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Remembering the Iraq War's Pollyanna pundits
Weeks after the invasion of Iraq began, Fox News Channel host Brit Hume delivered a scathing speech critiquing the media's supposedly pessimistic assessment of the Iraq War. 4 comments from 3 users
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posted by
saberhagen
on May 2, 2008 at 12:39 PM
You can add me to the list. I initially bought the BS thinking "They must have reliable intelligence that Saddam had WMDs. How could Powell and all those guys be wrong? And like Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and all those generals said, "We certainly can't allow a deranged, megamaniacal dictator with such a violent history possess have nukes, can we? Look how he gassed the Kurds! He would most assuredly use them." Then when Powell waved the vial of white powder in the U.N. chambers on television and talked about the Anthrax threat, I was totally convinced. Imagine my humility when it was finally revealed that there were no WMDs and no reason to invade. The only possible excuse for my stupidity is that I was grossly misled by the government I so confidently chose to trust. Now, like most everyone else, I know better than to believe anything that spills from the mouths of those liars. I recall sitting in a Pasadena restaurant with intelligent friends during the runup preceding the attack arguing the necessity to stop the Saddam Scourge before it's too late. My friends who were opposed to the invasion knew better than to trust those guys and said so. Why didn't I see the duplicity? I understand now that it didn't really matter what I or anyone else thought or said, they were bound to invade, anyway. The decision had already been made. But the regret for that instinctive failure lingers more painfully than any other in my life. I was so sure, yet so wrong. And man, it really sucks being wrong. Perhaps we need this sort of humility in our lives. I just hope eating a little crow meat at least made me a bit smarter.
posted by
jfrancais
on May 2, 2008 at 12:50 PM
I wanted to believe Colin Powell (sine he was the only politico I was familiar with) but I knew something was wrong when Hans Blix repeatedly tried to stifle the war machine that was revving up in the US leading up to the invasion in Iraq. posted by
nooneisabovethelaw
on May 2, 2008 at 03:00 PM
I realized Bush was a bozo who would lead to nothing but a forgettable presidency in early 2000, well ahead of the election. As it became clear this was the moron the Republican Party was foisting off on the American public, I thought Gore was a shoo-in for the presidential spot. Even after the GOP rigged the election in Florida during that debacle, I thought Gore would hang tough and demand a full recount. But he didn't, unfortunately. I thought Bush made it very clear from the time he was inaugurated that he was a lousy president and I said so to a number of friends. At best, he would be totally forgettable. Then...Sept. 11 happened. Bush and co. could not have asked for a nicer tragedy. I will say I thought initially he handled it fairly well. Not sure exactly how you handle something so catastrophic, but...I'll give him the benefit of the doubt. I totally supported invading Afghanistan -- still do, in fact. But a couple of months later, as he and his administration began to make noises about Saddam Hussein and Iraq...I can remember thinking, "What? What are you talking about? Are you nuts...?" Apparently so. Then we attacked Iraq in March, 2003. I distinctly remember it...I was on a treadmill at a gym, and the TV screens began announcing what was going on in Iraq. I knew then and I know now that it was a mistake, a disastrous mistake, unless we went in, dropped a lot of bombs and left, immediately. We'd be no worse off today, and maybe better, if we had actually followed up with the "Mission Accomplished" motif. "Okay, we're done here...bring everybody back." I still support the impeachment of Bush and Cheney, and I hope Obama will work towards that goal. I wish Congress would do so now. They won't, but they should, and Bush should be tried for both high crimes and misdemeanors. I wonder if George and Barbara Bush ever think badly of their idiot son. posted by
nooneisabovethelaw
on May 2, 2008 at 03:01 PM
Postscript...considering how things have turned out, Cal Thomas' phrase above -- "only the duped, the dumb and the desperate" -- takes on a whole new meaning.
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