As I stumbled across this particular paragraph, I couldn't help but think of the whole WMD charade and agree with the Veep here - wishing that they did a little more research on the facts rather than going to war on faith:
Wherever life takes us, it's also good to keep an eye out for people who can give you advice, or give you a hand, or simply be trusted to help you think and figure out a problem. In this world there is information and opinion -- and then there is knowledge and wisdom. And a lot turns on knowing the difference.Further down, he makes my point for me:
We're always better off if we seek out people who know more than we do, and ask them questions, and take their good advice.Certainly, don't you wish they spent a little bit more time verifying whether or not there were WMD in Iraq? I do.
Indeed there is a difference between information and knowledge. But there is a substantially larger difference between opinion and wisdom. The fact that the Veep strings those concepts together may be a substantive clue as to why they have led us into the deep quagmire they are leaving us with at the end of their reign. Indeed, it may have been the very straw that broke our camel's back.
2 comments:
That the administration is "admitting mistakes" after how many years of not doing so?
Politics as usual, tell them what they want to hear and maybe they'll leave us alone?!
Now's the time to work in a system where you can vote for more than the usual 2 party system.
Hell, they do it all over the world, but in america, what's up with that.
Aaarghhh!
Hey, Cheers to ya anyway! from the underbelly of the us via Sausalito a few yrs ago!
Hell, they do it all over the world, but in america, what's up with that.
For better or worse it's the difference between a Parliamentary Democracy and a Representative Republic, such as ours. Since our legislative and executive can be out of sync party-wise, it's difficult to support more than two parties because to do so would potentially bring Congress to a halt. In addition, our election is monstrously complex, but can you imagine how much more complex it would be with a viable third, or perhaps fourth, party in the mix.
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