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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mannie who wrote (14241)3/9/2003 5:22:18 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 89467
 
Mr Bush goes for the kill

Online commentary: There is a "moral case" for taking out Saddam.
But what about everybody else?

Terry Jones
Sunday March 9, 2003

Mr. Bush is right, Saddam Hussein is a nasty man and nobody I know has the
least objection to Mr. Bush killing him. It's just the way he proposes doing
it that worries me. Dropping 3000 bombs in 48 hours on Baghdad is going
to kill a lot of other people who, as far as I am aware, are not nasty at all.

That's the bit of the 'moral' argument I don't follow. It's a bit like the police
saying they know a murderer comes from the south of England so they are
going to execute everybody in Epsom.

Then again why does Mr. Bush need to drop 3000 bombs on Saddam Hussein?
I would have thought one would have been enough to take him out, if he knows
where Saddam is. And if he doesn't know where he is, what on earth is the
moral justification for dropping any bombs at all? Doesn't Mr. Bush realise
they are dangerous things and tend to kill people when they land?

Or does Mr Bush simply enjoy the idea of taking out a lot of Iraqis? I
appreciate Mr. Bush's argument that because Saddam Hussein has refused to
take any notice of the UN, Mr. Bush should teach him a lesson by dropping a
lot of bombs on him. But now he's telling us that if the UN won't give him
permission to do it, he's jolly well going to drop a lot of bombs on Saddam
anyway. In which case won't Mr. Bush be guilty of the same thing he's
accusing Saddam Hussein of? Apparently not because, according to the
President's advisers, if the United Nations won't give him permission to
drop a lot of bombs on Saddam Hussein, it will have ceased to be a
Responsible World Organization and therefore he doesn't need to take any
notice of it.

But doesn't the same thing go for Saddam Hussein? If the United Nations
ceases to be a Responsible World Organization how can the fact that Saddam
Hussein has refused to take any notice of it be something so evil that it
justifies dropping bombs on the poor people living under his heel?

And that's another thing - everyone seems to be very certain that dropping a
lot of bombs on Baghdad will get rid of Saddam Hussein. But will it? - any
more than devastating Afghanistan (and killing maybe 20,000 people) got
rid of Al-Qaeda? A recent UN report reckons that if and when the US starts
bombing as many as 100,000 Iraqis will die.

I can't really believe that the President of the United States gets his rocks
off by having people killed. That's more like Saddam Hussein.

And yet it worries me that Mr. Bush says that one of the reasons he wants to
kill a lot of Iraqis is because Saddam Hussein has also been killing them. Is
there some sort of rivalry here?

Back in 1988 Saddam killed several thousand at once, in the town of
Halabjah. Since then he's been carrying on the good work, but on a piecemeal
basis. In fact, for all I know, since his 1988 spree, he may not have killed
any more of his own citizens than George W. Bush did as Governor of Texas.
When Mr. Bush became Governor in 1995, the average number of
executions per year was 7.6. Mr. Bush succeeded in quadrupling this to a
magnificent 31.6 per year. He must have had the terrible chore of
personally signing over 150 death warrants while he was Governor. I
suppose the advantage of killing Iraqis is that you don't have to sign a piece
of paper for every one of them. Just one quick scribble and - bingo! You can
kill a hundred thousand and no questions asked! What's more, nobody is going
to quibble about some of them being mentally retarded or juveniles, which
is what happened to George W. Bush when he was Governor of Texas.

I'm not saying that George W. Bush shouldn't be allowed to kill as many
people as he wants. After all he is the unelected leader of the most powerful
country on earth, so if he can't do anything he likes, who can?

And, in the years to come, we can confidently look forward to a lot more
killing all over the world - certainly a lot more than ever Saddam Hussein
managed in his own country.

· Terry Jones writes regularly for The Observer. To all those readers
who have written in to ask if this Terry Jones had anything to do with Monty
Python, the answer is yes.