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War, War, War
See other War, War, War Articles

Title: Iraq's death toll is far worse than our leaders admit
Source: The Independent
URL Source: http://iraqwar.mirror-world.ru/article/118356
Published: Feb 14, 2007
Author: Les Roberts
Post Date: 2007-02-14 09:58:38 by leveller
Keywords: None
Views: 32224
Comments: 457

The US and Britain have triggered an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide

14 February 2007

On both sides of the Atlantic, a process of spinning science is preventing a serious discussion about the state of affairs in Iraq.

The government in Iraq claimed last month that since the 2003 invasion between 40,000 and 50,000 violent deaths have occurred. Few have pointed out the absurdity of this statement.

There are three ways we know it is a gross underestimate. First, if it were true, including suicides, South Africa, Colombia, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania and Russia have experienced higher violent death rates than Iraq over the past four years. If true, many North and South American cities and Sub-Saharan Africa have had a similar murder rate to that claimed in Iraq. For those of us who have been in Iraq, the suggestion that New Orleans is more violent seems simply ridiculous.

Secondly, there have to be at least 120,000 and probably 140,000 deaths per year from natural causes in a country with the population of Iraq. The numerous stories we hear about overflowing morgues, the need for new cemeteries and new body collection brigades are not consistent with a 10 per cent rise in death rate above the baseline.

And finally, there was a study, peer-reviewed and published in The Lancet, Europe's most prestigious medical journal, which put the death toll at 650,000 as of last July. The study, which I co-authored, was done by the standard cluster approach used by the UN to estimate mortality in dozens of countries each year. While the findings are imprecise, the lower range of possibilities suggested that the Iraq government was at least downplaying the number of dead by a factor of 10.

There are several reasons why the governments involved in this conflict have been able to confuse the issue of Iraqi deaths. Our Lancet report involved sampling and statistical analysis, which is rather dry reading. Media reports always miss most deaths in times of war, so the estimate by the media-based monitoring system, http://Iraqbodycount.org (IBC) roughly corresponds with the Iraq government's figures. Repeated evaluations of deaths identified from sources independent of the press and the Ministry of Health show the IBC listing to be less than 10 per cent complete, but because it matches the reports of the governments involved, it is easily referenced.

Several other estimates have placed the death toll far higher than the Iraqi government estimates, but those have received less press attention. When in 2005, a UN survey reported that 90 per cent of violent attacks in Scotland were not recorded by the police, no one, not even the police, disputed this finding. Representative surveys are the next best thing to a census for counting deaths, and nowhere but Iraq have partial tallies from morgues and hospitals been given such credence when representative survey results are available.

The Pentagon will not release information about deaths induced or amounts of weaponry used in Iraq. On 9 January of this year, the embedded Fox News reporter Brit Hume went along for an air attack, and we learned that at least 25 targets were bombed that day with almost no reports of the damage appearing in the press.

Saddam Hussein's surveillance network, which only captured one third of all deaths before the invasion, has certainly deteriorated even further. During last July, there were numerous televised clashes in Anbar, yet the system recorded exactly zero violent deaths from the province. The last Minister of Health to honestly assess the surveillance network, Dr Ala'din Alwan, admitted that it was not reporting from most of the country by August 2004. He was sacked months later after, among other things, reports appeared based on the limited government data suggesting that most violent deaths were associated with coalition forces.

The consequences of downplaying the number of deaths in Iraq are profound for both the UK and the US. How can the Americans have a surge of troops to secure the population and promise success when the coalition cannot measure the level of security to within a factor of 10? How can the US and Britain pretend they understand the level of resentment in Iraq if they are not sure if, on average, one in 80 families have lost a household member, or one in seven, as our study suggests?

If these two countries have triggered an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide, and have actively worked to mask this fact, how will they credibly be able to criticise Sudan or Zimbabwe or the next government that kills thousands of its own people?

For longer than the US has been a nation, Britain has pushed us at our worst of moments to do the right thing. That time has come again with regard to Iraq. It is wrong to be the junior partner in an endeavour rigged to deny the next death induced, and to have spokespeople effectively respond to that death with disinterest and denial.

Our nations' leaders are collectively expressing belligerence at a time when the populace knows they should be expressing contrition. If that cannot be corrected, Britain should end its role in this deteriorating misadventure. It is unlikely that any historians will record the occupation of Iraq in a favourable light. Britain followed the Americans into this débâcle. Wouldn't it be better to let history record that Britain led them out?

The writer is an Associate Professor at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health

http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/article2268067.ece

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#287. To: BeAChooser (#286)

So who pays you to post here?

sometimes there just aren't enough belgians

Dakmar  posted on  2007-02-17   0:42:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#288. To: bluedogtxn, Hayek Fan, ALL (#227)

I liked having it around.

**************

http://www.fumento.com/military/lancetscripps.html "

Cluster sampling can be valid if it uses reliable data, rather than inherently unreliable self-reporting. But biased researchers, knowingly or unconsciously, can easily pre-determine outcomes by cherry-picking survey sites – like determining denture use in the general population by surveying only nursing homes.

But medical researchers and their editors are above all that, especially at so prestigious a publication as The Lancet. Right? Never mind that Roberts admitted to the Associated Press that "I was opposed to the war and I still think that the war was a bad idea." Forget that Lancet editor Richard Horton told the BBC "Democratic imperialism has led to more deaths not fewer," in Iraq, and that he proclaimed coalition efforts "a failure." Ignore that he said "the evidence we publish today must change heads as well as pierce hearts."

Want more evidence the researchers knew their paper wasn't worthy of wrapping fish? The 100,000 figure is allegedly the excess over pre-war Iraqi mortality, which they claimed was 5.0 per 1,000 people annually. Not only is that far below the U.S. rate of 8.5 per 1,000, it's even below Saddam's own 2001 propagandist figure of 5.66!

Consider, too, that 100,000 deaths during the survey period averages out to over 180 a day. Have you heard anyone even claim we killed anywhere near that number on one day, much less every day? The bad guys wouldn't even try to pull that off. They left it to The Lancet.

Even anti-war and anti-American groups and individuals have indicated the Lancet figure is outlandish. "These numbers seem to be inflated," due "to overcounting," Marc Garlasco, of Human Rights Watch told the Washington Post. The website http://www.iraqbodycount.com estimates about 14,000-16,000 deaths since the war began. The Evil One himself, bin Laden, in his pre-election video, made reference to the Iraq war and stated "over 15,000 of our people have been killed."

How pathetic that a formerly great medical journal, in its desperate effort to out-propagandize both Saddam and bin Laden, is now just Al-Jazeera on the Thames.

****************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   0:44:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#289. To: Diana, ALL (#232)

I did not say specifically who said this as I didn't know.

This statement by you:

"Before the invasion the Bush administration wanted to falsify the number of people who died as a result of Saddam, going so far as to include long-dead Iranian soldiers from the Iraq/Iran war of the 80s found in mass graves, claming they were actually innocent Iraqi civilians recently killed by Saddam. They were that desperate to jack up the numbers of dead by Saddam, not to mention the nonsense that Iraq had the capability to launch missles to the US in 45 minutes, the non-existent WMD along with all the other lies."

clearly points the finger at the Bush administration. And my challenge to you is quote ANYONE in the Bush administration actually claiming that "Iraq had the capability to launch missles to the US in 45 minutes".

I just know it was said on FOX and other media outlets to scare the American public into thinking we were under an immidiate threat of being hit by Saddam's super missles which he didn't have.

More than likely it was said by someone on the left trying to create an issue ... just as it was the left who created the issue of Iraq being an "imminent" threat. The Bush administration never said that and Bush specifically said in his pre-war SOU speech that Iraq was NOT an "imminent" threat.

However other posters have now given you proof that it was said and by whom.

No they haven't. I dare you. QUOTE exactly what Bush (or any administration official) said in this so-called proof by other posters. For some reason, none of those who are *helping* you on this matter seem willing to do that. ROTFLOL!

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   0:53:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#290. To: christine, bluedogtxn, Hayek Fan, ALL (#237)

To bluedogtxn - he's on full status.
And I thank you for that status.
To bluedogtxn - i'm thoroughly enjoying your posts to him.

Maybe you'll like this one to bluedog.

To bluedogtxn -

***********

Here's a source with a good observation (just what I've been saying):

According to the phony survey, they recorded 629 deaths since the start of the war (p4 of the PDF). In 545 cases, they bothered to ask for death certificates, and for those 545 requests, 501 times they were shown the death certificates. So Mr. Pittelli notes, at least 80% of all the deaths in the sample (501/629), and possibly as many as 92% (501/545) were recorded by the government. Let's repeat that: According to the anti-war propagandists who are responsible for this blatant dishonesty, 80 to 92% of all deaths in their sample were recorded in the Iraqi government's own official figures.

What this means, as Pittelli points out, is that the official death figures should record at least 80% of the deaths since the Iraq war. Taking the bogus figures at face value, simply for the sake of argument entertainment, I calculate the estimates based on official figures should be between 314,000 and 867,000. They aren't. The "official figures estimate" is about 49,000.

To take the Johns Hopkins/Lancet figures seriously, you have to believe that the Iraqi government recorded deaths occurring since the invasion with an accuracy of at least 80%, but then suppressed 85-94% of those recorded deaths when releasing official figures, with no one blowing the whistle on them. You also have to believe that 85-94% of the dead bodies were unnoticed by the MSM, the funeral homes, and everyone else trying to keep track of the war casualties.

Alternatively, you have to believe that the Iraqi govt. only issues death certificates for 6-15% of all deaths, but this random sample got 80% certificate hits by pure chance.

Can you say bogus?

**************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   1:04:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#291. To: bluedogtxn, Diana, Hayek Fan, ALL (#242)

Diana - He was trying to play word tricks with me again, he was making my post mean something different, something he is expert at.

I was sure missles was said, that Saddam was going to shoot us with those missles that travel from Iraq to the US in 45 minutes.

I don't know if it was ever explicitly stated

ROTFLOL!

That anyone can try to deny now that the administration was pimping the possibility of Saddam nuking us with missiles is such a palpable re-writing of history as to be absurd.

Did I deny that? I don't think so.

And now that that is settled, that anyone can try to deny that Les Robert's studies are bogus is absurd.

Here:

**************

http://www.claytoncramer.com/weblog/2006_10_08_archive.html#116069912405842066

The more I think about the Lancet article, the more obviously bogus the results are. The claim is 654,965 excess deaths caused by the war from March 2003 through July 2006. That's 40 months, or 1200 days, so an average of 546 deaths per day.

To get an average of 546 deaths per day means that there must have been either many hundreds of days with 1000 or more deaths per day (example: 200 days with 1000 deaths = 200,000 dead leaves 1000 days with an average of 450 deaths), or tens of days with at least 10,000 or more deaths per day (example: 20 days with 10,000 deaths = 200,000 dead leaves 1180 days with an average of 381 deaths). So, where are the news accounts of tens of days with 10,000 or more deaths?

Where are the news accounts of hundreds of days with 1000 deaths or more? This article claims that there are perhaps 100 Iraqis a day now being killed in sectarian violence--and this is described as escalating violence. This horrifying article talks about 65 bodies found around Baghdad--with the claim that the day was "notable in its number."

Either the news media have been ignoring hundreds of days with 1000 or more deaths--or tens of days with 10,000 or more deaths--or the Lancet article is utterly wrong.

*********************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   1:13:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#292. To: christine, bluedogtxn, Hayek Fan, ALL (#248)

bluedogtxn - That is some kind of talent, not sure what to call it though. I think the technically correct term is "obfuscation", although in my neck of the woods we call it "bullshitting".

Christine - LMBO

Actually, I think I've been providing a bit a clarity. Here's some more on the threads' topic:

**************

http://www.claytoncramer.com/weblog/2006_10_08_archive.html#116069912405842066

Well, the Lancet, the top British medical journal, has just published a paper claiming that we have caused the deaths of 2.5% of the population of Iraq:

"We estimate that as of July, 2006, there have been 654,965 (392,979 - 942,636) excess Iraqi deaths as a consequence of the war, which corresponds to 2.5% of the population in the study area. Of post-invasion deaths, 601,027 (426,369 - 793,663) were due to violence, the most common cause being gun fire."

Short of setting up concentration camps, or intentionally spreading disease, or carpet bombing cities, I'm not sure that we could do that even if we were trying.

There comes a point in every statistical study when you need to do a sanity check.

... snip ...

Do you want to know how ridiculous this claim is? During World War II, the Allied air forces carpet bombed German cities, using high explosives and incendiaries with a callous disregard for civilian losses. The euphemism was "strategic bombing," but it was terror bombing--by day and by night. The United States Strategic Bombing Survey Summary Report developed some estimates of deaths as a result of this indiscriminate and indefensible use of bombing against civilian targets:

Official German statistics place total casualties from air attack -- including German civilians, foreigners, and members of the armed forces in cities that were being attacked -- at 250,253 killed for the period from January 1, 1943, to January 31, 1945, and 305,455 wounded badly enough to require hospitalization, during the period from October 1, 1943, to January 31, 1945. A careful examination of these data, together with checks against the records of individual cities that were attacked, indicates that they are too low. A revised estimate prepared by the Survey (which is also a minimum) places total casualties for the entire period of the war at 305,000 killed and 780,000 wounded.

So the Lancet wants us to believe that we have caused almost twice as many deaths without carpet bombing of cities, without creating firestorms like Dresden, without leaving vast rubble heaps where cities used to stand--and where our own compunctions, as well as world opinion, have prevented us from treating Iraqis as callously as British, American, and Russian air forces treated Germany? Give me a break.

Japan suffered about two million deaths (about 2.7% of its total population), both military and civilian, over a period of six years. This includes 192,000 deaths from atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and 100,000 killed in a single firebombing raid on Tokyo in 1945.

And these liars want us to believe that we have caused a roughly comparable percentage of deaths of Iraqis over the last three years largely with firearms?

*********************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   1:18:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#293. To: BeAChooser (#290) (Edited)

Can you say bogus?

Bogus.

Your link doesn't lead to the article you idiot.

Just like the bogus links you posted earlier today in "support" of your bullshit.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   1:31:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#294. To: christine, Hayek Fan, ALL (#257)

Hayek Fan - These other people could be hair stylists, political hacks or child molesters as far as I know.

christine - if they're male GOPers, you can probably count on it.

Well let's see if you can as readily dismiss this source (assuming you take the blinders off long enough to read it):

*************

http://medpundit.blogspot.com/2006/10/lancet-strikes-again-i-admit-this.html

Commentary on medical news by a practicing physician.

... snip ...

Lancet Strikes Again: I admit, this headline caught my eye. 655,000 dead in Iraq is an impressive number. Then I read the first sentence and saw that the number was gathered by public health researchers and it lost some credibility. The American public health community has a decidedly left leaning cast to it. It is more politically homogenous than any other medical specialty. How homogenous are they? Well, you won't find statements like this on the website of any other medical speciality. One is obliged to assume that the researchers started with a bias.

Then I read that it was published in The Lancet and I lost all interest. This is the journal that gave us the infamous MMR-causes-autism study and that published a similarly discredited tally of Iraqi casualities before the last American election. In the ranks of medical journals, I place them on a par with The Guardian.

This time, however, the media is on to them:

Robert Blendon, director of the Harvard Program on Public Opinion and Health and Social Policy, said interviewing urban dwellers chosen at random was “the best of what you can expect in a war zone.”

But he said the number of deaths in the families interviewed — 547 in the post-invasion period versus 82 in a similar period before the invasion — was too few to extrapolate up to more than 600,000 deaths across the country.

Donald Berry, chairman of biostatistics at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, was even more troubled by the study, which he said had “a tone of accuracy that’s just inappropriate.”

Kudos to the two New York Times reporters for taking the time to run the study by a couple of statisticians.

Color the Washington Post skeptical, too:

And neither does Michael E. O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution, which also tracks Iraqi deaths.

"I do not believe the new numbers. I think they're way off," he said.

Other research methods on the ground, like body counts, forensic analysis and taking eyewitness reports, have produced numbers only about one-tenth as high, he said. "I have a hard time seeing how all the direct evidence could be that far off ... therefore I think the survey data is probably what's wrong."

The full survey is here. The researchers spent two months canvassing households in various regions of Iraq asking about deaths in the family. Sometimes they were able to confirm the reports with death certificates, sometimes they weren't. They didn't ask if the dead were combatants or non-combatants. They were afraid to ask that question. Afraid for themselves and for those they were asking. They interviewed 40 households in each of their selected regions, then extrapolated the 600,000 figure from the number of deaths they had recorded in their interviews. The margin of error of +/-200,000 speaks for itself. It's not reliable.

And sorry, but the defense that it's as soundly designed as can be expected for these kinds of public health surveys is a weak one. Retrospective, interview-based studies like this are poor designs. It may be the standard way of gathering data in the public health field, but that doesn't make it the best methodology, and it certainly doesn't make its statistics sound. For too long the field of public health has relied on these types of shoddy numbers to influence public policy, whether it's the number of people who die from second hand smoke or the number who die from eating the wrong kinds of cooking oils.

But what do the Iraqi's think? Here's one who is particularly livid:

I wonder if that research team was willing to go to North Korea or Libya and I think they wouldn’t have the guts to dare ask Saddam to let them in and investigate deaths under his regime.

No, they would’ve shit their pants the moment they set foot in Iraq and they would find themselves surrounded by the Mukhabarat men counting their breaths. However, maybe they would have the chance to receive a gift from the tyrant in exchange for painting a rosy picture about his rule.

They shamelessly made an auction of our blood, and it didn’t make a difference if the blood was shed by a bomb or a bullet or a heart attack because the bigger the count the more useful it becomes to attack this or that policy in a political race and the more useful it becomes in cheerleading for murderous tyrannical regimes.

UPDATE: From Dani in the comments section, the editor of The Lancet, expressing his opinion, to which he is certainly entitled. However, his obvious passion (is it necessary to shout when using a microphone?) casts more than a shadow of doubt on his ability to be unbiased in selecting articles for publication that cover the same topic.

UPDATE II: The Lancet podcast defending the survey.

UPDATE III: Much more via Tim Blair, including Lancet editor Richard Horton's assessment of peer review, the annals of The Lancet's various controversies, a statistician's analysis of the study, criticism from anti-war epidemiologists.

UPDATE IV: More here.

*******************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   1:34:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#295. To: BeAChooser (#290)

Beachy, let me ask you one simple question:

What the hell is the point of posting a link if you know damn good and well that people are not going to be able to read the article at the link?

Are you liar or just an idiot?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   1:36:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#296. To: BeAChooser (#294)

Why are you posting those kook blogs nobody has ever heard of?

Do you think anyone is going to be impresseed?

Who wrote that crap anyway? You or Fun Balls?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   1:38:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#297. To: BeAChooser (#286) (Edited)

As the quotes I supplied prove, I did read the article.

Bullshit.

You posted dead links to decorate your spam. That is patently obvious. If the articles really suupported your argument, you would be waving the text in our faces and screaming for us to read them. Instead, you post a link offering to sell us a subscription to the magazine. LMFAO!

You deliberately posted dead links to make it look like your kook bullshit had some sort of support.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   1:43:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#298. To: ..., ALL (#293)

Your link doesn't lead to the article you idiot.

Not a subscriber? Too bad.

Didn't see it when it was free? Too bad.

Lucky for you, you can go to the LATimes article which did the original investigation that the WSJ was reporting on. But they too have archived their article. You can read it from them (free) but you'll have to find it. Fortunately, that article is available elsewhere. Better hurry before it too gets archived.

http://www.truthout.org/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/61/20726

ROTFLOL!

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   1:49:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#299. To: BeAChooser (#298) (Edited)

Your link doesn't lead to the article you idiot.

Not a subscriber? Too bad.

We must now decide if we take the utterly unsupported word of BAC, the infamous Ron Brown/UFO kook and the guy who just got kicked off LP for being a nut, or if we take the well documented ideas of Johns Hopkins University.

Since BAC has already been dishonest with us regarding the dead links he posts in "support" of his articles, he already has one strike against him.

I think I will go with Johns Hopkins University.

I will however listen to BAC if and when he wants to tell us how Rob Brown was brought back to life. (But only if nothing serious is going on.)

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   1:59:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#300. To: beachooser, Critter, Christine, Brian S, Honway, Robin, Aristeides, Red Jones, Diana, Kamala, All (#294)

BAC,

Your spam-slam Psyops/disinformation tactic isn't going to be anymore effective than your lies and other forms of deceit.

Deal with it!


SKYDRIFTER  posted on  2007-02-17   2:00:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#301. To: SKYDRIFTER (#300) (Edited)

He's busted dead on for his bogus link trick.

It's hilarious watching him squirm. The guy really does have no shame.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:02:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#302. To: SKYDRIFTER (#300) (Edited)

I think that sociopathic angle is why the guy is such a failure. And such a laughing stock. He really doesn't see what other people think of him. He can't. That's what's missing in his personality. Because of that, he can't calibrate his actions to fit the situation. Hence, he flails around like he is right now and digs his hole deeper and deeper.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:05:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#303. To: ..., BeAChooser (#295)

From the article, no more than 3 paragraphs down.

"There are three ways we know it is a gross underestimate.

First, if it were true, including suicides, South Africa, Colombia, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania and Russia have experienced higher violent death rates than Iraq over the past four years.

If true, many North and South American cities and Sub-Saharan Africa have had a similar murder rate to that claimed in Iraq.

For those of us who have been in Iraq, the suggestion that New Orleans is more violent seems simply ridiculous."

BAC, are Russia and Colombia more violent than Iraq?

AGAviator  posted on  2007-02-17   2:15:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#304. To: BeAChooser (#298) (Edited)

But they too have archived their article.

Let me get this straight.

What you are saying here is the article doesn't exist and you know it. And from this we can infer that you knowingly posted a bogus link in an attempt to fool us into believing your bullshit.

On top of that, you say we should take your word at face value - for some odd reason.

BAC, you really are a dishonest kook. Do you know that? Goldi showed surprisingly good judgment in giving you the bums rush.

And BAC, stop focusing on that one link. There are a whole shitload of linkx up there where you did the exactly same thing. Deal with all of them or shut up about it. You're not going to wiggle out of this by jerking off with the one single instance that you might be able to deal with.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:17:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#305. To: ..., Critter, Christine, Brian S, Honway, Robin, Aristeides, Red Jones, Diana, Kamala, All (#302)

BAC's persistence is almost strange. He has to be here "...on paid assignment," as no one insane would suffer the treatment which he begs & receives.

Historically, whatever he posts is unworthy of serious treatment, save for discounting, in terms of realizing what's impossible - versus his attempt at data-storming (spamming) and phase-shifting of nearly useless detail.

BAC is obviously attempting to distract major intellectual/emotional energy. Giving him any lengthy attention or response is a self-inflicted wound.

SKYDRIFTER  posted on  2007-02-17   2:27:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#306. To: scrapper2, ALL (#262)

You should be ashamed of yourself for trivializing the Iraqi losses that are a direct result of our aggression on their sovereign nation.

Just curious. Do you want us out of Iraq NOW? An immediate pullout? I bet you do. If so, you should be ashamed of yourself given that most authorities seem to think that would lead to far greater chaos and death than is now occurring.

http://www.jhsph.edu/publichealthnews/press_releases/2006/burnham_iraq_2 006.html

This should be fun.

- The mortality survey used well-established and scientifically proven methods for measuring mortality and disease in populations.

So John Hopkins defends itself against criticism of its methods by repeating it used well-established and scientifically proven methods? I notice that they don't explain why their pre-war mortality estimate is so different from the mortality estimates from much larger UN and WHO studies ... that the Lancet also blessed as wonderful ... and which also used well-established and scientifically proven methods. And I don't see this source explaining why their results don't agree with this 2004 study by the UN Development program, with a larger and more reliable data set, that found after the first year there were one-fourth the number of excess deaths the Lancet found with their survey. They too used well-established and scientifically proven methods. Why did the John's Hopkins response ignore this?

- The results from the new study closely match the finding of the group’s October 2004 mortality survey.

ROTFLOL! That's funny. Essentually they are saying the latest study is right because the results matched the first study. Never mind that they used the same researchers, the same American Hating Iraqi team, and the same methods.

- According to the researchers, the overall rate of mortality in Iraq since March 2003 is 13.3 deaths per 1,000 persons per year compared to 5.5 deaths per 1,000 persons per year prior to March 2003.

They still haven't explained why that 5.5 deaths per 1000 is so different than the numbers found in larger UN and WHO studies. And just where are all the bodies and death certificates corresponding to these 13.3 deaths per thousand? You are still ignoring that question.

- This amounts to about 2.5 percent of Iraqi’s population having died as a consequence of the war.

Yeah. Imagine that. We've killed a larger percentage of Iraq's population using precision guided munitions and infantry/armor than the Allies killed Germans ... back when they were carpet bombing cities with high explosives and incendiaries day and night till most German cities were nothing but ruins. (sarcasm)

And as also pointed out ... that's almost as large a percent of the population as we killed in Japan (2.7 percent) in WW2. When again we fire-bombed and nuked cities till they were nothing but ruins. (sarcasm)

b. And here's a response by one of the John Hopkins researchers to the WSJ opinion piece that questioned the findings. It appears that Les Roberts had comments falsely attributed to him. Hmmm....

This should be good too.

As a comparison, a 3,700-person survey is nearly 3 times larger than the average U.S. political survey that reports a margin of error of +/-3%.

ROTFLOL! Except Les Roberts methodology was more like one run by democRATS where they bias the sample by putting more democRATS in the mix than statistically exist in the population. My response to this defense by Roberts is to ask him why 92 percent of his sample claiming deaths was able to supply him a death certificate when the Iraqi population as a whole seems to have far fewer death certificates. Did he just randomly get a group that had 10 times as many folks with death certificates as the norm? ROTFLOL!

Our study also produced a range of plausible values that reflect the margin of error in our estimate.

Plausible? Then where is ANY hard evidence that so many have been killed? Why are there no death certificates, no bodies, no mass graves, no imagery of the slaughter, no media reports of the slaughter (not even by the insurgents who have demonstrated they know how to use video cameras)? Why is there NO evidence but the word of liberal researchers who admitted their bias against Bush and the war and their desire to influence an election, who employed Iraqis to do the interviews who they admit hate Americans, and who published their results in a Journal that has a track record of being critical of the US government and who also admitted wanting to influence the election against Bush?

In addition, Mr. Moore claimed that the Hopkins study did not include any demographic data. The survey did collect demographic data, such as age and sex, related to violence, although they are not the same details Mr. Moore’s company would have collected for public opinion polls.

Did they ask which religious group they belonged to? Did they ask whether they supported Saddam's government? Did they ask whether they had members in the insurgency? Did they ask whether the person killed was an Saddam regime soldier or an insurgent? I think those are the sort of demographics Moore had in mind.

Gilbert Burnham

Perhaps I'll have a bit more to say about him later in this thread. ROTFLOL!

c. Also I'm putting you on notice that I will not address ever again your idiotic comments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction that did not exist except in the fictious essays written by Doug Feith and his like minded IsraelFirster war mongering goons.

Still can't explain that binary sarin warhead, can you. You still can't tell us the contents of those truck convoys that went to Syria before the war ... under Iraqi military escort. You still can't tell us why Saddam's regime selectively sanitized files, computers and facilities the ISG said were related to WMD. You still can't tell us why Saddam didn't just come clean if he had no WMD or WMD programs.

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:33:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#307. To: SKYDRIFTER (#305)

BAC's persistence is almost strange. He has to be here "...on paid assignment," as no one insane would suffer the treatment which he begs & receives.

It's just mental illness, and his obsessive behavior is probably one of the most common mental illnesses around. If you work with people in the courts - and probably in 12 Step Program too - you see people like him every single day. One of the reasons I retired was because I got tired of dealing with them.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:33:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#308. To: BeAChooser (#306)

BAC, you just posted a link to the main page of the Bloomberg School of Public Health. It has absolutely nothing to do with your argument -- you dumb fucking idiot.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:37:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#309. To: ..., beachooser, Critter, Christine, Brian S, Honway, Robin, Aristeides, Red Jones, Diana, Kamala, All (#306)

BAC -

That single Sarin warhead was declared to be a freak left-over, by the Pentagon!

Your deceit attempts fail again (still).

SKYDRIFTER  posted on  2007-02-17   2:39:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#310. To: Burkeman1, bluedogtxn, scrapper2, Hayek Fan, ALL (#272)

I don't have to look at the thread. I am quite familiar with the sophism of this poster and his overall schtick. I don't find it amusing or even mildly entertaining. I find it sad and pathetic.

***********

http://notropis.blogspot.com/

Iraqi Death Survey Part I

I'm a statistics teacher, with only limited experience conducting surveys, and by no means a statistician, but, in perusing the new Iraqi Death Survey, "Mortality after the 2003 invasion of Iraq: a cross-sectional cluster sample survey" by by Bunham, et al, in the recent Lancet, I've come across several things that disturb me in the reports of data collected, the method of data collection and the method of extrapolation that I'd like to lay out in several posts, here. Then, perhaps, I can entice some people who know more than I do, or just think more clearly than I do, to look at these questions that I have, and address them, either supporting my concerns, or allaying them -- I don't much care which.

I don't really have a horse in this race, after all.

So, to the first, and probably most tenuous concerns, the matter of the believability of several items regarding the data collection.

1. "In 16 (0.9%) dwellings, residents were absent." When or where can you conduct a survey and find over 99% of the potential respondents at home? Especially in Iraq, where there are, according to NPR, two hundred thousand registered internally displaced persons (link), and an unknown, but presumably much higher, number of unregistered. So did the surveyors simply skip houses that looked "obviously vacant?" Assuming they did (and this would be a gross breach of statistical process, allowing one's own biases to influence which houses get sampled, but this happened anyway, see the next post; whether or not they did is hard to tell from the reported procedure -- "Empty houses or those that refused to participate were passed over until 40 households had been interviewed in all locations" -- are the "empty houses" the same as the ones reported above where "residents were absent," or does "residents were absent" refer to apparently occupied houses where they just didn't find anyone at home), it still seems amazing to find over 99% of potential respondents at home (and all the more so, since they apparently had to canvass throughout the day - see below.)

(Further puzzling is the statement: "Households where all members were dead or had gone away were reported in only one cluster in Ninewa and these deaths are not included in this report." Does this mean that in only one cluster were any vacant houses encountered? I can find more than that in upscale suburbs of Minneapolis.)

2. Only "15 (0.8%) households refused to participate." Now this could be a sign that Iraqis are concerned to get the truth of their plight out, and that's great. But putting this together with (1) above, we find that in a remarkable 98%+ of the potential households, the head of household or spouse was available and willing to answer the questions (according to the methodology, those were the only ones surveyed.) And this result was achieved, according to the article, on the first pass, without ever re-contacting a household, which the survey teams deemed "too dangerous."

3. In reading the methodology, the impression is given that the surveyors did an incredibly thorough, careful, and considerate job in their work. Yet we read that the teams each consisted of four individuals, who "could typically complete a cluster of 40 households in 1 day." Now, it's not clear whether the teams stuck together, or split up into 1s or 2s, but, given time for travel, and assuming 8 hours of surveying time available in a day, if they worked in pairs (which would make the most sense, one male and one female), we find that they spent less than half an hour (24 minutes), on average, per household, yet we're assured that the following protocols were strictly observed:

"The survey purpose was explained to the head of household or spouse, and oral consent was obtained. Participants were assured that no unique identifiers would be gathered. No incentives were provided. The survey listed current household members by sex, and asked who had lived in this household on January 1, 2002. The interviewers then asked about births, deaths, and in-migration and out-migration, and confirmed that the reported inflow and exit of residents explained the differences in composition between the start and end of the recall period. .... Deaths were recorded only if the decedent had lived in the household continuously for 3 months before the event. Additional probing was done to establish the cause and circumstances of deaths to the extent feasible, taking into account family sensitivities. At the conclusion of household interviews where deaths were reported, surveyors requested to see a copy of any death certificate and its presence was recorded. Where differences between the household account and the cause mentioned on the certificate existed, further discussions were sometimes needed to establish the primary cause of death."

And further on, we read that official death certificates were produced for 80% of the deaths recorded, all in an average of less than half an hour per interview. I'll have a few more questions about these death certificates in another post.

************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:39:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#311. To: BeAChooser (#310)

Does Fun Balls write that notropis blog you posted above or do you? And why should we care what the fuck they think?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:41:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#312. To: bluedogtxn, Burkeman1, Hayek Fan, scrapper2, ALL (#273)

Well, I found it both amusing and entertaining, as well as sad and pathetic.

*********

http://notropis.blogspot.com/

Iraqi Death Survey Part II

In my first post, I simply mentioned 3 items that, from my own experience conducting surveys, seemed surprising, at best, or downright unbelievable, at worst, regarding the apparent success and efficiency of the survey teams. These questions did not address the methodology of the survey, they simply cast aspersions on the integrity of the survey teams. Quite simply, I find it particularily hard to believe that you can achieve a 98%+ response rate under conditions as difficult as those in Iraq (I've never gotten that kind of result in Minnesota), and that you can conduct the careful, thorough, sensitive surveys that the article implies it conducted, in what must average well under 1/2 hour per survey (at 40 per day, it would probably actually add up to less than 15 minutes per household of actual survey time.)

But those are just skepticisms. In this post, I will bring up three problems that I find with the sampling methodology. In future posts I will look at some difficulties I find in the methods of extrapolation in the conclusions.

1. The second stage of the sampling is troubling:

"At the second stage of sampling, the Governorate's constituent administrative units were listed by population or estimated population, and location(s) were selected randomly proportionate to population size."

Why should this be troubling? Well, if a few hundred selections were made per Governorate it wouldn't be, but given the fact that in all but two governorates, 3 or fewer clusters were selected -in many cases only 1, the chances that any smaller towns (or administrative units) anywhere in Iraq might be selected are diminishingly small. It would be interesting to compare the number of small town or rural household clusters selected with the overall population of rural Iraqis to find out whether this underrepresentation were substantial, as I guess that it is. I don't have access to the raw data, so I can' t tell.

2. The sampling method used carries incredible inherent bias:

"The third stage consisted of random selection of a main street within the administrative unit from a list of all main streets. A residential street was then randomly selected from a list of residential streets crossing the main street. On the residential street, houses were numbered and a start household was randomly selected. From this start household, the team proceeded to the adjacent residence until 40 households were surveyed."

This may seem fine, and it would be, in suburban U.S. However, in Iraq, with hundreds of thousands of internally displaced persons, and the chaos of many others living in temporary housing and the squalor of newly-constructed unofficial slums, none of these persons had any possibility of being surveyed. Neither did any who live on any unnamed or unrecognized streets. And again, it is quite possible that many smaller towns don't even have any officially named main street, so wouldn't show up on the list at all. What effect would this bias have? There's no way to know, but it is clearly a built-in bias, systematically selecting against some rather large demographic groups.

3. In addition, it is clear that at the whim of the interview team, these pre-selected sites could be changed:

"Decisions on sampling sites were made by the field manager. The interview team were given the responsibility and authority to change to an alternate location if they perceived the level of insecurity or risk to be unacceptable."

This is a clear admission of selection bias in the sampling. Given the sectarian tensions in Iraq, even granting the alleged professionalism of the canvassing teams, it is impossible to tell the impact of these biases, but their existence is unquestionable. The implication in the report is clearly that more deadly areas were underrepresented, but were more distant (possibly safe) areas also selected against because of the level of risk required to reach them?

To summarize, then, the sampling methods reported systematically select against three groups (that I can think of): A) rural Iraqis (both in the method of selecting administrative units, and in the method of selecting particular streets) B) internally displaced refugees (since many live in camps, and not on named streets) and C) urban slum dwellers, who may often also not live in organized households on named streets.

The fact that the previous survey, done via GPS location, mirrors the present one in the 2003-04 results merely indicates that, to the extent that the present method may be less representative than the previous one, the biases did not effect the death toll results from 2004; it says nothing about whether these biases are still unimportant. After all, the nature of the situation has changed significantly in Iraq; that's one of the main conclusions of the report. If the recent upsurge in violence has been predominantly urban rather than rural, these sampling methods might tend to overestimate the results. If it has been predominantly in the urban slums or refugee camps, the methods might underestimate them. There is simply no way to tell beyond educated guesses, which take us completely out of the realm of statistical science. In any event, these obvious biases are, in my view, important enough to raise serious doubts about the validity of the conclusions.

More troubling, and carrying us way beyond anything that can be "fixed" by more statistical analysis, is the third point; namely, that in spite of the authors' best intentions to randomize the clusters, what they ended up with was, in point of fact, a sample with a high risk of personal selection bias. As understandable as concerns for safety are, statistics has no compassion. If you modify your selection based on personal considerations, you lose your claim to statistical validity.

*************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:42:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#313. To: RickyJ, Diana, ALL (#278)

Where oh where are you actually getting the claim that Bush said missiles could launch from Iraq and hit the US in 45 minutes ... as Diana alleged?

He didn't actually say it,

You are right. Take note Diana.

he implied it.

No he didn't.

He did say however that they could launch drone remote controlled planes over here to deliver a chemical/biological attack though.

But not drones launched from Iraq. Perhaps from across the border or a ship at sea. And the fact is that Saddam's regime was still working on long range UAVs in violation of their agreement not to do so. And one of Iraq's top scientists said the only reason he could see for the modifications being made was to use it to deliver WMD. Something you folks claim Saddam didn't have. Go figure...

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:46:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#314. To: BeAChooser (#312) (Edited)

BAC, let me ask you again: Do you really think quoting these silly little bullshit blogs will make people believe the shit you spew? I can find one man blogs that assert that alien spaceships are hiding at the north pole. I'm not kidding. What you are quoting here is getting pretty close to that kind of crap.

What the hell is a "notropis" anyway?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:46:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#315. To: BeAChooser (#306)

Still can't explain that binary sarin warhead, can you. Y

ou still can't tell us the contents of those truck convoys that went to Syria before the war ... under Iraqi military escort.

You still can't tell us why Saddam's regime selectively sanitized files, computers and facilities the ISG said were related to WMD.

You still can't tell us why Saddam didn't just come clean if he had no WMD or WMD programs

The White House is not "telling us" any of your claims - and they are the ones who decided on the war.

Why do you expect posters on an Internet site to defend outrageous claims that even the people who started the war, and who are constantly trying to justify it, aren't making?

AGAviator  posted on  2007-02-17   2:47:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#316. To: BeAChooser (#306)

You still can't tell us the contents of those truck convoys that went to Syria before the war ... under Iraqi military escort.

Sure I can. It's a kook conspircay theory that only exists in your head. And you don't have a shred of credible proof to the contrary. Just partisan hacks in the kook fodder press.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:51:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#317. To: Dakmar, bluedogtxn, scrapper, Burkeman1, Hayek Fan, ALL (#279)

well aren't you the clever little slickyboy, knowing all these links by heart...

************

http://notropis.blogspot.com/

Iraqi Death Survey, Part III

Summary of the first two posts:

I find some major reasons to be skeptical of the data collected, and the method of collection.

The first three are questions that lead me to doubt the credibility of the survey teams, in spite of the authors' assurances:

1) 99% of residences had people at home?
2) 98% of residences had heads of household (or spouses) at home and willing and able to provide the requested information?
3) Thorough explanations and double-checking and proofs of information were possible in well under half hour per interview?

The next three lead me to question the inherent bias allowed in the data collection:

4) Samples of size 1 - 3 (the number of clusters chosen from all but two of the governorates) chosen "proportionally to population size" can't possibly reflect the actual urban-rural makeup of an individual governorate, and given the small number of governorates, won't reflect the makeup, even taken in aggregate. You can "bootstrap" all you want, but you can't bootstrap with a sample size of 1 (and yes, one cluster is, in many respects just "1.") Moreover, no amount of bootstraping will make a demographic that's completely absent (like "rural Iraqis in X province") suddenly appear.

5) Persons living on non-officially-recognized and named streets were systematically ignored, biasing considerably against those living in urban slums, internally-displaced refugees, and rural Iraqis, and this influence was completely overlooked.

6) The field manager could select sampling sites at whim, and these could be changed at the "responsibility and authority" of the interview team.

I'm sorry, but, even with the amazingly advanced statistical analysis done on the numbers, these fundamental questions about the worth of the data collected undercut any validity of the survey. "Garbage in = garbage out" remains as true as ever, as does "data of questionable validity in = conclusions of questionable validity out" (although that's not nearly so catchy.)

***********

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:51:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#318. To: BeAChooser (#317)

I think the meth has affected your judgment or you wouldn't be buying into this crap.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:52:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#319. To: kiki, bluedogtxn, Hayek Fan, scrapper2, Burkeman1, ALL (#282)

what in the world is your point?

One would think that is clear by now.

That the Les Roberts/John Hopkins/Lancet studies were BOGUS.

And if we can't agree on that, how can we ever hope to find agreement in any matter.

Because this one is plain as day.

***********

http://notropis.blogspot.com/

Iraqi Death Survey Part IV

What about the death certificates?

According to the article, 80% of the deaths identified in the survey were confirmed by the presence of a death certificate. That's a good thing. That helps A) to make sure that some deaths aren't counted multiple times as being misremembered members of multiple households, B) to establish time of death, and C) to help determine cause of death, among other things.

But here's my question: If there's a death certificate, doesn't that make it an officially recorded death? That is (I'm assuming and asking), if the head of household has a copy of the death certificate, wasn't another one filed at the appropriate administrative office, by whoever made out the certificate? If this is the case, why doesn't it end up on the official Iraqi government death toll tally?

OK, I can think of several reasons why that might not happen. But the record should still be available locally. So wouldn't it have been/be a good check on the survey to contact the local administrative office, look at the death certificates there, and see whether the actual numbers at the administrative office come within the expected 20% of the projected numbers from the survey of 40 households?

I'll grant that that might not be possible on a larger scale, or in every situation, but there's something troubling about a survey that claims to have discovered hundreds of thousands of unreported deaths, by looking past official channels, yet that also claims that 80% of those deaths that it discovered have official death certificates (so clearly were not unreported.) Again, I understand that in some individual circumstances, administrative corruption or confusion might not make this possible, but you'd think it would make sense to double-check this where possible.

A positive confirmation would go miles to validate the methodology of this survey.

*************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:56:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#320. To: BeAChooser (#317)

BAC, I can judge you sanity here with a single question: Do you really think anyone is going to read all that silly spam you just blackend the board with?

Yes or no. And I will be able to tell you if you are in reality or not.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   2:57:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#321. To: tom007, ALL (#283)

The study cannot possibly be statistically valid unless the death certificates could be found for about 92% of the claimed 655,000 deaths.

You could be insane, just based on the above statement alone.

Actually, it just shows I understand statistics and you apparently don't.

Let me repeat this post just for you ...

*************

Here's a good observation (just what I've been saying).

According to the phony survey, they recorded 629 deaths since the start of the war (p4 of the PDF). In 545 cases, they bothered to ask for death certificates, and for those 545 requests, 501 times they were shown the death certificates. So Mr. Pittelli notes, at least 80% of all the deaths in the sample (501/629), and possibly as many as 92% (501/545) were recorded by the government. Let's repeat that: According to the anti-war propagandists who are responsible for this blatant dishonesty, 80 to 92% of all deaths in their sample were recorded in the Iraqi government's own official figures.

What this means, as Pittelli points out, is that the official death figures should record at least 80% of the deaths since the Iraq war. Taking the bogus figures at face value, simply for the sake of argument entertainment, I calculate the estimates based on official figures should be between 314,000 and 867,000. They aren't. The "official figures estimate" is about 49,000.

To take the Johns Hopkins/Lancet figures seriously, you have to believe that the Iraqi government recorded deaths occurring since the invasion with an accuracy of at least 80%, but then suppressed 85-94% of those recorded deaths when releasing official figures, with no one blowing the whistle on them. You also have to believe that 85-94% of the dead bodies were unnoticed by the MSM, the funeral homes, and everyone else trying to keep track of the war casualties.

Alternatively, you have to believe that the Iraqi govt. only issues death certificates for 6-15% of all deaths, but this random sample got 80% certificate hits by pure chance.

Can you say bogus?

**************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   2:59:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#322. To: BeAChooser (#321) (Edited)

So is this the sort of idiotic kookery that Goldi canned your ass for?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   3:01:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#323. To: Dakmar, bluedogtxn, scrapper, kiki, Burkeman1, Hayek Fan, ALL (#287)

So who pays you to post here?

*************

http://notropis.blogspot.com/

Iraqi Death Survey Part V

An opinion from an actual expert confirms my problems with this survey.

The Chairman of the Department of Biostatistics and Applied Mathematics at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Donald Berry, has this to say:

"Selecting clusters and households that are representative and random is enormously difficult. Moreover, any bias on the part of the interviewers in the selection process would occur in every cluster and would therefore be magnified. The authors point out the possibility of bias, but they do not account for it in their report."

and

"Incorporating the possibility of such biases would lead to a substantially wider range, the potential for bias being huge. Although there is no formal way to address bias short of having an ‘independent body assess the excess mortality,' which the authors recommend, the lower end of this range could easily drop to the 100,000 level."

Sort of what I mentioned in my second post, items 4 - 6. But Dr. Berry notices a further problem with the teams' selection bias, and that is that, given that there were only two teams of surveyors, any selection bias will be consistent throughout the survey, skewing all results in the same direction and further widening the true confidence interval.

Also, I don't know if he's an expert or not (I know nothing about him), but Tim Blair had the same thought about the death certificates.

************

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-02-17   3:02:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#324. To: BeAChooser (#321)

Do you realize you just posted link to another meaningless kook blog as support for your "argument"? Why should anyone care what "Rants and Rayguns" thinks about anything?

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   3:02:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#325. To: BeAChooser (#323)

Whoops, you got "notropis - fodder for kooks" up there again while I was posting about "Rants and Rayguns". Your other impressive source.

Do you think that making the same mistake over and eventually cures the error? Just curious.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   3:05:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#326. To: BeAChooser (#323)

BAC, if you are going to quote obscure, meaningless blogs in support of your argumets, why don't you just write the things yourself? Pay $14.99 per month, get a blog and tailor it to exactly what you need.

No one will buy the shit you quote from it, but no one buys the shit you quote from these pathetic sources either. But what you do quote will be more on point.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   3:11:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#327. To: Christine (#323)

Maybe you could delete some of Chooser's spam above. Nobody is going to read it and it makes the thread hard to follow.

.

...  posted on  2007-02-17   3:14:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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