There's no way you can prove Oil didn't have anything to do with it, either. You need to stop using hindsight as a measure of why shit happens. See my post above.
Pages: 1 2
- Index »
- Community »
- Debate and Serious Talk »
- Was there ever any evidence that we went to Iraq for oil?
This.Cybargs wrote:
It's cheaper buying oil from Iraq than stealing it.Mekstizzle wrote:
There's no way you can prove Oil didn't have anything to do with it, either. You need to stop using hindsight as a measure of why shit happens. See my post above.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
no. even the miltary had to bring in oil. which would make no sense if we were just taking their oil. stupid fucking people.
It's not about stealing it, people don't say they went into Iraq to steal the oil, well some do, but that's misinformed. It's abit more complex than that. You guys know all about that anyway but just feel like saying stealing insteadJohnG@lt wrote:
This.Cybargs wrote:
It's cheaper buying oil from Iraq than stealing it.Mekstizzle wrote:
There's no way you can prove Oil didn't have anything to do with it, either. You need to stop using hindsight as a measure of why shit happens. See my post above.
Saying that, I don't think it was about going in there solely because of oil. But I do think that oil was a big reason it happened. Just because things didn't work out as expected doesn't mean it doesn't factor into it all. You can't sit there and say oil had fuck all to do with any of it, I think that's the equivalent of burying your head in the sand. It's kinda stupid not to consider oil as a factor.
Last edited by Mekstizzle (2010-01-30 11:13:39)
Of course oil was a reason. You don't see us going into the Congo or Rwanda and toppling their leaders. Fact is, the ME is important to the world, a whole lot more important than central Africa or Southeast Asia or many other places, precisely because it has oil. Do we care about stability in those regions? Doesn't even cross our minds. Does that make us bad people? Hardly. It just means that the developed world has a vested interest in there being stability in a region that is so important to all of our interests. If there had been oil fields in Bosnia and Kosovo would Europe have stood by for so many years and allowed a genocide to take place without batting an eyelash? Of course not. We're in this world to pursue our own rational self interests. To think otherwise is just naive or brazenly ignorant.Mekstizzle wrote:
It's not about stealing it, people don't say they went into Iraq to steal the oil, well some do, but that's misinformed. It's abit more complex than that. You guys know all about that anyway but just feel like saying stealing insteadJohnG@lt wrote:
This.Cybargs wrote:
It's cheaper buying oil from Iraq than stealing it.
Saying that, I don't think it was about going in there solely because of oil. But I do think that oil was a big reason it happened. Just because things didn't work out as expected doesn't mean it doesn't factor into it all. You can't sit there and say oil had fuck all to do with any of it, I think that's the equivalent of burying your head in the sand. It's kinda stupid not to consider oil as a factor.
Are we bad people because we don't run around putting out all the fires of the world (like Darfur)? No, because if you look at it realistically it's a fucking waste of time. There will always be trouble somewhere in the world and it's a titanic waste of time and effort sorting out other peoples problems for them, especially since 99% of the time they will resent you for the help anyway. Gotta pick your battles and the only ones worth fighting are the ones where you personally have a vested interest in the outcome.
Last edited by JohnG@lt (2010-01-30 11:22:13)
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Yeah, people were on here talking about how it wasn't about oil, all that shit, trying to use the current disaster as proof. I just think it was all rather stupid to think like that. But I pretty much agree with what you say there.
True... but that's why much of the world balks at the whole "spreading democracy" bullshit. Our own democracy is a farce, so why is there this emphasis to spread something we can't even properly implement for ourselves?JohnG@lt wrote:
Of course oil was a reason. You don't see us going into the Congo or Rwanda and toppling their leaders. Fact is, the ME is important to the world, a whole lot more important than central Africa or Southeast Asia or many other places, precisely because it has oil. Do we care about stability in those regions? Doesn't even cross our minds. Does that make us bad people? Hardly. It just means that the developed world has a vested interest in there being stability in a region that is so important to all of our interests. If there had been oil fields in Bosnia and Kosovo would Europe have stood by for so many years and allowed a genocide to take place without batting an eyelash? Of course not. We're in this world to pursue our own rational self interests. To think otherwise is just naive or brazenly ignorant.
Are we bad people because we don't run around putting out all the fires of the world (like Darfur)? No, because if you look at it realistically it's a fucking waste of time. There will always be trouble somewhere in the world and it's a titanic waste of time and effort sorting out other peoples problems for them, especially since 99% of the time they will resent you for the help anyway. Gotta pick your battles and the only ones worth fighting are the ones where you personally have a vested interest in the outcome.
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
That would just make it even worse, the US isn't some all omnipotent, omniscience, omnipresent force (I think I said all of them there). You can't just go around acting like an complete outright dick (as opposed to a regular dick) and think you're totally safe.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
The US has to keep an image, it pisses off people when they go against it, but it's still not anywhere near as bad as if they just went ahead with the complete truth like you want them to. Or something like that.
Plus I think people are being abit too cynical about the US. It's not totally all about that. Mostly, but not completely like...
newsflash... everyone does that and has done it and will always do it.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
Not the statement part... but yes, the action of it.11 Bravo wrote:
newsflash... everyone does that and has done it and will always do it.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
Yeah but how many legitimately plan on giving the country back after they take it? We're not Hitler or Napoleon holding onto territory for the long haul. We go in, kick some ass, set up a puppet regime and then we go back to sipping pina coladas by the pool.11 Bravo wrote:
newsflash... everyone does that and has done it and will always do it.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
Everyone can bitch all they want but the primary goal is to set up a weakish government beholden to the people that can't fuck with it's neighbors and cause problems. Saddam had to go, not because he was beating the shit out of his own people, but because it was better to take him out than constantly having him threatening his neighbors and other people. The world is a better place without him. That's undeniable to even the most ardent pacifists
Last edited by JohnG@lt (2010-01-30 12:31:46)
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
If Obama was not elected,if the economy wasn't so fucked up and if the Iraq war had been successful i have no doubt who USA would free next: Venezuela.
really smart people here
Maybe... possibly Iran though. In fact, it seems more like invading Iran might have been more fruitful of an idea, instead of Iraq.Ticia wrote:
If Obama was not elected,if the economy wasn't so fucked up and if the Iraq war had been successful i have no doubt who USA would free next: Venezuela.
It depends on how you look at it.
Last edited by Turquoise (2010-01-30 14:58:48)
The US would never be able to "sell" an explicit military invasion of Venezuela to the International community. Any US activity in Venezuela will be behind the scenes.Ticia wrote:
If Obama was not elected,if the economy wasn't so fucked up and if the Iraq war had been successful i have no doubt who USA would free next: Venezuela.
Wrong, the oil companies pay Iraq a few dollars per barrel of oil extracted and make huge profits selling it, Iraqi oil is amongst the cheapest to extract too.Cybargs wrote:
It's cheaper buying oil from Iraq than stealing it.Mekstizzle wrote:
There's no way you can prove Oil didn't have anything to do with it, either. You need to stop using hindsight as a measure of why shit happens. See my post above.
The Iraqi govt also has to pay to have its infrastructure rebuilt which was destroyed - largely unnecessarily - during the war.
Not a bad scam really, bomb the shit out of a country, rape their oil and make them pay you grossly inflated prices for the rebuilding.
To the people arguing the cost-benefit makes no sense:
From the point of view of Halliburton, KBR etc it makes perfect sense - the tax-payer pays the cost, the contractors reap the benefit, how could it be better?
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-01-30 19:59:55)
Fuck Israel
Where did I say anything about Iraq in my post? The response was about Afghanistan. The poster I was responding to was essentially saying "I can see someone making an argument about Iraq, but Afghanistan?"Braddock wrote:
Iraq had little or nothing to do with AQ though, the 'war on terror argument' doesn't really wash in that regard. The WMD argument was seriously questioned beforehand and all but fell apart not long after the tanks rolled in. The oil argument is a logical one but not one that will ever be proved by documentation of any sort of Governmental agreement or decision. The 'proof' for people who buy into this argument would be the fact that oil that was once under the watchful eye of Saddam is now in the hands of multinational corporations... but again this is circumstantial evidence and any sort of evidence of a prior arrangement for such an eventuality will likely never surface (or probably never existed in any documented form to begin with).FEOS wrote:
They probably read the same internet blogs as Woody Harrelson. Convinced that we went to war in Afghanistan over a pipeline. Not because Afghanistan is where AQ was headquartered after 9/11. Nope. That had nothing to do with it. It was about a pipeline, you see. You can read all about it on the internet...right alongside how the US government snuck in demolition teams to take down the World Trade Center and flew a missile into the Pentagon.
The most logical theory for the war was that the Neo-Conservative Government wanted to try and use the climate of fear that 9/11 provided to attack a country that's only connection to 9/11 was it's geographical proximity to Saudi Arabia, for the purpose of building a free-market economy in one of the most oil-rich nations in the world. From the point of view of the Neo-conservatives after 9/11 all the parts of the plan seemed to just fit together... an oil-rich country, an Islamic country (nobody really cared that it had nothing to do with 9/11), a former ally turned despot, a previous threat of chemical weapons, pre-existing broken UN resolutions that could be emphasized for dramatic effect (as though loads of other countries hadn't broken just as many resolutions). It was just politics... just people looking out for their own interests and convincing themselves that they were doing 'the right thing' for the 'greater good'.
That was what my response was about.
Last edited by FEOS (2010-01-30 22:15:32)
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Might as well invade Nigeria to stabilize it coz it has oil amirite.11 Bravo wrote:
newsflash... everyone does that and has done it and will always do it.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
That's a good idea, actually... hmmmmCybargs wrote:
Might as well invade Nigeria to stabilize it coz it has oil amirite.11 Bravo wrote:
newsflash... everyone does that and has done it and will always do it.Turquoise wrote:
We should just be more honest and straightforward about it. "We're occupying your country to protect our business interests, and if you interfere with us, we're going to kill you."
That's fair enough, I was just building on your initial post and pointing out that the same arguments used in favour of the Afghanistan invasion don't apply when dealing with Iraq (which is the subject of the thread, is it not?).FEOS wrote:
Where did I say anything about Iraq in my post? The response was about Afghanistan. The poster I was responding to was essentially saying "I can see someone making an argument about Iraq, but Afghanistan?"Braddock wrote:
Iraq had little or nothing to do with AQ though, the 'war on terror argument' doesn't really wash in that regard. The WMD argument was seriously questioned beforehand and all but fell apart not long after the tanks rolled in. The oil argument is a logical one but not one that will ever be proved by documentation of any sort of Governmental agreement or decision. The 'proof' for people who buy into this argument would be the fact that oil that was once under the watchful eye of Saddam is now in the hands of multinational corporations... but again this is circumstantial evidence and any sort of evidence of a prior arrangement for such an eventuality will likely never surface (or probably never existed in any documented form to begin with).FEOS wrote:
They probably read the same internet blogs as Woody Harrelson. Convinced that we went to war in Afghanistan over a pipeline. Not because Afghanistan is where AQ was headquartered after 9/11. Nope. That had nothing to do with it. It was about a pipeline, you see. You can read all about it on the internet...right alongside how the US government snuck in demolition teams to take down the World Trade Center and flew a missile into the Pentagon.
The most logical theory for the war was that the Neo-Conservative Government wanted to try and use the climate of fear that 9/11 provided to attack a country that's only connection to 9/11 was it's geographical proximity to Saudi Arabia, for the purpose of building a free-market economy in one of the most oil-rich nations in the world. From the point of view of the Neo-conservatives after 9/11 all the parts of the plan seemed to just fit together... an oil-rich country, an Islamic country (nobody really cared that it had nothing to do with 9/11), a former ally turned despot, a previous threat of chemical weapons, pre-existing broken UN resolutions that could be emphasized for dramatic effect (as though loads of other countries hadn't broken just as many resolutions). It was just politics... just people looking out for their own interests and convincing themselves that they were doing 'the right thing' for the 'greater good'.
That was what my response was about.
But if you read the OP, the idiots threw Afghanistan in there, as well. Hence my Woody Harrelson comment.Braddock wrote:
That's fair enough, I was just building on your initial post and pointing out that the same arguments used in favour of the Afghanistan invasion don't apply when dealing with Iraq (which is the subject of the thread, is it not?).
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Pages: 1 2
- Index »
- Community »
- Debate and Serious Talk »
- Was there ever any evidence that we went to Iraq for oil?