American Occupational Hazards
Karin von Hippel of Open Democracy explains the hazards of post-war military occupation of Iraq.
The US administration led by President Bush came to office in January 2001 with an attitude of scorn towards the ‘nation-building’ efforts of its immediate predecessor. It is therefore a supreme irony that President George W. Bush is now embracing plans for a US military governor to run Iraq, in a way that is reminiscent of General Douglas MacArthur in post-1945 Japan.
In defining Bush’s security strategy at the start of his administration, Condoleezza Rice wrote (in Foreign Affairs, January/February 2000):
“The president must remember that the military is a special instrument.
It is lethal, and it is meant to be. It is not a civilian police force. It is not a political referee.
And it is most certainly not designed to build a civilian society.”
Ouch. That doesn't play well anymore. And there's more...
The avoidance of any manifest US occupation of Iraq is crucial to thwart what could otherwise become a successful recruitment campaign by al-Qaida. Such an occupation would serve to enrage Islamic extremists, while humiliating moderate Muslims, and increase anti-Americanism in many parts of the world. A UN-led, Nato-controlled, administration in Iraq – backed by a serious US-commitment, would remove that perception.
The Washington Post of 26 February 2003 retrieved a criticism of Al Gore by his rival candidate on the very eve of the presidential elections of November 2000. George W. Bush then declared: “Let me tell you what else I’m worried about: I’m worried about an opponent who uses nation building and the military in the same sentence”.
Double ouchie!
Be sure to read the whole article.
Tuesday, April 15, 2003
Looting, Lawlessness and Humanitarian Consequences
I know it's "old news" now, but this is worth reading. From Amnesty International, a damning assessment of our performance, or lack of, in maintaining order in Iraq.
Widespread looting and arson. Lawlessness and reprisal attacks. Water shortages and power cuts. Overwhelmed and ransacked hospitals. Disorder hampering humanitarian relief agencies. This is the grim reality facing millions of Iraqi civilians in areas newly under the control of US/UK forces. As one Iraqi told a BBC reporter on 10 April, "No authority now. No law now. No anything. Thieves anywhere."
US and UK authorities were repeatedly warned before the conflict by Amnesty International and others that there was a grave risk of widespread disorder, humanitarian crisis and human rights abuses, including revenge attacks, once the Iraqi government's authority was removed. Now that US/UK forces are occupying substantial parts of Iraq, they must live up to their specific responsibilities under international human rights and humanitarian law to protect the rights of Iraqi people.
Also from Amnesty, a call to ensure justice and accountability for human rights abuses in Iraq.
Amnesty International stresses that the UN has recognized expertise and authoritativeness in this field. As such, the UN should play the leading role in developing proposals for reforming the Iraqi criminal justice system and could recommend transitional and complementary approaches in the meantime, regardless of the arrangements made for governing Iraq.
"Proposals for using US or UK tribunals are undesirable, since they risk being perceived as victors' - justice. Certain proposals such as the use of US military commissions, which are not even courts, would be grossly unfair under international law," Amnesty International emphasized.
Possible transitional approaches under consideration include an international ad hoc tribunal and a mixed tribunal. Existing approaches including universal jurisdiction, could make an important contribution, and a regional tribunal should be examined. Amnesty International's report discusses the strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches under consideration.
Stay tuned.
I know it's "old news" now, but this is worth reading. From Amnesty International, a damning assessment of our performance, or lack of, in maintaining order in Iraq.
Widespread looting and arson. Lawlessness and reprisal attacks. Water shortages and power cuts. Overwhelmed and ransacked hospitals. Disorder hampering humanitarian relief agencies. This is the grim reality facing millions of Iraqi civilians in areas newly under the control of US/UK forces. As one Iraqi told a BBC reporter on 10 April, "No authority now. No law now. No anything. Thieves anywhere."
US and UK authorities were repeatedly warned before the conflict by Amnesty International and others that there was a grave risk of widespread disorder, humanitarian crisis and human rights abuses, including revenge attacks, once the Iraqi government's authority was removed. Now that US/UK forces are occupying substantial parts of Iraq, they must live up to their specific responsibilities under international human rights and humanitarian law to protect the rights of Iraqi people.
Also from Amnesty, a call to ensure justice and accountability for human rights abuses in Iraq.
Amnesty International stresses that the UN has recognized expertise and authoritativeness in this field. As such, the UN should play the leading role in developing proposals for reforming the Iraqi criminal justice system and could recommend transitional and complementary approaches in the meantime, regardless of the arrangements made for governing Iraq.
"Proposals for using US or UK tribunals are undesirable, since they risk being perceived as victors' - justice. Certain proposals such as the use of US military commissions, which are not even courts, would be grossly unfair under international law," Amnesty International emphasized.
Possible transitional approaches under consideration include an international ad hoc tribunal and a mixed tribunal. Existing approaches including universal jurisdiction, could make an important contribution, and a regional tribunal should be examined. Amnesty International's report discusses the strengths and weaknesses of the various approaches under consideration.
Stay tuned.
The US Media and Global Respect
Stephan Richter over at The Globalist wonders how long, in the age of "embedded" reporters, the American media will retain its global respect?
"U.S. media organizations are simply larger and better financed than those from nearly all other countries. But that material superiority does not translate into more meaningful — or better — journalism.
Too many U.S. media endeavor to achieve little more than to ratify the consensus.
All it really adds up to is more channels and other media outlets that need to be filled with more material.
Witness the near-identical coverage of the war on numerous U.S. cable news channels, as well as on the major networks. The pressures of filling more hours can become oppressive — and result in journalism losing its teeth."
Media reform. Now.
*****
Also in Welcome To A Fractured World, Gary Hufbauer ponders, "Without a security alliance as its rudder, can the world economic order be kept on course?"
Let's hope so. I know our president does.
Stephan Richter over at The Globalist wonders how long, in the age of "embedded" reporters, the American media will retain its global respect?
"U.S. media organizations are simply larger and better financed than those from nearly all other countries. But that material superiority does not translate into more meaningful — or better — journalism.
Too many U.S. media endeavor to achieve little more than to ratify the consensus.
All it really adds up to is more channels and other media outlets that need to be filled with more material.
Witness the near-identical coverage of the war on numerous U.S. cable news channels, as well as on the major networks. The pressures of filling more hours can become oppressive — and result in journalism losing its teeth."
Media reform. Now.
*****
Also in Welcome To A Fractured World, Gary Hufbauer ponders, "Without a security alliance as its rudder, can the world economic order be kept on course?"
Let's hope so. I know our president does.
Homer's Odyssey
I'd like to take this class in Berkeley, where they use 'The Simpsons' to discuss philosophy.
"Lest anyone think this is a course that academically challenged jocks seek for easy credits to stay eligible for football, Shores quizzed the students on (a) their knowledge of philosophic principles; and (b) "The Simpsons." The majority of those accepted were upperclassmen with majors ranging from philosophy to economics to English literature."
I'd like to take this class in Berkeley, where they use 'The Simpsons' to discuss philosophy.
"Lest anyone think this is a course that academically challenged jocks seek for easy credits to stay eligible for football, Shores quizzed the students on (a) their knowledge of philosophic principles; and (b) "The Simpsons." The majority of those accepted were upperclassmen with majors ranging from philosophy to economics to English literature."
Smart Heuristics...Or How Humans Learn To Live With Uncertainty
Gerg Gigerenzer waxes eloquent in this essay...
"There is a nice story that illustrates the whole conflict: A famous decision theorist who once taught at Columbia got an offer from a rival university and was struggling with the question of whether to stay where he was or accept the new post. His friend, a philosopher, took him aside and said, "What's the problem? Just do what you write about and what you teach your students. Maximize your expected utility." The decision theorist, exasperated, responded, "Come on, get serious!"
Decisions can often be modeled by what I call fast and frugal heuristics. Sometimes they're faster, and sometimes they're more frugal. Deciding which of two jobs to take, for instance, may involve consequences that are incommensurate from the point of view of the person making the decision. The new job may give you more money and prestige, but it might leave your children in tears, since they don't want to move for fear that they would lose their friends. Some economists may believe that you can bring everything in the same common denominator, but others can't do this. A person could end up making a decision for one dominant reason.
We make decisions based on a bounded rationality, not the unbounded rationality of the decision maker modeled after an omniscient god. But bounded rationality is also not of one kind. There is a group of economists, for example, who look at the bounds or constraints in the environment that affect how a decision is made. This study is called "optimization under constraints," and many Nobel prizes have been awarded in this area. Using the concept of bounded rationality from this perspective you realize that an organism has neither unlimited resources nor unlimited time. So one asks, given these constraints what's the optimal solution?
There's a second group, which doesn't look at bounds in the environment but at bounds in the mind. These include many psychologists and behavioral economists who find that people often take in only limited information, and sometimes make decisions based on just one or two criteria. But these colleagues don't analyze the environmental influences on the task. They think that for a priori reasons people make bad choices because of a bias, an error, or a fallacy. They look at constraints in the mind."
We must reveal the mind in order to free it.
Gerg Gigerenzer waxes eloquent in this essay...
"There is a nice story that illustrates the whole conflict: A famous decision theorist who once taught at Columbia got an offer from a rival university and was struggling with the question of whether to stay where he was or accept the new post. His friend, a philosopher, took him aside and said, "What's the problem? Just do what you write about and what you teach your students. Maximize your expected utility." The decision theorist, exasperated, responded, "Come on, get serious!"
Decisions can often be modeled by what I call fast and frugal heuristics. Sometimes they're faster, and sometimes they're more frugal. Deciding which of two jobs to take, for instance, may involve consequences that are incommensurate from the point of view of the person making the decision. The new job may give you more money and prestige, but it might leave your children in tears, since they don't want to move for fear that they would lose their friends. Some economists may believe that you can bring everything in the same common denominator, but others can't do this. A person could end up making a decision for one dominant reason.
We make decisions based on a bounded rationality, not the unbounded rationality of the decision maker modeled after an omniscient god. But bounded rationality is also not of one kind. There is a group of economists, for example, who look at the bounds or constraints in the environment that affect how a decision is made. This study is called "optimization under constraints," and many Nobel prizes have been awarded in this area. Using the concept of bounded rationality from this perspective you realize that an organism has neither unlimited resources nor unlimited time. So one asks, given these constraints what's the optimal solution?
There's a second group, which doesn't look at bounds in the environment but at bounds in the mind. These include many psychologists and behavioral economists who find that people often take in only limited information, and sometimes make decisions based on just one or two criteria. But these colleagues don't analyze the environmental influences on the task. They think that for a priori reasons people make bad choices because of a bias, an error, or a fallacy. They look at constraints in the mind."
We must reveal the mind in order to free it.
The Existentialist War
In a book review, Carlin Romano discusses, through the lens of George Cotkin's book Existential America, how we out existential the French in our liberation of Iraq.
"American existentialists, Cotkin wrote, shared some of the traditional anxiety and dread of European existentialism, but they did not "contentedly wallow in such despair." Instead, they often emphasized "the upside of existential freedom: the freeing from the shackles of tradition, the possibility of a more authentic existence, and the headiness that comes with the freedom to create and be creative."
In short, they bypassed what Cotkin describes very nicely in his conclusion as "the dead-end turn of existentialism" - nihilism. Summing up, Cotkin offers a kind of salute to what we might call 21st-century existentialism, American style: "To write, to act, to create, and to rebel after a century of totalitarianism and mass destruction, and in the face of new challenges, is to engage in existential transcendence, to erect a sculpture of human possibility, albeit out of the ashes of despair."
Let's do it.
In a book review, Carlin Romano discusses, through the lens of George Cotkin's book Existential America, how we out existential the French in our liberation of Iraq.
"American existentialists, Cotkin wrote, shared some of the traditional anxiety and dread of European existentialism, but they did not "contentedly wallow in such despair." Instead, they often emphasized "the upside of existential freedom: the freeing from the shackles of tradition, the possibility of a more authentic existence, and the headiness that comes with the freedom to create and be creative."
In short, they bypassed what Cotkin describes very nicely in his conclusion as "the dead-end turn of existentialism" - nihilism. Summing up, Cotkin offers a kind of salute to what we might call 21st-century existentialism, American style: "To write, to act, to create, and to rebel after a century of totalitarianism and mass destruction, and in the face of new challenges, is to engage in existential transcendence, to erect a sculpture of human possibility, albeit out of the ashes of despair."
Let's do it.
The Cosmopolitan Illusion
Policy Review writer Lee Harris discusses Martha Nussbaum's essay "Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism"...
Is it wrong to teach our children to be patriotic? Or may we teach them to be a little patriotic, provided that we also teach them to value and respect the cultures of others? Should they be encouraged to be loyal to their own nation, or should they be taught that they are citizens of the world before all else?
Should education be preaching either of these?
Policy Review writer Lee Harris discusses Martha Nussbaum's essay "Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism"...
Is it wrong to teach our children to be patriotic? Or may we teach them to be a little patriotic, provided that we also teach them to value and respect the cultures of others? Should they be encouraged to be loyal to their own nation, or should they be taught that they are citizens of the world before all else?
Should education be preaching either of these?
Monday, April 14, 2003
Umberto Eco On Eternal Fascism
Meme Cauldron links to a thoughtful essay by Umberto Eco on Ur-Fascism and the many ways of looking at a blackshirt.
Meme Cauldron links to a thoughtful essay by Umberto Eco on Ur-Fascism and the many ways of looking at a blackshirt.
General, is the war going well, or is the war going extremely well?
In the Guardian, Michael Wolff explains his controversial question to General Vincent Brooks: "I mean no disrespect, but what is the value proposition of these briefings. Why are we here? Why should we stay? What's the value of what we're learning at this million dollar press centre?"
The trouble begins. And, even though it was the question everyone wanted to ask, Wolff points out the hazards of actually asking a question like this live on international television...
"We had reached the point where reporters were interviewing other reporters in the most media scrutinised war ever fought. But even among the over-exposed, I was - because of the irritable question I'd asked at a daily briefing and over international television - on the verge of a special status: becoming the wise-ass of the war..."
Apparently, Rush Limbaugh and his crowd don't like a "wise-ass"...
"To his audience of 20 million - pro-war, military minded, Bush-centered, media-hating - lily white-Rush laid me out. I was not only a reporter, but one from New York magazine. "New York" resonated. It combined with "media" and suddenly, in the hands of Rush, I was as elitist and as pampered (fortunately nobody mentioned the Ritz) and as dismissive of the concerns of real Americans as, well, Rush's 20 million assume the media to be. Whereas Rush, that noted foot soldier, represented the military heartland."
We need more people like Michael Wolff in the media. If only to get Rush all riled up. Make sure to read the whole column, it's quite good.
In the Guardian, Michael Wolff explains his controversial question to General Vincent Brooks: "I mean no disrespect, but what is the value proposition of these briefings. Why are we here? Why should we stay? What's the value of what we're learning at this million dollar press centre?"
The trouble begins. And, even though it was the question everyone wanted to ask, Wolff points out the hazards of actually asking a question like this live on international television...
"We had reached the point where reporters were interviewing other reporters in the most media scrutinised war ever fought. But even among the over-exposed, I was - because of the irritable question I'd asked at a daily briefing and over international television - on the verge of a special status: becoming the wise-ass of the war..."
Apparently, Rush Limbaugh and his crowd don't like a "wise-ass"...
"To his audience of 20 million - pro-war, military minded, Bush-centered, media-hating - lily white-Rush laid me out. I was not only a reporter, but one from New York magazine. "New York" resonated. It combined with "media" and suddenly, in the hands of Rush, I was as elitist and as pampered (fortunately nobody mentioned the Ritz) and as dismissive of the concerns of real Americans as, well, Rush's 20 million assume the media to be. Whereas Rush, that noted foot soldier, represented the military heartland."
We need more people like Michael Wolff in the media. If only to get Rush all riled up. Make sure to read the whole column, it's quite good.
9/11 & Government Secrecy Are Inhibiting The War Against Corruption
Over at Transparency International's online Global Corruption Report, I found this archived Financial Times article very telling...
"It has long been accepted that corruption undermines the legitimacy and stability of
governments in poor countries. But corruption is also a private sector phenomenon:
public servants and politicians are not alone in mis-using entrusted power for private
gain. With the corporate scandals at Enron and other US companies still playing out, it
is clearer than ever that corruption also puts at risk financial markets and institutions.
The good news, says the report, is that new technology has so improved flows of
information that the media and public are increasingly calling businesses and
politicians to account. Yet, particularly since September 11 2001, governments have
become less, not more, willing to share information.
Yes, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development agreed an
initiative to combat bribery of foreign public officials in 1997. But few cases are being
investigated. In most OECD member countries, the political will to prosecute major
bribery cases is lacking," the report concludes."
Is it just me, or is this kind of stuff never reported in our media? It's time to end the national obsession with the war in Iraq, and start noticing what's really going on.
Snap! You are now awaking...be aware and pay attention to the troubling world around you.
Over at Transparency International's online Global Corruption Report, I found this archived Financial Times article very telling...
"It has long been accepted that corruption undermines the legitimacy and stability of
governments in poor countries. But corruption is also a private sector phenomenon:
public servants and politicians are not alone in mis-using entrusted power for private
gain. With the corporate scandals at Enron and other US companies still playing out, it
is clearer than ever that corruption also puts at risk financial markets and institutions.
The good news, says the report, is that new technology has so improved flows of
information that the media and public are increasingly calling businesses and
politicians to account. Yet, particularly since September 11 2001, governments have
become less, not more, willing to share information.
Yes, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development agreed an
initiative to combat bribery of foreign public officials in 1997. But few cases are being
investigated. In most OECD member countries, the political will to prosecute major
bribery cases is lacking," the report concludes."
Is it just me, or is this kind of stuff never reported in our media? It's time to end the national obsession with the war in Iraq, and start noticing what's really going on.
Snap! You are now awaking...be aware and pay attention to the troubling world around you.
Buying The Judiciary?
Read this editorial from the Multinational Monitor.
"In 2000, the Chamber of Commerce and a host of business interests decided that they could buy state supreme court elections. That year, state supreme court candidates raised more than $45 million, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, a 68 percent increase from 1998 and more than double the amount of 1994..."
There is much more damning information in the editorial. Obviously, this doesn't bode well for democracy and justice. MNM concludes by suggesting...
"The most sensible option -- for judicial elections perhaps even more than others -- is the clean money approach. This involves full public financing of candidates meeting minimal criteria to show that they have a breadth of support. While candidates are free to refuse public financing, those accepting public monies receive matching money to offset expenditures above a certain level by candidates opting out of the system. The calculations would take into account independent expenditures for the candidates. For the system to work most effectively, as the Brennan Center, which endorses it, points out, there should as well be vigorous disclosure laws, especially for independent expenditures, and dollar limits on individual, corporate and union contributions."
Eternal vigilance is required. We need to defend our institutions from those who seek to buy them.
Read this editorial from the Multinational Monitor.
"In 2000, the Chamber of Commerce and a host of business interests decided that they could buy state supreme court elections. That year, state supreme court candidates raised more than $45 million, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, a 68 percent increase from 1998 and more than double the amount of 1994..."
There is much more damning information in the editorial. Obviously, this doesn't bode well for democracy and justice. MNM concludes by suggesting...
"The most sensible option -- for judicial elections perhaps even more than others -- is the clean money approach. This involves full public financing of candidates meeting minimal criteria to show that they have a breadth of support. While candidates are free to refuse public financing, those accepting public monies receive matching money to offset expenditures above a certain level by candidates opting out of the system. The calculations would take into account independent expenditures for the candidates. For the system to work most effectively, as the Brennan Center, which endorses it, points out, there should as well be vigorous disclosure laws, especially for independent expenditures, and dollar limits on individual, corporate and union contributions."
Eternal vigilance is required. We need to defend our institutions from those who seek to buy them.
Homeland Security Act...An Agenda For Secrecy?
Common Cause takes issue with abuse of the Homeland Security Act to shield corporate wrongdoers.
"Three major business coalitions championed a secrecy provision that essentially denies the public information about a wide range of health, safety and environmental problems that may occur at facilities such as chemical plants, nuclear power plants, utilities and other “critical infrastructure.” Between 1998 and June 30, 2002, those coalitions donated nearly $112 million to federal candidates and political parties, according to a Common Cause report on the subject.
“This is a textbook example of what happens when companies that invest millions of dollars in political donations and lobbying work together to achieve a legislative goal,” said Chellie Pingree, president of Common Cause. “Unfortunately, it’s the public that loses out.”"
I repeat. It's time for to fight hard for real campaign finance reform.
Common Cause takes issue with abuse of the Homeland Security Act to shield corporate wrongdoers.
"Three major business coalitions championed a secrecy provision that essentially denies the public information about a wide range of health, safety and environmental problems that may occur at facilities such as chemical plants, nuclear power plants, utilities and other “critical infrastructure.” Between 1998 and June 30, 2002, those coalitions donated nearly $112 million to federal candidates and political parties, according to a Common Cause report on the subject.
“This is a textbook example of what happens when companies that invest millions of dollars in political donations and lobbying work together to achieve a legislative goal,” said Chellie Pingree, president of Common Cause. “Unfortunately, it’s the public that loses out.”"
I repeat. It's time for to fight hard for real campaign finance reform.
World Disarmament In Tatters?
"In fact, arms control advocates note, there is a particular irony to the war in Iraq: While U.S. forces pound Saddam Hussein in one of the most radical -- and expensive -- unilateral acts of disarming another country, the leading international forum for negotiating multilateral arms control agreements, the United Nations-affiliated Conference on Disarmament, is so frozen by disputes that it is unable even to agree on an agenda. Negotiations of crucial issues relating to nuclear materials, weapons in space and biological weapons are completely deadlocked.
'There is a lot of despair,' said Jayantha Dhanapala, undersecretary- general for disarmament affairs at the United Nations, who worked to extend the Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1995. 'There is a general feeling that the disarmament machinery is just not working.'"
"In fact, arms control advocates note, there is a particular irony to the war in Iraq: While U.S. forces pound Saddam Hussein in one of the most radical -- and expensive -- unilateral acts of disarming another country, the leading international forum for negotiating multilateral arms control agreements, the United Nations-affiliated Conference on Disarmament, is so frozen by disputes that it is unable even to agree on an agenda. Negotiations of crucial issues relating to nuclear materials, weapons in space and biological weapons are completely deadlocked.
'There is a lot of despair,' said Jayantha Dhanapala, undersecretary- general for disarmament affairs at the United Nations, who worked to extend the Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1995. 'There is a general feeling that the disarmament machinery is just not working.'"
Sunday, April 13, 2003
The New Zealand Herald Wonders...
Will Bush invade Cuba next? The editors discount a larger war on tyranny...
"So in picking where the US might strike next there is no point in looking at other countries that would welcome freedom from tyranny. Zimbabwe and Kazakhstan, for example, are probably not on any White House liberation list. Nor are Pakistan, Burma or Algeria. The Bush Administration does not see any threat to US security from those countries as it says it did from Saddam Hussein's Iraq."
They further dismiss considerations only on WMD, since North Korea is sliding, and we seemed much more concerned with regime change anyway. So they eventually determine that maybe it's just about settling scores...
"It is possible that the President's now proven penchant for settling old scores will put Cuba next in his sights. Electoral considerations in Florida could support that target. And North Korea demands early scrutiny even if the Administration believes it is merely attention-seeking. But the most nervous country now must be Syria, accused last week of aiding Iraq's resistance. Syria provides a refuge for a number of terrorist groups operating in Israel and Lebanon. It does not appear to directly threaten the US but as Iraq has proved, the White House will be the sole judge of that."
Wow. That's quite a line up of possibilities. A war in Cuba to ensure Florida in 2004? I have to admit that thought never crossed my mind.
What it does tell me is the suspicion and conspiracy have gone too far. Too establishment. End the secrecy. It's clear we need to clean up politics in this country, implement true campaign finance reform, and get back to discussion and debate of issues, and not personalities and scandal. Otherwise, we might just get wagged right into Armageddon.
Will Bush invade Cuba next? The editors discount a larger war on tyranny...
"So in picking where the US might strike next there is no point in looking at other countries that would welcome freedom from tyranny. Zimbabwe and Kazakhstan, for example, are probably not on any White House liberation list. Nor are Pakistan, Burma or Algeria. The Bush Administration does not see any threat to US security from those countries as it says it did from Saddam Hussein's Iraq."
They further dismiss considerations only on WMD, since North Korea is sliding, and we seemed much more concerned with regime change anyway. So they eventually determine that maybe it's just about settling scores...
"It is possible that the President's now proven penchant for settling old scores will put Cuba next in his sights. Electoral considerations in Florida could support that target. And North Korea demands early scrutiny even if the Administration believes it is merely attention-seeking. But the most nervous country now must be Syria, accused last week of aiding Iraq's resistance. Syria provides a refuge for a number of terrorist groups operating in Israel and Lebanon. It does not appear to directly threaten the US but as Iraq has proved, the White House will be the sole judge of that."
Wow. That's quite a line up of possibilities. A war in Cuba to ensure Florida in 2004? I have to admit that thought never crossed my mind.
What it does tell me is the suspicion and conspiracy have gone too far. Too establishment. End the secrecy. It's clear we need to clean up politics in this country, implement true campaign finance reform, and get back to discussion and debate of issues, and not personalities and scandal. Otherwise, we might just get wagged right into Armageddon.
Oh What A Relief It Is!
Congratulations to our men and women POW's and the individuals who rescued them! Let's wish them, and Jessica Lynch, a speedy and full recovery.
Congratulations to our men and women POW's and the individuals who rescued them! Let's wish them, and Jessica Lynch, a speedy and full recovery.
Saturday, April 12, 2003
Another Peace Activist Is Shot By Israeli Sniper
I'm getting sickened by the continuous misdeeds of Israel. They have killed two Americans in the past month, and now have shot another British citizen in the face. His family is screaming pissed, and so am I. To my knowledge, Israel has shown no real remorse for these actions. This is unacceptable. Our tax dollars have gone to arming Israel. Where are you President Bush? At least speak up for Americans being killed by Israel.
I'm getting sickened by the continuous misdeeds of Israel. They have killed two Americans in the past month, and now have shot another British citizen in the face. His family is screaming pissed, and so am I. To my knowledge, Israel has shown no real remorse for these actions. This is unacceptable. Our tax dollars have gone to arming Israel. Where are you President Bush? At least speak up for Americans being killed by Israel.
The Looking Glass War?
An oversimplification? Yes. Instructive of the absurdity of our means to ends? Yes. To be missed? No.
An oversimplification? Yes. Instructive of the absurdity of our means to ends? Yes. To be missed? No.
Spying On The Spies
"I have no objection to these systems monitoring serious criminals and terrorists," said Glyn Ford, a British Labour Party member of parliament and a committee member of STOA. "But what is missing here is accountability, clear guidelines as to who they can listen to, and in what circumstances these laws apply."
"I have no objection to these systems monitoring serious criminals and terrorists," said Glyn Ford, a British Labour Party member of parliament and a committee member of STOA. "But what is missing here is accountability, clear guidelines as to who they can listen to, and in what circumstances these laws apply."
Alliance For A New Humanity?
Seems like the urgency for humanitarian approaches to age-old problems is spreading...
Also, don't miss this guide on how to contribute towards the humanitarian effort in Iraq.
Seems like the urgency for humanitarian approaches to age-old problems is spreading...
Also, don't miss this guide on how to contribute towards the humanitarian effort in Iraq.
Don't Forget About Project Freedom
For more on the Patriot Acts and a mission statement to America on the struggle for freedom and against terror.
For more on the Patriot Acts and a mission statement to America on the struggle for freedom and against terror.
Chaos In Iraq...Are We Losing Victory?
Saddam Hussein was a weakling. His military had no chance against our vastly superior training, firepower, intelligence and technology. We knew this before the action started, and we've confirmed it. His removal is a welcome blow to tyranny and fascism. The other leaders of the Arab world will now have to stand up and take notice. Allow men and women to live free, or face the fury of the most powerful military force in the history of the world.
Only how strong is our moral case? Do our means reflect our ends? Take the state of affairs in Iraq. How could it not have been in the war plan to keep order and a sense of decency in Iraq after Saddam fell? I don't understand this short-sightedness. The chaos on the streets of Iraq is inexcusable. People are being robbed and killed, women are being raped, and the cultural artifacts and legal documents of Iraq being destroyed.
This is beyond untidiness. The name, word and integrity of America need to be upheld.
Saddam Hussein was a weakling. His military had no chance against our vastly superior training, firepower, intelligence and technology. We knew this before the action started, and we've confirmed it. His removal is a welcome blow to tyranny and fascism. The other leaders of the Arab world will now have to stand up and take notice. Allow men and women to live free, or face the fury of the most powerful military force in the history of the world.
Only how strong is our moral case? Do our means reflect our ends? Take the state of affairs in Iraq. How could it not have been in the war plan to keep order and a sense of decency in Iraq after Saddam fell? I don't understand this short-sightedness. The chaos on the streets of Iraq is inexcusable. People are being robbed and killed, women are being raped, and the cultural artifacts and legal documents of Iraq being destroyed.
This is beyond untidiness. The name, word and integrity of America need to be upheld.
We Need To Stop The Takeover Of Iraqi Media Immediately
The action of putting American news on the TV in Iraq is just plain stupid. Imagine how this act will be played by the Muslim world. The keystone schlops are definitely in charge our our country and strategy. Instead of sabotaging our longer term strategy of winning the hearts and minds of the Islamic world, we should have been concerned with maintaining order and protecting the interests of the Iraqi man and woman in the suburbs and street. For now, I have nothing more to say on the matter.
The action of putting American news on the TV in Iraq is just plain stupid. Imagine how this act will be played by the Muslim world. The keystone schlops are definitely in charge our our country and strategy. Instead of sabotaging our longer term strategy of winning the hearts and minds of the Islamic world, we should have been concerned with maintaining order and protecting the interests of the Iraqi man and woman in the suburbs and street. For now, I have nothing more to say on the matter.
Friday, April 11, 2003
Storytelling From The Margins
Imagine the vision of this short piece implemented through the global blog community. The liberation of the human mind and true democracy will happen in this century. Count on it.
Imagine the vision of this short piece implemented through the global blog community. The liberation of the human mind and true democracy will happen in this century. Count on it.
A Coming Surveillance Nation?
At least one man is already fighting back against the spectre of Big Brother.
At least one man is already fighting back against the spectre of Big Brother.
A Pleasant Find...Transparency.org
Excellent articles and other material, including a timely speech on The Dawning of a New Era of Accountability and Transparency.
Check it out.
Excellent articles and other material, including a timely speech on The Dawning of a New Era of Accountability and Transparency.
Check it out.
Keeping The Focus On America...And Due To A Very Busy Day
I'll just leave some links to interesting insights on what we should be doing, and not doing, in the Homeland.
End Pork Barrel Politics In Military Spending...Our Security (And Economy) Depends On It!
Seymour Melman On The Grip Of The Permanent War Economy
Renewing America's Infrastructure
What Patriot II Proposes To Do
Quit Politicizing the CIA!
I'll just leave some links to interesting insights on what we should be doing, and not doing, in the Homeland.
End Pork Barrel Politics In Military Spending...Our Security (And Economy) Depends On It!
Seymour Melman On The Grip Of The Permanent War Economy
Renewing America's Infrastructure
What Patriot II Proposes To Do
Quit Politicizing the CIA!
Thursday, April 10, 2003
Next Up...Operation Stabilize Iraq, Operation Avoid Humanitarian Catastrophe, Operation Stand Up For American Freedom, and Operation Media Deconsolidate.
Wonder twins of reason and compassion, go!
So much history in the making...whew! Stay tuned for Fox News coverage...what's that...they're already warning of staying in Iraq too long?
Will they at least defend our freedom?
(crestfallen)
I guess not.
(tear)
Wonder twins of reason and compassion, go!
So much history in the making...whew! Stay tuned for Fox News coverage...what's that...they're already warning of staying in Iraq too long?
Will they at least defend our freedom?
(crestfallen)
I guess not.
(tear)
We Want The Airwaves...Ruminate On This
Lisa English is ruminating again, this time about a turn to the left for the Democrats. What do you think? Lisa always tells it how it is, has hands down some of the best analysis in the blogosphere, and she's got me thinking about it. I don't know if it'll win though...
I'm not a Democrat, so who cares what I think anyway. I do support John Kerry right now though, scroll down to find out why. Does defending freedom ring a bell?
No matter what happens with the election, I think we need to make sure the Far Right gets a beatdown come 2004. I'll apologize to all conservatives upfront, but I just can't do the Far Right agenda. George, you didn't tell us it would be like this baby. No thanks.
Meanwhile, Avedon and Lisa are bringing the fire in the struggle to reclaim our media. We Want The Airwaves is hot out the gate and a great compendium of links, information and analysis in regards to freedom of information, thought and media. To that I've only one thing to say...
Yes!
*****
By the way kids, before you get any crazy ideas, I didn't vote for our cowboy-in-chief. I'll leave you guessing on that...
*****
And don't miss this on We Want The Airwaves. Seems like people from all parts of the spectrum are concerned about media consolidation...
Lisa English is ruminating again, this time about a turn to the left for the Democrats. What do you think? Lisa always tells it how it is, has hands down some of the best analysis in the blogosphere, and she's got me thinking about it. I don't know if it'll win though...
I'm not a Democrat, so who cares what I think anyway. I do support John Kerry right now though, scroll down to find out why. Does defending freedom ring a bell?
No matter what happens with the election, I think we need to make sure the Far Right gets a beatdown come 2004. I'll apologize to all conservatives upfront, but I just can't do the Far Right agenda. George, you didn't tell us it would be like this baby. No thanks.
Meanwhile, Avedon and Lisa are bringing the fire in the struggle to reclaim our media. We Want The Airwaves is hot out the gate and a great compendium of links, information and analysis in regards to freedom of information, thought and media. To that I've only one thing to say...
Yes!
*****
By the way kids, before you get any crazy ideas, I didn't vote for our cowboy-in-chief. I'll leave you guessing on that...
*****
And don't miss this on We Want The Airwaves. Seems like people from all parts of the spectrum are concerned about media consolidation...
Wednesday, April 09, 2003
Line In The Sand...Patriot Act Must Not Pass
I or II. Join in the discussion over at the Agonist.
Also, for my eve of war take on patriotism, freedom and the war on terror, check out Project Freedom. Only if you're ready for a few pages though. Such a case a blog post cannot make.
I or II. Join in the discussion over at the Agonist.
Also, for my eve of war take on patriotism, freedom and the war on terror, check out Project Freedom. Only if you're ready for a few pages though. Such a case a blog post cannot make.
Forget About Superman For Awhile, And Send Some Prayers To The Underdogs
Will this boy ever have any kind of arms again? If Christopher Reeve might walk again some day...
*****
Conscience Check: here, here, here, and here in Afghanistan.
For the first time in years, tears fell from my eyes today. This is awful. We must follow through in Iraq. We cannot walk away...
Will this boy ever have any kind of arms again? If Christopher Reeve might walk again some day...
*****
Conscience Check: here, here, here, and here in Afghanistan.
For the first time in years, tears fell from my eyes today. This is awful. We must follow through in Iraq. We cannot walk away...
All The More Reason Not To Trust The Corporate Media Business Interest
They are a business right? So we're supposed to trust them to not play up the war fever for fun and profit? I may sound jaded, but does anyone remember the tobacco companies? The concept of self-interest? Profits?
Can anyone give me any reason to trust a media corporation not to operate in its own self-interest and to maximize profits?
Is toxic sludge good for me?
Media diversity and distributed ownership are essential for the freedom of information and thought.
Let's not look back years from now and rue the day we allowed the creation of Big Media.
*****
In some cases, we need checks against self-interest, especially of the extremely large, more influential monopoly-style variety, as it effects others ability to pursue self-interests. Especially with the media, you're talking about a business that as part of the pursuit of its self-interest has an unprecedented platform to shape and influence the self-interest of others.
They spend googles on research, I know, and I've studied the relevant influence theory. The danger of 1984 is unchecked freedom of a core group's self-interest parlayed into the transformation of all other self-interest to its own.
*****
Not to mention the nature of the business itself, and the restricted medium with which to play. Whether it's bandwidth or transmission, the free market is already distorted in this industry.
They are a business right? So we're supposed to trust them to not play up the war fever for fun and profit? I may sound jaded, but does anyone remember the tobacco companies? The concept of self-interest? Profits?
Can anyone give me any reason to trust a media corporation not to operate in its own self-interest and to maximize profits?
Is toxic sludge good for me?
Media diversity and distributed ownership are essential for the freedom of information and thought.
Let's not look back years from now and rue the day we allowed the creation of Big Media.
*****
In some cases, we need checks against self-interest, especially of the extremely large, more influential monopoly-style variety, as it effects others ability to pursue self-interests. Especially with the media, you're talking about a business that as part of the pursuit of its self-interest has an unprecedented platform to shape and influence the self-interest of others.
They spend googles on research, I know, and I've studied the relevant influence theory. The danger of 1984 is unchecked freedom of a core group's self-interest parlayed into the transformation of all other self-interest to its own.
*****
Not to mention the nature of the business itself, and the restricted medium with which to play. Whether it's bandwidth or transmission, the free market is already distorted in this industry.
Tuesday, April 08, 2003
Separation of Media and State! Separation of Media (Targeting) and War!
I will be commenting on this shortly. In a nutshell, we need to support media diversity, and remove any ties between media and government. The lies have to stop, and honest dialogue resume. The appearance of impropriety is bad enough.
National sunshine laws, and a constitutional amendment for the Freedom of Information is needed. The Act needs to be strengthened. Informed consent must be encouraged. Self-interest is our economic lifeblood, so along with it we need ethics and accountability mechanisms that work. Along with those, we need transparency, a window for the sun to shine through, so we can put the nagging conspiracies and distrust to bed. It does America no good, and keeps us from getting together on the most important challenges that face us today.
And last, the media should never be a target of war. Especially this one. Iraq is a weak power, and if we can't take them out without bombing media and doing other questionable targeting, then we should start taking names and asking questions about who's running things.
At the very least, we have targeted Iraqi TV and media, so don't give me the "it's an accident or in the crossfire mumbo jumbo". And regardless of your stance on this last point, focus on the Freedom of Information, sunshine nationwide, and poisonous effect of our media and conspiracy thought.
I will be commenting on this shortly. In a nutshell, we need to support media diversity, and remove any ties between media and government. The lies have to stop, and honest dialogue resume. The appearance of impropriety is bad enough.
National sunshine laws, and a constitutional amendment for the Freedom of Information is needed. The Act needs to be strengthened. Informed consent must be encouraged. Self-interest is our economic lifeblood, so along with it we need ethics and accountability mechanisms that work. Along with those, we need transparency, a window for the sun to shine through, so we can put the nagging conspiracies and distrust to bed. It does America no good, and keeps us from getting together on the most important challenges that face us today.
And last, the media should never be a target of war. Especially this one. Iraq is a weak power, and if we can't take them out without bombing media and doing other questionable targeting, then we should start taking names and asking questions about who's running things.
At the very least, we have targeted Iraqi TV and media, so don't give me the "it's an accident or in the crossfire mumbo jumbo". And regardless of your stance on this last point, focus on the Freedom of Information, sunshine nationwide, and poisonous effect of our media and conspiracy thought.
Monday, April 07, 2003
Sunday, April 06, 2003
Prime Minister Berlusconi Owns 92% Of Italian Media!
Things are so bad, members of Berlusconi's own party felt compelled to vote in secret, after previously voting publicly on a bill in Berlusconi's favor, to put voice to their opposition to his quest to control Italian media and politics. I'm not sure the NY Times could have hid the story in a better spot, but I at least credit them for printing the story. Berlusconi, who "owns the country's largest private television network and indirectly controls...public broadcasting channels", was angered by the action.
This seems very odd, even by today's standards. 17 members of Berlusconi's party come back in a secret vote to gut the legislation they publicly supported? Kafkaesque, and signalling troubling times in Italy.
Back here in America, we need to take a stand now against concentrated media ownership. The Senate debating it right now. What's next? Rupert Murdoch for president?
Check out the Center For Digital Democracy, We Want The Airwaves, Journalism.org, The Media Access Project, Reclaim The Media!, The ACME Coalition, and Media Channel for the latest media information, arguments and ownership figures.
Things are so bad, members of Berlusconi's own party felt compelled to vote in secret, after previously voting publicly on a bill in Berlusconi's favor, to put voice to their opposition to his quest to control Italian media and politics. I'm not sure the NY Times could have hid the story in a better spot, but I at least credit them for printing the story. Berlusconi, who "owns the country's largest private television network and indirectly controls...public broadcasting channels", was angered by the action.
This seems very odd, even by today's standards. 17 members of Berlusconi's party come back in a secret vote to gut the legislation they publicly supported? Kafkaesque, and signalling troubling times in Italy.
Back here in America, we need to take a stand now against concentrated media ownership. The Senate debating it right now. What's next? Rupert Murdoch for president?
Check out the Center For Digital Democracy, We Want The Airwaves, Journalism.org, The Media Access Project, Reclaim The Media!, The ACME Coalition, and Media Channel for the latest media information, arguments and ownership figures.
Don't Hesitate...Go Check Out A True Patriot In Action!
Visit Tom over at Thinking It Through. You won't regret it. I don't, and read him regularly.
Visit Tom over at Thinking It Through. You won't regret it. I don't, and read him regularly.
We Must Prevent This! Our Name Is On The Line!
A humanitarian and health crisis resulting in catastrophic death and suffering for Iraqis will lose the war for us in the world of public opinion. Plain and simple. We have to help, and to soberly assess the situation and what's possible, now! Before it's too late. Or all credibility will be lost...
A humanitarian and health crisis resulting in catastrophic death and suffering for Iraqis will lose the war for us in the world of public opinion. Plain and simple. We have to help, and to soberly assess the situation and what's possible, now! Before it's too late. Or all credibility will be lost...
The Intimidation Of The Free In The War For Iraqi Freedom Continues
Do not miss this article in the Rolling Stone. This behavior is unacceptable if taken anywhere beyond interviewing. The band Spearhead is clearly anti-war, and non-violent. Listen to the albums, and check the words and interviews of the artists, before riding wild tangents on nefarious visits to Japan. That's silly.
Are we trying to put as much shame on ourselves as possible, to make ourselves look as hypocritical and stupid as could possibly be? I hope not. That will definitely play negatively in 2004 and beyond, not to mention right now. This is the i (Information/Internet) generation...people won't forget. Tread carefully on freedom, or it'll be head down as you leave office.
Thanks Atrios.
Do not miss this article in the Rolling Stone. This behavior is unacceptable if taken anywhere beyond interviewing. The band Spearhead is clearly anti-war, and non-violent. Listen to the albums, and check the words and interviews of the artists, before riding wild tangents on nefarious visits to Japan. That's silly.
Are we trying to put as much shame on ourselves as possible, to make ourselves look as hypocritical and stupid as could possibly be? I hope not. That will definitely play negatively in 2004 and beyond, not to mention right now. This is the i (Information/Internet) generation...people won't forget. Tread carefully on freedom, or it'll be head down as you leave office.
Thanks Atrios.
Saturday, April 05, 2003
Writing Textbooks For Iraq
Check out this article on the reeducation of Iraq. I'm still trying to gather information and take a position on this. In the meantime, we've got a discussion board going for it over at the Agonist.
Check out this article on the reeducation of Iraq. I'm still trying to gather information and take a position on this. In the meantime, we've got a discussion board going for it over at the Agonist.
A Slow Day...So Check These Out
I know Digby seems to be bogged down with traffic, but go check this out regardless. It's a great post. Also, check out Hesiod boiling in mojo over at his site. Hopefully, he doesn't go too far over the edge. Check out the comments at Hesoid's post, and contribute to the debate. Let's not let the polemics get out of control...
Also, check out this Slate article way back when on who's for and against the war, and why.
I know Digby seems to be bogged down with traffic, but go check this out regardless. It's a great post. Also, check out Hesiod boiling in mojo over at his site. Hopefully, he doesn't go too far over the edge. Check out the comments at Hesoid's post, and contribute to the debate. Let's not let the polemics get out of control...
Also, check out this Slate article way back when on who's for and against the war, and why.
Friday, April 04, 2003
God Bless John Kerry...
...for standing up for American freedom. John Kerry is a man of the utmost integrity, a patriot and veteran, and has worked tirelessly on discovering the status of fellow American soldiers left behind in Vietnam.
In unison with Mr. Kerry, I say shame on those who seek to impugn an obvious and true patriot's integrity, stifle dissent, and scandalize freedom. The intimidation and hypocrisy need to stop.
Back off.
*****
Even back as far as 1971, John Kerry was standing up for his fellow Americans in battle.
*****
I will have much more to say on this matter this weekend. The current ugly mood and accusations in regard to lack of patriotism, and in voicing opposition to war, are beginning to divide this country. Shall we divide not only the world but ourselves? 100 years ago William James took a similar stand against U.S. military aggression, fear-mongering, and loyalty-questioning. Unfortunately, James was only a philosopher with a limited media platform, and one of a minority of voices speaking out against the war. After hearing John Kerry today, I believe he can defeat the dividers of America, and invite all Americans to enjoy freedom as well as security, independence and allegiance. I am a member of no party, but today John Kerry has my support.
...for standing up for American freedom. John Kerry is a man of the utmost integrity, a patriot and veteran, and has worked tirelessly on discovering the status of fellow American soldiers left behind in Vietnam.
In unison with Mr. Kerry, I say shame on those who seek to impugn an obvious and true patriot's integrity, stifle dissent, and scandalize freedom. The intimidation and hypocrisy need to stop.
Back off.
*****
Even back as far as 1971, John Kerry was standing up for his fellow Americans in battle.
*****
I will have much more to say on this matter this weekend. The current ugly mood and accusations in regard to lack of patriotism, and in voicing opposition to war, are beginning to divide this country. Shall we divide not only the world but ourselves? 100 years ago William James took a similar stand against U.S. military aggression, fear-mongering, and loyalty-questioning. Unfortunately, James was only a philosopher with a limited media platform, and one of a minority of voices speaking out against the war. After hearing John Kerry today, I believe he can defeat the dividers of America, and invite all Americans to enjoy freedom as well as security, independence and allegiance. I am a member of no party, but today John Kerry has my support.
In Case You Forgot...
...war demonstrations have almost always been about supporting the troops, our fellow Americans, friends and family members, in the sense of bringing them home sans a body bag, while the war is ongoing. The truly novel development in the past decade are the massive protests before the war starts. Remember Vietnam?
How long would it have continued, and how many more body bags manufactured, if not for domestic resistance?
Without taking a position on the merits, or on how you choose to support our troops, here I'm merely pointing out that it takes a truly interesting read of history to come up with the idea that anti-war protests are meant to stop once a war begins.
Reflect on this.
...war demonstrations have almost always been about supporting the troops, our fellow Americans, friends and family members, in the sense of bringing them home sans a body bag, while the war is ongoing. The truly novel development in the past decade are the massive protests before the war starts. Remember Vietnam?
How long would it have continued, and how many more body bags manufactured, if not for domestic resistance?
Without taking a position on the merits, or on how you choose to support our troops, here I'm merely pointing out that it takes a truly interesting read of history to come up with the idea that anti-war protests are meant to stop once a war begins.
Reflect on this.
There's No Business Like War Business
We've dropped over 8,000 bombs in the liberation of Iraq, exhausting a sizable portion of our overall supply. Guess who stands to benefit?
We've dropped over 8,000 bombs in the liberation of Iraq, exhausting a sizable portion of our overall supply. Guess who stands to benefit?
Thursday, April 03, 2003
On Arnett (Revisited)
Sometimes it takes nuance to flesh out the bones of a contentious issue, and the senator calling for treason charges against Arnett apparently doesn't have it. From both sides come ringing denunciations and praise, and much reflexing of muscles and knee jerk sloganeering. I will try to pick through these here and explain why Arnett was wrong...
We seemingly have two fundamental principles in opposition: proper conduct during wartime, and proper conduct and rights of reporters in regard to freedom of speech. We'll start with the latter.
Peter Arnett has every right to speak his mind on the progress of the war, regardless of whether these are widely shared by others or in other media, as an individual and as a reporter.
With that said, the controversy is not exclusively "what" Arnett said, in the sense of evaluating it in a vacuum. It's more than that. He certainly was not in a vacuum, but rather in the middle of a war, on Iraqi TV, and leaving the perception to an Iraqi audience of the effectiveness of armed resistance (ironically implying that this resistance strengthens the arguments of overwhelmingly non-violent anti-war protesters in America).
This brings us to the issue of conduct during war. The first rule is that you do not aid and abet the enemy during wartime, or you will face the charge of treason, and be in deep, deep trouble. This isn't the issue we're dealing with today, despite what the unfortunate Senator Bunning believes. Clearly, there is no "aiding" or "abetting" in Arnett's behavior, just a subjective analysis of the state of affairs. Malicious intent is clearly not evident.
There's a rule of common sense though that, during wartime, you don't do anything controversial, or that may get construed in a controversial fashion, or that may indirectly and unintentionally support the enemy, if you don't plan to face the fire, if you're not prepared for the predictable knee-jerk reaction, if you don't intend to weather the accusations that you are a big jerk, and either a nuisance or sympathizer. This is par for the course, and Arnett clearly did not think this through before acting.
He's in a gray area, and leaning to the wrong side of it. This is why he was fired. The knee-jerk network, Fox News, took his actions practically as treason, and were aggressively and cynically using that information to win their "war" against the other networks for ratings. Thus, they played the story and trumpeted the fact that Arnett worked for NBC and MSNBC nearly non-stop. NBC had no other available business choice in the matter.
For sound business reasons, and due to the severe misjudgement on his part of proper wartime conduct for reporters and Americans, along with disrespect and blatant disregard for his employers, Arnett was fired. For the latter alone his firing was justified. Arnett's excuse that he was working independently is spurious at best. The impact to those connected to him remains the same. The appearance of impropriety alone in directly speaking to the Iraqi people on their controlled media about the effectiveness of resistance and the reconsideration of our war plan is also enough reason for NBC to cut ties, and for Americans to seriously question his judgement.
I'll add though that many misapply this common-sense principle of "supporting the war effort" to meaning knee-jerk acceptance to whatever our leaders say and do, as if every citizen was in the line of command and actively engaged in combat under military rules. Thus, the ludicrous assertions from many that Americans protesting the war are unpatriotic and/or helping the enemy.
Quite to the contrary, these patriotic Americans who are protesting the war are not in uniform, are not speaking to Iraqis, or to get their attention, but to wake up their own fellow citizens, Americans, and to send a message to President Bush. They in many cases may also mistakenly believe they're helping the Iraqi people, and their own soldiers, to escape disaster and death. If you're going to criticize them, at least understand the people who you are targeting, and their positions and motivations. Instead, it always seems like demonization, and the assumption of the darkest or dumbest motives. A disservice is done to everyone by spewing hate speech at fellow Americans. And hate speech is clearly what demonization is.
Arnett is a good reporter and a courageous individual. He also showed good character by apologizing for his misstep. Regardless, he did a disservice both to his country and to Iraqis, because their continued resistance will mean their slaughter, not their liberation, or victory, and possibly greater loss of life of our own soldiers. No matter what you think of American motives or justification, Saddam Hussein is untenable and never to be thought of as a better option for a self-respecting people, and with this in mind our leadership will not back down.
The bottom line is mass surrender is the only hope for the minimizing of Iraqi casualties, both military and civilian, not to mention ours. This is the message they need to hear. This is not a "fair" fight, and regardless of the increasingly desperate tactics of the Iraqi fighters, they have no chance, and the Iraqi people deserve to know this truth, and not the specious and short-sighted talk of how their resistance is "working" and will eventually be victorious and for the Iraqi people's greater good.
Such talk is BS, irreflective of reality, and not in the Iraqi peoples' best interests - now, or in the future; on the battleground, or in the coming peace.
***
I reiterate that Arnett's mistake is only one of appearance, not intent, and not even of effect, for the impact of his statement must not be overstated. In all likelihood, he could not have delivered a different message in this interview, and his overall influence on the Iraqi people is surely negligible.
Also, for more on this, and contrasting opinion, go check out Polizen.
Sometimes it takes nuance to flesh out the bones of a contentious issue, and the senator calling for treason charges against Arnett apparently doesn't have it. From both sides come ringing denunciations and praise, and much reflexing of muscles and knee jerk sloganeering. I will try to pick through these here and explain why Arnett was wrong...
We seemingly have two fundamental principles in opposition: proper conduct during wartime, and proper conduct and rights of reporters in regard to freedom of speech. We'll start with the latter.
Peter Arnett has every right to speak his mind on the progress of the war, regardless of whether these are widely shared by others or in other media, as an individual and as a reporter.
With that said, the controversy is not exclusively "what" Arnett said, in the sense of evaluating it in a vacuum. It's more than that. He certainly was not in a vacuum, but rather in the middle of a war, on Iraqi TV, and leaving the perception to an Iraqi audience of the effectiveness of armed resistance (ironically implying that this resistance strengthens the arguments of overwhelmingly non-violent anti-war protesters in America).
This brings us to the issue of conduct during war. The first rule is that you do not aid and abet the enemy during wartime, or you will face the charge of treason, and be in deep, deep trouble. This isn't the issue we're dealing with today, despite what the unfortunate Senator Bunning believes. Clearly, there is no "aiding" or "abetting" in Arnett's behavior, just a subjective analysis of the state of affairs. Malicious intent is clearly not evident.
There's a rule of common sense though that, during wartime, you don't do anything controversial, or that may get construed in a controversial fashion, or that may indirectly and unintentionally support the enemy, if you don't plan to face the fire, if you're not prepared for the predictable knee-jerk reaction, if you don't intend to weather the accusations that you are a big jerk, and either a nuisance or sympathizer. This is par for the course, and Arnett clearly did not think this through before acting.
He's in a gray area, and leaning to the wrong side of it. This is why he was fired. The knee-jerk network, Fox News, took his actions practically as treason, and were aggressively and cynically using that information to win their "war" against the other networks for ratings. Thus, they played the story and trumpeted the fact that Arnett worked for NBC and MSNBC nearly non-stop. NBC had no other available business choice in the matter.
For sound business reasons, and due to the severe misjudgement on his part of proper wartime conduct for reporters and Americans, along with disrespect and blatant disregard for his employers, Arnett was fired. For the latter alone his firing was justified. Arnett's excuse that he was working independently is spurious at best. The impact to those connected to him remains the same. The appearance of impropriety alone in directly speaking to the Iraqi people on their controlled media about the effectiveness of resistance and the reconsideration of our war plan is also enough reason for NBC to cut ties, and for Americans to seriously question his judgement.
I'll add though that many misapply this common-sense principle of "supporting the war effort" to meaning knee-jerk acceptance to whatever our leaders say and do, as if every citizen was in the line of command and actively engaged in combat under military rules. Thus, the ludicrous assertions from many that Americans protesting the war are unpatriotic and/or helping the enemy.
Quite to the contrary, these patriotic Americans who are protesting the war are not in uniform, are not speaking to Iraqis, or to get their attention, but to wake up their own fellow citizens, Americans, and to send a message to President Bush. They in many cases may also mistakenly believe they're helping the Iraqi people, and their own soldiers, to escape disaster and death. If you're going to criticize them, at least understand the people who you are targeting, and their positions and motivations. Instead, it always seems like demonization, and the assumption of the darkest or dumbest motives. A disservice is done to everyone by spewing hate speech at fellow Americans. And hate speech is clearly what demonization is.
Arnett is a good reporter and a courageous individual. He also showed good character by apologizing for his misstep. Regardless, he did a disservice both to his country and to Iraqis, because their continued resistance will mean their slaughter, not their liberation, or victory, and possibly greater loss of life of our own soldiers. No matter what you think of American motives or justification, Saddam Hussein is untenable and never to be thought of as a better option for a self-respecting people, and with this in mind our leadership will not back down.
The bottom line is mass surrender is the only hope for the minimizing of Iraqi casualties, both military and civilian, not to mention ours. This is the message they need to hear. This is not a "fair" fight, and regardless of the increasingly desperate tactics of the Iraqi fighters, they have no chance, and the Iraqi people deserve to know this truth, and not the specious and short-sighted talk of how their resistance is "working" and will eventually be victorious and for the Iraqi people's greater good.
Such talk is BS, irreflective of reality, and not in the Iraqi peoples' best interests - now, or in the future; on the battleground, or in the coming peace.
***
I reiterate that Arnett's mistake is only one of appearance, not intent, and not even of effect, for the impact of his statement must not be overstated. In all likelihood, he could not have delivered a different message in this interview, and his overall influence on the Iraqi people is surely negligible.
Also, for more on this, and contrasting opinion, go check out Polizen.
Tuesday, April 01, 2003
"We had hope," he said. "But then you Americans came to bring us democracy and our hope ended."
In a disturbing article following up on the tragic shooting incident in the Sydney Morning Herald, Bakhat Hassan, "who lost his daughters, aged two and five, his three-year-old son, his parents, two older brothers, their wives and two nieces aged 12 and 15, in the incident, said US soldiers at an earlier checkpoint had waved them through."
Incidents like these lose wars ladies and gentleman. And allies. Don't downplay them. Much more is at stake than may be decided by force. Regardless of what happens in Baghdad, and the ultimate outcome of the war, these kinds of incidents cannot continue. This one is past us, but we can allow no more.
How can we just say it's just an innocent mistake, a result of miscommunication in the warzone, ultimately Saddam Hussein's fault, when it is we who have forced the issue of violence, in the mission to free them? And instead we're killing them. Dead.
If people hate us even more after this war, the Jihad picks up and all hell breaks loose, and our allies back away and seek safer harbors, the fault does not lie with Saddam Hussein.
If you start a war to liberate people who obviously are not ready for you, then you are ultimately responsible for each and every life that is lost, and for the flack and unpopularity you take on when it's over. Not going to war, and not forcing the issue of violence, is the only condition under which Saddam Hussein would have continued to be responsible for Iraqi deaths, except for those taken during conflict by the hands of his men.
With that said, we can still make things right over there. We have to. By winning this war, being rid of Saddam Hussein, and telling the truth to the American people so that we come together to help these helpless Iraqis as we did for the victims of 9-11, we can help the Iraqis build the kind of free society that is right for them.
Until then, the promise of freedom only brings catastrophe, decimation and terrors the young and old alike will not forget easily. For the children, the nightmares will continue for countless years ahead. Freedom will not salve these at the beginning, and perhaps not at all, even though our intentions are ultimately good. Such is the hell of war.
As for the Iraqi people, first victims to Saddam Hussein, and now to us, we must lay bare our souls, and raise up their hopes. We're killing them to save them. Acknowledging this, and bending over backwards double-time after the hostilities cease, in the creation of a united front to help them, is the only way to make good, to do America proud, and to reestablish our name and word as it rightfully should be known.
The legacy of this war will be more than the end of the Saddam Hussein regime. It should also be the end of the lies, deceit and dishonor we take on in the exercise of our power and for the furtherance of our interests. If not, we risk the frustration of our interests and the loss of our power.
Freedom is not just an end, it is a means. As is compassion. To realize this, America needs to conduct herself with forthrightness, honor and truth, respectfully listen to the counsel of our friends and allies, and never again forget or downplay the costs and horrors of war.
Thank you.
***
As an afternote, if it seems I'm being too harsh, I don't mean to decry the cause for which the sacrifice of Iraqis is being made necessary. Of course in war there are going to be casualties, military and civilian. I'm trying to emphasize the larger picture, and our absolute need to make good on this in the post-war period. Obviously, reading my other stuff, I'm somewhat critical of some of the means too, but as to the cause of freedom I give no resistance. Such a life as under Saddam Hussein would be absurd for any free-loving American to conceive.
All Americans are in this together, and share responsibility for this war, by the nature of our founding, and the legitimacy and accountability of American power, which rests in the people.
In a disturbing article following up on the tragic shooting incident in the Sydney Morning Herald, Bakhat Hassan, "who lost his daughters, aged two and five, his three-year-old son, his parents, two older brothers, their wives and two nieces aged 12 and 15, in the incident, said US soldiers at an earlier checkpoint had waved them through."
Incidents like these lose wars ladies and gentleman. And allies. Don't downplay them. Much more is at stake than may be decided by force. Regardless of what happens in Baghdad, and the ultimate outcome of the war, these kinds of incidents cannot continue. This one is past us, but we can allow no more.
How can we just say it's just an innocent mistake, a result of miscommunication in the warzone, ultimately Saddam Hussein's fault, when it is we who have forced the issue of violence, in the mission to free them? And instead we're killing them. Dead.
If people hate us even more after this war, the Jihad picks up and all hell breaks loose, and our allies back away and seek safer harbors, the fault does not lie with Saddam Hussein.
If you start a war to liberate people who obviously are not ready for you, then you are ultimately responsible for each and every life that is lost, and for the flack and unpopularity you take on when it's over. Not going to war, and not forcing the issue of violence, is the only condition under which Saddam Hussein would have continued to be responsible for Iraqi deaths, except for those taken during conflict by the hands of his men.
With that said, we can still make things right over there. We have to. By winning this war, being rid of Saddam Hussein, and telling the truth to the American people so that we come together to help these helpless Iraqis as we did for the victims of 9-11, we can help the Iraqis build the kind of free society that is right for them.
Until then, the promise of freedom only brings catastrophe, decimation and terrors the young and old alike will not forget easily. For the children, the nightmares will continue for countless years ahead. Freedom will not salve these at the beginning, and perhaps not at all, even though our intentions are ultimately good. Such is the hell of war.
As for the Iraqi people, first victims to Saddam Hussein, and now to us, we must lay bare our souls, and raise up their hopes. We're killing them to save them. Acknowledging this, and bending over backwards double-time after the hostilities cease, in the creation of a united front to help them, is the only way to make good, to do America proud, and to reestablish our name and word as it rightfully should be known.
The legacy of this war will be more than the end of the Saddam Hussein regime. It should also be the end of the lies, deceit and dishonor we take on in the exercise of our power and for the furtherance of our interests. If not, we risk the frustration of our interests and the loss of our power.
Freedom is not just an end, it is a means. As is compassion. To realize this, America needs to conduct herself with forthrightness, honor and truth, respectfully listen to the counsel of our friends and allies, and never again forget or downplay the costs and horrors of war.
Thank you.
***
As an afternote, if it seems I'm being too harsh, I don't mean to decry the cause for which the sacrifice of Iraqis is being made necessary. Of course in war there are going to be casualties, military and civilian. I'm trying to emphasize the larger picture, and our absolute need to make good on this in the post-war period. Obviously, reading my other stuff, I'm somewhat critical of some of the means too, but as to the cause of freedom I give no resistance. Such a life as under Saddam Hussein would be absurd for any free-loving American to conceive.
All Americans are in this together, and share responsibility for this war, by the nature of our founding, and the legitimacy and accountability of American power, which rests in the people.
Monday, March 31, 2003
Killing Women And Children?
God I hope not.
I'm shocked about the tragic killing of women and children by our troops in Iraq. I must reflect on this...
Maybe our strategy to save our own needs to change. If we won't withdraw, then maybe full charge with maximum devastation, heroism and our casualties is the only alternative.
It's got be better than killing women and children in order to liberate them. My God! This never would have flown before the war started. Is our honor worth nothing? Our generals must be really squirming. They can't like this.
I hate to say it, because I'm not in favor of this particular war at this particular time, but we may have to "tolerate" more of our own casualties. Our military can't operate without honor people.
We absolutely, under no circumstances, can target women and children! Whether accidental or not.
Such would be a day of infamy like no other.
God I hope not.
I'm shocked about the tragic killing of women and children by our troops in Iraq. I must reflect on this...
Maybe our strategy to save our own needs to change. If we won't withdraw, then maybe full charge with maximum devastation, heroism and our casualties is the only alternative.
It's got be better than killing women and children in order to liberate them. My God! This never would have flown before the war started. Is our honor worth nothing? Our generals must be really squirming. They can't like this.
I hate to say it, because I'm not in favor of this particular war at this particular time, but we may have to "tolerate" more of our own casualties. Our military can't operate without honor people.
We absolutely, under no circumstances, can target women and children! Whether accidental or not.
Such would be a day of infamy like no other.
AC/DC Arnett...Big, Big Ones
I've revised my original stance on Peter Arnett...though I still object to whom and how he said what he said rather than what he actually said.
Arnett has cajones, but what was he thinking? The only explanation is that he is so opposed to the war, and the continuing civilian casualties and destruction of Baghdad, that he figured by saying this on Iraqi TV the Iraqis might not give up, and we might reconsider our approach. I can't imagine it's just a matter of free speech to him.
As an American citizen, which I think he is, he's playing it pretty "fast and loose". Clearly he's not responsible for those guys being in harm's way, though he's certainly not helping, but he sure puts himself in harm's way if his stratagem doesn't work out. Ouch. Bush is probably not going to calm down anytime soon, so the effectiveness of this strategy has to be questioned as well.
Why? More Americans will die if Iraqis fight back harder. Our friends and family.
Mr. Arnett, there are better ways to oppose this war. Unless you passionately believe this war to be a clear and present danger to America and the world, in terms of escalation and armageddon, or to result in the death of freedom, and for these reasons justified these extraordinary measures of putting our loved ones and fellow citizens at the risk of greater danger, by in effect reinforcing the Iraqi resistance and morale, this address to the Iraqi people hits new heights of bad judgement, and effectively guts to the mainstream your controversial piece from the past. Too bad.
And if you do think the world is going to hell in hand basket, I still consider you foolish, and dubious in your strategy. Many of us feel the same way that you do, but since when are you a newsmaker, rather than reporter, and why are you taking your dissent to the Iraqi people? An interesting experiment in freedom perhaps, and if that's the case stand up and defend it.
Instead, and to your credit, you apologized. Luckily, cooler heads will prevail, you won't be thrown to the hammerheads, and those ultimately responsible will have to make their decisions and be held accountable. Not you, though you really put yourself in the firing line. I'm very surprised that you thought a difference this would make. Baghdad is going down, whether anyone likes it or not, and you just gave Fox News that much more ammo to get away with jingoism and propaganda rather than news and clear-eyed journalism. You should have seen the sharks thrashing in your blood last night!
Thanks, but no thanks. You deserved to be fired, and if I were you I'd find a beach in New Zealand and chill for awhile.
And wish the best for our fellow Americans in battle.
****
Fox News is the real menace to American values and freedom...I'm horrified at their coverage. These people are truly haters, and should be chopped down at the ankles...instead, they did it to Arnett. NBC had to fire Arnett for business reasons.
And it is dreadfully ironic and just plain too bad that the truth can't be told to those who are being liberated. Unfortunately, it's a war, our guys are down there, and talk of liberation is more for us right now and for them in the long-term (for selling the war) then it is about conditions on the ground. We are killing machines over there, with very little distinction, appreciation or even possible discernment of who the enemy is, and you will discover this with a nuanced perusal of the available war reporting.
I've revised my original stance on Peter Arnett...though I still object to whom and how he said what he said rather than what he actually said.
Arnett has cajones, but what was he thinking? The only explanation is that he is so opposed to the war, and the continuing civilian casualties and destruction of Baghdad, that he figured by saying this on Iraqi TV the Iraqis might not give up, and we might reconsider our approach. I can't imagine it's just a matter of free speech to him.
As an American citizen, which I think he is, he's playing it pretty "fast and loose". Clearly he's not responsible for those guys being in harm's way, though he's certainly not helping, but he sure puts himself in harm's way if his stratagem doesn't work out. Ouch. Bush is probably not going to calm down anytime soon, so the effectiveness of this strategy has to be questioned as well.
Why? More Americans will die if Iraqis fight back harder. Our friends and family.
Mr. Arnett, there are better ways to oppose this war. Unless you passionately believe this war to be a clear and present danger to America and the world, in terms of escalation and armageddon, or to result in the death of freedom, and for these reasons justified these extraordinary measures of putting our loved ones and fellow citizens at the risk of greater danger, by in effect reinforcing the Iraqi resistance and morale, this address to the Iraqi people hits new heights of bad judgement, and effectively guts to the mainstream your controversial piece from the past. Too bad.
And if you do think the world is going to hell in hand basket, I still consider you foolish, and dubious in your strategy. Many of us feel the same way that you do, but since when are you a newsmaker, rather than reporter, and why are you taking your dissent to the Iraqi people? An interesting experiment in freedom perhaps, and if that's the case stand up and defend it.
Instead, and to your credit, you apologized. Luckily, cooler heads will prevail, you won't be thrown to the hammerheads, and those ultimately responsible will have to make their decisions and be held accountable. Not you, though you really put yourself in the firing line. I'm very surprised that you thought a difference this would make. Baghdad is going down, whether anyone likes it or not, and you just gave Fox News that much more ammo to get away with jingoism and propaganda rather than news and clear-eyed journalism. You should have seen the sharks thrashing in your blood last night!
Thanks, but no thanks. You deserved to be fired, and if I were you I'd find a beach in New Zealand and chill for awhile.
And wish the best for our fellow Americans in battle.
****
Fox News is the real menace to American values and freedom...I'm horrified at their coverage. These people are truly haters, and should be chopped down at the ankles...instead, they did it to Arnett. NBC had to fire Arnett for business reasons.
And it is dreadfully ironic and just plain too bad that the truth can't be told to those who are being liberated. Unfortunately, it's a war, our guys are down there, and talk of liberation is more for us right now and for them in the long-term (for selling the war) then it is about conditions on the ground. We are killing machines over there, with very little distinction, appreciation or even possible discernment of who the enemy is, and you will discover this with a nuanced perusal of the available war reporting.
Out Of Darkness, Perle Has His Say...
...and says it quite well. It's too bad the whole "threatening libel" thing happened, but it's water under the bridge now. He did the right thing, and resigned. I for one am sick of people blatantly questioning this man's integrity and patriotism. Disagree with his views and tactics, as I do in many ways, but cut the personal attacks! It's unseemly. Personally, I think he explains well the "milieu" he operates in, and to pretend that he invented this state of affairs or is somehow responsible for them is dubious.
"Since most people with experience and knowledge relevant to defense and national security policy are likely to earn their livelihood in defense-related enterprises, the possibility of conflict of interest is always present and must be contained by adherence to the two rules, disclosure and recusal. Without those rules, and the protection they afford, few individuals with knowledge or experience would agree to serve on advisory boards, and the benefits of those boards would be lost to policy officials."
Well said. Now obviously I'm not a defense expert, as I've said many times, being primarily concerned with freedom, transparency, informed consent and greater political participation, so here's my take. Perle makes a good case for himself (though not so much so in regard to Hersh, who he doesn't touch on too much), as a way of explanation, of explaining his activities. What I find troubling about his milieu though, and what feeds the fire of suspicion and conspiracy, is the secrecy and lack of transparency in these meetings. Not only do we need disclosure and recusal, which are very much of value, but we also need transparency.
A window. We can look through. Sunshine. All of our conspiracies go away. Who wants to be the fool to believe that these guys are superhuman geniuses with top-secret means of discussing issues, that if released to the enemy would jeopardize all of us? Such thinking is absurd, and beneath civilized free society. More likely than not, they may be helped by some analysis of their perfomance in this area. To put it simply, open it up, there is not a defensible, good reason to preserve secrecy and its resulting "fog", not for national security or any other reason.
Why? There is no national security if people don't trust their government, and no fool would put forward this trust without adequate assurance and accountability. The record of corruption in authority and of the privileged throughout history, not to mention in the short history of our great nation, goes a long way to ensuring this restraint, for justifying this skepticism. It's time for us to put aside these foolish days of the past, and embrace the brave and bright century of freedom ahead.
Let's start by putting the conspiracies, suspicion and darkness to bed, and free the sun, clear cool reason, and the warmth of compassion to energize and inspire America.
Reflect on this.
...and says it quite well. It's too bad the whole "threatening libel" thing happened, but it's water under the bridge now. He did the right thing, and resigned. I for one am sick of people blatantly questioning this man's integrity and patriotism. Disagree with his views and tactics, as I do in many ways, but cut the personal attacks! It's unseemly. Personally, I think he explains well the "milieu" he operates in, and to pretend that he invented this state of affairs or is somehow responsible for them is dubious.
"Since most people with experience and knowledge relevant to defense and national security policy are likely to earn their livelihood in defense-related enterprises, the possibility of conflict of interest is always present and must be contained by adherence to the two rules, disclosure and recusal. Without those rules, and the protection they afford, few individuals with knowledge or experience would agree to serve on advisory boards, and the benefits of those boards would be lost to policy officials."
Well said. Now obviously I'm not a defense expert, as I've said many times, being primarily concerned with freedom, transparency, informed consent and greater political participation, so here's my take. Perle makes a good case for himself (though not so much so in regard to Hersh, who he doesn't touch on too much), as a way of explanation, of explaining his activities. What I find troubling about his milieu though, and what feeds the fire of suspicion and conspiracy, is the secrecy and lack of transparency in these meetings. Not only do we need disclosure and recusal, which are very much of value, but we also need transparency.
A window. We can look through. Sunshine. All of our conspiracies go away. Who wants to be the fool to believe that these guys are superhuman geniuses with top-secret means of discussing issues, that if released to the enemy would jeopardize all of us? Such thinking is absurd, and beneath civilized free society. More likely than not, they may be helped by some analysis of their perfomance in this area. To put it simply, open it up, there is not a defensible, good reason to preserve secrecy and its resulting "fog", not for national security or any other reason.
Why? There is no national security if people don't trust their government, and no fool would put forward this trust without adequate assurance and accountability. The record of corruption in authority and of the privileged throughout history, not to mention in the short history of our great nation, goes a long way to ensuring this restraint, for justifying this skepticism. It's time for us to put aside these foolish days of the past, and embrace the brave and bright century of freedom ahead.
Let's start by putting the conspiracies, suspicion and darkness to bed, and free the sun, clear cool reason, and the warmth of compassion to energize and inspire America.
Reflect on this.
Sunday, March 30, 2003
Colin Powell Is Warning Syria Now Too
Wouldn't we be better off with the global support we had in the War On Terror? There's a disconnect here, between what we're doing now and our mission in the War On Terror, that in retrospect doesn't seem the best course of strategy, or to make any sense. We've lost allies, and are facing growing opposition worldwide. Will we be able to collect new allies, should the war expand, or will we actually start losing them, like Britain? Why do we alone have to sacrifice so much, in lives and dollars?
The spoils and success ahead may be great, and glorious, in securing the blessings of liberty and safety for posterity, but should things go awry, blowback could be a lonely boat to steer back home.
Also, I've given some more thought to war crimes accusations against Tony Blair, from within his own country's parliament, and have expanded my view from somewhat humorous to one of concern and opposition.
Wouldn't we be better off with the global support we had in the War On Terror? There's a disconnect here, between what we're doing now and our mission in the War On Terror, that in retrospect doesn't seem the best course of strategy, or to make any sense. We've lost allies, and are facing growing opposition worldwide. Will we be able to collect new allies, should the war expand, or will we actually start losing them, like Britain? Why do we alone have to sacrifice so much, in lives and dollars?
The spoils and success ahead may be great, and glorious, in securing the blessings of liberty and safety for posterity, but should things go awry, blowback could be a lonely boat to steer back home.
Also, I've given some more thought to war crimes accusations against Tony Blair, from within his own country's parliament, and have expanded my view from somewhat humorous to one of concern and opposition.
Amnesty International...Freedom...Go!
Remember...demand information before consent, participation before consent, information and participation before consent!
Remember...demand information before consent, participation before consent, information and participation before consent!
Are Oregon Children Going To Dismiss All Adults As Nuts...
...if they end up celebrating a known terrorist on Martin Luther King Day, a state of affairs made possible by proposed legislation there, oddly enough in the same state that took a stand against big government, Diaper State restrictions on liberty in the aftermatch of 9-11 (in refusing to round up Arab-Americans), and all of this due to passionate reaction about a war to free Iraqis? For their freedom...
Geez, where are our priorities? Our freedom? The absurd is hitting record heights...too bad the economy can't speculate on and profit from that.
A plea. Can we just get back to the War On Terror please, and all the good will and allies we had with that? I didn't see any war protests on this scale about the multilateral War On Terror, so clearly the protests now are mainly concerned with the elite, unilateral use of American power for projection of our interests, world be damned. Not to mention the arrogance and hyprocrisy of our save-them-from-themselves, what-Jesus-would-definitely-not-do attitude.
Cowboy Kahlil at ReachM is showcasing the quote of the week as far as I'm concerned...
"The past is prophetic in that it asserts that wars are poor chisels for carving out peaceful tomorrows. One day we must come to see that peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal. We must pursue peaceful ends through peaceful means. How much longer must we play at deadly war games before we heed the plaintive pleas of the unnumbered dead and maimed of past wars?"
--Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
...if they end up celebrating a known terrorist on Martin Luther King Day, a state of affairs made possible by proposed legislation there, oddly enough in the same state that took a stand against big government, Diaper State restrictions on liberty in the aftermatch of 9-11 (in refusing to round up Arab-Americans), and all of this due to passionate reaction about a war to free Iraqis? For their freedom...
Geez, where are our priorities? Our freedom? The absurd is hitting record heights...too bad the economy can't speculate on and profit from that.
A plea. Can we just get back to the War On Terror please, and all the good will and allies we had with that? I didn't see any war protests on this scale about the multilateral War On Terror, so clearly the protests now are mainly concerned with the elite, unilateral use of American power for projection of our interests, world be damned. Not to mention the arrogance and hyprocrisy of our save-them-from-themselves, what-Jesus-would-definitely-not-do attitude.
Cowboy Kahlil at ReachM is showcasing the quote of the week as far as I'm concerned...
"The past is prophetic in that it asserts that wars are poor chisels for carving out peaceful tomorrows. One day we must come to see that peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal. We must pursue peaceful ends through peaceful means. How much longer must we play at deadly war games before we heed the plaintive pleas of the unnumbered dead and maimed of past wars?"
--Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Saturday, March 29, 2003
Aaron Brown Should Be Ashamed...
...for suggesting that American patriots who exercise their freedom are dupes of Saddam Hussein. Such a view is groundless, and stupid. Not to mention (no-)class-action slanderous. If you think this way, I highly recommend you seek a therapist.
...for suggesting that American patriots who exercise their freedom are dupes of Saddam Hussein. Such a view is groundless, and stupid. Not to mention (no-)class-action slanderous. If you think this way, I highly recommend you seek a therapist.
Friday, March 28, 2003
Wow...PoliZen found a doozer!
Blair...a war criminal? He'll probably plead he was just following orders...ours.
Seriously though people, remember the "Boy Who Cried Wolf"? Well it's war crimes now, and before too long nobody is going to take them seriously. Like the "Anti-ists", please don't overuse and bankrupt an important concept. Don't throw out war crimes unless a) you really, really mean it and b) you really, really understand what it means legally, and practically in the world of power politics.
Blair may be a shaky leader in terms of democracy and heeding the voice of the people, but he is no war criminal. Neither is our esteemed president, or anyone else in our leadership for that matter. Disagree, but show some respect. Remember the stakes? Homeland terrorism, WMD, Code Red, the imposition of martial law, and the possible end of freedom as we know it. Wrong moves may be made, but remember that the challenges are great. Shock and awe in the face of the crucible we face is shared by more of our leaders than you might imagine.
Just don't forget about the anthrax, and the attack against our elected representatives.
Blair...a war criminal? He'll probably plead he was just following orders...ours.
Seriously though people, remember the "Boy Who Cried Wolf"? Well it's war crimes now, and before too long nobody is going to take them seriously. Like the "Anti-ists", please don't overuse and bankrupt an important concept. Don't throw out war crimes unless a) you really, really mean it and b) you really, really understand what it means legally, and practically in the world of power politics.
Blair may be a shaky leader in terms of democracy and heeding the voice of the people, but he is no war criminal. Neither is our esteemed president, or anyone else in our leadership for that matter. Disagree, but show some respect. Remember the stakes? Homeland terrorism, WMD, Code Red, the imposition of martial law, and the possible end of freedom as we know it. Wrong moves may be made, but remember that the challenges are great. Shock and awe in the face of the crucible we face is shared by more of our leaders than you might imagine.
Just don't forget about the anthrax, and the attack against our elected representatives.
Thursday, March 27, 2003
Who Needs Enemies When You've Got Allies Like This (Please Don't Tell Me It's The Oil Again!)
It is.
Courtesy of Kos (great job over there bro), very, very, very disturbing revelations about our partner-in-war Uzbekistan. Am I the only guy who's practically never even heard of this country, let alone heard its name pronounced? There had to be something to make us so friendly to such utter strangers in this most momentous time of our history...
Another one of our allies, the Turks, who merely have a disturbing and Orwellian tendency to ban entire languages, are starting to look better already...they've got nothing on these Uzis. Incidentally, guess which language the Turks banned? That of the Kurds, another one of our erstwhile allies. Luckily, the Kurds had some powerful friends backing them up...The European Union.
With friends like us, who needs freedom?
It is.
Courtesy of Kos (great job over there bro), very, very, very disturbing revelations about our partner-in-war Uzbekistan. Am I the only guy who's practically never even heard of this country, let alone heard its name pronounced? There had to be something to make us so friendly to such utter strangers in this most momentous time of our history...
Another one of our allies, the Turks, who merely have a disturbing and Orwellian tendency to ban entire languages, are starting to look better already...they've got nothing on these Uzis. Incidentally, guess which language the Turks banned? That of the Kurds, another one of our erstwhile allies. Luckily, the Kurds had some powerful friends backing them up...The European Union.
With friends like us, who needs freedom?
If We Lose 5,000 Guys In Taking Baghdad...
...will that make 9/11 look like small potatos? I sure hope not, and neither does at least one 9/11 Family Group. They just don't want the Iraqi people to suffer and experience immense pain, let alone add to ours. Saddam Hussein is not worth even 100 of our men and women...we and our leadership need to wake up.
We're surrendering to fear, allowing it to guide us, and directly because of the events of 9/11. a lot of people believe it. Even though this is clearly and demonstrably wrong, at least in the light of evidence, and conveniently ignores the mutual hatred between Saddam, a secularist, and Al Qaeda, the fundamentalists. We need a better strategy against fear and terrorism people, one better than giving into it and allowing it to guide us, one that is believable and workable. We need to lose the fear, and open our eyes and minds again.
When will we get to that day when we have sacrificed more American lives to get Saddam Hussein than were lost in 9/11? Hopefully never, and to me, we should not ever even come close.
(thanks to Disinfo for the tip on 9/11 families)
Besides, we still need to find out who tried to take out Congress with anthrax. Or has everyone forgotten about that?
...will that make 9/11 look like small potatos? I sure hope not, and neither does at least one 9/11 Family Group. They just don't want the Iraqi people to suffer and experience immense pain, let alone add to ours. Saddam Hussein is not worth even 100 of our men and women...we and our leadership need to wake up.
We're surrendering to fear, allowing it to guide us, and directly because of the events of 9/11. a lot of people believe it. Even though this is clearly and demonstrably wrong, at least in the light of evidence, and conveniently ignores the mutual hatred between Saddam, a secularist, and Al Qaeda, the fundamentalists. We need a better strategy against fear and terrorism people, one better than giving into it and allowing it to guide us, one that is believable and workable. We need to lose the fear, and open our eyes and minds again.
When will we get to that day when we have sacrificed more American lives to get Saddam Hussein than were lost in 9/11? Hopefully never, and to me, we should not ever even come close.
(thanks to Disinfo for the tip on 9/11 families)
Besides, we still need to find out who tried to take out Congress with anthrax. Or has everyone forgotten about that?
Wednesday, March 26, 2003
Continuing On The Theme Of Cynical Manipulation Of Public Opinion
On Waxman! On Hersh! On Post! On Veterans! On Close! On Blitzer? (with Perle at the bottom of this)
Freelixir!
On Waxman! On Hersh! On Post! On Veterans! On Close! On Blitzer? (with Perle at the bottom of this)
Freelixir!
Tuesday, March 25, 2003
Even More Bizarre, Fellow Patriots Are Informing Me...
...that the seemingly omnipresent Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld are bit players in a truly stranger-than-fiction, alleged cover-up of CIA efforts to dose American citizens with LSD, unwittingly and tragically resulting in the death of scientist Frank Olson, at the time one of America's top biological weapons scientists, former head of the special-operations division of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute at Fort Detrick, and as the Florida Today tells us, a specialist in the aerosol delivery of anthrax!
Who needs fiction when you've got the surreal times we live in?
...that the seemingly omnipresent Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld are bit players in a truly stranger-than-fiction, alleged cover-up of CIA efforts to dose American citizens with LSD, unwittingly and tragically resulting in the death of scientist Frank Olson, at the time one of America's top biological weapons scientists, former head of the special-operations division of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute at Fort Detrick, and as the Florida Today tells us, a specialist in the aerosol delivery of anthrax!
Who needs fiction when you've got the surreal times we live in?
On The Lighter Side...Though Not Really Funny Because It's Actually Happening
I guess I'm not the only one who thinks the Obliviously Ignorant Office logo is the lamest American adminstration move ever! Oh, except maybe for the not-so-secret Bible Code consultations of the CIA and the Pentagon.
It's old hat for the CIA though, who, when not creating extraterrestrial conspiracies are, as another patriot informs me, training to travel through time and space! That's got to be discomforting to Saddam Hussein! Celebrate a new century of enlightened American leadership everybody! The joke's on you...
And don't get caught napping and forget about Nostradamus and the coming "King of Terror". Everybody knows that Machiavelli is out, and biblical-style prophecy is in. With that in mind, we must stay ever vigilant to see which one of these Muslim leaders starts wearing a purple robe! Then we will have cornered the real enemy...the Antichrist! One patriot assures me that we can rule out Bin Laden because he's too evil to be the Antichrist! No, that title seems to be more suited to Bin Laden's young protege Khattab, also known as the Black Arab...
I guess I'm not the only one who thinks the Obliviously Ignorant Office logo is the lamest American adminstration move ever! Oh, except maybe for the not-so-secret Bible Code consultations of the CIA and the Pentagon.
It's old hat for the CIA though, who, when not creating extraterrestrial conspiracies are, as another patriot informs me, training to travel through time and space! That's got to be discomforting to Saddam Hussein! Celebrate a new century of enlightened American leadership everybody! The joke's on you...
And don't get caught napping and forget about Nostradamus and the coming "King of Terror". Everybody knows that Machiavelli is out, and biblical-style prophecy is in. With that in mind, we must stay ever vigilant to see which one of these Muslim leaders starts wearing a purple robe! Then we will have cornered the real enemy...the Antichrist! One patriot assures me that we can rule out Bin Laden because he's too evil to be the Antichrist! No, that title seems to be more suited to Bin Laden's young protege Khattab, also known as the Black Arab...
Monday, March 24, 2003
A Toast To PoliZen And American Dissent
Thanks for linking me in! You guys got some serious mojo!
And Let's Not Forget Cowboy Kahlil...the first to link me in!
Thanks for linking me in! You guys got some serious mojo!
And Let's Not Forget Cowboy Kahlil...the first to link me in!
When The Rhetoric Hits The Fan
Click over to Project Freedom, my sister blog, for my response to Ms. Noonen, where I assert that the baddest bad thing we can not do is get our own house in order. Also, don't miss Jesse's (thanks Atrios), which is much funnier than mine.
Click over to Project Freedom, my sister blog, for my response to Ms. Noonen, where I assert that the baddest bad thing we can not do is get our own house in order. Also, don't miss Jesse's (thanks Atrios), which is much funnier than mine.
More Public Manipulation Of Available Information...
From the Washington Post: "The White House has for months refused to provide a price tag for war in Iraq, saying too many variables were at play...ensuring that lawmakers' discussion of war spending will take place amid a surge of public support for American troops. That stance forced Congress to vote last week on budget resolutions that included Bush's proposed tax cuts, without war costs factored in."
Not to mention resulting in slashed veterans' benefits. How telling. The price tag, incidentally, will be only $70 or $80 billion or so, not including reconstruction and post-war administration costs, as well as humanitarian costs, which taxpayers also are ultimately responsible for since we are resisting UN post-war involvement. Is there any better frame to work with for our position against cynicism and secrecy, and for the freedom of information, informed consent, and governmental oversight on this web forum than this?
From the Washington Post: "The White House has for months refused to provide a price tag for war in Iraq, saying too many variables were at play...ensuring that lawmakers' discussion of war spending will take place amid a surge of public support for American troops. That stance forced Congress to vote last week on budget resolutions that included Bush's proposed tax cuts, without war costs factored in."
Not to mention resulting in slashed veterans' benefits. How telling. The price tag, incidentally, will be only $70 or $80 billion or so, not including reconstruction and post-war administration costs, as well as humanitarian costs, which taxpayers also are ultimately responsible for since we are resisting UN post-war involvement. Is there any better frame to work with for our position against cynicism and secrecy, and for the freedom of information, informed consent, and governmental oversight on this web forum than this?
Saving Strategy
Dig in, hold tight, and occupy Iraq right where we stand. Keep a perimeter around Baghdad, and contain the regime until we can smoke them out by restricting supplies and precision special forces raids. Better to lose up to a few hundred by snipers and ambush then upwards of 10,000 in a full-on assault. Better for political careers and legacies too...these are our family members. We've secured the realm, if necessary let's take our time in securing the regime.
Dig in, hold tight, and occupy Iraq right where we stand. Keep a perimeter around Baghdad, and contain the regime until we can smoke them out by restricting supplies and precision special forces raids. Better to lose up to a few hundred by snipers and ambush then upwards of 10,000 in a full-on assault. Better for political careers and legacies too...these are our family members. We've secured the realm, if necessary let's take our time in securing the regime.
A Plea To Remember
Ladies and gentleman, it's come to my attention that the upcoming siege of Baghdad could cost upwards of 10,000 American lives! Not to mention Iraqi civilians and conscripts. Wow. Operation Iraqi Freedom seems about to turn into Operation American Tragedy. Please, please people take notice of the reasons we are in this war, and the means and techniques we've used to get here, and do not forget them after the dust settles. Do not forget them when the war drum starts beating again, and do not forgot them when veterans' benefits are slashed to make room for tax cuts.
A critical moment is occurring now where the meaning of the American Way itself is being fought for and transformed. Speak out, stay vigilant, and do not forget.
Ladies and gentleman, it's come to my attention that the upcoming siege of Baghdad could cost upwards of 10,000 American lives! Not to mention Iraqi civilians and conscripts. Wow. Operation Iraqi Freedom seems about to turn into Operation American Tragedy. Please, please people take notice of the reasons we are in this war, and the means and techniques we've used to get here, and do not forget them after the dust settles. Do not forget them when the war drum starts beating again, and do not forgot them when veterans' benefits are slashed to make room for tax cuts.
A critical moment is occurring now where the meaning of the American Way itself is being fought for and transformed. Speak out, stay vigilant, and do not forget.
Sunday, March 23, 2003
American Honor
Turkey is reportedly rolling into Northern Iraq. For the Kurds, this means disaster. This was eminently predictable, and another case of the Kurds getting sold out.
Should not the Kurds be liberated too, rather than oppressed, intimidated and slaughtered until rendered passive by the Turks? At least against Iraq we were backing them up, and they enjoyed some autonomy, but against Turkey, a strategic geopolitical ally, we're not likely to say too much.
Turkey is a threat to Kurdish freedom, and to American ideals for that matter, as their Orwellian tendency to ban entire (Kurdish) languages from the public realm would clearly demonstrate (if ever reported in our media).
Turkey is not a trustworthy friend of freedom, or America, and for their sake we should not relinquish this last chance to make good to the Kurds. We've betrayed and misled them for far too long, and as far as I'm concerned, our word and honor as a nation rests in the fate of these people.
Will we do the right thing?
Turkey is reportedly rolling into Northern Iraq. For the Kurds, this means disaster. This was eminently predictable, and another case of the Kurds getting sold out.
Should not the Kurds be liberated too, rather than oppressed, intimidated and slaughtered until rendered passive by the Turks? At least against Iraq we were backing them up, and they enjoyed some autonomy, but against Turkey, a strategic geopolitical ally, we're not likely to say too much.
Turkey is a threat to Kurdish freedom, and to American ideals for that matter, as their Orwellian tendency to ban entire (Kurdish) languages from the public realm would clearly demonstrate (if ever reported in our media).
Turkey is not a trustworthy friend of freedom, or America, and for their sake we should not relinquish this last chance to make good to the Kurds. We've betrayed and misled them for far too long, and as far as I'm concerned, our word and honor as a nation rests in the fate of these people.
Will we do the right thing?
Further Thoughts On Waking Up To The American Dream
In response to a warning that John Ashcroft is "looking to control the Internet as we speak", I can only wish our passionate and patriotic Attorney General a dubious "good luck, and good riddance to you after you fail trying"...
You can't control the Internet. Nobody can. It's out of control. Business has already tried to ruin it, and it didn't work. Yea there's plenty of ads and pop-ups, and spam mail, but Ashcroft can't manage his own information let alone the Internet. It's a wet dream for him, and when he wakes up, he'll see the morning light.
The American way is establishing itself here on the Internet, free of undue influence by the state and manipulators who only see liberty as a tool for the truly worthy elite (however this in-group ends up defining themselves). People are forming opinions based upon available information and sharing these widely. This is the American Dream in action. Why do we need big government interfering with the free flow of information on the Internet?
If Ashcroft tries to take this down, just this process of learning, and forming opinions, and sharing them, he'll be the first to know he is a fascist, and a direct descendant of the Gestapo, and anti-American (though I despise this term). Which of course he isn't. The question remains though if you can't cynically manipulate the information, and the media that expound it, do you step aside or do you try to stop it altogether? They won't stop it, Ashcroft is not evil (just a do-gooder unknowingly on the side of wrong), and the natural process of understanding will take its course...
revolution without bloodshed,
revelation without mediation.
In response to a warning that John Ashcroft is "looking to control the Internet as we speak", I can only wish our passionate and patriotic Attorney General a dubious "good luck, and good riddance to you after you fail trying"...
You can't control the Internet. Nobody can. It's out of control. Business has already tried to ruin it, and it didn't work. Yea there's plenty of ads and pop-ups, and spam mail, but Ashcroft can't manage his own information let alone the Internet. It's a wet dream for him, and when he wakes up, he'll see the morning light.
The American way is establishing itself here on the Internet, free of undue influence by the state and manipulators who only see liberty as a tool for the truly worthy elite (however this in-group ends up defining themselves). People are forming opinions based upon available information and sharing these widely. This is the American Dream in action. Why do we need big government interfering with the free flow of information on the Internet?
If Ashcroft tries to take this down, just this process of learning, and forming opinions, and sharing them, he'll be the first to know he is a fascist, and a direct descendant of the Gestapo, and anti-American (though I despise this term). Which of course he isn't. The question remains though if you can't cynically manipulate the information, and the media that expound it, do you step aside or do you try to stop it altogether? They won't stop it, Ashcroft is not evil (just a do-gooder unknowingly on the side of wrong), and the natural process of understanding will take its course...
revolution without bloodshed,
revelation without mediation.
High Drama
The key battleground for the human mind is happening on the ground, in the form of demonstrations, and on the Internet, in the multitudes of web logs and media reporters springing up therein. Control is out of control. 200,000 people on the street is undeniable, and unstoppable. Millions of people on the Internet are growing and developing their own opinions, based upon an increasingly broad base of available information, and sharing these with the like and opposition minded. Barring a clampdown of epic proportions, the tide will continue to turn, and freedom of mind and information will be claimed and propagated for present and future peoples.
Go!
The key battleground for the human mind is happening on the ground, in the form of demonstrations, and on the Internet, in the multitudes of web logs and media reporters springing up therein. Control is out of control. 200,000 people on the street is undeniable, and unstoppable. Millions of people on the Internet are growing and developing their own opinions, based upon an increasingly broad base of available information, and sharing these with the like and opposition minded. Barring a clampdown of epic proportions, the tide will continue to turn, and freedom of mind and information will be claimed and propagated for present and future peoples.
Go!
Saturday, March 22, 2003
U.S. Taxpayers To Sport Tab For Rebuilding Iraq
Better cut back on the happy hours, because your tax dollars are not only going to destroying Iraq, but also to rebuilding it. According to the Administration, we'll also be using oil proceeds from Iraqi oil wells, which we'll apparently be in the position of controlling revenue flows. Interesting...sounds like ownership doesn't it?
If you don't want to register with the Times, here's the relevant quote..."These contracts will be financed by the taxpayer." Simple, huh? I wonder how many war supporters were aware they'd be sporting the tab for Iraq's Marshall Plan? Any American for that matter? I wonder how many intrepid CNN reporters or talk-show hosts will care to pick this up...
The plot thickens
(from Atrios)
Better cut back on the happy hours, because your tax dollars are not only going to destroying Iraq, but also to rebuilding it. According to the Administration, we'll also be using oil proceeds from Iraqi oil wells, which we'll apparently be in the position of controlling revenue flows. Interesting...sounds like ownership doesn't it?
If you don't want to register with the Times, here's the relevant quote..."These contracts will be financed by the taxpayer." Simple, huh? I wonder how many war supporters were aware they'd be sporting the tab for Iraq's Marshall Plan? Any American for that matter? I wonder how many intrepid CNN reporters or talk-show hosts will care to pick this up...
The plot thickens
(from Atrios)
CNN Sells Out The American People
It's sad to see the state of CNN today. Look at their headline...Americans demonstrate for, against war. Then read the article. The first part covers the anti-war protest in New York City today, with the obligatory difference pointed out between organizers' and police estimates of the crowd size, which is determined to be 200,000 and 300,000 people. In the first few days of war! This is big, big news, and a further signal that Vietnam, and strategic aggression, is dead as we know it.
Or is it? Remember we've got an equally important pro-war protest going on, right? At least according to the headline. This event, according to the Chicago Tribune "mobilized on the Internet and by conservative radio hosts", surely must have had a huge turnout itself right? With all the publicity, and Internet push. Wrong. CNN fails to even give a headcount for this rally, and the Chicago Tribune coverage tells us why. "By the time their event wrapped up at 2 p.m., though, they appeared to have attracted fewer than half as many people as the anti-war faction's estimated 5,000 protesters Friday evening rally in the plaza."
This is headline news? That a pro-war rally had less than 1/2 the turnout of the anti-war rally in Chicago the night before, and about 1/50th of the rally it shared a headline with? Actually, when you think about it, it is big news, as I've indicated above, just not the way they reported it. I wonder why? This is a historic failure for the so-called "pro-war" camp, and of the media, and shows just how much people who "support" the war are disconnected and not passionate about it, and are just being driven by the war hawks, pollsters, and their media allies.
I challenge Gallup or any other pollster to a new poll. Poll the American people, and ask them which best describes your position...do you vigorously support the war, support the war out of loyalty to party, support the war because we're already in it and that's what you're supposed to do, oppose and support the war because we're already in it and that's what you're supposed to do, oppose the war out of loyalty to party, and vigorously oppose the war. Better yet, ask them if they support or don't support, vigorously or moderately, and then ask them why without giving them the answers. A fill-in. Then, after the fill-in, ask them why again, without giving them the answers.
So for instance let's say you support the war, asked why you say to get Saddam Hussein, asked why you say because he is connected to 911. Something like that. Which makes me wonder if the 911 answer is even an option in the current polls going around that are specifically concerned with support or opposition to the war...
My frustration here with the pollsters is that they're using a known trick of social influence in these polls. Upon being presented the options to answer, by having only a limited number of options people are put into Jeopardy mode, not always answering as they really believe but giving their "best answer", regardless of whether there's a "not sure" option or not.
Alex: "High-tech drones loaded with dangerous and deadly weapons. Alice, your final jeopardy response?" Alice: "What is the United States." Alex: "Umm...I'm sorry Alice, you must select one of the answers on the teleprompter or being fed into your earpiece.." Alice: "Well now Alex, that doesn't sound very American, does it? Hee hee." Alex: "Maybe not Alice, but it is the rules." Alice: "Oh, okay Alex, hee hee hee. I didn't know that. Let's see...who is Saddam Hussein!" Alex: "Yes Alice, you are right, and the winner of the CNN Jeopardy grand prize! A brand-new Hummer! Thank you, and to all a good night."
CNN is a fraud.
It's sad to see the state of CNN today. Look at their headline...Americans demonstrate for, against war. Then read the article. The first part covers the anti-war protest in New York City today, with the obligatory difference pointed out between organizers' and police estimates of the crowd size, which is determined to be 200,000 and 300,000 people. In the first few days of war! This is big, big news, and a further signal that Vietnam, and strategic aggression, is dead as we know it.
Or is it? Remember we've got an equally important pro-war protest going on, right? At least according to the headline. This event, according to the Chicago Tribune "mobilized on the Internet and by conservative radio hosts", surely must have had a huge turnout itself right? With all the publicity, and Internet push. Wrong. CNN fails to even give a headcount for this rally, and the Chicago Tribune coverage tells us why. "By the time their event wrapped up at 2 p.m., though, they appeared to have attracted fewer than half as many people as the anti-war faction's estimated 5,000 protesters Friday evening rally in the plaza."
This is headline news? That a pro-war rally had less than 1/2 the turnout of the anti-war rally in Chicago the night before, and about 1/50th of the rally it shared a headline with? Actually, when you think about it, it is big news, as I've indicated above, just not the way they reported it. I wonder why? This is a historic failure for the so-called "pro-war" camp, and of the media, and shows just how much people who "support" the war are disconnected and not passionate about it, and are just being driven by the war hawks, pollsters, and their media allies.
I challenge Gallup or any other pollster to a new poll. Poll the American people, and ask them which best describes your position...do you vigorously support the war, support the war out of loyalty to party, support the war because we're already in it and that's what you're supposed to do, oppose and support the war because we're already in it and that's what you're supposed to do, oppose the war out of loyalty to party, and vigorously oppose the war. Better yet, ask them if they support or don't support, vigorously or moderately, and then ask them why without giving them the answers. A fill-in. Then, after the fill-in, ask them why again, without giving them the answers.
So for instance let's say you support the war, asked why you say to get Saddam Hussein, asked why you say because he is connected to 911. Something like that. Which makes me wonder if the 911 answer is even an option in the current polls going around that are specifically concerned with support or opposition to the war...
My frustration here with the pollsters is that they're using a known trick of social influence in these polls. Upon being presented the options to answer, by having only a limited number of options people are put into Jeopardy mode, not always answering as they really believe but giving their "best answer", regardless of whether there's a "not sure" option or not.
Alex: "High-tech drones loaded with dangerous and deadly weapons. Alice, your final jeopardy response?" Alice: "What is the United States." Alex: "Umm...I'm sorry Alice, you must select one of the answers on the teleprompter or being fed into your earpiece.." Alice: "Well now Alex, that doesn't sound very American, does it? Hee hee." Alex: "Maybe not Alice, but it is the rules." Alice: "Oh, okay Alex, hee hee hee. I didn't know that. Let's see...who is Saddam Hussein!" Alex: "Yes Alice, you are right, and the winner of the CNN Jeopardy grand prize! A brand-new Hummer! Thank you, and to all a good night."
CNN is a fraud.
War Prayer
As a human being and an American, with feelings of likeness and empathy to my fellow man, woman and citizen, I can only hope, and offer a prayer, that the number who die, and the people who suffer, from the fruits of our works, and the choice of our leaders, is minimized. May I never forget, in the passion of war, that our fellow Americans, the unfortunate Iraqi conscripts, and the oppressed Iraqi civilians, are children of creation, and the family of God. I wish them the best.
And to my boys from Pacific Beach, good and loyal Marines fighting for our most sweet lady of liberty, an extra-special shout out! May God bless and guide your hand, and bring you home.
As a human being and an American, with feelings of likeness and empathy to my fellow man, woman and citizen, I can only hope, and offer a prayer, that the number who die, and the people who suffer, from the fruits of our works, and the choice of our leaders, is minimized. May I never forget, in the passion of war, that our fellow Americans, the unfortunate Iraqi conscripts, and the oppressed Iraqi civilians, are children of creation, and the family of God. I wish them the best.
And to my boys from Pacific Beach, good and loyal Marines fighting for our most sweet lady of liberty, an extra-special shout out! May God bless and guide your hand, and bring you home.
Friday, March 21, 2003
Anti-War Movement Is Alive And Well...Let's Review
Just to prove I'm not budging on my stance, I'm reprinting a letter I wrote at the height of my frustration, on the eve of this conflict, and subsequently sent to every media outlet, pundit, politician, blogger, writer, thinker and patriot I could find an email for on the Internet. I just wanted to speak my mind, and know that I tried my best to appeal to the reason of my fellows. And as much as I believe in a united front, I believe felt opinions once expressed are always relevant, even after new realities press, and I'm standing behind it. There's never been any question that if we went in we'd roll Iraq...
...
It's a crucial time in American history. The incompetent, scandalous and crooked are becoming the norm. The latest incident involving the forgery of the Niger nuclear documents is a telling case-in-point. Confronted with this development, a key component of our case for war against Iraq, all we get from our leaders and these documents' former champions is a shrug. Oh well, we passed it along in "good faith". We are not incompetent, or criminal, it just managed to "slip through". Forget about it. And we couldn't have been responsible for it, because our people are competent, talented professionals who surely would have done a better job of forging these documents. And so on...
Only this information is, and was, unforgettably important. We expressed it at the highest levels of our power apparatus, as a justification for a very expensive, in both human lives and material cost, war against Iraq. A war in which we've articulated our possible use of weapons of mass destruction, nuclear and chemical, as a "defensive" measure "should it come to that". A war which has divided the world, invited enemies and derision, and which we have initiated. The people of Iraq, and Saddam Hussein himself, have not asked us to go to war with them. Mysteriously, it's not a priority for them.
Even more mysteriously, it's seemingly become our overriding purpose as a nation. You can't go anywhere and not hear about it. On TV, on the radio, in the newspaper, the non-stop onslaught of coverage of this possible war against a weakened tyrant and people is constantly in play. Forced to give an opinion by the pollsters, fastly becoming more tiresome and meddling in popular culture than the tax collector, Americans indicate a preference for action. An illusion. Most people don't know the facts, don't really care one way or the other, and would surely rather quit hearing about it. You'd think the mind-numbing coverage and escalating gas prices would have assured overwhelming support for war by now, just so we can "get on with our lives", but it hasn't. Most mysteriously of all, masses are gathering in the streets, not answering the call of obedience, irrationality and war, but demanding peace, rationality and sanity. The herd! Acting with compassion and reason, demanding information before consent! The elites must be trembling in their slippers...
Meanwhile, our young American men and women are strapping on their combat boots and chem-warfare suits, preparing to engage in a war of which they can't possibly be passionate about. Why do I say this? There's a difference in what you hear, and what you know. And only the most clueless of the clueless would believe we're sacrificing human lives for the cause of the common Iraqi. For his freedom. Or hers. So anyone who's looking for reasons, to engage their reason, to determine the right thing to do, the moral course of action, will find nothing but ideology and fiction, speculation and threats, forgeries and plagiarism emanating from our most competent war orators. The mere presence of a plagiarized, decade-old student thesis, and the aforementioned Niger document forgery, as key references for our case is more telling than anything else. The plagiarized student claiming to have been able to give more updated information if he had been consulted only adds insult to injury.
This war is a fraud. Essential questions have not been answered. Who is going to die, and why? Will our fighting men and women kill with certainty, or with doubts? When does being a patriot mean defending freedom, and when does it mean being a fool? We don't know. So to the perpetrators of this absurdity the American people should issue one last ultimatum. Stand down, or face the shame of a nation.
A patriot,
Jimm
Just to prove I'm not budging on my stance, I'm reprinting a letter I wrote at the height of my frustration, on the eve of this conflict, and subsequently sent to every media outlet, pundit, politician, blogger, writer, thinker and patriot I could find an email for on the Internet. I just wanted to speak my mind, and know that I tried my best to appeal to the reason of my fellows. And as much as I believe in a united front, I believe felt opinions once expressed are always relevant, even after new realities press, and I'm standing behind it. There's never been any question that if we went in we'd roll Iraq...
...
It's a crucial time in American history. The incompetent, scandalous and crooked are becoming the norm. The latest incident involving the forgery of the Niger nuclear documents is a telling case-in-point. Confronted with this development, a key component of our case for war against Iraq, all we get from our leaders and these documents' former champions is a shrug. Oh well, we passed it along in "good faith". We are not incompetent, or criminal, it just managed to "slip through". Forget about it. And we couldn't have been responsible for it, because our people are competent, talented professionals who surely would have done a better job of forging these documents. And so on...
Only this information is, and was, unforgettably important. We expressed it at the highest levels of our power apparatus, as a justification for a very expensive, in both human lives and material cost, war against Iraq. A war in which we've articulated our possible use of weapons of mass destruction, nuclear and chemical, as a "defensive" measure "should it come to that". A war which has divided the world, invited enemies and derision, and which we have initiated. The people of Iraq, and Saddam Hussein himself, have not asked us to go to war with them. Mysteriously, it's not a priority for them.
Even more mysteriously, it's seemingly become our overriding purpose as a nation. You can't go anywhere and not hear about it. On TV, on the radio, in the newspaper, the non-stop onslaught of coverage of this possible war against a weakened tyrant and people is constantly in play. Forced to give an opinion by the pollsters, fastly becoming more tiresome and meddling in popular culture than the tax collector, Americans indicate a preference for action. An illusion. Most people don't know the facts, don't really care one way or the other, and would surely rather quit hearing about it. You'd think the mind-numbing coverage and escalating gas prices would have assured overwhelming support for war by now, just so we can "get on with our lives", but it hasn't. Most mysteriously of all, masses are gathering in the streets, not answering the call of obedience, irrationality and war, but demanding peace, rationality and sanity. The herd! Acting with compassion and reason, demanding information before consent! The elites must be trembling in their slippers...
Meanwhile, our young American men and women are strapping on their combat boots and chem-warfare suits, preparing to engage in a war of which they can't possibly be passionate about. Why do I say this? There's a difference in what you hear, and what you know. And only the most clueless of the clueless would believe we're sacrificing human lives for the cause of the common Iraqi. For his freedom. Or hers. So anyone who's looking for reasons, to engage their reason, to determine the right thing to do, the moral course of action, will find nothing but ideology and fiction, speculation and threats, forgeries and plagiarism emanating from our most competent war orators. The mere presence of a plagiarized, decade-old student thesis, and the aforementioned Niger document forgery, as key references for our case is more telling than anything else. The plagiarized student claiming to have been able to give more updated information if he had been consulted only adds insult to injury.
This war is a fraud. Essential questions have not been answered. Who is going to die, and why? Will our fighting men and women kill with certainty, or with doubts? When does being a patriot mean defending freedom, and when does it mean being a fool? We don't know. So to the perpetrators of this absurdity the American people should issue one last ultimatum. Stand down, or face the shame of a nation.
A patriot,
Jimm
We're winning the war against war!
The effort to protest the war has not been lost. Protesting the war isn't really about the actual war itself, but about right and wrong, moral acts versus immoral acts. The anti-war voice was heard, and was successful to some extent, in airing the grievances of moral actors against what they perceived as self-righteous aggression. Was there any doubt the war would happen? None for me. Was there any doubt that we would roll over Iraq like Mike Tyson over wannabe tough Fox News talk-show draft-dodging mouthpieces for official truth? Hell no. That's like arguing whether the neo-conservative really asks "What Would Jesus Do".
People should be proud. Right stood up against wrong, and that's a victory in itself. Compassion over self-righteousness won't happen overnight. If you get enough people in the streets however, future wars can be averted. And the bottom-line is that we've officially killed the reemergence of Vietnam. Bush has 30 days of good will to win this war, at most, as it's obvious we're never going back to the drawn-out nonsense of the past. The legacy of the 60's, and the incompetence and criminality of Nixon, live on. The epic victories of Panama, Grenada and finally Iraq haven't revalidated and elevated the primacy of military action. Quite to the contrary, the final nails in the coffin have been pushed in with this truly horrible performance, and have rolled back the previous gains. They got their war, and it's going to be the last. The lies, the deception, the international outrage, aren't going to go away, because everyone expects us to pummel these guys. We've got everything to lose in this war, and nothing to gain, especially since we suspect the reality, and not the rhetoric, of what will happen when it's over.
To sum up, it's not every day that the director of the National Security Council quits, and it's not necessarily because he's a man who has seen the light. He may be a man who has seen the reconstruction of American military action, validity and power being destroyed in a comical mess of incompetence and stupidity, and has seen enough to disassociate himself. In the emerging age of information and the potential of the distributive Internet, the legacy of this run up to war will never be forgotten, and will only spread. Military might does not make right, and right is pretty mighty after all. We're winning! Stay true, keep believing, and you'll see...
The effort to protest the war has not been lost. Protesting the war isn't really about the actual war itself, but about right and wrong, moral acts versus immoral acts. The anti-war voice was heard, and was successful to some extent, in airing the grievances of moral actors against what they perceived as self-righteous aggression. Was there any doubt the war would happen? None for me. Was there any doubt that we would roll over Iraq like Mike Tyson over wannabe tough Fox News talk-show draft-dodging mouthpieces for official truth? Hell no. That's like arguing whether the neo-conservative really asks "What Would Jesus Do".
People should be proud. Right stood up against wrong, and that's a victory in itself. Compassion over self-righteousness won't happen overnight. If you get enough people in the streets however, future wars can be averted. And the bottom-line is that we've officially killed the reemergence of Vietnam. Bush has 30 days of good will to win this war, at most, as it's obvious we're never going back to the drawn-out nonsense of the past. The legacy of the 60's, and the incompetence and criminality of Nixon, live on. The epic victories of Panama, Grenada and finally Iraq haven't revalidated and elevated the primacy of military action. Quite to the contrary, the final nails in the coffin have been pushed in with this truly horrible performance, and have rolled back the previous gains. They got their war, and it's going to be the last. The lies, the deception, the international outrage, aren't going to go away, because everyone expects us to pummel these guys. We've got everything to lose in this war, and nothing to gain, especially since we suspect the reality, and not the rhetoric, of what will happen when it's over.
To sum up, it's not every day that the director of the National Security Council quits, and it's not necessarily because he's a man who has seen the light. He may be a man who has seen the reconstruction of American military action, validity and power being destroyed in a comical mess of incompetence and stupidity, and has seen enough to disassociate himself. In the emerging age of information and the potential of the distributive Internet, the legacy of this run up to war will never be forgotten, and will only spread. Military might does not make right, and right is pretty mighty after all. We're winning! Stay true, keep believing, and you'll see...
Thursday, March 20, 2003
Inaugural Thoughts II
This forum is created solely for the aim of human liberation, and strongly emphasizes the free availability and evidential soundness of information. The ''twin towers'' of compassion and reason are the directing values. Do not confuse this effort with the classic project of "Enlightenment", or any other century projects. Progress here is only measured in gains of freedom and acts of compassion, for all human beings, and is not a value in itself. Life with integrity!
This forum is created solely for the aim of human liberation, and strongly emphasizes the free availability and evidential soundness of information. The ''twin towers'' of compassion and reason are the directing values. Do not confuse this effort with the classic project of "Enlightenment", or any other century projects. Progress here is only measured in gains of freedom and acts of compassion, for all human beings, and is not a value in itself. Life with integrity!
To All Americans
Freedom is an elusive thing. To have, to hold, and to conceive. Try to define it, you will join a divergent chorus. In spite of this, most of us understand at least a common sense of freedom, of what it means, and this usually seems to be good enough. We tend to agree that an American should be free to live without undue interference, to speak, and to own property. Beyond that, there are dueling interpretations of how far we should go.
You'll notice that I specifically mention this freedom in regards to being "an American". With all due respect to the Declaration of Independence, and the ideals expressed within, Americans have always fought for and believed in "our" freedom, not "theirs", and in those cases where we did liberate other peoples we were ultimately doing so for our own purposes, and not strictly for theirs.
This goes back to our origins. Our founding fathers and fellow revolutionaries were not concerned with the free status of other Brits, or of people in any other country for that matter. Not fundamentally so. Our American story, and freedom, is about America, is American, and has always been that way.
At first, this institution of freedom was extended only to a minority of Americans. White men were the originally endowed. Women were seen as unfit and subservient to men, and blacks, native americans, and basically any non-whites were viewed as less-than-human. In these storied and triumphant times, freedom was new, tenuous and biased, and men were quite obviously victims of their own ignorance.
In psychological terms, a whole lot of repression was going on. How else could the belief in racial and gender superiority be justified in the light of the ideals enshrined in our Declaration of Independence? It couldn't. Today, we see this kind of behavior and thinking for what it is, misguided and ignorant, and if persisted with in the face of a more sane and rational outlook, with competing and superior information and understanding, rightly considered evil.
Which our founders of course were not. Our founders were brave and pioneering men and women, fighting against subservience and oppression, and distinguishing themselves to us and to history despite their misunderstanding and ignorance of the true state of human nature. This misapprehension of the true status of human life, and rights, and who is and what it means to be human, is unfortunate and a human error we have corrected in our times, though it still lingers in remnants, in pockets of ignorance, even among our elected leaders.
A lot our founders did get right though, and our pride as a people begins with them. We enjoy the fruits of our liberty today because of their struggles. Since those times, we've come a long way in bringing the ideal and practice of freedom into more intimate embrace. Every American is included in the franchise of freedom now, with the obvious exception of minors. Our flag waves with honor, even though some may choose to burn it. So be it. America is not and has never been evil, because we have changed and adapted to righteous challenge. In the light of reason, conflict and compassion we have improved and expanded the franchise of freedom to all Americans, and for this we should be very proud.
What we cannot be proud of is the shameful behavior of some of our fellow citizens who have trouble with opinions differing from their own, or who seek to conceal their questionable political activities behind smoke screens and legal argument. These individuals clearly do not appreciate what freedom means. Take for instance our cafeteria contras in Congress who've renamed french fries and french toast to freedom fries and freedom toast. Is this the proper example and protest to make in the name of freedom, our most cherished and founding ideal? From our elected leaders? To proclaim solidarity with the cause of Iraqi freedom by condemning the French for exercising their own freedom to disagree with and question our reasoning and motives? Are the French required to rubber stamp our every move, especially moves so dramatically divergent from international norms and our own history? Are we hypocrites? Bullies? Children? No, no, no, no, no, no, and no. Surely this isn't the vision and expectation of our forefathers.
How do we justify this attitude towards the French, this villification of them? Their leader and figurehead was the first to visit and offer his nations' condolences for our tragic losses on the day of September 11. But their national symbols didn't come crashing down on that day, ours did, so where is their overriding motive? Would we have rushed to war with Iraq if the Louvre had been felled? Honest? Our thirst for revenge is ablaze, so should theirs? By default? Who's forgotten that the greatest gift we've ever received from another nation did not fall that terrible day in September? No, our sweet lady of liberty still stands strong and vigilant. Who could forget that the French have been our friends and brothers since the very beginning of our great nation? Not me. Will our fears and passions for revenge get the better of us, clouding out all we know about ourselves, our friends, and our history?
Not even here in America do citizens believe we should be picking fights around the world for other peoples' freedom. Beyond safeguarding our freedom, homes and families, we're a peace-loving people, though you'd never guess it by looking at the seemingly non-stop skirmishes our leadership has dragged into over the past century. Why would the French differ in this regard, and not more greatly so since the policy and propaganda in this case are not of their own making, and aren't meant to be? Their private companies don't stand to profit from the takeover of Iraq, but actually stand to lose billions, with or without French support. Liberating people around the world is a noble, and still highly debatable, ideal for a freedom-loving people like we are, but it's radical in light of our history and attention spans, and needs to be presented and defended as such.
To the Americans who support the war against Iraq, I have a few questions. Do you do so strictly to "free the Iraqi people", or in acknowledgement of other imperatives? I know it sounds good, and you may have convinced yourself that this is the case, but is it really? Do you understand the ramnifications of this Bush doctrine, the number of wars in the future we must also fight? If we are to be consistent, and finish what we start? Have you projected that? I for one challenge you to look inside yourself and discover what you really believe. How many body bags will it take before we've had enough? How many people will we free? Just enough to conveniently rid ourselves of the "axis of evil"? Or just of Saddam Hussein? What about the rest of the starving and oppressed in the world, and their ruthless and terrorizing leaders? They'll probably have to wait for free trade to save them, the doctrine we've been defending up to this point.
Beyond all the rhetoric, the reality is fear and loyalty are driving us to war with Iraq, with our leaders duly cracking the whip. Despite what you may have heard, our previous approach to the world isn't necessarily broken, as some would have you to believe, at least not for the reasons being given. But boy was our own "efficiency" lacking when it counted. The world didn't irreversibly change because a cast of crusading misfits managed to slip through security and crash a few jumbo jets at a time when Americans were never suspecting such a thing. I'd like to see them try to get away with it now. They'd be torn to pieces. But still there is a lingering fear that we are vulnerable now, even though we've been so for a very, very long time, long before September 11, just unacknowledgly so by most of us enjoying our lives amidst the great economic boom, blissfully unaware of the parallel and sinister rise in terrorist ideology and targeting.
Ever since, our leaders have been feeding this fear and sense of place and loyalty, stoking the fires of our passion and irrationality and in the resulting confusion dusting off and polishing up grandiose visions deemed far too radical to pursue pre-September 11. Give them credit...opportunity knocked, and even before the commercial jets were back in the air, the hawks had taken flight. Meanwhile, rather than reflecting on the hidden costs of our privileged lives of convenience and dominance, and assessing where our paths are leading us and why large majorities of suffering and impoverished people hate us and wish for our destruction, we tune that out and follow the flutes of our seemingly fearless leaders, the true radicals. I admire them for their passion and resolve, and fear them for their tactics, sensitivity and love of secrecy. The bottom line is simple. Across the ocean lie oil fields we have become dependent on for our opulent national lifestyle, and these fields are surrounded by impoverished people who envy and hate us. Will we work to engage them, to influence their thinking and raise their good will, or will we engage in the politically unthinkable, and attack them in an offensive war to preserve our way of life?
Before you dismiss this argument as itself overly radical, ask yourself if you support invading Somalia, Vietnam, Libya and North Korea any time soon to secure "their" freedom? How about Iran? Is consistency and recognition of the actual fortitude this national mission will require to be successful asking for too much? Has there been any real, informed dialogue on any of this? Any forthrightness with the American people? Among the American people? From anyone in the maintream media?
The reality is that if and when we invade a country in the unilateral war against tyranny, as opposed to the global war against terror, we will only do so with popular domestic support for two reasons: our security and our interests, in that order. Liberating other people, especially people with whom we have little to no bond or history, is merely an effect, or pure rhetoric. Honesty tells us that. On the other hand, to save our skins, to secure our homes and families, should it come to that and we be convinced of such an inevitability, we'll invade and liberate any people. Let there be no mistake about that, or of the power, passion and courage we will bring in this most important matter of defense. I warn anyone against taking us lightly in these matters of life and death. We are not, never have been, and never will be a cowardly lot.
The world is a dangerous place. We ought to and will defend our homes, our families, our country, our friends, our neighbors and our freedom, but not anyone else's. Not yet. Not until we are willing to acknowledge all the evil that men do, including our own, here at home, what we've done, what we're doing. The guns, bombs, dictators and devastation we've brought to the four corners of the globe is a reality that's hard to plausibly deny. The corruption, deceit, and crime in our homeland are plainly evident for anyone to see. How many scandals have we found about long after the fact? That would have outraged us and had devastating political and even criminal consequence to those involved had the scandalous affairs come to light in a more timely fashion? How many lone psychos and loose cannons with an agenda or a passion to maim and kill do we have roaming our countrysides, suburbs and highways? Enough I'd say. Enough to say "enough", it's time to get our house in order.
Even the most ardent jingoist can't deny that, either by intent or effect, we've had impacts on the world that have not always been positive, or even well-meaning. Human nature and self-interest being what it is, who would expect less? All the more reason why we as Americans need greater participation in the affairs of our nation, and more oversight into the activities of our elected leaders, not less. We don't need restrictions on liberty, but enhancements in communication and timely information, and less rhetoric and more reasoning behind policies both foreign and domestic. The linkages between politics and economics should also be fair warning against excessive secrecy, as how is one to compete fairly in the market when political insiders with access to classified information and task group strategy sessions can get the early jump?
The bottom line is we need wholesale change in this country, and much more so than just a newly forged missionary zeal to take the fight against terror and tyranny to the world. Weakened dictators like Saddam Hussein are easy to slap around; changing ourselves and shaking off the corruption that infects us is much more difficult. Again, if you think I'm being too radical, too extreme, just take a moment and really think about it. Dry yourself off from the senseless stream of recycled information flowing from the pundits and talk-show hosts in the mainstream media and bask in the sunlight of divergent opinions on the Internet for awhile. Get some color. Then tell me who's extreme.
What you'll find is a lot of praiseworthy deeds we Americans are known for, as well as a competing amount of evidence and testimony that we've made mistakes, sometimes some really big ones, both in the past and in the present. Is your first instinct to automatically tune out this negative information? To ignore or devalue anything that challenges your belief system or your reasoning? To avoid this feeling which is known as cognitive dissonance, swiftly dismissing any non-supportive evidence of your belief system as the work of tricksters, traitors or infidels? It's okay if this is your reaction...it's a natural instinct. One carefully reinforced in human culture, especially by the halls of power and commerce, who've invested so heavily in this type of research. What's not okay is to give in to it, to let this feeling control your thoughts and pool of available information. Why? The result is repression and ignorance, and we've covered these perils earlier in this appeal. Have we come this far as a country just so we can fall back to where we started?
Everyone makes mistakes, including me, you, and our great nation. Perfection is not an option, or even a desired value, and we needn't worry about it. Self-awareness and integrity, on the other hand, are well within our control, both as individuals and as a nation, and at bottom require taking ownership and accountability for our actions, knowing why we do them, and being aware of their consequent effects. Unfortunately, as the masters of secrecy and plausible deniability, we never own up to anything.
Thus our dilemma. One cannot act with integrity and at the same time duck information that would seem to prove one otherwise. This is called weakness. Strength is facing the conflicting information with open eyes, ears and minds, evaluating, challenging, responding, discrediting, acknowledging and integrating. Engaging. Perhaps more than anything else, reveling in the newfound wellspring of information and global communication we've constructed, and building new alliances and finding novel solutions to age-old problems. Surely this sounds better than plausibile deniability and shock-and-awe warfare, doesn't it? I hope so. Never forget that this is our life, our time, and our place, and we're free to pursue these great adventures and vast challenges ahead with integrity rather than plausible deniability, if we choose to do so. We should. These are heady times, and we are ready people.
So let's get accountable, fix up a spot alongside freedom for integrity on our trophy case, get our own house in order, and then set off to ensure another century of enlightened civilization on this our most precious planet Earth. Better yet, let's raise the bar another notch. Forget about a new American century, since such thinking is far too parochial for the great spirit of our times and for the great depth of our and other peoples' love for freedom. What we're really talking about now is a century of freedom, not just for Americans but for our friends and neighbors abroad, for all peoples, a legacy for all human beings. Only in this pursuit will America fulfill its prophetic promise set forth in the Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal, and are endowed by their creator with inalienable rights which no person or state may run asunder. It's not a utopian dream my friends, but a reality, and the mandate given to us at our birth as a nation. We can do this. We can endure these growing pains, just as surely as we can secure the liberation of all human beings, cultures and civilization in a freely willing community of independent nations and peoples, each cooperating to keep the others in check, and each preserving its own special character. We can, and we will. I'll be the first to volunteer my services in this war against ignorance, repression and evil, and don't be in the least surprised, once they hear our song, to find the rest of the world clamoring to join our ranks.
Thank you, and God bless America.
(this added after the blog started, but written before the blog started, and explains what I'm about and why I started the blog)
Freedom is an elusive thing. To have, to hold, and to conceive. Try to define it, you will join a divergent chorus. In spite of this, most of us understand at least a common sense of freedom, of what it means, and this usually seems to be good enough. We tend to agree that an American should be free to live without undue interference, to speak, and to own property. Beyond that, there are dueling interpretations of how far we should go.
You'll notice that I specifically mention this freedom in regards to being "an American". With all due respect to the Declaration of Independence, and the ideals expressed within, Americans have always fought for and believed in "our" freedom, not "theirs", and in those cases where we did liberate other peoples we were ultimately doing so for our own purposes, and not strictly for theirs.
This goes back to our origins. Our founding fathers and fellow revolutionaries were not concerned with the free status of other Brits, or of people in any other country for that matter. Not fundamentally so. Our American story, and freedom, is about America, is American, and has always been that way.
At first, this institution of freedom was extended only to a minority of Americans. White men were the originally endowed. Women were seen as unfit and subservient to men, and blacks, native americans, and basically any non-whites were viewed as less-than-human. In these storied and triumphant times, freedom was new, tenuous and biased, and men were quite obviously victims of their own ignorance.
In psychological terms, a whole lot of repression was going on. How else could the belief in racial and gender superiority be justified in the light of the ideals enshrined in our Declaration of Independence? It couldn't. Today, we see this kind of behavior and thinking for what it is, misguided and ignorant, and if persisted with in the face of a more sane and rational outlook, with competing and superior information and understanding, rightly considered evil.
Which our founders of course were not. Our founders were brave and pioneering men and women, fighting against subservience and oppression, and distinguishing themselves to us and to history despite their misunderstanding and ignorance of the true state of human nature. This misapprehension of the true status of human life, and rights, and who is and what it means to be human, is unfortunate and a human error we have corrected in our times, though it still lingers in remnants, in pockets of ignorance, even among our elected leaders.
A lot our founders did get right though, and our pride as a people begins with them. We enjoy the fruits of our liberty today because of their struggles. Since those times, we've come a long way in bringing the ideal and practice of freedom into more intimate embrace. Every American is included in the franchise of freedom now, with the obvious exception of minors. Our flag waves with honor, even though some may choose to burn it. So be it. America is not and has never been evil, because we have changed and adapted to righteous challenge. In the light of reason, conflict and compassion we have improved and expanded the franchise of freedom to all Americans, and for this we should be very proud.
What we cannot be proud of is the shameful behavior of some of our fellow citizens who have trouble with opinions differing from their own, or who seek to conceal their questionable political activities behind smoke screens and legal argument. These individuals clearly do not appreciate what freedom means. Take for instance our cafeteria contras in Congress who've renamed french fries and french toast to freedom fries and freedom toast. Is this the proper example and protest to make in the name of freedom, our most cherished and founding ideal? From our elected leaders? To proclaim solidarity with the cause of Iraqi freedom by condemning the French for exercising their own freedom to disagree with and question our reasoning and motives? Are the French required to rubber stamp our every move, especially moves so dramatically divergent from international norms and our own history? Are we hypocrites? Bullies? Children? No, no, no, no, no, no, and no. Surely this isn't the vision and expectation of our forefathers.
How do we justify this attitude towards the French, this villification of them? Their leader and figurehead was the first to visit and offer his nations' condolences for our tragic losses on the day of September 11. But their national symbols didn't come crashing down on that day, ours did, so where is their overriding motive? Would we have rushed to war with Iraq if the Louvre had been felled? Honest? Our thirst for revenge is ablaze, so should theirs? By default? Who's forgotten that the greatest gift we've ever received from another nation did not fall that terrible day in September? No, our sweet lady of liberty still stands strong and vigilant. Who could forget that the French have been our friends and brothers since the very beginning of our great nation? Not me. Will our fears and passions for revenge get the better of us, clouding out all we know about ourselves, our friends, and our history?
Not even here in America do citizens believe we should be picking fights around the world for other peoples' freedom. Beyond safeguarding our freedom, homes and families, we're a peace-loving people, though you'd never guess it by looking at the seemingly non-stop skirmishes our leadership has dragged into over the past century. Why would the French differ in this regard, and not more greatly so since the policy and propaganda in this case are not of their own making, and aren't meant to be? Their private companies don't stand to profit from the takeover of Iraq, but actually stand to lose billions, with or without French support. Liberating people around the world is a noble, and still highly debatable, ideal for a freedom-loving people like we are, but it's radical in light of our history and attention spans, and needs to be presented and defended as such.
To the Americans who support the war against Iraq, I have a few questions. Do you do so strictly to "free the Iraqi people", or in acknowledgement of other imperatives? I know it sounds good, and you may have convinced yourself that this is the case, but is it really? Do you understand the ramnifications of this Bush doctrine, the number of wars in the future we must also fight? If we are to be consistent, and finish what we start? Have you projected that? I for one challenge you to look inside yourself and discover what you really believe. How many body bags will it take before we've had enough? How many people will we free? Just enough to conveniently rid ourselves of the "axis of evil"? Or just of Saddam Hussein? What about the rest of the starving and oppressed in the world, and their ruthless and terrorizing leaders? They'll probably have to wait for free trade to save them, the doctrine we've been defending up to this point.
Beyond all the rhetoric, the reality is fear and loyalty are driving us to war with Iraq, with our leaders duly cracking the whip. Despite what you may have heard, our previous approach to the world isn't necessarily broken, as some would have you to believe, at least not for the reasons being given. But boy was our own "efficiency" lacking when it counted. The world didn't irreversibly change because a cast of crusading misfits managed to slip through security and crash a few jumbo jets at a time when Americans were never suspecting such a thing. I'd like to see them try to get away with it now. They'd be torn to pieces. But still there is a lingering fear that we are vulnerable now, even though we've been so for a very, very long time, long before September 11, just unacknowledgly so by most of us enjoying our lives amidst the great economic boom, blissfully unaware of the parallel and sinister rise in terrorist ideology and targeting.
Ever since, our leaders have been feeding this fear and sense of place and loyalty, stoking the fires of our passion and irrationality and in the resulting confusion dusting off and polishing up grandiose visions deemed far too radical to pursue pre-September 11. Give them credit...opportunity knocked, and even before the commercial jets were back in the air, the hawks had taken flight. Meanwhile, rather than reflecting on the hidden costs of our privileged lives of convenience and dominance, and assessing where our paths are leading us and why large majorities of suffering and impoverished people hate us and wish for our destruction, we tune that out and follow the flutes of our seemingly fearless leaders, the true radicals. I admire them for their passion and resolve, and fear them for their tactics, sensitivity and love of secrecy. The bottom line is simple. Across the ocean lie oil fields we have become dependent on for our opulent national lifestyle, and these fields are surrounded by impoverished people who envy and hate us. Will we work to engage them, to influence their thinking and raise their good will, or will we engage in the politically unthinkable, and attack them in an offensive war to preserve our way of life?
Before you dismiss this argument as itself overly radical, ask yourself if you support invading Somalia, Vietnam, Libya and North Korea any time soon to secure "their" freedom? How about Iran? Is consistency and recognition of the actual fortitude this national mission will require to be successful asking for too much? Has there been any real, informed dialogue on any of this? Any forthrightness with the American people? Among the American people? From anyone in the maintream media?
The reality is that if and when we invade a country in the unilateral war against tyranny, as opposed to the global war against terror, we will only do so with popular domestic support for two reasons: our security and our interests, in that order. Liberating other people, especially people with whom we have little to no bond or history, is merely an effect, or pure rhetoric. Honesty tells us that. On the other hand, to save our skins, to secure our homes and families, should it come to that and we be convinced of such an inevitability, we'll invade and liberate any people. Let there be no mistake about that, or of the power, passion and courage we will bring in this most important matter of defense. I warn anyone against taking us lightly in these matters of life and death. We are not, never have been, and never will be a cowardly lot.
The world is a dangerous place. We ought to and will defend our homes, our families, our country, our friends, our neighbors and our freedom, but not anyone else's. Not yet. Not until we are willing to acknowledge all the evil that men do, including our own, here at home, what we've done, what we're doing. The guns, bombs, dictators and devastation we've brought to the four corners of the globe is a reality that's hard to plausibly deny. The corruption, deceit, and crime in our homeland are plainly evident for anyone to see. How many scandals have we found about long after the fact? That would have outraged us and had devastating political and even criminal consequence to those involved had the scandalous affairs come to light in a more timely fashion? How many lone psychos and loose cannons with an agenda or a passion to maim and kill do we have roaming our countrysides, suburbs and highways? Enough I'd say. Enough to say "enough", it's time to get our house in order.
Even the most ardent jingoist can't deny that, either by intent or effect, we've had impacts on the world that have not always been positive, or even well-meaning. Human nature and self-interest being what it is, who would expect less? All the more reason why we as Americans need greater participation in the affairs of our nation, and more oversight into the activities of our elected leaders, not less. We don't need restrictions on liberty, but enhancements in communication and timely information, and less rhetoric and more reasoning behind policies both foreign and domestic. The linkages between politics and economics should also be fair warning against excessive secrecy, as how is one to compete fairly in the market when political insiders with access to classified information and task group strategy sessions can get the early jump?
The bottom line is we need wholesale change in this country, and much more so than just a newly forged missionary zeal to take the fight against terror and tyranny to the world. Weakened dictators like Saddam Hussein are easy to slap around; changing ourselves and shaking off the corruption that infects us is much more difficult. Again, if you think I'm being too radical, too extreme, just take a moment and really think about it. Dry yourself off from the senseless stream of recycled information flowing from the pundits and talk-show hosts in the mainstream media and bask in the sunlight of divergent opinions on the Internet for awhile. Get some color. Then tell me who's extreme.
What you'll find is a lot of praiseworthy deeds we Americans are known for, as well as a competing amount of evidence and testimony that we've made mistakes, sometimes some really big ones, both in the past and in the present. Is your first instinct to automatically tune out this negative information? To ignore or devalue anything that challenges your belief system or your reasoning? To avoid this feeling which is known as cognitive dissonance, swiftly dismissing any non-supportive evidence of your belief system as the work of tricksters, traitors or infidels? It's okay if this is your reaction...it's a natural instinct. One carefully reinforced in human culture, especially by the halls of power and commerce, who've invested so heavily in this type of research. What's not okay is to give in to it, to let this feeling control your thoughts and pool of available information. Why? The result is repression and ignorance, and we've covered these perils earlier in this appeal. Have we come this far as a country just so we can fall back to where we started?
Everyone makes mistakes, including me, you, and our great nation. Perfection is not an option, or even a desired value, and we needn't worry about it. Self-awareness and integrity, on the other hand, are well within our control, both as individuals and as a nation, and at bottom require taking ownership and accountability for our actions, knowing why we do them, and being aware of their consequent effects. Unfortunately, as the masters of secrecy and plausible deniability, we never own up to anything.
Thus our dilemma. One cannot act with integrity and at the same time duck information that would seem to prove one otherwise. This is called weakness. Strength is facing the conflicting information with open eyes, ears and minds, evaluating, challenging, responding, discrediting, acknowledging and integrating. Engaging. Perhaps more than anything else, reveling in the newfound wellspring of information and global communication we've constructed, and building new alliances and finding novel solutions to age-old problems. Surely this sounds better than plausibile deniability and shock-and-awe warfare, doesn't it? I hope so. Never forget that this is our life, our time, and our place, and we're free to pursue these great adventures and vast challenges ahead with integrity rather than plausible deniability, if we choose to do so. We should. These are heady times, and we are ready people.
So let's get accountable, fix up a spot alongside freedom for integrity on our trophy case, get our own house in order, and then set off to ensure another century of enlightened civilization on this our most precious planet Earth. Better yet, let's raise the bar another notch. Forget about a new American century, since such thinking is far too parochial for the great spirit of our times and for the great depth of our and other peoples' love for freedom. What we're really talking about now is a century of freedom, not just for Americans but for our friends and neighbors abroad, for all peoples, a legacy for all human beings. Only in this pursuit will America fulfill its prophetic promise set forth in the Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal, and are endowed by their creator with inalienable rights which no person or state may run asunder. It's not a utopian dream my friends, but a reality, and the mandate given to us at our birth as a nation. We can do this. We can endure these growing pains, just as surely as we can secure the liberation of all human beings, cultures and civilization in a freely willing community of independent nations and peoples, each cooperating to keep the others in check, and each preserving its own special character. We can, and we will. I'll be the first to volunteer my services in this war against ignorance, repression and evil, and don't be in the least surprised, once they hear our song, to find the rest of the world clamoring to join our ranks.
Thank you, and God bless America.
(this added after the blog started, but written before the blog started, and explains what I'm about and why I started the blog)
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