Content pfp
Content
@
https://warpcast.com/~/channel/politics
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

π’‚­_π’‚­ pfp
π’‚­_π’‚­
@m-j-r.eth
curious what people think. in the context of testimony preceding the Iraq War, concerning the imminent and disproven threat of WMDs, and the following conspiracy of the Plame affair... was American consent for war manufactured?
3 replies
0 recast
20 reactions

Nounish Prof βŒβ—§-β—§πŸŽ© pfp
Nounish Prof βŒβ—§-β—§πŸŽ©
@nounishprof
absolutelyβ€”all ego & money β€” Iran has always been a way bigger threat than Iraq was btw β€” now we hold our collective breath and hope that this doesn’t escalate
2 replies
0 recast
7 reactions

π’‚­_π’‚­ pfp
π’‚­_π’‚­
@m-j-r.eth
from what I can see, this a gift-wrapped reset to the cycle of violence. neither Iraq nor Iran have the means to directly threaten the United States. it would be a bitter, likely losing, cost to establish any beachhead or sustained invasion onto U.S. homeland. the same goes for any direct strike, as our response would be of biblical proportions. I'm a bit bemused by the retrograde amnesia in this current decision. we suffered Iraqi insurgency, and it got really bad with the beheadings. we suffered the consequence of the Arab Spring in places like Libya and Syria. I count that as runaway escalation. right now there's a War Powers resolution: https://massie.house.gov/uploadedfiles/iranwpr.pdf unfortunately, majority of Americans poll yes for the Iranian War. do you see any way to deescalate this? I think we'll have no choice but to tally up the bill and practice extreme stoicism.
1 reply
0 recast
4 reactions

DV pfp
DV
@degenveteran.eth
They have always been a top adversary, people have played this situation out. Hopefully they're not willing to accept what would be next
0 reply
0 recast
2 reactions