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> Reporting that those condemnations occurred (they did) isn't an implicit validation

If 9/11, Iraq and WMDs have taught us anything, it is that repeating a lie enough times makes it true.

This is repeating the lie. Sure. It's done by reference only, and not directly, but it's still a repetition.



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> 9/11

What lies are you referring to?


I was mostly referring to how Iraq after 9/11 was repeatedly claimed to have WMDs. This was done to justify a war, which was obviously actually about oil.

US intelligence agencies time and time again claimed to posses evidence of Iraq having WMDs, and how it was vital to invade to stop Saddam from using them.

After the invasion it was obvious to pretty much everyone that the WMDs weren't there, they had been deliberately lied to, and that the "evidence" was manufactured.

I remember even Colin Powell being furious about this, seeing as he was the one who stood in front of the UN presenting the "evidence" as fact. A massive loss of face. He was not happy.


Lies like the supposed link between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein [0] and the fact that 9/11 was heavily used as a rationale for invading Afghanistan/Iraq.[1]

They had their target first and tried to spin 9/11 in such a way that it pointed to their predestined target. Many US Americans fell for it back then, still believing to this day that Saddam was involved with 9/11, lies about baby incubators and that the invasion of Iraq in 2003 was sanctioned by the UN.

Those are all evidently false, yet quite a many US Americans still consider them to be true, especially that last one about the Iraq invasion being UN sanctioned or else they'd have to admit that their country is leading wars of aggression for economic gains and not just to be "the good guys" aka "world police".

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddam_Hussein_and_al-Qaeda_li...

[1] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/plans-for-iraq-attack-began-on-9...


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