The defining moment
vruz:
by Paul Krugman, The New York Times
—via unburyingthelead:
One addendum to today’s column: the truth, which I think everyone in the political/media establishments knows in their hearts, is that the nine months or so between the summer of 2002 and the beginning of the Iraq insurgency were a great national moral test — a test that most people in influential positions failed.
The Bush administration was obviously — yes, obviously — telling tall tales in order to promote the war it wanted: the constant insinuations of an Iraq-9/11 link, the hyping of discredited claims about a nuclear program, etc.. And the question was, should you stand up against that? Not many did — and those who did were treated as if they were crazy.
For me and many others that was a radicalizing experience; I’ll never trust “sensible” opinion again. But for those who stayed “sensible” through the test, it’s a moment they’d like to see forgotten. That, I believe, is the real reason so many want to let torture and everything else go down the memory hole.
Source: oversets
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by Paul Krugman, The New York Times...One addendum to today’s column: the truth, which I...
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mohamedn reblogged this from oversets and added:
One addendum to today’s column: the truth, which I think everyone in the political/media establishments knows in their...
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