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Thursday, March 16, 2006

Interesting IM conversation

CNLkarishm: how's it going?
QuantmRed: good, work busy but good
QuantmRed: u?
CNLkarishm: ok
QuantmRed: unemployed bum
QuantmRed: living off the system
CNLkarishm: yeah
CNLkarishm: the system being my savings...
QuantmRed: hehe
QuantmRed: live off welfare
QuantmRed: thats why the liberals put it there
CNLkarishm: true, i'm a young minority single woman
QuantmRed: indeed
QuantmRed: and dont forget lazy
QuantmRed: so u fit the bill perfectly
CNLkarishm: except i don't have any out-of-wedlock kids
QuantmRed: haha true
CNLkarishm: i think that's important
QuantmRed: borrow some
CNLkarishm: lol
CNLkarishm: maybe i will

*disclaimer in case some civil servant gets their panties in a bunch over this: this is a joke; I have no intention of fraudulently obtaining welfare assistance (or legitimately obtaining welfare assistance). Any borrowing of children will take place only because I really want some and my fiance insists we need to be married first.

Good quote

“Americans seem to kind of want this McDonald’s war, where you drive up, you order it, you pay for it, you go to the next window and get a democracy. That’s not the way it works,” cautioned Army reservist Scott Southworth recently. “It takes a lot of effort; it takes a lot of time.”
From an article by an American returning from Iraq - I am not quite sure if he's a journalist or a soldier or contractor. Lots of good answers to common questions about the war like:

Has the Iraq war been too costly?
How is the morale of our soldiers holding up?
But in the wider Muslim world, hasn’t the Iraq war done irreparable damage to America’s image?

Another good answer:

Morass or not, this war seems to be especially unpopular on the homefront.

Actually, a substantial minority has opposed almost every war prosecuted by our nation. This was true right from the American Revolution—which a large proportion of Tory elites (including most New York City residents) insisted was an ill-considered and quixotic mistake.

Only in 20/20 hindsight have our wars been reinterpreted as righteous and widely supported by a unified nation. Even World War II, the ultimate “good” war fought by the “greatest” generation, was deeply controversial at the time. Fully 6,000 Americans went to prison as war resisters during the years our troops were conquering fascism in Europe and Japan.

There’s no reason to think of the Iraq war as more unpopular than any other U.S. war. If it is prosecuted to success, there’s little doubt that the war against terror in Iraq will in retrospect look just as wise and worthy as previous sacrifices. But there is a wild card: Would the nation have retained the nerve to finish previous successful wars if there had been contemporary-style news coverage of battles like Camden, the Wilderness, or Tarawa?

Lots of good stuff, too much to excerpt. RTWT, as they say.