http://www.thelancet.com/webfiles/images/journals/lancet/s0140673606694919.pdfBush, of course, disagrees with the Lancet study. “The methodology is pretty well discredited,” he said.http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2399950,00.htmlSo, what do y'all think?
10/11/2006 7:49:58 PM
pwn on
10/11/2006 7:51:56 PM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=438129
10/11/2006 7:55:20 PM
This deserves a thread of its own.
10/11/2006 7:58:02 PM
as silly as this thread is i would have to agree
10/11/2006 8:00:21 PM
How is this thread silly?
10/11/2006 8:00:56 PM
because it could have been posted in the other thread
10/11/2006 8:11:41 PM
It was posted in another thread, but...
10/11/2006 8:14:11 PM
I think its just as credible as any other study of the type. It should be discussed imo.
10/11/2006 8:22:17 PM
So they jumped up by 550% since the last time they provided an estimate? OhhhhhK.Basically I'm going to be leery of any study that comes out before some sort of census can be arranged, because any of these samplings are able to produce some wildly varying results, to say nothing of how those results might be interpreted.That said, I'm not entirely sure it bothers me in the way I'm sure you're expecting it should bother people. I am willing to wager that we are responsible for a tiny fraction of those deaths, and that various bands of angry Iraqis with guns are responsible for the rest. Those deaths are essentially inevitable -- if we hadn't toppled the regime, it would have fallen from some other cause eventually, and the same thing would have ensued. All we did was make all the shit happen when we had the political capital and the better ability to deal with it.
10/11/2006 8:53:11 PM
regardless if the US is causing the majority of the deaths doesnt matter. We invaded a country which now has a population being destroyed from the inside out.
10/11/2006 8:55:43 PM
It is hard to know what to believe.The US/UN say 30,000.Iraq Body Count says 50,000.The Lancet said 100,000 (until Apr 2004).Now The Lancet says 650,000 (John Hopkins School of Public Health).My own belief is the at least 100,000. There is NO WAY to know. Look at this:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6040054.stm
10/11/2006 8:57:09 PM
^^You missed my whole point, which is that such a thing would have happened eventually whether we intervened or not.At least now we have a presence over there to stifle things somewhat, and we made it happen before Iraq could get their hands on something.I know, I know, Iraq didn't have any fucking WMD and I never said they did. But it's hard to argue that they didn't want some, and it's damn hard to argue that the people in line to take over Saddam's position weren't batshit crazy. I don't like that combination.So, it's either:1) Shit hits the fan now when they don't have any big guns and when we have at least a little political will to be over there and deal with it, or2) Shit hits the fan twenty years from now after a couple of psychos do God-knows-what to the population and possibly aquire nasty shitNeither one is fun, least of all for the Iraqis, but I know which one I'd pick.^I think you are right at least in saying that there is NO WAY TO KNOW AT THIS POINT. Maybe when (if) the country ever calms down, they can do a census and get some reliable figures from across the nation. Right now? No chance.[Edited on October 11, 2006 at 9:00 PM. Reason : ]
10/11/2006 8:58:30 PM
^ i dont think it would have happened. Saddam had quite the hold on the population of Iraq.
10/11/2006 9:03:53 PM
Right, but Saddam dies eventually. Then his sons take over, and either they lose their grip -- in which case the shit hits the fan -- or they're butchers and kill a bunch of people and someone else takes over, and you get the same choice, until eventually the regime topplesThen we see exactly this, with Iran backing one group and someone else backing another and everyone killing everyone else.The point is, the shit was inevitably going to hit the fan. I say let it happen now, speed up the process when we're in the best position to deal with it, and before the government itself can murder any more people on top of what the fan-hitting shit does.[Edited on October 11, 2006 at 9:06 PM. Reason : ]
10/11/2006 9:05:06 PM
honestly I cant argue with that. But the fact we needed to deal with it is another matter all together.
10/11/2006 9:08:03 PM
10/11/2006 9:11:47 PM
10/11/2006 9:12:00 PM
^ I know, right?
10/11/2006 10:04:29 PM
For me, I think this study has finally put to rest the idea that this war is any different. I felt at least partially divided about it for some time. Not anymore. "Well, it might have been this bad at some point in the future anyway."That's the best we can say now, and that argument doesn't work for me.
10/11/2006 10:10:46 PM
Someone PM me when someone who knows something about statistical analysis critiques their work.
10/11/2006 11:24:58 PM
10/11/2006 11:31:12 PM
^That's a lose-lose argument. If the number is high, that indicates a failure to defeat terrorism (I feel dumber just typing that). If that is low, it begs questions about what the hell we are still doing there.
10/11/2006 11:39:00 PM
I really don't trust these studies...I think the only way you're going to get any accurate information on how many people died in this will be 30 years from now as people and governments (dictatorships or democracies) put the pieces together on what happened.650,000 is a huge number too. This is in a country of 26,783,383 (est'd, see CIA world factbook) people. That number just seems far far too large (what is that, 2.5-3% of the population that's supposedly dead now?).I just don't see how I can believe any of these studies if they're all showing wildly different results (government sponsored or independent).
10/11/2006 11:55:32 PM
^IOW, you hate math
10/12/2006 12:02:29 AM
10/12/2006 5:13:31 AM
Yeah, and Saddam is no longer plotting assassinations of American leaders: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/iraq/timeline/062793.htm
10/12/2006 6:36:23 AM
^I don't get it.
10/12/2006 8:02:56 AM
^ Did you read the article? Saddam plotted to assassinate a former president while he was traveling in Kuwait--and Iraq was bombed for it. What don't you get? And what does 13 years ago have to do with anything? So, yeah, 13 years ago Saddam plotted to kill an American leader. And now, due to his incarceration, he can't do that sort of thing anymore, which is good. Get it now?
10/12/2006 10:31:29 AM
Sorry. I injected sarcasm when I read your post. No need to let PMS take over
10/12/2006 10:37:18 AM
No PMS here. I was just trying to clarify my post for you.
10/12/2006 10:43:04 AM
10/12/2006 12:21:31 PM
i believe the numbers. As I see it, the US has every incentive to give us a rosy picture - gov't has been doing it all along across the board in Iraq. The previous study saying 100K deaths is 2 years old, and we can all agree that there has been a marked increase in violence/insurgency activity in the last 24 months.Also, whether the country would have imploded anyway post-saddam for whatever reason is speculative (though definitely possible) and at this point not relevant to the current claim that there have been over 600K Iraqi deaths as a consequence of the US invasion. That said, let me temper the numbers a little - the study extrapolates from a relatively small census, producing a huge margin of error, so the actual number is more correctly reported as 610,000 +/- 183,000 deaths (for clarity, i'm using the numbers from the NYT article). That's a 30% MoE... which doesn't mean the number is wrong altogether, it just means it could be anywhere in there. 425,000 deaths is still a pretty huge number though.While Bush is full of shit to say the methodology has been discredited (that's too standard a line for him to actually think he has a clue what he's talking about), there are concerns that the sample size turned out to be relatively small compared to a result of this magnitude. Still, statistics = statistics. so if you're skeptical, believe the number is ONLY 425,000, and still be appalled.
10/12/2006 1:24:33 PM
Even if it was 200,000, that's still a lot. That's like 100 9/11s.
10/12/2006 2:31:31 PM
^^I don't think the confidence interval is a flat distribution. What the Lancet numbers mean is that there exists a.975 probability that their best estimatet of excess deaths lies above or below each confidence limit and the rest of the interval follows a normal distribution.
10/12/2006 5:41:28 PM
10/13/2006 8:58:31 AM
how long until the study comes out reporting 50 million deaths?I give the over/under at 24 months.
10/13/2006 11:12:55 AM
texas deaths?
10/13/2006 11:48:14 AM
didnt these same people release some absurd estimate like....days before the 2004 election too??
10/13/2006 11:49:38 AM
10/13/2006 12:59:19 PM
http://thismodernworld.com/3245
10/13/2006 8:31:02 PM
least saddam only killed ~10,000 a year
10/13/2006 10:13:36 PM
This Modern World is just as stupid as it ever was. There have got to be better ways to support the study than that.
10/13/2006 11:41:26 PM
I don't really call anything in this paragraph stupid
10/14/2006 8:27:39 AM
The stupid things in that paragraph:1) He suggests that, before anyone can counter what the study put forward, they have to have their own estimate.2) He discounts out of hand (presumably without any evidence of his own) the possibilities that the study's release was timed and, rather more alarmingly, that you might run into misinformation when interviewing an Iraqi population that largely does not like us and would stand to benefit substantially from inflating the numbers.I'm not saying either case is true, but to call them "absurd" and telling those who put them forward to "just shut up" is pretty stupid.3) He fails to understand that, especially in this instance, the people who oppose the study likely do so for reasons completely unrelated to their ability to "accept facts." Whether it was timed to do so or not, this study did come out right before the election and it is pretty loaded. There isn't time for another study to be set up to verify or counter its numbers in time to affect the election.I'm curious, if a new version of the low estimate for Iraqi deaths came out, and it was 550% smaller than the previous one, would the antiwar camp not say, "What the fuck? Are you serious?" before they actually did any research of their own.---The non-stupid things in that paragraph:1) Politicians sometimes try to deny, bend, or ignore the truth.Thanks for that nugget of wisdom, Tom.
10/14/2006 3:05:31 PM
10/14/2006 5:28:11 PM
10/14/2006 8:30:15 PM
10/15/2006 7:26:24 PM
10/15/2006 7:31:51 PM
^ Why wouldn't they? As the world becomes increasingly connected, people in other countries sure as heck have a stake in other countries elections. For example, it could be argued that the entire reason UK citizens are dying in iraq is because Bush is president, and that otherwise they wouldn't be. If I were a UK soldier, i'd take at least a passing interest in US elections. Besides, is it absurd to think that a group which might have a stake in their local countries politics, would also not what to try and influence foreign politics as a way of indirectly influencing local politics?
10/15/2006 7:54:11 PM