Quote Originally Posted by bassiusmaximus View Post
Well your the one that pointed at Bush as being the problem for the divide so don't be suprised that some people disagree. We will never ever agree on that.
I suppose you think that if we had got Bin Laden and killed him or put him on trial this would all have been over. Sure we would have been happy about it but for how long? Would our worries have been quelled? What were we going to do after that? Were we going to wait for the next attack then go get whomever the next Bin Laden is at that time? Meanwhile the terrorist organization goes on killing innocent americans. 3000 americans for 20 terrorists (19 hijackers and Bin Laden) bet the terrorists would like that. It should be very obvious that there were alot of people in these organizations that wanted to do us harm besides Bin Laden. These organizations are backed by anti-american governments and others who want to harm us but want to avoid reprucussions. And in my opinion they should all pay no matter how long it takes.
Okay I'm going to break this down for you as simple as I can.

DJD started the thread by asking "What Happened to the unity after 9/11"

I gave my opinion that the Iraq war (a very unpopular war whether you want to admit it or not) started by Bush, yes started by Bush who tried to tie the attacks on 9/11 to Iraq and Saddam but never really did it divided the "unity after 9/11" that DJD was asking about.

And also gave my opinion that had we just focused on Bin Laden and captured/killed him there would have been a victory mentality that would have "united" us more instead of people even talking abou the Iraq war. Would of the "unity" worn off by now? I don't know but I bet it would have lasted longer than it did with the Iraq war in the equation.

Never said we would be safe/safer if we got rid of Bin Laden or hadn't got Saddam just giving my opinion about "What Happened to the unity after 9/11"

What's you opinion about DJD's question "What Happened to the unity after 9/11"? Just we have short attention spans.