Let's see, let's see ... maybe I read it all too quickly, Gig.
I hope that Saddam uses his hidden WMD's.
Pretty straightforward statement. Not much room for "interpretation." You can see where I would be suspicious, but I think you were being intentionally provocative, so you can't blame me yet.
I hope even more that they're used ineffectively and no one gets hurt, contaminated, or killed.
Well, that's nice too. Of course, even if someone does get killed, you are still hoping he uses them, right? Sure, it would be better if no one got killed, but if a bunch of people do get killed, it'd still be something you hope for. Yeah?
But I try and imagine this guy facing the loss of it all, his own country and life included, why wouldn't he make the biggest mess he can before departure? A blaze of chemical and biological glory.
Well, maybe he would, maybe he wouldn't. Is this why you hope he uses his weapons of mass distruction? If not, what's the point? You're post isn't talking about what might or might not happen, but about what you hope will happen. And you hope he uses his weapons.
Again, I hope he does so it's clear to the world the U.S. did the right thing.
And there you go. Why do you hope he uses the weapons? So the grand ol' U.S. won't come out of this with egg on its face. Of course, it's be nice if the weapons were detonated in a harmless way, but if that doesn't happen, you still "hope Saddam uses his WMDs." I don't think I was that far off base. Your second explanation seemed like a bit of backtracking.
I'm afraid of what will happen if he's eliminated and there are no WMD's found. But if used or found, I'm sure Bush's speechwriters will hide "We told you so" at least as well as the WTS can hide their real agenda.
Well, whatever. This makes it sound like you're less than a Bush supporter, but your initial assertion seemed, on first read, dumbfoundingly ill-reasoned. But I digress. Maybe it was just poor wording. Maybe I'm just too cantakerous for my age. Maybe the secretary brewed decaf this morning by mistake. Whatever.
My take on this is, justification after the fact doesn't excuse recklessly gambling on presumptions. It's analogous to racial profiling: pull over enough drivers of a certain race, and sure, you'll find something wrong. But that doesn't mean it was ever "right" to pull them over in the first place. Justice, a word used too casually, is trickier than most people suppose.
Of course, I'm also the guy who said that arguments from analogy were bad ideas, so what the hell do I know, right?
Dedalus