Thursday, June 13, 2013

More People Still Blaming Bush Instead of Accepting Responsibility

Report: Many Iraqis Still Holding Petty Grudge About U.S. Invasion


WASHINGTON—In spite of the rest of the world long having agreed to move on with their lives, a new report issued Monday reveals that many Iraqi citizens apparently still hold some sort of petty grudge over the U.S.-led invasion of their country.
According to research conducted by the U.S. Department of State, a startling number of Iraqis aren’t willing to just grow up and let go of the Iraq War, with many still crying their eyes out on a daily basis about the hundreds of thousands of civilian casualties, incalculable destruction, and lasting instability brought about by the conflict.
“While most of the world’s peoples have put the events of the war firmly behind them, our findings show that a significant number of Iraqi civilians would evidently rather trot out the same old sob story about having their country torn apart,” said State Department official and chief author of the study Arthur Manchin, who observed that these same individuals seemingly are more interested in dwelling on one little eight-year occupation than just letting bygones be bygones. “To hear these Iraqis tell it, you’d think they were the only people in the history of mankind to be invaded by a heavily armed aggressor and then turned over to violent militias and ineffectual police.”
“Yeah, the U.S. deployed hundreds of thousands of troops to their homeland, toppled their government without providing a functional replacement, and then abandoned the country, leaving it vulnerable for insurgent forces to terrorize indefinitely,” Manchin continued. “We get it. Stop living in the past.”
The report confirmed that a remarkable percentage of Iraqis refuse to be adults about the complete disruption of their way of life and instead are nursing bitter, childish grudges over the mass rocket bombardment, human rights abuses, political turmoil, and general chaos brought about by the war.______________________________________________________________________________
It´s tragic, not funny. But since this is from The Onion and nothing is sacred........

1 comment:

Diane Betts said...

In every disaster, there are helpless people who stand by, wringing their hands and wailing. At the same time, there are other people who face the situation and say, "Okay, this terrible thing has happened to us, what are we going to do about it?"

In my mind, the first group of people react emotionally to the situation. The second group, made up of responders, carefully thinks the situation through, decides what needs to change, forms logical plans to effect change, and then carries out their plan to improve the situation. Of course, the hardest part for responders is determining what the best options are for their plans. That's calls for strong leaders who can evaluate probable consequences for their choices and actions.