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How is it similar, other than a big boom with lots of dead people? McVeigh lived here, so law enforcement had to handle it--the military cannot, by law. The suspects still alive after 9-11 were in other countries, so our law enforcement wasn't authorized to do anything. It had to be done by the military and our intelligence agencies. The country in which the main suspects lived was also suspect, so extradition laws weren't likely to help. I'm not agreeing with Bush's reaction--I still oppose the way we attacked Afghanistan and feel that there was not a convincing investigation into who exactly was behind the attacks--but it was a different situation completely.
Clinton, you seem to have forgotten, unleashed a barage of bills giving him much greater authority. Wiretapping, surveillance, loosening of warrant searches, etc. There was a massive law enforcement effort to infiltrate and even pretty much destroy the militia movement in America, whether they were connected to McVeigh or not. I remember this well, partially because of an odd coincidence that involved me in one of the militia crackdowns, and also because there was an outcry from both liberals and extreme righties about Clinton's power grab, and his violations of our rights. There was also a lot of talk and fear about suitcase nukes, dirty bombs, chemical attacks, and all of that. One of the most annoying memory lapses amongst conservatives to me is that the same people who claimed Clinton was overreacting to OKC and the first WTC attack back then are now claiming Clinton didn't do enough to fight terrorism. They were the ones opposing everything he did.
Clinton's reaction wasn't as extreme as Bush's, and obviously Bush slipped a lot of other crap into the Patriot Act and into our military reaction (Iraq, for instance) that wasn't related to 9-11. But the event wasn't as extreme. At worst, after OKC, we were facing a network of militias making bombs out of fertilizer and maybe improvising other weapons (remember the tags they wanted to put in fertilizer after that?). With 9-11, at worst there was fear of foreign nations supporting the terrorists, with the possibility of massive funding, nukes, chemical weapons, etc.
And there's just the issue of scale. If you go out for a hike and get attacked by a dog, you may bring a big stick with you the next time. If you get attacked by a bear, next time you will bring a firearm, hopefully an automatic with the power to stop a bear. The attack on 9-11 showed Americans who had not considered it yet what all was possible.
Anyway, that's the summary. I think you are understating our response to OKC, and I don't think the two reactions were that different, except in scale. But the events were equally disproportionate. I'm not trying to say our response to 9-11 was proportionate--although I think at first most Americans tried to make it so. I'm just saying... well, what I said.
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