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I had been reading political material for years. However, I'd say I didn't really become politically active in terms of going to demonstrations, helping organizers etc. until 9/11.
I live in New York City, and seeing troops walking through the streets, going into train stations and seeing troops with rifles, and guard dogs, reminded me of third world countries I had been in. Not that I had a tea party notion of any immediacy of a problem, but it showed me how things can change. The real things of worry were the Patriot Act (which still exists), the gearing up for war etc. Don't forget, Bush sent the US Air Force to play chicken on the Chinese border in 2001, and killed a Chinese pilot. Five months later I protested at the World Economic Forum, and began getting more active.
I began easing out of activity when the war in Iraq started going bad. From November 2004 to January 2005, 344 coalition troops were killed, mostly Americans. The poll question "All in all, considering the costs to the United States versus the benefits to the United States, do you think the war with Iraq was worth fighting, or not?" went from 70% yes, 27% no in April 2003 to 45% yes, 53% no in April of 2005. I knew that would put the brakes on Alan Dershowitz and friends appearing on television and talking about how the US should torture its prisoners.
Also, I got a little tired of the infighting the groups I was involved with were going through. It taught me that it is probably better to work in a small group that gets along than in a bigger group that doesn't.
I am busy now with work and school. Really I think a lot of people thought like me after 9/11. There were hundreds of thousands of anti-war protesters in New York on February 20, 2003. The war went bad, and now we have Obama, 58-60 Senators and a large majority in the House. Sotomayor just went on the court. I know people have to work at the grassroots level to change things, but I am devoting a lot less time to it, as I have my own things to work on.
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