What do you all think? Does the Iraq-war experience serve as a good analogy for Americans' wishful thinking?As we were invading Iraq, far too many people held the simplistic view that the U.S. could somehow quickly, efficiently and justly free the people of Iraq and institute a democracy. Only ex post did we learn how much more arduous and complex the task really is. Before hand, it seemed to be so simple. In the end, however, it proved disastrous. This provides the perfect analogy for the plethora of failed government programs we have today. At the beginning, we oversimplify the ease at which programs can be implemented. We underestimate the true costs they incur and we do not think about the multiple unintended consequences that later take place. I see the three biggest federal programs as evidence enough that the American people continue to engage in this wishful thinking. Medicare started out as a much smaller and inexpensive program. Today it is gargantuan and insolvent. Its reimbursements have been widely criticized for decades yet have remained in place. Its bureaucracy takes ages to make decisions, yet we ignore these inefficiencies. Social Security, too, started out as a much smaller program. Today, it is insolvent. The bi-partisan Congressional Budget Office advised congress several years ago that Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security are so insolvent that we simply cannot raise taxes enough to cover their costs. Yet the American people continue their call for ever-larger programs.. By ignoring our past failures, Americans continue to overestimate the government’s ability to execute welfare programs, underestimate their true costs and overestimate our ability to pay for it all. With the Iraq war fresh in our minds, perhaps we should think again before we take on such massive, cumbersome and often-irreversible endeavors.[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 10:00 AM. Reason : .]
2/27/2009 9:57:30 AM
I feel that this is a flawed strategy disguised as conventional wisdom that has spread amongst the minds of millions of American youths. This is not an effective way to prevent the financial and emotional burdens of fatherhood. Wear a rubber.
2/27/2009 10:01:16 AM
Pulling out doesn't always work. Condoms are much more effective.And, Iraq wants us out, lets get the fuck out. 50k troops? Why that many? Drop it down to 5-10k actual competent advisers and then give them a time line as well.
2/27/2009 10:03:27 AM
remember, Bill Clinton warned against premature withdrawal
2/27/2009 10:05:07 AM
2/27/2009 10:35:07 AM
2/27/2009 11:07:36 AM
im glad that terrorists and insurgents know our game plan, not through taliban intelligence reports, but our president's weekly updates
2/27/2009 8:32:04 PM
maybe the pullout plan is all a ploy to catch the terrorist offguard
2/27/2009 9:46:12 PM
Perhaps Obama thinks that the war on the poor can be won, we just need a surge on the domestic front. Afterall, if the surge worked in Iraq then surely ramping-up domestic spending to here-before unseen levels will cure our societal ills. Only government can do it, more specifically only Obama's government can do it. Sadly Obama's surge will not be temporary. This outrageous and dangerous spending spree will reset a new baseline for federal spending. Pathetic republicans will fail to actually call for real cuts in spending and we fiscal conservatives will spend the rest of our lifetimes watching the government sanction more and more of our pay to be stolen for some supposedly noble goal.
2/28/2009 12:09:29 AM
sorry, but i have to do this[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 12:17 AM. Reason : i know this isnt chit chat theduke, but this is 100% necessary for this thread]
2/28/2009 12:16:10 AM
2/28/2009 3:43:22 AM
i'm watching obama's speech from lejune todaysome serious shit is going to have to happen in this country for him not to get AT LEAST two terms
2/28/2009 3:53:16 AM
2/28/2009 5:23:13 AM
Don't see why this is a big deal? The timeline he is proposing is relatively the same that the Army was planning a year and a half ago....
2/28/2009 9:29:14 AM
I predict the terrorism in Iraq will all but cease until most of our troops are gone. Then a massive influx of terrorism will take place. I hope the solid groundwork the US troops have provided the Iraqi's is enough for them to conquer it themselves or else the US will have to go back in and we will have fellujah all over again.
2/28/2009 11:36:23 AM
ALL the troops have to be out by dec. 2011 anyway per the agreement between the iraqi government and the BUSH adminstration.im glad that terrorists and insurgents knew our game plan, not through taliban intelligence reports, but our FORMER president's weekly updatesright tke?
2/28/2009 11:37:40 AM
2/28/2009 11:43:21 AM
2/28/2009 12:01:52 PM
We should want everyone to suceed. But do we really have a grave interest in the country? You can argue we are morally responsible for the country since we broke it, but that is all it is. If Iraq goes to crap our only interest should be to prevent U.S. terrorism; who runs the country of Iraq is not terribly our concern.
2/28/2009 12:13:33 PM
2/28/2009 12:20:37 PM
^ gg.
2/28/2009 12:28:31 PM
2/28/2009 12:50:13 PM
i'm gonna be a neocon for just a moment herei think the problem with the "let someone else be worldcop" is that the people who would LOVE LOVE LOVE to be the world cops practice sharia lawand they'll fly a fucking jet into your buildings to reach their goals
2/28/2009 2:18:20 PM
^ do not forget they will blow up Grandma's house next
2/28/2009 2:55:58 PM
2/28/2009 6:07:08 PM
I am sure the Obama Administration is sending an official copy of the withdrawl plan sealed and mailed expressly to Al Qaeda via UPS 1st class.
2/28/2009 10:43:27 PM
Is this thread supposed to be about Iraq or health care?
3/3/2009 8:31:18 AM
^^ Come on. Don't be ridiculous. You know that shit got handed off to DHL once it made it overseas.
3/3/2009 9:40:17 AM
3/3/2009 7:36:06 PM
3/4/2009 12:28:46 AM
AHA, this thread is funny. Did anybody read past the first sentence of this post?Hunt, you should have put "What do you all think?" at the end of your post. In response to your original argument, I disagree. I think it's inappropriate to compare such a miserable and unpopular war to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security because MMSS have done more good than the war in Iraq.I mean, it's a cute analogy. We do spend a shit ton of money on all those things, and they do seem to just keep on growing. But Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, in all their bloated glory, actually help some Americans. The war in Iraq doesn't help us so much. It's a money pit that even Tom Hanks wouldn't touch.
3/4/2009 4:44:54 AM