Comments on: Idio-Experts Find Their Groove https://barelyablog.com/idio-experts-find-their-groove/ by ilana mercer Wed, 02 Apr 2025 19:29:09 +0000 hourly 1 By: Boomer https://barelyablog.com/idio-experts-find-their-groove/comment-page-1/#comment-1197 Mon, 01 Jan 2007 08:54:46 +0000 http://blog.ilanamercer.com/?p=365#comment-1197 It was then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney in 1991 who, when asked why we didn’t go in and take out Saddam at the end of the 100 hour war, said: “Once you take Baghdad, what are you going to do with it?” (my paraphrase) Apparently, neither he, nor anyone in the current administration learned anything from the decision not to attack Baghdad at the end of “Desert Storm.” It’s sad that it appears that more troops to provide more security in Baghdad is where we are headed. I find it interesting that when it comes to war, admitting a mistake is too hard because it would apparently dishonor those who have given the ultimate sacrifice and we would “look bad.” So, more troops and more death is called for because “now that we’re in it, we have to win it”– at all costs– regardless of why we started it.

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By: Jerri Lynn Ward https://barelyablog.com/idio-experts-find-their-groove/comment-page-1/#comment-1196 Mon, 01 Jan 2007 03:54:51 +0000 http://blog.ilanamercer.com/?p=365#comment-1196 The second I heard that we went into Iraq, my thought was: “What are we doing?” [indeed] That said, my immediate focus after that was the safety of our soldiers (other American’s children). I, quite frankly, was afraid to say anything that might hurt them.

I’m still upset and confused.

That said, I have wondered for quite some time why my fellow conservatives would agree with anything someone like Christopher Hitchens has to say. To me, his agreement with the “War on Terror” has been a motivation for me to reconsider my presuppositions.

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By: John Danforth https://barelyablog.com/idio-experts-find-their-groove/comment-page-1/#comment-1192 Sun, 31 Dec 2006 17:52:50 +0000 http://blog.ilanamercer.com/?p=365#comment-1192 When basic premises and the theories that arise from them are negated by the evidence, then switching to reliance on empirical evidence can deflect the obvious need to reexamine the basic premises, thereby buying precious time to erect a new artifice into which both the evidence and the sacred preconceived notions might mesh.

–John Danforth–

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