LOGO
General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here.

Reply to Thread New Thread
Old 07-21-2008, 10:13 PM   #21
Misebeita

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
368
Senior Member
Default
No, it is actually the only sane way to do it. Why the hell whould you not use month to month unless you are trying your best to match months that make Oerdin not look like an idiot?
Misebeita is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 10:18 PM   #22
freevideoandoicsI

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
600
Senior Member
Default
In DanSed you. That was an argument completely tangential to my point, so I deleted it.
freevideoandoicsI is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 10:23 PM   #23
IronpumpedLady

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
544
Senior Member
Default
Originally posted by Ramo


Late 2005/early 2006 is the period (i.e. that just preceding the al-Askariyah Mosque bombing) that the past few months' violence most resembles. It looks like a ridiculous bout of nitpicking to criticize Oerdin over that comment. Parochial it may be, but nitpicking? I say no, given that he was the one making a big deal out defending it against two other people.
IronpumpedLady is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 10:28 PM   #24
FLOMOUSLY

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
354
Senior Member
Default
For ‘surge’ troops, pride and doubt

Soldiers who were part of the "surge" are heartened by security improvements but unsure if their hard-won gains will hold. Full story:
FLOMOUSLY is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 10:40 PM   #25
pataagusata

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
800
Senior Member
Default
Originally posted by Dauphin
Parochial it may be, but nitpicking? I say no, given that he was the one making a big deal out defending it against two other people. I agree. He wasn't dealing in vague generalities. He cited facts, and those facts contradicted his conclusion. He was wrong, and when people are wrong, other people will correct them. Why defend his BS?
pataagusata is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 10:54 PM   #26
roundman

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
541
Senior Member
Default
Again, it's clear that the pattern of violence in recent months most resembles a period in late 2005 and early 2006, not the much lower levels in early 2005, or 2004, or 2003 (as the graph he posted shows). Jun-08 373
May-08 396
Apr-08 631
Mar-08 819
Feb-08 564
Jan-08 485

TOTAL = 3268

Apr-06 808
Mar-06 901
Feb-06 688
Jan-06 590
Dec-05 344
Nov-05 592

TOTAL = 3923

I figured youhad already done the math, but I guess not. Oerdin is STILL wrong. We can go back to corresponding months, but that would be stupid on all levels.

Apr-08 631
Mar-08 819
Feb-08 564
Jan-08 485
Dec-07 476
Nov-07 471

TOTAL = 3446

And Oerdin is STILL wrong.
roundman is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 11:11 PM   #27
spacecrafty

Join Date
Nov 2005
Posts
544
Senior Member
Default
Is it the fault of the gardener if the seed fails? Setting aside the fact that this analogy is pretty bad, yes.

We invaded another country and got ourselves involved in a nationbuilding excercise. We chose the seeds. We chose the soil and climate. We chose the fertilizer. We did this without properly researching anything, but we weren't concerned. We would make the plants grow by sheer force of will!

What happens when you plant seeds in soil with the wrong PH, in a climate adverse to the plant, and apply the wrong fertilizer? Is it the fault of the seeds that the plant dies?

-Arrian
spacecrafty is offline


Old 07-21-2008, 11:53 PM   #28
Antelpebabe

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
468
Senior Member
Default
Originally posted by Patroklos
His comment was very specific, he compared 2006 to now (2008).

Jun-08 373
May-08 396
Apr-08 631
Mar-08 819
Feb-08 564
Jan-08 485

TOTAL = 3268

Jun-06 738
May-06 969
Apr-06 808
Mar-06 901
Feb-06 688
Jan-06 590

TOTAL = 4724 You are using civilian and military deaths where as i said civilian deaths. I even quoted from your own source Patty. Now, I know you are being deliberately deceptive.
Antelpebabe is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 12:42 AM   #29
kaiayout

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
414
Senior Member
Default
Originally posted by Arrian


Setting aside the fact that this analogy is pretty bad, yes.

We invaded another country and got ourselves involved in a nationbuilding excercise. We chose the seeds. We chose the soil and climate. We chose the fertilizer. We did this without properly researching anything, but we weren't concerned. We would make the plants grow by sheer force of will!

What happens when you plant seeds in soil with the wrong PH, in a climate adverse to the plant, and apply the wrong fertilizer? Is it the fault of the seeds that the plant dies?

-Arrian
So you're saying that once we took Hussein, which I still maintain was warranted, we should have left.
I can almost support that viewpoint, but I'll bet you
$100 that if we could turn back time and create that scenario, the same people would be whining.
Luckily for you and your $100 that we can't turn back time.
kaiayout is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 01:36 AM   #30
auctionlover

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
377
Senior Member
Default
Ben, once again you are making a strawman argument. No one has said things have not improved at all or that the surge is having no effect. Civilian deaths have declined.

What people are questioning is exactly how low civilian deaths need to go in order for it to be declared a shining example of success and we are looking at the benchmarks the White House said would be used to judge the success of the surge before the surge happened. Why is it you refuse to recognize this fact? The truth is of the 18 benchmarks the White House agreed would be used to measure the success of the surge only 3 have been accomplished.

Now the White House is saying they don't want to use those 18 benchmarks any more and that smells like they are changing the definition of what qualifies as a success so that they can declare victory even though they failed to accomplish their own benchmarks.
auctionlover is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 01:58 AM   #31
shemadagaswer

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
464
Senior Member
Default
I figured youhad already done the math, but I guess not. Lame.

1. You chose an asymmetric distribution of months between 2007 and 2008 to push that number higher.
2. I specifically stated that the bombing in Samarra was the trigger for the increased levels of violence. That bombing happened at the end of February. I'm not sure why you're including April.
3. The word "resemble" doesn't appear to mean what you think it does.
shemadagaswer is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 02:44 AM   #32
bomondus

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
457
Senior Member
Default
It's on ABC. An interview with Obama, asking why he had opposed the surge, that's down 80% from the same day last year. I forget the casualties numbers, but of course, dramatically down. McCain supported it.
Needless to say, also, Obama talked around it.


EDIT: To add, Obama appears quite the gentleman. He said McCain wanted to take care of the country, just like he wants to take care of the country. That he respects the sacrifices and political contributions McCain has made in his life.
That was cool. I liked that about him.
bomondus is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 06:54 AM   #33
BILBONDER

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
382
Senior Member
Default
Ben, once again you are making a strawman argument. No one has said things have not improved at all or that the surge is having no effect. Civilian deaths have declined. Thank you for admitting that the surge is working.

What people are questioning is exactly how low civilian deaths need to go in order for it to be declared a shining example of success I would say they are already there. Next question?

Why is it you refuse to recognize this fact? The truth is of the 18 benchmarks the White House agreed would be used to measure the success of the surge only 3 have been accomplished. I've seen the document, and that's NOT their conclusion. Do I need to cut and paste from there, or is it enough that you take me at my word? Your choice?

Now the White House is saying they don't want to use those 18 benchmarks any more and that smells like they are changing the definition of what qualifies as a success so that they can declare victory even though they failed to accomplish their own benchmarks. First off, the 18 benchmarks were for the success of the Iraq rebuild in general, not the surge.

Secondly, the benchmarks, many of them have absolutely nothing to do with the surge, one of the ones which has failed so far, is the one about the readiness of the Iraqi forces, which has already been noted.

Of the 18, most of them have been substantially fulfilled, if you actually read the document, it lists both the things in degrees, to which they have succeeded.

Has the surge succeeded entirely? No. Has the surge been successful? Yes. Has the reconstruction of Iraq finished? No. Will it go through, yes. How long will it take? I don't know. Should the troops stay until the benchmarks are totally finished? Yes. Is the surge a failure if at this present time not all the benchmarks are fulfilled? No.
BILBONDER is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 07:01 AM   #34
HarryMet

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
380
Senior Member
Default
Originally posted by Patroklos
I guess I should say the surge is working vice has worked. In any case, the OP is hopelessly flawed, perhaps Ramo can start a serious thread. besides you wanting to be a douchebag, what the **** would be the point of starting a new thread given that this one already exist??? What, is Oerdin getting paid per post or something?

Obviously people are willing to have a serious discussion with you (why, I can't figure) in this very thread. What, too cowardly to take it up?
HarryMet is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 08:07 AM   #35
Ekrbcbvh

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
499
Senior Member
Default
You are using civilian and military deaths where as i said civilian deaths. I even quoted from your own source Patty. Now, I know you are being deliberately deceptive. While you are correct, in the first numbers I posted for you on the front page were from the "Iraqi Security Forces and Civilian Deaths Details " data on the homepage, that really only showed just how disengenuous your OP was, as ISF casualties being down is very significant to the topic at hand as well. Another Oeridn failure at analysis.

Unfortunetly for you, Oerdin, the numbers I quoted for Ramo are from "Military Deaths By Year/Month" which splits ISF and civilian casualties. So, no, what you quoted is not military deaths but only civilian, and you fail.

I bet you wish you checked the numbers first now, don't you? Does it bother you when you get caught being a complete and utter douche?

Now you are just being an ass clown. I didn't say identical I said about the same and clearly they are roughly about the same. Not huge differences, certainly not an order of magnitude different. ~500. Well, you see Oerdin, that comparison was merely me and Ramo talking about what he said. You very specifically said 2006, so why would we use 05 numbers in your comparison? And btw, when did I ever say order of magnitude?

So lets recap, shall we. Oeridn says current civilian deaths are at 2006 levels desite deaths being 1456 or 31% lower for the same time period in 2008. Does that seem to be "roughly the same" to you (remember, your answer will be recorded here forever)?

No one claimed the surge had no effect but instead what was questioned was the assuration that the surge had some amazing, indisputable success which was absolutely undeniable. Clearly this is not so for the first half year of the surge. It wasn't supposed to for the first half of the surge, those troops were put there specifically to fight and suppress insurgents first, and THEN enforce that achieved pacification. Are you sure you were in the Army?
Ekrbcbvh is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 03:16 PM   #36
Nurfzerne

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
399
Senior Member
Default
Lame. Yes, you trying to compare completely unrelated periods when Oeridn specifically told us what he was comparing is lame.

Now, if you wish to cut Oeridn loose so he can drown without pulling you down with him, I am happy to discuss the topic with you. Oeridn is an albatross, cast him off to his own devices.

1. You chose an asymmetric distribution of months between 2007 and 2008 to push that number higher. I didn't choose any period of time, Oerdin chose the current time and 2006. I only included 2007 because you wanted to include 2005. But actually, if I didn't include 2007 but rather May/June 08 that would only pad the numbers in my favor further. Feel free to do the math.

2. I specifically stated that the bombing in Samarra was the trigger for the increased levels of violence. That bombing happened at the end of February. I'm not sure why you're including April. You said this, and I quote:

"a period in late 2005 and early 2006"

You said that, not me. Now, there is no reason to do that comparison regardless given Oeridn's parameters, but when I humor you by using your own stated parameters and you fail anyway don't blame me.

I humored you by including 2005 at all, Oeridn said 2006, why would I include more months of 2005 than 2006 (in reference to why March and April were included)?

3. The word "resemble" doesn't appear to mean what you think it does.

You're not good at that tac Ramo, it doesn't become you
Nurfzerne is offline


Old 07-22-2008, 03:43 PM   #37
Qrhzbadu

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
444
Senior Member
Default
Obviously people are willing to have a serious discussion with you (why, I can't figure) in this very thread. What, too cowardly to take it up? Ummmm, that is exactly what I was doing GePap, RTFT

In any case, the reason for a new thread is so that Oeridn won't taint people like Ramo with the idiocy of his OP. Houses built on a sinking foundation....
Qrhzbadu is offline



Reply to Thread New Thread

« Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:27 PM.
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
Design & Developed by Amodity.com
Copyright© Amodity