Note: I had this content under a separate domain but I'm going to include it here on account of the topic of Iraq War.
There is a controversy (from my perspective, as well others too, I'm sure) in the contention that there was "wasted military spending" and it was supposedly a "mistake" invading Iraq. I've avoided much of the argument, although occassionaly I'd comment here or there that Saddam was using chemical weapons on the Kurds. I also understood that he had stockpiles of the wmds and I eventually found out how he came about them so I then knew that part where there was reasoning behind concealing the entire truth. (Saddam was once considered an ally of Britian, and so by extention that meant the U.S. too.)
I'm an advocate for people who've been trauma'd, abused, etc. and I know there is/was always a left-leaning or liberal perspective about military in the U.S. (particularly, and is what only concerns me as a citizen) but as a veteran I also knew that due to civilian jealousy, exaggeration and misconception (often there's a critical omission that will substantially alter the perceived morality and justification of military action) there existed tales of nefarious conspiracies where the ideology was that my gov't is the most evil on this planet earth … ← & of course that discussion will spiral into how it's really a problem about our gov't …, and that'll raise red flags for me since people who have some problem with a large amount of people that's racially diverse will be alluding to the diversity part being their main complaint, but back to square one. People found a button with me and it's plum full of "fundamental attribution error" to where the end result is that of course it's me who's the real problem. In this case (as with most) it's because I refuse to hate myself for other people's sadistic pleasure.
As an old counselor with a masters degree explained to me, I volunteered for the military (as if I'm too fucking stupid to understand that), but like I pointed out to him … I had friends pulling armed robberies and getting in shootouts with police and trying to lure me into trying intravenous drugs. The only decent paying work I could do was dangerous and degrading. My father kicked me out of the house when I was seventeen because I went and got a general equivalency degree instead of finishing public high school where I was bullied and outcast. My father was also big on DIY so he had me doing physical labor when I was an adolescent that violated child labor laws (but he paid me & I accepted, was his cop-out). My friends would laugh at me because of how he treated me… it was obviously my fault since he was always respectful & nice to them. I was like wth? At the time I joined I really did not see myself as having any other alternative … there was "Job Corps" and an alternative school, but niether one was acceptable to my father when I was "still living under his roof".
Anyway, so yet again this issue comes up for me where I'm blindsided with this ideology that I'm supposed to be in concordance with, where what it all amounts to, simply put, is that Saddam's being declared a war criminal (and subsequent execution) was wrong … I realize that to be true to the Quaker tenet though, that capital punishment is wrong, and so the exact terminology used shouldn't matter. As it stands however, it wasn't the U.S. gov't in and by itself that conducted all of that, he was a leader of a foreign country afterall, so no small feat regardless of whether or not justifiable (for sake of argument here), and so there is contention then that the U.S.A., in all its power & might, is wicked evil to the extent where Saddam was a fucking saint actually. He brought stability to the nation (is what one commenter mentioned) and was actually helpful to the Kurds (← is what this propaganda video explained) … yet I don't think the words "brutal" & "tyrant" just came up out of nowhere. There exists photographs and reports of mass graves, as well as anecdotes of torture by Saddam's regime and it's odd that some are from athletes because of their soccer playing. Am I to dismiss all of those accounts as being false? Or is it in fact an example of the philosophy of "for a greater good" of some kind? But of course that's a matter of opinion with sociological factors that are complex with regional context that'd stretch back to the beginning of recorded history.
There's an actual good part here though, and that is the rest of the information given in the video documentary about the history of the region would be accurate, I'd think. More specifically what caught my attention is that the Kurds were appealing to communist nations for help which is something that isn't a culturally acceptable action, but here is the social science aspect: First, this was decades ago but the Kurds were still certain to understand that there was opposition (in form of capitalist countries) to that ideology along with the dominant ethnic culture of Saddam's, but there were a whole mass group of people who the video narrator described as belonging to a "irredenta", and minority (I knew from my prior education), who were all in agreement (enough) on that objective to where they were physically fighting for their goal, and losing. They were an oppressed culture and so we (as sociologists here) shouldn't want to be critical of them identifying as being oppressed (by denying the reports of brutality they suffered), or what is more pertinent for the culture studies aspect is that they, en masse, decided on "communism", of all things, and we are not them in their circumstances so it's not for us to judge them. That's significant and I realized that there exists commonality with the nations where the majority of people want to go that route.
I'd like to point out here that I'm not formally educated about political science, and what I'm about to bring up here most likely as been mentioned by somebody at one time or another since I'm not so grandiose to think myself as genius on any account. The countries that turn to communism are made up of the same (overall) race or ethnicity, and don't have a subordinate demographic, at least to same extent that the Occidental capitalist countries do. The other question would be is how much do the people know about what the wealthy, capitalist nations have in contrast to what they do? Of course that is rhetorical since as an autonomous nation (not neccessarily a country) their ventures to create substainable society would either need to be in closed economy (again, I'm not educated on the political or economical science aspect) and not depend on import and/or export, or manufacturing is publically administrated through gov't, basically. I suppose in the "closed economy" (self-substainable) paradigm the manufacturing would need to be managed by gov't too. The point is, for purposes here, is why that seems the best option. It would stand to reason that the idea would be to avoid establishing an unfair socioeconomic disparity where there is some distinguishable separation between the people who are obliged to sell their labor and those who don't need to, as is the norm in capitalist countries. Of course the posit is that there's incentive to become educated enough to make a living without it being labor intensive, and there's a system in place which facilitates (a facade of) equal opportunity in my country, but the education is for sell and the platitudes begin there with "buyer beware" and "you get what you pay for" … you didn't think we'd make it too easy, did you?
What also needs to be addressed here, is the stereotypical idea from Western culture standpoint, of what exactly the problem with communism is, and just to venture a guess I would say that the dominant idealogy is that there'd be too many people who wouldn't want to do their fair share of work. Actually it would be more in the lines of there wouldn't be incentive to innovate, or it'd suppress a person's motivation & freedom to control products of their own creation. The other critical aspect here is that the examples we have for evaluating the system's effectiveness are not very accurate representations since there exists their military spending, and that interferes with a goal of self-substainable economy. Of course there is a predominant psuedo-moralism too, where the "psuedo" part is that the inevitable double-standards exist. Prostitution would always be present in some form, whether legal or not, and who ultimately profits from it the most is an indication of what the equity or equality condition is.
What is most critical here, is that the format and source of the discussion of the U.S. foreign policy and the invasion of Iraq following the attacks on the NYC WTC. It's clear to me that it's now standardized that the narrative is that the U.S. was wrong to invade but the issue is then that the non sequitur is that would imply that Saddam was a sweetheart of a man… an angel or saint but then of course not to that extent, then what? The reality is that the whole affair is complex where the details include factors which are out of the of the psychology academic discipline Saddam Hussein and chemical weapons Iraq
Halabja
I would first like to mention that I don't claim to be any kind of expert on the relatable history or politcal dynamics of the region. I knew a little about Saddam from education in basic training of US Navy in mid 1980's. Although I'd occasionally comment on social media discussions where people would insist that the post 9/11 invasion of Iraq was "a mistake", where I'd point out what Saddam was about and he was convicted of war crimes, I'd mostly try to avoid the controversy. I've been through an immense amount of trauma in my life, an unusual high amount, so being caught up with angry liberals (as well as conservatives) who'd bombard me with implication that I'm just another monster in their midst wasn't productive for me.
The concept of Irredentism interested me because it helped me understand the dynamic of the region and also can describe the dynamic of the U.S. where the cultures are almost indistinguishable, or more accurately, there is an oppressed ethnic subculture. It gets confusing for me as an individual since I don't really belong to any particular one. Of course that last statement of mine would be adamantly denied … but at same time I'm the one who ended up homeless for a time after a wealthy real estate broker perjured himself in a civil case against me … see transcripts. The fact that all of that happened to me, as a disabled veteran, speaks volumes as to my contention that I belong to neither main culture. If I belonged to some large group then it wouldn't have been disregarded as unimportant.
What is popular now is that both liberals and conservatives (which are not really the same division of ethnic cultures which I previously described, but there are overlaps) … but both political factions in the U.S. have seem to agree on the ideology that Saddam was wrongly convicted (is what it all amounts to). Maybe it'd be conceded that he did commit brutal acts, but then along with that would be a bombardment of esoteric history of warmongering and other accusations which are meant to discredit & nullify any idea that the U.S. … and all its inhabitants … every single last one … from the very oldest Black person who as evidence of being descended from slaves to the most newest born little baby … are (whatever) ← that last bit is rhetorical of course, and sarcasm, so the exact word I'd use doesn't matter here. The point is that I wouldn't be involving myself with any of this if it wasn't for the fact that the controversy is affecting me personally.
Exactly how it affects me personally is what could be contended now… Why would it?. If it's all only an issue for me in social media debates and discussions then the obvious answer would be to avoid the discussions. Well, like I pointed out, I would only sometimes get involved and by and large, I'd often feel like I was able to get the information across to people. As with anything, I understood that oftentimes people won't immediately admit to changing their minds about some issue based on new information and if I'd go far as to insist that they do admit to changing their minds then it's my own ego that I'm concerned with and so contradicts my purposes. (I know it all about me, is the point.)
So what happened was that a PhD type, psychologist or whatever, a liberal, which is to be somewhat expected considering the community, although not everyone who works in human/social sevices fields identify as such and have as much as straight out told me that. Sectarian politics is what gets promoted and reinforced by the majority of people (who get involved) and the distinct division is what is defended. The objective for either camp, liberal or conservative, is to effectively outcast anybody who is not willing to completely conform to either ideological attitude. It's in that dynamic where I found it necessary for me to personally involved mtself more. The ongoing repeated narrative that Saddam was a sweetheart and so U.S. military service members are the actual enemy most likely affects other veterans too. The underlying culture on every issue is all about getting people upset, pushing buttons, and the resulting emotion is considered as evidence of uncontrolled aggression.
The reality is that there are people who feel free to insult, condescend, belittle, discombobulate, and frustrate anyone they talk to who don't agree with them. With that it could be argued that most people already know that and avoid people like that, or just don't let it get to them. That's reasonable enough, but the problem is that for some of us the objective for such people is to get us to concede that the real problem is us with our refusal to agree that we're the problem in some way or another. The simplist way to explain the ideology is that people are expected to be whatever to an undeniable extreme… e.g., a person who was abused as a child is expected to only consider themselves as abused if it was so terrible and consistant that they hate their parents or whoever abused them. The idea is that if they managed to forgive their abusers then that only happened because they themselves are abusers too, and that is much more important to discuss. Being a Christian person or otherwise spititual in a peaceful, considerate way in regards to other human beings in general is not acceptable if the person is in some position to where they depend on acceptance of some other people. It becomes more clear in political controversies where it's insisted that having compassion for (other) disadvantaged people is weakness. Those of us who see the contradiction and ultimately, protest the cultural appropriation of Christian tenets of forgiveness and compassion where it's all merely twisted around and corrupted to render it as pointless.
For me personally all of this extends to other controversies which exist n the U.S. as well as now in other Occidental countries (I know of a case in England where this took place) where established laws or legal definitions and accepted established guidelines are disregarded as antiquated. The main one in the category is the trend to charge and legally try (in court) minors as adults whrn their alleged crime(s) meet certain standards. The "certain standards" part is what is arbitrary and our country's established law is not supposed to be so. Whether or not the actual majority of people of voting age agree with the practice is never considered, from what I can see. There are articles which address the trend, regarding it as violation of human rights and unconstitutional. The problem really is that the action is utilized so sporadically and rarely that there has been no real debate or unilateral decision to establish the practice as legally appropriate. There are merely localized policies and court proceedings which ostensibly legitimize the designation of minors charged as adults. The reasoning is what is clearly the crux of it and the motivation in that a conviction for a minor who's committed some violent act wouldn't completely destroy the person's entire life and the mob really wants to see the person's entire life destroyed. None of it is really about rehabilitation any more.
There is a controversy (from my perspective, as well others too, I'm sure) in the contention that there was "wasted military spending" and it was supposedly a "mistake" invading Iraq. I've avoided much of the argument, although occassionaly I'd comment here or there that Saddam was using chemical weapons on the Kurds. I also understood that he had stockpiles of the wmds and I eventually found out how he came about them so I then knew that part where there was reasoning behind concealing the entire truth. (Saddam was once considered an ally of Britian, and so by extention that meant the U.S. too.)
There was another aspect to the dynamic that I wasn't aware of before I recently researched the events again and that is that the Kurds, being ethnic minority and caught up between two (other) nations (between two countries actually, Iran & Iraq). Briefly though, for purposes here, the Kurds weren't very popular since they were historically reaching out to communist USSR for relief, and were indicating that they were wanting to adopt the system too.