by Dave McGowan <dave@davesweb.cnchost.com>
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/davemcgowan49newsletter30jan04.shtml
Jan. 30, 2004
www.davesweb.cnchost.com/nwsltr49.html
Well ... it's a new year and the question on everyone's mind
seems to be: will this be the year that another 'terrorist' attack comes
our way, perhaps just in time to disrupt the presidential election? A lot
of people seem to think so. Even William Safire thinks so. Of course, when
people like me began making such redictions a couple of years ago, it was
just the lunatic fringe talking. Safire, on the other hand, is what you
call a responsible, respected journalist. Which is why, I suppose, he can
be so blasé about his prediction, as though such an occurrence would
be just another minor inconvenience that we must all suffer so that we can
continue to enjoy the freedoms that others hate us for.
Tommy Franks thinks that when the attack comes, the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights will fly right out the window, with the consent of
the American people. And he is probably right. The media is already gearing
up to sell the Bush 'response' to the American people, who haven't had much
trouble buying any of the other lies that Team Bush has been selling (http://www.nypost.com/gossip/44885.htm).
Martial law will be, apparently, just another minor bump in the road that
leads us to victory over the 'terrists.'
The nation's capital appears to already be under martial law
(http://www.onlinejournal.com/Special_Reports/123003Madsen/123003madsen.html).
And it is not entirely clear just how much of the Constitution and Bill
of Rights remains in force, in an era that has already brought us secret
arrests without charges; indefinite, incommunicado detentions; secret military
tribunals; wholesale domestic spying and surveillance; 'no-fly' lists; no
expectation of privacy for communications sent via telephone, letter, or
e-mail, a wanton disregard for international law; the increasingly violent
suppression of dissent (http://www.onlinejournal.com/Commentary/112203Conover/112203conover.html
and http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/dec2003/miam-d16.shtml);
electronic election rigging; and heavily militarized domestic police forces.
And in case it has escaped anyone's attention, we also seem to have done
away with that pesky Posse Comitatus thing (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jan2004/2004-j03.shtml),
along with the Central Intelligence Agency's charter, which specifically
bars the agency from domestic operations (that provision has, of course,
always been disregarded, but never before openly).
It is a rather remarkable fact that a regime that allegedly
reveres both the 'founding fathers' and 'the rule of law' has not only openly
and repeatedly violated international law, the UN charter, the Geneva Conventions,
and the Nuremberg principals, but also the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of
Rights, and various other allegedly sacrosanct documents. It is equally
remarkable that politicians of all stripes, as well as media pundits, 'think
tank' analysts, spokesmen for academia and the legal community, and numerous
other shapers of public opinion, all pretend not to notice that there is
a very bad moon on the rise.
And now we hear open talk of potentially doing away with the
pending, and allegedly democratic, presidential election in favor of installing
a military government -- and yet still, of course, maintaining the threadbare
fiction that we all live in the greatest democracy that the world has ever
seen. In any other country in the world, that would be a pretty difficult
trick to pull off. But I have given up trying to guess what the straw is
that will break the American camel's back, if indeed there is one.
A reader recently pointed out that I have waffled on the issue
of whether there will be a pre-election 'terrorist' attack. I initially
mused that there would be such an event, but then I later backed away from
that claim, agreeing with a letter-writer that through media control, smear
campaigns against opponents, and, most importantly, control of paperless
voting machines, Bush could easily be kept in office without resort to what
Safire referred to as an "October
Surprise." But still later, in a recent rant about the California recall
election, I seemed to return to my original prediction.
"So which is it?," my correspondent wanted to know.
At this point, I would have to say that the smart money seems
to be on the pre-election attack becoming a reality. And it's not because
an "October Surprise" is the only way that Bush can 'win.' It's
a fairly safe bet that the final outcome of the election, if it is to be
held, has already been determined. The problem will be with selling that
outcome.
The conventional wisdom holds that Bush is a formidable opponent
-- all but unbeatable. That is what we are constantly told and what we are
all supposed to believe. And he is unbeatable, but not because of his personal
popularity, or because of the popularity of his openly fascist policies.
He is unbeatable because those who control the vote-counting software now
control the outcome of elections. But the illusion of democracy hinges upon
maintaining the fiction that George Bush is a popular president, and therein
lies the problem.
An L.A. Times op/ed piece by Kevin Phillips, from November
2003, mentioned, rather casually, that a virtual state of martial law will
likely have to be declared in New York City so that the Republican Party
can present its presidential nominee to the nation. That, the article noted,
could prove to be an "embarrassment" for Team Bush.
It is always a bit 'embarrassing,' I suppose, when the wildly
popular leader of the freest nation on earth needs to turn a city into a
military garrison in order to make a public appearance. And it is equally
'embarrassing' to have to explain how a president and a political party
that are so despised by such a wide swath of people that they need military
protection to keep their own loyal subjects at bay can nevertheless go on
to sweep the election. And make no mistake about it: if the election does
proceed, there will be another Republican sweep. The stage has already been
set. More than a few 'Democrats' have
already stepped aside. Expect gains all around -- in the House, in the Senate,
in state races.
But can another Republican sweep and a second Bush term be
sold to the American people? Or would King George's inauguration require
another 'embarrassing' resort to martial law? How long can the illusion
of popularity, and the illusion of democracy, be maintained while the suppression
of dissent necessarily becomes increasingly violent?
There will certainly be radically rising levels of dissent
to greet the second Bush term. As the conquest of Iraq grows bloodier and
bloodier, millions of Americans - many of them returning servicemen, and
many of them family members of those who are shipped home in a box - will
demand answers. Millions of senior citizens will awaken to the fact that
- under the guise of Medicare reform, set to go into effect one year after
the re-coronation - they have been thoroughly ripped off. Millions of young
people will suddenly awaken to find that Uncle Sam has big plans for them
(does anyone else feel a draft?).
And then there is the ticking time bomb of the supposedly
recovering 'economy,' characterized by massive levels of consumer debt,
millions of radically overvalued American homes leveraged to the hilt, a
steadily declining job market as more and more jobs are 'outsourced,' increased
attacks upon the wages and benefits for the jobs that remain, and state
and national treasuries deliberately looted so as to justify further massive
cuts in expenditures on trivial things like education and healthcare.
Millions of Americans could well awake one day soon to find
that their piece of the American Dream was largely an illusion. Some may
even come to realize that the forces that drive Team Bush are insatiable.
The beast will not be satisfied with just plundering the rest of the planet;
it wants everything. It wants your Medicare benefits. It wants your Social
Security benefits. It wants your pension and your retirement plan. It wants
your healthcare benefits. It wants your home. It wants your job, if it can
find someone to perform it for less pay (someone like, for instance, a 'guest
worker'). And it wants your children, as cannon fodder for its wars of conquest.
In other words, you ain't seen nothing yet from Team Bush.
And the surprises in store for after the election will be decidedly unpopular
with the vast majority of the American people. In order to deal with that
eventuality, therefore, Washington will need vastly expanded police-state
powers -- and that is precisely why there could very well be another 'terrorist'
attack some time this year. My guess, after factoring in the Bratton/Miller/Schwarzenegger
nexus - along with a few other, even more wildly speculative, factors -
is that the attack most likely will occur in the Los Angeles area, very
possibly at LAX.
And I'm sticking with that ... unless I change my mind again.
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
Speaking of LAX (was that a smooth segue, or what?), it wasn't
a pleasant place to pass through over the holidays, from what I've heard.
What with the 'Orange Alert' and all, the delays were intolerable and the
searches intrusive and humiliating. And it was all, of course, complete
bullshit, as with all of Team Bush's fear-inducing 'terror alerts.' That
was quite obvious from the policies in place at LAX.
One rule, for instance, prohibited curbside drop-offs or pick-ups
-- except for taxis and limousines. That policy was repeated endlessly on
the television news so as to avoid confusion at the airport. What that demonstrated,
of course, was that either: (a) the government, relying on its usual crack
intelligence sources, concluded that 'the terrorists' are incapable of purchasing,
commandeering, or even hiring a taxi or limo; or (b) the response to the
'Terror Alert' had nothing to do with security.
It is not likely that the policies at LAX, and elsewhere,
made holiday travel any safer, but they certainly greatly inconvenienced
millions of travelers. And why? As near as I can tell, to generate support
for the government's Orwellian plan to pre-screen all travelers and assign
each of them a color-coded security risk assessment. Most of us will, I'm
sure, at least initially, receive the coveted Green ranking, after which
we can look forward to traveling with the ease with which we did prior to
'the day that everything changed.' With the new plan in place, it will only
be 'terrorists' and 'criminals' who will be inconvenienced, you see. And
we can certainly trust the Washington gang to establish reasonable criteria
for determining who is a 'terrorist' and who is not ... can't we?
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
Speaking of travel (another brilliant segue; I'm on a roll),
the Travel section of the January 25 Sunday L.A. Times brought word of an
exciting new destination that few have yet discovered. It "remains
isolated and serene, brimming with lush greenery, clean beaches and underwater
surprises." It may be, in fact, "the Caribbean's last great tourist
frontier: a low-key oasis of calm azure waters, lush green hills, wild horses
that graze by single-lane roads and vast coral sea beds inhabited by iridescent
fish."
And how has this paradise remained largely undiscovered until
now? Well ... primarily because the United States has spent the last 62
years bombing the shit out of it. And that is the kind of thing that can
really put a damper on the tourist industry. But it's a good thing, as it
turns out, that we spent 62 years bombing the shit out of a place of extraordinary
natural beauty. By doing so, and keeping people away, "paradoxically,
the Navy preserved the beauty of [the island] for posterity."
Talk about putting a positive spin on things ...
So what exactly is this hidden treasure? It is a 21-mile-long
island off the coast of Puerto Rico known as Vieques. And like the Times
said, Vieques is "brimming with ... surprises." One of the biggest
surprises, however, may come months or years after your visit to Vieques,
when the Depleted Uranium poisoning begins to take its toll and you discover
that the fish aren't the only things around Vieques that are iridescent.
Yes, it's true, people: no longer do you have to enlist for
military service and be shipped off to faraway places like Iraq or Afghanistan
to experience the blowback effects of the wholesale use of radioactive weaponry.
Now you can get the very same experience in a lush, tropical setting. Book
now, why demand is still low!
[Reed Johnson "Forays on Vieques," Los Angeles Times,
January 25, 2004]
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
As we stand on the threshold of an exciting new year, it is,
by tradition, a time for list-making. And so I thought that I would put
together a list that will, with any luck at all, provoke as many people
as possible. Here then, for your consideration, is a list of myths that
seem to have taken root in the 'progressive' community -- myths that, from
where I sit, need to be put to rest. That, of course, is just my opinion.
Myth #1: A "neocon" cabal has hijacked
the Bush administration's foreign policy, setting America on a new and dangerous
course.
I should first mention here that, although it may have escaped
many readers' attention, the word "neocon" has never before appeared
in one of these newsletters. That is because I like to, as much as possible,
focus on things that actually exist. And that is also because I haven't
felt the need to find some elaborate way of explaining the alleged change
in U.S. foreign policy, primarily because I haven't been able to detect
a noticeable change in U.S. foreign policy. The change that others perceive
is based on several more myths, beginning with:
Myth #2: Team Bush set a dangerous new precedent
by introducing the notion of 'preemptive' wars.
And that is, I guess, in stark contrast to our past military
ventures, which have been, I suppose, purely defensive actions (self-defense
being the only legally defensible reason for undertaking military actions
against another sovereign state) -- like when we defended ourselves against
Serbia. And Bosnia. And Somalia. And Panama. And Granada. And Vietnam. And
Laos. And Cambodia. And all the other countries that apparently attacked
us first, or at least seriously threatened to, although I can't, off the
top of my head, recall the specific attacks that we were responding to in
any of those cases.
To be sure, under Team Bush we were fed lies to garner our
support for two (yes, two) unprovoked, illegal, unjustified wars. But what
exactly is new about that?
Myth #3: Team Bush's disdain for international
treaties and agreements is unprecedented.
Not by any objective standard, although it may seem that way
to those who until very recently viewed America as some great and benevolent
force in the world. Wake up and smell the coffee, folks: the U.S. did not
suddenly abandon its previous role as international do-gooder and become
an international menace overnight. The record is very clear: America has
been, for a very long time, the single greatest impediment to the establishment
of international human rights standards, international arms control agreements,
and an International Criminal Court. Consider the following excerpts from
Amnesty International's landmark 1998 report, "United States of America
- Rights for All":
* "There are only two countries in the world that
have not ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child. One is the
collapsed state of Somalia which has no recognized government - the other
is the USA."
* "(T)he USA is also one of only a handful of countries that have
not ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women."
* "The first UN human rights treaty ratified by the USA was the Convention
on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. It ratified
the Convention in 1988, 40 years after signing it and after 97 other states
had already ratified it."
* "The USA took 28 years to ratify the International Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, after 133 other
states had already ratified it."
* "At least 71 other states ratified the Convention against Torture
before the USA."
* "It was only in 1992, after 109 other states, that the USA ratified
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), 26 years
after its adoption by the UN General Assembly."
* "The ICCPR is one of two principal treaties protecting human rights
as enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The other -
the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights - has
still not been ratified by the USA."
* "(T)he USA has refused to recognize any regional human rights treaties:
it has not ratified the American Convention on Human Rights, adopted by
the OAS (Organization of American States) in 1969, and has not even signed
the Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture, the Inter-American
Convention on Forced Disappearance of Persons and the Inter-American Convention
to Prevent, Punish and Eradicate Violence against Women."
And that is but the tip of the proverbial iceberg. George
Bush's 'liberal' predecessor did nothing to rectify any of those, uhmm,
'oversights.' He also presided over the rejection of a major international
arms agreement and openly flaunted an international ban on the use of landmines
by introducing a new $50,000,000 landmine program not long before said ban
was to go into effect.
Myth #4: The "neocons" have taken
a new, hardline stance in support of Israeli aggression. By some accounts,
Israel now dictates U.S. foreign policy, through Jewish "neocons"
like Wolfowitz and Perle.
The truth is that the United States has always taken a hardline,
pro-Israel stance, and has always looked the other way while Israel commits
egregious human rights violations in the occupied territories. In fact,
the U.S. has made a habit of being the only nation to consistently side
with Israel and defend its actions in the face of worldwide opposition.
In 1981 alone, many years before the 'neocons' took the reins, the U.S.
was Israel's sole defender during UN voting on 11 different resolutions.
As many as 141 countries voted against the U.S./Israeli positions.
And so, once again, we see that what has been portrayed as
a radical change in course is, in truth, the perpetuation of an historical
pattern. America has always armed, protected and quietly supported Israel
-- which is essentially an enormous, nuclear-armed, Western military outpost
in the Middle East. Israel, to put it bluntly, is a tool of the West, not
the other way around.
"But wait," you say, "isn't America fighting
Israel's war in the Middle East?" No. America is fighting for the same
thing America always fights for: the advancement of American corporate interests.
Those interests happen to be shared by the corporate/political elite of
Israel.
Myth #5: The policies of Team Bush have antagonized
and alienated many of our closest allies, straining relationships with many
previously
friendly nations.
It would be far more accurate to say that the brazen criminality
of the Bush team, as opposed to the more covert criminality of preceding
administrations, has forced other world leaders to occasionally distance
themselves from the U.S., lest they incur the wrath of the people. But said
leaders will always be quick to kiss and make-up if provided with the slightest
hint of political cover (such as the capture of Saddam Hussein).
As I have said before, I do not believe that the heads-of-state
of other 'Western' nations have many significant differences with their
American counterparts with regards to motive or agenda. The difference is
one of strategy, due to the fact that a population with knowledge of history
and a reasonably accurate view of current events forces a certain amount
of restraint upon the actions of national leaders. U.S. leaders, on the
other hand, can operate virtually without restraint.
In other words, while Bush has certainly done a fine job of
provoking legitimate outrage among the world's people, he has only provoked
staged outrage among the leaders of the 'Western world.' Indeed, behind
the scenes there could well be much admiration for an administration so
transparent in its motives, and so brazen in its lies, and yet so successful
at maintaining legitimacy.
Myth #6: The European Union is going to rise
up as some kind of counter-force to the U.S. military machine.
Sorry, but I just don't see that happening. The EU is fully
complicit in the drive for global fascism, and all of Europe will ultimately
adopt the police-state blueprint being drafted in America, albeit on a somewhat
different timetable. There will be no meaningful foreign opposition, and
there will be no place to run and hide.
Myth #7: The current war in Iraq was drafted
in 1998 by the "neocon" cabal operating as the "Project for
a New American Century."
By 1998, the war against Iraq had already been underway for
many years, following a script that was obviously written before the first
George Bush began military operations by pummeling Iraq from the air. That
was, for the memory impaired, followed by years of crippling sanctions and
the enforcement of illegal 'no-fly zones' that were created specifically
to provide a pretext for intermittent bombings that continued for well over
a decade.
None of that was intended to 'contain' Saddam Hussein, or
to force his compliance with cynical UN resolutions; the goal was always
to weaken the nation's defenses and demoralize the civilian population as
preparation for a military occupation that was in the cards long before
"Little George and the Neocons" came to town.
Myth #8: The real reason for the war in Iraq
is concern over "Peak Oil."
The notion of "Peak Oil" seems to have been carefully
seeded throughout the 'progressive' community, most prominently by Michael
Ruppert, but by many others as well. Personally, I ain't buying it. It positively
reeks of bullshit. What the "Peak Oil" promoters are essentially
saying is: "I am outraged by the fact that Team Bush has waged a war
of aggression motivated solely by the pursuit of oil ... but (wink, wink,
nudge, nudge) it's a damn good thing that they did, because the world is
quickly running out of oil and if we don't grab it now, we're going to be
in big trouble, and soon."
Now don't get me wrong -- I really want the "Peak Oil"
thing to be true. I can't really think of a better scenario, at this point,
than the world running out of oil. The entire global fascist system (or
GFS for short, which is kind of like the NWO, only different, since the
NWO is usually pitched as some sort of global communist/socialist system),
you see, runs on oil. The military machine can't operate without it. The
global corporate infrastructure can't run without it. It is the life-blood
of global capitalism. So there would be a certain poetic justice if those
who had toiled so long to achieve their dream of world domination were to
suddenly find themselves - on the eve of declaring game, set and match -
unable to operate the empire they had created. We would then be forced,
alas, to start over -- to rebuild and restructure.
It would be nice if that were true. It would save the American
people, and the world's people, a lot of work. But I don't see it happening.
And, yes, I am aware that 'experts,' with far more knowledge in the field
than I, have warned of "Peak Oil." But I am also aware that if
the right people consult with the right 'experts,' those 'experts' will
say pretty much anything they are asked to say.
Myth #9: The (fill in the blank) scandal
is going to bring down the House of Bush, or key members within it.
Some writers seem to have an obsession with predicting the
imminent demise of Team Bush (I'm thinking here again, for some reason,
of Michael Ruppert), as one scandal or another supposedly threatens to overtake
the, uhmm, "neocons" -- as though the dissemination of deliberately
leaked 'limited hangouts,' and other damage control measures, somehow indicates
that the media has suddenly decided to do its job.
The Plame scandal was, according to many, the one that was
going to bring Team Bush down. It gave a lot of lefties a chance to express
outrage over the outing of a CIA asset, and to absurdly claim that such
an outing threatens our national security, when all that is really threatened
is both the success of various covert operations aimed at expanding the
Western empire, and the well-being of the assets involved in those operations.
Personally, I would like to see Team Bush expand on this new
policy. In fact, I think the names of all CIA assets around the world should
be published. Let the chips fall where they may. I'm guessing that more
than a few outed assets would be shipped home in roughly the same condition
as Charles Dean. I'm not suggesting here, mind you, that Charles was, you
know, a CIA asset or anything like that, even though his ultra-conservative
family has long been deeply connected. Charles just happened to be backpacking
around Laos at the time that a genocidal war was being covertly waged there.
I'm sure that a lot of pleasure-seekers were backpacking around Laos at
the time. And I'm also sure that little brother Howard, being the 'liberal,'
'anti-war' candidate that he is, never had any affiliation with the CIA.
No, he has turned his back on his family's money and politics -- not unlike,
I suppose, that Osama bin Laden guy. But here I digress ...
Myth #10: Team Bush's militarism and domestic
repression is driven by a 'crisis' of global capitalism.
This school of thought holds that Team Bush's resort to more
overtly fascist rule is a desperate attempt to keep a failed system propped
up. In essence, this is yet another attempt to explain what is portrayed
as a significant break in the continuum of U.S. foreign and domestic policy.
But here again I must ask: what has really changed?
With a 'liberal,' pre-9/11 administration in place, we launched
unprovoked cruise missile strikes on two sovereign nations (Sudan and Afghanistan).
We intermittently bombed, throughout the entire 8-year administration, the
nation of Iraq, while simultaneously 'sanctioning' hundreds of thousands
of Iraqi civilians to early graves. We launched an unprovoked war of aggression
against Serbia, justified with stories of genocide and ethnic cleansing
that turned out to be - surprise! - lies. We openly flaunted international
law and then charged our victims with war crimes, even while openly celebrating
our own war crimes. We meddled covertly in the affairs of countless nations.
We enthusiastically embraced 'globalization,' 'free markets' and 'free trade.'
We cheered
welfare 'reform,' just as many of us now cheer Medicare 'reform.' We doubled
the nation's prison population. We expanded the use of the death penalty
and expanded the reach of the FBI and the CIA. We experienced 'terrorist'
attacks at both the World Trade Center and the Oklahoma City federal building,
and those attacks were followed by legislation that vastly expanded the
repressive powers of the state, setting the stage for the even more repressive
Patriot Act.
So what has changed? Very little, except that the volume has
been turned up. And it will continue to be turned up. Because the bitch
of it is, you see, that within a few years, the way things are today won't
seem all that bad. But for the 'powers that be,' that hardly represents
a crisis. To the contrary, it represents progress.
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
So much more to rant about, and so many potential readers
with short attention spans ... no choice then, I suppose, but to break this
rant up into smaller pieces. The next installment is nearing completion
andshould be posted soon. Until then ...
Dave McGowan
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