Lancet's Iraq body count debunked

FWIW researchers from both this new study and the Lancet study were arguing this on NPR just moments ago ("The Story", I think). Interestingly, they agreed on the Iraq death rate before the invasion and the death rate after the invasion - their estimates were nearly identical. The Lancet team assumed all of the increase was related to the invasion, while the new study suggests only 1/3 of the increase is. Curiously, there also appeared to be some agreement that political motives on both sides colored the results.
 
The 300 violent deaths out of 547 reported deaths stat I gave earlier includes non-violent deaths that would have happened without the invasion. My apologies if that was a source in your error.

Hmmm, no, I was going from recall of the studies and analyses of the studies, but my recall isn't what it used to be! I'm a bit limited in what I can access on this system, but I'll go over it again when I get back on my system this evening and see if I can figure out what I'm misrecollecting.
 
Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
<snip of irrelevencies/red-herring concerning Russians and Germans>

You call it irrelevant because you do not care for what it demonstrates.
Nope, I call them irrelevencies/red herrings because they are in no way related to, or accurate reflections of, what we are talking about. But, please, do point out how the Russian armies responding to a German invasion that penetrated deep into Russia, by pushing back into German territory in WWII, and the civilian casualties that resulted from this are in any way similar in circumstance or causation to the Iraqi civilian casualties caused by the US invasion and occupation, if you feel that I am mistaken about this being an irrelevent conflation made in an attempt to side-track the discussion.

Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
Then where is the problem with accepting that The US invasion and manner of our occupation bears a major responsibility for precipitating these situations?

Who said there is a problem with bearing major responsibility? Certainly not me. My position is acting as if any US responsibility absolves other parties of all responsibility.

A large dollop of responsibility for the US is fine. A free pass for others is not..

Please indicate who and where this has been done?

Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
I didn't say "all military experts," I clearly stated,"all the military experts familiar with occupation and insurgency issues." Which should clearly exclude Franks, Rummy and Bremer.

Bremer and Rumsfeld aren't military. Bremer is not a military expert in any sense, though one could be forgiven for thinking Rumsfeld has some expertise. I differ strongly with your dismissal of Franks. I happen to think he blew it (and have said so numerous times on these forums), but that doesn't make him any less a military expert on these things than Brett Favre's record number of interceptions make him a non-expert on football quarterbacking..

You brought up Bremer, Rumsfeld and Franks, not I.

Ah. But you said "familiar with occupation and insurgency issues," right? Great. Given that familiarity with that subject is rare in the Western world, I will be obliged if you name the subjects you had in mind. We can then contrast them with Franks..

Gen. Petraeus seems to be fairly competent in the area, or at least he seemed to have been prior to actually having to deal with such and being made a fall-guy by this administration. Col. Thomas Hammes likewise seems to have a pretty good grasp of the topics. Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper, Col. Chet Richards, Maj. Don Vandergriff, Lt. Col. H. Thomas Hayden, Richard Kohn, and John McCuen (though technically, neither of the last two are military, they did author definitive texts on counter-insurgency that are, I believe, still required academy reading). Heck, the Marine Corps own "Small Wars Manual 1940." seems to have a much better grasp of what to do and not do, than the plan this administration used operationally.

Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
I see your first response quite clearly, though what you believe it demonstrates seems to be at serious odds with supportive reasoning for your prior claims and assertions.

???
My "prior claims and assertions?" What, pray tell, are they? Do avoid building them of straw..

LOL, even if I were so inclined, it seems that you have cornered the market on such and driven the price of straw well beyond my meager means.

The equation of the US invasion of Iraq to the Russian pushback against the German invasion of Russia during WWII and the implied similarity in causation between civilian Germans in that war and Iraqi civilian casualties under the current US occupation.

If there is a strawman there, it is only the one with your fingerprints upon it.

Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
The sample for the year prior to the invasion were done to establish a pre-invasion baseline.

That much of statistics I am quite comfortable with. I am also comfortable in my knowledge that a time period's chronological primacy is not sufficient to make it an adequate baseline. It must also be representative.

I see no evidence indicative of it not being representative of conditions that were at least consistent over the last decade.

Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
The al-Anfal incidents happened back in '88 or nearly a decade and a half prior to the invasion and would be largely considered too remote to have been of any value and an outlier in its nature. Is there any reason to believe that conditions in the year leading up to the invasion were unusually quiet with respect to Saddam's activities in Iraq?

Reason? Yes. For a quick, top-of-the-head example you need go no further than trying to avoid providing reason for the invasion.

Proof? None at all..

Unfortunately, such speculations without some measure of supporting evidence, are largely specious and without merit, more often serving as a better measure of the speculator's bias than providing any sense of an objective and reflective of reality analysis.


Originally Posted by TShaitanaku
You have to realize this wasn't a political ploy to make Saddam look beneficient, this was an attempt to find out how many deaths had occurred between when the US invasion started and when the study was completed in 2006

I "have to realize"? Not in the slightest. I have to realize that it is claimed to be so. .

"Claimed to be so" (political ploy - presumably) by whom?


If the invasion is a Bad Thing over 4 years but is a Good Thing over 20 years, which way shall we decide?]..

Arguing that good things may eventually come about due to circumstances created by illegal, immoral and/or incompetent actions, is not a proper nor acceptable defense of those actions. It can be argued that without the holocaust, there would have never been a state of Israel nor many of the current international conventions against similar actions. And yet, that hardly seems a valid argument that the holocaust was a "good thing."


The first piece seems to be nothing but an opinion piece based upon other opinion pieces with very little in the way of solid data and real comparison to pre-surge figures.

And the second piece seems to contradict your assertion

If I kick your door down and kill your children and then stop any further killing, does that justify me kicking your door down and killing your children?
Oh, my. It seems that faulty analogies are the order of the day. Let's add to your little tale some relevant tidbits about me killing some of my own children before you kicked down my door and about my having invaded our mutual neighbor's house and having raped his children a decade ago, and having failed to report to my probation officer since.

Do that and you may have something. Not enough, though. For that you'd need to go further like how after you kicked down my door you didn't kill my children but simply locked me in the closet and then were unable to prevent a couple of my children trying to kill the remainder.

There. Much better.

Funny, that doesn't seem to have been the reason for given for invasion, if that case was strong and legitimate, why was that not the primary pitch made to congress and the american people to invade Iraq? As far as I can tell this had little or nothing to do with why the "door was kicked in."
 
Wars inevitably end up killing innocent people, and mistakes are always made in the course of waging them. Following your logic, we should never go to war. The alternative might get more people killed, but as long as their deaths can't be blamed on us then everything is fine. This leads one place: pacifism. But pacifism isn't moral, it's immoral.

Not killing people - immoral


You just cannot make this stuff up. The sky is falling the sky is falling. We must kill more people or we are being immoral.

I just bet Ziggurat has a US military background.
 
Not killing people - immoral

You just cannot make this stuff up. The sky is falling the sky is falling. We must kill more people or we are being immoral.
Did you really miss the point of Ziggurat's post that badly?

I won't get into morals, but pacifism is definitely irresponsible. Fortunately few people are true pacifists. Most style themselves as pacifists only when it suits them.
 
Did you really miss the point of Ziggurat's post that badly?

I won't get into morals, but pacifism is definitely irresponsible. Fortunately few people are true pacifists. Most style themselves as pacifists only when it suits them.

Well, I definitely think you're closer to the mark with "irresponsible", not due to any fault in Pacificist thought, but because the outcomes of pacifist thought in a very non-pacifist world are not always pretty. As Aldous Huxley taught us, no country is an island.

Calling a philosophy that values every human life "immoral" is a little over the top though. Perhaps a better way of phrasing that would be "The outcomes of Pacifist thought implemented in a non-pacifist world are frequently immoral and the result of a naive outlook".

That being said, I think the degree to which this is true depends on where the people are pacifist. If a bunch of people living in a commune in California are pacifist - with little in the way of influence or even contact with the outside world, I don't think the immorality charge sticks, because there's no danger of the government actually listening to these people and adopting their beliefs.

I'm also not sure what qualifies you to comment on the inner minds of "pacifists" in general and the degree to which they do or do not adhere to their stated beliefs.
 
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Not killing people - immoral

When refraining from killing means letting others die in far greater numbers, then yes. It is not praise that Ghandi deserves for telling the Jews to just let Hitler kill them.

You just cannot make this stuff up. The sky is falling the sky is falling. We must kill more people or we are being immoral.

Strawman. Indescriminate slaughter is not the only alternative to pacifism.

I just bet Ziggurat has a US military background.

Ad hominem. Care to add some more fallacies to your repertoire?
 
Excellent. So you hold the insurgents and suicide bombers responsible for deciding to be insurgents and suicide bombers.

Or don't you?

Of course I do. Why would you think I don't?
I think this is one of those areas where having someone to share the blame with doesn't make you any less responsible for what happened.

The new WHO survey agrees with Lancet-2 on pre-invasion death rates but disagrees on the post-invasion rate.

Actually, it doesn't. It gives 3.17 per 1000 per year. But they expect that to be an under-estimate. They both estimate about 400 deaths per day from non-violent causes, if your looking for a point of agreement. From the WHO study:

There was greater agreement regarding mortality from nonviolent causes between the IFHS study (372 deaths per day) and the study by Burnham et al. (416 deaths per day)

But that's less controversial, because no-one has claimed a huge increase in non-violent deaths compared to the days of Saddam and sanctions.
 
FWIW researchers from both this new study and the Lancet study were arguing this on NPR just moments ago ("The Story", I think). Interestingly, they agreed on the Iraq death rate before the invasion and the death rate after the invasion - their estimates were nearly identical. The Lancet team assumed all of the increase was related to the invasion, while the new study suggests only 1/3 of the increase is. Curiously, there also appeared to be some agreement that political motives on both sides colored the results.

Could you provide a link please? Because I've looked up the death rates used in the study and they don't seem to be the same. (Lancet 5.5, WHO 3.17)

eta:
The closest I can find is this:
http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2008/01/ifhs_study_on_violent_deaths_i.php

Where Roberts is quoted saying:
There is more in common in the results than appears at first glance.

The NEJM article found a doubling of mortality after the invasion, we found a tripling. The big difference is that we found almost all the increase from violence, they found 1/2 the increase from violence.

And http://psychoanalystsopposewar.org/blog/2008/01/10/les-roberts-on-new-iraq-mortality-study/

where roberts is quoted saying:

I think that this new article in the NEJM is a good addition to the discussion. It is good for Iraqis, it is good for science, it is good for promoting peace.

1) There is far more in common in the results than appears at first glance.

The NEJM article found a doubling of mortality after the invasion, we found a 2.4 fold increase. They found a CMR of 3/1000/yr. before and 6 after but thought they were missing almost 1/2 the deaths. We found a CMR of 5 before and 13 after….thus we actually agree roughly on the number of excess deaths. The big difference is that we found almost all the increase from violence, they found 1/3 the increase from violence.

13.3/5.5=2.4
so the second quote would have better numbers.
 
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I just don't think that a poll is the way to count something physical, vs attitudes. And it is only good for attitudes because we have no alternative.

Good science is repeatable.

Now, if there was some kind of back-up statistics for the death toll poll, it would be more believable. Like mens shoe sales statistics dropping by 10%- cigar sales? fishing pole sales? Something to show that there are 10% fewer men in Iraq? Birth rate perhaps (fewer 'fathers' around)? Enrollments in seminary schools? Some ratio change in male vs female apparel? Just anydamnthing that can be physically counted, to supply a statistic that would verify the poll.

How about in addition to asking "how many men died in this household" the pollsters also ask "how many live here now- men and women?". That ought to show a drop in the ratio of men/women.

We get nuthin. From nobody. Just one unverified figure. from interviews. not from physical count.
 
I wonder- Did the Mormons become pragmatically polygamous AFTER the civil war, which had killed off so many eligible bachelors?
 
Tshaitanaku said:
Nope, I call them irrelevencies/red herrings because they are in no way related to, or accurate reflections of, what we are talking about. But, please, do point out how the Russian armies responding to a German invasion that penetrated deep into Russia, by pushing back into German territory in WWII, and the civilian casualties that resulted from this are in any way similar in circumstance or causation to the Iraqi civilian casualties caused by the US invasion and occupation, if you feel that I am mistaken about this being an irrelevant conflation made in an attempt to side-track the discussion.
They are pertinent because your original question equated to this: “If the third order cause of civilian deaths (US invasion) had not occurred, would the immediate cause (car bombings, et al) have happened?” You address the second order cause (US mismanagement of the occupation) in your follow-on restatement of the question.

The implication is clearly that the chain of cause and effect is more than just temporal; it reflects a spectrum of moral culpability with the car bombers being on the lesser end simply because the bombing is a response. If my inference is off base, I will retract, but only if you say it plainly.


In regard to my Russian-German question, I began to compose an explanation of how it applied, but have—to my chagrin—discovered it doesn’t fit in the manner that I thought it did. So I will withdraw it on grounds it is a poorly thought argument, but not on grounds it was a red herring; I do not intentionally engage in those. Ever.


TShaitanaku said:
You brought up Bremer, Rumsfeld and Franks, not I.
I am being especially sloppy in this thread. My apologies again.


TShaitanaku said:
Gen. Petraeus seems to be fairly competent in the area, or at least he seemed to have been prior to actually having to deal with such and being made a fall-guy by this administration. Col. Thomas Hammes likewise seems to have a pretty good grasp of the topics. Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper, Col. Chet Richards, Maj. Don Vandergriff, Lt. Col. H. Thomas Hayden, Richard Kohn, and John McCuen (though technically, neither of the last two are military, they did author definitive texts on counter-insurgency that are, I believe, still required academy reading). Heck, the Marine Corps own "Small Wars Manual 1940." seems to have a much better grasp of what to do and not do, than the plan this administration used operationally.
Thank you, but this doesn’t satisfy.

Your original statement was:
TShaitanaku in Post #72 said:
If we had not disbanded the civil and military authorities and used sufficient occupation forces (as per the suggestions and general mandates of all the military experts familiar with occupation and insurgency issues) to pacify and maintain order in Iraq after the war was won, are these events likely to have occurred?
It is clear that your comment meant specific suggestions by specific experts directed specifically at the Iraq invasion/occupation prior to it all falling apart. Your list does not include such people. In fact, at least one person on it (Van Riper) was quite happy with the way the invasion was going until he realized there was no plan for the occupation.

I am quite familiar with the works of both Petraeus and Hammes. Boyd, too, though you didn’t mention him in your list.

Van Riper (again) was critical of Rumsfeld’s transformation plans, or rather the lack of plans and the reliance on buzzwords. His opposition to the invasion itself was stated after the war and predicated on his trust in Zinni’s certainty regarding the lack of WMDs in Iraq; it had nothing to do with a military consideration.

Vandergriff wrote Lessons Learned from Iraqi Freedom in 2004. On the first slide under “Still Room for Improvement” he writes “Obsolete planning process required unnecessary force levels.” This comes after he extols the military’s ability to defeat a larger force with a superior smaller force.

To be fair, he points out in the next slide that the Army still plays 2GW (as opposed to 4GW), but that is not in the context of having opposed the Iraqi invasion to begin with. In this slide show, as in most of his stuff, his major focus is on the need to revamp the personnel system.

Chet Richards also says the US wasn’t prepared for 4GW. Where did he make the suggestions you say he did?

From H. Thomas Hayden: “I do not believe that President G. W. Bush lied about weapons of mass destruction; everyone thought he had them, and Saddam Hussein needed to be removed. But President Bush certainly had bad advice on the invasion “force ratios” and there most certainly was no Plan B for the post occupation, pacification and reconstruction of Iraq.” Hmmm… that’s him talking about advice other people gave and clearly stating that the advice itself was for smaller force ratios.

Kohn, though, did say that invading Iraq would be a mistake without solidly tying them to 9/11 or demonstrating a plan by Saddam to attack the US. He said so soon after 9/11 and long before an invasion of Iraq became the topic du jour. I have not, however, read “Supreme Command.”

I have less knowledge of McCuen than I do of Cohn and have not read his book, either.

Are you seriously suggesting that writing on the subject of counter-insurgency equates to making suggestiongs to not disband the civil and military authorities in Iraq?


TShaitanaku said:
I see your first response quite clearly, though what you believe it demonstrates seems to be at serious odds with supportive reasoning for your prior claims and assertions.
You’re right. It was a bad example.


TShaitanaku said:
LOL, even if I were so inclined, it seems that you have cornered the market on such and driven the price of straw well beyond my meager means.
Nope. It’s another practice in which I do not engage. I frequently err, but I do not intentionally misrepresent what others say.


TShaitanaku said:
The equation of the US invasion of Iraq to the Russian pushback against the German invasion of Russia during WWII and the implied similarity in causation between civilian Germans in that war and Iraqi civilian casualties under the current US occupation.

If there is a strawman there, it is only the one with your fingerprints upon it.
Strawman means I ascribe a position to you which you do not hold, then I proceed to attack that position as if it were yours, declaring victory when I destroy it. I did not ascribe my Russian-German analogy to you; I used it as an argument from my side. I have now admitted it’s an argument without merit, but there was nothing dishonest in it.


TShaitanaku said:
I see no evidence indicative of it (the Lancet-2 baseline) not being representative of conditions that were at least consistent over the last decade.
I am not capable of performing the statistical analysis myself, but I think the mere absence of the Anfal and the plight of the Swamp Arabs immediately following Saddam’s draining of the southern lands is suspicious in itself.


TShaitanaku said:
Unfortunately, such speculations without some measure of supporting evidence, are largely specious and without merit, more often serving as a better measure of the speculator's bias than providing any sense of an objective and reflective of reality analysis.
You asked for a reason and I gave you a plausible one. I was honest enough to admit it that I lack evidence to support it. If you find that biased or argumentatively weak it’s no skin off my nose, and I suggest you brush up on burden of proof. When Lancet-2 chooses a one year baseline that excludes known atrocities in the not-too-distant past, it is incumbent upon Lancet-2 to defend its reasoning.

As I have said, I am unqualified to actually debate statistical methodologies (or the methodologies of the survey), but that does not mean I am incapable of following the debate, and I find the side questioning Lancet-2 to be more convincing.


TShaitanaku said:
"Claimed to be so" (political ploy - presumably) by whom?
In this instance, you.


TShaitanaku said:
Arguing that good things may eventually come about due to circumstances created by illegal, immoral and/or incompetent actions, is not a proper nor acceptable defense of those actions.
And begging the question wins you no points here. (I refer to the “illegal, immoral” part; I will grant, for sake of argument, “incompetent.”) But thanks for confirming my earlier inference about your assignment of moral responsibility.


TShaitanaku said:
It can be argued that without the holocaust, there would have never been a state of Israel nor many of the current international conventions against similar actions. And yet, that hardly seems a valid argument that the holocaust was a "good thing."
Shall I dismiss your example as a red herring? It would be only fair, I think. It falls apart when you consider intent.


TShaitanaku said:
The first piece seems to be nothing but an opinion piece based upon other opinion pieces with very little in the way of solid data and real comparison to pre-surge figures.
A briefing from April 2007.

An AFIS article quoting Rear Admiral Smith in November 2007.

The slides from Petraeus’ briefing to Congress in September 2007.

TShaitanaku said:
And the second piece seems to contradict your assertion
You should read more than the headline:

From my link that TShaitanaku references said:
However, the group also concludes that the number of those killed in Baghdad, where the majority of American reinforcements for surge operations were deployed, has fallen significantly during the year.

IBC compiles its data from official sources, including the Pentagon, and found that between 22,586 and 24,159 civilian deaths were documented for 2007, with the vast majority of those killed between January and August.


TShaitanaku said:
Funny, that doesn't seem to have been the reason for given for invasion, if that case was strong and legitimate, why was that not the primary pitch made to congress and the american people to invade Iraq? As far as I can tell this had little or nothing to do with why the "door was kicked in."
From here:
President Bush on March 22 said:
And our mission is clear, to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end Saddam Hussein's support for terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people.

But I’m not arguing about what reasons Bush and company gave for the invasion at the time, nor about whatever their hidden reasons may have been. Your analogy gave a scenario but with insufficient facts to make it comparable to the facts of pre-invasion Iraq. I don’t even need to include the chimera of WMDs to demonstrate that your analogy is in an intentional vacuum that demonstrates your own bias. Not that it bothers me; everybody's biased.
 
Researchers respond to the article cited in the OP.

http://www.jhsph.edu/refugee/research/iraq/national_journal.html

The January 4, 2008 series of articles by Neil Munro and Carl Cannon contain many innuendos, assumptions and untruths which should be addressed.
To start with, at no time did either Roberts or Burnham say that study’s release was timed to affect the outcome of the election. Roberts indicated that he wanted to promote discussion of the results, and Burnham told Munro specifically that he was anxious that the 2006 study be released well before the election to dispel any notion of trying to influence outcomes.
Dr. Riyadh Lafta has a long record as a solid partner for international research studies. In late 2004, when the World Health Organization feared that there was a polio outbreak in Iraq, a disease that after billions spent has almost been eradicated under United Nations leadership, Dr. Lafta was chosen to investigate and guide the United Nations on improving polio surveillance. Four population-based studies have now shown a consistent pattern of mortality in Iraq. There are multiple points of internal consistency, which point to the solidity of the data collected by Lafta and his team. Lafta has asked that the media do not contact him in Iraq, because of concerns for his safety and that of his family.
The collection of data by locally trained and supervised teams is standard for international surveys. The Johns Hopkins data on reduction of deaths in Afghanistan, quoted both by Munro and President Bush, were collected in the same way—using cluster surveys managed by skilled local public health staff.
In the ethical review process conducted with the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Institutional Review Board (IRB), we indicated that we would not record unique identifiers, such as full names, street addresses or any data (including details from death certificates) that might identify the subjects and put them at risk. Although we planned from the beginning to release mortality data (not “forced” as Munro states), it has never been our intent to release data at the household, street or neighborhood level that might identify and put at risk study participants. Children were not a part of the study. Onlookers—both adults and children—were told of the purpose of the project by the surveyors and asked to inform their neighbors, a common practice used by study investigators throughout the world including the U.S. Census Bureau. Since most households were located within walled compounds, conducting interviews on the doorstep was judged to be best from the point of security and cultural acceptability.
The statement on missing certificates is wrong. Three clusters did not have the presence of certificates noted, and in all there were 120 deaths in which the interviewers neglected to note their presence. It is also wrong to state the survey was scheduled to end on 1 July and to suggest that clusters with deaths were added later. The survey took several months to complete and finished when it did. High mortality was found in some of the clusters done earlier as well as some of those done later.
It is inaccurate to suggest that funding sources played some role in our research in Iraq. In 2004, and 2006, very modest levels of funding were sought after the projects were initiated. The fact that some of MIT’s financial support in 2006 came from the Open Society Institute had no effect on these reports; the researchers knew nothing of funding origins. MIT played no role in the study design, implementation, analysis or writing of the Lancet report.
Although frequent mention is made of the Iraq Body Count (IBC) data, these data are based on media reports and not statistics. So it is not surprising that car bombs, which consistently make headlines, are considerably over-represented in IBC data. A recent review of four major U.S. newspapers for articles on deaths in Iraq found that 12 percent the deaths reported in these papers were not included IBC’s data set. This would suggest that many and perhaps most of the press reports of deaths have not been captured by IBC, if 12 percent were missing from all of IBC’s 200 sources. A soon to be released study shows that even in Baghdad, the vast majority of violent fatal events are not in IBC’s database.


 
Although frequent mention is made of the Iraq Body Count (IBC) data, these data are based on media reports and not statistics. So it is not surprising that car bombs, which consistently make headlines, are considerably over-represented in IBC data. A recent review of four major U.S. newspapers for articles on deaths in Iraq found that 12 percent the deaths reported in these papers were not included IBC’s data set. This would suggest that many and perhaps most of the press reports of deaths have not been captured by IBC, if 12 percent were missing from all of IBC’s 200 sources. A soon to be released study shows that even in Baghdad, the vast majority of violent fatal events are not in IBC’s database.

Seems to be a pretty rational assumption now doesn't it? How could news reports capture any and all violent events during war - even in Bagdhad?

Is the argument that they capture enough to be "representative"?

If so, I think the selection method of journalists is enough to render this analysis as perhaps better suited to understanding how a war is portrayed in the media and those kinds of issues, rather than suited to providing an insight into Iraqi life, or even helping determine a reliable body count.
 
http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2008/01/john_tirman_on_munro_and_soros.php

One quick note about the Soros bugaboo. I commissioned L2. It was commissioned in Oct 2005, with internal funds from the Center for International Studies at MIT, of which I am executive director. The funds for public education (not the survey itself) came from the Open Society Institute in the following spring, long after things had started. Burnham did not know this (Roberts was not much involved at this point.) MIT was providing funds, that's all he knew or needed to know. There were other small donors involved too. I told this to Munro on the telephone and in an email. He nonetheless implied that Soros money had funded the survey from the start, possibly at Soros' behest. That is a disgraceful lie, and Munro knows it.
This timing also underscores another Munro falsehood: the attempt to influence 2006 congressional elections. We began in Oct 05 with the intention of getting the survey done in winter and results out in spring. The violence was so severe that the survey could not be conducted until late spring, and then at great peril. About two months for data entry, analysis, writing, peer review, etc. We decided to delay the release if too close to the election, setting our own deadline of Oct 14. It was never intended to influence the congressional election, though there is certainly nothing wrong in a democracy with wanting the public informed.
Munro also knew this and fabricated a tale to make this sound like a political gambit from the start. These are just two aspects that I know first hand. Munro's behavior--screaming at me on the telephone, demanding to know if any donors were Muslims, etc.---signalled his intentions from the start. This is a bad actor and is a disgrace to the newsletter where the diatribe appeared.
The NEJM article is far more important and interesting. This is where debate should be focused, not a blatant hatchet job by a guilty malcontent and one "source."







So do you get it now, Abdul?






 

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