Yeah, as a supporter of both wars that occurred as a result of this, a lot of us clearly fucked up very badly. Like really badly. Even if I can still see Afganistan as the right thing to do, the totality was clearly something which I supported and which was clearly the wrong thing to do.
And not just the United States but all of humanity is paying for the consequences. Not just in the forms of massive numbers of people dead but also a terrible economy and all sorts of science that isn't getting funded. In a world without the Iraq war, things like the James Webb Telescope and the Tevatron might still be getting funded. Just now, it seems like funding for necessary radioisotopes for lots of purposes is getting cut. And the increased security and immigration measures over the last decade have made many scientists just avoid the United States.
We've fucked up badly, and the long term consequences are still playing out.
Edit: The only saving grace is that I think I'm more rational than I was then (no longer religious, more sympathetic to Bayesianism and have a lot more life experience). But lots of otherwise rational people supported both wars also. So that change is likely insufficient.
That's a bit confusing. You've got at least 20 IQ points on me, and far more practice at bayescraft; but I saw our disproportionate response and its failure coming by that afternoon. Cringely is hardly the most prescient of pundits; even in his focus of technology. But two days later, he described in detail the coming disaster America would choose. Did we simply get lucky with a temporarily epistemically useful ideology?
Noah Millman wrote:
Link (which includes additional good retrospectives) thanks to Ampersand.
This article may have more political content than is suitable for LW-- if you'd rather discuss it elsewhere, I've linked it at my blog. I've posted about it here because it's an excellent example of updating and of recognizing motivated cognition even if well after the fact.