great...here we go again http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-11027970
8/19/2010 4:02:37 PM
Hopefully you understand that failing to act in this situation would just alienate more young Pakistanis and drive them towards anti-American extremism.
8/19/2010 4:13:55 PM
From a political standpoint, this is a really good thing.
8/19/2010 4:44:36 PM
Fuck politics.This is the right thing to do, given the circumstances (you are rich, have the equipment, and are next door).A lot of people don't realize how much damage the floods have done. They have done a lot more damage than the Tsunami, and have affected a lot more people, around 10% of the population.
8/19/2010 5:39:12 PM
You realize that our fight in Afghanistan is very much also an operation in Pakistan, and has been for over 30 years, right? The border between those two nations is, for all practical purposes, a sort of continuum, and we certainly can't view Afghanistan outside of the context of Pakistani involvement.
8/19/2010 5:46:09 PM
^ Exactly.Just looked up the latest numbers. 20 million are homeless, 12% of the population (imagine 35 million people in the US suddenly becoming homeless).These before and after pictures below are amazing, and shocking. See the big 'pools' of flood water in the after picture. Also see how the rivers have immensely swollen up.BEFOREAFTER
8/19/2010 6:00:17 PM
we shouldnt be in afghanistan at all anyway. i'm glad we are doing a good thing for a change.
8/19/2010 6:13:27 PM
8/19/2010 6:41:09 PM
8/19/2010 6:46:17 PM
Well yeah but the ice caps will melt and flood everything else so that isn't going to help at all.
8/19/2010 6:52:51 PM
GrumpyGOP, I used my words carefully. I talked of people being affected, not killed. Here are the facts:1) The tsunami killed 100 times as many people as the floods.2) But the floods have made homeless and/or displaced 10 times as many people as the tsunami.3) Agricultural and infrastructure damages by the flood are orders of magnitude greater than by the tsunami. Look what the UN says:
8/19/2010 7:19:35 PM
I still can't believe the moronic original post. Had he been complaining about the US helping period, at least he would have had some point. But no, he is pointing out that it is stupid of the US to help by taking away attention and equipment from Afghanistan, implying that the mission in Afghanistan is very important, which it is. Well, in that case, does he not know how things work in that part of the world?
8/19/2010 8:12:26 PM
^^We just overtook Saudi Arabia again by pledging another 60 mil., bringing us to $150 million.I hear our private donations have been miserable though, especially compared to the $400+ million regular citizens gave to Haiti.[Edited on August 19, 2010 at 9:13 PM. Reason : I haven't given anything.]
8/19/2010 9:12:13 PM
for my once a year Soap Box post, I'd just like to say0EPII1 bolds a lot
8/19/2010 9:30:03 PM
^^I'd like to say that our private donations have been low because of "disaster fatigue" -- we already helped out Haiti a lot, and there's a recession on, and we can't be expected to open our personal wallets every time a third world country has a disaster.Unfortunately I think the real answer is that people are thinking, "Pakistan? Isn't that where Osama bin Laden is hiding out with his cronies, and aren't Pakistanis helping murder our boys on the other side of the Khyber pass? Fuck 'em, let 'em drown."
8/20/2010 2:05:37 PM
^True. And I think there is legitimate skepticism about whether or not donations will be spent properly. I don't wanna send money to a place where they are systematically denying help to minority groups.Another reason I think donations have been low is media coverage. I'm embarrassed to admit this, but I didn't know there was any flooding until three days ago. In the case of Haiti, the media wouldn't let you forget it--they were immediately on the scene with live coverage of the devastation. Remote Pakistan, on the other hand, ain't so easy to get to.What a difference a Clooney makes.
8/20/2010 2:41:46 PM
I can't think of any good reason to NOT help the Pakistanis in this situation whether it be from a humanitarian, military, or geopolitical perspective. This flood decimated Pakistan's primary agricultural regions right before the harvest, wiping out what was supposed to be a bumper crop and leaving the survivors not just economically bankrupt but on the brink of death by starvation assuming the cholera doesn't get them first. The whole country now suddenly faces famine especially at a time when wheat prices are already high because of the Russian fires.
8/20/2010 3:49:56 PM
I thought that Wyclef fixed all of this.
8/20/2010 4:27:47 PM
Cool, our invasion of Pakistan has begun! According to wikileaks they were our enemy anyway, smuggling arms and money to the Taliban.
8/20/2010 5:18:47 PM