Joe Wordsworth
Logician
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2004
- Posts
- 4,085
As long as we're spending more than we make, we're putting the economy at risk. Much of that is the War--far from all, and replacing /that/ spending with /other/ spending won't solve the basic cash flow problem here.Sure it can... if it is given relief from the Iraq spending.
The issues of the economy and the war are directly related. As long as we are spending billions in Iraq, we are putting the economy at risk.
The "why" in this case (the economy going down the tube) isn't "The War", though. Its years and years of poor fiscal conservatism and bad monetary policy. Inflation, foreign debt, a mounting national debt, etc. did not get invented during the Bush Administration. Just sayin', its A problem... not THE problem.As writers, we all know that the deepest part of our characters is not the how but the why.
Yes, a sex scene portraying a character with an interesting kink can be entertaining. But what is really interesting to many of us is not how the character performs the sexual act, but why it is sexual to him.
They're important questions... but they aren't the most important ones for me. I'd rather have real discourse on monetary and fiscal policy--the core philosophy and rules we choose to operate by--than a song-and-dance about The War and promising guns and butter.Ask yourself these questions about Iraq. Why are we there really? It wasn't about WMD's, that seems clear at this point. Ask Colin Powell about that.
SO... why? Why Iraq?
Afghanistan? The why is simple and obvious... and valid. So, why did we put Afghanistan on the back burner over Iraq?
Who has profited from our exposure in Iraq? Every disadvantage to one person is an advantage to another. Trace the money. Whose profits have gone up in this negative economic turn? Are those industries and companies showing any connection to the Bush administration? Or, more disturbingly, to the republican party in general?
These are questions I still don't have the answers to... but I want them.