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October 27, 2004

Fool Me Once...

So about those 380 tons of munitions that are missing in Iraq. Some people are saying that the weapons may have gone missing before American troops entered Iraq, that Saddam Hussein's troops removed them sometime after the U.N. weapons inspectors last checked on them and found them secure, but before the U.S. could have had a chance to secure them [link via JR]. As I mentioned in a comment here, that's possible. Yesterday's Talking Points Memo argued that that story was bunk (see also many other posts at TPM from the last few days), but who knows? The point is that even if that proves to be the case, we still learn two things from these missing weapons. First, we learn yet again that the planners of the U.S. attack on Iraq put oil at the top of the list, and thought of little else. Securing weapons was not on their agenda, just like securing Iraq's cultural heritage was irrelevant. They secured the oil ministry and the oil fields first and foremost; everything else was an afterthought. Second, we learn yet again that we really may not be more safe now that Saddam is in jail. When Saddam was in power, these weapons were controlled and contained by the U.N. inspectors. Saddam could not have used them against Iraqis, or American soldiers, or anyone else. Now that Saddam is out of power, these weapons are gone, and most likely they have been and are being used to kill Iraqis and Americans. So yeah, thank goodness we removed Saddam from power. But the weapons inspectors were standing in the way of war; they said and still say it wasn't necessary, and Bush was determined to prove them wrong. Over time, it's still possible that Iraqis will be better off thanks to our invasion of their country. It's possible. But it's also possible that leadership far worse than Saddam—and far more dangerous to the U.S. and Iraq's neighbors—could be elected or could come to power some other way. We just don't know what's going to happen. But my point was about that 380 tons of missing munitions, and the bottom line is: Whichever way you slice that story, it's bad for Bush. He led us into this war against the wishes and advice of the rest of the world. And although he likes to say that everyone was misled by faulty intellignece, that's just not true. Oh, and by the way, that 380 tons of missing munitions may just be the tip of the iceberg. In other election-related bits: 100 Facts and One Opinion: The Non-Arguable Case Against the Bush Administration. Of course, we know Bush supporters don't care about about facts, but still, it's a pretty damning list. And the opinion?
If the past informs the future, four more years of the Bush Administration will be a tragic period in the history of the United States and the world
That's what Molly Ivins and others said in 2000—Bush's record in Texas showed he'd be a disastrous president. Now his record as president has proven that. And still he polls at 50%? How!? Why!? Elsewhere, Greg Palast reports on a new potential Florida vote scandal—are Republicans planning mass voter challenges on Nov. 2? The law says any voter can challenge any other voter for any reason, which effectively means that any voter could bring voting to a complete halt at any polling location in the nation. If Republicans stationed challengers at majority Democratic polling places, they could easily suppress a lot of Democratic votes. Of course, the Dems could do the same, or some malicious third party could play the spoiler for all. Palast is basing his report at least partially on some “caging” emails via which Republicans have exchanged lists of voters. I guess we'll know soon enough wether this is anything but speculation. More from Salon's War Room. The War Room also suggests that Justice Rehnquist's condition may be more serious than we're being told. The stakes just get higher and higher. For your audio-visual election-related pleasure, Eminem, now a political activist, suggests we mosh for the future. Errol Morris has also released a cornucopia of Republican-to-Democrat “switcher” vids. For your old-school gonzo journalism take, Hunter S. Thompson is still fighting the good fight. As far as the horserace aspect of the election goes, this electoral college predictions site is rather fascinating. Depending on which numbers you consult, Kerry has a 74% or a 28% chance of winning. Yeah, I'm thinking polls are pretty helpful at this point. Not! And don't forget to download your Kerry or Bush jack-o'-lantern carving templates! Whichever one you find more scary could make a great halloween decoration!

Posted October 27, 2004 07:47 AM | election 2004


Good way to conceal your identity--sitting in the lounge at GW discussing these exact issues and then playing the Eminem video outloud on your computer...

Posted by: Anonymous at October 27, 2004 07:37 PM

the 100 facts link was broken for me; i found it here: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20041108&s=facts

Posted by: em at October 27, 2004 07:41 PM

Hey, that wasn't me in the lounge. I'm not too concerned about concealing my identity; if you Google around, you can find out my name. Soon my name is supposed to be in print (in the ABA's Student Lawyer magazine) associated w/this blog, so my pseudo-anonymity is largely over. Still, I promise that wasn't me in the lounge playing the Eminem video or discussing these issues. That's cool that someone else was doing those things, though.

Em: Thanks. For some reason every time I post a link to The Nation it breaks. My blogging software (ecto) encodes certain characters into HTML entities (or something like that), so I think it's the ampersand (&) that always gets messed up. I wonder if there's a way around that. If I turn off the feature, the smart quotes and the em-dashes don't work, and I like those things...

Posted by: ambimb at October 27, 2004 09:17 PM

dude, this blog is getting more and more depressing... of course, so is the news.

but with all this, how can we NOT win? :)

Posted by: monica at October 27, 2004 11:01 PM

What about the jack-o'-lantern templates!? There's nothing depressing about that! ;-)

Posted by: ambimb at October 28, 2004 12:03 AM

I'm putting a Kerrylantern on my front porch on Saturday and it's staying lit until Wednesday.

Posted by: Steve at October 28, 2004 12:42 AM

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