tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-76135635347228832132024-02-20T20:47:27.599-05:00Wake Up CallThis web site is brought to you by the Smedley Butler and Samantha Smith chapters of the VFP in eastern Massachusetts.
Veterans will be sharing their thoughts on war, peace, and pretty much everything in between.unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.comBlogger163125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-24121508104933245382012-01-27T16:48:00.000-05:002012-01-27T16:48:18.859-05:00Intrusive Thought: From My Lai to Torture, Part IV<a href="http://intrusivethought.blogspot.com/2009/05/from-my-lai-to-torture-part-iv.html">Intrusive Thought: From My Lai to Torture, Part IV</a>Ghost_of_Smedleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03610420930798410825noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-67695323175636788432008-03-10T11:32:00.001-04:002008-03-10T11:34:41.431-04:00Why Bush NEEDS a Third Term ...By NanceGreggs<br /><br />(… or why McCain needs <i>one</i> – same dif.)<br /><br />I hope you have all seriously considered the things that Mr. Mission Accomplished has yet to do, and the dire consequences if he is forced to leave office in January 2009 <i>before</i> being allowed to complete his tasks.<br /><br />Here are my Top Twenty Reasons why Bush should be allowed another term to finish what he’s started:<br /><br />20. We are literally <i>minutes</i> away from complete victory in Iraq. I know we’ve been hearing this for five years, but this time <i>it’s really true!!!</i><br /><br />19. Sure we have millions of Americans who are homeless, bankrupt, uninsured – but do we have <i>enough</i>?<br /><br />18. Bush has brought the economy to the edge of the cliff – shouldn’t he be allowed to kick it <i>completely over the side</i> before he leaves office?<br /><br />17. The end of the Bush “presidency” will lead to massive job losses in the Burnable-Bush-Effigy industry, the “Impeach Now” sign-making business, and the “Off to the Hague” T-Shirt Manufacturers Union.<br /><br />16. While most Bush inner-circle cronies have made their millions, <i>some</i> have not yet been awarded government <i>consultancy</i> contracts – can’t we wait until <i>they</i> get their fair share?<br /><br />15. A new president might not award no-bid contracts to companies like Halliburton. Just <i>what</i> is Dick Cheney supposed to live on should that happen? Is it really fitting that a former VP end his days subsisting on Caviar-Helper?<br /><br />14. The cost of education will skyrocket due to US kids having to learn <i>English</i> as opposed to what’s been passed-off as English for the last seven years.<br /><br />13. Comedians and monologue writers will no longer have easy access to <i>jokes that virtually write themselves</i> every time Bush opens his mouth.<br /><br />12. There are still Iraqis who are <i>alive</i> – and they’re screwing up our ability to steal their oil.<br /><br />11. US cities could be over-run by homeless billionaires if the tax-cuts aren’t made permanent.<br /><br />10. Photographers could suffer serious injury if the carefully-staged photo-op, attended by hand-picked crowds, becomes a thing of the past.<br /><br />9. Having to revert to the Constitution and the rule of law could adversely affect the livelihood of history revisionists.<br /><br />8. Seeing a presidential approval rating that surpasses 20% might be too jarring a change for many citizens.<br /><br />7. DC paper-shredders could find themselves on the unemployment line, along with IT workers with expertise in erasing WH emails, videotapes of interrogations, etc.<br /><br />6. The great sport of <i>waterboarding</i> could lose its audience share.<br /><br />5. Yes, we’ve pissed-off millions of people world-wide – shouldn’t we stay the course until <i>every last person</i> is pissed-off?<br /><br />4. A new administration could decide that our vets actually <i>deserve</i> the very best of treatment upon their return – just <i>where</i> is that money supposed to come from?<br /><br />3. All right, big deal, so we lost <i>one</i> US city due to failure to mitigate the damage caused by a natural disaster – don’t we have <i>plenty</i> of cities? Shouldn’t we be in a position to get rid of a few more before it’s too late?<br /><br />2. Isn’t insisting on an AG who remembers stuff an affront to the memory-impaired everywhere?<br /><br />And the Number One Reason for giving Bush a third term:<br /><br />1. Sure, we as a nation are fucked – but shouldn’t we forge ahead until we are <i>Unequivocally the NUMBER ONE most fucked-up nation EVER in the history of mankind?</i><br /><br />Why should the Greatest Nation on Earth settle for being second best?<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/NanceGreggs/356unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-8093179286356702622008-03-01T08:04:00.001-05:002008-03-01T08:11:07.580-05:00Troops Die While Bureaucrats Blunder: The Fight Against Red Tape<span style="font-size:100%;">Paul Rieckhoff @ 11:24 am<br /></span><span style="font-size:100%;">February 28, 2008<br /><br /></span><div class="storycontent"> <p>Time and time again, we’ve seen troops and veterans suffering at the hands of an inept government bureaucracy. Wounded troops have been forced to repay their enlistment bonuses. Amputees fell through the cracks at Walter Reed. And <a href="http://www.iava.org/component/option,com_/Itemid,66/option,content/task,view/id,2421/">400,000 veterans are still waiting months (and even years) for their disability benefits. </a> </p> <p>Well, here we go again:</p> <blockquote><p>Christopher M. Simmance helped keep the peace as an American Soldier in the Middle East, but when he returned home and later suffered a breakdown, he was turned away from the VA hospital because the government didn’t acknowledge his overseas duty. </p></blockquote> <p>The whole story is <a href="http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,162682,00.html">here</a>. Overall, at least 2,000 veterans across the country are struggling to correct mistakes on their military records - mistakes that have cost some of them their jobs and their health care coverage. The wait to correct these errors can stretch for as long as three years. In the meantime, the veteran is not eligible for any of the services or benefits to which they are entitled.</p> <p>But the battles against the bureaucracy are not only fought by the wounded.</p> <blockquote><p>Army Sgt. Kendell Frederick, who had tried three times to file for citizenship, was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq as he returned from submitting fingerprints for his application.</p></blockquote> <p>There are roughly <a href="http://www.military.com/NewsContent/0,13319,162833,00.html">7,200 service members or veterans waiting on their citizenship applications</a>, despite a 2002 pledge from the Bush administration to fast track paperwork for immigrant members of the U.S. military. They have to wait months, and sometimes years, for their applications to navigate lengthy background checks, misplaced paperwork, confusion about deployments, and a plethora of other bureaucratic obstacles.</p> <p>Troops in Iraq getting shot at right now are also bearing the burden of bureaucracy. Our slow acquisitions process and the inadequate oversight of military procurement can have dire consequences for troops in theatre:</p> <blockquote><p>Casualties could have been reduced by half among Marines in Iraq if specially armored vehicles had been deployed more quickly in some cases.</p></blockquote> <p>That’s according to a <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/02/26/iraq.main/index.html">new blockbuster report to the Pentagon</a>. </p> <p>This is just unacceptable. For every bureaucratic snafu and oversight failure, there are thousands of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans paying the price-with their lives and limbs. That’s why <a href="http://www.iava.org/component/option,com_/Itemid,292/option,content/task,view/id,2665/">Government Accountability</a> is so important, and why we have included it as one of the five key areas of IAVA’s <a href="http://www.iava.org/2008-legislative-agenda">2008 Legislative Agenda</a>. </p> <p>But accountability isn’t very popular in Washington right now. The fate of one of our successes from last year’s Legislative Agenda has just been thrown into jeopardy. The 2008 National Defense Authorization Act established a new Wartime Contracting Commission to investigate fraud and waste by defense contractors. But in his signing statement, President Bush has <a href="http://webb.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=291449&">objected to this new “Truman Commission”</a> on the grounds that it might tie his hands as Commander-in-Chief. </p> <p>Senator Webb, a decorated Vietnam veteran whose son served in Iraq, championed the new commission, and <a href="http://webb.senate.gov/newsroom/record.cfm?id=291449">has sworn the commission will go forward</a>. He rammed it home on the Senate floor stating:</p> <blockquote><p>“If the Administration would like to explain to us what their constitutional issue is with a piece of legislation that the President has just signed, we would be happy to hear that. In the meantime, we are moving forward with this Commission. It is vitally important to accountability in the government, and I’m very proud to have introduced it. We are marching forward.”</p></blockquote> <p>Troops and veterans will be marching alongside Senator Webb on this. And we need the American people to do the same.</p><br /><p>Posted in full with author's permisssion.</p><p>Originally posted at iava.org: http://www.iava.org/blog/2008/02/28/troops-die-while-bureaucrats-blunder-the-fight-against-red-tape<br /></p><p></p><br /></div><br /><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-18716784246354873002008-02-28T01:44:00.000-05:002008-02-28T01:46:08.815-05:00Winter Soldier fundraiser in Somerville 3/7/2008<center>Veterans for Peace, Smedley Butler Brigade<br /><br />in partnership with<br /><br />O2 Yoga<br /><br />Present<br /><br />Winter Soldier II Fundraiser</center><br /><br /> <b>Where:</b> O2 Yoga<br /> 288 Highland Ave<br /> Somerville, MA<br /><br /> <b>When:</b> Friday, March 7, 2008<br /><br /> <b>Time:</b> 8:15 - 9:30PM<br /><br />Please come and help O2 Yoga and Veterans for Peace support the Winter Soldier II hearings March 13th to 16th in Washington D.C. Veterans and civilian survivors of both conflicts will give public testimony and eye witness accounts of what is really happening on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan.<br /><br />This is a fundraiser, please bring your checkbooks.<br /><br /><br />Speakers - Iraq Veterans: Liam Madden and Carlos Harris<br /><br /> Gold Star Family: Carlos and Melida Arrendondo<br /><br />A short film, Winter Soldier II will be shown.<br /><br /><br />Namaste<br /><br />Mimi Loureiro, Owner O2 Yogaunhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-41283166528367392462008-02-28T01:43:00.000-05:002008-02-28T01:44:23.195-05:00Winter Soldier fundraiser in Essex 3/2/2008<center>F U N D R A I S E R<br /><br />FOR<br /><br />W I N T E R S O L D I E R H E A R I N G S</center><br /><br /><br /><br />Sunday, March 2nd, 3pm<br /><br />First Universalist Church<br /><br />57 Main Street, Essex, MA<br /><br /><br /><br />Keynote Speaker: Andrew Bacevich, Boston University<br /><br />Professor of History and International Studies<br /><br /><br /><br />Featured Speaker: Iraq Marine Veteran Liam Madden<br /><br /><br /><br />Music by Pat Scanlon • Short DVD by IVAW • Light refreshments<br /><br /><br /><br />*****<br /><br /><br /><br />Help us support the Winter Soldier hearings<br /><br />March 13th to 16th in Washington DC<br /><br />where recent US combat vets will testify on<br /><br />what is really happening in Afghanistan and Iraq<br /><br /><br /><br />Sponsored by the Samantha Smith Chapter Veterans for Peace<br /><br />and the North Shore Coalition for Peace and Justice<br /><br />Contact: Paul Brailsford: (978) 356 7671<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />The plan for what comes after Iraq<br /><br />By Andrew J. Bacevich<br /><br />February 24, 2008<br /><br />THE ISSUE that ought to occupy center stage in the 2008 presidential campaign is not US policy toward Iraq but US policy after Iraq. "After" in this context does not mean that Iraq is now receding in America's rearview mirror; the conflict there will continue for years to come. "After" means that, like it or not, dealing with the war's consequences will rank near the top of the next president's agenda.<br /><br />more stories like this<br /><br />One such consequence is this: the United States finds itself without a set of viable and morally coherent principles to guide decisions regarding the use of force.<br /><br />The United States once adhered to principles that were both sound and eminently straightforward. As recently as the 1970s and 1980s, the so-called Vietnam syndrome exercised a restraining influence. Americans saw military power as something to be husbanded. The preference was to use force as a last resort, employed to defend vital interests. Overt aggression qualified as categorically wrong.<br /><br />After the Cold War, enthusiasm for precision weapons and a brief infatuation with "humanitarian interventionism" eroded those principles. During the 1990s, the use of force, usually on a small scale, became increasingly commonplace. The lessons of Vietnam lost their salience. Then came the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, which prompted the Bush administration to jettison those lessons in their entirety.<br /><br />In their place, the administration substituted a breathtakingly ambitious new framework. Through the use of preventive war (the Bush doctrine) the United States set out to transform the greater Middle East (the freedom agenda), thereby liberating the people of the Islamic world and preventing further terrorist attacks. Rather than a last resort, force became a preferred instrument. Given the right motives, aggressive war became justifiable and even necessary.<br /><br />Two key assumptions underlay this approach. The first was that US troops were unstoppable: once committed into action, US forces could be counted on to deliver a quick, decisive, and economical victory. The second assumption was that the greater Middle East was ripe for change, with liberal values providing the antidote to the pathologies afflicting the region.<br /><br />Events have now demolished these assumptions. Except when fighting on its own terms, the United States military has proven itself unable to deliver quick, decisive, and economical victories. Within 18 months of the terrorist attacks, President Bush initiated two major wars. Years later, despite the expenditure of hundreds of billions of dollars and the loss of thousands of lives, those wars continue, with no end in sight. The president will bequeath both of them to his successor. Bluntly, the Bush doctrine hasn't worked as advertised.<br /><br />Similar problems beset the freedom agenda. Efforts to democratize Iraq and Afghanistan have produced not effective and legitimate governments, but quasi-permanent dependencies. In the West Bank and Gaza, American insistence on free and fair elections delivered power to Hamas. In Lebanon, elections enhanced the standing of Hezbollah. Rather than alleviating pathologies, democracy has accentuated them.<br /><br />Although the White House may pretend otherwise, the Bush doctrine and the freedom agenda have failed their trials. That failure is definitive. Only the truly demented will imagine that simply trying harder will produce different results - that preventive war against Iran, for example, will hurry that nation down the path toward Western-oriented liberal democracy. The collapse of the Bush doctrine and the freedom agenda leaves a dangerous void.<br /><br />In the place of defective principles regarding the proper role of force, we now have no principles at all. Nothing in the presidential campaign thus far suggests that any of the candidates is aware of this problem. Regardless of the election's outcome, however, it will be incumbent upon the next president to replace the Bush doctrine and its corollary.<br /><br />This will be no easy task. Yet the place to begin is with a candid recognition of just how far Americans have strayed from the path of wisdom and prudence since persuading themselves that the lessons of Vietnam no longer applied.<br /><br />A first step might be to enshrine a new Iraq syndrome to serve the same purposes today that the Vietnam syndrome did after that failed war, reminding us that power has limits, curbing the reckless impulses of our politicians, warning against those who promise peace while sending young Americans to fight in distant lands.<br /><br />The Iraq syndrome ought to begin with this dictum: never again. This time we need to mean it.<br /><br /><br /><i>Andrew J. Bacevich is professor of history and international relations at Boston University. His new book "The Limits of Power" will appear later this year.</i>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-70730552881287712322008-02-27T08:33:00.000-05:002008-02-27T08:34:54.431-05:00Let's talk a bit about moneyDid you know the 2009 military budget is $735,700,000,000? No shit. <p>Hmmmm. I wonder why that is so. . . </p><p>F-22 Raptors cost $355,000,000 a pop. </p><p>F-35 Lightnings cost $239,000,000 a pop. </p><p>C-17 Globemasters cost $202,000,000 in 1998 dollars. </p><p>Littoral Combat ships cost over $600,000,000 each. </p><p>The new national security cutter costs $536,000,000. </p><p>MRAPs cost at least $1,000,000 a pop. </p><p>BTW, the F-22s had to go into the shop for corrosion repairs, the F-35 still has not flown above 40,000 feet, the C-17 assembly line is getting shut down in 2009, the Littoral Combat ships have increased in cost by 300%, the Deepwater program is on the ropes, and the US Military uses 340,000 barrels of oil a day. </p><p>You're probably scratching your head asking "Huh? Where did he get those numbers?" I post daily at democraticunderground in the Veterans forum. </p>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-54225243771534917982008-02-17T06:33:00.000-05:002008-02-17T06:34:25.283-05:00$705,700,000,000Ya gotta give the DoD credit for balls. They ask for more than $700 billion in their 2009 budget, and then four days later ask for another $30,000,000,000. <a href="http://tinyurl.com/ynwj5b">http://tinyurl.com/ynwj5b</a> <p>The toys are starting to get expensive: F-22s at $355,000,000 a pop, F-35s at $239,000,000 a pop, Virginia class submarines at $2,500,000,000 a pop, DDG destroyers at $3,300,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 a pop. The list goes on and on and on. </p><p>Deepwater program failures trashed the Coast Guard hopes for a replacement fleet. Admiral Allen's been on a propaganda tour trying to get more $$$. </p><p>The F-35 still cannot fly above 40,000 feet. </p><p>B-2s need $71,700,000 worth of display upgrades. </p><p>The Navy's LCS program is out of control. Instead of costing $220,000,000 a ship, the estimated cost is now $600,000,000 a ship. The Navy canceled two of the four ships ordered. </p><p>So back to the budget. The additional $30,000,000,000 makes the 2009 defense budget $735,700,000,000. <b>That's almost 3/4 of a trillion dollars.</b>. </p><p>How much longer can we afford to do this? <br /></p>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-59629441905823654782008-02-15T10:38:00.001-05:002008-02-15T10:38:51.512-05:00Winter Soldier: Iraq and AfghanistanHere's an 18 minute clip of Winter Soldier from the IVAW site. Watch it.<br /><br /><a href="http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/video" target="_blank">http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/video</a>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-1645306660269577552008-02-09T11:36:00.000-05:002008-02-09T11:38:37.228-05:00Gathering of Awesome!http://www.ivaw.org/node/2470<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.ivaw.org/files/Untitled-1.jpg"><img style="cursor: pointer; width: 320px;" src="http://www.ivaw.org/files/Untitled-1.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><span class="submitted">by <a href="http://www.ivaw.org/user/682" title="View user profile.">Jonathan de Wald</a> | Mon, 02/04/2008 - 6:01am</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><p>Have you heard of these guys? Man, they blow my mind! I've never seen so much patriotism confined to one website: http://gatheringofeagles.org/. How do they contain all that kick-ass patriotism with such a small amount of bandwidth? I thought I was a patriot: driving my Ford F350 all drunk, wailing on my wife, getting tattoos of bald eagles and Confederate battle flags, and then these guys come along and BOOM! I get to see, first-hand, what a real bad-ass American hero looks like. I thought I was supposed to go to the gym and get all muscular. Or learn how to fight. Nope! To judge from the physiques and <i>prêt-à-porter</i> attire of the Eagles, all I need is regular access to a buffet and some straight-leg Wranglers to attain that patriotic <i>chic</i>.</p> <p>So now I'm on a pretty strict regimen of steak, Miller High Life and seasonal sales at Farm and Fleet. I'd say that makes me the most patriotic red, white and blue bad-ass on my block. There's some dude next door with a sign that insists "MARRIAGE = MAN + WOMAN" in his front yard, but I've never seen him scream at 110-pound Code Pink gal until he was at the threshold of breaking an assault law, so I'm pretty sure he's a homo. Probably his mom's a Democrat. Might as well be Viet Cong!</p> <p>Well, my fellow patriots, I'm glad you let me get all Francis Scott Key on your asses. It's just, when it gets all patriotic up in here with some Lee Greenwood pumping in the background, everybody's saluting, totally waving the Stars and Stripes all up in your face and I can feel the eagles soaring, I'm glad to know where they gather: in internet forums where liberal concepts like "grammar" and "veracity" have no place.</p><br /><p><br /></p><br /><p><br /></p><p>http://www.ivaw.org/node/2470<br /></p>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-46210144900205978112008-02-09T10:02:00.000-05:002008-02-09T10:04:42.031-05:00Friday's Flick: Bush NoirBy NanceGreggs<br /><br /><br />The minute he walked into the Oval Office, I knew he was trouble. I’d seen the type before. All the cowboy swagger in the world couldn’t hide that east coast preppie smirk – just another wisenheimer whose only passing acquaintance with “work” was having to haul his heinie down to the bank once a week to cash his allowance check.<br /><br />Well, I can’t say I wasn’t curious about the kid. And a couple of rounds for the press boys at the local ginmill loosened a lot of tongues – just like four fingers of the good stuff always does.<br /><br />The story was pretty much what I’d expected. Turns out the only way the mutt ever held down a job was when his daddy’s pals sunk a pile of simoleons into some fly-by-night <i>business</i> that couldn’t find oil in Texas – no joke.<br /><br />The more I found out, the more obvious it was that the kid’s whole family, for all their high-falutin’ ways, had more skeletons in their closet than a grave-robber with amnesia. Yeah, there was plenty of dirt there – the kind that gets swept under the rug when you have enough doe-ray-me to buy yourself a top-of-the-line Bissell.<br /><br />Anyways, the way I heard it, it didn’t take too long before this Bush kid starts hitting the bottle on a regular basis, along with finding a new use for that silver spoon that was danglin’ from his gums the day he was born. But eventually the kid starts smelling the draft, so Daddy Big Bucks calls in a couple of IOUs, and faster than you can down a sarsaparilla and pop some Sen-Sen, Junior’s got himself a cushy fly-boy job states-side while his buddies are bein’ shipped off to ‘Nam.<br /><br />But here’s where the story gets interestin’. Turns out that years later, this Bush kid winds up as a duly-elected president – the <i>duly-elected</i> part being somewhat suspect, if you’re a stickler for the fine print – and he comes waltzin’ into the White House like he owns the joint.<br /><br />The minute I set eyes on the gang he was gallivantin’ with, I knew the whole bunch was up to no good. <br /><br />His sidekick, Big Dick Cheney, was the kinda guy who would shoot his best friend in the face, then send some doll-face out to talk to the coppers while he finished off the pitcher of highballs.<br /><br />Then there was that stuck-up dame, Condi – a real sourpuss if ever I saw one, always actin’ like those pricey pumps at the end of her gams made her better than the rest of us workin’ stiffs.<br /><br />And Rumsfeld – yeah, I’d grown up with kids like him back on the east side. Always trying to act the tough guy – ya know, kinda like the kids who beat him up for his pocket money every day of the week and twice on Sunday, just ‘cause they could spot a sissie a mile away. Turns out the guy’s into torture – as long as it’s some other poor schmuck on the hurtin’ end of the rubber hose. Thing is, you just know that every time this Rummy kid got told to strip down to his skivvies in gym class, you could hear him bawlin’ for his mama clean over to the next school district.<br /><br />But the dead giveaway was the bunch of snot-noses the Bush kid thought were his pals – a collection of know-nuthin’ crumb-bums with names like Billy “The Kid” Kristol, Paulie “The Comb” Wolfowitz, Dickie “The Dickless” Perle.<br /><br />You know the type – the kinda guys that talk big about how the <i>other guy</i> should do his bit for Uncle Sam, while the only action <i>they</i> ever seen was wavin’ goodbye to the dumb grunts down at the pier before headin’ over to some swank <i> “eatery”</i> to discuss the horrors of war over a plate of two-inch-thicks and a bottle of brandy.<br /><br />So the Bush kid starts runnin’ the country, and before you know it, there are two buildings downtown that wind up being a hole in the ground while he’s parked in a classroom reading a kids’ picture book, lookin’ for all the world like when the Good Lord was handin’ out brains, he thought He said <i> “trains”</i>, and he missed his.<br /><br />Before too long, he’s got us involved in some cockamamie war he can’t win, and whadda-you-know-joe, the hoodlums that just <i>happen</i> to be his best pals are rakin’ in the moolah like it’s goin’ outta style.<br /><br />In the meanwhile, our fightin’ boys are tryin’ to dodge the bullets while drinking water that ain’t fit to spit in, courtesy of the same Big Dick’s <i>former</i> company that just happened to get moved to the front of the line when the taxpayers’ greenbacks got handed out by the fistful and nobody was botherin’ to count.<br /><br />A hurricane hits New Orleans and while <i>el presidente</i>, fresh off one of those vacations he’s always on because you can’t expect a kid who grew up like he did to work more than eleven days a year, is out in the kitchen with Dinah, strumming on the ol’ banjo while people are dyin’ – which don’t make no neverminds by him, because they’re <i>the type</i> that he only ever seen at the country club when they was waitin’ tables and parking cars.<br /><br />So we wind up with a country in debt up to its eyeballs, the G-men are spying on <i>US</i> while the back-room boys are swindlin’ the country outta billions, ya can’t get a job with a good ol’ US of A company unless you move to India, ya can’t buy your kid a train set for Christmas unless he’s immune to lead poisoning, the air ain’t fit to breathe, you can’t afford to fill up the Buick unless you’re the heir to a fortune – and on top of everything else, no one seems to have noticed that living in Capital City is the number one cause of being tetched in the brain, because nobody knows nuthin’, nobody sees nuthin’, and nobody remembers nuthin’.<br /><br />And if you’re cooling your heels waitin’ for the press boys to drop a dime on the whole kit-‘n-caboodle, head on over to the soda shop and run a tab on the egg-creams, ‘cause you’re in for a <i>long</i> wait.<br /><br />So now it’s time for this over-aged frat-boy to pack his kit-bag and head out on the next bus departing for <i>points unknown</i>, while an entire country rolls up its sleeves and yells, “Say, I’d like to learn this kid a lesson he’ll never forget!”<br /><br />I wouldn’t give this Bush kid’s buddies more’en an ice-cube’s chance in hell to win another election, fair-and-square – and I’m talking about the fair-and-square we used to live by, back when a two-cent-plain went for two cents and Sunday’s sermon wasn’t about who to vote for.<br /><br />But that’s just one dame’s opinion – for what it’s worth. And these days, it seems to be worth more ‘en that swamp land these no-good palookas are still hawkin’ on every street corner, too dumb to notice that this time around, nobody’s buyin’.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/NanceGreggs/342unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-36343087142014726112008-02-07T06:21:00.000-05:002008-02-07T06:24:03.264-05:00Overseas outsourcing: You get what you pay forBy Mary Shaw<br /><span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:78%;color:#666666;">February 05, 2008 </span><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">A recent report from the Labor Department indicated that U.S. employers cut 17,000 jobs in January of this year. According to the <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22948894/" target="_blank">Associated Press</a>, this was "the first such reduction in more than four years." </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">Many of the job cuts were in manufacturing and "a variety of professional and business services." </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">I think it is no coincidence that these areas have seen a lot of U.S. jobs transferred to India, China, and other countries where the labor is much, much cheaper. Apparently, U.S. corporations care more about profits than the welfare of their employees. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">Apparently, they also care more about profits than safety. This is evidenced by so many chilling <a href="http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/archives/2007/06/chinese_products_unsafe/" target="_blank">accounts</a> of unsafe American-named products imported from China -- everything from children's toys to toothpaste. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what you pay for. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">And, apparently, they care more about profits than human rights. Many manufacturing facilities overseas are notorious for their use of sweatshops, horrific working conditions, and <a href="http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/06/15/news/china.php" target="_blank">slave labor</a>. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what you pay for. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">All this so that U.S. corporations can rake in huge profits, and reward their CEOs with <a href="http://www.dmiblog.com/archives/2006/06/as_ceo_salaries_rage_at_515_st.html" target="_blank">obscene salaries</a>. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what you pay for? No, these CEOs get what <i>others</i> have paid for -- with blood, sweat, and tears. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">And it's not just the low-level manufacturing jobs that are moving overseas. As the Labor Department's report noted, various professional and business services were also affected. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">Chances are, if you have made a phone call for customer service in the past few years, particularly technical support, the representative who answered your call likely had an Indian accent. I have spoken with countless frustrated folks who gave up on getting their questions answered since they couldn't even make out the words that their rep was saying. I am not a xenophobe, but a customer service representative should have the necessary skills to make himself understood to his audience. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what you pay for. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">I have a friend who worked as a technical writer for a Philadelphia area software developer. She thought her job was safe. After all, good technical writing must be very clear and unambiguous, and written using uncompromising standards of clarity. One of the rules of international technical writing is that you always write in your native language, or translate documentation <i>into</i>, not out of, your native language. Nevertheless, my friend's employer traded her in for her Indian counterparts. The resultant user guides, technical specs, and help screens were subpar, to say the least. But that didn't seem to matter to the corporate execs. Because it was all so affordable. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what you pay for. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">Remember the American dream? It's looking more and more as though it, too, has been outsourced. </span></p><p> <span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;">You get what the CEOs are willing to pay for.</span></p><p><span style="font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"><br /></span></p><p>Posted in full with author's permission.</p>Originally posted at home.att.net/~maryshawonline/: http://home.att.net/~maryshawonline/article-2008feb05-overseasoutsourcing.htmlunhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-63235144692785855072008-02-06T08:27:00.000-05:002008-02-06T08:29:49.993-05:00While us peons were distracted, our masters have brought back Debt BondageBy arendt<br /><br /><br /><div class="excerpt"><b>Historical peonage</b><br /><br />Peonage is a system where laborers are bound in servitude until their debts are paid in full. Those bound by such a system are known, in the US, as peons. <b>Employers may extend credit to laborers to buy from employer-owned stores at inflated prices. This method is a variation of the company store system, in which workers are exploited by agreeing to work for an insufficient amount of goods and/or services.</b> In these circumstances, peonage is a form of unfree labor. Such systems have existed in many places at many times throughout history.<br /><br /><b>Modern views</b><br /><br />According to Anti-Slavery International, "<b>A person enters debt bondage when their labor is demanded as a means of repayment of a loan, or of money given in advance. </b>Usually, people are tricked or trapped into working for no pay or very little pay (in return for such a loan), in conditions which violate their human rights. <b>Invariably, the value of the work done by a bonded laborer is greater that the original sum of money borrowed or advanced.</b>"<br /><br /><b>At international law</b><br /><br />Debt bondage has been defined by the United Nations as a form of "modern day slavery" and is prohibited by international law. It is specifically dealt with by article 1(a) of the Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery 1956. It persists nonetheless especially in developing nations, which have few mechanisms for credit security or bankruptcy, and where fewer people hold formal title to land or possessions. According to some economists, for example Hernando de Soto, this is a major barrier to development in those countries - <b>entrepreneurs do not dare take risks and cannot get credit because they hold no collateral and may burden families for generations to come.</b><br /><br />Where children are forced to work because of debt bondage of the family, this is considered not only child labor, but a worst form of child labor in terms of the Worst Forms of Child Labour Convention, 1999 of the International Labour Organization.<br /><br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debt_bondage" target="_blank">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debt_bondage</a> </div><br /><br />I hate to burst the bubble of all those people who honestly believe that putting electing a Democratic president and veto-proof Congress is going to bring back social justice in America.<br /><br />The sub-prime mortgage mess piles on top of usurious credit card rates and fees to create a perfect storm of peonage, not only for poor Americans, but also for the increasingly large percentage of the formerly middle class Americans who effectively have no assets.<br /><br />The new Bankruptcy Laws (thanks Joe Biden, Senator - MBNA) are the chains and padlocks that will keep the new peons from fleeing - as if there were any jobs in America to which they might flee.<br /><br />Welcome to debt peonage America, where children are locked into big box stores overnight to do shelf stocking, where single mothers get on buses to be bussed fifty miles away to work for chump change - as a condition of receiving welfare.<br /><br />Welcome to credit-aholic America, where the credit card companies are throwing cards at teenagers, college students, people just out of bankruptcy. Give them a taste, sell them a little blow, and pretty soon you have a full-blown debt addict who will pay off for decades to come.<br /><br />And rules? "We don need no steenking rules!" The credit companies change the terms and conditions on cards, retroactively, whenever they please. To the victims of this scam, it must be like being in the infamous Marion, IL Supermax prison. In that hell-hole, arbitrary, unannounced rule changes are discovered by being punished for not knowing about them - all as a part of psychological warfare to break the resistance of prisoners.<br /><br />To cover all the flavors of peonage, we have the "company store" - the seller of first and last resort in Corporate America. Its where the non-urban peons HAVE TO go to spend the money. Essentially, all the small businessmen in small towns have been put out of business, and their holdings consolidated into the giant latifundia - I mean big box stores - that now employ all those former entrepreneurs.<br /><br /><div class="excerpt"><b>Wal-Mart's Brave New World</b><br /><br />I was visiting my mother who was, at that time, living in one of the poorer regions in the piney backwoods of Florida, a place not much different from Chapman, or Oroville or any of the locales characterized by poverty, drug traffic, lack of opportunity and the panoply of social problems that have become increasingly common throughout the land.<br /><br />During the course of the visit, I noticed that my mother's old TV seemed about to expire, so I decided to buy her a new one. <b>The only place such a purchase could be made, however, was at a Wal-Mart store some 15 miles from where she lived.</b><br /><br /><a href="http://www.smirkingchimp.com/print/12629" target="_blank">http://www.smirkingchimp.com/print/12629</a> /</div><br /><br />WalMart is the new company store, where most of what is on offer is inferior, Chinese-made crap. And, except for the loss-leader items, its caveat emptor, suckers.<br /><br />--------<br /><br />I weep for America. It is financially doomed, but it goes about its increasingly pathetic business like it was still 1950. While it has a "gut feeling" that corporate deregulation and outsourcing are at the root of all the economic trouble, it is so collectively brainwashed that it continues to fall for the same old Libertarian /neoliberal bunkum over and over - the "ownership society", "trickle down", "tax cuts for the rich".<br /><br />The media brainwashing machine keeps the emotional volume on "high" for economically irrelevant distractions like gay marriage or evolution or birth control. If it didn't, or if they "tuned out", some of these new peons might be able to focus on that emotion that would, under normal circumstances, have long since been heard: these guys are crooks, and we are going to put them in jail.<br /><br />If that happened, we soon wouldn't have peons (or is that the "peed on"s).<br /><br />----<br /><br />That's OK, nothing to hear here. You all can go back to that wonderful campaign hoopla. You can listen to a candidate roster that has absolutely no intention of doing anything about the new peonage - except to make sure it continues. A celebrity will visit you and dazzle you. Vote. Belong. Consume and reproduce.<br /><br />arendt<br /><br />Note: given this is Super Tuesday night, this will sink like a stone. Consider it counter-programming for those who don't give a shit about this meaningless spectacle.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/arendt/137unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-36681664632943023972008-02-04T19:49:00.000-05:002008-02-06T01:29:11.888-05:00Super TuesdayIf I were still amongst the living, my thinking on this day would be as follows: There are 4 realistically viable choices left.<br /><br />CLINTON: She is an insider's insider, attracts all kinds of big $$$ (always with strings attached), is no friend of the anti-war movement and I don't think our nation needs another DYNASTY.<br /><br />ROMNEY: This guy is a phony ASS...., a big war supporter, who when asked by a reporter why his 5 sons (of military service age) were not partaking of the war he so strongly supports-, after a withering stare, replied that his sons were "serving their country by helping me get get elected president"!<br /><br />McCAIN: This guy scares the hell out of me! Here we have a Viet Nam Vet, who most surely should know better, strongly supporting the Cheney/Bush criminal fiasco and the"Surge"in Iraq, stating something to the effect "If it takes a hundred years, we should complete THE MISSION(???)"? Didn't he ever ask himself the question while in the "Hanoi Hilton" prison or later "What did all my pain,suffering and misery do for me or my country?" and then say to himself "If I can, I should do anything in my power to stop any more f....d up wars from ever happening again!" But then I could never understand "ring knocker"(academy grads) 'thinking'. Perhaps, as that geat military thinker/stategist Karl Rove intimated, McCain"s time as a POW affected his logic circuity. Or,mostlikely, BIG M.I.C.$$$$ has affected his integrity! What ever the reason(s), as I said, this guy scares the hell out of me!!!<br /><br />Lastly,OBAMA: Seems by far the "lesser of the evils" (isn't THAT the American way) and who knows, you may get lucky!Wouldn"t it be ironic, if an African/American restored DEMOCRACY to The Facist Plutocrcy of America?!<br /><br />WTFU,AMERICA!<br /><br />S.D.BGhost_of_Smedleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03610420930798410825noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-74591157374920813702008-02-04T06:10:00.000-05:002008-02-04T06:11:51.632-05:00I Will Not Be MovedBy NanceGreggs<br /><br /><br />Long before the infighting, the name-calling, the mindless bashing ever got a foothold, I had already chosen my candidate. I am not now, nor will I be in future, persuaded away from my choice, nor will I be insulted or bullied into changing my mind.<br /><br />My candidate is the one who ends up winning the nomination and has a (D) behind their name. They have my vote, and my support.<br /><br />Of course, I, like everyone, had my preference going in. But when it was clear that the majority of my fellow Democrats preferred someone else over my personal choice, I accepted that. I don’t think they are stupid or ill-informed; they simply had a different choice, perhaps based on different criteria than my own.<br /><br />So be it. As long as their choice has a (D) behind <i>their name</i>, I’ll abide by the ultimate majority decision that is made by my fellow party members. That’s based on my wanting a Democrat in the White House; it is also based on the overwhelming fact that I, unlike some people, do not believe that I <i>know</i> what’s best for everyone, and therefore anyone who disagrees with me is <i>clearly wrong</i>.<br /><br />I will not be moved by the Nostradamus factor; those who <i>know</i> we’ll lose in November if Hillary is the nominee, along with those who <i>know</i> we will lose if it’s Obama. And one can’t help but notice the irony: the listen-to-me-because-<i>I</i>-KNOW prophets are equally assured that they can predict the future – even though they are predicting completely different outcomes.<br /><br />I will not be moved by the childish bickering between the pro-Hill and pro-Obama factions, which has gone from one ridiculous outburst to another. “Hillary supporters are pro-war and just don’t care about their country.” “Obama supporters obviously <i>want us to lose</i> in November.” Yes, that’s right. Millions of Democrats across the country are meeting in secret, choosing the candidate they are most hopeful will continue the debacle in Iraq and/or cost us the White House. Glad you figured that one out, Einstein.<br /><br />Let’s not discuss how important it is to rid ourselves of Republican rule when there are more pressing things to focus on – like handshakes that did or didn’t happen. Let’s not concern ourselves with future Supreme Court nominees – better to wind up with another Scalia than elect a Democrat who <i>might have</i> snubbed someone – and, of course, let’s base the truth and/or the implications of that alleged snub on the MSM talking hairdos’ <i>take</i> on things, because it just doesn’t get any more reliable than that.<br /><br />So while the Clinton-Obama virtual fisticuffs continue unabated (as they no doubt will), I will stand firm in my choice: last man or woman standing with the all-important (D) gets my vote – unequivocally, and without ‘holding my nose’.<br /><br />In the end, it’s (D) v (R), and in the bitter fray that this place has become over the past few months, I have <i>never forgotten</i> who the enemy is.<br /><br />As for those who refuse to vote for <i>that man</i> or <i>that woman</i> based on their ‘principles’, I am sure that if we get another four-to-eight years of a Republican in the White House, those same people will comfort themselves knowing that their personal agenda was far more important than the wellbeing of the nation and its citizenry.<br /><br />Most of all, I will not be moved by those touting the idea that given the two candidates we're left with, there’s <i>no difference</i> between US (the Dems) and THEM (the GOP). If that is what you honestly believe, I hope you will give serious consideration to becoming an equal-opportunity whiner, whereby you post that same sentiment on Republican message boards for a while. If there's no difference between US and THEM, shouldn't you be giving <i>them</i> fair warning as well? That would seem only fair - and I’m sure there are many here who would welcome the break from your belly-achin’.<br /><br />A Democrat in the White House, with a strong Democratic majority in the House and the Senate. It’s the only thing that matters now – and if you don’t believe that, think long and hard about the alternative – because if <i>that</i> doesn’t give you nightmares, you obviously don’t understand what’s at stake.<br /><br />I believe, especially after the last seven-plus years, that I do understand what’s at stake – and I plan to vote accordingly. <br /><br />That's why the nominee with the (D) is getting my vote, and my support, without question. It will be interesting to see which of the two remaining candidates wins the <i>battle</i> - but ultimately, when it comes down to our (D) versus their (R), it should be obvious that there's a lot more riding on who wins the <i>war</i>.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/NanceGreggs/340unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-79468770152775461282008-02-04T06:04:00.000-05:002008-02-04T06:07:58.588-05:00Connection between State-Sponsored Terror, Corporate Greed and Economic “Shock Therapy”By <span class="medtext">Time for change</span><br /><br /><br />The relationship between state-sponsored terror, corporate greed and economic “shock therapy” represents perhaps the most fundamental evil of our times. I believe that it goes a very long way towards explaining why so much of the world’s population is impoverished today. It is no accident. Third World nations have to a very large extent been kept down by external human forces who seek to profit from the labors of the poor.<br />Naomi Klein, in “<a href="http://www.naomiklein.org/shock-doctrine" target="_blank">The Shock Doctrine</a> – The Rise of Disaster Capitalism”, thoroughly explores this issue in a manner that clarifies it like nothing else I’ve ever read.<br /><br />Her book begins with Chile in the 1970s, where U.S. complicity in the overthrow of the democratically elected president of Chile, Salvador Allende, had as perhaps its main goal the putting into practice of <a href="http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/us/friedman.htm" target="_blank">Milton Friedman’s economic theories</a>, developed at the University of Chicago. These theories, when put into practice in several countries over more than three decades, have served primarily to increase the wealth and power of the wealthy, at the expense of everyone else. They represent the shock doctrine and disaster capitalism referred to in the title of Klein’s book.<br /><br />It is essential that these phenomena be understood by enough people in order to enable successful efforts to be taken against them. Otherwise massive human catastrophes will continue to accumulate to the point where world civilization as we know it will be wiped out.<br /><br /><br /><b>The rise of the Pinochet torture regime in Chile</b><br /><br />The Nixon administration hated the idea of Salvador Allende being in power in Chile. Whether that was for ideological reasons or because he represented a roadblock to U.S. corporate interests is not entirely clear. Perhaps there is no real distinction between those two motivations. Anyhow, William Blum, in <a href="http://www.peace.ca/roguestate.htm" target="_blank">his article</a>, “A Concise History of US Global Interventions, 1945 to the Present”, explains what the Nixon administration did about their problem:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Salvador Allende was the worst possible scenario for the Washington power elite… (Allende) respected the constitution and became increasingly popular. After sabotaging Allende’s electoral endeavor in 1964, and failing to do so in 1970 despite their best efforts, the CIA and the rest of the American foreign policy machine left no stone unturned in their attempt to destabilize the Allende government… undermining the economy and building up military hostility.</div> <br />Consequently, the U.S. government collaborated with the Chilean military to <a href="http://www.gwu.edu/%7Ensarchiv/news/20001113/" target="_blank">overthrow Allende</a> and install Augusto Pinochet. Naomi Klein explains what happened next:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">The generals knew that their hold on power depended on Chileans being truly terrified…The trail of blood left behind over those four days came to be known as the Caravan of Death. In short order the entire country had gotten the message: resistance is deadly… In all, more than 3,200 people were disappeared or executed, at least 80,000 were imprisoned, and 200,000 fled the country.</div> <br /><br /><b>The use of economic shock therapy in Chile following the 1973 coup</b><br /><br />Milton Friedman’s disciples, who are known as “The Chicago Boys”, after the University of Chicago where they learned their economic theories, had been working hand in glove with Pinochet for some time before the actual coup took place. So they were plenty ready to put their theories into place as soon as Pinochet came to power. Klein describes how that worked out:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">In 1974, inflation reached 375 %. The cost of basics such as bread went through the roof. At the same time, Chileans were being thrown out of work because Pinochet’s experiment with “free trade” was flooding the country with cheap imports… Unemployment hit record levels and hunger became rampant… Chicago boys argued that the problem didn’t lie with their theory but with the fact that it wasn’t being applied with sufficient strictness.</div> <br />So Friedman flew to Chile to visit Pinochet himself, and he advocated even harsher measures. Eventually he convinced Pinochet to fully institute his “reforms”:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Friedman advised Pinochet to impose a rapid-fire transformation of the economy – tax cuts, free trade, privatized services, cuts to social spending and deregulation… It was the most extreme capitalist make-over ever attempted anywhere, and it became known as a “Chicago School” revolution… Friedman predicted that the speed, suddenness and scope of the economic shifts would provoke psychological reactions in the public that “facilitate the adjustment”. He coined a phrase for this painful tactic: economic “shock treatment.”</div><br />This caused even more severe distress for the Chilean people. But eventually, 15 years after he came to power, the economy “stabilized”.<br /><br /><br /><b>The so-called Chilean economic “miracle”</b><br /><br />It is of course important to those who profit from Chicago School economics to make people believe that they work. Hence the so-called Chilean economic “miracle”. Klein thoroughly debunks that argument:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Three decades later, Chile is still held up by free-market enthusiasts as proof that Friedmanism works. When Pinochet died in December 2006, The <i>New York Times</i> <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/10/world/americas/10cnd-pinochet-obit.html?_r=1&hp&ex=1165813200&en=e8a3b38f23c29fc7&ei=5094&partner=homepage&oref=slogin" target="_blank">praised him</a> for “transforming a bankrupt economy into the most prosperous in Latin America”.<br /><br />Pinochet held power for 17 years. The country’s period of steady growth that is held up as proof of its miraculous success did not begin until the mid-eighties – a full decade after the Chicago Boys instituted shock therapy…<br /><br />In 1982, despite strict adherence to Chicago doctrine, Chile’s economy crashed… The situation was so unstable that Pinochet was forced to do what Allende had done…<br /><br />It’s clear that Chile never was the laboratory of pure free markets that its cheerleaders claimed. Instead it was a country where a small elite leapt from wealthy to super rich in short order… bankrolled by debt and heavily subsidized (then bailed out) with public funds. Chile under Pinochet and the Chicago Boys was not a capitalist state featuring a liberated market but a corporatist one… What Chile pioneered under Pinochet was an evolution of corporatism: a mutually supporting alliance between a police state and large corporations… to wage all out war … on the workers. That war – what many Chileans understandably see as a war of the rich against the poor and middle class – is the real story of Chile’s economic “miracle”.<br /><br />By 1988, when the economy had stabilized and was growing rapidly, 45% of the population had fallen below the poverty line. The richest 10% of Chileans, however, had seen their incomes increase by 83%. Even in 2007, Chile ranked as one of the most unequal societies in the world…</div> <br /><br /><b>The spread of economic shock therapy to other Latin American countries</b><br /><br />Since the experiment in Freidman’s economics worked out so well in Chile, some other Latin American dictatorships decided to give it a try. Klein describes this process:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">The Chicago School counterrevolution quickly spread. Brazil was already under the control of a U.S. supported junta… Friedman traveled to Brazil in 1973, at the height of that regime’s brutality, and declared the economic experiment a “miracle”. In Uruguay the military had staged a coup in 1973 and the following year decided to go the Chicago route…. The effect on Uruguay’s previously egalitarian society was immediate: real wages decreased by 28% and hordes of scavengers appeared on the streets… Next to join the experiment was Argentina in 1976, when <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirty_War#The_military.27s_rise_to_power" target="_blank">a junta seized power</a> from Isabel Peron. That meant that Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Brazil – the countries that had been showcases of developmentalism – were now all run by U.S. backed military governments and were living laboratories of Chicago School economics.</div> <br /><br /><b>U.S. complicity in the rise of dictatorships in Latin America</b><br /><br />The above noted article by William Blum describes how the United States intervened in twelve different South and Central American countries during the Cold War including Guatemala, Costa Rica, British Guyana, Ecuador, Uruguay, Brazil, Peru, Chile, Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. The main purpose of these interventions was to facilitate changes to regimes that were friendlier to the United States (and in almost all cases less friendly to the indigenous populations of those countries.) For this purpose, we developed the School of the Americas, which was used to train native personnel in the techniques and ideology of insurgency and counter-insurgency.<br /><br />This article on <a href="http://www.geocities.com/%7Evirtualtruth/soaclose.htm" target="_blank">reasons to shut down</a> the School of the Americas (SOA) provides a good description of what was involved, and can be summarized as follows:<br /><br />It describes numerous atrocities committed by graduates of SOA, which are consistent with the SOA curriculum. While SOA torture manuals have been withdrawn and SOA has <a href="http://www.greens.org/s-r/23/23-08.html" target="_blank">changed its name</a>, the content of the torture manuals has not been repudiated, and some of the worst abusers continue to be honored as guest instructors for U.S. courses.<br /><br />School of the Americas training is oriented to support the military and political status quo in each country, which places the U.S. in opposition to any who seek free speech to discuss problems, alternative means to solve problems, or democratic means to change governments. More specifically, the enemy is identified as the poor, those who assist the poor, such as church workers, educators, and unions, and certain ideologies such as “socialism” or “liberation theology”. All of this just to make sure that Communists or “leftists” don’t get a foothold in any of these countries.<br /><br />Here are some specific examples of U.S. intervention in Latin America, as described by Blum:<br /><br /><u>Brazil</u><br /><div class="excerpt">President Joao Goulart was guilty of the usual crimes. He took an independent stand in foreign policy, resuming relations with socialist countries… His administration passed a law limiting the amount of profits multinationals could transmit outside of the country… He promoted economic and social reforms… In 1964 he was overthrown in a <a href="http://www.gwu.edu/%7Ensarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB118/index.htm" target="_blank">military coup</a> which had covert American involvement and indispensable support. The official Washington line was: Yes, it’s unfortunate, but still, the country has been saved from Communism. For the next 15 years, all the features of military dictatorship which Latin Americans have come to know and love were instituted… peasants’ homes were burned down… disappearances, death squads, a remarkable degree and depravity of torture…. Brazil became one of the United States’ most reliable allies in Latin America.</div> <br /><u>Uruguay</u><br /><div class="excerpt">The 1960s was the era of perhaps the… least violent Robin Hood like urban guerillas the world has ever seen…. A team of American experts arrived to supply the police with all the arms… etc. they needed; to train them in assassination… to teach methods of torture … It was all out <a href="http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/uruguay/tupamaros-uruguay.htm" target="_blank">war against the Tupamaros</a>…</div> <br /><br /><u>Ecuador</u><br />John Perkins, in “<a href="http://www.dreamchange.org/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=10&MMN_position=83:83" target="_blank">The Secret History of the American Empire</a> - Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth”, talks about the destruction of vast areas of Ecuador’s rain forests, the transformation of rivers into cesspools, and the disappearance of several animal species in Ecuador as the result of a $1.3 billion <a href="http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/20478/newsDate/15-Apr-2003/story.htm" target="_blank">oil pipeline</a> constructed there. He notes that for every $100 of oil taken from the Amazon forests, $75 goes to the oil companies, $18 goes to pay off the debt, and only $3 goes to the people who need the money the most. Since 1968, the nation’s debt grew from a quarter billion dollars to $16 billion, poverty level grew from 50% to 70%, and under- or unemployment grew from 15% to 70%.<br /><br />There was a brief interlude, however. In 1979 Ecuador elected its first President, after a long line of dictators. Jaime Roldos came to the Ecuadorian presidency promising to put his peoples’ interests above the interests of the oil companies, and he did in fact stand up against the oil companies. In May, 1981, shortly after warning foreign interests that they would be asked to leave his country if their plans didn’t benefit his people, he died in a <a href="http://www.internetpirate.com/roldos.htm" target="_blank">helicopter crash</a>, widely believed in Latin America to be the work of the CIA. Roldos was replaced by a man who was compliant with U.S. wishes, and it was all downhill for Ecuador from there.<br /><br />In 2003, Perkins came back to Ecuador to try to prevent <a href="http://www.theglobalist.com/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=4923" target="_blank">a war</a> that he held himself partially responsible for provoking. This would be a war fought against indigenous Ecuadorians against the Ecuadorian Army assisted by U.S. Special Forces advisors, on behalf of oil companies who accused an indigenous community of taking its workers hostage, as an excuse for war. Lawyers who represented the indigenous community in an effort to get the oil companies off their land had recently died in a plane crash.<br /><br /><u>Operation Condor</u><br />Operation Condor was a conspiracy between several Latin American dictatorships, whereby they provided mutual assistance to each other to help themselves maintain power. <a href="http://www.crimesofwar.org/special/condor.html" target="_blank">Patrice McSherry describes</a> the background and basic methods for the operation:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">In the 1960s and 1970s, populist, nationalist, and socialist movements emerged throughout the class-stratified nations of Latin America, challenging the entrenched privileges of local oligarchies as well as U.S. political and economic interests. In this context, U.S. national security strategists and their Latin American counterparts began to regard large sectors of these societies as potentially or actually subversive…. During these years, militaries in country after country ousted civilian governments in a series of coups… and installed repressive regimes….<br /><br />Condor was a covert intelligence and operations system that enabled the Latin American military states to hunt down, seize, and execute political opponents across borders. Refugees fleeing military coups and repression in their own countries were "disappeared" in combined transnational operations. The militaries defied international law and traditions of political sanctuary to carry out their ferocious anticommunist crusade…<br /><br />Security forces in Latin America classified and targeted persons on the basis of their political ideas rather than illegal acts. The regimes hunted down dissidents and leftists, union and peasant leaders, priests and nuns, intellectuals, students and teachers – not only guerrillas.</div><br />And McSherry describes the evidence for U.S. complicity in the operation:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Recently declassified documents add weight to the thesis that U.S. forces secretly aided and facilitated Condor operations. The U.S. government considered the Latin American militaries to be allies in the Cold War, worked closely with their intelligence organizations, and promoted coordinated action and modernization of their capabilities. As shown here, U.S. executive agencies at least condoned, and sometimes actively assisted, some Condor "countersubversive" operations.</div><br /><br /><b>The relationship between state-sponsored terror and economic shock therapy</b><br /><br />A major theme of Klein’s book is that economic shock therapy is very unpopular with the vast majority of a country’s population. The reason for that is quite straight forward: It does great damage to the vast majority of people, while providing huge profits for a small proportion of the country’s population, as well as for enterprising foreigners who take advantage of the situation.<br /><br />Orlando Letelier was a former Chilean ambassador to the United States under Allende. He explained in a letter to <i>The Nation</i> why the violent terror of the Pinochet regime and its economic policies were necessarily very closely related. Klein describes <a href="http://www.tni.org/detail_page.phtml?page=letelier-docs_thenation" target="_blank">that letter</a>.<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">He pointed out that “this particularly convenient concept of a social system, in which ‘economic freedom’ and political terror coexist without touching each other, allows these financial spokesmen to support their concept of ‘freedom’… Letelier went so far as to write that Milton Friedman, as “the intellectual architect and unofficial adviser for the team of economists now running the Chilean economy,” shared responsibility for Pinochet’s crimes… The “establishment of a free ‘private economy’ and the control of inflation a la Friedman,” Letelier argued, could not be done peacefully. “The economic plan has had to be enforced, and in the Chilean context that could be done only by the killing of thousands, the establishment of concentration camps all over the country, the jailing of more than 100,000 persons in three years… Regression for the majorities and ‘economic freedom’ for small privileged groups are in Chile two sides of the same coin.” There was, he wrote, “an inner harmony” between the “free market” and unlimited terror.</div> <br />Less than a month later, Pinochet received some confirmation of those assertions. On September 21, 1976, he died from an explosion of a remote controlled bomb in his car in Washington, D.C. Investigation pinned the assassination on a senior member of Pinochet’s secret police, who was later convicted of the crime in a U.S. federal court. The assassins had been admitted to the U.S. on false passports <a href="http://www.consortiumnews.com/2000/092300a.html" target="_blank">with the knowledge of the CIA</a>. <br /><br /><br /><b>The initiation of economic shock therapy without the use of violence or terror</b><br /><br />Though the use of violence and terror is a very useful way to get a population to accept economic shock therapy, it isn’t necessarily the first choice of method. For one thing, it cast suspicion on Friedman’s economic theories: If economic shock therapy is always accompanied by violence and terror, what does that say about its legitimacy as an economic policy? Also, the use of violence and terror pose certain risks. And, they give the regime a bad name. When word got out about the tactics of the Pinochet regime it developed a very bad reputation in many quarters, and it had to put up with a great deal of criticism and ostracism. So it is often or usually better to utilize nonviolent ways for achieving economic oppression.<br /><br />John Perkins, in “<a href="http://www.johnperkins.org/Book%20Overview.htm" target="_blank">Confessions of an Economic Hit Man</a>”, explains how the system often works, from the perspective of an insider who formerly did the dirty work that he describes in his book. Perkins explains that economic hit men (EHM) are paid by U.S. corporations to develop economic projections for major development projects in third world countries. Their projections are supposed to predict substantial economic growth and thereby justify huge loans from international lending institutions. The money from the loan then is immediately funneled into U.S. oil, engineering or construction companies (which is a precondition of the loan) to develop their projects.<br /><br />The problem is that the projects often or usually benefit only the country’s wealthy and powerful elite, who are represented by the very government that arranged the loan. If all works out well for the involved corporations, the country is unable to repay the debt, which forces them to be perpetually indebted and consequently ensures their loyalty to the United States. That enforced loyalty ensures that the country’s government will perform favors for us, such as allowing our corporations access to their natural resources, allowing the construction of U.S. military bases on their soil, and the casting of crucial U.N. votes in our favor.<br /><br />Thus, the huge debts incurred under the system cause great harm to the vast majority of a country’s population, not only because of increased taxes and severe cuts in health care, education and other social services, but also because the projects themselves usually deplete a country’s resources and pollute its environment, often displacing large segments of the population in the process.<br /><br />If the EHMs are unsuccessful in their efforts to convince a government to play ball, then what Perkins calls jackals are sent in to assassinate or overthrow the uncooperative government officials in question, as was done for example in <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/mideast/041600iran-cia-index.html" target="_blank">Iran in 1953</a>, in <a href="http://www.consortiumnews.com/archive/story38.html" target="_blank">Guatemala in 1954</a>, in Chile in 1973, or in <a href="http://www.namebase.org/kadane.html" target="_blank">Indonesia in 1965</a>. If that doesn’t work either, then we send in our military, as we did in <a href="http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Chomsky/ChomOdon_Panama.html" target="_blank">Panama in 1989</a> or in <a href="http://www.prwatch.org/books/tsigfy10.html" target="_blank">Iraq in 1991</a> and 2003.<br /><br />Naomi Klein explains that to a very large extent today, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, which are both very much under the control of the United States, are instruments which facilitate this process. They loan money to impoverished nations that are desperate for it, imposing conditions on those nations which work to keep the great majority of its inhabitants impoverished indefinitely. The process is something akin to loan sharking or indentured servitude.<br /><br /><br /><b>The relationship between right wing “free market” ideology and corporate greed</b><br /><br />Milton Friedman is usually thought of as an academic professional. Presumably his economic theories are politically neutral and based on economic science rather than politics. He even <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/2006-11-16-obituary-friedman_x.htm" target="_blank">received a Nobel Prize</a> for his work in economics. But is it realistic to think of Friedman’s theories as academically motivated, well intentioned, and politically neutral? Or is it more realistic to think of him as the head of a vast right wing think tank that has served to the great advantage of the wealthy and powerful while producing human catastrophe for millions of people?<br /><br />After explaining how the so-called “economic miracle” of Pinochet’s Chile was nothing more than a vast giveaway to the rich, at the expense of the vast majority of Chileans, Naomi Klein asks the following question:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">If that track record qualifies Chile as a miracle for Chicago School economics, perhaps shock treatment was really never about jolting the economy into health. Perhaps it was meant to do exactly what it did – hoover wealth up to the top and shock much of the middle class out of existence.</div> <br />And later in her book, after describing how something similar happened in Russia, she asks:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">This points to a nagging and important question about free-market ideologues: Are they “true believers”, driven by ideology and faith that free markets will cure underdevelopment, as is often asserted (and as they claim), or do the ideas and theories frequently serve as an elaborate rationale to allow people to act on unfettered greed while still invoking an altruistic motive? ….</div> <br />And she describes the dangerous consequences of failing to make the connection between Friedman’s radical theories and the torture regimes that put them into action:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">The Chicago Boys’ first adventure in the seventies should have served as a warning to humanity: theirs are dangerous ideas. By failing to hold the ideology accountable for the crimes committed in its first laboratory, this subculture of unrepentant ideologues was given immunity, freed to scour the world for its next conquest. These days, we are once again living in an era of corporatist massacres., with countries suffering tremendous military violence alongside organized attempts to remake them into model “free market” economies; <a href="http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Time%20for%20change/250" target="_blank">disappearances and torture</a> are back with a vengeance. And once again the goals of building free markets, and the need for such brutality, are treated as entirely unrelated.</div> <br /><br /><b>Portents for the future</b><br /><br />The above paragraph by Klein clearly refers to George W. Bush’s invasion and occupation of Iraq. Either Bush decided that the non-violent method of accomplishing his economic goals was not feasible, or else he didn’t want to take the trouble to pursue that method.<br /><br />Antonia Juhasz, in “<a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=Dl5l2G8_gwkC&dq=&pg=PP1&ots=O2turpguVg&sig=_VLxLqQ26s40JTHCFwp23oICdl8&prev=http://www.google.com/search%3Fhl%3Den%26q%3D%2522the%2Bbush%2Bagenda%2522%2Bjuhasz%26btnG%3DGoogle%2BSearch&sa=X&oi=print&ct=title" target="_blank">The Bush Agenda</a> – Invading the World, One Economy at a Time”, explains the <a href="http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=389&topic_id=1714474&mesg_id=1714474" target="_blank">purpose of the invasion and occupation of Iraq</a> as being mainly an economic one. The <a href="http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Corporations/Corp_Domination_Bush.html" target="_blank">Foreign Investment Order</a>, issued by the first administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority, L. Paul Bremer, provided the legal framework for the invasion of U.S. corporations into Iraq. It provided for the privatization of Iraq’s state-owned enterprises, foreign ownership of Iraqi businesses, tax-free remittance of all profits, immunity of foreign businesses from Iraqi courts, and much else. As with everything else about the U.S. occupation, these provisions did great damage to the Iraqi people, for the benefit of U.S. corporations. Juhasz describes the effects of privatization of Iraqi industries:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">In Bremer’s own words, “Restructuring inefficient state enterprises requires laying off workers.”… Even those workers who still had jobs in Iraq at the time only received… about half of what they made before the war. At the same time, prices skyrocketed.</div><br />And with respect to the lack of any constraints on foreign corporations:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">U.S. corporations are therefore invited to enter the Iraqi economy, exploit a nation at its most vulnerable point, with no obligation to reinvest in the country at a time when rebuilding Iraq is professed to be the Bush administration’s most vital assignment. U.S. corporations have reaped staggering revenues from their Iraqi operations…</div> <br />Naomi Klein sums up what Friedman type economic ideology has set in motion:<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Chile under Chicago School rule was offering a glimpse of the future of the global economy, a pattern that would repeat again and again (all of which Klein describes in her book) … an urban bubble of frenetic speculation and dubious accounting fueling super-profits and rampant consumerism… roughly half the population excluded from the economy altogether; out-of-control corruption and cronyism; decimation of nationally owned small and medium sized businesses; a huge transfer of wealth from public to private hands, followed by a huge transfer of private debts to public hands. In Chile, if you were outside the wealth bubble the miracle looked like the Great Depression, but inside its airtight cocoon the profits flowed so free and fast that the easy wealth made possible by shock therapy-style “reforms” have been the crack cocaine of financial markets ever since. And that is why the financial world did not respond to the obvious contradictions of the Chile experiment by reassessing the basic assumptions of laissez-faire. Instead it reacted with the junkie’s logic: Where is the next fix?</div> <br />The people of the United States and the people of the world need to understand this and make it clear to their governments that this type of voodoo economics in no longer acceptable.<br /><br /><br />Post in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Time%20for%20change/276unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-56486611317108070522008-01-28T10:07:00.000-05:002008-01-28T10:11:16.326-05:00United States Inc. vs. the PeopleBy<span style="font-size:100%;"> Larisa Alexandrovna<br /></span><h2 style="font-weight: normal;" class="date-header"><span style="font-size:100%;">January 25, 2008</span></h2><br /><div class="entry-body"> <p>If retroactive immunity for telecoms passes (as part of FISA bill), then our Congress will finally have declared that the United States is a wholly owned subsidiary of a few mega-companies and that the citizens are without rights or even avenues for redressing grievances. In other words, our government has given us very little choice other than to declare ourselves independent. </p> <p>Let's first examine why it was that original US colonies declared their independence from king to begin with. Here is the list provided by the founders in the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/document/index.htm">Declaration of Independence</a>. I will put them in bullet points and discuss each briefly:</p> <ul><li><strong><span style="font-size: 1.2em;">"He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good."</span></strong></li></ul><blockquote><p>How does this apply to this current scandal (among many) regarding domestic spying? Let's look at the particulars. The Vice President and President (Cheney/Bush) have acted as a single royal house that is above the laws of this country. They decided in secret to violate the law and used their power of authority to create a new law to be carried out by agencies under their control. This was done without the consent of Congress and the American people. It was also done against the law of the land and without authorization from the Judiciary. </p> <p>Moreover, this illegal domestic spying was conducted against US citizens, without a warrant, via the hiring (with public money) of non-government entities (corporations) who charge the public for their service to begin with. </p> <p>When the public learned of this, they filed legal action against the corporations, rightly so, for breach of contract (service provided to the customer) and criminal conduct. The Vice President and President are now demanding that the public not be allowed to sue these companies (civil) and exempting these companies from the criminal charges - which the White House cannot do in a blanket pardon of a corporation. </p> <p>This one abuse of power alone violates<a target="_blank" href="http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#Am4"> Fourth Amendment</a> to the Constitution ("<em>The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.</em>"). </p> <p>This violates the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#Am5">Fifth Amendment</a> to the Constitution, particularly the right to due process and self-incrimination <em>("nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be <a target="_blank" href="http://www.usconstitution.net/glossary.html#DEPRIVE">deprived</a> of life, liberty, or property, without <a target="_blank" href="http://www.usconstitution.net/consttop_duep.html">due process</a> of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.</em>")</p> <p>This also violates <a target="_blank" href="http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#A2Sec1">Article II, Section 1 </a>of the Constitution (<em>"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.</em>")</p> <p>Instead of being impeached for their crimes, the Vice President and President are being allowed to violate the law, subvert the Constitution, abuse their authority, and deny the public any forum in which to redress grievances. Instead of these corporations being held accountable by Congress, it now appears that every single company involved will get immunity and retroactively. Congress has now become complicit in the crimes of this administration and is obstructing justice by voting to cover it up. </p> <p>In other words, we have grounds on which to declare our contract with the government null and void. It has been done before (as noted above) and for the same reasons.</p></blockquote> </div> <div class="entry-more"> <ul><li><strong><span style="font-size: 1.2em;">"</span><span style="font-size: 1.2em;">He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance.</span></strong><strong><span style="font-size: 1.2em;">"</span></strong> </li></ul> <blockquote><p>As part of this domestic harassment, the Vice President and President have created the Department of Homeland Security, and have used the FBI to demand private information on US citizens without a warrant. The FBI has demanded, for example, <a href="http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Gagged_librarians_break_silence_on_Patriot_0531.html">private records from 26 Connecticut libraries</a>. When the libraries were unwilling to grant the access, the FBI slapped the librarians with "National Security Letters" making it illegal for anyone to tell Congress, the press, or in any way make public this harassment. Private institutions, medical offices, credit card companies, and US citizens have all been silenced in this way from making public such brazen acts of domestic surveillance, harassment, and even denied the right to redress their grievances by making what was done to them a state secret. This whole set of secret laws, secret policing, secret warrants (when there are any), secret harassment, and secret courts is entirely in violation of not only the laws of the land but also in violation of the very definition of democracy. </p> <p>As to the Constitution, this violates the First Amendment of the Constitution ("<em>Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a <a href="http://www.usconstitution.net/glossary.html#REDRESS">redress</a> of grievances.</em>"). Yet they passed the Patriot Act and the Real ID Act. And now are busy debating and likely to pass the FISA bill, which will allow domestic surveillance without a warrant, involving private companies to whom US citizens pay money for services. </p> <p>This violates the Second Amendment, the Fourth Amendment, the Fight Amendment, the Sixth Amendment, and the Seventh Amendment (see for all of these <a href="http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#Amends">here</a>). </p> <p>This also violates Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution, as well as Article, Section 8 of the Constitution. (see <a href="http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#A1Sec8">here</a>). </p> <p>In other words, Congress has abdicated its powers to an imperial presidency. And will continue to do so with the FISA bill. </p> <p>We again have grounds on which to declare our contract with the government null and void. It has been done before (as noted above) and for the same reasons.</p> </blockquote> <p>You get the basic idea, that we are ultimately faced with two choices. Either this FISA bill is the last straw and the passage of it will be grounds to declare the government contract with the people null and void, or we agree to give up our rights completely. Here are some additional reasons listed in the Declaration of Independence as to why our founding fathers declared their contract with the British king null and void. Notice how easily any number of crimes by this administration and Congress (as part of the royal court) can be inserted in substitution for the British monarchy and its legislative co-conspirators:<br /></p> <ul><li>He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.</li></ul> <ul><li>He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.</li></ul> <ul><li>He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their Public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.</li></ul> <ul><li>He has obstructed the Administration of Justice by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary Powers.</li></ul><ul><li>He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation: For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:</li></ul> <blockquote><p>For protecting them, by a mock Trial from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:</p> <p> For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world: </p> <p> For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent: </p> <p> For depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury: </p> <p> For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences: </p> <p>For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies</p> </blockquote> <ul><li>For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments: </li></ul> <ul><li>For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.</li></ul> <ul><li><p>He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. </p></li><li> He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & Perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation. </li></ul> <ul><li>He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands. </li></ul> <p> Do you see just how far this has gone? Are we not at the same juncture that our founding fathers were when they declared their contract with the government null and void? If this FISA bill passes with retroactive immunity for corporations in collusion with the government to commit crimes against the people, I would say folks we have to seriously consider a new Declaration of Independence, and we won't even have to change the list of reasons either.</p> <p> Now, for the latest <a href="http://www.alternet.org/rights/74895/">news on the FISA bill</a>:</p><blockquote> <p>"After a January 24 debate in the Senate on amending the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the Senate appears ready to capitulate once again to the Bush administration's agenda of sacrificing liberty for questionable security. </p> <p>On the day before Congress was slated to take up this issue, Dick Cheney addressed the Heritage Foundation, the most influential right-wing think tank. He was given a thunderous reception, to which he quipped, "I hold an office that has only one constitutional duty - presiding over the Senate and casting tie-breaking votes." But the most powerful vice president in this nation's history was about to strong-arm Congress into doing the administrations' bidding.</p> <p>Invoking the memory of September 11, 2001 twelve times, Cheney said it was "urgent" that Congress update the FISA law immediately and permanently. Notwithstanding the administration's well-known violations of FISA months before 9/11, Cheney claimed they had used "every legitimate tool at our command to protect the American people against another attack." He omitted the illegal tools the administration has admitted using, that is, Bush's so-called "Terrorist Surveillance Program" and a massive data mining program. FISA makes it a crime, punishable by up to five years in prison, for the executive to conduct a wiretap without statutory authorization. The TSP has been used to target not just the terrorists, but also critics of administration policies, particularly the war in Iraq."</p></blockquote><p>So, back to the Declaration of Independence, the only other document that I value as part of the democracy cannon (the other being the Constitution of course), with one minor change on my part below:</p><blockquote><p>We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. </p> <p>Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. — Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the <strong>ADMINISTRATION AND THEIR ENABLERS IN CONGRESS</strong> is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.</p></blockquote><p>No immunity for the telecoms. No one can stand above the law in a democracy. This my friends is patriotism.</p><br /><p>Posted in full with author's permission.</p><br />Originally posted at atlargely.com: http://www.atlargely.com/2008/01/united-states-i.html<br /><p></p><br /></div>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-47562742378903704322008-01-28T09:33:00.000-05:002008-01-28T09:35:39.059-05:00Bush Surging Into Oblivion<i><span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:85%;">by <a href="http://www.opednews.com/author/author176.html">Ron Fullwood</a> <br /><br /></span></i><span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:78%;"><a href="http://www.opednews.com/">http://www.opednews.com</a><br /><br /></span><span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:85%;">With less than a year left in office, George Bush is scrambling to tie up the loose ends of his presidency and cobble together something he can point to as his legacy, before he leaves town. Faced with the distraction of the election and squeezed by the limited time left in his term, Bush has decided to deploy every available staffer and appointee out into the nation to effect a 'surge' of accomplishments which he can highlight in his presidential library.<br /><br />All set to give his State of the Union Address Monday night, Bush is already prepared to report 'progress' and successes stretching from his continuing occupation of Iraq, to his reinterpretation of the Constitution and abuse of our democracy back home in the name of 'national security', and in his ability to hold on to the tax breaks the nation's affluent 2% have enjoyed during his presidency, at the miserly expense of the needs of the rest of the nation.<br /><br /></span><span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:85%;"> "I will report that over the last seven years, we've made great progress on important issues at home and abroad," Bush said in his <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/01/20080126.html" target="_blank">radio address</a> this weekend, telegraphing the highlights of his address. "In my speech, I will lay out a full plate of issues for Congress to address in the year ahead," he said.<br /><br />Undoubtedly, Bush will lead his appeal with a defense of his stewardship of the economy. 'This economy of ours is on a solid foundation," Bush told reporters days before he admitted to himself that immediate action was needed to prop up the declining markets. What the White House and the Emperor's Democratic tailors agreed to was a package of petty bribes to American taxpayers (funded by our foreign debt-holders in countries like Saudi Arabia and China) and a pacifying lump of cash for their corporate benefactors.<br /><br />Nothing, however will be broached by Bush or his congressional cohorts to address the exploding budget deficit which is forecast to rise to $219 bln in 2008, well over last years deficit total of $163 bln.. Their election year band-aid will only increase pressure on the stifled economy, promising a flood of negative effects for the next presidency as the departing administration removes their finger from the economic dike.<br /><br />Bush will also be looking to orchestrate a 'surge' of activity surrounding his defense and perpetuation of autocratic occupation of Iraq. His hapless lackey in the Iraqi regime, Prime Minister Maliki, has been openly preparing for over a week for a massive, staged military assault against Sunni communities in Mosul which government leaders have identified as 'al-Qaeda strongholds.' Obviously under Bush's direction, the new Iraqi dictator intends to demonstrate for Americans looking on that his army is capable of the same 'My Lai' type assaults on his countryfolk his U.S. military protectors have conducted; all for the presumed 'political progress' of the Iraqi regime, or for the furthering of Bush's politics back home.<br /><br />Look at the grand army he's recreated with soldiers originally disbanded by the invaders. Look at how well they strike out at the specter of Bush's al-Qaeda. "We <em>know</em> there's been 'progress' in Iraq because we have a body count of 'insurgents' we killed in our contrived raids."<br /><br />Lastly, Bush wants to keep a tight lid on the evidence of his illegal domestic surveillance, by pressuring Congress to give his telecommunication accomplices immunity from prosecution for their illegal assistance to an administration which refused to follow the law as they trolled through private phone and e-mail records. The administration insists that no laws were broken, yet, is loath to allow any of the FISA judges to review their handiwork. Bush wants Congress to waive him on as he does his predictable end run around the law, without even showing them the product of the surfing his people did through thousands of confidential records and proving their innocence.<br /><br />Like the administration's torture bill -- which reached back and granted immunity from prosecution for those who engaged in administration approved torture, in defiance of clear law and regulation prohibiting the actions -- Bush wants a clean slate of approval for the wiretapping abuses his administration arrogantly engaged in, clearly defying the law and their obligation to open their activities for congressional review. All Bush has to do to continue to use wiretapping in his 'terror war', is follow the original FISA law which saw over 90% of the requests which were brought before the panel approved outright.<br /><br />But, this administration, obviously, has a great deal of their activities they feel a need to conceal from the scrutiny of the American people. All they have left as a defense is Bush in his little, lame, bully pulpit. And, very few Americans are buying the arguments from an administration which has sacrificed over 4000 U.S. service-folk overseas for their political agenda; fostered and fueled a previously non-existent al-Qaeda presence in Iraq with their invasion and occupation; has been caught, red-handed, rifling through our private communications; and has destroyed the nation's economy for average Americans struggling to survive . . . Yet, Bush will try Monday night.<br /><br />"When I go before Congress on Monday, I will speak more about how we can keep our economy strong and our people safe," Bush said in his weekend address.<br /><br />I expect very little from Bush about his own responsibility in the decline in all of that. One of the extraordinary initiatives Bush will reportedly announce is an Executive Order directing federal agencies to "ignore" earmarks included in reconciling conference report language, but not in the actual wording of spending legislation. Once again, Bush is set to assume a privilege to ignore the intent of Congress as they do their job of appropriating money from the Treasury. Bush, in typical fashion, will attempt to dictate the intent of laws established by Congress to conform them to whatever he couldn't achieve through the normal legislative process.<br /><br />That's as good as a legacy as Bush can demonstrate tonight. Bush has achieved an autocratic administration which was able to amass assumed authority through the inability or ineptness of Congress to counter his power-grabs with their own constitutional levers of accountability and justice. Whatever anti-democratic or anti-constitutional constructions he's managed during his tenure will either collapse by attrition in the wake of a change in parties in power, or, will provide a platform for the next generation of corporatist republicans to build their own petty autocracy.<br /><br />Whatever Bush manages to express in his legacy address Monday night, one thing will be clear. The problems which Bush will claim to be responsive to are results and consequences of his own arrogant disregard of the will of the American people that he put aside his opportunistic militarism abroad and focus on the needs and concerns of Americans at home. The irony of a landmark presidential election to replace Bush -- drowning out his legacy appeal -- should not be lost on even one so ignorant as to escalate and highlight the agenda millions will mass together to oppose with their votes on election day.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at OpEdnews.com: http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_ron_full_080128_bush_surging_into_ob.htm<br /></span>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-34423823434752736542008-01-28T08:38:00.000-05:002008-01-28T09:33:33.417-05:00Dorothy Day and H.L.MenkenDorothy Day, a "Catholic Worker" activist and contemporary of mine, summarized the root cause of our nation's predicament when she stated "Our problems stem from our acceptance of this filthy rotten system."<br /><br /> Another contemporary, H.L.Menken, a well known newspaper columnist of our day, took it a step further when he wrote "Nobody ever got poor underestimating the intelligence of the American consumer" [Rove and Goebles really picked up on this one]-WTFU, America <br /><br />SDBGhost_of_Smedleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03610420930798410825noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-6199277697736709912008-01-27T11:19:00.000-05:002008-01-28T03:26:14.830-05:00What A Great Freakin' War!!By David Michael Green<br /><br /><br /><p>What a ding-dong I am!</p> <p>For months - nay, years! - I've been ranting about how screwed up the war in Iraq has been, and how disastrous have been its consequences.</p> <p>What a fool I've been! In reality, it's actually turned out pretty great.</p> <p>That's what I learned when I read William Kristol's recent New York Times piece, "The Democrats' Fairy Tale." In a stroke of thoughtfulness, generosity and uncanny prescience, the Times was kind enough recently to hire Kristol to write a regular column for their op-ed page. I guess that's because Ariel Sharon was unavailable and David Duke was on vacation.</p> <p>And bless his little heart, Kristol knows a thing or two about a thing or two. Heck, he's the one who got us into Iraq in the first place! He's been telling us for a long time what a cool thing it would be to knock over that tin-pot Saddam Hussein crank, and damned if he didn't convince the president to do it, despite Bush's decades of foreign policy experience.</p> <p>But it's been a rough couple of years for Ol' Bill, 'cause the whole damn country went into some sort of narcoleptic, apoplectic, pathogenic tizzy about the war, crying fickle and foul at every turn and seeming like all everyone wanted was to end the darned thing. Imagine that. What a bunch of whiney little self-interested twits, squealing like a continent full of Europeans, and utterly failing to see the great wisdom of Young William's Grand Adventure In Mesopotamia. It's really quite nauseating, isn't it?</p> <p>In his article, Kristol really rips the Democrats, and don't they ever deserve it. Now that Iraq appears to be marginally more peaceful than it was last year at this time, Kristol is angry because, as he puts it: "It's apparently impermissible for leading Democrats to acknowledge - let alone celebrate - progress in Iraq".</p> <p>Bill is angry because the Democrats (and the public - but, oddly, he doesn't mention that part) still want to end the war - even though it's been a huge success! They should "celebrate" it, instead! Fortunately, he is clever enough to suss out the real reason for this childish intransigence. It's not, as Hillary put it, because the Iraqis know the Democrats will shut off the supply valve of endless wasted dollars and soon-to-be casualties headed to Baghdad. As Kristol notes, "That is truly a fairy tale. And it is driven by a refusal to admit real success because that success has been achieved under the leadership of ... George W. Bush. The horror!"</p> <p>I must admit I've suffered from some of the same confusion as the Dumb Dems, whom I think we can all agree are simply hopelessly naive pacifists intent on allowing our country to be taken over by Very Bad People (of less than fully white complexion) who mean us harm. You know the type I mean, like George McGovern, who flew all those bombing missions during World War II while Little Bush, Cheney, Ashcroft, Kristol and the rest fought ... valiantly ... in ... Viet ... oh, never mind. Anyhow, that hopeless and dangerous idealism is why, just one year before the Iraq war, every single Democrat in the Congress opposed the invasion of Afghanistan except for ... well, except for ... every single Democrat in Congress other than one. Okay, never mind on that one too.</p> <p>Look, let's get down to brass tacks here. Kristol just gets it. The rest of us don't. He realizes that in the grand scheme of things - "World War IV" as his pappy likes to call it - what's important is not the big picture, but the very narrowest.</p> <p>You may think, for example, that promulgating egregious lies in order to shove your way into am Iraq war that no one else wants is stupid and counterproductive, damaging the credibility and interests of the United States, and probably accounting for the lack of allied support in a more credible war in Afghanistan. But Bill Kristol knows better.</p> <p>You may think that fighting a war that massively drains military, diplomatic and financial resources away from the real enemies of the country in order to pursue a pet project that has nothing to do with those genuine threats would be idiotic and suicidal. But that's 'cause you're not as smart as William Kristol.</p> <p>You might believe that it was a ludicrous waste of blood and treasure to kill 4,000 Americans and one million Iraqis, while borrowing and spending a trillion bucks (fast going up to two) in order to invade a country that had neither attacked us nor threatened us. And that doing so was an extremely poor choice of resource allocation, especially when we have tens of millions of children doing without healthcare in this country. But if you were a clever neoconservative like Bill Kristol you'd know better.</p> <p>You might think that wrecking our military and compromising American security over a non-problem - indeed, a problem that people like Bushes and Cheneys and Rumsfelds and Reagans once very much created and encouraged - would be a stupid choice of priorities. But that's only because you don't have the foreign policy insight of someone like Bill Kristol.</p> <p>And let me guess - I bet you also think that launching a war that brings chaos to a vital and volatile area, and that massively increases the power of an Iran run by radical theocrats was a really, really dumb idea. But if you were Bill Kristol you'd realize that all we need is a third war against an Islamic country, and we can clean up the whole mess all at once!</p> <p>Or maybe you're like all those American intelligence agencies, who collectively reported last year that the Iraq war was actually creating anti-American terrorists rather than eradicating them. But if you were as smart as Mr. Bill and his Kristol Ball, you'd know that they're all just a bunch of long-haired and bearded blame-America-first left-wing Berkeley rejects running covert ops for the CIA, NSA and other intelligence agencies. Of course they're going to diss the war! It's going well, and those unpatriotic spooks can't stand that because they hate America!</p> <p>Maybe you're angry because you think the same American soldiers whom people like George W. Bush are always hiding behind should actually have adequate armor to fight the war they've been thrust into, rather than their families having to hold bake sales to buy it for them. And maybe you also think they should be treated a wee bit better than they have been at Walter Reed (and far beyond) when they come home wounded, or they have to fight harder than in Anbar to get the benefits owed to them out of the military. But what Bill Kristol knows is that you can't make an omelette without breaking some eggs! So lighten up on that whole concern-for-the-troops thing already. (Unless you're the president doing a photo-op, of course.)</p> <p>Don't tell me you're chagrined at the idea that American forces may be in Iraq for another decade, or even for a full "generation". Probably that's just because you or someone you know might have to go fight there. People like Kristol never do, of course, so why should he worry?</p> <p>Are you angry that well-connected cronies and corporations got rich off this war? That eight billion dollars in cash went completely missing in Iraq? That multi-billion dollar no-bid contracts got paid out for jobs never done? That American soldiers worked and bled and died for peanuts alongside mercenaries making four times as much salary? That we will be paying for this war in interest on loans and expensive treatment of the wounded for generations to come? Yeah? Well Bill Kristol thinks you should get your priorities straight!</p> <p>Have you somehow come to the conclusion that turning one-fifth of Iraq's 25 million people into either corpses or refugees hasn't exactly been a great liberating service to that country? You know, sorta like when we told them to rise up but then stood by and watched Saddam mow them down. Or when we turned a blind eye to Saddam's use of chemical weapons against his own people, and even protected him from condemnation for those crimes at the UN? Bill Kristol thinks that's because you just don't know the true value of freedom and democracy. Oh, and you put too much emphasis on that whole not-getting-killed thing.</p> <p>Are you one of those whiney liberals who believe that this war - whether one supported the idea of it originally or not - has been ridiculously mishandled from the beginning? That there were never enough troops sent in? That allowing rampant looting was stupid? That failing to have plans for the occupation of a country of 25 million people constitutes criminal negligence? That firing the Iraqi army was just as idiotic as sending thousands of armed and angry men home unemployed sounds like it would be? That purging the national government and infrastructure of all Baath Party members was a prescription for chaos? That allowing civil war between Sunni and Shiite was disastrous? Yeah, well, Bill Kristol knows better. He understands that what's really important is that the massive levels of violence and pandemonium of these last FIVE years (count 'em) are now possibly slightly lower than the outrageous levels they've long been at, and could conceivably stay that way.</p> <p>Can't you see the small picture here? Kristol can. I guess that's why he has a New York Times column and you don't. I guess that's why the president listens to his advice and not yours.</p> <p>Who could blame him for being angry and vituperative toward dangerously silly Democrats who don't see the peril facing our civilization?</p> <p>Such quibblers! So what if the war was sold on completely fabricated lies, was supposed to be a cakewalk but has now lasted longer than World War II, has divided the country and made the world hate us, has squandered our (borrowed) resources and broken our military, has brought instability to a volatile and crucial region and allowed a real national antagonist to double its power, has diverted our resources from the still-uncaptured guy who supposedly attacked us on 9/11, has become a factory for producing anti-American terrorists, has wiped out over a million innocent people and turned more than four million into refugees? So what if this war has now supposedly been 'saved' by precisely the same strategy that was vehemently rejected by the same people in the beginning?</p> <p>Let's keep our priorities straight here, people. All that really matters is that we've seen a possible slight improvement in levels of violence in Iraq over the last couple of months (all of which may be due to a host of possible factors, including that there aren't many people left alive to fight there anymore). Get it?</p> <p>Some people think that burning down your neighbor's house and having your own catch fire as a result is a highly stupid and really criminal thing to do. What neocons like Bill Kristol understand, though - and what naive liberals will never get - is that what really matters is whether you can slightly diminish the rate at which the flames consume those dwellings, five years after starting the fire. That's what's genuinely important - not the ashes where the houses once stood.</p> <p>If you understood that simple principle, you wouldn't be complaining about this war so much. Rather, you'd be "celebrating" how well it's going.</p> <p>If you understood this logic, you'd have supported the war from the very beginning, as William Kristol did. (Which of course has nothing to do with his apparent defensiveness about it today, we can all rest assured.)</p> <p>In fact, if you were as smart as Bill Kristol and the other fine folks who brought you the invasion of Iraq, you'd quit with all your smug complaints, once and for all.</p> And you'd realize what a great freakin' war this really is!<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at regressiveantidote.net: http://regressiveantidote.net/Articles/What_A_Great_Freakin'_War.htmlunhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-90647789821061930332008-01-27T07:10:00.000-05:002008-01-27T07:14:02.794-05:00Bill O’Reilly, Homeless-Veteran Denierby <a href="http://pundits.thehill.com/author/brent-budowsky/" title="Posts by Brent Budowsky">Brent Budowsky</a><br /><br />January 25, 2008<br /><br /><br /><p>It was one of the most repellent and revealing spectacles to hear multimillionaire conservative talk show host Bill O’Reilly virtually deny the existence of large numbers of homeless vets.</p> <p>In his scorched-earth attack on John Edwards for calling for help for the homeless veterans living on grates and in poverty, O’Reilly hit a new low that is almost impossible to fully comprehend.</p> <p>Does O’Reilly not understand that the problem of homeless vets is very severe, and beginning to rise again with the return of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan with severe psychological trauma and physical wounds?</p> <p>Or is O’Reilly merely using homeless vets as the petty cash of another cheap-shot attack by a right-wing mouthpiece who doesn’t care whether his words are true, to make his point between commercials, from sponsors who should call him on the carpet for this?</p> <p>Perhaps Mr. O’Reilly can take a first-class flight to Washington, and before he checks in to his four-star hotel, prior to his opining during dinner at a five-star restaurant, he might ask his limousine driver to give him a guided tour of this city, where he would easily find the homeless vets this homeless-vet denier does not know exist.</p> <p>Let’s forget O’Reilly, part of the freak show cavalcade that now passes for entertainment and news in some outposts on cable television.</p> <p>The issue is homeless vets, the problem is a moral and patriotic crisis for our generation, and the solution is to give these homeless heroes the love, attention and support they have earned.</p> <p>In my column this past Tuesday in The Hill, I proposed a very modest profits tax on oil companies that would increase the size of the “stimulus” by adding, among other things, new support for homeless veterans.</p> <p>At various times, on this site and in columns, I have proposed a Soldier Bond, or Patriot Bond, that would be modeled after the U.S. Savings Bond and raise capital that would support homeless and disabled vets, and wounded troops.</p> <p>We should do these things. It would be swell if Mr. O’Reilly would lend his loud but not always wise voice to these efforts, but whether he does or not, we as a country and people must do this.</p> <p>Every one of us should be part of this effort. It is a moral duty of our generation, and we must do so with words that are true, actions that are real, and a patriotic commitment that is shared.<br /></p><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at pundits.thehill.com: http://pundits.thehill.com/2008/01/25/bill-oreilly-homeless-veteran-denier/<br /> <div class="meta"><h2 id="date"><span style="font-size:100%;">January 25, 2008</span></h2> </div>unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-12710174534402561142008-01-25T14:41:00.000-05:002008-01-26T05:31:37.303-05:00McCain and "Wasteful Govt.Spending"McCain, who parlayed his POW status into a life time on the taxpayers tits, has definitely shown his brain death. As a Viet Vet, who should know better, actively promotes this Criminal Enterprise's Criminal War "If it takes a hundred years"@" $2,083,333.33 per minute" [see unhappycamper below] and in the breath says, as president, he will stop all that"wasteful government spending."<br /><br />Perhaps, for once, Karl Rove was right when he claimed McCain's time in the "Hanoi Hilton" damaged him to such an extent that he couldn't be trusted to be President!<br /><br />WTFU,A!<br /><br />SDBGhost_of_Smedleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03610420930798410825noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-56929013961716916512008-01-25T14:08:00.000-05:002008-01-25T14:11:11.171-05:00Let's face facts, shall we? America SucksBy <span class="medtext">MrScorpio<br /><br /><br /></span>Yep, I said it, we suck. <br /><br />It isn't hard to figure this out. <br /><br />It's just that too many of us are too chicken to deal with this fact.<br /><br />I know that a lot of people will say, "What about Democracy? What about Freedom? What about this? What about that?" <br /><br />I say that these people obviously haven't been paying attention. <br /><br />In terms of the strict constructionist, America was supposed to be the safe haven for the white, land owning male... Everybody else was supposed to be an afterthought. Slaves, indigenous people, women and child labor be damned. The history of this nation should never be viewed in terms of the PEOPLE, who overcame adversity and lead the nation to peace and prosperity... That's basically a lie.<br /><br />The story is one of the privileged few, forcing the disenfranchised many to do their bidding. Twenty million citizens from the great state of Wisconsin didn't sign the NAFTA treaty along with the people of Chiapas and Manitoba... These were men and women, who were the source of real power or the supporters of it. They acted and the people who were most affected by this, or any other such treaty or policy decision had very little say, if any.<br /><br />The history of America is basically an example of how empires are built, and as of late, how they collapse on themselves. The motto of America should have always been, "We Shit Where We Eat". Which, of course, is never a good thing to do.<br /><br />You have two histories of America, internal and external. The internal history relates how the rich and powerful few have subjugated the not as rich and powerful many. How most people are dealing with modern day slavery, i.e. the prison industrial complex, economic disenfranchisement and the support for the war machine that affects so much of our external history.<br /><br />America still is ruled by the rich and powerful few and the tools that use are many. Their strategy is very simple and efficient in its prosecution: Just get the masses of people to not care that they are continually working against their own best interests. Do everything to stop them from noticing that they are shitting where they are eating.<br /><br />You hear these folks, and there are a lot of them all the time. They say things like, "I'm not a terrorist, so it's ok that my phones or bugged". Or, "Unions are what's bringing down the economy." Or one of my personal faves, "The government should be run like a business." People who utter this kind of crap have successfully turned off their brains and are willing to allow their masters to maintain dominion over them.<br /><br />Even, when faced with their own economic and political disadvantages, they proudly attach yellow ribbons to their vehicles and pine on about how great "we" are. Talk about reverse projection.<br /><br />They are the kind of people who shit where eat and are very proud of this fact.<br /><br />And of course, those captains of industry and their whores in the political arena aren't any better. These are people so blinded by their quest for greed and power, their willing to commit social and economic suicide to get ahead. Just think about every business that fought tooth and nail to change trade policy in this country that outsources manufacturing and offshores money. Look in any paper and you'll see that the major car companies are tanking from lack of sales and are tanking badly.<br /><br />Did it ever occur to these people that, by moving manufacturing and support to cheaper and less regulated climes, they were undercutting the buying power of a huge chunk of folks that they depended on to buy their cars? Henry Ford may have been an anti-semitic, racist, union-busting egoist along with being a successful industrialist... But one thing he understood, the wages that he paid his employees would eventually put more money in his own pockets. So, he sold a car that he knew that his workers could afford. With his eventual acquiescence to the demands of his organized labor force, the resulting growth of the middle class working population improved living conditions tremendously.<br /><br />All in all, Henry Ford was dragged kicking and screaming into the realization that it was not a good thing to shit where he ate.<br /><br />How the Big Three are not realizing this obvious situation as they circle the drain is way beyond my understanding.<br /><br />About a hundred years ago, during the gilded age of the robber baron, society said enough: The barons where given a choice, either strive to make life better in general for the masses of people, or continue to shit where they ate and be forced to change their ways. Most chose the latter. Thus people whose with names like Rockefeller, Mellon and Carnegie built an infrastructure for culture and learning that we still are benefiting from to this very day.<br /><br />They were forced to be the exception when the rule was no longer tenable. <br /><br />The result helped transform America into a country where the original ideal citizen was expanded to include just about all of us into the franchise.<br /><br />Somehow, we're backing to shitting where we eat and no one has any inclination to change.<br /><br />On the External Front, America never fails to shit where it eats. I'll just give you a list of people that simplifies my point. A list of dictators supported by the U.S. Government and the corporate elite.<br /><br /><div class="excerpt">Country Dictator Dates Statistics<br />Chile Gen. Augusto Pinochet 1973-1990 3000 murdered. 400,000 tortured.<br />Argentina Gen. Jorge Rafael Videla 1976-1981 30,000 murdered. more<br />Indonesia Suharto 1965 coup against left-leaning Sukarno,<br />1975 support of East Timor genocide<br /> 500,000 dead after 1965 coup; 100,000-230,000 dead in East Timor; more, more, more.<br />Guatemala Armas, Fuentes, Montt 1954-<br />Iran The Shah of Iran<br /> Ayatollah Khomeini was on the CIA payroll in the 1970s in Paris<br />Egypt Sadat, Mubarak 1978-today<br />Iraq Saddam Hussein<br />Nicaragua Anastasio Somoza & sons 1937-1979<br />Paraguay Stroessner. US supported throughout (state.gov says US has supported Paraguayan development since 1942) ($142M between 1962 and 1975) 1954-1989<br />Bolivia Col. Hugo Banzer overthrew elected leftist president Juan Jose Torres 1970-<br />Angola Jonas Savimbi/UNITA (didn't actually win his revolution, but killed or displaced millions) 1975-1989<br />Zaire Mobutu <br />Saudi Arabia Saud family <br />Kuwait a monarchy <br />Morocco <br />Tunisia <br />Algeria <br />Jordan <br />Panama Noriega was US-supported for years <br />Haiti Papa Doc, Baby Doc <br />Dominican Republic Trujillo, a military dictator for 32 years with US support for most of that time; Belaguer, Trujillo's protege, installed after US Marines intervened to put down an attempt to restore the democratically elected government of Juan Bosch 1930-61, 1965-78<br />Honduras <br />El Salvador 1980s<br />Nepal monarchy since 1948<br />Cuba Fulgencio Batista pre-Castro<br />Brazil Gen. Branco overthrew elected president Goulart with US support 1965-67<br />Uzbekistan Kamirov "The Boiler", $150M from the Bush administration for an air base. 1965-67<br /><br /><a href="http://www.tomveatch.com/dictatorships.html" target="_blank">source</a></div><br /><br />With things like total war, globalized pollution, tobacco price and trade supports, the undermining to international law and a complete disregard of the basic humanity of other people on this planet, the U.S. is taking a big shit on the whole planet. Just to name a few, of course. Oh, and we brag, and force so much of our "culture" on so many people who can't even imagine to have our frame of reference at all. The concept and definition of "Anti-Americanism" and our response to it has always bothered me... I could spend all day talking about that, but I won't<br /><br />I'm sure you get the point, so there's no need to extrapolate further. Is there any reason why we shouldn't realize why so many people hate our guts?<br /><br />One last thing: They easy thing to do would be to blame Bush, or Reagan or the Republicans or whoever. The fact is that these things have happened and they were done in all of our names AND due to the fact that the masses did not stop whatever crimes from occuring, we all share either implicit or explicit blame. When a dropped bomb kills an innocent family, in one way or another, we all share in that event, without regard to our approval or not. We allow the bombs to be built, our taxes fund the costs and those who represent us authorize the deed.<br /><br />We allow failure to stop it from occurring to be an option.<br /><br />It's that ugly fact alone, which stipulates why this country sucks.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://tinyurl.com/36mumxunhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-25674747921185050892008-01-25T04:13:00.000-05:002008-01-25T04:15:12.935-05:00Come On, MSM - Just DO IT!!!By NanceGreggs<br /><br /><br />To say I have a problem with the mainstream TV media’s coverage of the presidential primaries would be a vast understatement. However, since they’re intent on turning politics into a combination horserace/infotainment show, they can at least go whole-hog with the concept – yes, pun very much intended.<br /><br />Primary season could begin with the candidates from both parties battling it out on <i>Jeopardy!</i> – at least we’d get a glimpse of who knows what, especially with tailored-to-the-task categories like <i>The Economy, The National Debt, Job Outsourcing</i>, and <i>National Security</i>. <br /><br />It’s bound to keep the voters enthralled. Who doesn’t want to hear McCain choose “Iraq” and have to answer with, “What is a money-sucking quagmire?” if he wants to stay in the game, or watch the hilarity as Huckabee says, “I’ll take <i>Separation of Church & State</i> for a thousand, Alex.”<br /><br />The popular <i>American Idol</i> format would work well as-is, except the competition would focus on speechmaking rather than singing. Bonus: no need to replace the judges. I’ve no doubt that Simon, Paula and Randy know as much about politics as, say, Wolf, Candy and Russert. While it may seem laughable that candidates be judged on their speechifying’, let’s remember that one G.W. Bush never would have made it past the audition stage. You can almost hear Cowell’s disgust as he states, in his clipped accent, <i>”That was truly dreadful. Let’s be honest here, George, it is blatantly obvious that you <u>cannot speak English</u>.”</i><br /><br />TVs across American would be tuned-in for an entire season of <i>Survivor – Middle-Class America</i>, where contestant candidates are plunked down into a small American town and, stripped of any access to their personal wealth, have to survive by finding a job and an affordable place to live, while facing choices between food and heating oil, or enough gas to get to work and an emergency trip to the dentist. Job outsourced after one week? Bankrupted by a medical emergency? Welcome to Middle-Class America – too bad you didn’t survive!<br /><br />Of course, there’s always the probability that the GOP candidates could “up” their ratings by appearing on more than one show in a primary season. No doubt Giuliani would wow ‘em on <i>Cheaters</i>, followed by an episode of <i>Cops</i> where he stands in the driveway, shirtless and clutching a can of beer, screaming as the boys-in-blue ‘cuff his best buddy Kerik, and cart him off to the hoosegow.<br /><br />Cameo appearances on popular drama shows could also boost ratings <i>and</i> score political points, e.g. Fred Thompson portraying a catatonic patient on <i>ER</i>, or Alan Keyes playing a presidential candidate who went missing months ago without anyone noticing on <i>Without a Trace</i>. <br /><br />And who wouldn’t watch a special reprise episode of <i>Seinfeld</i> featuring Mitt Romney as Elaine's newest love interest who’s got Mr. Peterman selling his combination <i>puffy shirt/magic underwear</i>?<br /><br />The side-slapping, roll-on-the-floor-laughing possibilities are truly endless, and would undoubtedly have the viewing/voting public not only <i>interested</i>, but mesmerized - and therein lies the problem.<br /><br />So don't forget to tune-in. You don't want to miss a minute of the hilarious hijinks as the country chooses its next president - one who could make-or-break democracy as we once knew it. And if the entire country goes down in flames, there's always the hope that <i>next season</i> will offer better viewing fare.<br /><br /><br />Posted in full with author's permission.<br /><br />Originally posted at democraticunderground.com: http://journals.democraticunderground.com/NanceGreggs/336unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-81854160801246873972008-01-24T09:51:00.000-05:002008-01-24T09:59:35.548-05:00$2,083,333.33 a minuteThe occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan are costing us roughly $12,000,000,000 a week, which works out to $2,083,333.33 <b>a minute</b>. Every fucking minute of every fucking day. (1,440 minutes per day, 5,760 minutes per week)<br /><br />I don't know about you, but I sure could find something useful to do with $2,083,333.33 a minute. Feed the hungry. TAKE CARE OF OUR VETERANS. Schools. Bridges. Health insurance. TAKE CARE OF OUR VETERANS. Social programs. SCHIP.<br /><br />Instead, we continue to pour money down the rabbit hole. BAE, Lockeed Martin, SIAC, GE, Raytheon, Grumman Northup, Parsons, Halliburton, Blackwater etc. etc.<br /><br />What is going on is shameful. And wrong.unhappycamperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08628251205607296521noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7613563534722883213.post-19864709528297377132008-01-22T08:42:00.000-05:002008-01-22T09:50:09.798-05:00"Free Lunch""Free Lunch" by David Cay Johnston is subtitled "How the wealthiest Americans enrich themselves at government expense and stick you with the tab." In it he cites people like Warren Buffet, Donald Trump, "Dubya" himself etc. ad nauseam. In his own words; "These people use the government as a vehicle to take from the many and give to the few."<br /><br />Sound familiar? - As in "War is a Racket - A Few Profit the Many Pay" by Smedley D.Butler.<br /><br />Face it folks, as Bob Dylan wrote in his song, many years ago - "When You Gonna Wake[the Fuck]Up?" "You got gangsters in power and law breakers making the rules" <br /><br />Too bad we can't program that song into every American's radio alarm!!!<br /><br />S.D.B.Ghost_of_Smedleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03610420930798410825noreply@blogger.com0