Spaces

Monday, February 11, 2008

Painful memories

Atrios posted this last week, and I was surprised how much it affected me. I had this physical sensation that was very unpleasant, strolling through the mental nightmare memory of 2002-2003:
It's hard to try to recapture those time. A nation had gone truly mad, our discourse was run by warmongering fools and Very Serious Liberal Hawks, and any attempt to oppose the Iraq war was marginalized 3000 different ways.


Proof in the pudding: an old post by Kevin Drum - who is very smart and whom I read regularly:
What's more, they know that everything they say is easily verifiable once the war starts. No one ever pressed LBJ for proof of what happened in the Tonkin Gulf, but there will be dozens of countries and dozens more NGOs who will be looking very closely at what we find in Iraq after ground forces move in. It will hardly be possible to fake vast numbers of mobile weapons labs, swimming pools of anthrax, ballistic missiles, and the like, and if those things aren't found in substantial and convincing quantities George Bush will be lucky to escape impeachment, let alone win reelection.

If your opposition to war is based on the idea that Saddam does indeed possess illegal weapons but it's best to leave him alone anyway, well and good. But if it's based on the idea that the administration is lying and none of this stuff exists, you should tread carefully. I think it's pretty likely you will be proven wrong shortly.


It gives me shudders to think back on that time, and worse: it makes my blood boil that we have come this far from then, and no one has yet been held accountable.

No comments: