"Never have so many been so wrong about so much..."

Quote from LongShot:




HEY DUMBASS!!! L@@K AT THE PHOTO!! WAKE UP MF'ER!! THE TRUTH IS STARING YOU RIGHT IN THE FACE!! BLAHHHHHHHH! :-/

IT'S ABOUT 1 THING!!

THE BLING-BLING & CHROMED OUT WHEELS!

STYLI'N & PROFILI'N!!

THAT'S IT! END OF MASSAGE! :-/
 
Quote from Jesse J.:

you waste so much time trying to preach , but nobody's listening.

Want to know why? People don't appreciate those who spin the truth and facts.

I'll help you out with that cost analysis:

1 less ruthless dictator in the world to threaten middle east stability & give money to suicide bombers = $1 billion (minimum) in future savings.

$1 billion in future savings, now how much were your expenses?

Now subtract them, if you can do math.

you're SUCH a MORON. how does spending $80billion to save $1billion make any sense???

apparently most republicans are about as proficient at simple math as yourself....
 
Quote from bungrider:




The Bill--

One World Trade Center (don't know the figure -- someone please chime in)
One War With Iraq In 1991 - again, I don't have the figure
One War With Iraq in 2003 ~80billion
Reconstruction Of Iraq ~30billion (estimated)
One Half-Assed War With Afghanistan (again, someone please help me out with the figure)



WWII's bill according to TIME = $2.3 trillion or roughly $20,000 per capita of USA population back then.........

 
In September 2002, former Bush economic adviser Larry Lindsey said war could cost between $100 billion and $200 billion, speculation that was immediately dismissed by White House Office of Management and Budget Director Mitch Daniels.

Daniels himself said in December that war could cost between $50 billion and $60 billion, but quickly clarified that it was impossible to tell how much the war might cost and that he was simply trying to compare a new war with its only close historical precedent, the first Gulf War, which cost about $60 billion.


Last fall, Democrats in the House estimated war could cost $93 billion. The bipartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), however, said the war would only cost between $9 billion and $13 billion for initial troop deployment and another $9 billion a month thereafter.

As a measure of just how wide the range of possible costs is, the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, another nonpartisan think tank, said in February that war could cost between $18 billion and $85 billion, that five years of post-war occupation could cost between $25 billion and $105 billion, and that humanitarian and other relief efforts could cost between $84 billion and $498 billion.
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