Fraternal Conflict

Yes, addressing the big issues of our time… our pet gerbils have had a falling out, with one biting the bum of another. The biter has been moved into a cardboard box while we figure out what to do. it’s very unlikely we can reintroduce him to the tank, even though they all seem to be pining for their lost family, because this is a fight to the death over who has the largest gerbil cojones. And I’m damned if I’m spending even more money on another tank to keep him in (the cardboard box isn’t going to last long). On the other hand Claire works for the RSPCA, so we can’t just let him go play in the garden.

So the best option seems to be assembling a divider for the tank so we can have them all in one place, but keep the savage beasts apart. More construction, oh joy.

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Easy Lies

From a post at Gateway Pundit that makes some reasonable points, a couple of mistakes. First, an easy lie about money.

And, the cost of this war– something the Democrats are focusing on now that Iraq is stabilizing– is lower than Vietnam or the Cold War:
Defense Spending

Lets say I pay you $10 a day, and charge you $1 for food. Then one day I raise the cost of your food to $2. Would you say that the cost of your food was lower? Of course not. But how about if I increased your pay to $30 a day. Now the cost of your food is lower, right? Again, no. It’s certainly more affordable, which is great, but it’s higher, not lower.

Well that’s what the Pundit is trying to sell you; something costs less if you earn more. I can’t scare up the site, but I read recently that, allowing for the natural uncertainties in costing such things, this is now the second most expensive war in US history, after WWII. Expensive as in ‘cost is higher’. It’s more affordable than some others because of the strength (to now, at least) of the US economy, which is a great thing. But it’s an easier sell to lie and say it’s cheaper, than to tell the truth and say it’s more affordable.

The second lie is less obvious, but surprisingly similar. The stated aim of the ‘surge’ (or escalation, as it ought to be known) was basically to advance and consolidate the political stability of Iraq. There are two facets to that. The first is making space for the politicians to do their thing, and in that the escalation has done an impressive job. The problem is that without the second part – actually making things happen – it has failed almost entirely. And without that second step the statement that “Truly- The Surge Is Historic in Its Success” is as much of a lie as the lower costs of the war. It’s a good and noble thing to cut civilian and military casualties, but sadly it’s a long way from ‘mission accomplished’.

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Relationships

Adive from ‘Stuff White People Like‘ on dealing with people who’ve just ended a relationship:

It is imperative that you do not attempt to kick them out of their misery by saying things like “get over it,” “there are other people out there,” or “I don’t want to read your poem.”

Read, as they say, the whole thing.

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$3.3 Trillion

That’s the cost of the war in Iraq, according to a Nobel Laureate economist. He went on to explain what that money could be doing instead, which seems a bit silly to me; it would be easier to list what you couldn’t do. And right now I can’t think of anything for that list.

One of the classic responses to this at the moment seems to be to point out the cost of not taking action. Putting aside the slight problem of logic involved (no Al Qaida in Iraq before the war, WMD, blah blah), I’m actually ready to concede this point, if well made. But for all the accounts I’ve seen making the point, none have actually then actually stated that cost.

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