Jhonny: Yeah I read the NYT article, and it doesn't PROVE anything. All it does is insinuate -rather badly I might add- which is a great big surprise coming from a left-leaning newspaper who has been harshly against the Iraq War from the very beginning. Of course the administration when to great lengths to justify attacking Iraq, is that surprising or wrong? I suppose you would rather have them NOT present evidence or argument before starting a major military operation? Uh... right. The bottom line is not everyone was "tricked" like you and some others around here. I pushed for the war before Bush did, and there's a lot of people like me who advocated action and still support the war fully.
Jack: It looks like I've given you more credit than you deserve. You say things like the war is "stupid, useless, counter-productive, based on lies and deciet", but little talking point sound bites aren't arguments or serious. Small minds indeed.
Let's take a look at the next thing you say: "Some of think that he is a moron whose strings are pulled by evil, cunning masterminds." First, I think anyone who thinks something like that is a blind partisan, and it will just turn off more rational moderate/independents... so politically speaking it's a dumb thing to say. However, some people do enjoy a good conspiracy, but like most all conspiracies they're impossible to prove... very convenient. The worst thing though is the telling psychology of such thinking. Only the most cynical and pessimistic could believe in evil, shadowy masterminds pulling the strings of a dopey president. What does it say about such people's attitudes towards the presidency, the government, the public, and America? It says volumes... no wonder such thinkers are some of the most negative and hateful people around. Here's a news flash for those grounded in reality: You don't go to the best schools, fly fighter jets, run large businesses, be a governor, and be president if you're a idiot. In my opinion, attacking Bush's intelligence is just weak-minded ad hominem and exposes those people for what they are.
Jack says: "First of all, just as he agreed to unfettered access, GWB pulled the rug out from under the inspectors. So I'd guess you'd have to blame Bush for the ultimate "failure" of the inspections. Secondly, is there some "magic number" of failures to comply with U.N. resolutions that automatically generates a war? It might suprise you that other countries ignored more of them without us going to war. I hardly consider your position a vadid argument."
First of all he had agreed to unfetted access only about 10 times previously-- before AND after kicking out inspectors. How naive can we be to continue to play the song and dance game of the past? That's exactly the point, and that's what some of us learned after 9/11. We cannot play the fool's game of before, the status quo aint gonna work, and we have to take serious action at certain times. The fact that you would trust a murderous madman with a track record of evil AFTER 9/11 tells me you're willing to risk LA, DC, or your home to another (and possibly more devastating) terrorist attack. I'm glad we have a pro-active president who in not willing to take that risk. Blaming Bush for the "failure" of inspections is just plain laughable... as I said in my last post, the blame America first crowd will turn anything around.
And no, there is no magic number for violated resolutions. But when it's connected to a previous war, and it deals with a rogue nation, and there's major potential for this regime to cause harm, then I definately would take those violations into consideration.