Nice Hallmark card you present here. Touches on all the right emotions....

And what this man says may be true, I'm not there and according to him, he
is. He comments on how much better things are in general and that all the
violence is concentrated in a small area. Does that make the rest of the
country appear safer then? The violence of 911 was concentrated to an area
of a few city blocks, but I don't know if the remainder if the US is safer
now.

Assuming he's correct in all he says, I can find only one underlying thread
to his comments that makes me take a second look. Here's the quote needed to
discuss: "Folks, take a deep breath, they're better off over there now than
they were before.".

Ok. Fine THEY are better off than before. WTF????? I thought we were going
to war to find WMD. Isn't that what Dubya told us? Isn't that what Powell
repeated on TV many times? Wasn't the threat of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons the reasons we loaded up CNN, Fox and PBS to cover the
invasion and to record the discovery of stock piles of WMD???? We were told
that Saddam had all these weapons and they were pointed towards us and hence
the greatest military in the world took on an army whose most advanced
weapons involved a potato gun and a modified Toyota pick-up.

And we beat the daylights out of them. Good for us. And the liberation
began. I'm sorry, the occupation began. After searching high and low (and
under coffee tables), no WMD were found. So, for damage control the spin
goes that Saddam was a bad man and should have been removed because of the
way he treats his people. Excuse me, that is a little different than the US
being threaten by nuclear weapons.

I could give a rat's arse about how much better off they are. I'm not
in-sensitive, I just don't care. The war was not about making them all Ward
and June Cleaver. The war was to stop a dictator from using his WMD to kill
us. We spent billions of dollars to destroy the country and prolly twice as
much to re-build it. Oh, THAT makes sense. So all these folks can live a
better life.

Touching. But what about the millions of people in this country (Legally)
who don't have enough to eat, clothes to wear and soccer balls to play
with???? I wonder how much good could have been done in this country with
$200 billion?

So, according to John Matthews, the war was worth it because the people of
Iraq are out from under the terrible ruler Saddam. Then, if that is the
pre-requisite for invading the countries of the world, I think Time magazine
or one like it has ranked the world's worst rulers with respect to how the
people of the country are treated. I better get a copy so I can send it to
the next Prez. No need in wasting valuable time and energy trying to figure
out where to invade next when the list has already been compiled.

I think one of the rulers towards the top lives in Africa. Will the embedded
reporters need to get their passports renewed first???

And if John does indeed like being pro-active instead of re-active, tell him
that North Korea is on Line 1 and the clock is ticking........

 -----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]  On
Behalf Of Tim Boozer
Sent:   Wednesday, March 31, 2004 5:26 PM
To:     RollTideFan-The University of Alabama Athletics Discussion List
Subject:        [RollTideFan] NON Tide - "Was the war in Iraq worth it?"

>From the Orlando Sentinel...



FRIDAY FORUM
Today's topic: Was the war in Iraq worth it?

By John Matthews | My Word
Posted March 26, 2004

Was the war in Iraq worth it?

It depends on whom you ask.

I'm a soldier, not a politician. This is from my perspective as someone who
spent the last 12 months with his boots on the ground in Iraq.

If you were to ask an American soldier's parent or family member who has
lost a son, daughter, father or sister over there, then of course the war
was not worth it. I can't imagine their pain and sorrow. My heart goes out
to them.

If you were to ask an Iraqi parent or other family member who has gained
back a son, daughter, father or sister from having to serve and die under
Saddam's army or "service" his henchmen's wants and perversions, and now has
their family whole again with a chance to live and pursue happiness, then,
of course, the war was worth it.

Wars are like that. You don't win a war. What I'd hope you'd understand is
that this isn't about winning. It's about doing what is right.

This war was worth it. I was a truck battalion XO and had more that 1,500
brave and competent soldiers traveling the entire north/south highways in
Iraq. Think of driving from Miami to Savannah every day, every week for a
year, with 40 pounds of gear and 130-degree heat during the summer.

You feel and see everything in these convoys. Good and bad. Recently I
traveled to an orphanage in Nasiriyah, the Iraqi town where Jessica Lynch's
team were ambushed. It is a different town now. I traded cigars with some of
the local police force, played patty-cake with the kids, showed off pictures
of my family to the local teens who insisted that I allow them to marry my
teenage daughter. We played a game of soccer (soldiers against kids; we
lost).

Folks, take a deep breath, they're better off over there now than they were
before. Sorry to burst your bubble, but it is the truth.

Their newfound freedom shows and multiplies every day. Shops are selling us
colas, ice, flags and other items. Families get to keep their crops, herds,
water and electricity instead of Saddam taking a percentage. We've got their
electric and sewage running decades better than it used to. The insurgents
blow it up to promote "instability." Kids are going to new schools and
playing soccer instead of throwing rocks at convoys or learning how to turn
a coke can into an improvised explosive device. They are interested in us
and we are interested in them. Bottom line, rubber meeting the road and all
that . . . honest.

That Miami-to-Savannah trip I mentioned earlier: Most of the ambushes are
occurring only in an area the size of Jacksonville. The media -- and
therefore, YOU -- are focusing on the tree instead of the forest.

>From what I've seen in the papers and on cable, you'd think that we've made
no progress over there at all and blame politicians. But this isn't politics
to those Iraqi survivors or my soldiers.

We have made progress by leaps and bounds. There are setbacks and
finger-pointing at levels way above my pay grade, but in the end Iraq is
better off. The Iraqi minister of tourism isn't getting too many calls, but
it'll happen. If "Friday Forum" is still around in 10 years, look for my
letter.

The Middle East has been given a wake-up call: We'll bring the fight to you,
to protect our freedom and our way of life.

Give me proactive over re-active any day of the week. I don't want to be
sitting in my office building in Orlando saying, "Hey, that plane's flying
kind of low . . . ."

John Matthews, a major in the Army Reserves, lives in Clermont.


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