<<Perhaps you are confusing the numbers of people disinterested in the truth with the actual truth itself. >>
What I sometimes confuse is Debategate life with real life. In real life, I read a paper and throw it away. I watch the news and go to bed. And I remember what I read and what I watched. I don't make notes, I don't clip quotes, I discuss the news with colleagues, friends and family without keeping records of our discussions. And I remember. In a sort of general fashion.
What I remember is this. Sometime after 9-11, articles began appearing in the New York Times and conservative venues (and reprinted in the Toronto papers) about a threat from Saddam Hussein. Very scary stuff. Nuclear weapons programs. Poison gas. Biological weapons. Then guys (and a very small number of women) began appearing on TV to talk more about this same God-awful threat. Most of them seemed to be Jews. A lot of the articles seemed to be written by Jews. I didn't pay much attention at first because I figured all these folks just had it in for Saddam Hussein. They'd love to see Saddam eaten alive by wild dogs, why? Because Saddam was paying $25,000 U.S. to the families of suicide bombers. He was in effect (as a lot of right-wing Jews saw this) offering money to people to go out and kill Jews at random. (That's not the way I saw it, because they weren't killing Jews at random, they were killing them in Israel and the West Bank, and it was war - - a war of unequal war resources where the suicide bomber was the poor man's F-16. And my solution to the war was to offer a just division of the land, not try to kill all those who objected to one side hogging it all.) Soon the politicians were talking about this "threat" from Iraq as well. Now I saw it was becoming serious. It looked like Bush wanted to invade but the Europeans and a lot of unempowered Americans were against the project.
How did I react at the time? I thought it was ridiculous. In the first place because every sovereign nation has the right to arm itself as it sees fit. How could the U.S.A. with the biggest nuclear arsenal in the world, and a little Middle-Eastern sidekick like Israel with another 400 nukes, raise any valid objection to Iraq arming itself? Even more importantly, the idea that Iraq could threaten the U.S. in any way was, and remains to this day, patently absurd. Only a lunatic could even conceive of the possibility. Of all the lies of the Bush administration, that was the one Big Lie, the one Goebbels was talking about when he said that if you told a lie that was really, really outrageous, the very biggest lie you could think of, for some reason nobody would question it. I was not opposed in principle to the U.N. as a world body regulating some of Iraq's aggressiveness, but in fact the U.N. was content to take less aggressive measures and work things out over time - - as were the Europeans. And the Canadians, for what THAT'S worth.
So I remember Bush, and Cheney, and Rumsfeld and even Colin Powell and their military explain the case for an invasion, basically how "surgical" the bombing would be this time, how long the whole operation might take. The minimal casualties, especially the minimal civilian casualties. (Which I knew even then had to be another lie.) The only specific memory I have from those days is Condi's famous "mushroom cloud" remark and something from Blair that his intelligence indicated that Saddam's missiles were loaded and ready to be fired on 15 minutes (or was it 45 minutes) notice, presumably at British or maybe even U.S. targets. I also specifically remember the "We'll be welcomed as liberators" comment, with some embellishments I believe. Something about flowers or rose petals.
My general memories of those days is that this would be a quick operation because the entire Iraqi population was sick to death of Saddam Hussein but so terrorized by his reign of torture that they were helpless. I don't specifically remember Rumsfeld's remark that it would be six days or six weeks but not six months. I must have heard or read it, but it was part of a huge volume of lies and bullshit that were being dumped all over America and that one does not stand out - - however it is very consistent with everything I remember. That the Iraqi people were with "us" (America) and that this whole thing would be a cakewalk.
That was real life. That's how I remember it.
Now we have Debategate life. I come in here and there are people who tell me that everything I remember just did not happen. That sure, there were predictions made that overthrowing Saddam's regime would be easy but that staying on thereafter might be very hard. I never heard that. I know it never happened. But in Debategate World, memory counts for nothing, quotations and sources count for everything. So, like a schmuck, I diligently go and seek out the sources. I mean, I'm not crazy, I didn't imagine all of this, and if it happened in public media, there must be a public record of it, right? Right. And there is. There IS a public record of it. I find the sources. No surprises there. Why shouldn't I find them? Bring 'em back to the group and what do I get? "Well, that's what it SAYS but that's not what it MEANS. It MEANS this, it means that, it means everything except what it says right on the face of it and what I myself remember from hearing that same stuff or other stuff just like it at the time.
Moreover, it couldn't possibly have meant what these right-wing fruitbats claim it means, because nobody who was trying to convince the American people to go to war would have said what the fruitbats now claim they said at the time. Can any sane individual seriously conceive of Bush or one of his lying criminal ratpack telling the American people, as the fruitbats now claim he did, "Yo, taking out Saddam is the easy part but after that we'll have to keep about 150,000 troops there for four years at the very least while the country sinks into civil war and we ship back 25,000 wounded and 3,500 dead, but we gotta do it because those Iraqis really really really want democracy?" That is NOT how to convince a country to go to war, and Bush & Co., being the natural snake-oil salesmen that they are, told the people whatever story they needed to hear to get them on board. That was NOT the fruitbat version.
Anyway, I've vented enough. I put too much energy into these surrealistic discussions. I'm done.