Fixed!
Wow, way to stereotype.
Are you saying 20% of the people who voted for Bush/Cheney, but do not approve of them now are still idiots?
Or whatever percentage that is?
Fixed!
No surprise there.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/polls/vault/stories/data082303.htm
These polls show that on September 13, 2001, just two days after the attacks and well before Bush started talking publicly about Iraq, 78% of the public thought it was somewhat or very likely that Saddam was personally involved in the attacks. These numbers went down, not up, over time.
Hey, thanks for finally joining the conversation.
It's amazing how you can use a news poll when it agrees with what you already believe and then turn around and within 15 minutes berate the press for being misleading.
That aside, it isn't true that the Bush administration started talking about Iraq sometime after September 13, 2001.
Apparently (if you can trust that dang biased press), the Bush administration was planning on drawing the connection the same day as the attack.
Also, you've fallen into the same trap that you accused me of. You've shown a public opinion, but you have not identified what that opinion was based on.
Very excellent straw man. I never said they started linking Al Qaeda to Saddam before 9/11.And if you want to talk about a pattern to deceive regarding the connection of Saddam to Al Qaeda and 9/11, well, how exactly did that pattern start before 9/11 even happened?
Good thing, that would be another rather ugly straw man and a argumentative fallacy by trying to paint me as a conspiracy nut job. That would have been just dishonest.I suppose if you thought Bush had a hand in 9/11, that sort of thinking might make sense, but I don't think you believe that.
Actually, I was presenting a counter hypothesis and then backing it up. (hint, hint)So this is basically irrelevant, and you know it. You just brought it up because you thought you could trip me up with it.
Yes, there have been a lot of painting those who don't trust Cheney as irrational, reactionary, dishonest, lazy, and even mentally defective. Is that really necessary?You really haven't spent much time thinking about the logic of that bit of info, have you?
Which is why people have pointed out that various members of the press have interpreted Cheney's statements the same way that many participants in this thread have, because we are all members of public. And, at least in this forum, the press and members of this board have a very visible voice.We're talking about public opinion here.
...until September 2002 to present, of course.Whatever the administration might have considered doing along those lines, they didn't actually do it.
You know that biased media who spins things? They don't just spin left, ya know. Maybe you noticed that link I gave where one of those media figures related having an hour and a half meeting with the President in 2006 with several other high profile conservative media figures?How on earth could those discussions, which were NOT public until very recently, have affected public opinion on a broad scale? Are you positing time travel? Or maybe mind control? Really, what's the logic here?
But you did claim you could demonstrate that they reached the conclusion that there was a link between Al-Qaeda and Saddam with no input from the Bush administration. That would require identifying the source and determining that it was not prompted by the Bush administration.Uh, no. You are correct that I did not identify what the opinion is based upon. But my argument and your argument are not equivalent. Your argument depends upon a specific cause being identified for that opinion, my argument does not.
Do you really feel that those of us who do not agree with you on Cheney and the Bush administration simply cannot be reasonable people with valid reasons for thinking they way we do? (same question to steve and corp)
What source are you using which indicates that this claim is false? The AP report certainly doesn't indicate it's false.
News outlets don't determine the actual meaning of things. This is a mixture argument ad populum and appeal to authority, and it's a logical fallacy.
That's because the press sucks and group-think is rampant. When's the last time you read a news story in a major media outlet and thought, "Wow, that's a detailed and insightful analysis!"?
And all those misleading statements are misleading because the press keeps telling you they're all misleading, and reporting them in a context in which they appear misleading.
Accurate for what purpose? Context matters. The context of this question was about whether the current conflict in Iraq is properly considered part of a broader "war on terror", not whether or not we were justified in invading. It is just impossible that an accurate description of Cheney's comments could leave out the question he was responding to. And yet, it did.
Jeez. When Senator Hillary is prez are we going to have a bunch of people splitting hairs about the latest comments from VP Edwards they don't agree with ?
Most likely. People are still splitting hairs on Kerry's comments, past and present, and he didn't even win.Jeez. When Senator Hillary is prez are we going to have a bunch of people splitting hairs about the latest comments from VP Edwards they don't agree with ?
Tell me what else the quote can mean? And what source? The 9/11 commission report ring a bell?
And you're staying the course with the misspelling, I see. Your thread title, right or wrong. We're either with you or against you.
Politics forum.
Cleon was right.
Okay, news outlets don't determine the meanings of things, and groups of people just follow each other. Well, last time I checked, the Executive Branch was a group of people, so doesn't this logic apply to them?
1 a : to fix conclusively or authoritatively <determine national policy> b : to decide by judicial sentence <determine a plea> c : to settle or decide by choice of alternatives or possibilities <trying to determine the best time to go> d : RESOLVE <she determined to do better>
2 a : to fix the form, position, or character of beforehand : ORDAIN <two points determine a straight line> b : to bring about as a result : REGULATE <demand determines the price>
3 a : to fix the boundaries of b : to limit in extent or scope c : to put or set an end to : TERMINATE <determine an estate>
4 : to find out or come to a decision about by investigation, reasoning, or calculation <determine the answer to the problem> <determine a position at sea>
5 : to bring about the determination of <determine the fate of a cell>
And if quoting directly from Cheney's very own mouth doesn't do it for you,
You consider YOURSELF the arbiter of what something means.
So, arbiter, tell me: Cheney has mislead or attempted to mislead Americans into believing that there is a clear and unmistakeable link between al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein/Iraqin an attempt to convince Americans that an invasion will prevent future attacks against Americans and a war was/is justified and right.
And many sources from the entire political spectrum, including George W. Bush himself, have stated repeatedly that there was no link between Iraq/Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda.
But you did claim you could demonstrate that they reached the conclusion that there was a link between Al-Qaeda and Saddam with no input from the Bush administration. That would require identifying the source and determining that it was not prompted by the Bush administration.
Which you have not done.No, it doesn't. It requires demonstrating that the supposed cause was not present at the time of the effect
How do you propose to determine that the Bush administration had no influence on public opinion if you have not determined what did influence public opinion?- it does not require identifying an alternate cause.
Prior to 9/11, the Bush administration had set up Saddam and Iraq as the number one enemy of the US, did they not? When 9/11 hit and before those responsible were identified, I suppose it shouldn't be surprising that a majority of Americans jumped to the conclusion that Saddam had something to do with it.You're right that Bush talked about Saddam prior to 9/11. But did he talk about Saddam in relation to Al Qaeda prior to 9/11? I don't think so. In fact, I don't think most people were even aware of the existence of Al Qaeda prior to 9/11. I know I wasn't. So how could Bush have possibly convinced 78% of the public that there was a connection if he never even talked about the two of them together?
I actually do believe that time travel is possible, especially going forward. Going backwards might still be possible, but would be very, very expensive and would probably hurt a lot.I do not know what made 78% of people think, on 9/13/2001, that Saddam might have been involved with 9/11. I do know what did NOT cause them to think that: namely, something the Bush administration started doing AFTER that date. And I know that because I am deeply convinced time travel is not possible.
How do you propose to determine that the Bush administration had no influence on public opinion if you have not determined what did influence public opinion?
Prior to 9/11, the Bush administration had set up Saddam and Iraq as the number one enemy of the US, did they not?
When 9/11 hit and before those responsible were identified, I suppose it shouldn't be surprising that a majority of Americans jumped to the conclusion that Saddam had something to do with it.
I'm not saying that it was intentional, at that early stage, that the Bush administration influenced public opinion in this way, but it was a lucky break for them. And they certainly ran with it. Once Al-Qaeda was identified as the guilty party, the Bush administration often mentioned Al-Qaeda and Iraq in the same breath.
Well, there have been several claims. But here is the one that I've been asking you to back up:Are you being deliberately obtuse?
The charge is that the Bush administration tricked people into believing that there was a connection between Saddam and 9/11 because they would supposedly imply that such a connection existed. But people believed in the connection before anyone in the administration engaged in ANY of the activity which has been labeled as deceptive.
That is what I asked you to "Then, please, demonstrate."But no causal connection has been established, most people demonstrably concluded that in the first place without any input from the administration,
Hold on. People jumped to the conclusion that Saddam might have been involved with 9/11, but once it became clear that Al-Qaeda was responsible and not Saddam, where did the idea come that there was a link between Al-Qaeda and Iraq?Quite true. So why blame Bush for people having that opinion? Why attribute it to a supposed campaign of misdirection, when they were perfectly capable of forming that opinion on their own? Where's the actual evidence that anyone was actually decieved? Oh, that's right: you don't HAVE any.
Have you not been to the General Skepticism section of this forum? Why do you think there is a need for debunkers and skeptics in this world? Very smart people are fooled by simple tricks all the time because most people don't pay close attention.Once again, you rely on the inability of the public to consider anything more complex than the proximity of two words. Argument from stupidity: the sheeple were to dumb not to jump to incorrect conclusions even when the statements themselves are factually correct.
Well, there have been several claims. But here is the one that I've been asking you to back up:
That is what I asked you to "Then, please, demonstrate."
Hold on. People jumped to the conclusion that Saddam might have been involved with 9/11, but once it became clear that Al-Qaeda was responsible and not Saddam, where did the idea come that there was a link between Al-Qaeda and Iraq?
I did. Perhaps you misunderstand me. I was talking about the perception of a connection between Saddam and 9/11. The Bush administration made no such connection, and implied no such connection, prior to September 13, 2001. Yet people concluded there was such a connection. Therefore, they did so without input (about the connection) from the Bush administration. Is that really so hard for you to comprehend?
Well, that was my question to you when you insisted that I only thought Cheney was attempting to mislead the public because AP told me he was.What, people can't come to conclusions on their own?