda makes you a total !@#$ing retard, doesn't it?
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 Funny. Not two posts up you made a clear distinction that the intel was fabricated rather than subject to confirmation bias. Now you're making the exact opposite statement. Kinda makes you a total !@#$ing retard, doesn't it? I did? I don't think I did, or at least didn't intend it that way. I don't believe intelligence was fabricated in the sense it was made up from thin air while administration officials were twisting their mustaches, I DO believe that they cherry picked the intel that fit their narrative. There's a difference.
meazza Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 I did? I don't think I did, or at least didn't intend it that way. I don't believe intelligence was fabricated in the sense it was made up from thin air while administration officials were twisting their mustaches, I DO believe that they cherry picked the intel that fit their narrative. There's a difference. You mean like someone cherry picking your posts to see how wrong you are on a subject. When there is so much data, it happens.
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 You mean like someone cherry picking your posts to see how wrong you are on a subject. When there is so much data, it happens. Truth
dayman Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 If there is data supporting something, then data showing that supporting data is no good, and you cherry pick the supporting data and leave out the other data that show the supporting data is crap....is that fabrication or confirmation bias?
Magox Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 That's cold blooded, homes. Don't you know who you are talking to? I mean the guy self-allegedly fired one employee and reduced the pay of his gardener by 30%, because "elections have consequences". He's a real stand up and principled guy.
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 Don't you know who you are talking to? I mean the guy self-allegedly fired one employee and reduced the pay of his gardener by 30%, because "elections have consequences". He's a real stand up and principled guy. :lol:
3rdnlng Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 If there is data supporting something, then data showing that supporting data is no good, and you cherry pick the supporting data and leave out the other data that show the supporting data is crap....is that fabrication or confirmation bias? Is this a hypothetical question or are you referring to something specific?
We Come In Peace Posted March 21, 2013 Author Posted March 21, 2013 Is this a hypothetical question or are you referring to something specific? I don't think he was trying to be cryptic...
3rdnlng Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 I don't think he was trying to be cryptic... I'd like him to answer the question. As a lawyer he's used to making prejudicial comments and then calling them to be struck from the record. I'd like him to actually go on record.
DC Tom Posted March 21, 2013 Posted March 21, 2013 This is incorrect information. Desert Storm, Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom were all voted on and funded by Congress. While not formal declarations of war, they were not waged with Executive Powers alone. Now, we can quibble over the semantics, but anything costing over $3 Trillion (and climbing) and over 4,000 American soldiers is not what the Constitution had in mind when determining war powers and is precisely why Congress was called on to vote. The semantics in this issue are important, and people argue over them all the time. For example, I could just as easily argue that, as a state of war between Iraq and the US did not exist before the Executive gave the order to initiate combat in OIF, Congressional authorization for OIF did not in fact constitute a declaration of war (I believe that was roughly John Kerry's reasoning for voting for the authorization...he didn't support the war, but he wasn't voting for a declaration of war, merely voting to allow someone ELSE to declare war. Thus he "voted for it before he voted against it.") If there is data supporting something, then data showing that supporting data is no good, and you cherry pick the supporting data and leave out the other data that show the supporting data is crap....is that fabrication or confirmation bias? Usually confirmation bias. Because generally data is not all that clear on its own - I've seen it in hard sciences, and that data tends to be MUCH more unambiguous that intelligence.
We Come In Peace Posted March 22, 2013 Author Posted March 22, 2013 (edited) The semantics in this issue are important, and people argue over them all the time. Certainly, especially you and I -- or is it, 'me and you'? Usually confirmation bias. Because generally data is not all that clear on its own - I've seen it in hard sciences, and that data tends to be MUCH more unambiguous that intelligence. Considering the size of the intelligence fu*kup, and I don't mean the political fallout or military operations but more in the sense that nearly every single piece of "hard" intel that was presented to the public during the lead up to the war turned out to be incorrect, what's more likely in your mind: (edit: and I realize this isn't an either or situation, I'm honestly curious about your opinion on it) The entire intelligence community was duped and/or misled by Sadam's propaganda and intelligence outfits and that's what led to the failure or The administration, supported by a ratings driven media and fueled by an angry/grieving citizenry, pushed their own agenda for war with Iraq to the forefront of our national consciousness and forced the intelligence community to play ball or shut up? Edited March 22, 2013 by We Come In Peace
....lybob Posted March 22, 2013 Posted March 22, 2013 Certainly, especially you and I -- or is it, 'me and you'? Considering the size of the intelligence fu*kup, and I don't mean the political fallout or military operations but more in the sense that nearly every single piece of "hard" intel that was presented to the public during the lead up to the war turned out to be incorrect, what's more likely in your mind: (edit: and I realize this isn't an either or situation, I'm honestly curious about your opinion on it) The entire intelligence community was duped and/or misled by Sadam's propaganda and intelligence outfits and that's what led to the failure or The administration, supported by a ratings driven media and fueled by an angry/grieving citizenry, pushed their own agenda for war with Iraq to the forefront of our national consciousness and forced the intelligence community to play ball or shut up? When you say The entire intelligence community you really mean U.S, U.K and Israel - German and Russia intelligence never agreed, I thought French intelligence was on board but later I saw an interview where a Frenchie spook totally denied ever agreeing with U.S. intelligence assessments (truth or revisionist history who knows) - plus try to find an American intelligence officer who will take credit for that intelligence assessment, good luck, I've seen many CIA guys saying stuff like I don't know where the hell that Intelligence came from - I've seen no one taking credit for it.
Chef Jim Posted March 22, 2013 Posted March 22, 2013 Certainly, especially you and I -- or is it, 'me and you'? Us and Them.
DC Tom Posted March 22, 2013 Posted March 22, 2013 Certainly, especially you and I -- or is it, 'me and you'? Considering the size of the intelligence fu*kup, and I don't mean the political fallout or military operations but more in the sense that nearly every single piece of "hard" intel that was presented to the public during the lead up to the war turned out to be incorrect, what's more likely in your mind: (edit: and I realize this isn't an either or situation, I'm honestly curious about your opinion on it) The entire intelligence community was duped and/or misled by Sadam's propaganda and intelligence outfits and that's what led to the failure or The administration, supported by a ratings driven media and fueled by an angry/grieving citizenry, pushed their own agenda for war with Iraq to the forefront of our national consciousness and forced the intelligence community to play ball or shut up? Far more the former than the latter. I'm not going to give detail right now...largely because I've got a couple of sources here I can dig out that explain it better than I can do off the top of my head right now, and I want to look at them. But the bottom line is that people tend to see things as they expect them to be, and don't necessarily consider alternatives once their preconceived notions are proven. In ANY discussion or discipline. Pick an area of scientific research, and I'll find you a paper based on research that suffers from confirmation bias (and don't pick economics or climatology or sociology - nothing that easy). You can't read a single page of a newspaper (with the possible exception of the classifieds) that doesn't have an article that suffers from confirmation bias. People don't like proving themselves wrong, so if you're looking for something, you tend to find what you're looking for whether it's there or not. It's just that people don't usually start wars because of it.
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