Enough was said. I know that only some media outlets repeated it, but it was said we had no exact time frame, and needed to wait on certain events to unfold.
YOU feel enough was said. Others don't. Can you fault people for not trusting the words of the government? You do the same yourself quite often.
There was plenty of visible progress. The mainstream media only focused on disasters, while talk radio did talk about progress. Want to blame someone on that point, blame the media for being partisan.
Plenty of visible progress in YOUR eyes. There were relatively few distinct goals that were achieved. The vote was a big one, and rightly touted. But since then, what? It's been a struggle to hold and maintain areas. There's strong belief out there that as soon as we leave, all will collapse into chaos, that the Iraqi Security Police are undisciplined and will fail to hold the peace.
I see the problem as liberals using any problem noted as political talking points, hampering our efforts and the public's perspective.
And do Republicans do any different when it comes to liberal policies? Don't all Republicans focus on the negative consequences of Democratic lawmaking? Doing so keeps the excesses of the other party in check, and is an important and healthy function of our democracy.
Do you think it would be more American to prevent criticism?
I suppose it's proper then to jump off a roller-coaster when it scares you rather than waiting for it to finish.
There are some things you have to stick with when you commit to them.
Just because YOU feel we should have to "finish" doesn't mean everyone else does. Tell me, how would you define us being "finished" in Iraq? What does that mean? Does it mean a completely stable country? Does it mean one that has a democracy? One free from terrorism?
A war against terrorists is not like a war against a foreign nation that can 'surrender', and thereby has a definite 'finish'. There will be no 'finish' against the war on terror, because there is no one that can claim responsibility over all terrorists.
Your logic could be used in any number of faulty beliefs. We've already started the healthcare process, now we have to finish it. We've already started the bank bailouts, now we have to finish it. Etc etc. There's no formal logic behind that statement; you just throw it out there like it's a postulate.
Sure, but was it really a majority? Look at how the polling questions were pushed.
Yes, it was. A great number of different polls performed by different pollsters showed that the American public was against the war by... 2006 I believe it was.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popular...vasion_of_Iraq
And here are the way the questions were worded in some of them, if you want specifics.
http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq.htm
"Do you favor or oppose the US war in Iraq?" is a pretty open-ended question, don't you think?