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Evermore wrote:how many homeless does the US have? or orphaned children?
Narrock wrote:How about pumping that 10 billion into solving our own problems? Wow, what a concept!
arlos wrote:Well, in the grand scheme of things, I'd rather have had us not spend the 500 billion on Iraq rather than not spend 11 billion on Afghanistan....
-Arlos
Eziekial wrote:Interesting #. Does it take into account the cost of fuel prices going up or the service men and women killed/wounded in the conflict? I doubt it. How do you put a price on someone's life?
Eziekial wrote:Interesting #. Does it take into account the cost of fuel prices going up or the service men and women killed/wounded in the conflict? I doubt it. How do you put a price on someone's life?
Xaiveir wrote:Eziekial wrote:Interesting #. Does it take into account the cost of fuel prices going up or the service men and women killed/wounded in the conflict? I doubt it. How do you put a price on someone's life?
Whats the going rate of a barrel of oil today? Suppose that would answer your question.
Phlegm wrote:Xaiveir wrote:Eziekial wrote:Interesting #. Does it take into account the cost of fuel prices going up or the service men and women killed/wounded in the conflict? I doubt it. How do you put a price on someone's life?
Whats the going rate of a barrel of oil today? Suppose that would answer your question.
The current price of a barrel of oil right now is about $55 down from the record high of $77 a few months ago.
Oil traders and others believe that the Saudi decision to let the price of oil tumble has more to do with Iran than economics.
Their belief has been reinforced in recent days as the Saudi oil minister has steadfastly refused calls for a special meeting of OPEC and announced that the nation is going to increase its production, which will send the price down even farther.
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Moreover, the traders believe the Saudis are not doing this alone, that the other Sunni-dominated oil producing countries and the U.S. are working together, believing it will hurt majority-Shiite Iran economically and create a domestic crisis for Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose popularity at home is on the wane. The traders also believe (with good reason) that the U.S. is trying to tighten the screws on Iran financially at the same time the Saudis are reducing the Islamic Republic’s oil revenues.
For the Saudis, who fear Iran’s religious, geopolitical and nuclear aspirations, the decision to lower the price of oil has a number of benefits, the biggest being to deprive Iran of hard currency. It also may create unrest in a country that is its rival on a number of levels and permits the Saudis to show the U.S. that military action may not be necessary.
Harrison wrote:Evermore wrote:how many homeless does the US have? or orphaned children?
How many clueless idiots does it take to ask inane questions not related to the subject at hand?
Eziekial wrote:Interesting #. Does it take into account the cost of fuel prices going up or the service men and women killed/wounded in the conflict? I doubt it. How do you put a price on someone's life?
Evermore wrote:Harrison wrote:Evermore wrote:how many homeless does the US have? or orphaned children?
How many clueless idiots does it take to ask inane questions not related to the subject at hand?
the clueless idiot is the one critizing.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
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