And now, something a little less anecdotal:
Wikipedia: Public Opinion on the Iraq War
In May 2003, a Gallup poll made on behalf of CNN and USA Today concluded that 79% of Americans thought the Iraq War was justified, with or without conclusive evidence of illegal weapons.
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Internationally, is a completely different story, of course.
March 2003
Days before the March 20 invasion, a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll found support for the war was related to UN approval. Nearly six in 10 said they were ready for such an invasion "in the next week or two." But that support dropped off if the U.N. backing was not first obtained. If the U.N. Security Council were to reject a resolution paving the way for military action, 54% of Americans favored a U.S. invasion. And if the Bush administration did not seek a final Security Council vote, support for a war dropped to 47%.
I'm sure you can wikipedia just as well as the rest of us, so you know damn well you cherry-picked that number. The invasion was in March, not May. Pre-invastion, the country was quite split. Here's what a more thorough wikipedia page tells me:
An ABC News/Washington Post poll taken after the beginning of the war showed a 62% support for the war, lower than the 79% in favor at the beginning of the Persian Gulf War.[2]
May 2003 was the "high point" of the entire stupid ordeal, what with "Mission Accomplished" and all that. "Major combat operations" were supposed to be finished.
But pre-invasion there was plenty of dissent. I come from a liberal yuppie paradise and no one I knew was onboard. That's why they had to make up all that horse hockey about yellow cakes and roving weapons labs.
Yep.
Joe Biden, bless his heart, had a line in his stump speech—he was running for president in 2004, remember—and I heard it early on, in a couple of small rooms, and it resonated. He said that at that moment, G-Dub should have asked America to embark on a Manhattan Project, an Apollo Project, to wean ourselves from Middle East oil. I agree, wholeheartedly. What we did was just the opposite. Imagine what could have been different if we'd taken dumbass Joe Biden's advice instead of Dubya's.
I'm sure you can wikipedia just as well as the rest of us, so you know damn well you cherry-picked that number. The invasion was in March, not May. Pre-invastion, the country was quite split. Here's what a more thorough wikipedia page tells me:
An ABC News/Washington Post poll taken after the beginning of the war showed a 62% support for the war, lower than the 79% in favor at the beginning of the Persian Gulf War.[2]
May 2003 was the "high point" of the entire stupid ordeal, what with "Mission Accomplished" and all that. "Major combat operations" were supposed to be finished.
But pre-invasion there was plenty of dissent. I come from a liberal yuppie paradise and no one I knew was onboard. That's why they had to make up all that horse hockey about yellow cakes and roving weapons labs.
And exactly what are we supposed to replace Middle East oil with? What full scale ready to go technology do you have? You can't even resist posting dribble on a message board to reduce your carbon footprint. Can you understand why I don't take someone like you seriously? How is the electricity you use to power your computer and other gadgets generated? Coal? How will you generate the electricity to power all those electric cars? Coal? Hydro? Nuclear? What exactly is the lefts answer to get us off of Middle East Oil? Keystone? LOL. There are no bigger polluters than enviromantalists. The main goal of environmentalism is to national energy policy like they have healthcare.
Sturg here is yet another example of their theocracy!
There really do need to be realistic proposals coming from the alternative-fuel crowd. And solar panel roads ain't it. Combine all the alternative models together, throw in a good measure of conservation, and we still aren't anywhere close in economy of scale, to needs.
In the mean time, incorporating more and more modes of conservation and energy-use reduction is a good thing and will be forced upon us with higher costs across the board. I just wish you could find a decent small truck again.
Utilizing domestic fuel resources whilest intensely pursuing alternative energy sources seems like the obvious way to go. It's the perfect middle ground, the perfect compromise.